The Mogul's Reluctant Bride
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Synopsis
Following the deaths of her sister and brother-in-law, Kaya Brehna is awarded custody of their three children. To avoid financial ruin, she must move them to Palm Beach where her successful career in interior decorating can provide financial security. Her plans are, however, thwarted by New Hampshire business mogul, Bryce Fontaine, who is determined to keep his godchildren in Granite Falls at all costs—even emotional blackmail.
Ever since his family was killed, Bryce Fontaine has been plagued by torment and regret. Five years later, his three godchildren are the closest thing he has to a family. But when their parents’—his dearest friends—sudden deaths threaten their close-knit relationship, Bryce would be damned before he allows some stranger—aunt, or not—to uproot them from the only home they’ve ever known, and move them a thousand miles away from him.
Can Bryce and Kaya find a way to work together for the good of the children whom they both love, or will the pain in each of their hearts keep this blended family divided?
Release date: May 10, 2013
Print pages: 320
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Behind the book
The Mogul’s Reluctant Bride is a tear-jerker, so have your tissues handy. Bryce and Kaya’s story starts out on a sorrowful note, with each butting heads with the other. But as all romances go, they eventually find a way to work together and fall into love so deeply, every woman will wish she were Kaya with a sexy Bryce by her side.
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The Mogul's Reluctant Bride
Ana E Ross
“There must be some mistake, Steven.” Kaya Brehna’s hands tightened around the arm of the chair.
“I really wish there was, Kaya.”
“They— they left nothing?”
“Nothing,” the man behind the mahogany desk reiterated with a shake of his head.
Kaya pressed an unsteady hand to her chest. Her heart raced with fear, and her mind swam in a pool of confusion and uncertainty. Even though she’d never had a close relationship with Lauren, when Steven had called with the news of her sister and brother-in-law’s deaths, and that they had named her guardian of their children, Kaya had dropped everything to be with her nephew and two nieces.
Up until a minute ago, she had every reason to believe that nine-year-old Jason, four-year-old Alyssa, and two-month-old Anastasia were financially secure. She hadn’t met the children until yesterday, but the minute she saw them, Kaya knew she could never abandon them. She was all set to put her life on hold to nurse them through this most grievous time of their lives, but how on earth could she do that after what the executor of Michael and Lauren’s will just told her?
They died bankrupt.
Nothing made any sense.
Forcing back the hysteria in her throat, Kaya struggled to her feet, and braced her hands against the edge of the desk. “Steven, I’ve worked in the homes of some of the wealthiest people in Florida. I know money when I see it. That three-story, eight-bedroom mansion my sister lived in is worth millions, yet, you’re telling me she died penniless?”
“I’m sorry to give you more bad news, Kaya, but, yes, those are the facts I’m afraid.” His tone was apologetic, as if he was the one who had caused her dilemma.
“Well, in light of that, Steven, I can’t stay in Granite Falls now. I have no choice but to return to Palm Beach, and take the children with me.”
Steven rose and strolled around the desk. “I’m aware that you and your sister weren’t very close, Kaya, and that there are events about her life you may not be aware of. But I was Michael and Lauren’s friend as well as their attorney, and if there’s one thing I do know, it’s that they would not want you to take their children to Florida. Granite Falls is their home.”
“Was, Steven. Was.” Kaya threw her hands up in frustration. “Everything is changed now. I was willing to settle down in Granite Falls, put my life on hold for a while, until they got used to me as their caregiver, but that option is off the table. My career in Palm Beach is the only fighting chance I have to provide a decent living for all of us.”
“I understand the financial dilemma you’re facing, but it wouldn’t be wise to uproot the children so soon after the loss of their parents. They have ties in Granite Falls. Ties that shouldn’t be severed at this precarious time of their lives.”
“And their strongest tie is Bryce Fontaine, I suppose,” she said, rather grudgingly. Bryce was the children’s godfather, and from what Kaya had learned from friends of the family who were gathered at the house when she arrived yesterday, he was a very present figure in the children’s lives.
