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Reuniting with the Billionaire

Page 13

by Lori Ryan


  Andrew shrugged. “Look, all you need to know is that we’re great friends, the chemistry is off the charts, and we want a life together. We both want a future together. That’s all that matters. How I got us there isn’t important.”

  Jack was the first to diffuse the tension. “Hey, far be it from me to judge. I paid my wife to marry me and look how happy we are. If this is what you want, I’m happy for you, man.”

  “Yeah, Jack’s right. Congratulations, little guy.” In light of his unusual height and size, Chad called Jack and Andrew ‘little guy’ fairly often.

  The clap on the back told Andrew Chad was trying to lighten the mood.

  Jack grabbed a bottle of Scotch from a drawer and poured each of them two fingers to toast Andrew’s good news before they settled down to begin their morning meeting.

  Just before lunchtime, Jennie was surprised to hear that all staff were being called for an impromptu employee meeting in the front lobby. This wasn’t anything she’d ever seen at Sutton Capital. She tried to catch Chad to ask him what was going on, but she didn’t see him anywhere.

  She walked to the front lobby and took a spot at the edge of the group waiting for Jack to begin the meeting.

  “I know this is a bit unusual, guys,” Jack began in the informal way he often addressed the close-knit team at Sutton. “But we have a few things to celebrate today. First, I want to welcome back Debbie, who assures me she’s feeling better than ever.”

  Amidst the clapping and good-natured welcome back messages from those around her, Jennie heard a harsh whisper next to her.

  “What is she doing back?” Jennie turned to see Theresa’s pinched face next to her.

  “Um, I guess she’s ready to come back?” Jennie was never at a loss for words. Except around Theresa. Something about this woman just wasn’t right. Moments later, her theory was confirmed when Jennie saw Theresa’s response to Jack’s second announcement.

  “And, congratulations are in order for Andrew as well,” Jack continued when the room quieted down. “Andrew and his girlfriend, Jill, got engaged this weekend. Join me in wishing them a long and happy life together!”

  This time the room exploded in talk and cheers as all of Sutton Capital lined up to celebrate with Andrew. In the middle of clapping her hands, Jennie felt Theresa’s hand clench down on her arm in a crushing grip.

  “I thought you said he had only been dating that woman for a short time? Why would he be marrying her?” Theresa spit her words out.

  Jennie stared at the woman next to her and then wrenched her arm free. She rubbed the spot where Theresa’s hand had gripped her arm, sure there would be bruises tomorrow.

  Every instinct Jennie had was raised as she watched the look of rage on Theresa’s face and heard a mumbled accusation of pregnancy to trap a man.

  “Excuse me, I need to go to lunch,” Jennie said, anxious to get away from Theresa.

  “Oh, great, I’ll go with you. We can talk more,” Theresa said.

  “No!” Jennie shot out before realizing how her response sounded. “I mean, I have a lunch meeting I have to get to.”

  Just then Chad walked by. Jennie hoped Chad would understand her signal when she reached out and grabbed his bicep as he walked past.

  “Chad, are you ready for our lunch meeting?” she asked. She felt Chad’s arm tense under her hand, but he didn’t miss a beat.

  “You bet. If you’re ready now, that works for me,” Chad said. He put a protective hand on Jennie’s lower back and walked with her to the elevator.

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  As soon as the elevator doors closed, Chad turned to Jennie. He rubbed his hands up and down her arms as he studied her face.

  “You okay?” Chad asked softly.

  Jennie nodded, unable to speak.

  Any other time, his attention would have her heart speeding up. But today, nothing could puncture the unease she was feeling.

  “Gonna tell me what that was about?” He raised an eyebrow and waited, his voice soft, reassuring.

  “Something’s wrong with that woman, Chad. She’s scary. And really, really focused on Andrew.”

  Now Chad was all business. “What woman?”

  Jennie recounted the odd way Theresa talked about Andrew. The weird questions about Jill and his engagement. The creepy feeling she got whenever she was around Theresa.

