Ruthless Tycoons: The Complete Series (Ruthless Billionaires Book 3)

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Ruthless Tycoons: The Complete Series (Ruthless Billionaires Book 3) Page 12

by Theodora Taylor


  I hold up my hands and cut him off. “Arturo. Are you telling me you have to fire me because my son used Kinder Club resources and became close friends with Wes? So, Holt Calson put you up to this?”

  Arturo looks left, then right before answering, “I am not allowed to name the guest who filed the complaint.”

  Oh, my goodness… “This is complete nonsense, Arturo, and you know it! You yourself said Barron could participate in the Kinder Club activities when you recruited me.”

  Arturo winces before saying, “There is no record of me making such an offer to you. And according to several members of the staff, the guest in question and his bodyguard were frequently seen in your staff quarters. As you know, hosting guests in staff lodgings is also against our rules—”

  “I cannot believe you are letting that horrible man get away with this!” I yell, cutting off his foofool explanation. “Especially when I was called in on my day off to deal with Wes because no one else—including you—could. Was that in the complaint as well, or did you not even bother to defend me?”

  Arturo lowers his chin and blows out a noisy breath. “Of course, I tried to talk corporate out of this,” he hisses back at me. “You are the best Kinder Club director I’ve ever seen in all my years working for this company! And if it were up me, I would sign you on full-time, no questions asked. I am still not sure why this… guest…filed a complaint in the first place. But unfortunately, he is very well connected. This order comes straight from the desk of the vice chairman himself, and though we will provide you with two weeks’ severance, I am afraid I must let you go.”

  A lump gathers in my throat because two weeks’ severance is not nearly enough for two emergency plane tickets home.

  Perhaps sensing my distress, Arturo’s posture becomes less defensive and he says, “Look, niña, I have a little money I can give you.”

  Pride rears up inside me at the thought of taking even a dollar from the man I thought I was forming a close connection with. “I do not want your money. All I need from you is a recommendation before I leave. I don’t have one on file since I’ve only ever worked for The Tourmaline, but I will need a good word from you if I’m going to get another job right away.”

  It is a simple request, but Arturo’s shoulders deflate. “I am so sorry, niña, but I was explicitly forbidden to give you a recommendation…written or verbal.”

  I stare at Arturo, feeling sick to my stomach. I had believed with a few more months of dating, we might get married. I thought he was a good man, a decent man.

  And though I do not say any of this aloud, he answers my stare with a defensive, “This is not in my hands. None of this is my fault. And it won’t help you if I lose my job, too.”

  I think of the basketball player. The one who threw money at Lydia to get an abortion when she came to him with news of the baby he put inside her. The one who never returned my calls or text messages after her death.

  Some men are cowards, I decide. Incapable of loyalty or responsibility. In my frustration, I tell him, “I hope no one ever comes for you the way you let corporate come for me.”

  Arturo spreads his hands. “I tried to argue with them. I did. But…” he dips his head and replies in a low voice, “This feels personal. I do not know why this guy has it out for you, but you are right. This is not how these things are usually done here and it gives me no pleasure to let you go.”

  I want to argue more. I want to scream. Instead, I deflate. Because Arturo is right. This is personal. This is a hit job, courtesy of Holt Calson. And though I wish Arturo had stepped up for me, going after him won’t change a thing. I will still be out of a job, no matter what I say or do. Because this is Mexico, not the States. They can fire me at will and for any reason at all without fear of reprisal.

  In the end, I turn and walk away from the man I dated for over six months without another word. Because what else is there to say?

  I am still fuming by the time I make it back to my employee bungalow, but I stop dead in my tracks when I see a couple of hotel security guards in white, black, and gold polos outside my front door.

  “Luis? Fernando?” I say. Then I ask them in Spanish why they are here.

  Fernando looks away guiltily, but Luis answers in halting English, “Sorry, but the Mexican Consulate is calling the office. They say your work visa is taken away, and you cannot live on hotel property unless you are paying to be guest. And right now, there are no rooms.”

