Pregnant by the CEO (The Jameson Heirs)

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Pregnant by the CEO (The Jameson Heirs) Page 2

by HelenKay Dimon


  Ellie was almost afraid to answer. She did, anyway. “I met Derrick Jameson and told him to back off.”

  The explanation sounded good. So strong. Just what Ellie wanted to be. After years of racing around, trying to keep every ball in the air and failing most of the time, Ellie wanted to be in control of her life and not running behind it, trying to catch up.

  Vanessa tapped on the keyboard. “Uh-huh.”

  Yeah, not good. “What does that response mean?”

  “Did you happen to see a photographer while you were there?” Vanessa sat straighter and waved her hand in the air. “Forget it. I’ll just go ahead and read it to you before you explode.”

  Ellie dropped the paper napkin she was twisting in her fingers. “Wait, read what?”

  “The latest from that Insider site.”

  “No.” Ellie’s stomach fell. She could have sworn it hit the floor.

  “‘Derrick Jameson and Ellie Gold made an official appearance together at the swanky Hay-Adams Hotel tonight. No word on whether they got a room, but they did leave the business party one right after the other, making more than one partygoer wonder if Derrick sprang for the presidential suite...’”

  Silence screamed through the room. Ellie could feel it hammering in her head as it rumbled through her.

  “Okay.” Vanessa cleared her throat. “So, that happened.”

  “It did not happen.” Ellie reached over and turned the laptop to face her. “We argued. We fought.”

  She started tapping random keys. Anything to make that now familiar Insider website disappear.

  “Wait, go back. There’s a photo.” Vanessa swatted Ellie’s hand away then leaned in and pointed at the screen. “Why does it look like you’re hanging on his arm?”

  As if Ellie could deny it. The evidence, even though it didn’t show the whole story, was right there. Her pressing against him, looking up at him. Anyone seeing this would believe they were having an intimate chat.

  “That’s not... I was just...” The words clogged her throat in the rush to get them out. “I’m going to kill him.”

  Vanessa winced. “You can’t think that he—”

  “Of course he planted this. I’m his PR plan.” And he wasn’t even trying to hide it. He’d been very clear. She just hadn’t realized he’d turned it on full-time.

  Vanessa made a humming sound. “He really is cute.”

  “Don’t.”

  “But clearly a gigantic ass.” Vanessa’s voice sounded harsher that time.

  “Better.” But still not good enough. Ellie wanted to forget all about his smug face.

  “Hating him doesn’t fix the Noah situation,” Vanessa said, being far too reasonable for the moment.

  “Or help with my income issue or get my life under control. Yeah, I know.”

  Vanessa’s shoulders fell as she sighed. “I can give you money, or move in here with me and don’t pay rent for a few months. Give yourself a financial break.”

  “I can’t.”

  “You can.” Vanessa made a grumbling sound as she said something under her breath that wasn’t quite clear. “I’m thinking about stuffing twenties into your purse while you’re not looking.”

  With that, Ellie felt some of the Derrick-related anger drain away. She reached over and gave her friend’s arm a quick squeeze. “You’re awesome and I love you, but this is bigger than a short-term money problem. It’s like everything is spinning and I can’t make it stop.” Even now her life choices ran through her head as she questioned each one. “I still can’t believe I got fired for something that wasn’t my fault.”

  “So, take it back.” Vanessa grabbed the bottle and refilled her glass. “Control, I mean. Start with one thing. You take a small piece, conquer that and then move on.”

  The advice rolled around in Ellie’s head until it took hold. She knew exactly which battle to wage first. “Right. Derrick Jameson.”

  “Um, no. I was thinking more like you could get a temp job and rebuild.” Vanessa topped off Ellie’s glass. “A guy like Jameson is not easily managed. Forget him. Handle what you need first.”

  The suggestion made sense but Ellie couldn’t survive that way. She’d spent so much of her life fixing things. First, for her father, who had one pipe dream after another, and her mother, who had fought to keep them together as a family. Then for her brother. She didn’t have the energy left to tackle straightening out her life, but she would. Later. Once she’d dealt with Derrick and Noah was back on track. “I have to handle these other pieces first.”

  Vanessa shook her head. “Ellie, you can’t fix everything.”

  “I can fix this. If Derrick Jameson wants a battle, he’s going to get one.”

  Two

  The DC Insider: The hottest romance in town just got more interesting. Ever wonder what happens when the lady in question calls our office to insist there is no romance? Well, we call the gentlemen for his comment. And Derrick Jameson did not disappoint. The usually demanding businessman chuckled and said, “You should listen to Ellie. I enjoy acquiescing to her.” These two are never dull.

  She’d been summoned.

  The call came at a little after nine the next morning. Ellie debated ignoring it. She wasn’t exactly the type to jump when a man ordered, but then Derrick was no ordinary man. He seemed to enjoy ticking her off.

  Yet there she was, two hours later, walking along a long hallway on the fifteenth floor of the Jameson Industries’ office building. Pristine white walls surrounded her as her heels clicked against the polished hardwood floors. People moved in and out and around cubicle walls. They carried stacks of papers and shuffled with a sense of urgency.