  Jennie didn’t mention the way Theresa had grabbed her or the fact that she suspected her arm was already bruising. She kept her sleeves down and her mouth shut.

  If Chad heard that, he’d likely fire Theresa on the spot and Jennie knew firing someone had to be well documented and done carefully to avoid repercussions. Jennie didn’t want her creepy feelings about Theresa to come back to haunt Sutton Capital if she said something to make Chad act too rashly.

  “Are you going out on assignment this week, Jen?” Chad asked when she had finished telling him about Theresa.

  “No. I’m in house for the rest of the month,” she said.

  “Good. Consider Theresa your assignment. When we get back, I want you to write down what just happened. See if you can get close to her. Let me know if you see or hear anything unusual. And document everything. I’ll fill Jack and the head of Human Resources in on your assignment but other than the four of us, let’s keep it quiet.”

  Jennie nodded.

  “Come to me with any concern. If she has you at all worried, if you don’t feel safe, you come to me. Got it?” Chad instructed.

  “Got it, Boss.”

  “Good.” Chad grinned as they stepped out into the lobby. “Now let’s get that lunch.”

  Chapter Thirty

  The next few weeks passed in a whirlwind for Jill. Andrew surprised her with a stunning ring. The thin band was inlaid with diamonds and a large round yellow diamond was set in the center and surrounded by more white diamonds. Jill didn’t think she would have been able to pick a ring more suited to her sense of style if she had tried. The fact that Andrew chose something so perfect for her took her breath away.

  His attorney had, in fact, written up a prenuptial agreement with the ‘penalty clause’ written in. It had taken quite a bit of insistence to get his lawyer not only to do it, but also make it ironclad, but in the end Andrew had gotten what he wanted. He also asked Jill to have her lawyer look over it to be sure it was done right.

  Andrew and Jill announced their engagement to friends and family. Nora wanted to host an engagement party but they convinced her they wanted the affair to be more quiet and private. For once, Nora backed down.

  They set the date for spring. Since it was nearly Thanksgiving now, that gave Jill plenty of time to plan things. She wanted a small wedding, with both the ceremony and the reception at Nora’s house. Andrew still needed to sell his downtown condo and find a house they both liked, but there was time for that, too. And, with the way their tastes so often meshed, Jill had no concerns on that front – she was certain she and Andrew would find something easily.

  They began to spend their weekends at the ski cabin that Andrew, Jack, Chad and some of their other friends from grad school all owned together in Vermont. The group had bought the cabin back when they were still in school.

  Even though most of the group had plenty of family money and easily could have bought the cabin through their families, the friends had insisted on using their own money on it and sharing the expense.

  At the time, they didn’t have much money of their own, so there were a total of six of them that each owned a share.

  Now that many of the owners were getting married and starting to think about children – or in the case of Jack and Kelly who had just announced they already had children on the way – they had plans for each of the owners to build their own ski cabin on the property in the next few years. They’d leave the original cabin as a place for guests to stay. To that end, they had bought up additional property on the mountain and now owned the upper two thirds.

  One of the group, an architect, had beg
un to work on plans for the new cabins.

  Most weekends in the winter months, all or some of the six and their significant others could be found there. Jill loved the weekends at the cabin. She trekked through the woods on snowshoes with her cameras while Andrew skied.

  They spent the evenings surrounded by good friends and laughter. She felt wonderful enveloped by so much love and couldn’t believe the way Andrew’s friends all opened up to her instantly. She felt content and happy there.

  In fact, Jill felt content and happy all the time now. When she was with Andrew, things just felt right. She felt cherished and appreciated and valued in a way she hadn’t in her marriage.

  She also felt good because he seemed happy and content too – and how he felt mattered to her. She felt as though she and Andrew were more in sync with their goals and what they wanted from each other, what they wanted in life than she and Jake had ever been. There was a unique synchronicity to the life they were building together.

