A Debt Paid in Passion

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Book: A Debt Paid in Passion Read Online Free PDF
Author: Dani Collins
a remark that he hadn’t expected this child; he certainly wasn’t ready to contemplate more.
    * * *
    Three months later, Raoul was taking steps to ensure he was prepared for the birth, looking ahead to clear his calendar in six weeks. He rarely took time off and found even Christmas with his mother an endurance test of agitation to get back to work. Anticipation energized him for this vacation, though.
    Because it was a new challenge? Or because he would see Sirena?
    He shut down the thought. The baby was his sole interest. He was eager to find out the sex, know it was healthy and have final confirmation it was his.
    Not that he had many doubts on any of that. True to their agreement, Sirena had sent him updates on the baby’s progress. Nothing concerning her own, he had noted with vague dissatisfaction, but he expected he would be informed if there were problems. The second scan later in the pregnancy had not revealed an obvious male, so he’d assumed the baby was female and found himself taken with the vision of a daughter possessing dark curls and beguiling green eyes.
    As for paternity, to his mind, the fact Sirena had signed made the baby his. The final test after the birth was a formality that would activate the arrangements, that was all.
    But that was a month and a half from now and he had people to organize. People who were abuzz with the news that the driven head of their multinational software corporation was taking an extended absence.
    Only a handful of his closest and most trusted subordinates knew the reason, and even they didn’t know the mother’s identity. The scandalous circumstances of his father’s infidelity and suicide had made Raoul a circumspect man. Nothing about his involvement with Sirena, their affair, her being fired for embezzlement or her pregnancy was public knowledge. When people asked—and she’d made enough of an impression on associates and colleagues that many did—he only said she was no longer with the company.
    Part of him continued to resent that loss, especially when the assistants he kept trying out turned out to be so trying. The highly recommended Ms. Poole entered the meeting with a worried pucker in her magic-marker brows.
    “I said life or death, Ms. Poole,” he reminded, clinging to patience.
    “She’s very insistent,” the spindly woman said, bringing a mobile phone to him.
    “Who?” He tamped down on asking, Sirena? Her tenacity was something he’d come to respect, if not always appreciate.
    “Molly. About your agreement with Ms. Abbott.”
    He didn’t know any Molly, but something preternatural set an unexpected boot heel on his chest, sharp and compressing, causing pressure to balloon out in radiant waves. Odd. There was no reason to believe this was bad news. Sirena hadn’t contacted him directly since he’d left her looking wrung out and cross at her flat that day, neither of them particularly satisfied with the outcome of their negotiations, but possessing a binding document between them.
    “Yes?” He took the phone in a hand that became nerveless and clumsy. As he stood and moved from the table, he was aware of the ripple of curiosity behind him. At the same time, despite everything that had passed between them, he experienced a flick of excitement. His mind conjured an image of Sirena in one of those knitted skirt-and-sweater sets she used to wear.
    “Mr. Zesiger? I’m Sirena Abbott’s midwife. She asked me to inform you that the baby is on its way.”
    “It’s early,” he protested.
    “Yes, they had to induce—” She cut herself off.
    He heard muffled words and held his breath as he strained to hear what was said.
    She came back. “I’ve just been informed it will be an emergency cesarean.”
    “Where is she?” he demanded while apprehension wrapped around him like sandpaper, leaving him abraded and raw.
    “I understood you were only to be informed and that a paternity test be ordered, not that you would attend—”
    “Save me
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