Marion Lennox

A Child in Need


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      “Were you beaten as a child?” Shanni asked—and waited.

      “Yes,” Nick said harshly.

      “Nick—”

      “Don’t you dare feel sorry for me. If I’m not over it now I never will be.”

      “I don’t think you can ever be over something like that. Kids can bounce back from a hard time—but if they don’t think they’re loved….”

      “Harry will be okay.”

      She hadn’t been talking about Harry—but now she turned to look down at the sleeping little boy.

      “I guess.” She smiled and turned back to Nick. “If you stay on his side….”

      “Hey, I’m committing myself to nothing here.”

      “You’re already committed.”

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      Families in the Making!

      In the orphanage of a small Australian seaside town called Bay Beach are little children desperately in need of love. Some of them have no parents, some are simply unwanted—but each child dreams about having their own family someday….

      The answer to their dreams can also be found in Bay Beach! Couples who are destined for each other—even if they don’t know it yet—are brought together by love for these tiny children. Can they find true love themselves—and finally become a real family?

      Look out for the next PARENTS WANTED story:

       Their Baby Bargain

       by Marion Lennox

      #3662

      A Child in Need

      Marion Lennox

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      CONTENTS

      PROLOGUE

      CHAPTER ONE

      CHAPTER TWO

      CHAPTER THREE

      CHAPTER FOUR

      CHAPTER FIVE

      CHAPTER SIX

      CHAPTER SEVEN

      CHAPTER EIGHT

      CHAPTER NINE

      CHAPTER TEN

      CHAPTER ELEVEN

      PROLOGUE

      ‘MY PERFECT woman…’

      ‘Yeah, Nick. You must have someone pictured in that cool, calculating head of yours. If you were ever to consider marriage…’

      ‘Ha!’

      ‘No, but say your career depended on it. Say you really needed a wife. Who would it be?’ Nick’s fellow lawyers were clustered around the bar late on Friday night, and they weren’t letting him off the hook.

      So Nick thought about it—but just to humour them. There was no way this could ever be serious.

      ‘Okay. Wife requirements coming up.’ He frowned. ‘Anyone I married would have to be independent. I don’t need a wife so she couldn’t need a husband.’

      There was a hoot of derisive laughter and the questioning intensified. ‘We guessed that much. Independent. Okay. What else?’

      ‘Beats me.’ Nick gave a mental shrug. This was stupid. Marriage wasn’t on his cards at all. But if it was…

      ‘She’d have to be really something,’ he said slowly, thinking it through. ‘Tall and gorgeous. Of course.’

      ‘Oh, of course,’ his friends agreed, rolling their eyes. ‘Cat-walk gorgeous.’

      ‘Trophy-wife gorgeous,’ Nick agreed. ‘After all, that’s the only reason I’d be marrying.’

      ‘And smart?’

      ‘Absolutely. Professional something. A lawyer or a doctor, maybe. So she’d have her own life.’

      ‘Rich?

      ‘Yep. There’s no chance I’m supporting any woman!’

      ‘That’s a bit unfair. You make a mint.’

      ‘And that’s the way I like it. Wealth. Position. Travel. What else is there in life?’

      ‘How about kids?’ they asked curiously.

      ‘You have to be joking!’ That was emphatic. ‘No!’

      ‘Now, how did we guess that?’ His friends now had their summary. ‘So… Gorgeous. Intelligent. Rich. Independent. Wanting no ties. Cold as ice? Something like you, in fact?’

      ‘Am I cold?’ Nick asked mildly, but he knew the answer. Of course he was cold. Nick Daniels kept his emotions to himself. He didn’t get involved. Not after what he’d been through.

      So this conversation was ridiculous. Marriage for Nicholas Daniels was never going to happen.

      ‘It must be getting close now—or has John popped the question already?’

      Shanni McDonald laughed and shrugged. They were a strange partnership, these two. Shanni, kindergarten director at twenty-seven, still looked about sixteen. Her assistant, Marg, was in her fifties, but they worked together brilliantly. There was only one disadvantage as far as Shanni was concerned. Marg’s age meant she was never backward in asking the hard questions.

      So now she was waiting for an answer, and there was only one to give.

      ‘Not yet.’

      ‘He will. I can feel it. And you’ll agree. ’Cos he has to be your perfect man.’

      ‘I guess.’

      ‘Isn’t he just what you’ve always wanted?’ Marg demanded. ‘Don’t you have a list?’ She held up one finger after another. ‘Lives locally and never wants to move. Loves animals and kids. Family man. Loves the country. Has room to stable horses and house half a dozen kids. Your families like each other. Everything’s right, then. John fits everything on the list.’

      ‘I guess he does,’ Shanni said, and tried to stop the note of doubt creeping into her voice.

      But Marg was astute enough to hear it. ‘So what’s wrong?’

      Shanni caught herself and shrugged. ‘Nothing, I guess… When he pops the question I’ll be the happiest girl in the world. After all, he is my perfect match. Where could I find a better partner in life than John?’

      CHAPTER ONE

      THE man who just might interfere with her wedding plans wasn’t talking marriage now. Nick had other things on his mind, all bleaker than the thought of an unwanted wife.

      ‘I don’t want to be a magistrate in Hicksville. I don’t wish to be within a hundred miles of this place—so why on earth am I here?’

      It was a good question, but there were sensible answers. Nick Daniels had one burning ambition and one only—to make high-court judge. Historically, once a lawyer joined Queens Counsel he could be appointed a judge without leaving the city, but that was hard to do now. There were new rules. No one wanted the country magistrate positions, and there was only one way to force aspiring judges to take them on.

      ‘If you want the plum job, then you need to do the hard work first,’ Nick had been told by the head of his chambers. ‘Politically there’s no other way. There’s a job going as local magistrate at Bay Beach. Great little fishing town, four hours’ drive from Melbourne. You’re