  During her marriage, Jill had told herself it was okay when her husband didn’t want to try to have another baby. Now she realized it wasn’t okay with her. She’d been fooling herself to try to make their marriage work.

  Now she could admit, she wanted to have a baby. More than one, in fact, and Andrew wanted that too. She wanted to be able to give that to him, to share that together.

  Today, Jill and Kelly planned to spend the day shopping for wedding dresses before she met up with Andrew to make the drive to the ski cabin after work.

  She heard Kelly honk her horn outside and grabbed her purse and her bag for the weekend before heading out the front door and climbing into her friend’s car.

  Since Jill and Andrew were leaving right from the appointment at the dress boutique, Kelly and Jack were going to grab Rev later. They would keep Rev overnight then bring him up when they came to the cabin tomorrow.

  “Hi, Kels,” Jill said as she climbed into the passenger seat of Kelly’s little red BMW.

  “Hi! I can’t wait to get to the store. It’s so exciting to be looking for a wedding dress,” Kelly gushed as she pulled out of the drive.

  “I know. I’m more excited than I thought I’d be. I kind of thought it wouldn’t be a big deal since it’s my second time around. Jake and I did the whole giant wedding thing the first time, so I don’t want anything big this time, but I really can’t wait to find the perfect dress.”

  Jill and Kelly would need to look for bridesmaids’ dresses as well. Jill’s best friend from college, Amy, would be her maid of honor and Kelly would be her bridesmaid. She and Andrew had decided to keep the number of attendants small, with Jack and Chad standing with Andrew.

  Kelly pulled into the parking lot of the small bridal boutique where she had found her dress and she and Jill went inside. Kelly spent a few minutes catching up with Bria, the owner of the shop, before they got down to business.

  “I have a bit of a different process than most bridal boutiques. I like to get to know a bit about you and the groom so I can help steer you toward the right dress for your connection. Most people think the wedding gown should only be about what the bride likes, what looks good on her, what will fit well. I promise I’ll take all of that into consideration, but it should be so much more than that, don’t you think?” Bria asked, expecting Jill to agree with her.

  “Uh, I…” started Jill, but Bria just continued on and Kelly sat nodding encouragement.

  “So, tell me about Andrew. Tell me why you love him,” Bria ordered.

  Jill swallowed. How could she tell them that this marriage wasn’t about love? It was about safety, security, and never having to wonder if one day love would fade or passion would fizzle.

  Jill couldn’t tell them that. She would be mortified. She would just tell them the things about Andrew she loved. There were many of those, even though she couldn’t ever let herself fall in love with the whole.

  “Um, I love the way he thinks of my needs first, I guess?” she started, a little weakly.

  Kelly and Bria both nodded and looked as though they were waiting for more.

  “Um, I uh, I love the way he cares about my opinions and feelings.” It was getting easier now. She was on a roll. “I love the way he calls or texts me throughout the day to see how I am. And, I love the way he sometimes just knows when I’m in a bad mood and then knows how to get me out of it before I even realize what he’s doing. I love his kisses and the way it feels when he holds me.”

  Jill was blushing now so she stopped and stared at Bria, hoping that would be enough. Bria smiled and jumped to her feet. “Strong and steady. I know the perfect dress for such strong, steady love!” she said.

  Bria ran to the back of the room, leaving Jill with only one thought. Yes, strong and steady, that’s what Andrew is.

  Jill had never seen such a crazy method for choosing a wedding dress, but the dress was perfect. A floor-length, simple sheath with tiny pearls sewn around the bodice. It was classic, abiding and endless, in a style that would never fade. It draped beautifully on Jill, accentuating her tall, slim build but still showing the curve of her hips and breasts. It was simple enough to be just right for a second marriage, but it was elegant with enough flair to make Jill feel beautiful and desirable.

  As Jill and Kelly left the bridal shop, Jill continued to fight the nagging feeling that she was falling much further than she should allow herself to fall for Andrew. In fact, fighting that feeling was becoming an exhausting and hopeless endeavor.

