Revealed: His Secret Child

She'd Wanted To Tell Him.

But she decided there was no point telling him before the child was born, and then decided to wait until Ethan was sleeping through the night so she had a clear head, and then… The longer she left it, the harder it became.

“Pack your bags.” Max surged from his chair, strode back to the window. “My son will know me. He'll grow up with his father. I'm seeing to that today.”

Gillian gripped the table as though that could anchor her. “I don't understand what you're saying.”

“I'm saying,” he said quietly, “that we're getting married.”

 

Don't miss a single book in this series!

The Takeover

For better, for worse. For business, for pleasure.
These tycoons have vowed to have it all!

Claimed: The Pregnant Heiress
by Day Leclaire

Seduced: The Unexpected Virgin
by Emily McKay

Revealed: His Secret Child
by Sandra Hyatt

Bought: His Temporary Fiancée
by Yvonne Lindsay

Exposed: Her Undercover Millionaire
by Michelle Celmer

Acquired: The CEO's Small-Town Bride
by Catherine Mann

 

Dear Reader,

I love continuity series—six or so individually terrific books linked so that one teases you for the next, and the next lets you revisit the characters you grew to know and love in the previous one.

This is the first continuity book I've had the pleasure of writing and it's been a fabulous experience working with the authors who've written the other five books. I'm really looking forward to reading all of the stories to see how everything finally plays out.

As for Max and Gillian, whose story this is, it was fun getting to know them. Gillian tried so hard to make the best decisions for the best reasons, even if that reasoning was one Max vehemently disagreed with. And as for Max—a man used to being in absolute control of his life—he never expected a family of his own. Even less did he expect to fall so hard and so completely for Gillian.

Sometimes having our expectations thwarted is the perfect solution.

Enjoy!

Sandra

SANDRA HYATT
REVEALED: HIS SECRET CHILD

To Roberta Brown and Charles Griemsman.

Thank you.

Books by Sandra Hyatt

Silhouette Desire

Having the Billionaire's Baby
#1956

The Magnate's Pregnancy Proposal
#1991

His Bride for the Taking
#2022

Under the Millionaire's Mistletoe
#2056
   “Mistletoe Magic”

Revealed: His Secret Child #2072

SANDRA HYATT

After completing a business degree, traveling and then settling into a career in marketing, Sandra Hyatt was relieved to experience one of life's eureka! moments while on maternity leave—she discovered that writing books, although a lot slower, was just as much fun as reading them.

She knows life doesn't always hand out happy endings and figures that's why books ought to. She loves being along for the journey with her characters as they work around, over and through the obstacles standing in their way.

Sandra has lived in both the U.S. and England and currently lives near the coast in New Zealand with her high school sweetheart and their two children.

You can visit her at www.sandrahyatt.com.

 

Dear Reader,

Yes, it's true. We're changing our name! After more than twenty-five years of being part of Harlequin Enterprises, Silhouette Books will officially seal the merger by taking the company's name.

So if you notice a few changes on the covers starting April 2011—Silhouette Special Edition becoming Harlequin Special Edition, Silhouette Desire becoming Harlequin Desire, and Silhouette Romantic Suspense becoming Harlequin Romantic Suspense—don't be concerned.

We'll continue to have the same fantastic authors, wonderful stories, eye-catching covers and emotional, compelling reads. We're just going to be moving under the overall company name, which will make us even easier for you to see in the stores, on the internet and wherever you usually find us!

So look for the new logo, but remember, beneath the image will be the same promise of romantic stories of love, passion, adventure, family and a whole lot more. Just the way you like them!

Sincerely,

The Editors at Harlequin Books

One

T
his time she'd gone too far.

Max Preston looked from the newspaper spread before him to the glittering sea beyond the window and made up his mind. This time he wasn't going to give her the opportunity to ignore his calls. To ignore
him.

His chair scraped across the parquet flooring of the Beach and Tennis Club's breakfast restaurant as he stood from his table. Leaving a tip for his waitress and his just delivered omelet untouched, he took one last sip of his coffee and left.

So much for the first Saturday off he'd had in months.

He hadn't known he was going to fill his morning. He did now.

A search on his phone as he strode to his car turned up her address. Tossing the parochial, two-bit rag she worked for—the proverbial thorn in his side—onto the passenger seat, he slid into his seat and eased the Maserati out of the club's parking lot.

The first time he'd seen Gillian Mitchell's picture and byline in the
Seaside Gazette
and realized that she was here in Vista del Mar, he'd felt an unexpected surge of pleasure and triumph, like when he found something he didn't realize he'd lost and was missing. A hundred-dollar bill in his coat pocket—but better.

It only took the seconds he'd needed to read her first biting paragraph for those feelings to vaporize.

Since that moment, he'd been trying to view her presence here and her articles with purely professional detachment.

Clearly, she wasn't doing the same. Her attacks on Cameron Enterprises and, in particular, Max's boss, Rafe Cameron, might, to the uninformed reader, appear objective, but they were personal and directed at Max. He was sure of it.

