Dr. Mitchell: Chapter 23
Dr. Mitchell: Billionaires’ Club Book 1 (Billionaires’ Club Series)
I stood on the perfectly manicured lawns of the cemetery, staring at the polished mahogany casket. I held Ashâs hand as she stood quietly to my right while Jim stood stiffly at my left. We listened to Collin eulogize his father before the minister stepped in and finalized the burial service.
I managed to push everything down since losing John on my table and was able to force conversation and smiles that would show everyone around me that I was doing fine with it all. I was grateful Ash was with me, more shocked than anything she took me up on my request to join me for this farewell to the man whoâd taken the place of my father after Dad succumbed to a heart attack as well.
I went into this line of work to prevent my standing here with this grieving family, and yet, here I was, staring at the casket of a man who fell to the silent killer anyway.
I pulled my eyes from the casket and slid them over to the beautiful woman standing soberly at my side. I needed the distraction of the one thing in my life that was good. The one person who seemed to bring out this new side of me to which I would forever be grateful for.
Sadly, even having her here wasnât helping the grief, guilt, and despair I was currently experiencing. Fuck me to hell if I couldnât just cope with Johnâs death and move the hell on already.
After the burial, I went through the motions of celebrating Johnâs life with immediate family and close friends at John and Marilynâs house. The mansion suddenly felt claustrophobic as people came to thank the doctor who tried to keep John with them. I had to get the fuck out of this place.
Ash and I left when I noticed the drinking had commenced. It was the perfect out, and I didnât hesitate to take it.
âWeâre almost at my place,â Ash said, breaking through my auto-pilot driving and gripping the steering wheel harder than necessary. âAre you sure youâre okay, Jake?â
I forced the smile Iâd been using since John passed. âFine, Ash. Thanks again for coming with me today. I hope it wasnât too much.â
She reached over and placed her hand over mine on the stick shift. âIt wasnât too much. In fact, itâs got me thinking.â
âOh, yeah?â I absently answered her.
âDad and I have been sort of stuck in some bizarre state in the idea that keeping Momâs urn with us would help to keep her with us.â She softly chuckled. âWe need to put her to rest in Santa Clarita. We need to move forward with the acknowledgment that weâve been blessed to have her and learn from her, and now itâs time to do what sheâd requested before she passed.â
âWhat was her request?â I answered, not necessarily listening, but trying to hang onto something I knew was monumental for the woman I loved.
âShe said to live for her.â Ashley choked out the words, causing me to turn my hand from gripping the gearshift and to intertwining our fingers together. âNot to die with her.â Her fingers gripped my hand. âAll these years, and I never realized it until todayâlistening to Collin talk. Itâs our duty to live for our lost loved ones. How in the hell could I have imagined my mom being at peace when Dad and I werenât?â
âYouâve been doing an amazing job accepting that loss.â I smiled over at her. âBoth you and your dad are proving to move forward and live your lives to their fullest.â
I pulled my hand from hers as I shifted gears and steered us down the road toward her house.
âDo you want to come in?â she asked.
âI think Iâm just going to head home.â I placed my hand around her neck, helping to bring her face close as I leaned over to press my lips to hers. âNot trying to be a dick, but this week has kicked my ass.â
âI get it.â She smiled. âTomorrow is Saturday, so if you want to do something this weekend, you know where to find me.â
âFuck,â I said, knowing Iâd barely survived the fucking week. âIâve lost track of time.â
âItâs understandable.â She ran her hands along my cheek. âIâm here for you, Jake. Take all the time you need.â
âThanks,â I said.
I would have never believed this whole thing would bring me not to see Ash for the next three weeks, but it did. And three weeks later, I found myself going to do the only thing I believed that could wake me from the fucked-up state of mind I was inâsurfing.
âBruh,â the group of surfers Iâd spent the morning trading waves with approached. These guys were hardcore surfers, and this was their territory. âIf it isnât the media-famed playboy,â the young man said, paddling over.
âGood to see you too, Flex,â I said, acknowledging this surf groupâs leader.
âWhat brings you out to Trustles today?â
âWaves were more aggressive. I needed to get some fucked-up energy out of my system.â
âLose one, man?â he asked, these guys knowing more about me than myself when I came out to surf their waters.
