funnyâshe couldâve fallen in.â
His smile faded. In a blink he was back to the distant, narrow-eyed businessman. âI wouldnât have you drop her.â
She suppressed the flare of resentment at his suggestion that sheâd almost dropped Jennie, when heâd been the one to take the baby out of the stroller in the first place. âYou might not have been able to stop it.â
âI wouldâve done everything in my power.â
Nick placed one foot on the bank, Jennie still squirming in his hold. âHey, stop it, miss. You will end up going swimming if you carry on like that!â
âNick!â
At her warning shriek, Nick glanced up.
âLook out!â Candace was almost incoherent with apprehension. âThe geese.â
He jerked his head around as Jennieâs fingers jabbed in the direction of a goose whoâd silently paddled up behind them. He swung the baby away, but it was too late. Jennieâs wail rent the air.
Rushing to the waterâs edge, Candace blocked his way as Nick clambered back onto the bank.
Jennie was screaming, her face cherry-red with protest, her hand limp.
Candace reached for the pecked fingers. âLet me see!â Her head bent over Jennieâs reddened finger. âOuch.â
âThe skinâs not broken.â
His words set a torch to her already frayed emotions. âDonât be so callous!â Nick started to object, but she overrode him. âItâs going to need cleaning. Heaven knows what mightâve been in that birdâs beak.â
âThe café has a bathroom where you can clean it up, and Iâve got a first-aid kit with some antiseptic in the trunk of my car.â
Candace glared at him. âIâve got a rudimentary first-aid kit in the strollerâenough to deal with this.â She drew a shuddering breath, stunned at how quickly everything had happenedâand at the extent of her fear. âJennie should not have been taken out of the stroller.â
Nick stared at Candace in disbelief. â Now itâs my fault? She wanted to get out.â
âShe could see perfectly well from where she was.â
âYouâre overreacting,â he said tersely.
A fresh wave of anger flooded her. âShe got hurt because of you. â
âOh, please. That kind of thing is a normal part of growing up. It happens.â He was studying her in a way that made her grow tense. âYouâre shaken up. Iâll take Jennie and clean her up.â
What was he getting at? Was he implying she was too emotional to do her job, to look after Jennie? âIâll do it! You can bring the stroller and the first-aid kit.â
To Candaceâs distress, Jennieâs wails grew louder as they stormed along the winding pathway up the rise to the café. The little body huddled against her was rigid with outrage.
Â
As he waited for Candace to return from tending to Jennieâs pecked finger, Nick couldnât stop thinking about Jennieâs puckered-up little face glaring at him accusingly over Candaceâs shoulder as sheâd been borne away.
Candace was right.
Jennie had been hurt.
And he couldâveâshouldâveâavoided it.
Sometime in the past twenty-four hours heâd connected with Jennie. Nick silently promised himself that in the future he was going to make sure he spent more time with the baby soinnocent of the treachery surrounding her conception. And, as little as he wanted to admit it right now, he had Candace to thank for opening his eyes to the fact that his lifeâwhat was important in itâwas getting away from him.
By the time Candace and Jennie joined him at the table in the sunny sheltered spot outside the café, Jennie had stopped crying. After Candace secured her in the stroller, the baby lay back and focused intently on the Micky Mouse Band-Aid wrapped around her finger.
Nick winced. âIs it very
Patrick Gale
Barbara Taylor Bradford
Charity Parkerson
Tracie Peterson
Jill Churchill
Jerry Byrum
RP Dahlke
Carolyn Keene
Eric Marier
Siobhan Parkinson