  “Que?” I say, hoping I am not understanding his broken English correctly. Because it sounds like he is saying my work visa has been revoked, and he and Fernando are here to kick me out of my home. Which means not only do I have to buy two very expensive one-way tickets back to Jamaica, but I also have to pay for a place to stay in the interim.

  Before Luis can respond, a voice calls out, “Mama! Mama!”

  The door to my bungalow flings open and Barron runs out, happier than I have seen him…well, in forever. Barron is a very serious boy and does not show much excited emotion unless a scientific breakthrough is involved.

  “Oh, hi Barron,” I say, my voice weak because I thought he was still out in the field with the iguanas. I had not expected to have this conversation with him so soon. “I have some news—”

  “I know!” he answers, cutting me off. “Wes just told me! I can’t believe it. But you’re here saying you have news, so it must be true, right?”

  I shake my head in confusion. How could Wes tell him I was fired? Did he text Barron from the plane? And even if he did, why would Barron be so excited about it?

  That’s when Wes, the boy in question, runs out of the bungalow, followed by a huge man. This isn’t the normal sized plain clothes security guy who’d been assigned to Wes all week, but a huge, blunt-nosed man in a black tailored suit. He’s even bigger and maybe even meaner than Javon, whose face and name I still remember in frightening detail. As Wes comes running toward me with his arms open wide, the man glances over his shoulder toward the inside of my former home. And then…

  Holt Calson saunters into view. He leans casually against the doorframe of the little bungalow that used to belong to me.

  “You’re going to be my nanny!” Wes cries happily, throwing his arms around my waist.

  While at the same time Barron yells, “And I’m going to C.I.T.!”

  Chapter Fourteen

  HOLT

  As far as coups go, this has definitely been one of my best. I hadn’t just given Wes what he wanted, I also obliterated any chance Sylvie had of finding another job beyond the one I wanted her to take.

  Less than four hours after turning down my son’s offer, she has no job prospects, no place to live, and I am betting, no boyfriend now that he’s been forced to fire her. All thanks to Zahir, who had no idea the woman who used and betrayed me had been working in his family’s hotel division for nearly ten years. He didn’t hesitate to do as I asked, though I had been careful not to tell him I needed Sylvie fired from this job so she could take a job with me. That would have brought questions. And probably a few warnings, which is why I won’t be sharing any of the details with Luca, either, when we meet on Wednesday for our monthly climb at the Manhattan Bouldering Gym.

  The point is, it pays to have friends in high places—a lesson Sylvie should have considered before turning down my son’s job offer.

  When Wes announces Sylvie is going to be his nanny, her eyes fly up to meet mine. Her face still reads like a book. I can see the panic in her eyes…the rapid calculations. True, she could empty out her bank account and book a hotel room and buy tickets back to Jamaica where, according to her ex-boyfriend, she worked before he poached her for this hotel. But then she would have to explain to her son why she would rather spend her hard-earned money on two flights back to Jamaica than take the well-paid job I already took the liberty of telling him she accepted.

  I stand in her soon-to-be-former doorway, waiting…

  And a triumphant horn blares inside my chest when I see h
orrified realization dawn across her face. She gets it—finally understands I have painted her into a corner. One she can’t get out of unless she is willing to sacrifice her son’s dreams in order to do it.

  For a moment, her eyes burn into mine, calling me all kinds of bastard even if she’s still not the type to curse aloud.

  Fine by me. She can call me whatever she wants. Because the thing is, Calsons get what they want, by any means necessary. My son wants her to be his nanny. And the mere sight of her, her failure to acknowledge my presence, the happy little life she carved out for herself after what she did to me—well, now I want revenge.

  And though I still haven’t said a word, I am sure she hears my intentions loud and clear. I am no longer the unstable boy you had wrapped around your finger in New Haven. I am a man now, and as far as I’m concerned, revenge is best served boss.