“Bryce is a big part of their lives,” Steven voiced her thoughts out loud. “Despite the fact that you are their aunt and only living relative, they will need him to get them through this tragedy. He has been like a second father to them, ever since they were born, and now that Michael is gone, they will need him more than ever.”
Kaya tried to ignore the insinuations in Steven’s words. She needed no reminders that the children didn’t know her, that they’d never met her until yesterday. If only she’d been more congenial toward her sister, met her halfway. A few weeks ago, Lauren had invited her up to celebrate Michael’s fiftieth birthday. She’d agreed to come, and they’d promised to take care of her travel arrangements. But unable to get past her juvenile sibling resentment, she’d reneged at the last minute. If she’d come up like she’d promised, she would have seen her sister and met Michael and the kids, but she hadn’t.
“When is Bryce coming back?” she asked Steven. She was still to meet this Bryce, who’d been on a skiing trip in Switzerland the day Michael and Lauren died.
“His jet could be landing anytime soon. You know what that means for Jason.” His brows drew together and his blue eyes clouded with unease. “I can’t force you to stay in Granite Falls, Kaya. I can only strongly advise that you consider sticking with your initial plans to remain here, at least for now.”
Kaya walked over to the window and stared out across the parking lot. She felt as listless as the wind-blown snowflakes tumbling aimlessly to the ground. Steven was right about keeping the children in a familiar environment, around familiar faces. But what was she to do? They were destitute. Returning to Florida was her only option. Even there, with three children to support, she could still end up broke, like Michael and Lauren.
Kaya never anticipated that her life could spiral out of control so quickly and unexpectedly. There was only one other time in her life when she’d been this scared—the day she saw her father for the last time.
She raised a hand to her chest and closed her fingers around the locket that her father had given her when she was five years old—the one with the code to a safety deposit box. Her father had instructed her not to go to the bank until she was eighteen, and now, even after five years, Kaya was still awed at the contents of that safe.
She’d had the jewel appraised, and almost fainted when she learned how much it was worth. Her father had left a letter explaining how he’d come into possession of the gem. He’d written that he wanted her to know that it wasn’t stolen. Unsure of what to do with it, Kaya had just left it alone. Had her father given Lauren a similar gem? Had Lauren sold her inheritance to purchase L’etoile du Nord, her multimillion-dollar estate? Had she squandered the rest on an extravagant lifestyle that she couldn’t maintain?
Kaya sighed as the questions surged through her mind. Steven was right again. There was so much about her sister’s life she didn’t know. What she did know was that the contents in that safe was all she had of her father’s memory, the only tangible bond she had to her ancestry. She couldn’t bear the thought of parting with it, even though it would solve her newly acquired financial problems, and set her and the children up for life. But that was asking too much. It wasn’t fair that she should have to spend her inheritance on Lauren’s children. She had preserved her heirloom, while Lauren had wasted hers on a big…
Kaya turned from the window as the only other solution took root in her mind. “The estate,” she said, walking back over to Steven. “It’s worth millions, hopefully more than Michael and Lauren owed their creditors. If I sell the estate, I can—”
“Um, Kaya, you can’t sell that estate.”
“Why not? Don’t tell me there’s a lien against it.” That faint thread of hysteria was back in her voice. If their father had given Lauren the same kind of gem he had given her, Lauren could have paid cash for the estate. Did she mortgage it off to sustain her luxurious lifestyle?
“No. There’s no lien against it,” Steven said.
Kaya breathed a sigh of relief. “Well then, why can’t I sell it?”
“Because it didn’t belong to Michael and Lauren. It doesn’t belong to the children.”
Kaya’s mouth dropped open. “What do you mean, it didn’t— doesn’t belong to them? If it isn’t their estate, then whose is it?”
“Mine. L’etoile du Nord belongs to me,” came a rumbling voice behind her.
Kaya spun around, her heart flying to her throat when her eyes collided with the powerful bronze body of the man standing on a pair of legs that would make a Viking proud.