  She missed the energy of a busy office. Insurance underwriting wasn’t the most exciting topic but she’d worked in human resources, slowly taking on more responsibility. She loved coming into a pile of files waiting on her desk each morning and solving problems.

  Everything went fine until the big boss took an overactive interest in her. She’d done everything she’d been trained to do. Documented his behavior. She’d known how hard it was to report that sort of thing up the chain of command without becoming the subject of gossip. Before her boss made his move she’d set up a system to handle the concerns. Then she got fired before she could implement it.

  The attorney she contacted about the firing but could barely afford said she had a good case. But her former boss had the resources to drag the thing out and exhaust her.

  She tried not to think about that as two men headed straight for her. She slipped to the side, banging into the wall and knocking the corner of a painting. One that likely cost more than her car. After that, one more turn and she moved into a quieter part of the floor. No one scurried here.

  Sleek furniture made of unblemished leather with shiny chrome accents filled the open reception area. That, and a desk covered with piles of files, was all that stood between her and a set of closed double doors. Those and the guy next to her. She couldn’t remember her escort’s name, wasn’t even sure he’d offered it.

  Before she could ask, he reached out and knocked on the door to the right in front of them. One brisk thwack then he opened it. Even gestured for her to step inside in front of him.

  No, thank you.

  Her legs refused to move, anyway. The threshold seemed innocent enough, but the man on the other side was not. Every inch of this place screamed money. Something she’d never had enough of and worked liked crazy to stockpile in case her life hit a bump...just as it had. More like a Himalayan mountain, but still.

  She couldn’t see Derrick at the moment, but she did have an unrestricted view of his desk. The thing had to be eight feet long. Formidable, like the man who sat at it.

  She refused to go one step further. Decided to call out instead. “What do you want?”

  “Come inside,” the faceless
voice said from some hidden corner of the office.

  She noted the deep and commanding tone. Yeah, this was going to be a quick meeting.

  “I’m fine here,” she said.

  The security guy put his hand over his mouth to cover what sounded like a fake cough. He hesitated a second before saying anything. “You really should obey him.”

  Apparently she’d gotten off the elevator and stepped back a century. “Did you use the word obey?”

  “Don’t fight with Jackson. It’s me you want,” Derrick said, still without making an appearance.

  She glanced at the man looming next to her. He stood well over six feet with brown hair and a lean athletic build. Attractive in a liked-to-run-along-the-Potomac sort of way, he looked far too amused by what was happening. “Is Jackson your first name or last?”

  Before he could answer, Derrick stepped out of the room off to the side of his office and into the doorway. Hovered right in front of her. He nodded as a small smile played on the corner of his mouth. “Ellie, it’s good to see you again.”

  The warmth in his eyes. That tone. A strange dizziness slammed into her when he got close. No way was she being reeled in by that charm thing he seemed to have flicked on. Nope, she knew better.

  She managed a nod. “Mr. Jameson.”

  “Come inside. Despite our argument last night, we have a lot to discuss.” He swept a hand toward the inside of his oversize corner office.

  The very real sense she was out of her league slammed into her. “What would you do if I said no?”

  He frowned. “Why would you?”

  “You have this guy following me around the hallways...no offense.” She winced as she glanced at Jackson before looking at Derrick again. “Then there’s the part where you ordered me to come here. Today. Right now.”

  “Ten minutes ago.”

  “What?”

  “I asked you to meet with me ten minutes ago. I assumed you being late was some sort of power play. Unless you have a problem with tardiness. If so, we’ll need to work on that.”

  She glanced at Jackson again. “Is he serious?”

  Jackson nodded. “Almost always.”

  “Ellie.” That’s it. Derrick just said her name then turned and walked across the room, stopping next to his desk.

  “Your manners need some work.” She didn’t bother mumbling as she followed him. If he wasn’t going to be subtle, neither was she.

  “So I’ve been told.”

  “Then there’s the very real sense you’re setting me up.” Not so much a sense as a fact. If he planted one rumor, he could plant many. And that seemed to be his intent.

  “How so?” He had the nerve to look confused.

  She refused to believe he was that clueless.

  “I complain about a story on the internet about us and suddenly there’s a photo of us up there, complete with a new quote from you.” An annoying quote. One that didn’t say anything yet managed to say a lot. “I called them and denied that we were together and you...actually, I don’t know what you were doing when you talked to the Insider.”

  “I was being a gentleman.”

  She took a few steps. Hovering there in his office gave her confidence. “You mean the I-don’t-kiss-and-tell thing? Oh, please. You were toying with them because it amused you.”

  “Admittedly, I’m not often at a loss for words, but I’m not sure what to say to that comment.”

  “You could admit you set me up to be featured on the Insider. Again.” The sound of a cough and rustling had her turning around.

  Jackson stood there with his attention focused on Derrick. “Do you need anything from me, sir?”

  “No, but it would be wise to stay close by in the hall in case Ms. Gold brought a weapon.”

