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Billionaire Bad Boys

Page 45

by Holly Hart


  When I have control of myself again, I let go of him and turn to face the side of the pool. I kick myself forward and reach out, grabbing the rungs of the ladder.

  “Um,” he says. “Excuse me? Where are you going?”

  I pull myself up two rungs and stop, bending slightly at the waist. As I do, I drop a smoldering look over my shoulder.

  “Sorry,” I say. “I just left my scarf up on that top shelf. Do you think you could help me reach it?”

  Carson’s eyes light up and he crosses the gap between us in two seconds, despite having to wade through thigh-deep water. He glides up behind me and suddenly the heat of his erection is pressing against my bare ass.

  “Of course,” he breathes into my ear. “But we’d better hurry. Don’t want someone to walk into the coatroom and get the wrong impression.”

  “No,” I sigh as he slides the tip of his shaft between my lips, back and forth, front to back, back to front. “A girl could get a reputation that way.”

  He covers my shoulders with kisses as I grind my hips in time with his movements. His hands reach up and gently massage my wet breasts and rock-hard nipples.

  “I think it’s just a bit too high for me,” I groan.

  “No problem,” he pants. “Let me get that for you.”

  He takes a step forward and upwards, finally thrusting his stiff cock into my slick entrance. I shudder with pleasure as it penetrates deep inside me.

  I steady myself with the railings as Carson grabs my ass with both hands and I can tell he’s barely able to control himself. His powerful hands grip me tight and pull me toward him as he thrusts harder, faster. My second orgasm begins to radiate upwards from my core even as I feel his building inside me.

  “Cassie,” he rasps in my ear, giving voice to his urgent need. I can’t help myself – I let go of the railings and drop forward, hands on the pool deck, allowing his cock to go as deep as possible inside me. His hips move so fast and hard that it all blurs into a sprint of orgasmic delight, until I finally let out a cry that startles the birds in the copse of beech trees next to the pool into flight.

  Carson explodes inside me in a wave of heat and pressure that sets me off one last time, wracking my body with shudders of passion and leaving me a shaking mess. If it weren’t for his hands holding my hips, I’d simply collapse in a heap on the pool deck.

  He leans forward, still buried deep inside me, panting in my ear. His chest is like a bellow against my back, expanding and contracting. His arms are wrapped around me like he’s holding on for dear life.

  “How is it we keep getting better at this?” I moan, trying to catch my own breath.

  “Practice makes perfect,” he pants.

  The cool shower was glorious, and the nap was even better. But alas, nothing lasts forever.

  “Honey,” I say, rolling over onto my back and stretching. “You need to feed me or I’ll fade away.”

  Carson’s already bringing a tray of fruit and cheese into the bedroom. Apparently he can read my mind while I’m asleep, too. He’s even dressed, which is more than I can say for myself.

  He hands me a small plate of provolone, gorgonzola and grapes. I snatch it away and dig in.

  “You’re the bestest billionaire in the whole world,” I coo.

  “For a little while longer, anyway,” he sighs.

  I smile and shake my head.

  “We’ll still be able to afford cheese and grapes,” I say. “Just not in a $50,000-a-night villa.”

  “Probably supermarket cheese,” he mumbles morosely.

  I stick out my tongue, which is probably pretty gross from his perspective, given that it’s covered in green-veined cheese.

  Carson glances at his Rolex. “Just about time to get ready for cocktail hour,” he says.

  I stretch one more time, giving him an unobstructed view of my boobs. He smiles appreciatively.

  “All right,” I say. “I’ll get dressed if I absolutely have to.”

  As I rise from the bed, the electronic chime of the intercom system goes off. I reach over and hit the “talk” button on the tablet next to the night table.

  “Yes?”

  A cold male voice with a thick Russian accent fills the room.

  “We have your son,” says the voice. “If you ever want to see him again, I suggest you let us in.”

  I roll my eyes.

  “Just a second, Maks.”

  My finger taps the “unlock gate” button and I continue into the en suite bathroom and walk-in closet.