Bryce Fontaine, New England’s business mogul—CEO and president of Fontaine Enterprises—in the flesh.
He was far more handsome than his pictures portrayed, she thought, staring in admiration as he bent his snow-dusted head to get his large frame through the door.
The ample shoulders, stretching beneath a dark-green sweater, the sharp chin, and generous mouth, all spoke of power and resolute strength. The man possessed a captivating presence and an air of authority that made you stop and take note when he entered a room. She was taking note—a lot of notes.
If Kaya had to sum Bryce Fontaine up in one word, it would be “intimidating”.
A tingling sensation generated in Kaya’s belly and traveled south to her thighs, and then to her knees, making them go weak. She slumped against the edge of the desk and tried to bring her escalated breathing under control.
Steven walked over and met him near the door. Even Steven—who was about six feet, two inches tall—had to roll his head back to face the giant, as they talked in low voices.
Steven had called Bryce the night of the tragedy, but a blizzard in the Alps had delayed his return. He must have flown all night, Kaya thought, taking in his stubbled chin and disheveled appearance that made him seem even more imposing.
When Kaya had enquired about the hunk in her sister’s family pictures, Libby—Steven’s fiancée, and a close friend of the family—had given her a short version of his accomplishments.
Bryce Fontaine had started out in real estate—buying up a substantial amount of land in Granite Falls and the neighboring towns, then quickly expanded to the rest of the business world. He devoured companies from glass blowing to computer software programing, and as he’d just claimed, he also owned the estate on which her sister lived.
Seemed like the man owned the entire town, she thought, recalling driving by the Youth Performing Arts Center, Granite Falls Towers, and Country Club, to name a few buildings and skyscrapers that bore his name. His signature was everywhere in Granite Falls. He’d even built an airport with a runway long enough to accommodate his private jets and those of his friends, Libby had told her.
As if sensing her scrutiny, he turned his head and pinned her with a calculating stare. Breathless seconds ticked by before he stepped around Steven and headed in her direction. A compelling energy seemed to coil within him at each step he took.
Forcing her legs to support her, Kaya pushed off the desk as he came to a stop and towered over her. His gaze was bold and penetrating. His eyes, enigmatic and unfathomable, were like midnight’s deepest black. As she gazed up at him, Kaya had the dizzying sensation of falling into blackness. She’d never felt so susceptible to a man in all her life. He could reach out and take a hold of her, do anything he wanted to her, this very moment, and there was not a damn thing she’d be able to do about it. Vitality zinged through her bloodstream, even as her body began to shiver from an unfamiliar awareness. How could she feel this vivacious and weak at the same time? Kaya wondered, as she once again leaned on the desk for support.
If he could cause her to lose control of her motor skills by just looking at her, then God help her.
“Bryce,” Steven said, coming to stand next to the titan, “this is Lauren’s sister, Kaya Brehna. Kaya, Bryce Fontaine.”
Bryce shook the hand the petite woman, with a thick curtain of dark-brown curls tumbling off her small shoulders, offered him. Such soft honey-hue skin, he thought, as he gazed into her beautiful brown eyes—eyes like little Alyssa’s. Where Alyssa’s were innocent and mischievous, Kaya’s were mesmerizing, large and exotic, with tones of soft amber that seemed to speak to him from within. He could easily lose his way in those spellbinding eyes, he thought.
“It’s a pleasure, Miss Brehna,” he said, releasing her and ordering his brain to buffer the bolt of electricity charging through him. It had been ages since the touch of a woman caused his heart to pound out an erratic rhythm. He didn’t know what to make of it.
“It’s nice meeting you, too, Mr. Fontaine,” she said in a soft unsteady voice.
Bryce smiled as her dark, long lashes came down to shield her eyes from his.
Steven cleared his throat, reminding Bryce that there was someone else in the room.
“I’ll leave you two alone to get acquainted while I make a phone call,” Steven said, walking into an adjoining room and closing the door.
