The Secret Sin
whether she’d tried to preserve the fiction that she was fifteen.
    She also wondered how closely Ryan had looked at the form.
    “And you live in Pittsburgh?” Annie asked.
    “Not in Pittsburgh exactly,” Lindsey said. “We live in Fox Chapel. It’s near Pittsburgh.”
    “Any brothers or sisters?”
    Lindsey narrowed her eyes. “Are you going to ask my phone number next?”
    Annie had been attempting to fill a desperate need to find out more about Lindsey, but that wasn’t what the girl had asked. “I already called your parents.”
    “But…but how did you get the number?”
    “The form in Dr. Whitmore’s office.”
    From the shocked expression on Lindsey’s face, she hadn’t considered that possibility.
    “I left your parents a message,” Annie continued. “They’re probably worried sick about you.”
    “They don’t even know I’m gone,” Lindsey said. “Dad took Timmy and Teddy to Kennywood, and Gretchel’s working. She’s supposed to pick me up at a friend’s house at five o’clock.”
    Kennywood, Annie knew, was a popular amusement park near Pittsburgh that was one of the oldest in the nation. “Who’s Gretchel?”
    “My stepmother.”
    “Are Timmy and Teddy your brothers?” Annie asked.
    “Sort of,” Lindsey said. “I’m adopted. They’re not.”
    Annie bit her lower lip to find it trembling. Lindsey had been matter-of-fact in stating she was adopted, but she considered Annie’s father to be her uncle and not her grandfather. Lindsey obviously didn’t know the truth about her birth, and it wasn’t Annie’s place to tell her.
    “That doesn’t make them any less your brothers,” Annie said.
    Lindsey blew air out her nose, but stayed quiet. Neither did it seem as though she planned to eat any more of her sandwich. Yet she needed nourishment. She was too thin and still pale enough that she looked as though she might topple off the stool.
    “You could have another dizzy spell if you don’t eat,” Annie said. “You don’t want to go back to the doctor, do you?”
    Lindsey’s blue eyes flashed. “At least Dr. Whitmore was nice to me. If I came to visit his father, he wouldn’t make me go back to Pittsburgh.”
    Her words were like blows. Annie had tried to forget about the daughter she’d given up, but now that she’d met Lindsey she realized how miserably she’d failed. The clawing need to know the girl was as fierce as the unconditional love that nearly overwhelmed her. She couldn’t give in to that love without risking that somebody would figure out Lindsey was her birth daughter. If only the girl knew how desperately Annie wanted to keep her around. Annie swallowed, pushing words past the lump in her throat. “It’s for your own good.”
    “Annie Sublinski,” a deep male voice announced from behind them. “What brings you off the river?”
    Annie swiveled on her stool to see Michael Donahue moving toward them, his tall frame dressed in jeans and a work shirt, his thick, dark hair slightly sweaty. Since moving back to Indigo Springs earlier in the summer, he’d gone into business with the Pollocks, who owned a local construction company.
    She’d always felt a certain kinship toward Michael because he’d been another of the outcasts of Indigo Springs High. An incident at this very snack counter had landed him in juvenile detention. Fathers, including hers, had warned their daughters to stay away from him.
    He’d since redeemed himself in dramatic fashion, although very few people knew he was the hero who’d rescued a child from drowning during an Indigo River Rafters trip earlier that summer. “Hey, Michael,” Annie said, then turned to Lindsey, preparing to introduce her.
    “Wait a minute. Don’t tell me why you’re here. Let me guess.” Michael placed three fingers on his forehead and closed his eyes before snapping them open. “It has something to do with a young brunette.”
    Lindsey giggled at Michael’s antics, but Annie’s breath caught. Did
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