I nodded at the man Iâd become friends with years ago after he saved mine and Collinâs life when we thought we were badass enough to surf this location on new boards we werenât familiar with. Truth be told, I never understood why the man didnât kick both our asses for almost killing ourselves and him and his buddies rescuing us in the process.
âYou know me too well,â I answered, straddling the board and watching the best sets of waves line up, but not in the mood to ride into the perfect curl they were creating.
âYou only bring that board out when youâve got shit you need out of your system.â He nodded toward my shortboard. âThough youâve only ridden through a few good pipes, and I have to question why youâre watching the last of the best waves weâll get today head to shore.â
I smirked at him. âI have to ask why you suddenly give more of a damn about my state of mind than those waves.â
âSmartass,â he answered. âWhoâd you lose, a young one?â
My lips tightened. âNah, Collinâs dad.â
âShit,â Flex said. âCollin okay?â
âCollinâs managed through it all pretty well. Heâs got a ton of bullshit with the company, though.â
âYou know,â Flex started, âwhen the ocean brings lifeââ
âFlex,â I interrupted, âI swear I donât want to sound like an asshole, but Iâm not out here to listen to metaphors about the fucking ocean. I just had to get away from the noise.â
âI get it,â he said, straddling his board, now floating in the water next to me. He reached over and chuckle. âLooks like Collin might be taking my place in the words of encouragement department.â
I squinted out and watched the surfer who duck-dived a breaking wave and popped up from the other side reveal himself as my best friend.
âYeah, Iâm sorta fucked now. Probably best to take the next set.â
âYour dumbass isnât going anywhere,â Collin said as he paddled over to where Flex and I sat on our boards. âWhat the hell? If this were the morning we were going to surf, Iâd think your stupid ass would have invited me. Whatâs up, Flex?â
âJust sitting here catching a board-tan with your boy.â Flex laughed.
âAnd we all know how much you love watching sets roll past you.â He pinched his nose clear of the water that splashed up in his face. ââSup, fucker?â Collin asked, sitting on his board facing both Flex and me.
âJust trying to get it all out of my system,â I answered, looking at the shoreline filling with peopleâand fucking media as usual. âThose assholes follow you here?â I nodded toward the crew coming down with tripods, gear, and of course, the mighty camera lenses.
Collin looked back. âWell, you are the doctor who did everything right to try and save one of the worldâs greatest billionaires.â He chuckled.
âI seriously canât believe that shit didnât backfire in my face.â
âYeah, Dadâs laughing at your sorry butt from the great beyond.â
âWhy?â I smirked. âBecause he knew my personal life being blasted all over the place wasnât enough, so he thought heâd die to make these people travel from around the globe to follow me now?â
âHey.â Collin laughed. âHe was definitely the type of man who would have known how to get you good publicity and not just localâglobal.â
âThat was his style.â I exhaled. âAlways about building global platforms.â
âUnfortunately, I have a feeling,â Flex added, âthat those mother fuckers might have a new way of twisting shit up for you now that youâre out on the board.â
âYeah.â Collin chuckled. âAnd all the hot chicks in the bikinis will serve to kick a can of gas on that fire of bullshit theyâll come up with.â
âWhat?â I snapped. âI canât have a fucking sport I enjoy? These assholes think I sit in a basement all day or some shit like that, researching medical science like a mad man?â
âHell,â Collin said, âI thought thatâs where you wound up after I called Ash looking for you.â
âAsh,â I said her name as if I was shocked she was still in my life. âFuck, I havenât seen her in weeks.â
âGood thing sheâs not giving in to the BS stories about her being the latest victim of the Billionairesâ Club.â
My stare darkened. âWhat?â
âYou knew that shit would be plastered all over the place,â Collin said. âAs soon as you and Ash stepped out together, all theyâve done is watch you two and wait for Ash to become absent from their photos.â
I scooped up water and ran it over my legs. âFuck me, man.â
âWhoâs Ash?â Flex asked, studying his guys as they rode the last of the good waves.
âA woman who we all actually believed changed Jakey here from the asshole we all know and love.â
âYou son of a bitch,â Flex splashed me with water. âIâm losing money on your stupid ass.â
I smiled at him, the thought of Ash making me relax some, but I was also tense in the fact that Iâd been blowing her off with lame-ass texts. God only knew what she thought of me. These stories exposing my life never really had an effect on her, but now I was stupidly living up to the love âem and lose âem headlines.
