
One in a Million
by Beverley Kendall
Publication Date: March 18, 2025
ISBN: 9781525830327
Format: Trade Paperback
Publisher: Harlequin Trade Publishing / Canary Street Press
Price $18.99
Blurb:
She’s got everything planned–including when she’ll have kids. Until something completely unplanned turns her world upside down.
World-famous Whitney “Sahara” Richardson is at the top of her game. With four Grammys, an Oscar nod, and a billion-dollar clothing line, her career is skyrocketing. Even her headline-grabbing dating life is looking up. And if everything goes as planned, marriage and children are just a few years away–and they will come in that order.
That is…until a mix-up at the fertility clinic where her eggs are stored puts the cart before the horse. Oops. Whitney suddenly has a daughter…whose biological father is reluctant to share her.
One in a Million is a fun celebrity rom-com with the poignancy of Abby Jimenez and a modern twist on “surprise baby” for fans of Jasmine Guillory.
HarperCollins: https://www.harpercollins.com/products/one-in-a-million-beverley-kendall
BookShop.org: https://bookshop.org/p/books/one-in-a-million-original-beverley-kendall/21448552?ean=9781525830327
Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/one-in-a-million-beverley-kendall/1145522991
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Excerpt:
Myles Redmond was annoyed.
Scratch that. He was more than annoyed. He was pissed and currently doing his best not to glare at the woman sitting in the chair next to him.
Dear God, heβd never resented anyone more in his life, and the fact that he was married to her made the nightmare they were living through one hundred times worse.
It would be fair to say their three-year marriage hovered on the brink of failure, and the outcome of this meeting might be what sent it plunging to its demise.
Myles clenched his jaw as he regarded Holly, taking in her unsmiling face and rigid posture. His wifeβs beauty turned heads everywhere they went but had failed to turn his since sheβd demanded the DNA test.
βWould you stop looking at me like that?β Holly huffed, cutting a pair of ice-blue eyes at him. She sniffed and abruptly looked away, her chin notched a fraction higher as she presented him with her profile. βWhether you want to admit it or not, weβre doing the right thing.β
Sheβd worn a light blue dress for the occasion. As if she hadnβt made her hopes for the outcome of the meeting clear enough. Blue was her lucky color. Her long manicured nails kept up a rhythmic tapping on the wooden arm of her chair.
βAnd what exactly is that?β he asked, his tone like shards of glass.
Exasperated, she rolled her eyes and flicked a wavy lock of platinum-blond hair over her shoulder. βGod, I hate when youβre like this. You know exactly what Iβm talking about. I canβt believe you donβt want to know who she belongs to.β She addressed the empty desk in front of them more than she did him.
βShe,β he stressed through gritted teeth, βhas a name. Her name is Haylee, and she is our daughter.β His voice was low and controlled while he seethed inside. It didnβt matter what the DNA results revealed. Haylee was their child. After all theyβdβsheβd gone through to have her, how could she say otherwise? That was the thing he couldnβt understand. His part had been easy. Hers had notβas sheβd frequently reminded him.
Holly huffed out a sound of deep frustration, her narrowed gaze taking a glancing stab at his face. βSheβs not ours, Myles, and for the life of me, I donβt understand why you refuse to accept it. Itβs as obvious as the nose on my face that she belongs to another couple.β
βSheβs ours.β He was the only father Haylee had ever known, and no test was going to change that.
βIβm sure her biological parents will have something to say about that.β His wife had made up her mind and refused to be swayed.
Recognizing the pointlessness of arguing with her, Myles kept his mouth shut and averted his gaze. These days, it was impossible to look at her without feeling a profound sense of betrayalβ¦and angerβso much anger. Feelings far removed from how heβd felt the day theyβd exchanged their wedding vows.
βMyles, they have as much a right to know as we do. Wouldnβt you want to know if you were in their place?β Holly said, her voice cajoling, indicating a switch of tactics. Good cop, bad cop, meet Holly the Bully and Holly the Sweet-Talker, the same woman employing two tried-and-true methods to get her way.
Well, itβs not going to work this time.
The office door behind them opened, and Dr. Kelly Franklin walked in, saving him from more of his wifeβs attempts to convince him her motivation was altruism, not selfishness.
Small in stature at barely over five feet and clad in a white lab coat, Dr. Kelly had brown shoulder-length hair and carried herself with the confidence of the framed Harvard MD degree hanging on the wall.
βGood afternoon, Mr. and Mrs. Redmond. Thank you so much for coming in on such short notice.β
The doctorβs greeting was warm and respectful. More importantly, she didnβt sound as if she was about to plunge a knife into his heart. That said, it was clear she hadnβt come bearing tidings of joy either.
Myles made a move to stand, but she stayed the act of male courtesyβingrained in him by his fatherβby motioning for him to remain seated.
Quelling his instincts, he subsided back into his chair and watched as she quickly took hers behind the desk.
βSorry to keep you waiting.β
She was nervous but doing her best not to show it. As a former defense attorney, Myles had learned to pick up on the subtleties of body language. She hadnβt blinked once since sheβd greeted them, and the distinct tapping sound that began shortly after she sat down was her nervously tapping her shoe on the floor. Hollyβs hands were on her lap.
