Black spots danced in front of her eyes, a dizzy rush made her body sway, and then a pair of strong warm arms wrapped around her from behind.
“It’s all right,” a familiar voice murmured. “You’re safe, baby girl. I’ve got you.”
She lifted her head, met her brother’s concerned dark eyes and began to sob. “Jim! Oh, God, Jim, Daddy was hit!”
“It’s okay,” he soothed, stroking her hair. “They’re going to take care of him.”
Lana suddenly registered the sound of urgent voices and hurried footsteps. She turned in time to see a pair of paramedics bending over her father’s body. A third rolled a stretcher over.
“We’ve got a pulse,” she heard one of them say, triumphant.
Relief shuddered through her. He was alive. Her father was alive.
Burying her face against her brother’s chest, she continued to cry softly. Jim just held her, touching her hair, whispering, “It’s okay,” over and over again. Her tears stained the front of his shirt, her cold hands, still in restraints, clung to his neck. A myriad of emotions swirled inside her. She’d almost lost her dad. Almost lost her own life. Her baby’s life.
The baby.
Deacon!
She jerked out of Jim’s arms, her gaze darting anxiously around the crowded area. Where was he? He wasn’t by the van, where he’d shielded her from harm. Her head swiveled, eyes searched, heart thumped wildly.
And then she saw him. Two federal agents were shoving him into a black car. A flash of silver caught her eye. Handcuffs. Deacon was being arrested.
Ignoring Jim’s shocked expression, she staggered forward, trying to get to Deacon, but he was already inside the car. Doors slammed. An engine roared to life.
“No!” she shouted when the taillights blinked and the car began to move.
Jim’s hand clamped down on her shoulder. “What the hell are you doing?” he demanded.
The car sped past them. Lana caught a glimpse of Deacon’s face in the back window. He looked stoic, sad, and then she could no longer see him.
She spun around to face her brother. “You can’t let them arrest him!”
Jim frowned. “Who?”
“Deacon Holt. He saved me.” Her voice held a note of urgency. “They have to let him go, Jim! I’d be dead if it weren’t for him.”
The frown curling her brother’s mouth deepened. “What exactly is he to you, Lana?”
A dozen lies sprang to her lips. She could say Deacon was an undercover cop. A kidnapper who’d defected. A friend. A total stranger.
She took a breath, opened her mouth and what came out was, “He’s the father of my baby.”
The waiting room of Helena General Hospital was packed to the gills with Kelleys. Lana couldn’t remember the last time her entire family was gathered in one small space like this. Cole, Dylan, Jim. Her mom, Uncle Donald, his wife Bonnie Gene. Along with the family, several others occupied the uncomfortable plastic chairs. Cindy and Bethany, the twins’ respective loves. Hank’s bodyguard, Gage, and his girlfriend, Kate. Even Lana’s best friend, Caitlin, had come to the hospital, despite the fact that she’d apparently gone through an ordeal of her own just recently.
Lana only managed a brief smile in Caitlin’s direction. She would speak her to later, after the adrenaline pulsing in her blood dissipated. After she was able to take a breath without her entire chest squeezing with pain and regret. Deacon had been arrested. No matter how up in the air things were between them, she felt that she’d failed him. She’d promised she would make sure he escaped punishment, and instead, she’d stood by and watched him being driven away in handcuffs.
It didn’t help that her brothers kept shooting cloudy and suspicious looks in her direction. Her confession to Jim had been passed along to everyone in the waiting room by now, and more than once she’d noticed her uncle Donald glancing at her tummy. None of them approved of, or even understood, this pregnancy, and the disappointment emanating from the mob of bodies in the room had been so unbearable she’d had to leave.
Now she sat in a smaller waiting room near the nurses’ station, which she’d discovered after pretending she needed to use the restroom. It was nice to be alone. Her father was still in surgery, would probably be there for several more hours, and the last thing she wanted to do was face her family’s questions and displeased faces.
“There you are.”