  “I hope they fed Leo,” Carson says absently. “He’ll go down for his nap more easily if he’s had a snack.”

  I pull on a camisole and a pair of capris before stepping into my sandals.

  “You know who you’re talking about, right?” I say, running a brush through the briar patch of my hair. “I didn’t come up with the name ‘Tricialicious’ for nothing.”

  He kisses my neck as we step out of the master suite and head for the parlor one floor below.

  “I just hope Maks didn’t try to set him up with any girls,” he says.

  My heart sings as I see the familiar strawberry blond mop on Leo’s head. He’s holding Tricia’s hand, until he sees me: then he drops her like a hot potato and makes a beeline for the base of the stairs.

  “Mommy!”

  I scoop him up in my arms and hug him fiercely. It’s only been a handful of hours, but it might as well have been years. He wraps a pudgy arm around my neck and lays a wet kiss on my cheek.

  “My mommy,” he says absently, looking around the expansive room from the elevated perspective of my arms.

  Carson tousles his hair and gives him a kiss on the cheek.

  “Hey buddy, did you have fun today?”

  “Uh-huh. I saw a clown.”

  “Really?” I raise my eyebrows. “Where did you see one of those?”

  Tricia grins, and her own brows go up.

  “Down by the marina,” she says brightly. “He was rummaging through the garbage outside the bar and started talking to us.”

  “Ohhh!” I say, beaming at Leo. “And did he smell funny, too?”

  “Yup,” Leo says, barely able to contain his boredom. I set him down and he trots over to his MathMat and starts solving the equations it electronically dictates.

  Carson heads to the antique bar that takes up a good chunk of the wall by the stairs.

  “What can I get you guys?”

  “Mojito,” says Tricia. “By which I mean a bottle of rum and a lime.”

  “What about the mint?” I ask.

  “Okay, throw in a stick of gum.”

  I smile sympathetically.

  “Everything is going to be fine,” I say, sitting down beside her on the sofa. “All we have to do tomorrow is get you dressed and get you to the church. Sophia is taking care of everything else.”

  “What about you, Maks?” Carson calls from the bar.

  “Nothing, thanks.”

  He’s looking a little green. If I didn’t know better, I’d say he was hung over, but his bachelor party was weeks ago. Carson took him and the rest of the groomsmen to the Boom Boom Room.

  “Everything all right, buddy?” Carson asks.

  “He’s worried about his family tomorrow,” says Tricia. “I keep telling him they can’t be worse than my clan. My cousins make the guys from Jersey Shore look like Mensa members. I’m pretty sure Leo could beat their SAT scores.”

  “What’s SAT?” Leo says from his MathMat.

  “Nothing you have to worry about for a few years,” I say.

  Although, judging by his progress, not much more than a few years. He’s already figuring out how to read by watching the phonetics skits on Sesame Street. He may have inherited my red hair, but he got his father’s gray eyes and gifted intellect.

  Too bad he also inherited my own father’s overly serious disposition. But we’re working on that.

  Maks smiles, but it seems a bit forced.

  “Maybe I am overthi
nking,” he says. “I just don’t want it to be – awkward?”

  He looks at Tricia. “Is that the right word?”

  She gives him the thumbs up.

  “Perfect, babe,” she says, taking a sip of the mojito Carson hands her. “We’ll have you saying those vows right yet. Although I still have nightmares about you telling the priest that ‘I am taking this woman to be awfully wet and wife.’”

  Carson takes a seat next to Maks and chucks him on the shoulder.

  “It’s one day of your life,” he says. “It’ll be over before you know it.”

  “Easy for you to be saying,” Maks says glumly. “You eloped.”

  I smile at the memory. It was just the two of us, in a little church in Siena. Our folks weren’t overjoyed, but we had a big party when we got home and that helped smooth things over with them. Well, with our moms, anyway. Dad was put out. Of course.

  But he’s coming around. It’s pretty hard to argue with a billionaire son-in-law who once offered to give up his entire fortune for your daughter.