βWe were early,β Myles said. Fifteen minutes, to be precise. Because this was important. The rest of his life hinged on what she was about to tell them. Despite vowing to himself that heβd remain calm, he felt tenser than ever.
For a beat, her brown eyes bounced between them. Then she blinked and said, βThe DNA test confirmed thatββ
βShe isnβt ours, is she?β Holly asked, cutting the doctor off midsentence.
Myles turned and narrowed his eyes at his wife. Why not put up a billboard? I donβt want her. Give her to someone else.
As far as he was concerned, Holly had checked out of motherhood and their marriage before she packed her bags and took off to San Diego to stay with her mother after telling him she needed space.
What kind of parent needed βspaceβ three weeks after the birth of her daughter?
His wife, that was who.
Look, he got it. They had hired a surrogate, so Holly didnβt get to bond with Haylee the way mothers usually did, but sheβd known that from the outset. Theyβd both gone into this with their eyes wide openβ¦and then some. Furthermore, parents didnβt walk away just because their child didnβt turn out the way they wanted or expected. That wasnβt the way parenting worked.
At the end of the day, though, he had to face some hard truths. He was just as much to blame for what was happening. While he might be successful in other parts of his lifeβhe was a loving father, son, brother, and uncle and a loyal friend, and had been elected president of the California Bar Association two terms in a rowβhe sucked when it came to romantic relationships.
How did he know?
Because he already had one failed marriage under his belt, and it looked like he was coasting for divorce number two. In sports terms, heβd soon be 0-2.
Dr. Franklin tentatively cleared her throat before continuing. βUnfortunately, your case is a little more complicated.β
βComplicated? What does that mean? Either sheβs ours or sheβs not.β She turned and looked at him as if expecting him to echo her demand for clarity. βAlthough I think itβs obvious she canβt be.β The latter she muttered as an aside meant to be heardβjust in case the good doctor didnβt know where she stood on the matter.
Mylesβs jaw locked. According to his wifeβwhoβd gone from being the top-producing female real estate agent in Southern California to self-ascribed geneticistβHaylee couldnβt be the product of two white, blue-eyed parents. If she has a drop of Nordic ancestry in her, Iβm the Queen of England, Holly had said in reference to her parentsβ Swedish heritage and Hayleeβs slightly darker complexion, dark brown curly hair, and brown eyes.
Never mind that he was a quarter Sicilian on his motherβs side, and his hair was dark and wavy. In her summation of their daughterβs parentage, it was clear Holly hadnβt factored his genes into the equation.
βWould you mind elaborating?β he said, his brow furrowed in concentration.
Dr. Franklin inhaled and treated them to another unblinking stare. βIt means that youβre right. There was a problem, but not what I assumed. The error occurred during the egg selection portion of the fertilization stage, not the implantation stage.β
For the first time since they walked into the office, Holly appeared genuinely confused. βAre you saying thatββ She broke off, as if unable or unwilling to give voice to whatever conclusion sheβd drawn in her mind. Unusual for her.
The doctor met Hollyβs puzzled stare. βIβm sorry to have to tell you this, but you arenβt your daughterβs biological mother.β Her gaze then shifted to him. βHowever, you are her biological father.β
Hollyβs gasp cracked the air like a thunderclap. The deafening silence that followed was just as loud.
Myles was too stunned to speak, his heart pounding so loud in his ears that, for a few moments, it drowned out all possible thought or comprehension.
βNo, no. That canβt be right.β Holly turned to him, her eyes wide with shock and disbelief.
If he could speak, he didnβt know what he would say, given the state of his mind. Completely blown.
The doctorβs composureβwhich had remained relatively calm thus farβbegan to show cracks. Based partly on the dates on her diploma, he guessed Dr. Franklin was in her early forties, but the depth of the lines now bracketing her mouth and fanning out from her eyes spoke of the toll this must be taking on her and made her look years older.
Swallowing visibly, she continued. βWe had the test run by two different labs. The results are the same.β
Accompanying his wifeβs cry of dismay came the realization that his claim to his daughter was as solid as any fatherβs could be. Haylee was his. Relief began to seep into every part of his being. Seconds later, it washed over him in a flood. He could breathe again.
Dr. Franklin regarded them, self-reproach stamped all over her face. βIβm sorry. Iβm so very sorry. I donβt know how this happened. Itβs never happened to us before. But I promise to get to the bottom of it and do whatever it takes to make this right.β
Coming into the meeting, Myles had prepared himself for only two possibilities. Either Haylee was biologically theirs, or she wasnβt. And in the latterβs case, heβd been fully prepared to fight to keep her even if his marriage would be one of the casualties of any battle heβd have to wage.
The one thing he never imagined was discovering he had a babyβ¦with a woman heβd never laid eyes on.
Excerpted from ONE IN A MILLION by Beverley Kendall.
Copyright Β© 2025 by Beverley Kendall.
Published by Canary Street Press, an imprint of HTP/HarperCollins.
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Author Info:
BEVERLEY KENDALL has published over ten contemporary and historical romance novels. She also manages the romance review blog, Smitten by Books (smittenbybooks.com). Bev writes full-time while raising her son as a single mother. Both dual citizens of the US and Canada, they currently call Atlanta home.
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