Lana lifted her head as her mother entered the room. With her long blond hair, porcelain skin and eyes the same shade of blue as Lana’s, Sarah looked more like her older sister than her mother. Only the faint wrinkles around her eyes and mouth revealed her age.
Suppressing a sigh, Lana watched her mom approach, searching the familiar face for any hint of reproach or accusation. But her mother’s expression radiated softness and warmth and deep compassion.
“May I join you?” Sarah asked quietly.
Lana managed a nod.
The second Sarah settled into the chair next to hers, she wrapped a protective arm around Lana’s shoulder and pulled her close. “I’m so happy you’re safe, honey. I was going out of my mind the past couple months.”
Lana looked over to see tears glistening in her mother’s eyes. She immediately took her hand and clasped it tightly. “I’m all right, Mom. They didn’t hurt me.”
Sarah’s gaze dropped to Lana’s belly.
“It wasn’t like that,” she said quickly. “It happened before I was taken.”
“Jim said that you told him he saved you…the father of your baby.”
She nodded. “Deacon helped me escape. He was bringing me back to Maple Cove when Le Clair and his men found us.”
“Then I owe him a great debt. He brought my baby home to me.”
Tears prickled behind Lana’s eyelids. “The FBI arrested him. I didn’t have time to clear everything up. It all happened so fast, and then…he was gone.”
Sarah rubbed her shoulders in a familiar maternal gesture. “Tell me about him. This Deacon.”
God, where did she even start? She could see the questions swimming in her mother’s eyes, but she had no idea how to answer them.
Sensing Lana’s dismay, Sarah chuckled. “How about we start with an easy one?” She paused. “Do you love him?”
Chapter 17
Lana burst out laughing. “You call that easy?” Leave it to her mother to ask the one thing she’d been agonizing over for weeks now.
“Well, do you?” Sarah prodded gently.
She bit her lip, letting the question settle. “Yes,” she confessed. “But he doesn’t love me.”
Before she could stop it, a stream of words rushed out of her mouth. She told her mother everything. The night at the Louvre. The men on the train. The horrifying discovery that Deacon was involved in her abduction. Their time on the run. His final declaration to her.
When she finished, her heart was beating wildly, and her palms went damp as she voiced one last thought. “We don’t have a future, Mom.”
Sarah smoothed the top of Lana’s head. “Why do you say that?”
“Well, for one, he’s not interested. He says he doesn’t want to be a father or a husband. He thinks I deserve better than him.”
“And what do you think?”
“I don’t even know anymore,” Lana burst out in frustration. “From the start, I saw something decent in him. I was convinced that deep down he was a good man. But then he shut down on me. He said some really hurtful things, too. And…and he was involved in my kidnapping! I know he redeemed himself in the end, but maybe he was right all along when he kept telling me he wasn’t a good person.”
Her mother fell silent for a long moment, then shifted in her chair so they were face to face. “Oh, honey, you still don’t get it, do you?”
Lana faltered. “Get what?”
“Baby, nobody is all good and all bad. We all have our dark moments, our shades of gray.” Sarah sighed. “Do you think Deacon’s actions saved your life?”
“I know the
y did.”
“And are those the actions of a bad man?”
She bit her lip again. “No, but…”
“But nothing. You know, I’ve always worried about you,” her mother admitted. “You want everything to be beautiful and perfect. You always have, even as a child, and I supposed that’s admirable in many ways, but it’s also unreasonable at times. Nobody is perfect, honey. You need to learn to accept the good and the bad. It’s okay to seek out the best in people, but if you remain blind to their flaws, you’ll only hurt yourself in the end.”
“Maybe. But none of that matters.” Her eyes stung. “He doesn’t love me.”
“Sure he does.”
She had to grin at her mom’s careless tone. “Oh, does he?”
Sarah began to recite facts. “He protected you from his boss. He helped you escape. And Jim said Deacon threw himself on you when the bullets started flying. That, my darling, is love.”
