Final Offer: Chapter 55
Final Offer (Dreamland Billionaires, 3)
The real estate agent sends me updates every thirty minutes about the house. According to him, we have three buyers who are currently engaging in a bidding war over the property. I knew that might happen if I set the price low enough to entice buyers, but hearing it from the real estate agentâs mouth makes the whole process of selling the house very real.
I resist the temptation to head over there and check if Cal showed up. Instead, Violet, Delilah, Wyatt, and I decide to stick to the guesthouse and our private dock out back. I want to take advantage of the last few times Iâll get to enjoy the lake with my friends before the summer is over and the house is sold.
No one has brought up Cal since last nightâs trip to the bar.
Cami and Wyatt play in the water while Delilah, Violet, and I sit on the dock, soaking up the sun.
âArenât you a little curious about the bidding war?â Delilah nudges me with her shoulder.
âNot really.â I tuck my phone away. In the end, whoever buys the house will be inconsequential.
âI would be.â Violet reapplies sunscreen on her face.
My phone vibrates with a new text. I expect it to be the real estate agent with another update, but Calâs name flashes across the screen.
Do you still want to check out the buyer interested in purchasing the house and see if theyâre legit?
I consider it. When I told Cal I wanted to find someone who loved the house as much as me, I thought I could bear the idea of speaking with them. But the more I think about it, the less I feel capable of doing that.
No. You can handle it.
A text from the real estate agent pops up before I lock my phone, letting me know that he has asked everyone to give him their best offers.
Already? How is that possible?
I call him right away.
âAlana! You wonât believe it.â
âWhat?â
âWe had someone put in an offer for two million dollars.â
âTwo?â I reach out for Violetâs shoulder to stabilize myself. When I lowered the price to a million, I expected to barely receive anything over asking price, but to have someone offer double?
I might faint.
I can feel the real estate agentâs excitement through the phone. âYes! Iâve asked the other buyers who are interested in the property to put in their final offers within the next hour.â
âButââ
âThis is the best-case scenario.â
For him or me? Based on how much he is charging, the agent will walk away with a pretty penny once all the paperwork is done, especially if the buyers are driving up the price.
My phone vibrates with a new message from Cal.
I just heard one of the buyers mentioning how they plan on bringing the house down to the foundation and completely rebuilding it because they prefer a modern open-floor plan. Are you sure you donât want to meet with them?
I jump up.
Hell no. I refuse to let anyone who wants to buy the house tear it down.
Violet peeks up at me. âWhatâs wrong?â
âCan you all watch Cami for a little bit? I need to handle something back at the house with a buyer.â
Wyatt waves me away like itâs no big deal. âWeâre going to do an ice cream run in a little bit if thatâs fine with you.â
âYeah, sure. She has a set of clean clothes laid out on her bed,â I reply over my shoulder before stomping toward the main house.
Over my dead body will someone purchase the house only to tear it down. Cal and I did not go through the process of renovating the whole thing for someone to erase all the history and charm we worked so damn hard to keep.
Iâd rather pick the person with the cheapest offer who might actually love the place than give it away to someone who wonât appreciate the property.
I walk into the house with every expectation of finding people roaming the property. Except when I arrive through the back door, the only person around is the real estate agent, who stands at the kitchen counter with his phone pressed against his ear and a folder with sheets spread out in front of him.
âWhatâs going on?â I stop to catch my breath after powerwalking over here.
He hangs up the phone with a smile. âWe just received another offer.â
âReally?â
âYes.â
Ugh. âSo, there are four in total?â
âCorrect.â His gleeful clapping grates on my nerves.
âWhere are they?â
âTwo had to go check out another house having a showing at the same time, but the other two are waiting in the living room for our final decision.â
âPerfect.â I walk past the real estate agent, ignoring his shouts.
I follow the long hallway toward the low murmurs of two people talking, although I canât make out what theyâre saying.
I enter the living room. âCal? Where did the other buyer go?â
He turns at the sound of my voice. âYou came.â
âOf course I came. No way am I going to let some asshole tear down the house.â
A tall man almost the same height as Cal walks around him. He wears an expensive-looking suit with an equally fancy watch, looking out of place compared to Calâs relaxed look of jeans and a linen shirt.
