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Authors: Shirley Wine

One Hour to Midnight (12 page)

BOOK: One Hour to Midnight
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"Sonia's had her reasons." Leon rocked back on his heels.
 

She nodded. "Yannis deceived us both."

"I'm glad you do realise that." Leon looked at her and she fought not to fidget. "Was that what caused your collapse?"

It was pointless pretending not to understand. The memory of Sonia's visit had been preying on her mind. The shadows allowed her some privacy. "Not entirely."
 

"What else was involved?"

Veronica hesitated.
Why not? I've come this far.
 

It was more than time Leon understood the relentless pressure she'd endured in his home, pressure that he'd either ignored, or preferred not to see.

"Julia confirmed Sonia's claim." The bald words echoed her anguish. "Julia told me she approved Yannis's choice."

Leon's stillness was absolute.
 

Goose-bumps erupted on Veronica's skin. The intense silence could have been cut with a knife.
 

"
Julia?
Julia told you that?" The shock in his voice was unmistakeable. "But that's impossible! She never knew you existed until the day I brought you here."

She almost believed him. But doubt was so embedded in her psyche it needed more than one shocked denial to erase suspicion.

"The moment Julia saw me she wanted my baby." Let Leon deny that if he could.

Leon's harsh sigh was loud in the night silence. "Julia found infertility a heavy burden and envied you, yes. But the decision to give up Jordan was your own."

Veronica didn't know whether to laugh or cry.
 

She had no doubt that Leon believed what he was saying, but she'd lived with her truth for ten years.

"You mean it had nothing to do with my inability to support my baby, my youth, or your determination to retain custody?"

Leon gripped her arms and gave her a little shake, his anger and distress tangible. "Had you opted to keep Jordan, I would have applied for joint guardianship with you, similar to what I have with Andreas and Katya. Jordan was your baby, but he was also a Karvasis and entitled to his birth-right and financial support. That's a far cry from what you're suggesting."

She stared at him, her jaw loose with shock, shaking her head, as she struggled to assimilate his words.
 

"You would have supported me…" her voice faded to a shocked whisper, as she stared up into his eyes, struggling with disbelief, "financially? Even had I decided to keep Jordan?"
 

Leon's black brows snapped together in a heavy frown. "Of course, what else did you think I meant?"

Nausea churned in Veronica's stomach.
 

"I didn't understand." Her choked words echoed in the suddenly tense silence.
 

She pulled away from him and rubbed her hands up her chilled arms, but the cold chill in her chest refused to budge.

Julia had twisted this, too.
 

"I thought you'd offered either adoption or financial aid," she said in a harsh, shaken whisper. "Why didn't you make it clear?"

His eyes narrowed as he watched her, a small muscle pulsing in his jaw.
   

"You thought I'd throw you and your baby onto the street if you didn't agree to us adopting him? If that's what I intended, why on earth would I bring you here?"
 

There was no way Veronica could mistake Leon's incredulity. Put like that, her assumptions were ludicrous.
 

But then she was no longer that frightened, pressured teen. She could see her situation through mature eyes, without Julia's clever distortions.
 

Distortions meant to undermine a teenager's confidence. One glance at Leon enough for her to know he would never believe her.

"You chose a career over your child. Do you blame Julia for loving the child you left behind?"

The words sliced Veronica open as neatly a sharp knife slipped between her ribs. Her heart sank. Would Leon ever believe the pressure Julia had exerted? With a moment of clear insight, she knew it was futile to even try to explain. As always, with Leon, everything came back to Julia.

And in its own way, the pressure from Leon had been just as intense.
 

"Do you mind leaving?" she asked woodenly, unable to bear anything more. "I'm tired."

For several tension-filled moments he never moved, then with an expressive shrug he disappeared, leaving only the soft shushing sound of the closing door in his wake.
 

Veronica eased out a ragged breath. In the bedroom, she crawled into bed, only to find sleep elusive.
 

She'd made a mistake returning to Claremont.

Overwrought, her brief visit with Jordan, the heated exchanges with Leon replayed through her mind, overlaid with snatches of Julia's ghostly laughter.

 

~***~

 

"Veronica? Ricki? Wake up!" A hand shook her shoulder, hard. Opening bleary eyes, she saw Leon standing over her. "Jordan's not so well."

She bolted upright, anxiety clutching at her throat. There was only one reason Leon would wake her in the middle of the night.
 

"McKenna's getting the car. I'm leaving in a few moments if you want to come."
 

Veronica tumbled from the bed, dragged open the cavernous wardrobe and was tugging on clothes before Leon reached the door. Racing to the bathroom, she splashed cold water on her face, dragged a brush through her tangled hair and scooped up a band and tugged it into a ponytail. She was pushing her feet into canvas espadrilles when he reappeared.

"You need something warm." He caught up a denim fleece jacket and held it for her to thrust her arms into.

"Let's go."

Cassie was in the hallway, hair in a scarf and wrapper hastily tied, her face ashen and looking every one of her years. "I'll pray for you both."

"I'll let you know how he is as soon as we get there." Leon gripped her gnarled hands. "Try not to worry."

Try telling the sun not to rise. The sombre thought made Veronica shiver.

Leon hustled her out the door, taking the steps two at a time and bundling her into the waiting car. "Don't waste time."
 