“Take your time,” Bryce said, his gaze following Kaya’s movements as she laced and unlaced her fingers in front of her. He wondered if she was this nervous in the company of all men, or was it just him. He let his ego believe it was just him. He was so used to assertive women, who let him know up front exactly what they wanted from him. It was a welcome change to encounter one who was still shy, demure, who made a man feel like a man. Protective. Male—pumped full of adrenaline in anticipation of the chase, he thought as his eyes took in the radiance of her heart-shaped face and her full, pouty, sexy lips. How he would so love to test their subtlety, feel them quiver, then open to accept him.
If he’d passed Kaya on the street, in a restaurant, or pulled up beside her at a traffic light, Bryce knew he would have given her a second look, maybe a third. He most certainly would have asked for her number.
And to think he could have had it months ago, when Lauren had been telling him that she wanted him to meet her sister. He’d shut Lauren down because he hadn’t wanted to jeopardize their friendship. What if he’d met Kaya and didn’t like her? Well, that wasn’t an issue anymore. He’d met her, and he liked her, too much, he realized at the stirring in his loins. But the outcome would have been the same, because when he’d had his fill of little Kaya, he would have walked away like he always did. His friendship with Lauren had meant too much to him. It still did, even though she was gone. So there was no messing with her little sister. Stand down, boy.
“So, here we are,” she said, raising her head to offer him a heart-stopping smile.
“Yes, here we are.” Dear God, he was dumbstruck. Only once in his life had Bryce ever felt this powerless to a woman.
“Why are you looking at me like that?” she asked, crossing her arms about her.
Bryce shook his head. “I’m sorry,” he said, to cover his fascination with her. “It’s just that, you look nothing like Lauren. You’re so petite, and Lauren was—well, Lauren.” He formed a generous figure in the air with his hands. “I expected some small hint of resemblance, at least.”
“Maybe it’s because we were half-sisters,” she said, a smile lighting the soft features of her face.
“Half-sisters?” He tilted his head to one side. “Lauren told me she had a younger sister, but she never elaborated. I just assumed you had the same parents.” He frowned as he studied her. “I didn’t think you’d be this young, either.” He hadn’t thought anything of her at all, since he never expected to ever meet her. She couldn’t be much older than twenty-two or three. Lauren had to be at least ten years her senior.
His eyes appraised her petite form, dressed in a cream sweater and a knee-length skirt. Even in her black high-heel boots, the top of her head hardly made it to his chest. She looked very soft, very warm, very female—his ideal type. Lauren knew him well. A fond smile touched his lips at the memories of his friend, his sister, whom he missed so much already.
“Let’s just say Eli Brehna would never have been nominated Father of the Year,” Kaya said, as her fingers closed around a fist-shaped locket resting against her chest. “Neither Lauren nor I ever spoke about it.”
He wanted to ask her about the “it” she and Lauren never spoke about, but knew it was not the right time. He and Lauren had been very close, yet she’d never mentioned “it”.
Whatever secret they’d shared, Lauren had taken it to the grave with her. He wondered how much she’d told Kaya about him, about...
“I was also surprised when I saw your pictures, Mr. Fontaine.”
“Please, call me, Bryce. There’s no need for formality between us.”
“Okay, then I’m, Kaya.” Her lips spread on a warm smile. “As I was saying, Michael was a lot older than Lauren, so when she wrote that you were best friends, I assumed you were his age. Besides, there aren’t many thirty-something-year-old men out there who’ve built billion-dollar empires from the ground up.”
“When I want something, I just go out and get it.”
“I’m just the same way. I believe in fighting for what I want. I let nothing stand between me and my heart’s desires.”
Bryce smiled. “We have something in common already, I see.”
“It would seem as if we do, Bryce.” Her brown eyes sparkled, and her lips quivered on an inviting smile, one that lit up her eyes this time, and caused the amber hues around her irises to shimmer.
