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Single Mom for the Billionaire (Alpha Billionaire Romance Book)

Page 38

by Davis, Alexa


  “Okay, well you are within your legal rights to leave, but I would suggest that you stay.”

  “Thank you very much; we shall be leaving now.”

  With that, Lewis picked up his belongings and stalked from the room, leaving me with no other choice but to follow him. He walked quickly, causing me to run a little to catch up with him. “Can you do that?” I whispered into his ear. “That seemed a little…much.”

  “It’s within your legal rights. They have no evidence on you, you didn’t do it – it really is as simple as that,” he stopped for a second, and stared at me. “Now, you might want to prepare yourself; it’s a media circus out there.”

  “What, really?” I gasped, dreading having all eyes on me, but it was too late. He was already on the move again.

  I guess it made sense. After all, nothing ever happened in this small town, not really. There was the odd big event that captured everyone’s attention: a lottery win, a health-related miracle, acts of heroism, but nothing that lasted very long. Not like this would. This was bad, and it had my name attached to it, a fact that was never going to disappear. I wasn’t going to be able to escape this for a very long time.

  All of a sudden, the idea of getting the hell out of Florence didn’t seem like such a bad one, after all.

  Lewis practically kicked the doors open, and the circus began. Cameras flashed, people screamed, video cameras whirred, microphones were shoved in my face. I felt a sickness building within me, an intense fear gripping at my heart, and for a split second, I feared I might pass out.

  “Just keep going,” Lewis hissed at me. “And remember that you’re innocent.”

  “What happened in there, Mr. Larkin?”

  “Why did you kill that guy?”

  “What were you doing when the victim was murdered?”

  So many questions… What the hell was I going to do?

  “My client isn’t taking any questions,” Lewis yelled loudly, but he didn’t manage to drown anyone out. “No comment; he is an innocent man… Just put your head down,” he whispered to me. “Don’t look at anyone and get into the car.”

  But I couldn’t obey his instructions – my eyes were flickering everywhere, looking for a friendly face. I just wanted to see someone, anyone, who might believe me, but it didn’t look like anyone did. It was a witch hunt, and I was the witch. How the hell was this happening to me? What had I done to deserve it? It didn’t feel like anyone had as bad luck as me.

  And then I saw her.

  June.

  Those familiar eyes, I would recognize them anywhere. She was here. Sure she was in the crowd of the journalists, as if looking for a story, but I could see in her eyes that she wanted to know more for herself – and that she might just trust me. I wanted to run to her side, to explain everything, but I couldn’t, not without wading through the vultures first, and I wasn’t quite ready for that. I needed to get the hell out of there.

  As our eyes locked, I tried my best to communicate all that I couldn’t say aloud, hoping that at least some of it was getting across. She looked pale, bewildered, as if this was affecting her, too, which of course it was. She was involved in this as unwillingly as I was, and in a way, she had as much on the line as I did.

  Her hand moved slowly to her ear, and she made the call me gesture, which I nodded along to, glad that she was actually willing to give me a chance to explain. She could have turned her back on me, assuming I was guilty, or decided she didn’t want anything to do with the situation, but she hadn't. She was here. I nodded quickly in reply and watched as she turned her back on me.

  “Come on,” Lewis insisted, pushing me forwards. “Get yourself into the car, now.”

  As I finally managed to slide into the car, my mind was swimming. That had to be the most intense experience I’d ever been through, which was saying a lot considering the way my life had gone, and I still felt a little frozen and numb. Maybe I was acting weird when I made that call, and maybe I still was now, but death was something that just seemed to happen all around me, in a way that I couldn’t control, and that freaked me the hell out.

  “Are you okay?” Lewis finally asked me, giving me a curious glance out of the corner of his eyes. “Do you want to go home?”

  “No,” I shot back quickly, already imagining the media circus that it would be there. Journalists would be camping out there already, just waiting to see what I had to say. I couldn’t face that, not a chance in hell.

  “Then, where do you want to go?” Lewis asked me, a little frustrated by my lack of answers. “Where do you want to stay?”

  Good question… Where would I stay now? I didn’t have anywhere in the world. Did I?

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  June – Monday

  I didn’t know what to do as I got back into my car, where I had to just wait for Roy to call. I wasn’t sure if he would call me right away or if he’d wait until he was somewhere safe, but I didn’t want to start driving just in case.

  I thought about his scared face as he left the police station, trying his best to rush through the crowds pecking at him like hungry birds, while his lawyer screamed out some pointless sentences, trying to put people off. Did he not understand what a scoop this would be for this town, should it turn out to be true? It would be the story of the century in Florence.

  I knew for a fact that it wasn’t true, though. I’d been wavering outside, trying to find any ways that it could be true, just in case it came back as that, but with one glance into his eyes, I could see that it wasn’t. It was very likely that the murder had happened during the night Roy was with me. If he’d already been released, then maybe they wouldn’t need me to confess that I was with him, after all. Maybe I would still be able to keep my career despite everything.

  I almost jumped up from my seat when my phone started ringing. The phone call might have been what I was waiting for, but to have it actually happen while I was so deep in thought threw me.

