But he caught up again, tone incredulous. “What did you say?”

She ignored him.

“Devin.”

She gave in to temptation. “You heard me. Well, really, I heard you talking to Byron. ‘Devin. Me. Babies.’ I believe that’s an exact quote.”

Lucas was silent for a full, stunned second. “You misunderstood.”

She whirled to face him, jamming her thumb against her chest. “I misunderstood. Monica misunderstood. How many other people misunderstand your despicable conspiracies?”

“My backup plan,” he enunciated, voice scoffing as he leaned in, “was falling in love with you.”

She ignored the constriction of her chest. “Oh, you’re good.”

The man would say anything if he thought it would put her off balance.

“I was telling Byron that if worse came to worst, and we lost Pacific Robotics, I was grateful that I’d still have you.” Lucas’s expression was open and frank, and for a second there, she almost fell for it.

But then she mentally smacked herself, turned on her heel and marched into the courthouse.

Inside, she was swallowed up by Steve’s team of lawyers, who escorted her to the front of the courtroom. She barely heard their last-minute instructions, and though she caught movement in her peripheral vision, so she knew Lucas’s team had sat down, she kept her gaze fixed firmly ahead.

The judge began to speak, but Devin was fighting a ringing in her ears. Her palms were sweating, and her mouth had gone dry. Lucas was lying. He was absolutely lying about falling in love with her.

She needed to concentrate on Amelia. Amelia was back at the San Juan Islands resort with Lexi where they’d spent the last few days. Devin and Lexi had joked about taking a boat to Canada and hiding Amelia until she turned eighteen. Right now, it didn’t seem like such a bad idea.

“Ms. Hartley?” the judge prompted, and the lawyer next to Devin nudged her.

“Yes, Your Honor?”

“Please take the witness stand.”

Devin rose shakily to her feet, surreptitiously smoothing her damp palms down the side of her charcoal-gray skirt. She walked carefully on her high heels, keeping her gaze fixed on points along the walls-the flag, a water pitcher, an antique portrait, the judge’s gavel.

She climbed into the witness stand and swore to tell the truth. She couldn’t wait to tell the truth.

Her lawyer went first, and the opening questions were innocuous, factual. They’d rehearsed them a dozen times. She talked about Monica and Konrad’s whirlwind courtship, the fact that she was surprised at how quickly Monica became pregnant, and that Monica hadn’t known about the inheritance until she’d overheard Lucas and Konrad discussing her pregnancy.

Partway through her testimony, Steve slipped into the courtroom and took a seat at the back of the gallery. There were few other spectators, except for the overflow of lawyers sitting in the gallery benches directly behind each of the tables.

Devin’s lawyer gave her an encouraging nod and a wink, then he sat back down at the table.

One of Lucas’s lawyers stood up. “Did your sister love Konrad Demarco?” he asked without preamble, dropping his pencil and moving from behind the table and into the center of the courtroom.

Devin leaned slightly into the microphone. “I believe she did.”

“What makes you believe she loved him?”

Devin couldn’t help a reflexive glance in Lucas’s direction, reminded of their conversations about what she knew for certain and what she only surmised. “She told me that she loved him.”

“Was she excited to get married?”

“Yes.”

“Was she excited to be pregnant?”

Devin nodded. “Yes.”

“Did your sister believe Konrad loved her?”

Devin hesitated, trying to remember what Monica had specifically said about Konrad’s love for her.

She remembered the wedding photos. She pictured their early months together, Monica with her arms wrapped around Konrad’s neck, his whispered words to her, her grin, the way his hand encircled her waist, the way his eyes lit up when he spoke her name, and the way he watched her from across the room, like nobody else on earth existed.

“Ms. Hartley?”

“I’m sorry.” She blinked to bring the lawyer back into focus. “What was the question?”

“Did your sister believe Konrad loved her?”

“Yes.”

“Would you say they were happy together?”

“At first,” Devin admitted.

“What changed?”

Devin’s glanced drifted to Lucas again. “She found out it was all a scam. Lucas and Konrad wanted Amelia to inherit their grandfather’s estate.”

The lawyer moved closer, his voice going lower, less theatrical. “How did she find this out?”

“She overheard a conversation between Konrad and his brother Lucas.”

“What did they say?”

“That they’d thwart Steve by having Amelia.”

“Any chance your sister misunderstood their meaning?”

“No.”

“Any chance she heard the words out of context?”

