One Night, One Baby Read online




  Enjoy eight new titles from Harlequin Presents in August!

  Lucy Monroe brings you her next story in the fabulous ROYAL BRIDES series, and look out for Carole Mortimer’s second seductive Sicilian in her trilogy THE SICILIANS. Don’t miss Miranda Lee’s ruthless millionaire, Sarah Morgan’s gorgeous Greek tycoon, Trish Morey’s Italian boss and Jennie Lucas’s forced bride! Plus, be sure to read Kate Hardy’s story of passion leading to pregnancy in One Night, One Baby, and the fantastic Taken by the Maverick Millionaire by Anna Cleary!

  We’d love to hear what you think about Presents. E-mail us at [email protected] or join in the discussions at www.iheartpresents.com and www.sensationalromance.blogspot.com, where you’ll also find more information about books and authors!

  Private jets. Luxury cars. Exclusive five-star hotels.

  Designer outfits for every occasion and an

  entourage of staff to see to your every whim….

  In this brand-new collection, ordinary women

  step into the world of the superrich and are

  He’ll have her, but at what price?

  Available only from Harlequin Presents®.

  Kate Hardy

  ONE NIGHT, ONE BABY

  TORONTO • NEW YORK • LONDON

  AMSTERDAM • PARIS • SYDNEY • HAMBURG

  STOCKHOLM • ATHENS • TOKYO • MILAN • MADRID

  PRAGUE • WARSAW • BUDAPEST • AUCKLAND

  All about the author…

  Kate Hardy

  KATE HARDY lives on the outskirts of Norwich, England, with her husband, two small children, a dog and too many books to count! She wrote her first book at age six, when her parents gave her a typewriter for her birthday. She had the first of a series of sexy romances published at twenty-five, and swapped a job in marketing communications for freelance health journalism when her son was born, so she could spend more time with him. She’s wanted to write for Harlequin since she was twelve, and when she was pregnant with her daughter her husband pointed out that writing Harlequin Medical Romance™ books would be the perfect way to combine her interest in health issues with her love of good stories. Five years after selling her first Medical Romance novel, she branched out into writing for the Harlequin Presents series.

  Kate is always delighted to hear from readers. Do drop in to her Web site at www.katehardy.com.

  For Fi and Phil, godmothers extraordinaire,

  with much love

  CONTENTS

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  Copyright

  CHAPTER ONE

  PERFECT.

  Absolutely perfect.

  He was leaning against the stone pillar outside the office block, with his head tipped back slightly and his hands clasped just above his head, looking broodingly out onto the river Thames. His right knee was bent and his foot was flat against the wall. His dark, slightly curly hair looked as if he’d been running his fingers through it. And with that white shirt and dark suit trousers—no tie, no jacket, and the top button of his shirt undone—he looked tall, dark, handsome…and dangerous.

  Exactly what Jane was looking for.

  So why was she hanging back? Why wasn’t she marching up to him and…?

  ‘Because you’re a wimp,’ she told herself ruefully.

  Charlie, her housemate, would’ve done it. Kissed him, then smiled and wished him a nice day before sauntering off. Then again, Charlie had panache. She could have got away with it. Jane knew she couldn’t.

  It was a daft idea anyway. Whoever walked up to a tall, dark, handsome man—a complete stranger—and kissed him?

  All the same, he was gorgeous.

  On impulse, she took her mobile phone from her bag; OK, so she wasn’t brave enough to kiss him, but she’d take a photo. Show her housemates the man who really fitted her fantasy—the one she wished she’d been brave enough to kiss. The camera zoom wasn’t quite good enough, so she casually strolled closer. Close enough to get him right in the frame.

  And just as she pressed the button to take the picture he glanced her way and saw what she was doing.

  ‘Hey!’

  Oh, no. Oh, no, no, no.

  She backed away, but not fast enough, and the fingers of his right hand whipped down to encircle her wrist, hard as steel, trapping her where she stood. ‘What’s all this about?’

  ‘Nothing.’