  Of course, he probably wouldn’t agree with what we’re about to do. But it’s not his decision to make. It’s ours.

  “Don’t worry,” says Tricia. “If anything goes wrong, we’ll just blame Cassie and Carson. They’re the ones who paid for everyone to fly here first class and stay at the resort.”

  She lays her head on my shoulder and snuggles in. I put my cheek on top of her head and we both stretch our legs onto the priceless eighteenth century coffee table. When Leo sees this, he ambles over and crawls up, stretching out across both our laps.

  “I want your life,” Tricia sighs, stroking Leo’s head.

  Be careful what you wish for.

  Carson and Maks sit down in the armchairs across from us.

  “I know this might not be the right time,” Carson says. “But have you given any thought about what you’re going to do when we go public?”

  Tricialicious is on the verge of launching its initial public offering of shares in a few months. It’s been a lot of work over the past few years, but we managed to exceed our every goal. And I’m proud to say we did it without a single penny of Carson’s fortune.

  Our best estimates predict Tricia, Maksim and I will be able to sell our one-third shares for $29.3 million each, or $88 million total. That’s about eight times our initial investment. I’ll be honest – sometimes the thought that I was able to do it all myself makes me so proud I want to cry.

  Or at the very least phone up my dad and lord it over him.

  “Oh, we’re cashing in,” says Tricia.

  “Yes,” says Maksim. “No ifs, ands or asses.”

  Carson snorts a laugh. Tricia and I manage to keep ours under wraps.

  Maks sighs. “What this time?”

  “It’s ‘buts,’” Carson says with a sympathetic look.

  “Butts, asses,” Maks grouses. “What is the difference?”

  I give him a reassuring smile. “It’s perfectly fine, Maks,” I say. “So you’re ready to walk away with sixty million bucks?”

  “It is more than enough for us,” he says. “Even now that I have no trust fund.”

  Maks lost that money last year when the feds finally cracked down on his family. His father managed to avoid jail, but they were left virtually penniless after all the fines were paid and the illegal assets were confiscated.

  Now they all come to him for money, which I know makes him as proud as my situation makes me.

  Of course, he didn’t have to spend any of his own money for years. Carson always picked up the tab. Maybe that was a good thing – Maks never learned how to be greedy.

  “I still can’t comprehend any of it,” says Tricia. “My whole life I couldn’t afford anything, then I meet you people and suddenly I’m living this ridiculous lifestyle. It’s crazy. Like my grandpa used to say, I don’t know whether to shit or go blind.”

  “Don’t say shit,” Leo murmurs sleepily in our laps, prompting the two of us to clamp our lips between our teeth to keep from bellowing laughter.

  “Besides,” Tricia says after we calm down. “Our best friends are still obscenely rich.”

  Carson and I exchange a glance.

  “Actually,” I say, “we were wondering if we could talk to you two about that.”

  “Trish, if you don’t close your mouth soon, a bug is going to crawl in.”

  Her jaw has been hanging open for a full minute, since before I took Leo to his bed for his nap. Maksim’s mouth is closed, but his eyes look like they’re trying to bid adieu to his skull and float off into orbit.

  Carson squeezes my hand as I sit next to him.

  “Say something,” he urges them. “Even if it’s telling us to go pound sand up our asses. I mean butts.”

  “You’re not serious,” Tricia breathes. “This is a joke.”

  “No joke,” I say. “If you two are up for the trade, we’ll make it happen.”

  “But – but it’s not making sense,” says Maks. “Nobody trades $3 billion for $90 million. That is like giving someone your precious Ferrari and taking their Smart Car.”

  Carson and I look at each other.

  “Never thought of it that way,” he says with a grin.

  Tricia leans forward on the sofa and takes my hands in hers.

  “Why?” she asks. “Why give it away? And to us, of all people?”

  I squeeze her hands and smile. Sometimes I love her so much, it hurts. If God had asked me to design the perfect sister, it would have been her.

  “Simple,” I say. “Because we do want to give it away, and you two are the best people to do that for us. We want you to oversee a charitable foundation that distributes the majority of the fortune. How much you decide to give is up to you.