  Sylvie’s eyes continue to burn for several long moments, her angry brown gaze boring into mine. But in the end…she does exactly what I knew she would. And less than two hours later we are on a plane to Connecticut.

  However, my victory would ring a hell of a lot sweeter if she wasn’t taking things so quietly. We are about four hours into a six-hour flight and she still hasn’t said a word, even though she’s seated directly across from me.

  Nor has she accepted the champagne the flight attendant offered her, or touched the meals Wes and Ender scarfed down before disappearing into the back row of seats with a couple of tablets.

  I work on my laptop for a few minutes, returning emails and approving the pictures Della culled from those the photog sent her. Meanwhile, Sylvie stares out the window looking miserable. But that is not why I am the first to break the extended silence—at least, that’s what I tell myself before I ask, “Is your son’s father going to be a problem?”

  My question finally brings her eyes away from the window. “What’s that now?” she asks, her voice still as soft and melodic as I remember.

  I shift in my seat. “I don’t know the terms of your custody agreement, or if your son’s father is Mexican or Jamaican. But if he’s going to have any issues with his eight-year-old son leaving the country, we should get my lawyers on the case now…”

  Sylvie shifts with the same distressed look she wore when I told her I wanted to fuck her on a cloud. “Barron is ten,” she says after a few uncomfortable tics. “And his father will not be a problem. He has been with me ever since my sister died in childbirth.”

  Her words and Barron’s age finally drops the penny. It also explains why he is so much taller than my already tall son.

  Confirming my thoughts, she says, “Barron’s father is not and will never be in his life.”

  “So, he is your ward,” I say. Which means she hadn’t moved on to another guy right after me. Hadn’t had a son with someone else. Not that it should matter. In fact, I fucking hate the way my heart soars in my chest when I put two and two together.

  Sylvie’s face hardens like I’ve offended her. “Barron is my son,” she says quietly, firmly. “And I will thank you to never refer to him in any other way again.”

  My heart stops soaring with a sudden thud as I am reminded again how loyal she is to those she loves. So long as they aren’t me.

  I clear my throat, hating all the emotions. Hating her. But I manage to keep my tone all business as I reply, “In that case, my assistant will take care of everything as far as registering your son for school goes,” I pause to let that sink in. “You will be expected to take Wes to and from his school. But we don’t live far from CIT. And until my assistant can find a new private school for Wes, you will be no more than a few minutes away if he should need you.”

  “I don’t want to go to another private school!” Wes shouts from the back of the plane. “Just let me stay in public.”

  “Thank you for sharing your opinion with us, Wes,” Sylvie calls over her shoulder. “Now, please come here and try that again but in a more respectful tone.”

  “But—” Wes starts to shout again.

  “You will not like it if you try me with any further shouting across this plane, Wes,” she replies, her voice soft but firm.

  I raise my eyebrows, wondering if she wants my kid to throw a fit on the plane. Like, maybe this is her petty form of revenge.

  But after several seconds of mutinous silence, Wes finally appears in the aisle beside us and asks me in a more subdued tone, “If I like public school, can I just go there?”

  “Uh…” I answer, sounding a lot like the pre-media trained Holt Calson. The truth is, I have never set foot in a public school. I have no idea how they are different from the private schools both Wes and I attended during our childhoods.

  “Sure,” I answer, winging it. “I don’t care as long as you get good grades.”

  “Yes!” Wes says, pumping his fist.

  Then he disappears into the back of the plane, leaving me alone with Sylvie. We stare at each other. Me not wanting to wonder what she’s thinking, but doing it just the same. However, instead of continuing our conversation, Sylvie’s eyes shift back to the airplane window. Like the clouds outside are far more interesting than I am, was, or ever could be.

  III

  Greenwich

  Chapter Fifteen

  HOLT

  “Wow! This house be bigger than a hotel, mon!” Ender exclaims a few hours later when our group walks through the large cherry wood cathedral doors at the front of our waterfront compound in Greenwich.

