ROMANCE: BAD BOY ROMANCE: M.V.B. - Most Valuable Baby (Sports Secret Baby Romance) (Contemporary Interracial Pregnancy Romance) (52 page)

BOOK: ROMANCE: BAD BOY ROMANCE: M.V.B. - Most Valuable Baby (Sports Secret Baby Romance) (Contemporary Interracial Pregnancy Romance)
9.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

 

Hanes remained speechless. His eyes wide and mouth ajar, he gaped at her like had forgotten how to talk. After a few awkward seconds, a sound traveled up his throat.

 

“You’re going to be a daddy, Hanes!” a girl from inside said. “Don’t be staring all quiet like that. Say something!”

 

CHAPTER SIX

 

Hanes spun around and jabbed a finger toward Gina, peering around the corner of a hallway. “What did mom tell you about snooping. Get. This isn’t any of your business.”

 

“Not yet,” she said musically before running down the hall.

 

Hanes still pointed at the empty space, his hand reluctantly lowering on its own accord. He had reacted out of habit—Gina was always such a nosy gossip—and now his psyche was sinking back to its earlier stunned state. He shook it off and tried to think—tried to process.

 

He…and Frankie…a baby. Wow. He had been around the bend and back a few times, but he thought he had grown past the pregnancy-scare phase. Not that this was a “scare” but the real thing.

 

“I’m sorry,” Frankie said. “I…should I have come? Maybe I shouldn’t have. But I thought I, um—”

 

Hanes returned his full attention to her. A nice lady, fun-loving and sensitive. She must be as scared as she is guilty.

 

“No need for that, darling,” he said. His own guilt swelled up within him, and he let it show on his face. “I’m the one who is sorry. I…this has never happened before, believe it or not, so I was just surprised. But I am really glad you told me.” He thought about for a second, and then he nodded when was certain this was true. “I’m not a fan of secrets either, especially one so big.”

 

Frankie released a large breath, her small frame loosening immensely. She almost looked like a different person, no longer so stiff and stressed. “Good. I’m glad.”

 

Hanes gaze lowered to her belly, hidden behind her purse. Curiosity and some foreign need had him gently pushing the purse to the side until Frankie finally moved it. But, of course, her stomach looked no different than it had a couple of months ago. He was embarrassed as he was disappointed.

 

“Sorry,” he said again, wincing and forcing himself to look her in the eye. His dad always said that when you made apologies, you didn’t hide from the person you were apologizing to. “Of course you ain’t showing yet. I…I was rude.”

 

“It’s your child,” she said, a bashful expression coming over her. She licked her lips and glanced away. “I don’t mind.”

 

“Okay,” he said. His child. He blinked hard, something…pleasant tightening his chest. He nearly laughed, the sensation tickling him. “Well, that being the case, you should know that I will take good care of you and the kid. Always.”

 

Her eyes snapped back to him, her face slack. “Oh…I…you don’t have to. I wasn’t—”

 

“I want to. Really.” The strange nice feeling washing over him was so euphoric and distracting that it took him a moment to realize something important. When he did, his heart sank. “Unless you don’t want me to.”

 

“No! I mean, yes, Of course I do! I mean, I want you involved if you want to be involved—”

 

He held back a laugh, not wanting to embarrass her any further. “I want to be involved.”

 

“Good. Good. I’m glad.”

 

“Yeah. Me, too.” He couldn’t help himself; he looked at her stomach again.

 

His child…how about that?

 

Before the silence between them could become awkward, he heard two people rush down the hallway. His sister and mother—he could tell by their footsteps.

Hanes barely managed to restrain a groan. He looked at Frankie and gave her a weak smile. “I apologize in advance for my family’s nosiness. Dad always taught us to be truth-seekers and not conspiracy-starters, but he forgot to teach some of us about the etiquette of privacy.”

 

Frankie giggled, a pretty sound. She shrugged and opened her mouth to speak, but of course, Hanes’s female kin were already in the front the room.