âAnd who are you?â
âThe asshole who wants to tear down the house.â He holds out his hand. His fingers are long like that of a pianist, lacking any kind of callouses that would suggest hard work. âI prefer to go by Lorenzo Vittori, though.â
Lorenzo Vittori. The name sounds familiar, but I canât place it. He doesnât look like someone I know, but there is something about his dark gaze and eye shape that sparks recognition.
âVittori?â I grip his hand and give it a quick shake.
âYes.â
âWas your mother the one who used to work at the Hawthornsâ house by chance?â
His jaw ticks. âShe was.â
âYou two know each other?â Calâs head tilts.
âOur mothers were friends before my family had to move away,â Lorenzo replies.
âHow is she?â I ask out of politeness.
âDead.â His voice is flat and void of any emotion.
Calâs eyes widen as he looks over at me.
âIâm sorry to hear that,â I offer.
Lorenzo doesnât even blink. âHave you considered my offer, Ms. Castillo?â
Okay then. Safe to assume Lorenzo likes to get to the point.
âNot really, seeing as you want to destroy my house.â
âI prefer to describe it as tapping into a propertyâs true potential.â He smirks in a way that seems well-practiced, as if he trained himself to charm others. If it werenât for his lifeless eyes, I would have believed it.
âIâm going to have to pass.â
His brows crinkle for a second before smoothing out. âWhat if I match the highest offer?â
âWhich is?â
âThree million.â Cal tucks his hands into his pockets.
Wait. What? Last time I spoke to the agent, he said two million.
Lorenzo blinks twice in the most human display of emotion Iâve seen. âYouâre joking.â
Cal grins. âUnless you want to counter, it looks like mine is the best and final offer.â
Mine is the best and final offer?
Mine?
Mine?!
Cal made an offer on his own house? Why would he do that?
The room spins around me as I try to wrap my head around what the hell is going on.
Lorenzoâs eye twitches. âYouâre insane to pay that much on a place like this.â
Cal lifts a shoulder. âWe do crazy things for the people we love.â
Lorenzoâs upper lip curls. âLetâs pray I never find out.â He tips his head in my direction. âGood day, Ms. Castillo. Wish you two the best of luck with this endeavor because youâre going to need it.â
He waltzes out of the room, taking his air of superiority with him.
âAsshole,â I say.
âCouldnât agree more,â Cal grumbles. âI never thought he would leave.â
I turn to face him. âWhat the hell is going on, and why are you putting an offer on a house you own?â
Calâs smile wavers. âBecause Iâm not the one buying the house.â
âWhat?â
âIâm speaking on behalf of a trust.â
âWhat trust?â
âThe one I made for our future kids.â
The air whooshes out of me. âYou opened a trust for our future kids?â I choke on the last two words.
âYes.â
I reach out for the fireplace mantle to stop myself from keeling over. âBut why?â
âBecause I wanted to prove to you that the inheritance means nothing to me personally.â
Oh. My. God.
âHow much is in the trust, Cal?â
He hesitates. âDoes it matter?â
I shoot him a look.
He doesnât hesitate as he says, âTwenty-six billion once we sell the house.â
âTo Cami and whatever hypothetical children you think we are having one day.â
âTo their trust. Itâs a whole complicated legal loophole, but it works. Grandpaâs lawyer and I sorted it all out.â
My knees give out, but Cal wraps an arm around me before I crash to the floor.
âTwenty. Six. Billion. Dollars.â I pinch my arm, wince at the pain, before repeating the same move again.
Cal swats my hand away and rubs at the red spot. âThey wonât have access to the whole thing all at once.â
âWell, thatâs a relief. I was worried what might happen if the kids had the urge to blow through twenty-six billion dollars on a whim.â
His eyes narrow. âI canât get a good read on how you feel about all of this.â
âIâm not even sure myself.â
âAre you happy?â
âYes.â My eyes mist.
So damn happy. Not because of the moneyâthere is no way I would let Cal give up his entire inheritanceâbut because we get to keep the house.
