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her within a few inches of his six foot one. Her golden-brown hair hung in a thick braid to her waist. Her dark blue eyes could be penetrating or sympathetic. She already seemed to know when to divert him, to make him stop focusing on his anger—his fury—that Eva had taken off. He figured he could work fine with Cassie.

      At the moment she was writing in her notebook. She’d taken off her old and apparently cherished leather jacket and hung it neatly on the back of a chair. At her waist was a holstered gun. He hadn’t expected that. He didn’t know why he was surprised, but he acknowledged it as sexist. If Quinn Gerard had shown up for the job, Heath wouldn’t have been surprised at the weapon.

      “What kind of gun is that?” he asked.

      She didn’t look up. “Sig Sauer. Forty caliber.”

      “Are you good with it?”

      “Is San Francisco foggy?” She smiled at him, her confidence more than a little appealing to him.

      “I don’t always carry, but I didn’t know what I was walking into today. Okay—” she tapped her pen on her notebook “—you said Eva works at your lawyer’s office.”

      “She did. She went on maternity leave starting last week.”

      She frowned. “That’s early, isn’t it? It seems like women work until their water breaks these days.”

      “I wouldn’t know.” His ex-wife had stopped working the day they were married, which had been fine with him.

      “Is it a big firm?”

      “Torrance and Torrance.”

      “That’s a big firm,” she stated. “I worked for Oberman, Steele and Jenkins for five years as an in-house investigator, so I know a lot of the law firms. OSJ does criminal work, and T and T does corporate, but they must operate alike. She would have friends at work—other clerks and paralegals. In a company with that many employees, there would be at least one or two she would go to lunch with. I’ll check it out.”

      Heath braced his legs. “You can’t,” he said to her back.

      “I can’t what?”

      “Talk to anyone at the office.”

      She looked at him as if he’d lost his mind. “I have to.”

      “You can’t.”

      “Why?”

      “Because our relationship was secret. They have a strict no-fraternization-with-the-clients rule. She would be fired.”

      “No one knows you’re the father?”

      “No one at her work, at least.”

      “I wonder how she managed that.” Her toe tapped the floor. “It would be very hard to keep that sort of thing to yourself.”

      “She likes her job. She wants to hold on to it.”

      “Hmm.” After a few seconds she flipped a page. “We’ll skip that for now. Current residence?”

      He passed her a card he’d pulled from his Rolodex file.

      She wrote down the address.

      “She has a roommate,” he said. “Darcy. I don’t know her last name.”

      “Have you been to the apartment?”

      “No.”

      “So, the one-night-stand thing really was all there was to it? You never went on a date?”

      “Never.” Admitting it out loud made it seem sordid. It hadn’t been sordid. He hadn’t taken advantage of Eva. She’d been willing. More than willing. If anything, she’d come after him.

      Cassie looked at the Rolodex card again. “Is this her current phone number?”

      “Yes. It’s a cell.”

      “I take it you’ve tried to reach her.”

      “It’s turned off.”

      “Okay.” She wrote down the number and gave him back the card. “Friends she’s talked about?”

      “Someone named Megan. A guy named Jay.”

      “In what context did she discuss them?”

      “They were people she went out with after work and on the weekends.”

      “You don’t think this Jay could be a boyfriend?”

      “Didn’t sound like it.” Heath liked the way she fired questions, hardly waiting for his answer. Thinking one step ahead.

      “You mentioned parents ‘back east.’ She never said their names?”

      “No.”

      “Any mention of siblings?”

      “A sister, Tricia. Older. She has three children. Eva called her for pregnancy advice. Said she couldn’t talk to anyone else.”

      “Is she local?”

      “I have no idea.”

      She contemplated him in silence.

      “I know I should know more about the woman who is carrying my baby,” he said apologetically and with disgust, too. “It isn’t as if I didn’t ask her questions and want to know more about her. She just wasn’t forthcoming.”

      “She kept secrets.”

      The way Cassie stated it instead of asking it brought his worries to the forefront, too. He’d already realized he couldn’t trust Eva, but he hadn’t known whether to be afraid for her or angry at her.

      “In some ways she was open,” he said. She was a distraction when he’d needed it. Or so he’d thought. Turned out he was wrong, but that didn’t relieve him of his responsibilities. “It was like she wanted to keep herself mysterious, like it would keep me more interested.”

      “Would it?”

      He considered the possibility. “Maybe. To a point. Intrigue boosts adrenaline and interest, but it had gotten tired.”

      “Yeah. The rush is great—for a while. How about education?” Cassie asked.

      “Currently attending business school. The firm was paying for a paralegal course. She was allowed to attend classes during work hours.” He passed her a piece of paper. “Make and model of the car she drives, and the license plate.”

      “Outstanding. Who is her obstetrician?”

      Heath handed her a second Rolodex card, which also listed the hospital where the baby was to be born.

      “Did you take Lamaze classes? Do you plan on being there for the birth?”

      “No and no.”

      “Did you go to her doctor’s appointments with her?”

      “No.” He almost had, once, when she was to have an ultrasound. He changed his mind at his front door.

      Cassie capped the pen and bounced it against her palm as she eyed him. “You said you don’t get out much.”

      “Right.”

      “Do you get out at all, Mr. Raven?”

      “Heath. And, no.”

      “For how long?”

      “Three years.”

      He let her do the math. He hadn’t stepped foot out of his house since his son died.

      “You don’t open the blinds, either.”

      “No.”

      She didn’t ask why, but if she had, he wouldn’t have answered. It wasn’t any of her business.

      “Okay,” she said, slipping the pen into her notebook.

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