The Billionaire’s Baby: Chapter 3
The Billionaire’s Baby (Seduced by the Billionaire Book 3)
WRINKLING HIS NOSE AT THE HUMIDITY, Gavin stared at the familiar mansion of his oldest brother. Though Jacob had bought one of the largest ones on the market, Catherine had remodeled and expanded it until the structure was grand enough for her. She hated being without people to take care of her every need, so the place had never lacked staff. But now, despite the sunshine and insect sounds all around, it reminded him oddly of his office at 2 a.m., when everyone else had long since left. Quiet as the proverbial graveyard.
Gavin had a key and the security code, so he opened the door and walked inside. No one greeted him.
Bee hadnât been exaggerating. Couch pillows were strewn about. Water from broken vases lay spilled over the marble floor, and yellow and pink roses scattered among the jagged ceramic pieces.
Jesus. He should get somebody to come and clean everything up. Catherine wouldnât know what to do with the mess sheâd created even if her life depended on it.
He went through the living room and kitchen and found her sitting in a burgundy leather armchair in the den. A white chiffon dress hugged her short but well-curved body. The material wouldâve rendered her an air of innocent victimhoodâ¦if it had held the power to mute her.
The moment she noticed him, Catherine started sobbing, tears streaming from her large light brown eyes. âOh my god, what do I do? My lifeâs ruined!â Even in the middle of a crisis, she had on full makeup that was apparently waterproof.
Gavin went straight for the wet bar Jacob had installed and helped himself to a generous serving of bourbon. One could never start drinking early enough when dealing with Catherine. And it paid to get right to the point.
âIs it true? Jacob has another wife?â
âYes! Some stripper from Las Vegas he married before he proposed to me. He left me for her. How could he?â
No shit. Strippers were generally attractiveâthey had to be, in order to earn any moneyâbut Gavin doubted that any of them could hold a candle to Catherine. âHow does that leave The Lloyds Development?â
âTLD? Who cares about the company right now?â
âYou should. If TLD goes bad, youâll have nothing.â Gavin walked over and stood in front of her. âIs it solvent? Bankrupt? What? He couldnât have left without taking something.â Given Jacobâs propensity to live grandly, Gavin wouldnât have put it past his brother to have robbed the company of everything except the carpet.
âYou saw the quarterly reports. The companyâs fine. It just needs a new CEO. But I⦠I donât know where to start.â Fresh tears fell. âI have nothing . I donât know what Iâm going to do. My lifeâs over.â
âPull yourself together. Your lifeâs far from over. Youâre still young.â
âWhatâs the point? Your family will protect Jacob and toss me out. Iâll be made the villain in this farce.â
âNo, we wonât.â
âWhy not?â She sniffed and tossed her dark curls over a shoulder. âThey all hate me.â
âThatâs not true.â Well , not exactly true . Jacob had left, Gavin had gotten over her, and Ethan, the second oldestâ¦well, he didnât hate her, but it was mainly because he didnât consider it worth the effort. Ethan probably suspected there was some history between Catherine and his two other brothers, even though Gavin hadnât breathed a word, and Jacob in all likelihood hadnât either.
Or maybe Jacob had blabbed. Given the magnitude of the fiasco heâd left behind, Gavin wasnât sure if he could trust his oldest brotherâs judgment any more.
âYour mother pulled all my favorite flowers from her garden,â Catherine said.
âThey were diseased.â Life was too short to tell unpleasant truths to Catherine. He needed to fly home to his wife, who was, to put it mildly, undoubtedly irritated. âShe had no choice.â
âWhat do I do?â
He grabbed a fistful of napkins from the wet bar and shoved them at her. âStop crying. Start thinking.â
âWhoâs going to move the gnomes?â She gestured at the garden and grew even more hysterical.
About a dozen or so colorful giant pointy hat-sporting figures littered the multi-acre yard in an oval. A wheelbarrow squatted in the center.
Gavin shrugged. âYour gardener. Who else?â
âI donât have one. I fired him.â
âOh for godâs sake.â One bourbon wasnât enough for this bullshit. âIf itâs that much of a big deal, you shouldâve waited until he moved your gnomes.â
âI heard him laugh. I couldnât stand it.â
Patience . Patience . âNot everything is about you, Catherine. Maybe he was thinking about a joke.â
âYou donât know him the way I do. I was the joke!â She dabbed at her eyes, then blew her nose in that practiced dainty way.
He shouldâve expected that his sister-in-law would be crazy with shame. Appearances were paramount to her. She could bear anything except public humiliation. He almost said, âFor fuckâs sake, get over yourself,â but the firm voice of his mother stopped him short.
We always take care of our own . Family is important . Itâs all we truly have .
His motherâhis familyâwould expect him to do something to calm his ex/sister-in-law down. A Lloyd didnât shirk his duties.
âIâll get you a new gardener tomorrow. He can move the gnomes then,â Gavin said.
