“Bring on another bottle,” she told him.

Reed gave her a genuine smile, and the force of it shot all the way to her toes. She immediately rethought her strategy on getting intoxicated. It could be dangerous to be around him without all her faculties intact. She set her wineglass down on the table.

Reed headed for the wine rack in the dining room.

With him out of the room, Hanna hit Elizabeth with an expression of stark curiosity.

Elizabeth held her palms up in a gesture of confusion. She’d never seen Reed in a mood like this.

He strode back into the living room with an open bottle of wine and three fresh glasses. “The eighty-two Chateau Saint Gaston,” he announced with satisfaction.

Elizabeth blinked.

Hanna choked. “Did you just open a ten thousand dollar bottle of wine?”

Reed pretended to study the label. “I do believe I did.” He poured them each a glass of the Saint Gaston.

Still standing, he held his glass aloft. “A toast,” he said.

“Please don’t,” begged Elizabeth. She didn’t know what he had in mind, but she didn’t like the reckless look in his eyes nor the cocky set to his mouth.

“A toast,” he said in a softer voice, looking straight into her eyes. “To my gorgeous, gracious, intelligent wife.”

“Reed,” she pleaded.

“I lied to you today.”

So what else was new?

“I wasn’t in Chicago.”

Something shriveled up inside Elizabeth. The man lied recreationally. She couldn’t have cared less whether he was in Chicago.

She waved a dismissive hand. “Whatever. Salute.” She lifted her glass to take a drink.

“Uh, uh, uh,” he tisked. “This is a ten thousand dollar bottle of wine. Let’s have a little respect.”

She heaved a frustrated sigh. Maybe she should just go to bed, get to sleep before he decided to join her there. Maybe, just maybe, she’d feel stronger in the morning.

“I was in California,” he continued.

Elizabeth waited for the point.

“Ironically, on the advice of my dear father, I went to see the Vances.”

She froze. “No.” He hadn’t compromised their case. He wouldn’t.

“And while I was there,” he said, “I realized that you, dear Elizabeth, are absolutely right, and I am completely wrong.”

He perched himself on the armchair cornerwise to her. “I promise I will never lie to you again.”

Elizabeth searched his eyes. They were warm and soft and loving, but she didn’t know what to say. “Thank you,” she tried.

His lips stretched into a smile before he tipped his glass and took a sip.

Elizabeth followed suit, but she couldn’t taste a thing.

“I love you,” Reed said to her.

“Hey,” Hanna put in, coming to her feet. “I really think I’d better-”

“Drink your wine,” Reed ordered. “I might need you later.”

She sat back down.

“Where was I?” he asked.

“Are you drunk?” asked Elizabeth, trying desperately to make sense of his behavior. This wasn’t the Reed she knew.

“Oh, yes. Now I remember. The Vances are not going to contest the will.”

Elizabeth was afraid she hadn’t heard that right. “What?”

He nodded his confirmation, slowing down his words. “The Vances are not going after custody of Lucas. And, no, I’m not drunk.”

A pulse of optimism hit Elizabeth for the first time in weeks. “How did you…?”

“Skill, intelligence and guile. Plus a really fast private jet.”

“Quit messing around,” Elizabeth ordered. This was a serious conversation, not a joke.

“Oh, I think I’ll mess around a little longer.” He took another sip of the wine, holding his glass back to study the legs. “Worth every penny.”

“Go, Reed.” Hanna applauded in a reverent tone.

“Thank you,” said Reed. “Now, will you help me convince her I’m worth sticking with?”

“He’s worth sticking with,” Hanna said to Elizabeth.

“Traitor,” Elizabeth muttered, but even she was running out of excuses to leave him. He might have lied about Chicago, and he might have been gone all day long, but he’d done it for Lucas, and he’d done it for her.

“She told me you were great in bed,” Hanna offered.

“Hanna!” Elizabeth was horrified.

“Well, that’s one in my column,” said Reed.

“Damn straight,” said Hanna.

“There’s one more thing.” He sobered, all traces of joking gone, his attention fixed completely on Elizabeth. “I’ll be home evenings from here on in. Or I’ll work part-time. Or I’ll sell my companies. Or we can move to freakin’ Biarritz if that will make a difference.”

Elizabeth’s throat thickened up. “What are you saying?”

“I’m saying that I’m prepared to put as much effort into my marriage as I put into my business.”

Elizabeth was speechless. Her heartbeat sped up and her chest went tight. She stared at Reed in utter astonishment. “Seriously?”

Hanna stuck out her foot and nudged Elizabeth in the knee. “I think the word you’re looking for is yes!

Twelve

Elizabeth and Reed were on their way to the bedroom when Lucas stirred. Reed went into the nursery to rock him back to sleep, while Elizabeth all but floated into their bedroom.

Reed was staying. They were going to work things out. He’d decided their love was worth fighting for, and if there was anything her husband could do, it was to achieve whatever goal he set for himself.

Though they’d slept in their bed together hundreds of times, she knew tonight was special. It was the beginning of a whole new marriage, a whole new family.

She pulled open the top drawer of the bureau, and her gaze caught on the rosewood coin box. She slowly lifted the lid, pulling out the liberty head, ten-dollar gold coin, and hefting its weight in her palm.

“Heads,” she whispered to herself, “I do it.”

Tails, she’d do it anyway. This time, she didn’t need to flip the coin.

She slipped it back into its holder and pulled out the red silk negligee she’d worn on her wedding night. Appropriate, since this was another new beginning.

She removed her clothes, but as she was about to slip the soft silk over her head, her gaze caught another flash of fabric in the drawer. Lemon yellow and bright blue and purple. The silk scarves they’d bought in France.

