Blane had gotten that senate appointment, to the surprise of no one. Kade and I had watched on television as he’d been sworn into office. Blane Kirk was now a name that was nationally recognized, and his handsome face had graced the covers of several news magazines. The press seemed to love him, though I was sure that wouldn’t last. The gossip pages once again had photos of Blane with beautiful women on his arm, though the same one never seemed to appear twice.

Blane had escorted Vivian to Keaston’s funeral. The story that had been circulated was that the senator had suffered from terminal cancer and had decided to spare himself and his family the pain of a long, drawn-out illness. I didn’t care what story was put out to explain his death. I was just glad he was out of all our lives, permanently.

Kade and I had gone to James’s sparsely attended funeral. We’d stood at the graveside and I’d sprinkled a handful of dirt over the coffin. Closure. It was good for my mental health.

Clarice had been dumbfounded to hear about Kade and me, but she’d recovered quickly, wishing us happiness. I thought she was hiding disappointment that Blane and I hadn’t worked out, which I understood. She was loyal to both Blane and Kade, but I knew she held a special place in her heart for Blane and wanted to see him happy. So did I.

Chance wasn’t nearly as quick to let the past go and I made sure it was just him and me when I told him the news. He’d been stunned.

“You’re married?” he’d asked, his eyes wide with disbelief. “To Kade Dennon, an assassin?” The utter outrage in his voice had made me cringe.

I didn’t know if Chance would ever believe that Kade had left his old life behind, so we just took it day by day. I had to hope that, eventually, he would see the good in Kade the same way I had.

Kade treated me like gold, and he had been true to his word about leaving his old career behind and focusing on work that was legal and had zero chance of him ending up either dead or in prison. Initially, I’d been somewhat worried that his old life might cause problems, but it seemed that being an assassin was a lonely and secretive profession. He’d asked Branna to help him put out some rumors that he’d been killed on a job and it seemed he was right—no one came seeking the truth.

“So how about Aidan?” he asked in my ear, his arms wrapping around me from behind.

I leaned my head back against his chest, turning my head to look up at him. I made a face. He rolled his eyes.

“You don’t know it’s going to be a boy,” I said. We’d decided not to find out the sex of the baby and picking a name was an ongoing discussion, especially since Kade was convinced it was a boy.

“Yes, I do,” he said. “Trust me. I know things.”

It always made me smile when he said stuff like that and I laced my fingers through his as they rested on my abdomen.

“How about Tripp?” he asked.

I didn’t even bother responding to that one. “If you’re so sure it’s a boy,” I said, “that means I’ll have two of you to handle, so I think I should get to name him.”

Kade looked at me skeptically. “I don’t know. I wouldn’t want my son to end up with some name that could be a girl or a boy, like Jordan or Tory.”

“You don’t trust me?” I asked, raising an eyebrow.

“Ooh, now you’re reaching for the big guns,” he teased, making me laugh. “All right, fine. If we have a boy, like I know we will, then you get naming rights.”

“Deal.”

We sealed it with a kiss and I was just getting into it when the lights went out. I jerked my mouth away.

“It’s time!” I said excitedly.

“You know, most women would rather kiss me than watch Britney Spears,” Kade chided me.

“I’ll make it up to you later,” I promised with a laugh.

“I’ll hold you to it,” Kade said, “because I also got you this.” He held something up in front of me as the stage lights came on and the music started.

“Backstage passes?” I cried. I turned and threw my arms around his neck. “You’re amazing!” I pressed a hard kiss to his mouth.

When I pulled back, Kade’s expression was soft, his eyes tender as he looked at me.

“No,” he said, “you are.”

EPILOGUE

The pains began in the morning while I was drinking my coffee. Starting in my lower back and expanding around my abdomen, flaring in intensity, then fading. I knew what it was immediately and glanced at the clock. Another one came in ten minutes. I waited it out, breathing through my mouth and gripping the counter.

Once it passed, I took a shower. Kade was already in his office working and I knew he’d go apeshit the second I told him. He’d practically refused to leave the house the past couple of weeks, saying he just knew that the moment he left was when the baby would decide to come. The second I told him it was time, he’d have me hustled into the car and to the hospital. Well, I wanted to shower first and shave my legs.