âNo. They have to be moved today. Theyâve just been sitting out there like this all this time.â
âOne more day wonât make a difference.â
âOh fine! Iâll do it.â She hopped off the armchair and pushed her perfectly curled hair back.
Gavinâs jaw tightened. There was no way she could move even one of the gnomes by herself. They were too large, and she was going to pull a muscle or something on top of everything else that had happened.
He yanked his wedding band off and put it on the bar. After shrugging out of his jacket and vest, he said, âStay here, you crazy woman. Iâll take care of them.â
He stalked outside as Catherine burst into fresh tears at being called crazy.
Just kill me now .
That damned Jacob. He should be the one dealing with Catherine. Or did he think he didnât have to since he was the âmoreâ of the familyâthe older one, the more successful, the more popular, the more everything?
Is this what you meant by success , Jacob? What the hell?
Gavin started moving the damned gnomes. They were heavier than they looked. He didnât care all that much about the personal lives of his oldest brother and his wife. They could do whatever they wanted in private, so long as it didnât reflect badly on the family. But bigamy? Running off with a stripper, legally married or not? The scandal would hit everyone hard. Their mother would be furious and embarrassed.
As Gavin carted a gnome across the expanse of lawn he wondered what kind of shape The Lloyds Development might be in. The reports Jacob had prepared said things were fine, and so did Catherine, but she didnât have the head for a business as big as The Lloyds Development. Not that being a bigamist necessarily made Jacob a terrible businessman. But sloppy people did sloppy things, and failing to divorce this Vegas stripper wife before marrying Catherine definitely fit. What other messes were lying around, waiting to be discovered?
* * *
Amandine checked her appearance once more in the rearview mirror as she drove to La Mer. After giving Brooke the rest of the day off, sheâd gone to see her stylist to fix her hair. Her makeup was done professionally, her clothes had been selected with her stylistâs help and there was nothing wrong with the way she lookedâseriously, an army of professionals had dedicated hours to making her as stunning as possibleâbut her palms grew clammy nonetheless.
Mustâve been nerves from being pregnant. Sort of like how she had grown teary over the gift.
It had nothing to do with the fact that Gavinâs executive administrative assistant, Hilary Rosenberg, had no idea where heâd gone or what the âurgentâ business was.
âReally sorry to bother you, Amandine, but is Gavin with you?â Hilary had said over the phone over an hour ago.
âWhat?â
âI canât seem to reach him.â
âBut why are you calling me? Didnât you talk to him earlier about some emergency in Houston? He left after that.â
âIâmââ A discreet throat clearing. âOh, never mind. I just found his itinerary. Sorry about the confusion. Enjoy the rest of your day, Amandine.â
âThanks,â Amandine had responded, but how in the world was she supposed to enjoy the rest of the day after that? Amandine didnât buy Hilaryâs excuse about a misplaced itinerary. Hilary knew Gavinâs schedule better than Gavin did.
If it wasnât business⦠If it was something personal, why hadnât he said anything?
Amandine stopped her car in front of the glitzy restaurant, and a uniformed valet opened the door for her. She climbed out and handed him her keys. The soft red silk cocktail dress whispered against her skin, the matching sandals adding almost three inches to her five-foot five. Her stylist had pulled her wheat-colored hair into a chic French twist, something she could never manage on her own. She radiatedâor at least she hoped she radiatedâa sophistication and elegance that befit the crowd at La Mer.
The maître dâ, clad in a tuxedo that looked like cultured wealth, led her to a table in the most sought-after corner. The walls were made entirely of Plexiglas; behind them was an enormous aquarium full of interesting sea life. Her section boasted orange and yellow coral and tropical fish of various vivid shades. The only ones she recognized was a pair of clownfish, which swished their tails to disappear into their anemone home.
Amandine sighed. It must be nice to live in a modest home, just them and their spouses, nobody to impress. The fish seemed to be in sync with what they wanted and expected from each other. Maybe it was because a clownfish never married a fish out of its league.
Like a shark.
A waiter came by to get her drink order. She requested mineral water and juice, which appeared almost instantly.
She shouldnât be ungrateful. She had a generous husband, a lovely home everyone envied, tons of staff to take care of everything.
So what if she hadnât been in half the rooms in her house, or if she always had to look the part? Sheâd known what was expected when she agreed to marry Gavin. He was far wealthier than her uncleâs family, who had taken her family in when her fatherâs prolonged unemployment had resulted in eviction. And her uncle had been rich. Gavin shouldnât have to become downwardly mobile just because she was more comfortable in clothes from thrift stores, or a smaller home that she could manage on her own.
This was their anniversary. Her focus should be on all the lovely things in her life rather than a few minor annoyances.
Right?
She sat back in her seat and waited.
And waited.
Then waited some more.
After about half an hour, she gave up and reached for her phone. Maybe Gavin wasâ
She started when a chilled bottle of Perrier-Jouët appeared on the table.
