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  Congratulations, It’s A Boy!

  Everyone knows Charles Fortune Chesterfield. The flirty son of Sir Simon and Lady Josephine Fortune Chesterfield is famous for his wit, his charm...and his libido. He’s left a trail of lovely ladies in his wake, but Alice Meyers stood out from the rest. The beautiful blonde Texan was shy, sweet and a virgin. Now, apparently, she is a mother. And guess who’s a dad?

  When Charles announces he is extending his stay in Austin to get to know his son, Flynn, better, Alice doesn’t know whether to be happy or terrified. Will she once again fall prey to “the royal treatment”? Or could she and Flynn actually find a home in the handsome Brit’s heart?

  MEET THE FORTUNES

  Fortune of the Month: Charles Fortune Chesterfield

  Age: 29

  Vital statistics: Dark, sexy hair women love to tousle, seductive blue eyes. Six feet plus of honest-to-goodness princely charisma.

  Claim to fame: “Bonnie Lord Charlie” is an international hottie whose TV commercials for British tourism promise visitors to England “the royal treatment.”

  Romantic prospects: Are you kidding?

  “Social media would have me as some kind of lothario. This is not strictly true. I do enjoy feminine attention. I can’t help it if women find me irresistible. I do not fear commitment; I simply choose to avoid it.

  But now there’s Alice. And Flynn. My son! From the moment I found out he was mine, everything changed. I’ve promised to do everything in my power to be a good father to my boy, and that means keeping my hands off Flynn’s mom. Strictly friends, she says. It’s what she wants. It’s the right thing to do. And I’m bloody certain it’s going to kill me.”

  The Fortunes Of Texas: All Fortune’s Children—Money. Family. Cowboys. Meet the Austin Fortunes!

  Dear Reader,

  As young girls, many of us dreamed of one day finding our own Prince Charming. Charles Fortune Chesterfield may not be royalty, but he’s handsome, smart, flirty and he loves women. Plus, there’s that yummy British accent. In fact, he’s become the poster boy for British tourism, and women around the world visit England hoping to receive “the royal treatment” from Charles.

  But during a trip to visit his family in Texas, Charles receives a call from a woman he knew for only one unforgettable weekend. It’s a call that will change his life in ways he never expected.

  When Alice Meyers introduces Charles to his baby son, she isn’t sure how the famous playboy will react. In her wildest dreams, she never imagined that Charles would embrace the role of father. And his bond with their baby soon leads to a connection between Charles and Alice that neither can deny. But can two people from opposite worlds overcome their differences to find true love?

  I hope you enjoy Charles and Alice’s story because I had a great time writing it! I’d love to hear from you at michellemajor.com or through Facebook (Facebook.com/michellemajorbooks) or Twitter (@michelle_major1).

  All the best,

  Michelle Major

  Fortune’s Special Delivery

  Michelle Major

  Michelle Major grew up in Ohio but dreamed of living in the mountains. Soon after graduating with a degree in journalism, she pointed her car west and settled in Colorado. Her life and house are filled with one great husband, two beautiful kids, a few furry pets and several well-behaved reptiles. She’s grateful to have found her passion writing stories with happy endings. Michelle loves to hear from her readers at michellemajor.com.

  Books by Michelle Major

  Harlequin Special Edition

  Crimson, Colorado

  A Baby and a Betrothal

  A Very Crimson Christmas

  Suddenly a Father

  A Second Chance at Crimson Ranch

  A Kiss on Crimson Ranch

  A Brevia Beginning

  Her Accidental Engagement

  Still the One

  The Fortunes of Texas: Cowboy Country

  The Taming of Delaney Fortune

  Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com for more titles.

  Get rewarded every time you buy a Harlequin ebook!

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  To all the Fortunes readers. I’m thrilled to be celebrating the 20th anniversary with you!

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Epilogue

  Excerpt from The Girl He Left Behind by Patricia Kay

  Chapter One

  “A toast to your marriage.”

