Surprise Baby for the Billionaire Read online




  From passion, to pregnancy...

  To a family for real?

  Betrayed by her cheating fiancé, pediatrician Saskia fell into the arms of brooding entrepreneur Malachi Gunn. Her on-the-rebound encounter has consequences she never could have imagined—she’s pregnant! Whisking her away to his Tuscan villa, Malachi makes it clear she must wed him to give their baby the family it deserves. But can Saskia settle for a paper marriage...or should she hope for more?

  “And we will marry, Saskia. For the baby’s sake. I can assure you of that.”

  The worst of it was that she had to bite her tongue not to simply agree to that, too. Even if Malachi was doing it for the wrong reasons, part of her couldn’t help but feel it was the right solution for her.

  At least she would have him in her life. And after the last few days, she was beginning to find it harder and harder to envisage a future with her baby without Malachi closely entwined in it.

  “We’ll see,” she managed instead, acutely aware that this time it wasn’t an outright refusal.

  His eyes held hers and, try as she might, she couldn’t seem to drag her gaze away. They stayed like that for longer than she could tell, an eternity perhaps, until they heard the consultant returning and he finally dropped his hands.

  She felt the loss acutely.

  Dear Reader,

  Having written Anouk and Sol’s story, Saskia and Malachi were waiting patiently for me to tell theirs.

  I can still remember the moment that, without warning, the Gunn brothers burst into my head. Malachi, the serious, responsible older brother who had become a carer for both his mother and little brother at such a young age; and Solomon, the younger of the Gunn boys who had carried the weight of his brother’s expectations.

  Becoming a young carer for not only his mother but also his baby brother had made this hero determined never to be responsible for anyone again, though I knew from the start that he had the biggest, most loyal heart. He just needed the perfect heroine to help him unlock it—and Saskia was everything I could have hoped for.

  Bright, passionate, fun—I loved her from the start. Even better, she had a way of getting under Malachi’s skin in ways I hadn’t even imagined!

  I really do hope you enjoy reading their story as much as I enjoyed writing it.

  It’s wonderful hearing from readers, so I’d love it if you dropped by my website at charlotte-hawkes.com, or met me on Twitter @CHawkesUK.

  Charlotte xx

  Surprise Baby for the Billionaire

  Charlotte Hawkes

  Books by Charlotte Hawkes

  Harlequin Medical Romance

  Hot Army Docs

  Encounter with a Commanding Officer

  Tempted by Dr. Off-Limits

  The Army Doc’s Secret Wife

  The Surgeon’s Baby Surprise

  A Bride to Redeem Him

  The Surgeon’s One-Night Baby

  Christmas with Her Bodyguard

  A Surgeon for the Single Mom

  The Army Doc’s Baby Secret

  Unwrapping the Neurosurgeon’s Heart

  Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com for more titles.

  To my boys,

  Even as I write this dedication, you are running up and down the decking, arguing over who has had a pop-up ice cream and who has only had an ice pop.

  But I hang on to every moment of it because I can’t stop time and it won’t last forever; at seven and five years old, you are both growing up far too fast!

  xox I love you xox

  Praise for Charlotte Hawkes

  “What an interesting, fast-paced, surprising and entertaining read Ms. Hawkes takes readers on with this book...the dialogue was riveting and had me liking how these two interact; and everything this couple go through on their journey to happy ever after made this story fast-paced.”

  —Harlequin Junkie on Christmas with Her Bodyguard

  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

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  EXCERPT FROM FALLING FOR HER ARMY DOC BY DIANNE DRAKE

  CHAPTER ONE

  SHE COULDN’T HIDE away in here for ever.

  Forcing herself to open her eyes, Saskia glanced gingerly around the stark, pristine hospital bathroom, relieved to find it was no longer spinning. She’d spent more time in one of these than she cared to remember over the past three months, but for once she wasn’t here experiencing morning, afternoon, and evening sickness.

  No, this time she’d ducked in here because she’d caught a glimpse of Malachi Gunn—looking as solid, as indomitable, and as smouldering as ever—stepping out of the stairwell to her paediatric ward. Apparently her body’s fight-or-flight response had got its wires crossed and so she—the girl who was renowned for her fearless attitude and for never backing away from anything—had made a dash for the relative safety of the nearest ladies’ room.

  Not that it did any good, of course; in the end she was going to have to tell him. She had to, no matter how terrifying the idea of doing so might be. Besides, she wanted to tell him; she’d wanted to for the last few months. Desperately. She’d just been too afraid, and had no idea exactly what to say.

  Because, really, how on earth was she to tell the only one-night stand she’d ever had in her entire life that he was the father of her unborn child?

  In truth, she had been prepared to tell him both times she’d made her monthly pro bono visit to Care to Play, the centre he had set up where young carers could forget their responsibilities and burdens and simply be kids, if only for a few hours each week. But Malachi hadn’t been there since their weekend together, which in itself had set off alarm bells in her head.