  ‘You just took my photograph!’

  This was so embarrassing. It would be good if the earth could open up and swallow her.

  Preferably if time rewound first and she was swallowed up the very second before she’d taken that first step towards him. But, given that time travel wasn’t possible, now would do very nicely.

  He stared at her. He had the most beautiful greeny-grey eyes she’d ever seen, but right at that moment there wasn’t a hint of softness or sweetness in them. ‘Well?’ he asked.

  She shook her head. ‘Look, I apologise.’

  This was so not how it was meant to have happened.

  ‘Would you mind letting me go, now?’ She twisted her wrist in his grasp.

  ‘Go…?’ Then his gaze dropped to her wrist. ‘You still haven’t explained what that was all about.’

  ‘I’m sorry. It was an impulse. A stupid impulse.’ She switched the phone off and stuffed it back into her handbag. ‘And right now I would very much like to go and hide behind that huge potted palm over there before anyone else stares at me,’ she added, the last words uttered through gritted teeth.

  To her surprise, he actually smiled.

  It transformed his whole face. Turned him from the Heathcliff type into someone much more accessible. She was glad he was still holding onto her wrist, because she didn’t think her legs were going to hold her up for much longer. The tall, dark, handsome and brooding stranger had morphed into someone who was knee-bucklingly beautiful.

  Not to mention way, way out of her league.

  ‘I have a better idea,’ he said. ‘Coffee.’

  ‘Coffee?’ she repeated, nonplussed. Had she just missed something?

  ‘I have a feeling that this is going to be a long story. And it’d be much more civilised to hear it over coffee.’

  ‘But—’ she frowned, puzzled ‘—weren’t you taking a break from a meeting or something? At least, that’s what it looked like.’

  ‘It was an excruciatingly boring meeting.’ He lifted one shoulder in the most elegant shrug she’d ever seen. ‘My agent can deal with it for me.’

  Agent? Was he famous, then? Or very important?

  Of all the men outside all the buildings in all the world, she had to pick this one to photograph.

  ‘Um—don’t you need your jacket?’

  ‘I wasn’t wearing one in the first place.’ He strode off, giving her no choice but to match her pace to his. ‘But if it makes you feel better, I’ll call Harry.’

  ‘Harry?’

  ‘My agent. Actually, you’re right. It’s only polite to let them know I’m not going back. Excuse me a moment.’ He took a small, slim mobile phone from his pocket with his free hand and speed-dialled a number. ‘Harry? Yes. No. Sorry.’ He did at least sound genuinely contrite. ‘Call you later, OK? Yes. Thanks.’

  And by the time he’d slid the phone back into his pocket, they were in a café. Standing by the counter, ready to order.

  ‘Espresso? Cappuccino?’ he asked her.

>   ‘Skinny latte, please.’

  ‘Make that two, please,’ he said to the barista with a smile.

  She coughed and looked pointedly at his fingers.

  He inclined his head slightly and freed her wrist, paid for the coffees before she even had a chance to offer to buy them or at least pay her share, and then shepherded her over to a table overlooking the river.

  ‘So. First things first. Your name?’ he asked.

  ‘Jane.’

  ‘Jane what?’

  ‘Redmond.’

  He inclined his head in acknowledgement, but didn’t extend his hand. ‘Mitch Holland.’

  Mitch. Short for Mitchell, perhaps? Though that wasn’t a particularly English name, and his accent was most definitely English. Slightly on the posh side.

  He took a sip of coffee and leaned back in his chair. ‘So what was that all about?’

  ‘I’m sorry. It was just…’ She sighed. ‘Thank you for the latte, Mr Holland.’

  ‘Mitch,’ he corrected. Then looked at her. Waiting for her answer.

  Clearly he wasn’t going to let her off. She’d have to explain. ‘All right.’ She turned the mug of coffee round and round in her hands. ‘This is going to sound…’ she blew out a breath ‘…ridiculous. Childish. Stupid.’

  ‘Tell me anyway.’

