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СКАЧАТЬ at Seth with both hands.

      “And what are you two up to?” she asked as they came closer.

      “I just wanted to say thank you, ma’am, for your hospitality,” Chance said, then added, “and to say goodbye.”

      “Goodbye?” Grant asked abruptly. “Already?”

      Jennifer’s gaze flicked from father to son and though she knew Chance probably wouldn’t be happy to hear it, she privately acknowledged just how much he looked like his biological father. But it wasn’t just their features they shared. Both of the men had an air of self-confidence about them that people naturally gravitated toward.

      It was part of the reason Grant had done so well in the business world—and why Chance would inevitably continue his rise through the ranks. No doubt one day he’d be an admiral. Men like the Connellys were born conquerors. All that differed were the prizes they sought.

      “Jennifer’s not feeling well,” Chance was saying, “so I offered to take her home.”

      “Aah…” Grant nodded thoughtfully as his gaze flicked from his son to Jennifer and back again.

      Jennifer felt her cheeks warm up at the knowing gleam in Grant’s eyes, so she spoke up quickly. “I, uh—” think fast, Jen “—have a headache,” she finished. Well, that was brilliant. But she didn’t want to go into Sarah’s medical problems now. Not at the party. “Commander Barnett was kind enough to offer me a ride.”

      “Barnett?” Grant stared at the man who was his son.

      A touchy subject, Jennifer knew. Chance quite naturally wanted to keep the name he knew. The name his mother had given him. Grant, just as naturally, wanted his sons to use his name.

      It would be interesting to see who eventually won this little tug-of-war.

      “Sir,” Chance said, holding his right hand out to his father, “thank you. It was a nice party.”

      Grant harrumphed. “You hated it.”

      “Pretty much,” Chance acknowledged.

      “Knew you would. Too much like me.”

      Chance nodded shortly. “Maybe.”

      Grant dropped one arm around his wife’s shoulders. “Emma’s the party-giver around here. Loves the hustle and bustle. She just tells me when to show up.”

      Emma gave his broad chest a playful slap, before looking at Chance. “It’s true, you know. He’d much rather be out taking over small companies or sailing, or…well, just about anything.”

      Jennifer watched as a small smile curved Chance’s lips, and to her surprise, a curl of something delightful spiraled through her in response. Oh, that probably wasn’t a good sign.

      “Then maybe we are more alike than I’d thought,” Chance allowed as Grant took his outstretched hand and gave it a firm shake.

      His father smiled. “I’ll settle for a maybe. For now.”

      “Seems fair,” Chance told him.

      “All right, then,” Emma spoke up. “Jennifer, I hope you’re feeling better tomorrow. Why don’t you take the day off?”

      “Oh, that won’t be—”

      “A day off’s not going to bring the world to an end,” her employer told her firmly. Then she shifted a look at Chance. “You drive carefully. Without Jennifer, I’d never get a thing done around here.”

      “Yes, ma’am,” Chance said, and in seconds he had Jennifer turned around and headed for the front door. They skirted the edges of the party and avoided being stopped again. Their steps clicked on the cold marble of the main staircase, then echoed as they moved into the grand entry hall on the main floor. Here, the marble gleamed and shone in the spill of late-afternoon sunshine slashing through the wide front windows. Chance left her just long enough to grab their coats, and once she was bundled up, he ushered her outside into the bite of the cold Chicago wind.

      “I’m parked just up the street,” he said. “Why don’t you wait here and I’ll go get the car?”

      “Thanks, I’d rather walk.”

      “Suit yourself,” he said smiling, then offered her his arm.

      Arms linked, they took the short flight of steps to the sidewalk below, crossed the narrow strip of lawn and turned onto Michigan Avenue.

      “I can’t believe you found a place to park around here.”

      He grinned at her and Jennifer sucked in a breath. That really was a devastating weapon he had tucked away. Thankfully, her defenses had been strengthened over the last two years.

      “I’m a SEAL, remember? We excel at the impossible.”

      “I’ll keep that in mind.”

      While they walked, he talked, as if somehow sensing that she wasn’t in the mood to discuss her problems anymore tonight. She listened to stories of his and Doug’s childhood, heard the pride in his voice when he talked about his mother and what she’d managed to accomplish all on her own. She hoped that one day Sarah would be as kind when talking about her.

      God knows, she tried to be both mom and dad. But it wasn’t easy. Despite having a great job with the most understanding employer in the free world, Jennifer was pushed every day, wondering how to get everything done. She had no idea at all how women with less going for them managed to survive.

      “It must have been so hard for her,” she finally said, looking up at him. The wind blew strands of blond hair across her face and she plucked them out of her way so she could see him clearly.

      He stared off into the distance as if looking into years past and nodded. “Yeah, it was,” he said, “but we didn’t know that at the time. She made it look so easy. Mom wasn’t the kind to sit around and whine about finding herself. Or wishing that things were different. She used to say that the only thing you could change in life was yourself. So do the best you can.”

      “Smart woman.”

      “Oh, yeah.” He turned his head to look down at her and gave her yet another of those great smiles. “She would have liked you.”

      “Really? Why’s that?”

      “Because your daughter’s so important to you.”

      Something clutched at her heart, but Jennifer only said, “She’s everything to me.”

      “I can see that.”

      “That easy to read, huh?”

      “Does the phrase an open book mean anything to you?”

      Jennifer laughed in spite of herself. She’d never had much of a poker face. “Mike used to say the reason I was so honest was because I just couldn’t pull off a lie.”

      “Good a reason as any,” he said and stopped alongside a cherry-red SUV.

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