âWith my compliments.â
She looked up and blinked. âHello, Mark.â
âSurprised to see you sitting here by yourself.â Mark Pryce took the only empty chair, the one that Gavin was due to sit in when he showed up. The dim interior light darkened Markâs medium-brown hair so that it almost looked as inky as Gavinâs. He wore a nice dress shirt and dark slacks of European origin. Most likely custom tailored, given the way they fit him.
Mark was Gavinâs friend and one of the richest men in the state. He invested in many upscale restaurants, including La Mer, and La Mer, which had opened just the week before, was already a smashing success. His mother seemed to disapprove of it. She had definite ideas about how her children ought to live their lives.
âI have a date,â Amandine began, self-conscious and vaguely embarrassed, âbut I think heâs been delayed.â
âGavin?â
âWell, of course. Itâs our anniversary.â
His blue eyes warmed. âCongratulations. I picked the right bottle for the occasion.â
âIâm not drinking.â
âWhy not?â he said, pausing in the middle of popping the cork. âItâs not like you have to drive. I can call you a limo if you like.â
âThanks butâ¦â She hesitated. She didnât want to tell him about her pregnancy, not when she hadnât even told Gavin yet. âIâm not feeling too well.â
âI see. Then Iâll have this bottle saved for you, so you can enjoy it later.â
âThat would be great.â
âHas he called?â
âNo. I was about to see if heâs even in town.â She fiddled with her half-empty water glass. âHe had to go to Houston this afternoon.â
âAh.â Mark raised eyebrows. âDamage control.â
âExcuse me?â She tilted her head. A tendril escaped her French twist and tickled her face. She tucked it behind an ear impatiently. âWhat do you mean?â
He hesitated. âYou havenât heard?â
âWhat?â
âJacob ran off from Catherine.â
âWhat? â Amandine immediately closed her mouth and bit her lower lip. Not everyone at the restaurant needed to hear her outburst.
But she couldnât believe this. Jacob was the oldest of the Lloyd siblings and headed The Lloyds Development, the family business that provided a steady and generous income to every Lloyd. Some, like Gavin, didnât need the money from the company, but many depended on it to finance their lifestyles. âWhat happened?â
âHe, uhâ¦â Mark pursed his lips and shrugged. âHe turned out to be a bigamist. His first wife showed up in Houston.â
She gasped. First wife?!
âSo his marriage to Catherineâ âhe cut his fingers across his neckâ âended. And he ran off with the real wife.â
âThe real wife,â she repeated.
âYeah.â
âSoâ¦who is she? A Vanderbilt? One of the Astors?â
He leaned across the table and lowered his voice. âA Vegas stripper.â
Amandine brought her fingertips to her mouth, at a complete loss for words. What a cliché. It sounded like something from a daytime soap her mother used to watch.
âIâm surprised you didnât know.â
She cleared her throat. âIâve been rather busy the past few days.â She winced inwardly at the lame excuse.
She stared at the label on the champagne bottle. The shock still coursed through her, short-circuiting her thoughts. She shook her head to clear it.
Why hadnât Gavin told her earlier? This was a family matter, and she was family.
Then it dawned on her.
Catherine was free .
Her hands tightened into fists. Catherine was the one Gavin had wanted in the first place. The only reason heâd noticed Amandine was because Catherine had chosen Jacob.
And why hadnât Catherine reached out to her? After all, they were cousins.
Did Catherine want Gavin back?
Most importantly did he want her back?
Of course he does . Why else would he have gone to Houston on your anniversary?
Amandine put a hand over her belly. Disappointment turned into half-panic, half-apprehension. Sheâd wanted to let him know about the pregnancy. But now⦠Would he find the newsâ¦their babyâ¦regrettable?
âAre you all right?â
She blinked. âYes, fine. Just a littleâ¦shocked. You know, about Jacob and Catherine and all.â
âSorry I said anything. I shouldâve let Gavin tell you. Itâs a family matter.â
âIt canât be that much of a family matter if you already heard.â
He made a sympathetic face. âBad news travels fast. You know how it is.â
âOf course.â Everyone knew except her.
âListen, even if Gavinâs not here to celebrate, you should treat yourself. Iâll comp the whole thing.â
âItâs all right.â If her appetite hadnât already been dead, Markâs pity would have killed it.
He nodded, his eyes understanding. âThe invitationâs open-ended, so you can call me any time you change your mind. Ten years from now, whenever.â
She managed a smile. âSure. Thank you.â
Amandine went home, her mind churning, her eyes burning with unshed tears. How could her day go from such bright optimism to this? She couldnât seem to process anything. Should she confront Gavin? What would she say? What should she say?
The house was empty. Sheâd asked Luna to leave early since they were going to eat out.
Her feet moved automatically, leading her upstairs to the dark bedroom. She flicked the light switch on and blinked. The sight of new flowers on the nightstand punched her in the gut, stealing her breath.
They were yellow rosesâCatherineâs favorite.