  ‘I’m twenty-five today.’

  ‘Happy birthday. And?’

  God, he was relentless. The type who’d never let anything go. ‘I…’ She squirmed. Even saying it made her feel whiny. Which just wasn’t her. So she let the words go out in a rush. ‘Nobody remembered. My parents, my brother, my housemates—even my colleagues at work.’ Then she lifted her chin and stared him straight in the eye. Just so he knew she wasn’t whinging. ‘I’d already booked today as a holiday. Which left me with two choices: have a pity party and mope around the house, feeling sorry for myself, or spend the day doing things I’ve always wanted to do and never got round to doing. So I chose to enjoy my day.’

  ‘Doing things you’ve always wanted to do.’

  She could feel her skin heating. ‘Things most women have done by the age of twenty-five.’ And since she could guess what he was thinking, she threw the words at him. ‘If you must know, top of the list was kissing a tall, dark, handsome stranger. But I was too chicken and took your photo instead.’

  The corner of his mouth quirked. ‘You were going to kiss me?’

  She glared at him. Talk about maximum humiliation.

  ‘Interesting.’

  Before she realised his intentions, he’d pulled her onto his lap, slid one hand across the nape of her neck, and then his mouth was moving against hers. Teasing her. Tasting her. Tiny, nibbling kisses along her lower lip that incited her to open her mouth and let him deepen the kiss.

  When she did, the tip of his tongue slid against hers. Probing softly, skilfully. Telling her he wanted her. Showing her how much she wanted him.

  London faded. The noise in the café—people chattering, the clatter of cups against saucers, the thudding bass from someone’s earphones—just vanished. No sound. No light, because her eyes were firmly closed. And her remaining senses were focused entirely on Mitch: the feel of his mouth against hers. The light, citrussy scent of whatever shower gel he’d used that morning. The taste of his mouth, coffee mingled with pure male.

  It wasn’t until the kiss ended that she realised his other hand was flat against her back, holding her close, and her own hands were tangled in his hair. Soft, sexy, rumpled hair.

  Oh, hell.

  She didn’t do things like this.

  She’d never, ever been kissed so thoroughly that she’d actually forgotten where she was.

  And by a complete stranger, to boot.

  ‘Happy birthday,’ he said again, this time his tone much sweeter.

  ‘Thank you. I think.’ She levered herself off his lap and reclaimed her chair. And her dignity. Though she had a nasty feeling that her T-shirt was doing nothing to hide the erect state of her nipples.

  ‘So that’s what you’re going to do today? Go around kissing strangers?’

  There was definite amusement on his face now. Even though she knew he’d seen and it was too late, she folded her arms to hide her body’s arousal. ‘No. It was just one little thing on a list.’ Empty bravado, and she’d just bet he knew it. After all, she’d already been stupid enough to tell him it was top of her list.

  ‘So what else is on your list?’

  She shrugged. ‘A few things.’ Things a man like Mitch Holland wouldn’t be interested in.

  Ten minutes ago, Mitch had had no idea that Jane Redmond even existed.

  And now he’d kissed her. Properly. In public. Enough to be aroused.

  Mad.

  Really, he should just shut up. Drink his coffee, to be polite, and then say he needed to get back to his meeting.

  Ha. Who was he trying to kid? He’d bought the coffee. He didn’t have to be polite. He could walk out any time he chose.

  The fact he didn’t want to do that worried him.

  The fact he wanted to know more about Jane Redmond worried him even more.

  Relationships weren’t even under the ‘any other business’ section of his agenda, let alone anywhere higher up. So why wasn’t his mouth working on the same plans as the rest of his head? Why was it asking her, ‘Such as?’

  She frowned. ‘Why do you want to know?’

  His mouth was really on a roll. ‘Seeing as I was involved with the first item.’ A kiss. A kiss, he realised with shock, that he wanted to repeat. ‘And things are often more fun when you do them with someone else.’

  ‘Are you inviting yourself along?’

  Absolutely not. No, no, and thrice no.