  “H…hello? Roy, are you okay?” I stammered into the handset. “Did you manage to get away all right?”

  “I did…” He sounded off, which had me even more panicked. “I really don’t want to go home. I know that they will be waiting for me there.” I couldn’t deny that. The photographer from the Gazette was likely still there, like a lion waiting to pounce on his kill. “Is there any chance that I could come and stay with you for a few days? I mean, I understand if you don’t want me to, with all that’s going on.”

  “Are you kidding me?” I gasped in shock. I would do anything for him! “Of course, you can come and stay. I would love to help.” I didn’t dare ask what the chance of reporters being around my home was because I wasn’t sure that I wanted to know. If they were there, it was too late and the world already knew about us. Sure, if I was pictured with him, I wouldn’t have any plausible deniability, but that probably didn’t matter. “I will be there in a minute,” I promised him. “Just wait for me.”

  As I raced the car back to my home, my phone started ringing again…only this time, it was Mike: the last person in the world that I wanted to speak to. Of course, I couldn’t ignore him – I was supposed to be on a job after all.

  “Hi, Mike, I’m in the car, so I can’t talk much…”

  “What the fuck is going on out there?” he interrupted, not caring about what I was trying my best to tell him.

  “Erm… Well, Roy Larkin has been released,” I told him in the calmest voice I could manage. “And, there isn’t any police information just yet, but it seems like he’s innocent.”

  “So, who the fuck was it, then? This could be a massive fucking scoop here. You need to be on top of it; where the fuck are you going?” I could tell he was pissed, which mean he was about to pile the pressure on.

  “I will have the report emailed to you in a moment,” I told him quickly. “You’ll have everything that I know.”

  “I really fucking hope it’s more than anyone else because if we can have something good for this story, then
we’ll be selling out like fucking crazy.” Urgh, I hated the way his language took a dire turn whenever he was stressed. I found it such an unattractive feature. “So get it to me quick; I need it as soon as you can.”

  “Sure, I’m on it.”

  I was certain that he would steal this story to claim it as his own, but I really didn’t care. I didn’t really want to be attached to this one, anyway.

  As I pulled up outside my home, I was stunned to see no other car there, but then I saw Roy’s shadow creeping around the corner. I practically ran to get the door unlocked. I was sure that he wanted exactly the same as me: to get inside, away from the rest of the world.

  “Are you okay?” I asked, tears filling my eyes as I pulled him in for a hug. “That must have been so horrible for you.”

  But he didn’t seem to care about the effect that it’d had on him; he seemed more worried about me. He pulled back to look at me with concern plastered across his expression before running kisses all over my cheeks, as if he wanted to kiss my tears away.

  “I’m fine,” he told me, in between placing his lips on my cheek. “Are you all right? You look sick.”

  “I’m okay,” I waved my hand dismissively, trying to brush that point off. I really didn’t want him to find out that I passed out; how awful would that make me sound when he’d been through a real trauma. After all the death this poor man had already suffered in his life, now he was seeing more, and even worse…being blamed for it. I couldn’t imagine what was going on inside his mind. “Let’s sit down, get you a drink or something.”

  “Sure, thank you.”

  As he sat and I passed him a glass of water, I realized just how terrible I was in crisis situations. I’d never really had to go through it before, and I wasn’t quite sure what I was supposed to do. I felt really awkward, like I wasn’t quite sure where to even place myself, never mind what to say.

  “So, what happened?” I eventually asked a little cautiously. “At the police station, I mean?”

  “Urgh, it was shitty,” he told me honestly, rubbing his forehead hard with his palm. “But I didn’t tell them anything about you.” God, was that all that he thought I was worried about? And how selfish did it make me that it was one of my primary concerns? This man could have been locked up for something that he didn’t do, and I was worrying about my job. I didn’t like to think what sort of person that made me. “I didn’t mention that we were together because I didn’t want you to get in trouble. Luckily, I managed to get away anyway.”

  “Why did they arrest you?” I was really curious about that part. I felt like they had to have some reason for suspecting him. I didn’t want to think that it was all for no reason.

  “Because of the way I just shut down when I saw the body…emotionally, I mean. I guess they took that as suspect.” He let out a noise that I thought was supposed to be a laugh, but it came out far too strangled for that. “I mean, when did closing off make you a murderer? But there you go…”

  “That’s awful,” I told him, wrapping my arms around him. “I hope you’re okay.”

  “I just have this horrible feeling,” he continued, sounding a little dreamy. “That I know who is involved.”

  “You do?” I exclaimed, unable to keep the shock from my voice. “With the murder, you mean? Did you tell the police anything?”

  “I think it might have been Lewis, the guy acting as my lawyer today,” he continued, as if I hadn't even spoken. “I don’t know why – it’s more of a gut feeling than anything else – but there was just something a little suspect about the certainty of my innocence in his mind.”

