Ten million things went through his head, each one worse than the last.
His phone rang, and he scooped it up, his weak fingers clumsy on the plastic. “Did you find her?”
“It’s kinda weird, but she went into a vacant suite and hasn’t come out again. I can’t leave, but I’m sending someone to check it out.”
“What room number?”
Nate told him, then said, “I’ll call you back as soon as I know what’s going on.”
Torr didn’t tell him not to bother. He was going to go there himself and find her and then give her hell for sneaking off like that and scaring him. She didn’t have to lie and tell him she was leaving town to get a break from him. All she had to do was tell him she needed some time off. He would have understood.
He grabbed his sheathed sword, knowing he was going to need some kind of cane to keep from falling on his face. The suite was only one hall away, but as wobbly as he was, it was going to feel a hell of a lot farther.
John refused to give up on Meghan. He couldn’t imagine that any man capable of raising a daughter like her would also be capable of keeping her from living her own life.
There was only one way to find out.
Like some kind of creepy stalker, John followed her back to her home. As soon as she pulled into the garage, he hurried to the front door, hoping her father would be the one to answer so she wouldn’t have the chance to slam it in John’s face.
The man who answered the door came up only to John’s nose. He was thin, but not sickly, and peered up at John with a clear, questioning gaze. “Yes?”
“My name’s John Hawthorne. I’m a friend of Meghan’s from Minnesota. Mind if I come in?”
The man’s eyes lit up with interest and he smiled. “Of course. She doesn’t have many people stop by these days. Not like she used to when she was a kid. That girl had people parading through this house back then.”
“Dad, I’m home,” she called from somewhere off to the left.
“Just in time. Your friend’s here.”
Meghan stepped through a doorway and stopped cold. “You followed me home?” she asked in shock.
“I figured you wouldn’t invite me over, so I had to be rude and show up on my own.”
Her father took a protective step toward his daughter. “Is this man causing you trouble?”
“No, Dad. He just doesn’t know when to give up.”
“Can we talk?” asked John.
Sadness tinged her voice. “I’ve already said all there is to say.”
“Please. We can’t let it end like this.”
“Just go, John. This is already hard enough.”
Her father was listening to every word, watching each of them carefully. John hated that there was an audience for this, but that was her choice. Not his. He would have rather discussed this with her in private.
He knew before he said the words that she wasn’t going to like him discussing this in front of her father. “I can’t go until I know whether you might be carrying my baby. We didn’t use a damn thing, and you never said whether you were on birth control.”
Meghan’s eyes went wide with shock, as if she’d just realized what he had realized on the way over here: She might be pregnant. Why he hadn’t even thought about it before, he had no idea. He’d always been responsible. Hell, he had a condom in his wallet. He simply hadn’t thought about using it.
Her hand moved to her stomach in an unconscious gesture.
That was all the answer John needed. He found himself praying to God she was pregnant, because at this point, he was willing to resort to whatever slimy tactics he could find to keep her in his life. A baby would tie her to him and give him the time he needed to convince her she could love him for real—the way he knew he loved her.
The realization was a bit stunning, but it warmed him from the inside out and made his path forward as clear as day.
Meghan’s father crossed his arms over his chest and said, “Obviously, the two of you have things to discuss. I’ll be in the kitchen making dinner. For three.” He directed that last part at Meghan. “You go kicking out the father of my possible future grandkid before dinner and we’ll have words.”
He walked away, leaving the two of them alone in the foyer.
Meghan had gone pale and had pressed her hand to the wall as if to steady herself. “I hadn’t even considered . . . I’m sure I’m not ...”
“Pregnant,” he offered, bothered that she couldn’t even say the word. “You look like you’re going to fall over. Can we sit down?”
She nodded numbly and led him into the next room. She sank onto the couch, but rather than sitting across the room, as she’d probably intended, he sat down next to her.
John wasn’t a man to mince words, so he just blurted out, “I want to try to make things work with you. Come live with me.”
“I can’t. My dad.”
“Bring him, too. I have plenty of room. That cabin is just a spot I go to get away. I have a real house, too—big enough for all of us.”
“It’s too cold for Dad. His arthritis—”
“Will be greatly improved with all the exercise a grandchild will give me,” shouted her father from the kitchen. The man peeked around the corner, grinning like he was already planning what to do with a child they didn’t know existed yet.
In that moment, John decided he liked the man. He wouldn’t mind having him as a father-in-law at all.
“My work is here,” she said.
“I know lots of people up there. I can help you find a good job. Or I can give you one at my company.”