  Charles Fortune Chesterfield lifted his glass of deep red cabernet, unable to hide the smile that curved one corner of his mouth. “Or should I call it your unmarriage? Your remarriage?” He winked at his sister Lucie, sitting across the table from him in the trendy Austin restaurant. It was early April and the weather in Central Texas was quite fine, a welcome change from the dreary rain of a London spring. He would rather have been sitting at a table on the restaurant’s spacious patio, enjoying the fresh air and the sound of the city passing by them. Unfortunately, the paparazzi hounded his family wherever they went, so Charles and Lucie were huddled in a quiet booth in the back of the restaurant.

  “Don’t be cheeky, Charles,” Lucie answered in a clipped tone, her hazel eyes flashing. “If you came all the way to Texas to tease me, you should have stayed in London.”

  “I’m happy for you, Luce.” Charles set down his wineglass and grabbed his younger sister’s hand, giving it a squeeze. “Truly I am. That’s why Austin was my first stop on this trip.”

  “And...” she prompted, her smile returning.

  “You and Chase make a lovely couple,” he offered. “It’s obvious how much he loves you.” Charles hoped his sister realized he was sincere. He hadn’t seen her as happy as she was now, reunited with her first love and husband, Texas oilman Chase Parker. Few had known about Lucie’s impulsive wedding when she was only seventeen until the fact that she and Chase were still married came to light last month. Charles had hated watching his younger sister hounded by the press, but true love had triumphed in the end.

  He’d flown in yesterday from London and gone straight to dinner with Chase and Lucie at the sprawling Parker ranch outside town. Even jet-lagged, he’d been able to see how much they loved each other. His family had wasted no time in filling him in on the news from Horseback Hollow, the small Texas town the rest of his siblings called home. Lucie had also informed him that family matriarch and cosmetics mogul Kate Fortune was still in Austin and apparently meeting with their generation of Fortune children to look for someone to take over the empire built on her Fortune Youth Serum.

  “Chase is perfect,” Lucie agreed now, “although I wouldn’t recommend calling him ‘lovely’ to his face. A native Texan won’t appreciate that description, Charles. But I’m talking about you.” She punched a few keys on her cell phone and lifted it for a better view. She’d gone to one of the online tabloid sites so popular in Britain.

  The headline displayed on the small screen read Is the Third Time a Charm for Bonnie Lord Charlie? An obvious reference to Charles’s two previous broken engagements. Below the headline was a grainy photo of Charles and a beautiful, thin and very regal-looking brunette.

  “Lady Caterina Hayworth?” Lucie asked, her brow pu
ckered. “Tell me you’re not engaged to Conniving Cat. I know you like your women brainless and beautiful, but she’s a social climber of the worst sort. You must know she wants your celebrity status as much as she wants you.”

  “I hate that nickname,” he muttered, running his finger along the smooth screen as if he could blot out the maddening words.

  “Conniving Cat?” Lucie waved a hand in the air. “Perhaps it isn’t kind, but you must admit—”

  “Not that one,” he clarified. “Hell, Caterina loves the moniker. I think she was the one to start it. I mean ‘Bonnie Lord Charlie.’” He scrubbed a hand over his face, the transatlantic time change suddenly catching up with him tenfold. “Jensen is the one with the title.” Their mother, Josephine May Fortune Chesterfield, had married Sir Simon Chesterfield after ending her first, loveless marriage to Rhys Henry Hayes. “The press doesn’t feel the need to give Brodie or Oliver a fake title,” Charles said, referring to their two older half brothers from Josephine’s first marriage. “And calling me ‘bonnie’ is ridiculous. I’m a twenty-nine-year-old man, not a wee lad toddling around in rompers.”

  “You are quite handsome.” Lucie’s smile turned sympathetic. “I’m sure it’s meant as a compliment.”