Elizabeth paused. She set the negligee aside, fingering the texture of the scarves. And then she smiled. This wasn’t her honeymoon. It was a different beginning, a different relationship, a relationship based on authenticity instead of fantasy.

She wrapped the lemon yellow scarf over her breasts, tying it at the back like a bikini top. Then she fastened the blue and purple one low on her hips, sarong-style, leaving most of one thigh and hip bare. She combed her hair, dabbed some perfume, then waited, standing in the middle of the room.

Reed walked in and stopped, his gaze trailing up and down her body. “We going to Tahiti?” he asked.

She sauntered toward him, walking her fingertips up his chest, snaking her arms around his neck. “I think we’re going to nirvana.”

A gorgeous smile spread across his face. One arm snaked around to the small of her back, tugging her tight. His other hand cupped her bottom through the soft silk.

“I do love you,” he whispered as he bent to kiss her lips.

She tipped her head back, opening her mouth, meeting his hot tongue in a tangle of passion and desire that she couldn’t hope to contain. And she wouldn’t. It was all honesty all the time from here on in.

She pushed his suit jacket off his shoulders, letting it fall to a heap on the floor. Then she attacked his shirt buttons while he nipped and nibbled his way along her shoulder. His hand slipped under the sarong, toying with her heating skin.

He cupped her breast, strumming his thumb over her hard nipple. “I so love these scarves,” he breathed.

“Versatile,” she agreed.

He chuckled low, then his tone turned to a growl. “Nobody, nowhere, no how is ever going to stop us from making love. I don’t care what the science says, this is right.”

She nodded her agreement, gasping as his finger slipped inside.

“Too fast?” he asked.

“No. Just right.” She grappled with his belt buckle, and he shucked his clothes, pulling her onto the bed in a flurry of caresses, kisses and silk.

When she was naked, he stretched her arms over her head, stroking his fingertips from the wrists all the way to her toes and then back again.

She shuddered at the sensations, freed her hands and caressed the play of his muscles, from his shoulders to his abs and beyond.

He rolled on top of her, settling between her legs, his body teasing her sensitized flesh. He took one nipple into his mouth, drawing out the caress as she squirmed beneath him. Then he laved the other, then moved to her mouth, kissing her long and deeply.

He drew back, gazing down into her eyes as he slowly pushed into her. She felt the pressure, then the heat, then the fullness, and then he stopped. They stared at each other for a frozen moment of perfect communication.

Reed flexed his hips, and sparks shot off in her brain. She tipped her head back, exposing her throat to his kisses. Her hands tangled in his hair, and he murmured her name over and over while time stopped and he drove them higher into the atmosphere, past the moon and the stars, to the outer stratosphere until the entire universe exploded around them.

Elizabeth woke to the sound of Lucas’s gurgles and coos in the nursery. Reed’s arm was across her stomach, holding her firmly back against his body.

“Good morning, gorgeous,” he whispered against her hair.

“Good morning, handsome,” she responded.

He planted a series of tender kisses on the back of her neck.

“There’s a baby waking up,” she warned him, the buzz of desire forming instantly in her belly.

“Can’t resist me?” he teased.

“I don’t want to resist you,” she corrected.

He moaned. “Oh, that’s what I like to hear.”

“But I have to get Lucas.”

“I’ll get Lucas. You go lounge in the bath for a while.”

Elizabeth glanced at the clock. “You’ll be late for work.”

She felt him shrug. “So, I’ll be late for work. Who cares?”

She turned onto her back to stare up at him. “Reed, you don’t have to prove-”

“What are they going to do? Fire me?”

“I’m just saying-”

“Bath,” he repeated. “What does Lucas eat for breakfast?”

“Oatmeal.” She searched his expression. “Are you really…”

“What did you think I meant last night?”

“That you’d get home earlier in the evenings.”

“And the rest?”

The part about working part-time or selling his companies or moving to France? “I thought it was a terrific speech.”

Some of the light went out of his eyes. “I was serious, Elizabeth.”

“Okay.” She nodded, realizing he was completely serious. “Okay, husband of mine. Our baby eats oatmeal for breakfast. Sometimes he gets it in his hair. Sometimes he gets it in my hair.” She jammed her thumb in the direction of the en suite. “And I’m going to take a very long bubble bath.”

“Good for you.”

She wrapped her arms around him and held him close, drawing the hug out until Lucas’s little voice turned demanding. Then Reed pulled back the covers, and Elizabeth headed for the bathtub.

While the water splashed and foamed its way to the top of the oversize bath, she brushed her teeth, combed her hair, and twisted it into a messy knot on top of her head. She retrieved a soft terry robe from the closet and hung it on the hook on the back of the door.

Rain spattered on the bathroom window, while the small room filled with the scent of roses. Elizabeth took a deep, cleansing breath, glad that the month of October was coming to a close. November was going to be so much better. Maybe they would go to Tahiti.

She slipped a toe into the hot water, then her ankle and calf. The steam caused a sudden wave of vertigo, and she steadied herself on the towel rack. But it passed, and she lowered herself into the luxuriant water.

They’d only had Lucas for three weeks, but already she appreciated the simple pleasure of time for self-indulgence. She pictured Lucas in the high chair, and Reed heating up the oatmeal. She smiled. There would be happy months and years ahead of them.

Months.

Elizabeth blinked.

She sat up, sending a wave of water over the edge of the tub, splashing onto the tile floor.

October was almost over.

Her cycle was off.

Her cycle was way off, and she’d been dizzy getting into the tub, dizzy three days ago in the penthouse foyer. She counted on her fingers.

No way. No way. They’d missed her prime ovulating days. They’d gone against all the advice of their doctor.