  “Well, he knows you well, right? He’s worked for you for years. Maybe he just knew that you wouldn’t…”

  He gave me a look. “We’ve been hanging out, getting to know one another. I feel like you know me quite well. Tell me, before you actually spoke to me, was there a moment where you doubted me?” I didn’t say anything. I simply allowed the guilt to flow through my veins. “Of course you did, that would be rational. He just seemed so sure…”

  I didn’t know how to respond to that, so I said nothing and proceeded to rub his back in a way that I hoped was comforting. We stayed in silence for a few moments, both lost in our own thoughts, before I remembered that I still had a job to do.

  “I’m really sorry about this,” I told him awkwardly, moving towards my laptop. “I just need to send my boss a report about what happened today. He’ll be on my back all night otherwise.”

  This felt horrible, like I was betraying him, but he looked really understandingly at me. “That’s okay… Just don’t say anything about Lewis.”

  “Of course not, I would never do that.” I wouldn’t write about anything I was told in confidence; not that I could, anyway. This was nothing more than a gut feeling, not something that could be legally written about in the news.

  “You can write about the fact that they only suspected me because of my emotionless phone call,” he told me seriously. “I want people to know the police based my arrest on that.”

  At least I had something a little different to add in, something that would keep Mike happy. I could easily say I heard the information somewhere else if I were to be pulled up on it.

  “Why don’t you go and get into bed?” I asked him, with a smile playing on my lips. “I know that it’s early, but you must be exhausted. I’ll bring you up something to eat and drink if you like? There’s a television in there, and some DVDs, so why don’t you stick on a movie while you wait for me?”

  “Sounds good,” he agreed, looking a little happier. “And thank you, I really appreciate it. I know you didn’t have to take me in, so I’m really glad.”

  But as he walked away from me, I didn’t feel good about myself. I felt like utter crap.

  I had put Roy’s entire future at risk by not coming forward, by protecting myself, and there was nothing that I could do to change that. I was stuck with that choice, and it wasn’t going anywhere, no matter how hard I tried to forget it. I didn’t want to think of myself as a selfish person, but that was what I’d undeniably become.

  “Shit,” I muttered angrily to myself as I set about typing up the report. I would have to find some other way to make it up to Roy, something else that I could do to ensure that he remained free – I just wasn’t quite sure what yet.

  I fired off the email and sat with my head in my hands for a few moments, allowing all of that to wash over me. Before I could really lose myself in my sadness, an email pinged back from Mike, confirming that I’d done a good job, which sparked off a reaction in me.

  I didn’t want to sit and mope. I needed to get into action, to make Roy the meal I promised him. Even if I’d done a bad thing, he was still here, giving me a chance, and the last thing that I wanted was to throw that back in his face.

  I’m sorry, Roy, I thought to myself the things that I couldn’t say aloud. I’ll make it up to you; I promise.

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Roy – Tuesday

  This time as I woke up at the crack of dawn, I slid quietly out from under June without waking her. She needed her rest, and I had a whole lot to do, stuff that needed my attention right now. I couldn’t sleep with all of it swimming around in my mind, anyway, so I needed to just get on with it.

  I got dressed silently and put in a call to the driver that I’d turned away at the airport, the one I always used when I needed taking anywhere, and I asked him to take me to the office in the next town over. I needed to get Tank from Lewis, who had offered to pick him up as soon as I told him I wasn’t going home – and we needed to have a chat, too.

  I closed the door almost silently behind me and raced out to the sidewalk to wait to be picked up. The entire time, my mind was spinning. I wasn’t sure what it was that made me suspicious of Lewis, but I needed to be sure. I needed to just talk to him, to find out the truth. Even if this turned out just to be a trip to confirm that he didn’t do it, it would be worth it.

  “Hey th
ere,” Gary, the driver, grinned at me as he pulled the car up. “How are things going?”

  “Haven’t you heard?” I asked wryly, not actually sure how much the news of what’d happened had spread just yet. “I’m being accused of murder.”

  “You what?” he gasped in shock, turning to face me. “What the hell happened?”

  “Take me to the office; I’ll tell you along the way.” I knew I could trust Gary, at least enough to tell him some of the story, and to be honest, it would feel good to get it off my chest.

  As the car parked outside the office, my heart really started to kick up a notch. This was it – the moment that I was about to have my suspicions either confirmed or denied – and I honestly wasn’t sure if I was ready for any of it. Why hadn't I just stayed in St. Louis a little while longer? Why didn’t I remain at June’s a little while longer? Why did the dead body have to end up on my damn property? It didn’t feel fair.

  “Thanks, Gary,” I said quietly. “I’ll call you later; okay?” One of the best things about this driver was that he didn’t mind having Tank in the back of his car. It was one of the reasons why I always used him.

  Then I took in a few deep breaths of air and I smoothed down my tee shirt, forgetting that I normally decided to arrive here in a suit, and I stepped inside. As I walked through the building a few people called out hello to me, but all I did was send them a cursory wave back. I didn’t have time for niceties, not with all of this on my mind.

  “Lewis,” I called to him, as I spotted him chatting up one of the receptionists. “I need to talk to you – now.”

  His face went pale and his entire body stiff, but he followed regardless, knowing that was what he had to do. As soon as we were inside his office, I clicked the lock on the door and shut his blinds, too. This was about to be a private conversation, and I didn’t want anyone to hear or see us.

 

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