“No.”

“How can you be so certain?”

“I spent the next year helping her get over Konrad’s betrayal.”

The lawyer backed off, and Devin took a breath. She tried hard not to meet Lucas’s eyes, but she found her attention drawn in his direction, more and more frequently.

“And what did Konrad do during that year?” asked the lawyer.

“He tried to win her back.” Devin said the words more to Lucas than to anyone else. “He tried every trick in the book to get her and Amelia to come back to him. But she wouldn’t do it.”

Lucas’s lips compressed in a thin line.

“You believe Konrad was insincere?” asked the lawyer.

“Yes.”

The lawyer looked to Lucas, and Lucas gave an almost imperceptible shake of his head.

The lawyer cocked his head sideways and waited.

Lucas shook again.

There was some kind of silent argument going on between them.

Then the lawyer turned back to Devin. “Ms. Hartley, I understand you broke into Lucas Demarco’s personal email account.”

Lucas brought his hand down on the table and started to rise, but another lawyer grasped his shoulder to hold him down.

“Ms. Hartley?”

“I didn’t ‘break’ into it.” There’d been no password. It was conceivable that she’d accidentally opened it.

“But you did look at Mr. Demarco’s private emails.”

Devin swallowed. “Yes.”

“Why?”

Her voice came out slightly high-pitched, but the man was beginning to frustrate her. “To prove I was right.”

“And did you prove that?”

Devin resettled herself in the witness chair and told herself to calm down. “I read an email from Lucas to Konrad that said, ‘I’m counting on you.’ They were talking about Monica.”

“And you interpreted that to mean Lucas was counting on Konrad to woo Monica, marry her quickly and have a baby in order to capitalize on their grandfather’s will.”

“Yes.”

“Is that what the email said?”

Devin didn’t understand the question, and she gave her head a reflexive little shake.

“Was the email that specific?” asked the lawyer. “Did it go in to the details of the alleged plot, or did it simply say ‘I’m counting on you’?”

“‘I’m counting on you,’” Devin repeated.

“So, for all you know, Lucas could have been counting on Konrad to pick up a quart of milk on the way home?”

Devin’s lawyer jumped to his feet. “Objection, Your Honor.”

“I’ll allow it,” said the judge.

The lawyer carried on. “They could have been referring to anything.”

“Maybe,” Devin was forced to admit. “But-”

“Why would he try to win her back?” the lawyer shot out, startling Devin.

“Excuse me?”

“Why would Konrad, having already married Monica, already impregnated Monica, clearly having fulfilled the terms of his grandfather’s will. Why would he then spend pretty much every waking minute for the next year trying to win her back?”

Devin hesitated.

Once again, she found her glance going to Lucas.

For some reason, he’d stopped looking aggressive. He almost looked compassionate. Was he feeling sorry for her? Was she doing so badly on the stand that she evoked his pity?

“He wanted her back because he loved her,” said the lawyer.

“Speculation,” said Devin’s lawyer.

“Rephrase,” said the judge.

The lawyer moved closer to Devin, speaking slowly and deliberately. “If Konrad had truly loved Monica, and if she had misunderstood a conversation between him and his brother, and if she had left him, what would you expect him to do?”

Devin paused. She knew she’d walked right into a trap. But there she was. She couldn’t get out.

And the lawyer was right. If she took a giant step back from her sister’s emotional upset, Konrad had done everything a man in love might do. Devin couldn’t be positive he hadn’t loved Monica. Nor could she be positive he’d manipulated her.

The truth came to Devin in a blinding wave.

Lucas was right. He’d been right all along, and she couldn’t lie about it.

She looked directly at Lucas. “I’d expect a man in love to try to win his wife back.”

Lucas gave Devin a ghost of a soft, compassionate smile. He looked genuinely regretful at the turns of events. He couldn’t be, of course. By rights, he should be celebrating.

There was a strangled exclamation from the back of the room, as Steve threw up his hands in disgust.

“I ask again,” said the lawyer to Devin, “is there any chance Monica misunderstood Konrad and Lucas’s conversation?”

“Yes,” Devin admitted, blinking against the sting of tears. Lucas was going to win it all. And he was going to take Amelia away from her. And she’d have to beg him for every second she spent with her niece.

The lawyer looked to Lucas again, and this time Lucas nodded.

“Why did you take Amelia away from the Demarco security last weekend?” asked the lawyer.