begun to believe I could - -damn you, O'Riley."
"There's nothing you can say to me that's worse than what I'm already thinking about myself. Now where is she?"
"You go to hell." She slammed the terrace door and flipped the lock.
Sloan gave brief thought to kicking it in then, swearing, went around to the stone steps on the side of the house. He found Suzanna standing on the second-floor balcony, looking out at the cliffs. He'd taken his first step toward her when Amanda burst out of the doors.
"You keep away from her." She already had a protective arm around her sister. "Just turn around and start walking. Don't stop until you get back to Oklahoma."
"This isn't any of your concern," Sloan told her, and Suzanna had to grab hold before Amanda sprang at him.
"It's all right." Suzanna squeezed Amanda's hand. "I need to talk to him, Mandy. Alone."
"But - "
"Please. It's important. Go down and finish setting up, will you?"
Reluctant, Amanda stepped back. "If it's what you want." She aimed a killing look at Sloan. "Watch your step."
When they were alone, Sloan struggled for the right words. "Mrs. Dumont. Suzanna - "
"What's his name?" she asked. "What?"
"The boy. What's his name?" "I don't - "
"Damn it, what's his name?" She whirled away from the wall. Shock had been replaced by angry tears. "He's half brother to my children. I want to know his name."
"Kevin. Kevin O'Riley." "How old is he?" "Seven."
Turning back to the sea, she shut her eyes. Seven years before she had been a new bride, full of hope and dreams and blind love. "And Baxter knew? He knew that she'd had his child?"
"Yes, he knew. Megan wouldn't tell anyone at first who the father was. But after she'd called and spoken to you...but she didn't speak to you, did she?"
"No." Suzanna continued to stare straight ahead. "Baxter's mother perhaps." "I want to apologize."
"There's no need. If it had been one of my sisters, I would have struck out with more than a few hard words." To warm herself she cupped her elbows with her hands. "Go on."
She was tougher than she looked, Sloan thought, but it didn't ease his conscience. "After she'd called, she fell apart. Tliat's when she finally told me everything. How she'd met Dumont when she'd gone to New York to visit some friends. He was there on some business and he started showing her around. She'd never been to New York before, and it - and he dazzled her. She was just a kid."
"Seventeen," Suzanna murmured.
"And naive with it. Well, she got over that quick enough." The bitterness came though. "He gave her all the usual bull about getting married, about how he'd come out to Oklahoma and meet her family. Once she got home, he never contacted her. She got through to him on the phone once or twice. He made excuses and more promises. Then she found out she was pregnant"
He steadied himself, trying not to remember how angry and frightened he'd been when he'd learned his baby sister was going to have a baby of her own.
"When she told him, he changed tactics fast. He said some pretty awful things to her, and she grew up fast. Too fast."
Suzanna understood that, more than he could know. "It must have been terribly difficult for her, having the child without having the father."
"She handled herself. I have a very supportive family. Well, you'd know about that."
"Yes."
"Luckily, money wasn't a problem, either, so she could get all the care she and the baby needed. She never wanted his money, Suzanna."
"No, I understand that, too."
He nodded slowly, seeing that she did. "And when Kevin was born...well, Meg was great. It was for his sake that she tried to contact Dumont again, and eventually decided to appeal to his wife. All she wanted was for her son to have some contact with his father."
"I understand." Steadier, she turned around to look at him. "Sloan, if I had any influence with Bax I'd use it." She lifted her hands and let them fall. "But I don't, not even when it concerns the children he's chosen to acknowledge."
"I figure Kevin's better off the way things are. Su-zanna - " he dragged a hand through his disordered hair " - how the hell did a woman like you end up with Dumont?"
She smiled a little. "Once I was a young, naive girl who believed in happy ever after."
He wanted to take her hand but wasn't certain she'd accept