âLosing money?â I shook my head at my Tahitian surfer buddy. âHow many of you dipshits have bets going on my life?â
âThe whole world at this point, brah,â Flex said while he and Collin laughed in unison. âWell, you two enjoy these ankle-biters. Iâm closing up shop for the day.â
âSee ya.â
âYouâve got this, Jake. You looked good out there this morning,â Flex said. âI almost thought you knew what you were doing.â
Collin grinned as Flex popped on his board a road a small wave into shore.
He looked over at me. âYou need to move past this. You know itâs exactly what Dad wanted.â
I looked down the coastline. âI know I couldnât save him on that table. I know that. Iâve come to grips with that.â
âThen why are we into this for at least two weeks now?â
I pinched my lips together. âI canât get it out of my mind. What if I used different words when trying to persuade him? What if there was a better way to talk to him? I shouldâve been able to prevent this.â
âAnd there we have it. Dr. Mitchell is playing God with lives.â
I moved the water through my hands. âNot playing God at all, Coll,â I said. âJust thinking about what I could have done differently in convincing him.â
âYou couldnât have done anything differently,â Collin answered. âDad was a stubborn ass, and we all knew that. Why carry the burden of his hard-headed personality that put him in the grave?â
âAs a doctor of medical science, itâs my job to fix and find answers to each patient I have. I use my experience with patients Iâve saved and lost to move on and learn what I can do differently with future patients,â I said.
âAnd so youâre going to ride the board until the answers come?â
âIâm out here to get a little fucking peace, and youâre not allowing that.â
âThatâs what best friends are for.â Collin smirked. âLetâs get out of here and go grab a beer. Itâs fucking five oâclock somewhere.â
âVery original,â I said, conceding.
âJake.â Collin reached out and snatched my board. âLet it the fuck go. This goes beyond your research bullshit you just fed me. Iâm a doctor too; Iâve lost patients too. We both grieve their losses differently, yes. My dad hits close to home for you, yes. But youâve got to get your ass back in the game.â
âIâve operated on two hearts this week, both patients successfully recovered and home now. Iâm in the game.â
âYouâre hiding behind patients,â Collin said. âListen, Iâm your best friend, and I know you better than anyone, even Jim. Youâre vacant, man. Youâre going to lose Ash, and you know it. But do you even give a shit?â
âOf course, I do.â
âSee,â he said, scowling at me. âYour face always had this sappy, giddy, and breezy as fuck look whenever her name was spoken, but now.â He blew out a breath. âHopefully, sheâll still be around when you come out of this.â
âHow do you expect me to switch gears?â
âStop going over the bullshit of an idea that you could have found the words to save Dad. Knock that shit off. You know better, and you knew him better than that. My dad would kick your ass from the grave if he knew his stubborn bullshit was the reason youâre falling the fuck apart. Youâre not saving anyone by using John Brooks as your example of what you should have done differently.â
âYouâre right. Well said,â I answered. âLetâs paddle these boards in. Iâm in the mood for some fish.â
âFish tacos are calling my name,â Collin said. âHow about we bring Ash out tomorrow and teach her the one thing her man is most enthusiastic about when it comes to sports.â
âAsh loves the ocean. She already threatened to kick my ass if I ruined that love she had if she got seasick on the yacht. Thereâs no way in hell Iâm destroying that while sharks are migrating through the pacific.â
âFor fuckâs sake, Jacob,â he said. âYou need to pull your shit together. Why donât we let Ash decide if sheâs going to fear marine life killing her and not the fearless chump who went softer than a wet turd on me?â
âYouâre such an idiot sometimes,â I answered, bringing my body to lie on the board. âYouâre right, Iâd much rather see Ashâs expression when I ask her to join me surfing instead of assuming that I was trying to kill her off.â
âThatâs a great story for these Billionairesâ Club headlines.â Collin laughed. âThe Billionairesâ Club moves to the next level in ditching their so-called loversââ
I popped on the board after paddling forward with the momentum of a small wave rolling in. The four-foot wave was perfect enough for me to cut back and forth before allowing a final ride into shore.