Second Chance Lover – An Age Gap Surprise Pregnancy Read Online Natasha L. Black

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Erotic, Romance Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 73
Estimated words: 67675 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 338(@200wpm)___ 271(@250wpm)___ 226(@300wpm)
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But nothing helped.

Nothing, and no one, could.

Except maybe the recipient of the quarter million dollars.

“No,” I said aloud, realizing she’d been waiting for me to reply. “Thank you, but I have it covered.”

I updated her on the search so far. She flinched at the sum I’d sent into the shadows. “A quarter million, Landon? Was that wise?”

I realized that, despite sitting in my ten-million-dollar penthouse, my mother had no idea of my net worth. I spent a quarter million on Con’s bachelor party a few months ago. I’d spend ten times that to get Cami and Emma back. “I think it will pay off,” I said rather than try to make her see what she didn’t want to.

A faint smile tugged at her mouth. “You sound like your father.”

Her words landed like a blow. “I’m the opposite of my father,” I spat before I could moderate my tone. “I’d empty out my bank account, sell off everything, to get my child back. He just walked away from his.”

She lifted her shoulders. “Maybe he just walked away. Maybe he didn’t.”

I stared at her. She stared back.

“He walked away,” I repeated slowly. “That’s what you always told me.”

Her brow wrinkled. “No, I didn’t. I said he left.”

“It’s the same thing. Walking away and leaving are the same thing.”

The English teacher in her came right out. “The denotations might be the same, but the connotation is different. Walking away from something implies giving it up completely, for good. Leaving, on the other hand, is an action that has an opposite. I said he left, not that he wouldn’t return. I really thought he would.”

Amazement and incredulity spread through me as I stared at my mother. It had been thirty-five years, and she hadn’t once let on that she expected him to come back. That she was worried when she didn’t. She just put it all in a box and shoved it away. Just like Cami said I did.

“He loved you,” my mother added, her voice stiffening the way it always did when she was called on to show emotion. “You knew that.”

I shook my head slowly. “No, I didn’t.”

“Yes, you did,” she insisted. “Don’t you remember when he coached your little league team? You two were so close.”

“Until he walked away.”

“Left.”

I rose and walked to the kitchen. I needed a drink. “Explain it to me,” I said when I returned with two glasses – whiskey for me, red wine for her. “If he loved me so much, why didn’t he come back?”

“I assumed he met a bad end. You know your father. He was always chasing pots of gold. He never wanted to earn anything.” My mother sipped the expensive wine and wrinkled her nose. Replaced the glass on the table. “He’d always say, ‘I think it’ll pay off, Nancy. I really do.’ I don’t need to tell you that it never did.”

I was amazed by the breadth of things my mother hadn’t felt she needed to tell me. I knew if I said anything, her brow would crease, and she would say in a faintly annoyed tone, “I taught you critical thinking and how to infer so that I wouldn’t have to spoon feed you every little thing.”

“He loved me,” I repeated.

She nodded.

“He meant to come back.”

She nodded again, that faint line of annoyance forming between her eyebrows like I was a particularly slow student.

I stood up again. I wasn’t sure how I felt. Frustrated, irritated, and strangely, relieved. I hadn’t come from the kind of man who would abandon his family for no reason. My father had loved me. He’d meant to come back.

“But if he loved me so much, why did he leave in the first place?” I asked abruptly, thinking of Cami.

For the first time since she arrived, my mother’s face softened. I saw that she understood the question underneath the question. “People leave for all kinds of reasons,” she said. “Obviously there are selfish reasons, but sometimes people leave because they think it’s the right thing to do. Sometimes they think it’s the only thing to do.”

I was silent, absorbing this.

“For what it’s worth, I think Cami must have thought it was the only thing to do.”

I looked at my mother, waiting for her to elaborate.

“Well, surely you could see she loved you,” she said, that irritated line appearing again.

I hadn’t. Not really.

“People these days don’t know how to read between the lines,” my mother said, shaking her head. “No one pays attention anymore.”

Before I could say anything, a notification came in on my phone. Encrypted. It was from the source I’d hired to find Cami and Emma. I couldn’t read all of it yet. I had to get on my computer to use the decoding software, but the first word was promising.

Update.

“Thank you for coming by,” I said. “Really.”


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