On the seat beside him, her opinion piece lay face-up. At the first set of lights he flipped the paper over so that he didn't have to see the one-sided article that constituted her opinion.

A call came through on his cell. “Max speaking,” he said into his earpiece.

“Have you seen it?” Rafe wasted no words.

“I'm dealing with it.” As head of PR for Cameron Enterprises it was Max's job to smooth the waters, to make sure the people of Vista Del Mar saw Rafe's takeover of Worth Industries—a microchip manufacturer and one of the town's biggest employers—in the best possible light.

And Gillian, it seemed, was doing everything in her power to achieve the opposite result.

“Is it libel?” Rafe asked.

“It's close. I'm on my way to see her now. I'll let her know how seriously we're taking this. That our lawyers will be examining this piece as well as every word she's written to date, and every word she will write in the future on anything related to this subject.”

“Good.” Rafe rang off.

At one time, Max had nothing but the highest respect for Gillian's doggedness. But when she started making his boss the repeated target of her campaign, that doggedness looked a lot more like intransigence and plain old sour grapes.

Because she and Max had history.

But the way he remembered it, it had been good history. And it had ended cleanly. Six months into their relationship, when she'd casually dropped the words
children
and
marriage
into a conversation, he'd known he had to end it. It was only fair. He didn't do marriage and kids, they hadn't been in his plans. Still weren't. And till that moment he hadn't thought they'd been in hers.

So he'd broken it off with her. On the spot. It was the only honest thing to do. And he'd thought she'd taken it well. There had been no drama. She'd calmly agreed with him that they clearly had different needs from a relationship, and walked away without so much as a backward glance.

He hadn't heard from her or of her in the three and a half years since then. Till these opinion pieces and her supposed factual, objective articles. So now he was thinking maybe she hadn't taken it well. Maybe she had merely bided her time till the opportunity to strike back arose.

The ten-minute coastal drive gave Max time to calm down so that by the time he reached her place—an older Spanish-style home set several blocks back from the beach—he was only annoyed instead of furious.

She was nothing he couldn't deal with.

And, if he was honest, he was just a little curious, too. They'd had some good times. Had she changed in the intervening years? Were her eyes as green as he remembered?

He strode the path to her door, knocked firmly and waited, standing where she'd have a clear view of him through the glass bordering the door. He could just make out the beat of
the rock music she used to enjoy and had a flash of memory, of Gillian swaying and sashaying around her L.A. apartment. The music stopped.

Beyond a row of orange flowering bushes, a blue hatchback with tinted windows sat in the driveway. Max paused before knocking again. She used to drive a sporty, two-door soft top.

Had she married, as she'd been so clearly keen to do? The thought gave him pause. The fact that she hadn't changed her name didn't mean she hadn't gotten her wish. The hatchback had a definite family-car aura to it.

It didn't matter. The only thing that concerned him was the paper he held and the inflammatory words she was writing in it. As he lifted his hand to knock again, the door swung open halfway.

For a moment, as they looked at each other, the world stopped. For just that moment, he forgot why he was here. Sunlight caught her chestnut-brown hair, brought a luminescence to her creamy skin. She was so hauntingly familiar, and yet, not.

“Max?” She blinked, regrouped. “What are you doing here?” Her words, the shock and the underlying reluctance in them, got the world spinning nicely again. He hadn't expected or wanted warmth, but he also hadn't expected fear, and that was definitely what he saw in her wide, green eyes and heard in the catch in her throaty voice. She didn't want him here.

“We need to talk.”

“If you want to talk to me, phone.” She swung the door.

Max put his hand and foot out to halt its momentum. “You'll see me now. I tried phoning last week, remember? That didn't work. This is what you get when you don't answer my calls.”

“I was going to call you Monday. We can make an appointment. I'll see you during normal working hours.”

Her eyes were just as green as he remembered. It was the emotion he read in them now that was different. Perhaps the defensiveness was caused by conscience about the things she was writing. “And since when have you kept normal working hours?”

“Since…” A look he couldn't interpret stole over her face. “Since I realized that work isn't the be-all and end-all of everything. Which means that, unlike yours, my weekends are sacred. I like to relax, to devote my time to…other things. It most definitely means that you're not a welcome intrusion.”

Max stayed precisely where he was. He remembered her as being direct but beneath this morning's directness he couldn't help but feel that she was hedging. She was on the defensive. Which worked for him. “You're not the only one who values their weekends,” he said, “so let me come in, we'll talk, straighten a few things out and then I'll leave. But until we've talked, I'm not going anywhere.”

Gillian glanced at the slim watch encircling her wrist then over her shoulder as though deciding. “Five minutes, Max. That's all I can give you.” She stepped back from the door, opened it just wide enough for him to enter.

It was a decision that pleased him. “Five minutes is all we'll need. So long as you see reason.” He stepped inside, got his first proper look at her. A white tank top clung gently to the curve of her breasts. The press of her nipples against the soft fabric advertised the fact that she wore no bra, diminishing the available oxygen in the room and threatening to distract him absolutely. For the first time Max reconsidered the wisdom of catching her unawares, first thing in the morning, in her home.