“Or duty,” she whispered. “He felt he owed me something. How do I know that’s not the reason he did all of that?”
“Well, there’s a simple way to find that out.”
“There is?”
“Ask the man if he loves you,” Sarah said with a tiny smile.
“I would, except he’s in jail,” she pointed out.
“But he doesn’t have to stay there.” Her mother’s smile widened. “We’re Kelleys, honey. Might as well make good use of our connections, no?”
Deacon paced the small cell, his boots wearing away at the floor. His shoulders tensed at every noise, every random creak that sounded in the holding area of the police station. It was foolish, believing someone would actually come and give him news of Hank Kelley’s condition, but he was going crazy not knowing. Lana would be destroyed if her father died.
He’d actually had to use all his strength to keep her down when the gunshots had been blazing above them, and yet she’d still managed to climb out of his grip to run to her father. He’d never forget the look on her face, that steely determination to get to a person she loved.
Funnily enough, he’d felt that same determination in his own blood. The need to run after Lana and keep her safe had been as powerful and basic as the need to breathe.
He froze in front of the bars as a sudden realization dawned on him.
In that moment, with his self-preservation in jeopardy, his head in danger of meeting a bullet, he’d only been thinking about Lana.
Would his father have done that?
A harsh laugh burst from his mouth. No, he was fairly certain his dad would’ve used his mother’s body as armor to save his own skin.
Pressure squeezed Deacon’s chest. His breathing grew ragged. He’d put Lana first. He’d been doing that since the moment she was abducted from the train station.
What did that mean? Why had he done that?
Because you love her.
He leaned his forehead against the bars, letting the metal cool his suddenly hot skin. He couldn’t ignore it anymore. From the second he’d met Lana Kelley, he’d been overwhelmed with emotion. Ridiculously intense emotions. That same intensity had consumed his father and destroyed his mother, but it hadn’t destroyed Lana. Even when she told him about the pregnancy, after withholding the truth for so long, he hadn’t snapped.
His father would have snapped.
News flash, buddy, you’re not your father.
Deacon sucked in a shock-tinged breath. Clarity sliced into him. No, he wasn’t his father. The destiny he’d always believed lay in store for him…well, that was nothing but a load of bull.
He controlled his destiny. And he couldn’t live his life waiting for the darkness in him to spill out. Couldn’t avoid caring about others in fear that it would.
Damn it, he cared about Lana. He loved her.
Along with the liberating rush of joy that swelled in his belly came the crushing blow of frustration. He was in prison. There was nothing he could do for Lana as long as he was in here, not even tell her how he felt.
A door swung open, bringing a gust of warm air into the somewhat cool holding area. Footsteps came from the end of the block, growing louder and heavier, until one of the FBI agents who’d arrested him stepped into view.
“Looks like you’ve got friends in high places,” the agent announced with a reluctant look.
A uniformed officer approached from behind, already unclipping the key ring from his black leather belt. Deacon fought a spark of hope. No, this couldn’t be happening. Not even Lana had the kind of power to save him from the kidnapping charges hanging over his head. Did she?
His hope deepened when the officer stuck a key into the cell door and pulled it open.
Deacon didn’t move. “What’s going on?” he asked warily.
“You’re free to go,” the federal agent said with a shrug. “There’s a car waiting outside to take you to Helena General.”
Deacon just stood there, thunderstruck.
“Christ, get out here,” the agent grumbled. “I’m not about to keep the Kelleys waiting.”
With legs heavier than lead, Deacon walked out of the cell. Lana had kept her promise. She’d actually saved his ass.
For a moment, he contemplated ordering the car to take him to the airport instead of the hospital. He could disappear. Empty out his bank account, fly to an island somewhere and live his life the way he’d always planned—alone.
But the thought disappeared as quickly as it had appeared. Squaring his shoulders, he followed the agent out of the holding area, a smile lifting the corner of his mouth.
Screw living alone.
He’d much rather claim the love of his life and spend the rest of his life doing everything humanly possible to make her happy.