  ‘Yes.’

  She looked at him. ‘No way would you do the things I want to do.’

  This was his get-out. This was where he said, ‘Yes, Jane, you’re probably right. Have a nice birthday. Have a nice life,’ and got the hell out of here.

  But this was the first time in years he’d been challenged like this. The first time since, oh, he couldn’t remember when, that he’d been intrigued by someone. And he wasn’t ready to let that feeling go, just yet. So he said, ‘Try me.’

  She lifted her chin. ‘All right. Paddling in the fountain in Trafalgar Square.’

  ‘Sure. Though it means we’ll have to evade the fountain monitors.’

  She had one of those open faces that told you exactly what was going on in her head. Right now, that was pure puzzlement. Just to confirm it, she asked, ‘What fountain monitors?’

  ‘The people whose job it is to make sure nobody dips as much as a toe in the water. I think you’re still allowed to smile, and possibly sit on the edge and have your photo taken. But no paddling.’

  ‘Oh.’ She was clearly aiming for cool and casual, but he could see the disappointment in her face. She flapped a dismissive hand. ‘So that’s another one crossed off, then.’

  He shrugged. ‘Not necessarily. I can keep a look out for the fountain monitors and distract them, if you’re really set on it being Trafalgar Square. Or…’ He really ought to shut up. But this was irresistible. The idea of spending a day doing things he wouldn’t normally be doing. With a perfect stranger. Someone who didn’t know him, wouldn’t judge him. A day when he could maybe forget the past. Just be.

  ‘Or?’ she prompted.

  ‘There’s a fountain just a bit further up the South Bank from here. You can stand right in the middle with a wall of water going round you.’

  She scoffed. ‘You wouldn’t do that.’

  Was she calling him stuffy? ‘What makes you think that?’

  ‘Your shirt’s expensive. Not something you just picked up from a chain store.’

  How did she know that?

  ‘And if I look under the table,’ she continued, ‘I just bet I’ll see a pair of handmade Italian shoes.’

  ‘So?’ he challenged.

  ‘So you’re not dressed for the
things I want to do.’

  ‘Hmm.’ He looked at her. She was wearing a pastel-coloured T-shirt. Jeans? He hadn’t really noticed her clothes when he’d dragged her off here—he’d been working purely on impulse. All he’d taken in were the facts that she had blue eyes, light brown hair cut in a short bob, was around six inches shorter than his own six feet, and she was very much the girl-next-door type.

  The kind of woman he didn’t want to get involved with.

  The fact he’d just kissed her stupid in public was beside the point.

  He took a quick look under the table. ‘Linen trousers and loafers. Hmm. You’re not planning on doing anything too messy, then.’

  ‘I’m wearing comfortable clothes suitable for walking round the city on a warm April day,’ she corrected.

  He indicated his shirt. ‘And who says this isn’t comfortable?’ Even if it was a handmade shirt. A decadent luxury that made being trapped in the city just about bearable.

  It was her turn to look under the table. ‘I was right about the shoes. You’re not going to mess them up in a fountain.’

  ‘Watch me,’ he said, rising to the challenge. ‘The fountain’s first. What else?’

  ‘Climbing to the top of St Paul’s and whispering in the Whispering Gallery.’

  This time he couldn’t suppress the grin. ‘How old were you when you made this list?’

  ‘Not saying.’

  ‘Fifteen,’ he guessed.

  Correctly, because her face turned the prettiest shade of pink. She blushed to the roots of her hair. And Mitch had to stop himself wondering if she blushed all over.

  ‘I told you it was stupid,’ she muttered, looking away.

  ‘Actually,’ he said, meaning it, ‘it sounds like fun. You’re on. What else?’

  She stared at him. ‘You’re serious about this?’

  ‘As serious as you are.’

  ‘But y—’

  ‘My time’s my own,’ he cut in gently, anticipating her objection.

  ‘And you don’t have a—well—a significant other who’d mind?’

  ‘I don’t have a significant other.’ He had. Once. But—