  “After all,” I smile, “one of us has to still be obscenely rich.”

  Carson claps Maks on the back.

  “That means the penthouse is yours,” he says. “But you still can’t smoke cigars in the study. Sorry.”

  Maks smiles absently. He looks like someone waiting for the alarm buzzer to go off and wake them up.

  “You didn’t answer my question,” says Tricia. “Why us? Why not someone else who would be better at it? Neither of us has even been to college.”

  I glance at Carson. It’s his money, and it was his idea. He should be the one to explain it.

  “Well,” he says. “As to why we chose you, it’s simple. It’s not because we consider you family – you already know that much. It’s because you two are the kindest people we know.”

  He looks at Maks. “I’ve never met someone like you, man. You never judge, ever. You’re kind and accepting to everyone. You don’t have a mean bone in your body. Sometimes you remind me of Leo that way.”

  I see tears shimmer in Maksim’s eyes, and next thing I know, I’m fighting my own.

  “Thank you, brat,” he breathes, using the Russian word for brother. “That is greatest compliment I ever have.”

  “And you,” I say, looking Tricia in the eyes. “You have a way of looking at things that cuts straight through the bullshit and gets right to the heart of the matter. I wouldn’t be where I am today without you.”

  Carson and I exchange a glance.

  “We wouldn’t be where we are without you,” he says. “If you can help others the way you helped us? We couldn’t ask any better use for the money.”

  The two of them look at each other and link their hands. Tears are flowing freely everywhere now.

  Tricia wipes at her eyes with the heels of her palms.

  “Good thing you got this out of the way tonight, bitch,” she rasps. “It’d be just like you to ruin my make-up on my wedding day.”

  Carson and I simultaneously position ourselves on either side of them on the sofa, wrapping our arms around their shoulders. We were prepared for this.

  “So,” I say. “Is that a yes?”

  They look at each other and back at us.

  “Yes,” says Maksim. “I me
an yes, it is yes.”

  “And you know I’ll be calling you every five minutes asking you what to do,” Tricia snuffles.

  I smile. “Wouldn’t have it any other way.”

  “But wait,” she says, finally rummaging a tissue out of her purse. “What are you guys going to do? With the $90 million, I mean?”

  She looks at Carson. “You’re already retired, you lazy ass. What are you going to do, just downsize?”

  We exchange another glance.

  “Well,” I say. “Therein lies a tale.”

  “Your mouth is hanging open again,” I tell Tricia. “It’s getting a little old.”

  “You’re the one who keeps kicking my feet out from under me,” she breathes. “Are you serious?”

  “Very,” says Carson.

  “But why?” Maks asks, clearly baffled.

  “I was blessed for a long time,” says Carson. “And when I found Cassie, I finally understood what the term ‘embarrassment of riches’ meant.”

  Maks opens his mouth and Tricia holds up a hand.

  “It means he has more than he deserves. Go on.”

  “I realized when we got together that I had wasted a good portion of my time, abilities and fortune,” says Carson. “I don’t know if I believe in a god, but I do know that if there is one, he really put me at the front of the line.”

  He looks at me.

  “And when I learned more about Cassie’s life, I realized what a selfish shit I’d been. There are so many people in the world with real problems.”

  “That’s where the idea to give away his fortune came from,” I say.

  Tricia nods. “Okay, I get that. But what about this other crazy scheme?”

  Carson smiles and shakes his head.

  “Maybe it is crazy,” he says. “But we have to try. There are a lot of women – and girls – in this world who are being bought and sold as possessions. That’s wrong. And I, of all people, have a lot to atone for in that department.”

  I take his hand. We’ve had a lot of long talks about this. We’re both ashamed of ever getting involved in the Chase – each for different reasons, of course, but both for lowering ourselves. Me for money and Carson for thrills.

  But what we saw that day in Brighton Beach, with Bogdan and Anna… no one should ever have to deal with people like that. But thousands of women and girls around the world have to, every single day of the year.

 

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