Lana changed out of the blue hospital gown the doctor had forced her to put on, quickly changing into a pair of clean jeans and the baggy green sweater her mom had thoughtfully brought for her. She slipped her stockinged feet into comfortable brown loafers, then tied her hair in a loose twist atop her head.
The doctor had given her a clean bill of health after forcing her to endure an uncomfortable pelvic exam and an awe-inspiring ultrasound. The baby was fine. She was fine.
Her father, however, was not.
She sat back down on the gurney, impatience rising inside her. The doctor had left the room to get her some prenatal vitamins, but she didn’t want to sit here and wait. Twenty minutes ago, the surgeon who’d operated on her dad had informed the family that Hank was in a medically induced coma. Although the bullet that had entered his temple had fortunately avoided damaging her father’s brain, the swelling had been impossible to manage. If it continued to swell, the doctors feared it would result in brain damage, and Lana’s mother promptly signed the consent form allowing them to induce a coma in order to control the swelling.
Lana was eager to see her dad, even though she knew he probably wouldn’t even know she was there. Despite the choices he’d made that had contributed to her abduction, she wanted to be there for him.
The door swung open, and she hopped off the gurney, ready to snatch those vitamins from the doctor’s hands and head back up to ICU.
But it wasn’t the doctor who stood in the doorway.
Her heart flipped as her gaze collided with Deacon’s. He still wore the faded jeans and black sweater he’d had on earlier, and she noticed specks of gravel stuck in his close-cropped hair. But other than that, he looked unharmed.
“He did it,” she breathed.
Deacon moved closer, his hazel eyes flickering with confusion. “Who did what?”
“My uncle Donald. I asked him to help get you out of jail.”
“Well, he succeeded.”
They stared at each other for a few long moments. Lana wanted to hurl herself into his arms, but she forced her feet to stay rooted to the tiled floor. She knew he’d only come here to thank her. Maybe even to say goodbye.
Just because she’d helped set him free didn’t mean he would bow down in front of her and
profess his undying love.
Deacon gestured to her belly. “Did the doctor check you out?”
She nodded. “The baby and I are both fine.”
Relief flashed across his face. “Good.”
Another silence descended. “Deacon—”
“Lana—”
She stopped, a fleeting smile crossing her mouth. “You first.”
“I…” He trailed off, his chest rising as he took a deep breath.
And then he swiftly moved toward her and she found herself enveloped by his strong arms. His heartbeat hammered against her chest, his warmth surrounded her, his lips grazed the top of her head. “God, Lana, I’m so glad this is all over. I don’t know what I would’ve done if you’d been hurt.”
She pressed her face in the crook of his neck, breathing in his familiar scent, spicy and masculine and unbearably heady. The goodbye would come soon. She knew it. But she couldn’t bring herself to break free of the embrace. She felt so small and fragile in his arms. Safe. Happy. She didn’t want the feeling to go away just yet.
“There’s something I need to say to you.”
Disappointment flattened down on her chest. Slowly, she stepped out of his arms, forcing an indifferent look on to her face. Here it came.
“I know what you’re going to say,” she murmured, averting her eyes. “So don’t bother. I get it, everything you said in the motel room holds true. You don’t want me or this ba—”
“I love you,” he interrupted.
Her head jerked up. “What?”
“I love you,” he repeated, his voice thick with emotion she’d never dreamed she’d hear from him. “So much, sweetheart. And everything I said at the motel—” He laughed harshly. “It was a damned lie.”
Was she hearing things?
“When I first took the job Le Clair offered, I was in it for the money,” he admitted. “And then I met you, and suddenly the money didn’t seem so important anymore. These last two months, the only thing I’ve wanted, the only thing I cared about, was keeping you safe.”
Raw emotion sliced his rough features as he continued. “I figured it was duty, a way to redeem myself, but when I was in that jail cell, I realized I did all that because of you. Because I’m madly in love with you.”