Maitland Maternity: Triplets, Quads and Quints. Kasey Michaels
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There’s nothing more precious than a tiny new arrival…
MAITLAND MATERNITY: TRIPLETS, QUADS & QUINTS
You’re invited to celebrate the opening of the new McCallum Multiple Birth Wing at the Maitland Maternity Hospital—where romances are born, secrets are revealed and multiple bundles of joy are delivered!
Five heart-warming stories from five favourite authors.
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MILLS & BOON SPOTLIGHT™
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April 2010 The Ashtons: Jillian, Eli & Charlotte
Featuring
Just a Taste by Bronwyn Jameson Awaken the Senses by Nalini Singh Estate Affair by Sara Orwig
Maitland Maternity: Triplets, Quads & Quints
Featuring
Triplet Secret Babies by Judy Christenberry Quadruplets on the Doorstep by Tina Leonard Great Expectations by Kasey Michaels Delivered with a Kiss by Mindy Neff And Babies Make Seven by Mary Anne Wilson
Maitland Maternity: Triplets, Quads & Quints
Judy Christenberry
Tina Leonard
Kasey Michaels
Mindy Neff
Mary Anne Wilson
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Triplet Secret Babies
By
Judy Christenberry has been writing romances for fifteen years because she loves happy endings as much as her readers do. A former French teacher, Judy now devotes herself to writing full time. She hopes readers have as much fun reading her stories as she does writing them. She spends her spare time reading, watching her favourite sports teams and keeping track of her two daughters. Judy’s a native Texan, but now lives in Arizona.
Chapter One
Her head was beating like a bass drum during a pep rally. Briana McCallum stared at the shelf of pain relievers in the New York deli she’d found a block from the hotel, feeling lucky to have found it open after midnight.
There it was! Her favorite relief for headaches. She grabbed it and then took a soda from the refrigerated shelf nearby and hurried to the cash register.
She was digging through her purse when the clerk said, “You give me your money.”
“Yes, I’m looking for it,” she assured him, her head down as she dug through her bag for her billfold.
“No, all your money,” he returned harshly.
She looked up to find herself staring down the barrel of a pistol pointed directly at her.
“What—” she began, confused, when the outer door opened and another customer arrived. Relief poured through her. She wasn’t alone with the wacko anymore. The pistol swung away from her to the new arrival.
“You come. Give me money,” the clerk ordered.
The new arrival, a handsome man in a tuxedo, his tie untied, stared in surprise. “What’s going on?”
He looked at Briana for an explanation. “I think he’s planning on robbing us,” she said.
“I go home now. I need money,” the clerk said, as if that explained everything.
“Home to—?” the man asked.
“India. My mother sick. I go home. Give me money.”
After a dead silence, the man behind the counter began shifting, swinging the gun between the two of them, and Briana grew more nervous. “I—I don’t have a lot of money.” She pulled out about sixty dollars and laid it on the counter. “That’s all I have with me.”
“Now you,” the clerk said, scooping up the money and looking at the man.
With reluctance, the man pulled out his wallet from his back pants pocket. He took the cash out and laid it on the counter. Then he tucked his wallet away. “That’s all I’ve got.”
It was considerably more than Briana carried with her.
But she was distracted from thinking about that. The clerk came around the counter and gestured for them to go to the back of the store. Was he going to shoot them before he left? She didn’t want to die, not when her dream was just coming true. Not when she’d finally achieved—
“Go!” the clerk shouted, becoming more agitated.
The man put his hands on her shoulders and pushed her gently in front of him, keeping himself between her and the gun. A very protective gesture. One her brother Caleb would approve of. As did she.
They reached the back of the store and the clerk shoved open a door that said Employees Only. It was dark, not a large area, and she was reluctant to go in. Suddenly the man fell into her and she fell to her knees on the concrete floor. She heard a loud slamming noise and everything went black.
She thought she’d passed out, but she was still awake. Then she realized the door behind them had been slammed shut and there was no light.