  He stares open mouthed and wide eyed at the ivory-and-marble foyer, but Sylvie’s expression stays closed. As if she has resigned herself to living in a penal colony rather than a 10,000-square foot Mediterranean-style estate overlooking Indian Harbor.

  And her expression doesn’t change when Wes says, “Dad made Melissa stay in one of the bedrooms upstairs, but I told him to give you guys the guest cottage!”

  Ender, once again proving himself to be much more polite than my son, turns to me and says, “Thank you.”

  “You’re welcome,” I answer, my eyes pinned on Sylvie. But she doesn’t meet my gaze as she says to Wes, “Yes, thank you. I’m sure we will be very comfortable there.”

  “It’s out back,” Wes says, pointing in the direction of the long hallway lined with modern art that intersects the house. “C’mon, I’ll show you!”

  Who is that kid? I wonder as I watch them go, I’ve never seen Wes so happy or helpful.

  “We forgot our bags,” I hear Ender say.

  “What? Don’t worry, dude. Someone will bring them to the guest cottage,” Wes says impatiently, as if he’s trying to explain normal life to an alien who has no idea how it works.

  I give it 24 hours before Wes grows tired of playing host and starts making unreasonable demands.

  But 24 hours later when I return home from work late Monday night, I find the house empty with a note from Lucynka, our housekeeper, on the refrigerator door.

  “Dinner is in oven. Plenty leftovers since Wes decides to eat with new nanny.”

  Okay…I think.

  My phone vibrates inside my suit pocket. It’s a text message from Wes: “Vee said to tell you I’m staying here tonight.”

  And the rest of the week goes on in the same vein. I come home to an empty house and a text message from my son saying he’s with the nanny and her son. The only differences are the dinners left for me in the oven. That Thursday, Lucynka leaves me a chicken breast and green beans with a small salad on the side. And by the following Thursday, I’ve become used to dinners that can be easily prepared for and eaten by one person.

  Wes does manage to surprise me the following Friday. For the first time in two weeks, I find him waiting for me at the kitchen table when I return from work. I am a few hours earlier than normal in order to beat the especially bad rush hour traffic on I278 E.

  “Hey,” I say when I find him there. “What are you doing here?”

  Wes shrugs. “Vee said I had to eat with you tonight so you wouldn’t feel lonely. I tol
d her you wouldn’t care, but…” Wes shrugs again, this one even more aggrieved than the last.

  I take a seat and tuck into the cheese-and-meat plate Lucynka left out for us.

  Part of me wants to agree with Wes and let him return to the guest cottage since he obviously doesn’t want to be with me. But the other part of me is too curious to let him go.

  “So, Allie tells me you had a pretty good first week of school.” I keep my voice casual, but I cannot remember a time when two weeks of school went by without at least one “Wes Incident” noted in the daily briefings Allie gives me.

  Wes shrugs. “It’s okay. Ender has been helping me with my homework—that’s cool. He’s not great at the English stuff, but he knows how to do all kinds of math…”

  I listen, eyebrow crooked as Wes spends the rest of dinner telling me, “Ender knows this,” or, “Ender said that,” and how Vee let’s him do his homework outside because, “everything’s better outside.”

  “Come, Holt. Everything will taste better outside.”

  I’m suddenly struck by a memory of Sylvie pulling me out to the balcony where she’s set up our dinner on an old blanket she found in one of the closets.

  “Dad? Dad? You okay?”

  I find Wes staring at me with a concerned look—one I suspect he picked up from spending two straight weeks in Sylvie’s company.

  “Are you all right?” he asks.

  The answer is no. I’m not all right. Even though I should be after ten long years. I should be over her.

  I change the topic to something safer: my plans for the board presentation in October. Wes predictably puts up with about five minutes of me talking about this before he asks if he can go since he’s finished eating and Sylvie said they could go for a swim after dinner.

 

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