  Admittedly she hadn’t been coming to the centre for long—and only once or twice each month, and only since her engagement to Andy had unravelled so spectacularly—but as far as she’d been able to tell Malachi was always there, and the kids loved him. And they weren’t the only ones—it hadn’t been long before she’d started counting down the days to her next visit.

  The fact that since their one-weekend stand he hadn’t once been at the centre at the same time she had could surely mean only one thing—he’d been deliberately avoiding her.

  It hurt more than she cared to admit.

  Even now her hand went subconsciously to her belly, where the tiniest bump was just beginning to make itself known. As though the gesture could somehow protect her precious cargo from the idea that Malachi wouldn’t want to know. And from other people who might judge her or cast aspersions.

  It shouldn’t matter, of course. Saskia knew that. But you didn’t grow up the daughter of a Tinseltown starlet without having people judging your every move. And she’d never really had as thick a skin as she’d pretended.

  Not that anyone else could even tell that she was pregnant, of course. Not even Anouk, who had been Saskia’s best friend since kindergarten and hanging out on a movie set where their rival Hollywood actress mothers had battled to out-diva each other.

  Saskia felt a fresh pang of guilt about keeping silent with the one person she had always trusted most in th
e world, but somehow it seemed wrong to tell other people before Malachi. It was ludicrous, really, since she wasn’t even sure he would want to know.

  Besides, work had been so busy lately, and she’d already brought enough drama into her quiet friend’s life by landing on Anouk’s doorstep, suitcases at her feet, after she’d walked out on Andy.

  Not that Anouk had ever uttered a word of complaint, of course. No, her friend had merely hugged her and then gone out and found a stunning two-bedroom apartment more suitable for them to share. Anouk had simply made it feel like an exciting new stage in the adventure on which they’d embarked over a decade earlier, when they’d boarded a plane out of the States in order to go to medical school in the UK and track down the father Anouk had never known.

  It was bizarre, the way people always seemed to consider her to be dynamic and fun whilst they viewed Anouk as reserved, even a little cold. To Saskia, Anouk was focused, loyal, gentle—all the qualities that Saskia, who hated the way she herself seemed continually to find herself in the middle of some new, unwanted drama, envied most.

  Gripping the moulded plastic sink top as she glowered at herself in the mirror, Saskia berated herself. Anouk wouldn’t be hiding out in a bathroom on the paediatric floor whilst she worked out what the heck to say to Malachi out there. Then again, wise, pragmatic Anouk would never be pregnant from a one-night stand in the first place.

  ‘Well,’ she grumbled at her reflection, ‘you are. So you’re just going to have to face the man and get on with it.’

  With a satisfied nod, Saskia pushed herself off the cold plastic and marched across the bathroom floor. Then she hesitated. Carefully, slowly, she opened the door a crack.

  And nearly fell backwards as a face loomed in the tiny gap.

  ‘Oh, Saskia...’ the voice cooed. ‘You’re not squirreling yourself away in the bathroom to avoid me, are you, babe?’

  Gritting her teeth, Saskia opened the door firmly and forced herself to step outside. Babette was one of the paediatric nurses on Saskia’s ward, and there was no way she could ever avoid the woman, however much she might want to.

  ‘No, Babette, I am most certainly not trying to avoid you.’

  Babette’s laugh was more grating than tinkling, Saskia thought, and then chided herself for being so uncharitable.

  ‘Are you sure? Only, I don’t know how I’d get myself out of bed if I were you...’

  Okay, maybe she wasn’t being uncharitable after all.

  ‘Indeed. But I’m lucky enough to have an ejector button built in under my mattress.’

  ‘Really?’

  Babette’s eyes went large and round, and it was all Saskia could do to shake her head.

  ‘No, Babette, not really. I was just joking.’

  ‘Oh...’ Babette narrowed her eyes in a calculating manner. ‘Well, it’s good that you still have a sense of humour. Especially now.’

  Don’t rise to the bait. Don’t rise to the bait.

  ‘What do you mean, “especially now”?’ Saskia couldn’t help herself, even as her skin prickled in warning.

  ‘Oh, I really didn’t want to be the one to have to tell you, babe...’ Clearly the other woman could barely supress her glee. ‘But I didn’t want you to have to hear it from someone else. I feel...responsible.’

  Yeah. Right.

  ‘Tell me what?’ Saskia managed, her heart now hammering around her chest so hard that it would surely leave bruises.

  Lifting her hand, Babette waved it so close to Saskia’s nose that she had to take a step back. But not before she’d noticed the huge, glistening stone.

  ‘Andy and I are engaged.’

  Her heart stopped in an instant. She was going to be sick. Again. She wanted to grab the wall behind her just to stop herself from plummeting to the cold vinyl floor, but she didn’t want to give Babette the satisfaction.

  Most days the shame of her ex-fiancé’s betrayal didn’t get to Saskia at all. But occasionally it felt as raw as it had ten months ago, when she’d walked in on him and his...mistress in flagrante in that on-call room, barely half an hour after she had been in bed with him herself in their own home.