 

“Is it true, Hanes?” his mother asked, hand clamping on her shoulder. She looked Frankie up and down. “Oh. Hello. I’m Mrs. Copper, Big Jim’s widower.”

 

“Mom,” Hanes scolded, his voice coming out a bit too whiny for his liking. His face reddened, humiliation and discomfort clutching him like it used to when he was younger. “You need to stop introducing yourself like that. It’s morbid.”

 

She scoffed and shrugged. “People usually ask. I’m just beating them to the punch. Speaking of which,” She turned to him fully, “do you have a little heir of your own, or is Gina blowing smoke up my ass?”

 

“Mom!” Gina cried out from the hallway while Hanes slapped a hand over his face.

 

He turned to Frankie to apologize when she stuttered out “You’re Big Jim’s son?”

 

“One of them,” his mother answered for him. She squinted at Frankie. “You didn’t know?”

 

“No,” Frankie breathed, head tilting back like she was just noticing the mansion for the first time. “Oh…”

 

“I don’t live here,” Hanes said. He stepped out of his mother’s grip and gently reached out for Frankie’s arm. He smiled, nervous but happy. “I live in the trailer and all that. I just help out around here sometimes.”

 

“Oh,” Frankie said, still looking stunned.

 

Hanes desperately wanted to apologize again.

 

“Well,” his mother said, sounding annoyed. “Is she pregnant or what?”

 

Hanes managed to hold back an aggravated series of swear words, though the action resulted in a pounding ache beneath his skull.

 

CHAPTER SEVEN

 

Frankie didn’t know how to break it to Hanes when he announced that he would take her to their doctor that instant. She had already had an ultrasound in New York, and it was something she had to schedule weeks in advance. But Hanes was so excited, and he clearly wanted to get away from his mother—and Frankie just wasn’t that strong of a person to be brutally honest twice in one day.

 

So she let him take her by the hand and guide her into one of the family’s many expensive cars. She had waved goodbye to Hanes’s mother and the girl—his sister? They did not wave back, though they did intensely observe the way her hand moved back and forth.

 

God, she hoped they weren’t racists.

 

“Look,” Hanes said, his fingers drumming over the wheel as he drove, “I’ll admit, I haven’t always been the most responsible person in the world, but I’m going to do right by this kid. Don’t you worry.”

 

“I’m not,” she said. “But you really don’t have to do—”

 

“I want to. I really do. You are not pressuring me. This is good, so I’m going to be good. That’s all I meant.”

 

“Oh. Good.”

 

Silence followed, save for the sounds of the car and Hanes’s fingers tapping the steering wheel.

 

Frankie swallowed and stared out the window.

 

“You’re…supposed to call ahead for these things, aren’t you?” Hanes asked.

 

Surprised amusement bubbled within her, and she could stop the little laugh that escaped. “Yeah, yeah, usually.”

 

“…Damn.”

 

She laughed harder, turning to him. His sheepish smile—green eyes focused on the road but not fully—it all made affection warm her chest. He was so considerate, like he had been before. A kind, good man.

 

Frankie patted his shoulder. “You’re still new to this. It’s alright.”

 

“You could have said something.”

 

“I was confident that you would figure it out.”

 

He snorted, a chortle bursting out of him. “Is that right? Well, maybe you have a little too much confidence in me.”

 

“Not at all. You did figure it out.”

 

“True.” His lips curled upward, an odd smacking sound emanating from the inside of his cheek. He tapped the steering wheel faster. “So…is there any place you would like to go? I mean, we could go to the hospital and schedule that appointment. Or someplace…nicer.”

 

Dating? Was that what he was implying? Frankie’s cheeks burned, uncertainty making her finicky. Unable to read him, she said, “You can drop me off at my hotel. And I can schedule an ultrasound there and call you afterward.”

 

“Hotel?” His face twisted with disgust. “No. No baby mama of mine is sleeping in a hotel when the baby daddy has a perfectly good trail—” He cringed. “No, that’s not good enough either.”