  “It’s an implied dig that I don’t do anything, that I have nothing to offer but my face and my family’s good name. No use denying it.”

  Her slim shoulders stiffened. “You do plenty, Charles. I think your ads single-handedly doubled the number of women vacationing in Britain over the past year.”

  He fought back a grimace, even though he had no one but himself to blame. The ad campaign that featured him promising visitors to England “the royal treatment” had started as a joke during a meeting he’d attended with the British Tourism Council two years ago. He’d been expected to bring ideas to the table, but had spent the night before the meeting clubbing with friends and had shown up to the meeting a half hour late with a raging headache. He’d pitched the Royal Treatment campaign as a jest, but the council had loved it. Before he knew what was happening, Charles ended up the star of a series of print and television ads, wearing a tux in front of various British monuments, giving it his best James Bond–meets–Mr. Darcy impression.

  He was happy to do his part for queen and country, but lately wished his contribution could be of a more meaningful sort. Lucie, like their mother, devoted herself to various charitable organizations. Their brother Jensen was a successful financier. Everyone in his family had something of substance to offer.

  Except Charles.

  That, too, was his fault. For years he’d cultivated his image as a good-time guy. He’d been the charmer in his family as a kid, perpetually entertaining his parents and siblings, always good for a laugh. After Sir Simon died, it had seemed the right thing to do to make his mother smile as often as he could. So that’s what people had come to expect from him—a good time. Only his father had ever seemed to want him to be something more.

  “That is part of why I’m here. I have meetings set up with the Texas Tourism Board next week. We’d like to do some cross-promotions—Texans and high tea. That sort of thing.” He leaned forward. “Did you know almost three million Americans are projected to visit England this year?”

  “And most of them want ‘the royal treatment’?” Lucie asked with a laugh.

  Charles forced a smile. He had a reputation to uphold, after all. “I suppose. You’re right about me needing an escape. There’s work and family, but I also needed to get away from the press. Cat and I were nowhere near to being engaged. We weren’t even a proper couple.”

  Lucie taped a finger on the cell phone screen. “Did she know that?”

  “Chalk it up to selective hearing on her part,” Charles said. “Don’t get me wrong, she’s a lovely lady.” He sighed. “They’re all lovely ladies.”

  “But what about the right woman, Charles?” Lucie took a sip of her wine and waved away the waiter who approached their table. “Now that Chase and I are together, you’re officially the last man standing in the family. Brodie, Oliver, Jensen and Amelia are happy in Horseback Hollow. Even Mum seems to have found love again.”

  “Jensen mentioned a burgeoning romance with Orlando Mendoza.” Charles was happy for his mother, although it was difficult to imagine her with anyone but his father.

  “She’s glowing,” Lucie said with a wistful sigh.

  “Then the two of you have that in common, dear sister.” Charles twirled the stem of the wineglass between two fingers. “Marriage...remarriage...whatever you want to call it agrees with you. But I don’t believe there’s only one woman in the world for me.”

  “Because you haven’t met her yet,” Lucie argued.

  “I’ve met plenty of women.”

  “And bedded most of them.”

  Charles took a long drink of wine. “I’m absolutely not having this conversation with my sister.”

  “If you’d only—”

  At that moment, Charles’s cell phone rang. He drew the device out of his coat pocket as Lucie frowned.

  “Send the call to voice mail,” she told him with her best sisterly glare. “I’m not finished lecturing you.”

  He grinned, then glanced at the display. “Sorry, sis, it’s an Austin number. Might be important royal business.” But when he accepted the call and said hello, whoever was on the other end of the line was silent. “Anyone there?” he asked into the phone.

  He was about to hang up when he heard a funny squeak that might have been “hello.”

  A throat cleared. “Is this Charles?” a woman’s voice asked.

  “Who wants to know?” he responded, then met Lucie’s curious gaze and shrugged his shoulders.

  “Hang up,” his sister whispered.

