She was still jumpy after dinner when his mother climbed onto the floor in her linen pantsuit to play with Lucas. Elizabeth rushed to her side when Lucas grabbed a handful of Jacqueline’s silk blouse, aiming it toward his mouth.

Jacqueline calmly untangled Lucas’s chubby fingers and gave him a toy, which he immediately stuck in his mouth. Jacqueline laughed, but Elizabeth didn’t relax her vigil.

Reed handed his father a second glass of German beer and sat down in the other wingback chair.

“Your mother and I have been talking,” Anton began, setting his tall glass down on the round table between them.

Reed braced himself. He let his gaze rest on sweet, adventurous Lucas and elegant, compassionate Elizabeth-both of whom he loved to distraction. Somehow, some way, he was going to protect them from his father’s narrow-mindedness. Even if he had to send them to live in France.

Anton’s voice went gruff. “I was out of line the other day.”

Reed turned to stare at his father’s stern profile. Anton was also fixating on the cluster of people on the carpet.

“Excuse me?”

“About Lucas,” said Anton. Then he cleared his throat. “I was out of line to suggest that you shouldn’t adopt him.”

Reed couldn’t believe his ears. “You’ve changed your mind?”

“As I said. Your mother and I were talking.”

Reed’s mother? His mother had actually changed his father’s mind about something as significant as the heir to the Wellington dynasty? Reed looked at Jacqueline with new respect.

Anton lifted his glass from the table and took a sip. “The baby makes your mother happy.”

“Lucas,” Reed prompted.

“Lucas,” Anton acknowledged.

“He makes Elizabeth happy, too,” said Reed, wondering if he should take a page from Lucas. A sappy smile. A big hug. A clap of his hands. Maybe Reed had been trying too hard as a husband.

“You should go to California,” said Anton.

Reed turned his attention back to his father. “To do what?”

“Talk to the Vances. They want something. Find out what it is.”

“They want Lucas,” said Reed.

Anton shook his head. “They say they want Lucas. You find out what they really want.”

“You’re not suggesting this is a shakedown.” It was preposterous to suggest that the Vances would use Lucas to get money. They obviously loved him.

“Your mother tells me babies are wonderful. But she also tells me that once you’ve raised your own, you want grandchildren. You don’t want to start over.

“The Vances want something.” Anton nodded to Elizabeth and Lucas. “This is your family. You go find out what it’s going to take to fix the problem.”

Reed considered his father for a moment. “You get a lot of advice from Mother.”

Anton shot him a censorious look, and Reed braced himself for the fallout. But then his father’s expression unexpectedly softened. “Yes. Well. That’s just the way it is. The jet’s at JFK. I took the liberty of clearing the schedule for tomorrow.”

It took Reed all of thirty seconds to realize that the Vances weren’t looking for a bribe. They loved Lucas, and they only wanted what was best for their grandson. After finessing his way around the issue for a good thirty minutes, in desperation, Reed had decided to put all his cards on the table.

He told the Vances about his and Elizabeth’s infertility, of the strain it had put on their marriage, of her deep love for her brother, and her passionate desire to adhere to Brandon and Heather’s final wishes.

He didn’t brag about his wealth, but he didn’t downplay it, either. Lucas would live in the finest areas of New York. As he grew, he would have access to private schools, culture, travel, a thousand experiences that would enrich his life.

Then, lastly, he admitted the problems he and Elizabeth were facing in their marriage. But he pledged to the Vances that he was going to do everything in his power to keep his family intact. As the words poured out of him, he knew they were absolutely true. He was going to fight tooth and nail for Elizabeth. He loved her, and he would find a way to win her back.

Margarite Vance cracked first. She admitted her deep fear that Reed would take Lucas away from them. Unlike Reed, they weren’t wealthy, and California was a long way from New York. They didn’t want to be parents, but they desperately wanted to be grandparents. They wanted to be a part of Lucas’s life, to watch him grow.

Reed had immediately pledged his jet, his corporate account at a dozen Manhattan hotels, his parents’ guest rooms on Long Island, and he offered to send Elizabeth and Lucas to California as often as possible. He explained that he would like nothing better than for the Vances’ house to be Lucas’s second home when he and Elizabeth needed to be away.

In the end, the Vances had enthusiastically agreed not to contest the will. Reed had wanted to promise a visit for the weekend, but he knew he needed to talk to Elizabeth first.

