a mother on a mission.”
“The same thing.”
He wasn’t going to back down and she could get a serious cramp in her neck if he continued to loom over her like some annoyed, threatening, tall person.
“I can’t totally be at your beck and call,” she said, changing the subject. “I have a job and a life.”
“You have a job and now I’m your life. I’ll respect your work hours.”
“Why do I doubt that?” She walked to the cupboard and pulled down two mugs. They were both chipped. She looked through her selection, but none of them were in great shape.
Nearly as bad as the chips were the gaudy logos on the front. Every one of them had been a freebie. Billionaire Nathan was just going to have to work around that, she thought as she poured coffee and handed it to him.
“I’ll take it black,” he told her, “what with milk being so scarce.”
“Don’t mock me. I’m poor.”
“Don’t assume about me. I’m rich.”
She sighed. “You’re not going to make this easy, are you?”
“You’re blackmailing me. Why should I?”
“It’s the gentlemanly thing to do.”
He put down the coffee untasted. “I’m not interested in being a gentleman, Kerri. I’m interested in winning. I will honor my part of the bargain—see that you do the same. If you don’t, I promise you’ll regret screwing with me.”
She set her mug next to his. “You can’t do anything to me that’s worse than what’s already happening.”
Something dark and painful flashed in his eyes. “I can still make your life hell. I’ll have my secretary phone you and set up an appointment. We’ll meet in my lawyer’s office.”
She wanted to snap at him, but the truth was, he could have ignored everything she’d done and not given her the money. Because of him, her son had a chance. Annoying or not, the man deserved to have her meet him at least halfway.
“Okay. Look, I’ll try to help when I can, but I have Cody to think about. So at least give me some notice?”
“I’ll do my best.”
“Are you going to want me to show up at fancy stuff? If so, wardrobe could be an issue.”
“I don’t know.” He pulled a business card out of his wallet and put it on the counter. “This is my direct number at work and my cell number. If you need to get in touch with me.”
She picked up the card and waved it. “How much would a tabloid give me for these phone numbers?” she teased.
His eyes narrowed. “That is confidential information.”
“So I can call whenever I want, right?”
He picked up his jacket and walked to the front door without speaking.
“Okay, fine. I won’t play fast and loose with your personal info. Do you need my phone number?”
He turned back to her. “I have a file on you, remember?”
“I try not to.” She glanced at the clock on the wall. “Cody will be home in a few minutes. You could stay and meet him.”
“No, thank you. I have to be back in Seattle.”
Translation—he wasn’t interested in her son. She reminded herself he’d given her the money and she owed him. “Then I’ll just be here, quivering in anticipation of your phone call.”
One corner of his mouth twitched. “If only that were true.”
DR. ABRAM WALLACE SLAMMED shut the door to his truck and walked into Bill’s Food and Feed to pick up his weekly order. Bales of hay topped by bags of dog food stood to the left of the open double wood doors. On the right a galvanized tub held ice chilling imported asparagus and a basket of hothouse tomatoes. Bill catered to everything that ate—human and animal alike.
Abram stuck his hands in his coat pockets as he walked and kept his head down. He nodded as he passed a couple of women talking, then moved straight to the counter.
“Hey, Professor,” Bill, a large man in his fifties, called out. “I got your order all ready. Looks like Linda’s making you meat loaf. Lucky guy.”
Linda, Abram’s assistant, hadn’t mentioned making dinner, but it was something she took on once or twice a week. He didn’t pay attention to food and only ate because it allowed him to keep working. If it was up to him, he’d eat the same thing day after day. But Linda insisted on variety and making homemade meals so he wasn’t always heating up something from a can.
“You must be excited,” Bill said as he passed over a large box containing Abram’s order. “About the money for the research facility. Nathan King’s giving you fifteen million dollars.”
Abram gave him a blank look.
“You haven’t heard?” Bill paused. “You know, so you can start up again. Healing those sick kids.”
Abram avoided newspapers and he didn’t own a television. Linda kept him informed of any major events and reminded him to vote every few years.
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” he grumbled. Money? For research? He’d closed down the lab years ago. After the fire, he’d had to. There was no going back. He couldn’t do that again. Couldn’t take the chance.
“You’re going to open the lab,” Bill insisted. “With the money. Everyone’s talking about how it will save the town.”
Abram took his order and left. Fool, he thought as he retraced his steps to his car.
There was no saving Songwood. It was too late for both of them. Linda had asked him once why he stayed. He hadn’t answered her, but he knew the reason. He’d killed the town. The least he could do was stick around and die with it.
“YOU’RE AN IDIOT,” Jason Hardy said as he led the way into a small conference room.
“So you’ve said.”
“Just trying to do my job. You shouldn’t have gone up to Songwood by yourself.”
“You’re repeating yourself,” Nathan told him as he walked over to the table against the far wall and poured himself a cup of coffee. “At what you make an hour, you should be more original.”
“You’re not cooperating,” Jason muttered. “I have a bad feeling about all this.”
Nathan reached for the container of cream, then paused as he remembered Kerri Sullivan hoarding milk for her son. As if milk was hard to come by. Although given her paycheck and her medical expenses, perhaps it was a luxury.
He remembered his mother complaining about the amount of food he’d put away when he’d been a teenager. But there had been affection, at least from her. His father was another story.
Involuntarily he turned to look out the window. The conference room offered a sweeping view of Puget Sound, including the spot where Nathan’s towers would go. Too bad his old man wasn’t around to see them built. Not that the dead could ever admit they were wrong.
“If word of this gets out, you’re screwed,” Jason said.
Nathan shrugged. “It’s a calculated risk. There’s a confidentiality clause in the paperwork. Kerri and I will keep silent. And you’re bound by client privilege. Who else is going to know?”
“I don’t like it,” Jason told him. “You should have let me handle this.”
“It’ll be worth it.” Nathan sipped his coffee. “The fifteen million means nothing to me. If using Kerri Sullivan and her kid gets