  Charles understood her reaction. The caller was likely a reporter trying to track him down, or one of the frequent fame hounds who’d come after his family through the years, especially since their connection to the prominent Fortunes was revealed. Charles, like all the Fortune Chesterfields, had learned to guard his privacy—one more reason the tabloid photo with Lady Caterina irked him.

  But something about the way the woman on the other end of the phone spoke his name intrigued him. Her voice was soft, with a sweet Texas drawl and more than a hint of nerves. Charles might be a magnet for women, but the timid girls typically gave him a wide berth.

  “This is Alice,” the woman told him.

  “Alice,” he repeated, liking the way the two syllables sounded on his tongue. But he had no recognition of an Alice from his past.

  “Alice Meyers,” she continued, a little breathlessly. “I’m sorry to call you out of the blue. I got your number from the tourism board office.”

  Right. Suddenly an image—a beautiful blonde, with long legs and a shy but sexy smile—popped into his mind.

  Alice cleared her throat again. “We met last year—”

  “At the tourism conference here in Austin,” he continued. “I remember you.” Charles tried to hide his small smile from Lucie. What he remembered most about Alice was spending a blissful night with her in his hotel room after the conference ended. He’d even asked for her number, something he rarely did after a casual dalliance. But he’d liked Alice Meyers, and he’d thought she liked him. Too bad when he’d come out of the shower the next morning she’d disappeared from his hotel room and his life.

  Now, more than a year later, she was ringing him. Charles felt his smile widen. Intriguing, indeed.

  * * *

  Alice breathed a sigh of relief that Charles remembered her. Of course, she’d known who he was before they’d met at the bar in the conference hotel last spring. Every woman between the ages of ten and ninety knew Bonnie Lord Charlie. But she hadn’t expected him to commit her to memory. Men rarely did.

  She’d followed his romantic exploits in the tabloids since their encounter, and it was a wonder Charles could remember what girl he was with on any given night. The man seemed to be the British equival
ent of the Energizer Bunny when it came to women.

  “Alice, are you still there?” His crisp accent broke through her musings.

  “I need to see you,” she blurted, then bit down hard on her lip as silence greeted her outburst. He was bound to think she was a stalker for calling him out of blue and making such a bold request.

  “That’s a lovely offer,” he said finally, sounding every bit the aristocrat he was. How was it possible for him to sound more British than before? “But I’m fairly booked on this visit.”

  “It’s important,” she whispered, swallowing back the emotion clogging her throat. “I promise I won’t take much of your time.”

  “Can you give me a hint what this mysterious meeting might entail?”

  “It’s personal and...” She paused, then added, “Please, Charles.”

  There was another long moment of silence. Alice checked her phone to make sure Charles hadn’t hung up on her. She wouldn’t exactly blame him. He was handsome, rich, and famous around the world. She was nobody, yet was demanding precious time from him. But even if he said no now, Alice couldn’t give up. Seeing Charles again was too important.

  “Tomorrow morning,” he said suddenly.

  “Gr-great,” she stammered, shocked that he’d agreed. The fingers holding the phone trembled with both nerves and exhilaration. “We could meet in Zilker Park. Are you familiar with it?”

  “I am.”

  “There’s a bench under a big oak tree near the entrance of the Zilker Botanical Garden. How about ten o’clock?”

  “Very good. I’ll see you in the morning, Alice.”

  The way he spoke her name made sparks zing low in her belly. His accent made every word sound like a caress. She shook her head, needing to keep her wits about her. As good a time as she’d had with Charles, she hadn’t contacted him for her sake. “Goodbye, Charles. Thank you.”

  As the call ended, she pulled the phone away from her head, her hand trembling as she stared at it. “I did it,” she whispered, glancing at the baby sleeping in the swing in the corner of the room. Her son, Flynn, was a champion napper at four months, which was one of the few things that had made being a single mom a tiny bit easier for Alice.