Mr. Mitchell: Chapter 5
Mr. Mitchell: Billionaires’ Club Book 2 (Billionaires’ Club Series)
Last night was more of a get comfortable night, I believe, for both Avery and me. I felt strange ditching my connection to the company, European and American-based offices, but when I reconnected with Alex during my late night and his afternoon, all was fine. In fact, we both determined it might work for me to have a few days of not being glued to a phone or computer. I could check-in during the evenings when I felt Avery was okay with me disappearing, and if there were anything important to handle, Alex would contact me on my other personal line. The line that wasnât connected to my email or business.
God only knew how Iâd handle this disconnect. I was a control freak with that company, and even though I knew that Alex could run it well, I had my concerns about pulling back like this. I didnât honestly know why I felt compelled to take this time away from work. I wasnât burnt out, but Avery had brought to my attention the fact that I was chained down by the phone whether I was inside the office or outside, and fuck it if she wasnât right.
It was why I didnât have a life. Itâs why I had a driver take me everywhere, and itâs definitely why I wouldnât be able to learn jack-shit else about this woman who seemed to lighten me up when I was around her. So, that was it. I was checking out, taking a mini-vacation, and actively trying to get to know this woman whoâd captured my attention.
My morning sprint came to a halt when I spotted her, running on one of the hills. She seemed to stop at the same time I did, and we both jogged through the meadow of my hundred-plus acre estate.
âDid a ghost chase you out of the house?â I asked with a smile, catching my breath.
She laughed, leaning over on her knees. âWhy would you ask that?â She turned her head up and squinted at me, smiling.
I loved her sexy, scratchy voice. âI believe it was you who called me a poor host to allow you to sleep alone in what you believed was a haunted room?â
She rose and laughed again. âThat was the booze talking.â
âAnd to think, I almost fell for it and took advantage of you while under the influence.â
âWell, I wasnât that drunk. I might have been half-serious in wanting more than just your badass cooking.â
Fuck me. âDonât tempt me.â I smiled. âAs I said, I hate to fail, and to fail in my new role as a host would piss me off.â
âYouâre too much, Jim.â
âSeriously, though.â I looked around at the morning sun, spreading its light over the peaceful land. âWhat are you doing out at seven in the morning?â
âI was up at six, and I took off for a run if you couldnât tell by the sight of me.â She looked around. âIt could be the best morning run Iâve had in my life.â
âLooks like morning runs are another thing Iâll be sure to join you on.â
âYeah, of course. Iâd like that.â
âHere,â I said, leading us over to a walnut tree. âThereâs nothing like experiencing a sunrise in the country.â
We sat next to the tree, and I reclined against it.
âSo,â she said, not feeling ashamed to sit on the grass and dirt next to me. âI wonder what the history is with all this land. Like, if you could put on binoculars and travel back into time and see what was happening out in those fields.â
âTime-traveling binoculars?â I chuckled.
âWhy not?â She shrugged. âYou look through them and see what was taking place during a certain period in time.â
âWhich time-period would you wish to look out and see on those lands?â
âThey mentioned Henry the Eighth reigned in the 1500s; was he out here?â
I smiled. âOf all Englandâs history, you seem to be fascinated by the tyrant King Henry the Eighth, eh?â
âWell, I think he wasnât horrible in the beginning,â she said. âHe just turned awful at the end.â
âHe wasnât horrible before or after he sent his first wife away in shame?â I smirked.
âIâm looking through my historical binoculars,â she looked pointedly out to the lush hills. âItâs the year 1500 and Henry,â she pulled her lips up on one side and grinnedâa grin so cute I wanted to capture it with my own lips, âsent his first wife away.â
âVery well, then.â I softly laughed. âHenry would have been young and fit, and since he enjoyed taking his court with him in his travels, he would have most likely been in your binoculars of time travel, enjoying a morning ride with his lover, Anne Boleyn.â
âSo fucking cool,â she said. âYou really think that?â
I laughed. âWho knows? I am merely assuming, but he was all over the countryside. He fled the city on numerous occasions to leave the chaos, to dodge the plague, or, more importantly, to flaunt his health and wealth to his people. He was a notorious show-off.â
âHealth and wealth. I like that.â She looked back from where she sat up in front of me and touched her finger to my chest. âSorta like you.â
âDo not compare me to Henry the Eighth.â I laughed.
âIâm comparing you to his young, healthy, and happy years.â
âAwe, that makes it all the better. Even better for you keeping your head on your shoulders,â I said with a wink.
She relaxed against the tree. âDo you have family out here? Or in the states?â
âMaybe itâs best we put the time-traveling binoculars back on and search for another monarch.â
âAnswer the question, King Henry.â She laughed.
If it werenât for her bold and adorable way of speaking to me, I would have clamped my mouth shut on something Iâd never shared with anyone outside of my close friends and what my family knew.
âMy father passed away after I graduated from college,â I said.
âOh, God.â She covered her mouth. âIâm sorry. You look like youâre maybe about five years out of college. Was it recently? Iâm so sorry.â
âTen years now.â I smiled. âItâs okay. His legacy lives on well through the business he started. My brother and I have done everything we can to honor him through our actions. I think, hopefully, he would be proud of us.â
âAnd your mom?â
âI donât speak that womanâs name.â The words came out harsher than I expected they would. âSorry, I didnât mean to snap. She was and still is a nightmare at times. Jake, my younger brother, was too young to remember when she was physically abusive and brought drug-addict dickheads into our house, so Iâm the one who got stuck with that.â
âThatâs awful,â she said, her eyes wide. âIâm really sorry. You both were young, then. Just you and your brother?â
âYeah. I was seven, and Jake was five. Iâm glad Jake didnât remember her as I did. Thank God my dad put us before everything. He had a surveillance system secretly installed and caught her fucking druggies in our home, forcing Jake and me to stay outside until she got her goddamn drugs and whatever the fuck else she wanted. It was a nightmare.â I shook my head. âSorry about that. I never speak about her to anyone, not even to my brother. Sheâs a piece of shit, and I shouldâve left it at that.â
âIs that why you took the phone from me on the plane? Iâm guessing you mustâve heard me mention Derek being an addict?â
âI heard enough to be reminded of a horrible parent with a poor kid involved to want to intervene impulsively. Again, Iâm sorry I did that, and if it does cause you further issues with your ex, Iâll be sure to give you my private number, and Iâll help in any way you need.â
âDerekâs all talk,â she said, but I could tell he was a lot more than that. I wasnât pressing, though. âI do appreciate what you did.â
âIâm glad for that.â I stood. âHow about breakfast in the little town you appeared to be enamored with before we arrived here?â
âThe storybook town?â
âYes,â I said, turning to walk toward home. âItâs a lovely village, and after losing my shit about my dirt bag mother, I think you might need a cleansing that only the peace in that town can offer.â
âGive me a break.â She leaned against me as an old friend would, and I loved the gesture. âI get it. Iâm just sorry you and your brother went through that. You had a great father to get her out of your life.â
âJust like youâre an amazing mom for working on getting an addicted parent out of your daughterâs life.â
âDonât go that far. In Derekâs opinion, Iâm the same piece of shit you see in your mom.â She laughed.
âIf only Derekâs opinion were of any value to me.â I smirked, prompting her sexy little giggle to lighten up the demons of my past Iâd brought into play.
I needed to slow down, I was getting too close, and it was just through simple conversation with a woman I enjoyed.