"Two weeks." Her voice was faint and barely audible.
"Don’t you think you should give him a call sooner?"
"No." She refused to look at him.
Steve apparently found what he wanted. He sat on the edge of the mattress and slowly, methodically put on his shoes. "How often does this sort of thing happen?" he asked next.
"It doesn’t matter." Some of her energy returned, and she tested her strength by sitting up. "Listen, Steve, I appreciate your concern, but it just isn’t necessary. My baby and I are going to be just fine."
He didn’t look convinced. His brooding gaze revealed his thoughts, and when he looked at her, his expression softened perceptibly. It took a moment for his eyes to drop to her hand, which rested on her abdomen.
The change that came over him was a shock. His face tightened and his mouth thinned. A surge of anger shot through her. "You don’t want to claim our daughter, then it’s your loss."
"The baby isn’t mine."
The anguish in his voice was nearly Carol’s undoing. She bit her lower lip and shook her head with mounting despair. "I can’t believe you’re actually saying that. But you’ll never know, will you, Steve? All your life you’re going to be left wondering. If she has dark eyes like yours and dark hair, that will only complicate your doubts. No doubt the Kyle nose will make you all the more suspicious. Someday you’re going to have to face the fact that you’ve rejected your own child. If you can live with that, then so be it."
He twisted around and his fists were knotted into tight fists. "You were pregnant at Christmas and you’re trying to pawn this pregnancy off on me."
"That is the most insulting thing you’ve ever said to me."
He didn’t answer her for a long time. "You’ve insulted my intelligence. I may have loved you, but I’m not a blind fool."
"They don’t come any blinder."
"Explain the milk?"
"What?" Carol hadn’t a clue to what he was talking about.
"At Christmas, after we’d made love, we had a snack. Remember?"
Carol did.
"You poured yourself a glass of milk and I commented because you used to dislike it. We were married five years and the only time I can remember you having milk was with cold cereal. You could live your whole life without the stuff. All of a sudden you’re drinking it by the glassful."
With deliberate calm Carol rolled her gaze toward the ceiling. "Talk about flimsy excuses. You honestly mean to say you’re rejecting your own child because I drank a glass of milk an entire month before I was pregnant?"
"That isn’t everything. I saw your knitting Christmas Eve, although you tried to hide it from me. Later, I asked you about it and you claimed it was a baby blanket. It was the same piece you were working on at Christmas, wasn’t it?"
"Yes, but…"
"That blanket’s for your baby isn’t it, Carol? There never was any friend."
Frustration mounting in volcanic proportions, she yelled, "All right, it wasn’t for any friend – that’s what you want to hear."
"And then there were the sweet potatoes. Good God, you had six containers full of yams that night… pregnant women are said to experience silly cravings. And that’s what it was, wasn’t it – a craving?"
Standing, Carol felt the weight of defeat settle on her shoulders. No amount of arguing would change anything now. Steve had reasoned everything out in his own mind and found her answers lacking. There was no argument she could give him that would change what he’d already decided.
"Well?" he demanded. "Explain those things away, if you can."
She felt as if she were going to burst into helpless tears at any second. For six years she’d loved this man and given him the power to shatter her heart. "You’re the only man I know who can put two and two together and come up with five, Steve," she said wearily.
"For God’s sake, quit lying. Quit trying to make me doubt what’s right before my eyes. You wanted to trick me into believing that baby is mine, and by God, it almost worked."
If he didn’t leave soon, Carol was going to throw him out. "I think you should leave."
"Admit it!" he shouted.
Nothing less would satisfy him. She slapped her hands against her thighs and feigned a sorrowful sigh. "I guess you’re just too smart for me. I should have known better than to try to fool you."
Steve turned and marched to the front door, but stopped, his hand gripping the knob. "What’s he going to do about it?"
"Who?"
"Todd."
It took every dictate of Carol’s control not to scream that her former employer had nothing to do with her being pregnant. "I don’t have anything more to say to you."
"Is he going to divorce Joyce and marry you?"
With one hand cradled around her middle, Carol pointed to the door with the other.
"I have a right to know," Steve argued. "If he isn’t going to help you, something should be done."
"I don’t need anything – especially from you."
"As much as I’d like to walk away from you, I can’t. If you find yourself in trouble, call me. I’ll always be there for you."
"If you want to help me, then get out of my life. This baby is mine and mine alone." There was no anger in her words; her voice was low and controlled… and sad, unbelievably sad.