Bryce’s heart responded with a leap, ever so slightly. He liked the soft sound of his name falling from her exquisite lips. Tightening his jaw, he blanketed the warm feelings it generated in him. No need to travel down troublesome paths. Paths that would lead to nowhere, and that would only leave him in a lingering state of frustration. Kaya was in Granite Falls for one reason only—her sister’s funeral. When it was over, she’d be going back to Florida, and he may never see her again. He hoped.
He turned and held the back of a chair. “Have a seat, Kaya. We may as well be comfortable while we discuss the children’s welfare.”
She nodded and sat down.
Bryce sat down in the chair facing her, his heart heavy at the thought of discussing the gruesome reason he’d left Switzerland, just hours after his jet landed. He hadn’t even gotten the chance to attack the slopes, burn off the frustrations that had driven him there in the first place. “Who’s taking care of them?” he asked Kaya, deciding it was best to just tackle the issue they’d been avoiding since he walked into the office.
“Libby,” she answered.
“Great.” He would have gone directly to the house, but when he’d called Steven and learned that Lauren’s sister would be in his office, he’d opted to meet her here. They had a lot to discuss, and he’d rather not do it with the kids around. “How are they coping?”
“Alyssa’s fine, as resilient as a rubber ball,” she answered with a gentle softness in her voice. “But Anastasia has been fussy, and Jason, well—”
She started that nervous twisting of her hands again. She couldn’t be scared of a little boy. “What about Jason?” Bryce asked, fighting the urge to reach out and cover her hands with his.
“He’s in denial. He completely ignores me. Samantha Kelly, the grief counselor from their church, came by last night, but he wouldn’t talk to her. He thinks his parents went to Switzerland with you, and that you’re bringing them home.”
Bryce frowned. “Why does he think that?”
“Well, they died the same day you left for Switzerland, remember?”
“Yes, but—”
“You’ve taken the family to Europe on your jet several times, so in Jason’s mind, his parents merely took another trip with you. Samantha called it a coping mechanism, and she thinks you’re the only one who can get Jason to accept the truth.”
Bryce felt pressure building in his chest. Propping his elbows on his knees, he buried his face in his hands, groaning inwardly. If Michael and Lauren’s deaths seemed so inconceivable to him, he could only imagine what it was like for Jason losing both his parents so suddenly and tragically.
Many times he’d put smiles on the children’s faces when he’d replaced a broken toy. How could he attempt to fix their little broken hearts, when he could never bring their parents home?
Fate had dealt them a crushing blow, and he would have to see them through this most frightening period of their lives. He would be there for them—night and day until... Bryce slowly raised his head and stared at Kaya. “When I walked in, you were discussing the option of selling my estate. Why?”
She blushed and glanced away briefly. “I didn’t know L’etoile du Nord belonged to you. I’m just trying to close out Michael and Lauren’s affairs as soon as possible, so that the children and I can get on with our lives. As you know, Michael had no relatives, and I’m the only family Lauren had.”
“And I imagine coming here for the funeral and finally meeting the children will give you some closure and a measure of peace when you return to Florida.” He paused as the door to the adjacent office opened and Steven rejoined them. “I can assure you, the children will be well cared for. I love them dearly, and I’ll raise them as if they were my own.”
“Um, Bryce,” Steven interjected. “That wouldn’t be necessary.”
“On the contrary, Steven, it’s absolutely crucial. There’s no one else to take care of them.”
Steven shot Kaya a furtive glance. “There is someone else, Bryce.”
“Who?”
“Kaya. Michael and Lauren named her legal guardian. She has full custody of the children, and she’s planning to take them to Florida after the funeral.”
Kaya watched a kaleidoscope of emotions flitter across Bryce’s face. Shock. Confusion. Hurt. Betrayal.
He staggered out of his chair and slammed a fist down on the desk. “They did what?”
Anger.
Kaya jumped and hugged her arms about her middle tightly, her eyes flashing back and forth from Bryce to Steven, then back to Bryce.
“Michael and I were closer than most brothers, for God’s sake. I loved Lauren like a sister. I adore those kids. How could they ever doubt that?”