Drawstring yoga pants rode low on the flare of her hips. Her pale feet were bare. He was guessing she wasn't long out of bed. And he was
not
going to follow that train of thought any further, because combining the words
Gillian
and
bed
even if only in his mind would almost certainly derail his thought process.

Though still slender, she was maybe a little curvier than he remembered. There was a new softness to her body that was most definitely missing from the guarded expression on her face.

She bit her lip, something he'd only ever seen her do when she was nervous, then gestured to a room just off the entranceway. She stood blocking any view he might have had of any of the rest of her house while he stepped into the formal living room she'd indicated. How did she manage to look so unyielding and yet so tempting?

A sofa and two comfortable-looking floral armchairs surrounded a coffee table that was bare except for a flowering peace lily. The curtained window overlooked a private, palm-filled garden.

“Sit down.” She pointed to one of the armchairs. “I'll be back in a moment.” She headed for the door.

“One thing.”

She hesitated.

“Are you married?” He hadn't meant that to be the first question he asked her.

“No.”

He shouldn't feel relief, he had no right, and he was no hypocrite. Not normally. Business. This was purely business. That was all there would ever be between them.

She left the room and Max had to drag his gaze from the sway of her hips in the soft draping fabric and turn back to the living room. The door shut with a firm click behind her.

He looked about the room that seemed both a little old-fashioned and far too tidy, in an almost sterile way. The Gillian he remembered used to have half-read newspapers, magazines and books stacked and stashed around any and all of her living spaces.

Seemed she'd changed. Or that this was what his grandmother used to refer to as her company room. It certainly wasn't where the music he'd heard or the scent of coffee he'd caught as he'd stepped into the house had been coming from.

He placed his copy of the
Seaside Gazette
on the coffee table so that her opinion piece was uppermost, reminding him to refocus on his sole reason for being here. Not to speculate on Gillian's life.

True to her word she was back in just a few moments, once again shutting the door carefully behind her. The soft tank top and yoga pants had been replaced by hip-hugging, multipocketed cargo pants and an olive-green T-shirt. Thankfully, for the sake of his focus, it seemed she wore a bra beneath the T-shirt. She'd pulled her lush hair back into a high ponytail.

She looked like the heroine from one of the computer games they used to play—ready for combat.

The subtle charge of anticipation swept through him. “This morning's opinion piece.” That was why he was here. Not to find out if she was married or how she'd been doing in the past three and half years, or…if she wanted to go out to dinner tonight. There was, after all, more than one way to skin a cat.

No. Not going there again.
Max pulled himself up short.

Her kick-ass demeanor had beguiled and fooled him once into thinking it meant she didn't want those things he shied away from, that she wasn't looking for emotional intimacy and a future together. And Max was a man who learned from his mistakes.

Gillian perched on the edge of the second armchair, as though ready to leap back to her feet. Her expression was shuttered. Still, just because they were on opposite sides of
this issue didn't mean he couldn't enjoy locking horns with her. “It's libelous,” he said quietly, leaning toward her.

“No, it's not.” She shook her head, smiling. “It's an opinion piece. And every opinion is backed up by cold, hard facts.”

“You call labeling Rafe Cameron an angry teenager who's grown into an angry man with an ax to grind and the money to grind it well, a fact?”


I
didn't call him that. It's a direct quote.”

“From a real person?”

“Of course.” He'd pushed a button with that one. “As real as Emma Worth was.”

And she pushed a button right back. Max's jaw tightened. Emma Worth's father, Ronald, had founded Worth Industries and was revered in the town. So when Gillian had quoted his skeptical daughter in a piece two months ago, the townsfolk had sat up and taken notice. And not in a good way. In the interim, Max had brought the focus back round to the good work Rafe was doing in the town, specifically the charity, Hannah's Hope, he'd founded to improve the literacy skills of the town's workforce, many of whom were migrant workers with limited formal education.

He had scored something of a coup in using Rafe and his half-brother Chase's connections to secure the involvement of superstar musician Ward Miller. The community was justifiably enthusiastic, almost excited. And interest in the upcoming fundraising gala was strong and building. Negotiations with a number of other celebrities were proceeding nicely.

But celebrities were notoriously sensitive about their public images. They were rightly cautious about what and whom they were linked with.

Gillian and her opinion pieces could end up scaring some of his best prospects off for no good reason. “You at least gave Emma a name. I had no doubt she was real. Today's source…” He shrugged to express his doubts.

“Emma insisted I use her name because she knew it would give weight and credence to her comments. The source I used for today's piece didn't feel the same way. And I agreed with him. But that doesn't mean he's not real or that he didn't have specific, verified examples to back his opinion up.”

Max leaned back in his chair and studied her, trying to gauge just how sure of her position she was. “You're skating on wafer-thin ice, Gillian. Our lawyers will be taking a good hard look at each and every word you've written.”

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