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a simmering anger. Since he had no reason to be angry, Sydney pretended not to notice.

      “It’ll be a little while until I get the results.” Despite her best efforts to sound cool, calm and collected, her voice caught.

      “Don’t worry.” He touched her arm. “Everything will be all right.” He held her gaze for the space of a heartbeat before he looked away.

      Because she hoped he was right, she said nothing. Instead, she studied his chiseled profile. Perversely, she wished he wasn’t so damn beautiful. If he weren’t, she might find it easier to hate him, if it came to that when all this ended.

      She could deal with that, she told herself, as long as she didn’t lose her heart. And God knew, she would never be that foolish again.

      The nurse emerged, causing them both to look up. “If you’ll follow me?”

      This time, when Chase followed, Sydney let him.

      They were led down a long hall to a small office. Two high-backed leather chairs faced a mahogany desk.

      “The doctor will be with you shortly,” the nurse said.

      Sydney stared at the chair, her rapid heartbeat feeling as though it were in her throat.

      “Sit.”

      “I don’t know if I can.”

      His smile was a flash of white. “Of course you can. What else are you going to do? You can’t pace in such a tiny room.”

      He had a point. Sydney sat.

      When he lowered himself into the chair next to her and then took her hand, she froze. He squeezed her fingers and she decided to take the comfort he offered.

      A moment later, Dr. Kallan bustled into the room, smiling broadly. “I have good news. You’re absolutely fine and your baby is developing normally.”

      Sydney released her breath. Clutching Chase’s hand, she turned to him, her eyes filling. “Thank God.”

      Chase’s hard expression softened. “Congratulations.”

      Impulsively, she leaned over and kissed him before jumping to her feet and hugging the doctor. “You don’t know what a relief it is to hear that.”

      The gray-haired doctor smiled back. “You’re about eight weeks along. Everything looks good.”

      “Could you tell the baby’s sex from this sonogram?”

      He shook his head. “Not yet. It’s too early. We can usually determine the sex of the fetus accurately by sixteen to eighteen weeks using ultrasound or fifteen to sixteen weeks with an amniocentesis. Or, if you’d like to come back in two weeks, we can do a CVS, chorionic villus sampling. That’s usually reliable at ten or eleven weeks.”

      “I won’t be here then.”

      At her words, Chase stiffened.

      The doctor smiled. “Then I’m afraid you’ll have to guess a bit longer.” He stood and held out his hand.

      After she shook it, he inclined his head. “If you need anything else, have your people give me a call.”

      Once in the hallway, Sydney headed for the doors under the sign marked Exit. Chase stopped her.

      “We need to discuss a strategy.”

      “A strategy for what?”

      “Dealing with the press.”

      She sighed. “What’s to discuss? We’ll just do the same thing we did before. Breeze through them with a bunch of ‘No comments.’”

      “We can’t. We can get away with ignoring them once. If we do it twice, they’ll speculate.”

      “So? Let them.” She tried to pull away, but his hand on her shoulder prevented her. “Let me go.”

      “Do you want to read a story in the morning about how you got rid of your baby?”

      Shocked, she stared up at him. “What do you mean?”

      “You know how some of them can be, especially the tabloids. Lacking truth to report, they’ll simply make something up.”

      “I would never do such a thing.”

      “They don’t know that. The general public doesn’t either.”

      “You can tell you’re in public relations.” She couldn’t keep the bitterness from her voice.

      Stoically, he watched her.

      “Fine. We’ll make a statement. What do you want me to say?” Despite her anger, her emotions were perilously close to the surface. The back of her throat stung, and she blinked away tears.

      “Sydney—” With a curse, he crushed her to him, covering her mouth with his in a hard, possessive kiss.

      Neither heard the doors silently swing open.

      A flashbulb popped. Then another. Suddenly, reporters with camcorders and cameras surrounded them.

      Jaw clenched tightly, Chase released her.

      She turned in time to see the cameraman flash a thumbs-up sign. She recognized the reporter standing next to him as Chris Endov, one of the beat reporters for the Daily Press, Silvershire’s main paper.

      “What do you want, Endov?” Chase asked. Though he sounded pleasant enough, Sydney recognized the thread of steel underlying his tone.

      “I have a few questions.” Endov came closer. “For you, Miss Conner. First you’re hot and heavy with the prince, and now that he’s dead, you’re with his royal publicist? Any particular reason for that?”

      Chase answered before Sydney could even open her mouth. “No comment.” Arm around her waist, he began shepherding her away.

      The reporters followed, shouting questions.

      “Are you still pregnant?”

      Sydney tensed. Without even looking at them, Chase tossed off a quick, “No comment.”

      “No, wait.” Sydney stopped, turning to face the restless throng. “I want to answer that. Yes, I definitely am still pregnant. I came here to have a routine checkup.”

      More flashbulbs. Several of the camcorders were rolling. Sydney tried to look a dignified as possible, memories of her mother’s simpering pandering haunting her.

      “Do you know your baby’s sex?” someone shouted.

      She forced a smile. “No, it’s too early for that.”

      “Were you and Prince Reginald secretly married?”

      Without waiting for her answer, another reporter followed up. “Now that the prince is dead, are you planning to step forward and proclaim your unborn child heir to the throne?”

      She stood straight and tall, the afternoon breeze lifting her hair. “Absolutely not.”

      “Then,” someone else called out, “you’re saying your baby will be born unwanted and illegitimate, like you?”

      Someone gasped. The rowdy reporters fell silent, one by one. Chase cursed.

      For Sydney, time seemed to stand still. She blanched, turning her face away from the crowd, toward Chase, longing for the comfort of his broad chest.

      He took a step toward her and stopped, his expression dark. When she raised her gaze to him, she knew she wasn’t strong enough or quick enough to hide her stark pain.

      “Old wound,” she said, striving for lightness but sounding instead as though she’d taken a blow to the solar plexus. She kept her eyes fixed on Chase while she spoke, using him as an anchor.

      Something dark, something haunted, crossed his face. She noticed how he fisted his hands, though he kept them at

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