On the flight home, he grew more and more eager to talk to Elizabeth, and he thought of more and more things he wanted to say.

But, at the airport in New York, he was met by Collin and Selina. They both fell into step with him as he marched toward his limo at the passenger pickup.

“Go away,” he told them, determined that for once Elizabeth would come first.

“We need to talk to you,” said Collin.

“I don’t care,” said Reed. He was going home, and nothing was going to stop him. He’d pay the damn ten million dollars if that’s what it took.

“It’s important,” said Selina.

“So is my life.” Reed pushed open the airport door, coming out onto a floodlit, rain-soaked sidewalk.

“This is about your life,” said Collin.

“We have information,” said Selina.

“I have a marriage to save,” Reed countered, spotting his driver. He marched out from under the awning. The driver rushed forward with an umbrella, relieving Reed of his briefcase.

“We can tell you in the car,” Collin offered.

Reed heaved a sigh. “We’re going straight to the penthouse. I’m not going to the office, or the police station, and we’re not stopping for anything but traffic lights.” He looked pointedly at the driver. “And even those are optional.”

The man grinned. “Yes, sir.”

He glanced back at Selina and Collin who were rapidly developing a drowned rat look.

“Get in,” he grumbled.

“It’s important,” Selina repeated, as they settled into their seats, an apology in her tone.

“It’s always important,” said Reed. “That’s the problem with my life. If I was deciding between Elizabeth and the things that weren’t important, I wouldn’t have a problem, would I?” He didn’t wait for an answer. “But every day, nearly every hour, something that is vitally important grabs my time and attention. I spend my evenings with you two and with Gage and Trent, because if we don’t work this out, I might be going to jail. A blackmailer might extort money. Somebody might even die.

“And so I do my part,” Reed continued. “But you know what? It stops here. I’m going home to Elizabeth. You two tell me what I need to do to make that happen.”

Selina glanced at Collin. “Do you want to tell him or shall I?”

Collin gestured that Selina should go ahead.

“It’s the Hammond and Pysanski connection.”

“Don’t tell me. It’s getting worse?” Reed absolutely could not get a break.

“I spent the last two days in Washington,” said Selina. “I found out that each of Hammond and Pysanski’s purchases were made in the forty-eight hours following the committee’s shortlisting of the project in question.”

“How many companies on the shortlist?” Reed couldn’t help asking. Had Hammond and Pysanski bought into the shortlisted companies on spec?

“Usually three to five,” said Selina. “But it looks like the unofficial decision coincided with the shortlist. Because they bought into the right company each and every time.”

Reed was dumbfounded. “So, Kendrick is guilty.”

“At first I thought it was Kendrick, too. But then I found this.” Selina pulled a sheet of paper out of her briefcase. “One of the senator’s aides, Clive Neville. With each transaction, the day after the Hammond and Pysanski stock purchase, ten thousand dollars was deposited to Clive Neville’s account.”

“A payoff?” asked Reed.

Selina nodded. “But you and Gage bought your shares a week before Hammond and Pysanski,” she said. “Before the shortlist.” She smiled at him.

“So it’s over?” Reed asked.

Collin slapped him on the shoulder. “It’s over.”

The limo came to a halt in front of 721 Park Avenue.

Reed handed the bank printout back to Selina. “Well done, team. I hope you don’t take this the wrong way. But, goodbye.” Reed beat the driver to the door handle and stepped out into the rain.

“You know,” said Hanna, topping up their wineglasses with a merlot, “there is another option.”

“No, there’s not.” Elizabeth was out of options to save her marriage. All that was left was to save herself. Reed was never going to change. That’s why she was taking such drastic action.

Hanna set the empty bottle on the coffee table and leaned back at the opposite end of the sofa. “You could tell him you were wrong, that you love him, and that you want your marriage to work out.”

“Yeah,” came a deep, male voice, and Elizabeth nearly dropped her wine into her lap. Hanna’s eyes went wide, and she twisted toward the penthouse foyer.

“You could do that,” said Reed, dropping his keys and sauntering into the room.

“Reed.” Hanna swallowed around a dry rasp.

“Hello, Hanna.”

“I am so sorry,” she offered in obvious embarrassment. “I was…We were…”

Reed shook his head. “Don’t be sorry. If I thought you’d convince her, I’d leave and let you go at it.”