He opened his eyes and saw Dylan. When his gaze moved to where Shannon had been sitting, or more importantly, the e-reader he’d been so fascinated with, Victor caught on.
He sat up. “Waterproof, huh?”
Dylan nodded. “Lightweight, too.”
Victor looked up, didn’t see Shannon, and saw his hand reaching toward her stuff.
He touched the screen and it came to life. It took him a few sentences to comprehend what he was reading.
A book on pregnancy? No . . . not exactly.
He flipped through and found a chapter heading and the title of the book.
No, no. Why would Shannon . . . ?
“Pretty cool, right?” Dylan asked.
He had to be mistaken. Was the woman pregnant? He thought of the bikini hugging her body. A bathing suit like that was what a woman wore to attract a man. Not to mention the alcohol. Shannon seemed like a responsible woman. Pregnant women didn’t drink.
Victor knew it was wrong, but he clicked on what looked like a menu and the images of book covers popped on the screen. Single Mothers. Single Motherhood by Choice. Skip the Syringe, Just Have Sex.
What the . . .
He clicked back into the book she’d been reading, flipped back a few pages, uncertain where he’d picked the device up, and left it next to her bag and hat.
“I might have to take up reading again,” Victor said, staring at Dylan.
Dylan offered a sad smile.
So many questions came at once. Shannon was considering a baby, which was obvious. Skipping the syringe meant sleeping around, trapping a man? No, no . . . single mothers. No dad needed for that. Except in the baby making part of the deal. Kinda hard to have a baby without a man or the implied syringe.
Victor tried to find some kind of incriminating behavior to point the finger toward Shannon working some kind of scheme to get pregnant without the man realizing what was going on.
Except all he came up with was the time she’d spent with him and the gay couple from Portugal.
Which left him.
Only his fiancée had walked out, and here Shannon was at his honeymoon hotel, by accident.
Was she playing him?
Was she playing anyone?
Son of a . . .
There was really only one way to find out.
Shannon skipped back onto the beach ten minutes later, much happier than when she’d left.
“Is everything okay?” Victor asked.
“Everything’s great.” She sat on her perch, waved a hand at the server on the beach. “I’m up for a Bloody Mary, anyone want one?”
“I’ll take one,” Erasmo said.
She looked at Victor.
“I’m good.”
“Dylan?”
“Too early for me.”
“How’s Avery?” Victor asked.
Shannon grinned and bit her lip. “Much better.”
“What’s so funny?”
She shook her head. “Nothing.”
The waiter approached, cutting off the conversation.
As Victor watched Shannon sipping what he would call a vacation cocktail or something given a name that made it okay to drink before noon, he completely ruled a pregnant Shannon out.
Her playing him, however, was still on the table. He had two days to figure out her game.
If there was one thing Victor had come to realize, it was that she was up to something.
Nothing could dim her mood. Even Avery grumbling around their room and checking her stomach’s profile in the full-length mirror while in complete denial.
Like clockwork, Avery’s transient stomach issues disappeared as the morning ran on, leaving her tired but hungry around two.
“We’ve been using protection.”
“Apparently not all the time.”
“I knew going off the pill was a bad idea.” At thirty-three, her doctor had suggested she take a break to test her hormone and thyroid levels. Add to that the fact that she and Liam had talked about having a baby . . . someday. “All your talk about getting pregnant scared me into thinking I wouldn’t.”
“Obviously not your concern.”
Avery paced the room, as she had most of the day. “We just got married.”
“Liam is going to be thrilled.”
“I know that. But he isn’t the one puking. I’m going to get fat.” She sat on the edge of a bed. “Maybe it’s just some kind of parasite.”
Shannon giggled. “Yeah, the nine month kind.”
“This isn’t funny.”
She took Avery’s hands in hers. “You’re going to be a great mom.”
Avery’s eyes opened wide. “Oh my God. I’ll be like my mother.”
“Not a chance.”
“What if I screw up?”
“You’re not going to screw up.”
Avery shook her head. “I’m not ready for this.”
Shannon knew her friend. It had taken her a long time to allow a relationship between her and Liam, even longer to admit it. Then