Page 6 of His Texas Heir

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"And a bar. Feed store. Hardware store." His eyes crinkled slightly. "It's not San Antonio."

"I grew up near San Antonio," I said faintly. "I know what Hill Country towns are like."

"Then you know what you'd be getting into."

I looked at this man. This enormous, still, silver-templed stranger in a fertility clinic waiting room who had just offered me a cottage on his ranch in exchange for having his baby, as casually as you'd offer someone a ride.

"We'd need a contract," I said.

"Obviously."

"A real one. Parental rights, financial arrangements, what happens if—" I stopped. "There are a lot of variables."

"I have a lawyer."

"I'd want my own lawyer to review it."

"That's reasonable."

I looked back down at the spreadsheet. At the numbers that had been sayingnofor forty minutes.

The numbers were saying something different now.

"I don't even know your name," I said.

"Gage," he said. "Gage Holt."

He held out his hand. Big and weathered and very steady.

I looked at it for one second. Then I took it.

"Millie Calloway," I said.

His hand was warm and completely certain around mine and my body had many feelings about this that I was filing away to deal with never.

"So," Gage Holt said, in that unhurried Texas voice. "You want to talk terms?"

From across the waiting room, a nurse appeared in the doorway with a clipboard.

"Calloway?" she called. "We're ready for you."

I looked at Gage. He looked at me.

"After," I said.

He nodded once. Settled back in his chair.

"I'll be here," he said.

TWO

Gage

I almost didn't wait.

That's the honest truth of it. I sat in that waiting room for twenty minutes after she disappeared through the door with the nurse, telling myself I was being reasonable, that I'd heard an interesting solution to a real problem and it was worth thinking through, that the fact that she'd made me laugh twice in thirty minutes had nothing to do with anything.

Then I told myself I was being an idiot and I should go home and call my lawyer and find a proper surrogacy agency and handle this the way a grown man with a real problem handles things, which is methodically and without getting distracted by a woman in a marigold mask who did math in her head faster than I did and looked at me like I was simultaneously her best option and her worst idea.