“Bryce, believe me, when they asked me to write the will, I raised those same points on your behalf. But they were quite certain about what they wanted.”
“When did they make this ridiculous decision?”
“About a year ago.”
Kaya sat up straight. It was a year ago was that Lauren tracked her down, and began sending her pictures of the children. She’d invited her to come up and meet the family. But old fears had kept her away.
Bryce turned his mercurial eyes on her. His big hands were clenched into fists. His broad shoulders heaved from his deep, harsh breathing.
The mixture of hurt and betrayal in his eyes resonated in her own tormented heart. He just lost his dearest friends, and now he was about to lose his godchildren, whom he obviously adored.
“They didn’t even know her.” He flung his hands in the air. “They might as well have pulled a stranger off the streets and asked her to raise their kids. That’s what you are. A stranger. To all of us!” He took a threatening step toward her.
Kaya felt his despair in the pit of her stomach, but she steeled herself against the looming threat, and pushed to her feet. “Bryce, I know how hurt and betrayed you must feel right now. But I’m the only living relative the children have.”
“I’m the closest thing to family they have, Kaya. The fact that people share the same blood, doesn’t make them family. You don’t know those kids, and they certainly do not know you.”
“They’ll come to know me. They’ll even love me in time,” she said, forcing stability into her voice.
“They love me now,” he grounded through clenched teeth. “I’ve been in their lives from the moment each one of them was born. Where were you?”
In high school. But she was sure that’s not what he meant.
“I’m not the kind of godfather who ignores them all year, and then drop by with expensive gifts on Christmas and birthdays. Which is a lot more than I can say for you, their only living relative, who never even took the time to visit her sister.”
That hurt far more than Kaya ever thought it would. But she gathered courage from the knowledge that even though she and Lauren were estranged, her sister still named her legal guardian of her children.
Lauren had her reasons. Kaya didn’t know what they were. What she did know was that she would not fail her sister. She had failed her in life by not reaching out to her, meeting her halfway; she would not fail her in death by walking away from her children. She would fulfill her request, no matter the cost.
Kaya glanced at Steven, hoping he would intervene on her behalf. He shrugged and spread his hands, obviously reluctant to take sides in a dispute between an old friend and a new client.
“I hope you haven’t told the kids about your absurd plans.” Bryce’s acerbic tone drew her back to his scowling face.
“Of course not. They have enough to deal with already. I’ll tell them when the time is right.”
“It’ll never be right, Miss Brehna.”
So they were back to last names.
He looked her over judiciously. “You’re a career woman, whose main priority in life, I’m certain, is to climb the corporate ladder of success. It’s not easy for a single woman to raise a child alone.”
“And how would you know?” Kaya retorted, hands on hips.
“I employ a few of them, Miss Brehna. I overhear their complaints. Can you honestly tell me that you’re ready to sacrifice all you’ve worked for to raise three children you don’t even know?”
Kaya knew it wouldn’t be easy, and that it may even jeopardize her job at Pearson’s Interior Decorating. Wayne had already pointed out the demands her new position as head designer would have on her time, not to mention her obligation to the clients she’d left hanging when she got the call from Steven.
And then there was Jack, her fiancé, whom she still hadn’t told she’d inherited three little orphans. Jack was adamant about not having children after they were married. She never thought she wanted children, either, until she met these three, who had Eli Brehna’s blood flowing through their veins. Was she picking up a heavier load than she could hoist over her shoulders, much less carry?
“You have no idea what you’re getting yourself into, do you?” Bryce was like a hound dog, sniffing out her fears. “You’re already neck-deep in financial problems or you wouldn’t have been thinking about selling my estate. You probably can’t even afford the funeral.”
The funeral. Kaya hadn’t even thought of that after Steven dropped the bombshell on her earlier. When she’d thought there was money to pay for the funeral, she’d picked out two elaborate coffins, and hadn’t bothered to give a second thought to the expense of keeping them in the funeral home. Well, she’d have to take a much cheaper route now, and get Michael and Lauren buried as quickly as possible. Tomorrow.