  She had forgotten poor Jackson was still there. Hearing the door click behind her as he left, she tried not to fidget. Now it was the two of them temporarily trapped in a room bigger than her entire apartment.

  Rather than retreat, she stepped forward. Followed Derrick’s trail until she stood on the opposite side of his desk and watched him slip into his chair. “As if I could have gotten anything through the two rounds of security.”

  He leaned back. “I find myself a bit more careful these days.”

  “These days?”

  “Since your brother stole from me then turned around a few days later and tried to throw the scent off him by taking public shots at me.” Derrick motioned toward the chair next to her.

  “So, that’s it. The rumors, the photos, the fake social news suggesting we’re together.” She dumped her purse on the seat but remained on her feet. “You’re coming after me to get even. This is some sort of weird revenge.”

  Derrick nodded. “A fascinating theory.”

  That really was the only explanation. Even though money had always been tight, Noah wasn’t the type to steal.

  “I see the dramatic streak runs in the family.” Derrick’s exhale filled the room. “Lucky me.”

  Right. I’m the dramatic one. “Says the guy who has a private butler and an office set off from everyone else.”

  “Security.”

  Everything inside her froze. “Excuse me?”

  “Jackson is my head of security.”

  She relaxed but not much. Something told her she needed to be on her toes with this guy. He might talk smooth and look like he stepped out of her hottest fantasy, but that didn’t change the facts. He was a ruthless jackass. “Do that many people want to kill you?”

  “My family has significant business interests. That sort of thing tends to attract trouble.”

  She’d never been called that before. “Are you referring to me as the trouble?”

  He shrugged. “Let’s hope not.”

  She’d taken about all of the put-her-on-the-defensive moves that she could stand. It was time to get to the point so she could run out of there. “Mr. Jame—”

  “I believe I asked you to call me Derrick.”

  That’s what she called him in her head... “Do you think that’s wise?”

  “I’m afraid you’ve lost me.”

  “You and my brother are locked in some sort of public pissing match. You’re threatening him with lawyers. He’s making you look bad on the internet, which has bled over to traditional media.” She put her palms on his desk and leaned in. “What I’m saying is that fake rumors or not, we’re on opposite sides of this battle.”

  His gaze skimmed over her. “We don’t have to be.”

  He hadn’t moved but the heated words swept over her in a caress that had her shaking her head and standing straight again. She not only needed to be careful with Derrick, she needed body armor.

  She blocked out every other thought and concentrated on the guy she’d come to think of as cold-blooded. “Has anyone ever pointed out your cryptic way of speaking?”

  “Then let me be clear.” Derrick balanced his elbows on the edge of his desk and leaned in toward her. “Your brother took money out of my business accounts and is going to go to jail unless I step in and save him.”

  “No, that’s not—”

  Derrick held up a finger. “There’s nothing to debate. That’s a fact.” He let his hand fall again. “But I am willing to help him.”

  She could almost feel a trap closing over her head. The need to bolt overtook her but she forced her legs to stay still. “Why?”

  “Most people would ask how.”

  She refused to be taken off guard by double-talk. “I’m not like everyone else.”

  “I’m starting to see that.” Derrick watched her for a second. His gaze moved over her face in the silence. After a visible inhale, he began again, his voice louder and more firm. “I will help your brother but he has to do something for me.”

  “You don’t like that he’s making you look
like a complete jerk, maybe even a bit incompetent.” She got that.

  Derrick fired Noah eight weeks ago, exactly two weeks before she lost her job. Noah’s videos started out as a way to let off steam. Then he gained followers. A lot of them. He even managed to make money off his internet work, but she had no idea how.

  He’d become a symbol for the “little man” fighting against the corporate machine. As his following grew, so did his stories about Derrick and the company.

  Blame it on Noah’s baby face or his sarcasm, but media and online sites had picked up the battle. Then Derrick’s lawyers had made contact...and so had the prosecutor’s office about the missing funds.

  And now Derrick had the Insider and its gossip network working for him.

  “I have shareholders and business associates,” Derrick said.

  “So, this is about money.”

  Derrick’s frown deepened. “Isn’t everything?”

  Not an unexpected answer, but still... “It worries me that you don’t know how scary that question is.”

  “I’m proposing a quid pro quo. I make your brother’s legal issues disappear. He shuts down his site and I assist him in finding other more profitable and appropriate ways to channel his technology experience.”

  That sounded somewhat reasonable, which scared her. “That’s the entire deal you’re offering?”

  “No.”

  She beat back a wave of disappointment. She’d taken care of her brilliant brother for so long. Tried to keep him occupied and out of trouble. The idea of having someone else handle that job sounded really good to her at the moment. With her life in shambles and the need to find a new job nipping at her, she loved the idea of having one less stress to deal with.

  “I haven’t told you what I get out of this,” Derrick said.

  Her heart sank. She held in a groan before it could escape her lips. “You did. He stops running the site.”

  It might sound easy but it wasn’t. Noah didn’t have anything else right now except for his anger at Derrick and the attention from his videos. It was the “thing” that kept Noah going. It also provided him with more attention and praise than he’d ever gotten.

 

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