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Harlequin Romance September 2013 Bundle: Bound by a Baby\In the Line of Duty\Patchwork Family in the Outback\Stranded with the Tycoon PDF

515 Pages·2013·1.83 MB·English
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Preview Harlequin Romance September 2013 Bundle: Bound by a Baby\In the Line of Duty\Patchwork Family in the Outback\Stranded with the Tycoon

Harlequin Romance September 2013 Bundle Bound by a Baby In the Line of Duty Patchwork Family in the Outback Stranded with the Tycoon Harlequin Romance brings you four new titles for one great price, available now for a limited time only from September 1 to September 30! Experience the rush of falling in love! This Harlequin Romance bundle includes Bound by a Baby by Kate Hardy, In the Line of Duty by Ami Weaver, Patchwork Family in the Outback by Soraya Lane and Stranded with the Tycoon by Sophie Pembroke. Look for 4 compelling new stories every month from Harlequin Romance! Table of Contents Bound by a Baby By Kate Hardy In the Line of Duty By Ami Weaver Patchwork Family in the Outback By Soraya Lane Stranded with the Tycoon By Sophie Pembroke Bound by a Baby By Kate Hardy 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 ONE ‘I ASSUME YOU know why you’re both here,’ the solicitor said, looking at Emmy and then at Dylan. Of course Emmy knew. Ally and Pete had asked her to be their son Tyler’s guardian, if the unthinkable should ever happen. If. She swallowed hard. That was the whole point of her being here. Because the unthinkable had happened. And Emmy still couldn’t quite believe that she’d never see her best friend again. She lifted her chin. Obviously today was about making things all official legally. And as for Dylan Harper—the only man she’d ever met who could make wearing a T-shirt and jeans feel as if they were a formal business suit—he was obviously here because he was Pete’s best friend and Pete and Ally had asked him to be the executor of their will. ‘Yes,’ she said. ‘Yes,’ Dylan echoed. ‘Good.’ The solicitor tapped his pen against his blotter. ‘So, Miss Jacobs, Mr Harper, can you confirm that you’re both prepared to be Tyler’s guardians?’ Emmy froze for a moment. Both? What was the man talking about? No way would Ally and Pete have asked them both to be Tyler’s guardian. There had to be some mistake. She glanced at Dylan, to find him looking straight back at her. And his expression was just as stunned as her own must be. Or maybe they’d misheard. Misunderstood. ‘Both of us, Tyler’s guardians?’ she asked. For the first time, the solicitor’s face showed an expression other than smooth neutrality. ‘Did you not know they’d named you as Tyler’s guardian in the will, Ms Jacobs?’ Emmy blew out a breath. ‘Well, yes. Ally asked me before she and Pete revised their wills.’ And she’d assumed that Ally had meant just her. ‘Pete asked me,’ Dylan said. Which almost made Emmy wonder if Ally and Pete hadn’t spoken to each other about it. Though obviously they must’ve done. They’d both signed the will, so they’d clearly known that both of their best friends had agreed to be there for Tyler. They just hadn’t shared that particular piece of information with either Dylan or herself, by the looks of things. ‘Is there a problem?’ the solicitor asked. ‘Is there a problem?’ the solicitor asked. Apart from the fact that she and Dylan disliked each other intensely and usually avoided each other? Or the fact that Dylan was married—and Emmy was pretty sure that his wife couldn’t be too pleased that her husband had been named co-guardian with another woman, one who was single? ‘No,’ she said quickly, and looked at Dylan. This was his cue to explain that no, he couldn’t do it. ‘No problem,’ Dylan confirmed, to her shock. ‘Good.’ Good? No, it just made everything much more complicated, Emmy thought. Or maybe it meant he intended to fight her for custody of the baby: family man versus single mum, so it was obvious who’d win. But she didn’t have a chance to protest because the solicitor went on with the reading of the will. ‘Now, obviously Ally and Pete left financial provisions for Tyler. I have all the details here.’ ‘I’ll deal with it,’ Dylan said. Immediately assuming that a flaky, airheaded jewellery designer wouldn’t have a clue what to do? Emmy knew that was how Dylan saw her—she’d overheard him say it to Pete, on more than one occasion—and it rankled. She’d been her own boss for ten years. She was perfectly capable of dealing with things. Whereas he was so uptight and stuffy, she couldn’t even begin to imagine him looking after a baby or a toddler. Given that Ally had always been diplomatic about Dylan’s wife, merely saying that she worked with Pete, Emmy was pretty sure that Nadine Harper was from the same mould as Dylan. A cold workaholic who wouldn’t know what fun was if it jumped out in front of him and yelled, ‘Boo!’ And not the sort that Ally would’ve wanted caring for her son. But the solicitor was off again, going through the details of the arrangements made in the will. Emmy had to ignore her feelings and listen to what the man was telling her before she got completely lost. This was important. And then at last it was all over. Leaving her and Dylan to pick up the pieces. Together. Unthinkably. She gave the solicitor a polite smile, shook his hand, and walked out of the office. On the doorstep of the building, she came to a halt and faced Dylan. ‘I think,’ she said, ‘we need to talk. Like now.’ He nodded. ‘And I could do with some coffee.’ There were shadows under his cornflower-blue eyes, and lines at the corners betraying that he hadn’t slept properly since the crash; for the first time ever, betraying that he hadn’t slept properly since the crash; for the first time ever, Dylan actually looked vulnerable—and as if he hurt as much as she did, right now. It stopped her from uttering the kind of snippy remarks they usually made to each other. ‘Make that two of us,’ she said. On the sleep front, as well as the need for coffee. Vulnerability, no way would she admit to. Especially not to Dylan Harper. No way was she giving him an excuse to take Tyler from her. He and Nadine were not taking her place. ‘Where’s Tyler?’ Dylan asked. ‘With my mum. She’ll ring me if there’s a problem.’ She lifted one shoulder, daring him to criticise her. ‘I didn’t think the solicitor’s office would be the best place for him.’ ‘It isn’t.’ Another first: he was actually agreeing with her. Maybe, she thought, they might be able to work something out between them? Maybe he’d be reasonable? A baby wouldn’t fit into his busy, workaholic lifestyle. It’d be tough for Emmy, too, but at least she’d spent time with her godson and would have some clue about looking after him. ‘Shall we?’ she asked, indicating the café across the road. ‘Fine.’ At the counter in the café, Emmy ordered a latte. ‘What would you like?’ ‘I’ll get these,’ Dylan said immediately. She gave a small but determined shake of her head. No way was she going to let him take charge. ‘I offered first.’ ‘Then thank you—an espresso would be great.’ ‘Do you want anything to eat?’ He grimaced. ‘Thank you for the offer, but right now I really can’t face anything.’ She, too, hadn’t been able to choke much down since she’d heard the news. It seemed that the situation had shaken him as much as it had shaken her. In a way, that was a good thing. Maybe they could find some common ground. ‘If you go and find us a table, I’ll bring our coffee over,’ she said. And she was glad of that small space between them. Just so she could marshal her thoughts. Right now, she didn’t want to fight with Dylan. She just wanted her best friend back. For everything to be the same as it had been, three days ago. For Pete to have taken Ally on a surprise anniversary trip to Venice, for them to be happy and for Ally to be texting her to let her know they were on their way back and couldn’t wait to see their little boy and tell her all about the

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.