“This is what we’re going to do, Miss Brehna.” Bryce glared down at her as if she were one of his insubordinate employees. “I’ll pay for Michael and Lauren’s funeral, then I’ll even pay for a first class ticket back to Florida for you. Better still, I’ll have my pilot fly you back in my jet. I’ll reimburse all expenses you’ve incurred so far. Just sign the kids over to me and you can leave Granite Falls as freely and as unencumbered as you came.” He pulled a checkbook from his back pocket, and opened it. “Name your price, Miss Brehna.”
Kaya seethed at his arrogance, his assumption that he could buy her. In all of her twenty-three years on this planet, she never had this strong a desire to slap someone across the face. Too bad it was beyond her immediate reach.
“Money isn’t everything, Mr. Fontaine. It can buy a lot of luxuries, I’d grant, but it cannot buy love. I love my nephew and nieces. In time, they’ll grow to love me. Love is a price you certainly cannot afford.”
His eyes narrowed to dark slits as he tossed the checkbook on the desk. “You obviously have no idea who you’re dealing with, Miss Brehna. I promise, I will—”
“Time out,” Steven finally interjected, coming to stand between them. “I realize emotions are running high at the moment. But you both need to stop before you say something you’ll regret. Let’s get Michael and Lauren buried, then you two can work out the details over the children.”
“Actually, there’s nothing to work out,” Kaya stated in the calmest voice she could muster under the circumstances. “Steven, I would like you to prepare the necessary papers to finalize my custody of the children, so I can get out of this town as soon as possible.”
She threw her head farther back to encounter Bryce’s angry glare. Even though he’d managed to push her within a hair’s breadth of striking him, she knew what drove him. He was fighting for three little kids who weren’t even related to him, when her own parents had walked away without a backward glance. For that, she admired him, and for the children’s sake, she would try to get along with him.
In spite of her empathy, she had to let him know that she didn’t scare easily. Her years in foster homes where she had to fight for what was hers, then fight some more to hold on to it, had instilled a warrior’s spirit in her. She wasn’t backing down. Not for him. Not for anyone.
“Mr. Fontaine, I’m sorry we had to meet under such tragic circumstances. I can see that you care about your godchildren, and only want what’s best for them. But, I’m their family, and good or bad, rich or poor, family is the most important thing to a child. I wouldn’t get in the way of your relationship with them. You can visit them whenever you want. But get this, I’m not signing them over to you, or anyone else. Ever.”
Bryce could barely contain his fury as he watched her sashay across the floor, pull a leather jacket from the coat rack, and snatch up a handbag from a corner table.
The second Steven closed the door behind her, Bryce exploded. “The nerve of that woman! Who does she think she is?”
“Their aunt and legal guardian.” Steven ran his fingers through his hair, a helpless, skeptical twist to his lips.
“You are my friend. You should have told me what Michael and Lauren had done.”
“Bryce, you know I couldn’t do that. They were my friends too, but they were also my clients. I owed them certain fiduciary rights. Loyalty and confidentiality—”
“You dare talk to me about loyalty, Steven? Where was their loyalty to me and to their defenseless children?” Bryce shook his fists in the air and began to pace the floor. “She’s taking them to Florida. Michael and Lauren would not want their children living anywhere, but in Granite Falls. This is their home.”
“I pointed that out to Kaya. I don’t know if it did any good.” Steven sighed. “If I’d seen this coming, I would have instructed them to include some kind of condition on her guardianship. It’s beyond my power. Kaya has custody, clear and free.”
Bryce came to a halt in front of Steven. “It may be beyond your power, but it isn’t beyond mine. I’m not going to stand by, and let that woman take those kids from their home, from people they’ve known all their lives. People they know and trust. People who love them.”
“Bryce, I don’t want you going off—”
He cut Steven off with a flip of his wrist. “I don’t care what I have to do, or whose neck I have to step on to keep those kids in Granite Falls. I will not lose them, Steven. I will not lose them!”
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