His arms tighten around me. âThen it was worth it.â
âHow is this even possible?â
âYou wanted the house, so I found a way to keep it.â
âIris was right.â
His head tilts. âAbout what?â
âShe said if I wanted something, you would find a way to make it happen.â
He grins. âYou should know by now Iâd do anything for you.â
My heart squeezes. âAnything?â
He clasps onto my chin. âAbsolutely anything. Although I canât take all the credit for this plan. Without my grandpaâs lawyer dropping a cryptic hint, I would have never thought about opening a trust.â
âIâm still wrapping my head around that.â
âWhat about it?â
âWhy you would give anyone that kind of money in the first place.â
âItâs not anyone. Itâs our family.â His smile reaches his eyes.
My legs threaten to buckle, but Cal holds me up.
Shit. I never stood a chance against him once he got sober. Hell, I barely stood a chance when he was still drinking, which only proves how screwed I was from the very beginning.
He brushes his knuckles across my cheek. âI told you selling the house never had anything to do with an inheritance.â
âSo, you decided to give it all up to prove a point?â
âWithout you agreeing to sell the house, there would be no inheritance to give in the first place.â
âWe really get to keep the house?â I ask again to confirm.
His smile grows. âOnly if you accept my final offer.â
I look around the room. âWhere are the other buyers?â
âI scared them away.â
âYou?â A laugh explodes out of me, making Calâs grin widen.
âDid you bribe them?â
He shakes his head.
âThreaten them?â I probe.
âNo. Iâm not Declan.â
I bite back my laugh. âThen what?â
âI explained my situation and how I was trying to win back the woman I love.â
A warmth blooms in my chest, right above my heart. âThen what happened with Lorenzo?â
âAsshole refused to back down. Said he didnât know what was more disappointing: me making poor life choices for something as fickle as love, or everyone else walking away after I confessed I was hopelessly in love with you and desperately needed to buy the house.â
âHopelessly in love with me, you say?â
The butterflies in my stomach flutter as he cups my chin. âIâve always loved you, although at first it was platonic and innocent. But the love grew as we did, morphing into something more mature. Something strong enough to stand the test of time and distance every single year. A love built on memories of the past and a hope for the future.â He tucks a wave of hair behind my head. âA future I canât see with anyone but you.â
My heart pounds furiously against my chest as if it wants to be heard.
He keeps going while clasping on to my trembling chin. âPurchasing the house isnât about buying your love or trust or anything like that. I know that will only come with hard work and proving to you that Iâm committed to being the best version of myself for both of us. The only reason I want to buy the house is because I want to buy into the future you want, whether itâs with me or someone else.â His voice cracks.
âAlthough I desperately hope you want that future with me. The one with the kids and the dock and all those model ships you want to build every summer. I want to spend my life daring you to do shit youâre afraid of, while having you push me to do the same. Just like I want to become the man you always dreamed I could be once I got my life together.â
My heart swells at his words. âI thought you hated this place.â
He shakes his head. âI hated being reminded of the person I could have been had I gotten better sooner.â
I reach up and cup his cheek. âAnd now?â
âI see it through your eyes, and now I canât imagine being anywhere else but at your sideâwhether you are at the lake or on the other side of the world. Wherever you go, I want to follow. Whatever you accomplish, I want to be there to congratulate you. And whenever you struggle, I want to be there to pick up the pieces and hold you together until youâre strong enough to stand on your own.â
A tear slips down my cheek. âWhat changed?â
âI did.â He grips on to the back of my neck and pulls me forward. âStaying sober is going to be a process. Thirty days in rehab is a good start, but itâs not an instant cure for a lifelong addiction. Iâll have to put in the work and commit to bettering myself every single day. I only hope youâre willing to share the journey with me, because God, I want you to. I know I donât deserve another chance, but Iâm begging you to give me one anyway. Just give me one last chance to show you that I can be the man you want to spend the rest of your life with. That I can be the one to turn your dreams into realities.â
I take in the man Iâve loved since before I even understood what the word meant. âOne last chance?â
He nods.
I cradle his face and press my lips against his. âBreak my heart again and Iâll put a bullet in you for real this time.â
He smiles against my mouth. âBe sure to aim for the heart then, because thatâs the only way youâll keep me away.â
I wrap my arms around the back of his neck and rise on the tips of my toes, so our lips are only a few inches apart. âDeal.â