laughable the way his own noise seemed to surprise him.

She didn’t care that he was one more person who would rely on her instead of the other way around. She was enraptured. Instantly, utterly, completely in love.

She lifted her gaze to Javiero’s gleaming eye and breathed, “Thank you.”

CHAPTER THREE

JAVIERO HAD WRESTLED an overgrown house cat for less than five minutes until it had been lured away by a fresh cut of meat. His two weeks and four surgeries in the hospital had been acutely painful, but the morphine drip had ensured he slept through most of it.

Scarlett had struggled in agony, her final hour of pushing intense and fearsome to witness. He’d never felt so helpless in his life or so humbled. Reverence gripped him as he took in the dazzlingly tender light in her eyes and her smile of serene joy.

“You were incredible,” he told her as a nurse took their son to measure and swaddle him. Javiero carefully brushed away the tendrils of hair stuck to her temples. Nothing in his life had prepared him for such an internal upheaval.

Shadows came into the dreamy blue of her eyes. Her mouth trembled. “I know you’re still angry.”

“I am.” He wouldn’t lie to her. “But all that matters right now is that you and our son have come through this alive and well. I didn’t expect to be a father when I woke up this morning, but I’m grateful, Scarlett.” The word wasn’t big enough for the swell of thankfulness in him. He was incredulous and dumbfounded and deeply moved.

“I love him so much and we’ve only just met.” Her wet lashes blinked as she looked for him, the sweetest smile trembling on her lips. Javiero wanted to set his own there to steady them.

“Does he have a name?” the nurse asked.

“I thought Locke for a boy,” Scarlett said tentatively. “But you can think on it.” Her eyelids blinked heavily. “I need to tell Kiara. She’ll be anxious.”

“I’ll do it,” he promised, continuing the rhythmic caress of his thumb across her brow, bemused that she could think of anything beyond this moment. “You should rest.”

“I haven’t slept properly in months,” she admitted on a yawn. “Will you wake me if he needs me?”

“Of course.”

“Thank you.” Her voice was fading and her eyes stayed closed on the next blink. With a small sigh, she drifted into sleep.

He straightened, and the nurse handed him the bundle that was more blanket than baby, far lighter than Javiero expected, and such a punch in his chest he had to sit down to absorb it.

The lens through which he had viewed his life had completely inverted. He was no longer a son with a father, but a father with a son. He was overcome with pride, and also responsibility and an unmistakable fear. One day this infant, who was at this moment unmarred by life, could turn on him with abhorrence and tell him to go to hell, the way he had done with Niko.

I will do better, Javiero swore compulsively even though he wasn’t sure what “better” would look like. He had only ever thought of himself as a parent in the vaguest of “someday” terms, not the immediacy of every day.

His psyche leaped on the words. He wanted every day with his son.

He wouldn’t be a father in name only, as Niko had been. An imposing stranger who enforced a handful of visits a year, someone who provoked fear and insecurity, resentment and rebellion. He would not fill his son’s ears with disparagements of his mother.

Javiero moved his gaze from the eyelashes against a delicate pink cheek to the longer, blond lashes on Scarlett.

It seemed impossible that the two of them had made this fragile miniature person. Oh, he remembered every second of the act. A stir of the infuriating attraction he’d always felt toward her teased him even now, calling up wispy memories of a lush breast in his hand and the incredible sensation of sliding into her heat. She had smelled of sunshine and crushed flower petals and had held back nothing.

At the time, it had seemed so deliciously spontaneous yet inevitable.

Given his father’s behavior, Javiero had always guarded against letting his nether regions take control. Scarlett had tested his resolve from their first meeting.

He wasn’t sure what had driven that depth of attraction. Her classic beauty, obviously, but she had worked for his father. He’d wanted to shoot the messenger as badly as he’d wanted to seduce her. He’d sent a message to his father by barely giving her the time of day, but he’d always had a sense of possibility where she was concerned, certain she would one day turn her back on Niko and come to him.

There’d been something in her self-possessed demeanor that had intrigued him. She wasn’t a doormat. Hell, no. From the first moment, he had seen she was intelligent and witty and capable of withstanding high stress. She hadn’t let him or his father’s complicated love life get under her skin.

Maybe that had been the draw. Val and the war between their mothers had always been a stain that Javiero couldn’t erase, yet Scarlett had disregarded it. Or regarded it as normal?

Either way, the far more interesting reaction was her betraying awareness of him. She’d done her best to hide it, but he’d seen it in a lingering look or a poorly disguised blush.

He had fought his own sexual tension, suspicious of her even then. When he had ultimately lost that battle, it had been a deeply humbling experience. Not only had he succumbed to his primal instincts and discovered his perfect sexual match, she had left him afterward. For his father.

He’d been ripe with self-disgust then, angry with himself for giving her the upper hand.

He had followed his mother’s suggestion that he propose to Regina as a means of moving on from Scarlett. To firmly closing off roads back to the madness he’d shared with her.

Yet here he was with her, holding the

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