Veronica trembled. "What's wrong?"

"He's got pneumonia." Leon ran a shaking hand through his hair. "Damn! I should never have left his bedside."

Icy fear trickled through her veins.

"Leon," she gripped his hands in hers, one glance enough to know he shared her fear. "You not being there wouldn't have made any difference."

"I saw the sheen of sweat on his brow earlier. I should have heeded my instincts and stayed with him."

"You need rest, too. No one could have anticipated he'd have a setback."

"Maybe not, but had I ignored your siren call, I'd have been there for my son."

His bitter words robbed her of breath. She tugged her hands free. What did he mean by that crack?

"What are you inferring?"
 

"You have the lure of a bitch in heat. You make a man forget his responsibilities."
 

Shock was followed swiftly by outrage.

"You bastard," she said through her teeth. "Who insisted I stayed at Claremont?'
 

"That was a mistake." He gave her one searing glare and turned to stare out the opposite window and ignored her. In a silence, thick with tension McKenna parked beneath the hospital's portico.

Leon caught her hand but she yanked it free not wanting his touch. Her heart pounded so hard with fear and outrage, she struggled for breath. On Jordan's floor, Leon paused. "I'm sorry, Veronica. That was uncalled for."

Maybe, but now I know what he thinks.

 
"Stop it," Leon said harshly, gripping her shoulders. "You won't be any help like this."

Hurting and resentful, she glared at him and then glimpsed the raw emotion he was unable to hide. "Do you want to help?"

She managed to nod.

"Then calm down. You need to be strong, for Jordan's sake."

She closed her eyes and concentrated on her breathing, the pressure of Leon's hands calming.
 

"Better?"

She managed to smile. "I won't go to pieces. I promise."

For several moments he looked at her and, as if satisfied with what he saw, gave a small nod. "Okay let's get gowned up. Jordan's in protective isolation for his radiation therapy."

Veronca followed him into a stark washroom.

"You have to strip to your undies and don surgical overalls, mask and cap and then scrub your hands." She hesitated shy at stripping in this confined space with him present. "Now's not the time for false modesty."

Embarrassed, she turned her back and removed her blouse and skirt. Heightened senses magnified every rustle as Leon did likewise.
 

As Veronica pulled on the drab green overalls Leon crossed the space and slipped his hands around her neck and through her hair, lifting her chin with both thumbs.

"Don't be embarrassed." His gentleness was a complete contrast to his previous acerbity. "I've seen you at your most vulnerable, remember?"

As if she could ever forget, or the scene that erupted when she'd tried get Julia's help—

 

"Ricki's alone, having my brother's child. A baby she's giving into our care. You must support her through her labour."

"Well rule me out." Julia's lips were a thin angry line.

"If you won't then I will."

Leon was as coldly angry as I'd ever seen him and Julia, adamant in her refusal. Reasons she never divulged to Leon. To me she showed a different face.

"You deserve to be alone," she whispered harshly, when Leon left the room. "It's your punishment for breaking up a marriage."

 

—even now, Veronica struggled to understand how Julia came by that notion.

 
Did Julia blame me for breaking up a marriage I never knew existed?

During her labour, Leon stayed with her, rubbed her back and talked nonsense to distract her. For twenty rugged hours she drew on his strength. And when it was over it was Leon who placed Jordan, wet and bloody, in her arms.
 

At some point during those long pain-filled hours an enduring link was forged between them, a link that still bound them despite time and distance.
 

Veronica met his gaze. "I never did thank you."

Leon's eyes darkened before he lowered his lashes.
 

"It wasn't necessary." He lowered his head and laid a brief, tender kiss on her lips. "You gave us a gift beyond price."

Veronica turned to the basin and scrubbed her hands, memories crowding her.

Sometime during her time at Claremont and giving birth, her love for Yannis died. In its place had grown a deep, abiding love for his strong, forceful brother.
 

And despite time, separation and starved of contact, Veronica had only to see Leon in that nightclub and she knew she'd love him until she took her last breath. And after being at Claremont for less than a day, she knew Leon still loved his dead wife.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter Eight

 

"R
eady?"

With a quivering breath, she nodded. Leon held a mask and she turned and he tied it for her. She pulled a paper cap over her hair.

"Let's visit our son." He held out a hand but she shook her head.

Our son.
The words hit her with all the force of a fist to the solar plexus. Since the hour of his birth, Jordan had never been hers. And no matter how much she regretted her decision now, she had surrendered that right.

Jordan tossed restlessly, his sickly pallor intensified by a hectic flush. "Daddy? Daddy where are you? Mummy?"

The harsh croak barely parted his fever-cracked lips. His cries cracked Veronica's heart until it was as brittle as crazed glass.
Jordan doesn't want me, he's calling Julia
.
 

She pushed aside her hurt and took his hot hands in hers. She may not be the mother he was crying for, but ties of the heart bound her just as tightly to this sick little boy.

She laid a hand on his forehead. He was burning up.

"I'm here sweetheart," she murmured. "I'm right here."

With a grip that held surprising strength, he caught her hand. "Don't leave me, Mummy. Don't go away again."

"I won't leave you." Veronica took the tepid flannel from Leon and began sponging Jordan's face, neck and torso.

BOOK: One Hour to Midnight
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