  Today was one of those raw days, Saskia thought with another sickening lurch—although, mercifully, this lurch was a little less intense. Not even when his new fiancée was standing opposite her and smiling superciliously.

  ‘Isn’t it stunning?’ Babette cooed. ‘Thank goodness! I was afraid he might get me something like a tiny quarter-carat thing that I’d need a magnifying glass to even see.’

  ‘Perish the thought,’ Saskia managed dryly.

  Babette’s eyes widened in feigned innocence.

  ‘Oh, I didn’t mean any offence about the ring he bought you, of course. I’m sure you must have been perfectly happy with it. I guess being the daughter of a Hollywood diva doesn’t guarantee good taste.’

  ‘Of course you don’t mean any offence,’ Saskia murmured quietly, ignoring the jibe.

  She might have come to terms with her parents’ death years ago, but it didn’t mean she wanted someone like Babette dismissing it as though it meant nothing. Besides which, she was still fighting to quell the nausea as she thought of the tiny solitaire Andy had bought for her, on the premise that he was saving money for a decent house.

  What a naïve idiot she’d been.

  Then again, had she really been completely oblivious?

  Sucking in a steadying breath, Saskia considered—not for the first time—whether she had always known, on some level, that Andy was wrong for her. He had been more interested in using her name and perceived connections to further his ambition of becoming a plastic surgeon to the stars.

  Was that why, from the very first moment she had stood on Anouk’s doorstep, surrounded by her worldly possessions, a strange tangle of emotions had tumbled inside her? Sorrow, humiliation, and rage, of course. But then also fleeting lightning bolts of something she had only been able to categorise as...relief.

  ‘Anyway, I just wanted to tell you personally. I always pride myself on being honourable, babe. And Andy agrees.’

  Saskia’s jaws ached from being clamped shut. But it was better than saying that neither Babette nor Andy would recognise honour if it danced a jig in front of them. The woman would only take it as jealousy, and Saskia couldn’t bear for Babette to think that. Or to acknowledge that was her motivation.

  But that had been before Andy. And before she’d fallen pregnant with Malachi Gunn’s baby.

  How many times had she tortured herself over the last couple of months by scouring the local papers to see if there were any photos of local events where Malachi might be seen with some new, impossibly beautiful date on his arm?

  Not that she’d seen any. But it didn’t mean he was pining for her the way she seemed to be for him.

  Saskia faltered, then caught herself. No. She’d be damned if catching her ex-fiancé cheating on her with the abominable Babette was going to change who she was deep down. Malachi was supposed to have been her rebound. Up until that night Andy had been the only man Saskia had slept with—ever—and Malachi was to have been her long overdue one-night stand.

  Although if a one-night stand stretched into three glorious days and four nights of a long weekend could it still be called a one-night stand?

  What was the etiquette?

  Who knew?

  Either way, despite the sick feeling she had now, the last thing Saskia felt was jealous. Certainly not of Babette or Andy, anyway.

  But she really did feel ill. Another wave of nausea threatened to engulf her and Saskia pressed her hand to her stomach. The other woman didn’t miss a trick.

  ‘Oh, babe,’ Babette crowed. ‘I never expected you to take it this badly. I told Andy it was too soon. I hope it isn’t going to be too much for you, seeing us together at the charity ball on Saturday night?’
<
br />   Saskia fought it, but the darkness was closing in. Fast.

  ‘It’s not about you or Andy, Babette,’ she muttered, as her mind fought to battle that little bit longer. ‘I need you to get a doctor.’

  ‘You don’t need to pretend with me. I understand, babe. Perhaps it’s better that you don’t come...’

  Through her blurring eyes Saskia could see that the woman was practically beside herself with joy at the idea that her engagement was causing Saskia such pain.

  ‘No, Babette,’ Saskia managed. ‘You really don’t understand. I need you to get a doctor. I’m pregnant.’

  She just about heard Babette’s shocked intake of breath as her head spun again.

  And was that the floor coming up to meet her?

  Abruptly, two strong hands grabbed her shoulders. Heat from a body was behind her back. An unmistakably citrusy, woodsy male scent filled her nostrils. And then she was being swept up into the oddly familiar arms of a hulk of a man, and nestled against his shoulder as he carried her down the corridor.

  Malachi.

  Her mind railed even as her body slumped against him, and by the time she came round fully they were in an on-call room and Malachi was sitting on the edge of the bed, cradling her head, a plastic cup of water in his other hand.

  Saskia groaned inwardly.

  ‘Stop squirming, zvyozdochka,’ he commanded gruffly. ‘You’ll hit your head if you fall backwards.’

  Reluctantly, she obeyed, taking another sip of the proffered water, then another, letting her mind stop whirling and twirling like the teacups ride at a theme park. As if water could somehow dampen all that heat and desire which she was sure still swirled around them even now.

  At least he had the grace to stand up and move to the chair next to her, instead of being so close on the bed that it felt as though her entire left side was on fire.

  It seemed like an age before she could shift position again, moving her legs to swing them carefully over the edge.