I sat on the shower seat when another pain came, breathing through it, then finished rinsing my hair. I dressed in comfy clothes and blew my hair dry before pulling it back in a French braid. When I deemed myself ready and the contractions were about seven minutes apart, I went to find Kade.

He was typing away at the computer and the windows in the office were open, the warm spring air drifting in along with the scent of the daffodils and lilacs blooming outside. The first thing he’d done when we’d arrived back in Indy from our honeymoon was to buy me a beautiful two-story brick home surrounded by an expansive lawn dotted with trees. We weren’t in the country, like my little house in Rushville was, but there was enough space between us and neighbors that I didn’t feel boxed in.

“Good morning,” I said, sliding my arm across his shoulders.

Kade glanced up and smiled, turning his chair and tugging me down onto his lap. I wasn’t as dainty as I used to be, not with a nine-month pregnant tummy, but Kade seemed to love everything about it. His hand rested on top of my stomach. “‘Morning, princess,” he said, giving me a kiss. “How are you feeling today? Is the baby awake?”

I grinned. “Not only is the baby awake,” I teased, “but it’s time.”

It took a second for Kade to catch on, then his eyes went wide. “Now?”

I laughed. “Well, not right now, but hopefully by tonight it’ll all be over.”

That put Kade into high gear, as I’d known it would. In minutes he’d closed up the house, gotten my suitcase, called Mona, and was trying to hustle me to the car.

“Wait,” I said, “did you eat breakfast?”

He looked at me like I was insane. “You’re seriously not asking me if I’ve eaten, right?” he asked incredulously.

“Well, the hospital food is awful,” I said, thinking I was being perfectly reasonable and he was the one reacting all out of proportion. “You should eat something before we go.”

“Oh my God, Kathleen, just get in the car,” he moaned. “Please. Before I stuff you in it myself.”

“Will you relax?” I said in exasperation. “You act like we haven’t done this twice before.” Still, I got in the car before his face got any redder.

“If you think that makes it easier, it doesn’t,” he said firmly, sliding behind the wheel.

“Are the boys all right at Mona’s?” I asked.

“They’re fine,” Kade assured me, one corner of his mouth tipping up. “I told them their mommy and I were going to bring home their little sister and they were quite excited.”

“Nice that they were already there spending the night,” I said, then another pain hit and I gripped the door, breathing until it passed. I noticed Kade’s speed had increased while I’d been quiet.

“I’m fine,” I said, reaching for his hand. “Slow down. There’s plenty of time.”

Kade, for all his coolness under pressure, proved to be the typical husband when it came time for me to give birth. I thought that was because it was something out of his control, which he hated.

It took a little while to get me admitted and situated in a room, then all the equipment hooked up to me, the IV put in, yadda yadda. The pains were closer together now and I hoped that after having two babies, the third would arrive quickly.

It took a couple of hours, then the nurse proclaimed I was dilated enough for an epidural, and I heaved a sigh of relief. I knew lots of women did childbirth the natural way, but I was fine with the label of wimp. I wasn’t a fan of pain and if modern medicine had a way for me to avoid it, I was all about it.

Kade hated watching, though, his fear of needles making him extremely uncomfortable seeing one go into my spine. Of course he said he wasn’t afraid of needles, he just didn’t “like them,” though he’d never told me why.

I felt much better after the epidural and the next few hours passed relatively easily.

“Did you call Blane?” I asked Kade at one point.

“Yeah,” he said. “He was in a meeting, but I left him a voice mail.”

I nodded, a little disappointed, though I knew Blane was a very busy man. Blane was a US senator in his own right. After being appointed to fill the remainder of his great-uncle’s term, he’d run for election and won the seat. He’d inherited Keaston’s estate, which not only included the house in Georgetown but also his family home in Cambridge, where Vivian still lived, and a vacation home on Nantucket. Now Blane divided his time between DC and Nantucket with occasional visits to Indy. Congressional recess was coming, though, and he usually came back for a visit before taking our boys with him to Nantucket for two weeks every summer.

By late afternoon I was pushing and by dinner, Kade and I were holding the newest member of our family.