  The weekend at the cabin was a particularly fun one because all the owners were up at the same time. In addition to Chad, Jack, Kelly, Andrew, and Jill, the three other men who co-owned the cabin arrived over the course of Friday evening and Saturday morning. Cade Jeffers arrived with his girlfriend, Sylvia. Those two had arrived first and got the heat turned up and a fire burning. Cade was an architect in New York City and Sylvia was an interior designer.

  Greg Burton and his wife Liz came up from Hamden. Greg owned a consulting firm in New Haven and Liz owned a catering business. Since Liz couldn’t help but cook when she was with a big crowd, she had soup simmering and dough rising for loaves of homemade bread within an hour of her arrival.

  The last of the group was Trent Lang and his fiancée Deidre. They had recently relocated to Boston, where they both worked in finance.

  Jill had become friends with the group in the short time she’d known them. Even though she was a bit of an outsider since they’d all known each other for so much longer, they were all warm and welcoming people and she felt relaxed with them.

  Jack and Kelly brought Rev up when they arrived Saturday. Jill loved to see how happy Rev was wrestling with Zoe, running in the snow, and letting everyone spoil him with tummy rubs and ear scratches. He got a few too many table scraps and treats over the weekend but it made her happy to see him so content.

  It also tugged at her heart to see how happy Rev and Andrew were to see one another. Andrew seemed to have adopted Rev in his heart and the dog didn’t object to that at all.

  The only niggling seeds of doubt came at the end of the weekend when Cade pulled out the plans he was working on to build each of the partners their own cabins. As Jill listened to him outline the plan for the property, she began to feel uncomfortable with the idea that this special place of Andrew’s – a place he shared with such close friends – would now be tied up in their penalty clause. She didn’t think she could stomach the idea of taking anything so close to his heart and using it to tie him to her forever.

  Andrew met Jill’s eyes across the room and, as always, seemed to read her mind. Crossing the room, he wrapped his arms around her and looked into her eyes.

  “What’s wrong, sweetheart?” he whispered softly.

  She frowned as she tried to find words to explain. “It just seems wrong. I can’t take this from you. We can’t put this in the penalty clause.”

  Andrew looked over his shoulder at the others in the room and then pulled Jill down the hall and into their bed
room and shut the door.

  Andrew looked at Jill and tried to read the emotions on her face. She looked agitated. Sad. Guilty. There were too many emotions playing over her beautiful features.

  “What do you mean? Everything goes in the clause.” He stood in front of Jill with his arms crossed as if immovable.

  She shook her head. “No, Andrew. This place is too special to you. It’s for you and your friends. I don’t want it in the clause.”

  She looked like she was close to tears and he struggled to reassure her. He knew the truth. He knew that he loved her. That his love was the reason he would never leave, not some clause in a contract, not the material things he had picked up along the way in life. The material things meant nothing next to her.

  But he couldn’t risk losing Jill by telling her how he felt. If he said the words and she got spooked and ran, he might not get her back.

  With his hands on her upper arms, he gave a firm squeeze. “No, Jill. It’s all or nothing. Everything goes in the clause. I’m not worried about losing it. Don’t you see? I’m never leaving. I’ll never walk away. That’s the point. You can believe in that with all your heart.”

  “But––” she began.

  “No. No buts, Jill. That clause will never come into play. I’m here forever.”

  She nodded and let him kiss her, wrap her in his arms. But Andrew wasn’t sure she truly believed him. If he could ensure that everything went into the clause, maybe she would begin to believe. Maybe someday she would relax again.

  He even, stupidly, let himself hope that maybe she could begin to fall in love with him someday. That someday she might feel the way he did and not run from that emotion. Not leave him the minute she realized the depths of her feelings.

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Jill kept an eye on Rev as she refilled the bird feeders in her front yard. As usual, the dog was racing around the yard without a care in the world. If she hoped to spot any birds later today, she’d need to keep him in the house long enough for the birds to come out of hiding.

 

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