 

“What? What are you talking about?”

 

He blew out a taut breath. “My trailer. I was suggesting you should stay there, but it is too cramp and dirty and—” He shook his head. “You can stay at my parents’ estate. Mom even still has a few maids and cooks who can take care of you right.”

 

Frankie smiled, touched. “Thank you, but that really isn’t necessary. I’ve never…I’d be weird around the help, trust me.”

 

“You can be as weird as you want. You’re with child.”

 

“Good to know.”

 

He smirked, glancing at her. Those green eyes—lighting up, aimed at her—

 

Frankie’s breath caught in her throat.

 

“I’m serious,” he continued, though his tone expression bemusement. “Don’t hesitate to ask for whatever you want or need.”

 

“You’re so sweet. Thank you.”

 

“You’re welcome.” He returned his gaze to the road. “I’ll drive back to my parents’ place.”

 

“Hotel,” she said, tone too gentle to be insistent.

 

“Alright, alright, hotel. You’ll give me your number though, right?”

 

“Yeah, of course I will.”

 

“Good.”

 

Frankie nodded, mesmerized by him. After a few seconds, she forced herself to look away and think about something else. Cockroaches, asphalt, rotten apples—

 

She thought she could very well fall in love with Hanes Copper. Which would be perfect, but only if he fell for her, too. And that might not happen. After what happened with Jack…

 

Frankie closed her eyes, her fingers brushing over her lower belly.

 

CHAPTER EIGHT

 

A week came and went, and Frankie remained here in town—in a hotel, but still. If she ever planned on going back to New York, she never told Hanes about it. But the more he spoke with her—the more time he spent with her—the more he got the impression that she wasn’t leaving anytime soon. Maybe she had initially planned so, but now…

 

“You greedy bastard!” Thomas shouted, barging into their parents’ manor like he owned the place.

 

How Thomas had known Hanes was sitting in the front room was beyond him. The curtains to the front windows were drawn, and Hanes had only arrived a few minutes ago to retrieve the pregnancy books his mother had gotten him and Frankie. Luckily, the old woman was searching for the other things she had bought for her future grandchild, otherwise, Thomas’s abrupt and loud entrance might have given her a heart attack. Still, it wasn’t as if there wasn’t a woman present.

 

Hanes set aside the pregnancy book he had been glancing through and pointedly glanced at Gina, who held her own book while glaring at Thomas.

 

“Good morning to you, too,” Hanes said. “Did mom know you were coming? You really should call before you—”

 

“What’d you do?!” Thomas spat, striding up to Hanes and hovering over him. “Knock up the first woman you saw, or did you have to sleep with a bunch of them and hope for the best?”

 

Rage grew at a slow pace beneath Hanes’s clavicle—the contradictory nature of the sensation tickled his blood and made his head burn. He glared up at his brother and tried—
tried
—not to punch his gut. Hanes clenched his fists despite himself.

 

“Don’t be an ass, Tommy,” Gina said. “She was pregnant before Hanes knew about the will.”

 

Hanes refrained himself from rolling his eyes. Nosy Gina, always so helpful.

 

Thomas scoffed and strode away. “Typical! Just typical! The spoiled brat of the family gets everything. Didn’t take dad to be so vindictive.”

 

Hanes stood up. “Do not talk about him like that.”

 

“He was my dad, too, you know. I can talk about him however I want. Just because you were the favorite, doesn’t mean the rest of us meant nothing to him.”

 

Hanes pinched the bridge of his nose. Rage continued to pulsate throughout him—searing, ripping—he could barely breathe. He wanted to fight, to defend, to do something other than stand there and deal with the same old crap.

 

Thomas huffed. “You never even cared about the business. You think you’ll be able to keep it afloat?”

Other books

The Influence by Ramsey Campbell
Devlin's Dare by York, Sabrina
Time and Time Again by Ben Elton
In the Dead of Summer by Gillian Roberts
Brothers In Arms by Marcus Wynne