The Billionaire’s Baby: Chapter 5
The Billionaire’s Baby (Seduced by the Billionaire Book 3)
THE NEXT MORNING, Brooke showed Amandine a silk cocktail dress and matching sandals. The fresh yellow color was cheery in the morning light. âHere, I think this should do it.â
âThanks.â
âAnd here are the accessories.â Brooke pulled out a small velvet pouch from her purse.
âYou thought of everything.â
âOf course! I want you to look like a goddess. Gavin deserves to be tortured a little. And then you can choose to bestow your favors upon him or not, as you see fit.â
Amandine nodded, seated in front of Brookeâs vanity. âDo you really think heâll notice?â
âHeâd better.â
Amandine sighed, half-regretting sending Brooke to her place to pick up some clothes. But she hadnât been able to bring herself to go, coward that she was. So donât ask her . Donât ask her!
âWhat kind of flowers were in the bedroom?â
Brook hesitated, then said, âYellow roses. But they might be a coincidence.â
âThe florist has never sent any before. Never.â
The rings on Amandineâs left hand winked. One was a simple classic platinum wedding band, the other the stunningly beautiful sapphire and diamond ring that Gavin had proposed with.
âHey.â Brooke stood behind Amandine, looking at her in the vanity mirror. âDonât let the little things get to you. Heâs probably trying to show that heâs sorry, so give him a chance.â She leaned over and touched the rings. âNo matter what, youâre the one wearing these, not Catherine.â
âThe engagement ring wasnât meant for me,â Amandine said, finally unable to be quiet about it. âHe asked Catherine to marry him with it first.â
âWhat? How do you know?â
Amandine sighed. âFive years ago, when they were dating? We were all at one of Jacobâs parties, and Gavin was out on a balcony, looking at it, working up his nerve. Later that night, he proposed to her with it.
Brooke stared at her. âAnd then after she turned him down, he used it again to propose to you?â
âIt came from his grandmother. His grandfather proposed to her with it.â
âOh my god. So itâs an heirloom.â
âIt isâ¦and itâs beautiful. But I wish heâd gotten me a new ring, so I wouldnât think about Catherine every time I look at it.â
And compare herself to all the women who wanted him. People always took note of Gavin. He wasnât the most handsome man sheâd ever seen. Los Angeles was full of pretty boys harboring dreams of becoming movie stars. But he was all boldness and intelligence and indomitable drive, qualities that made other men fade into the background.
But none of that had mattered to Catherine, who later had declared, âIâm not crazy enough to marry a guy who has an unstable job.â
âWhat do you mean unstable ?â Amandine had said. âHe has his own company, and is very successful.â
âHe makes highly leveraged trades on things like corn, OJ, and currencies. Itâs the quickest way to Chapter Seven. Thatâs how Dad lost everything. Sorry, but Iâm not marrying a guy who gambles for a living. Iâm aiming for stability.â
Except Catherineâs aim had been way off. Amandine brushed her hair and ran pink lipstick over her mouth. âI always told myself I shouldnât wish for things beyond my reach. Itâs a surefire recipe for misery. I can never measure up to Catherine, a real Fairchild.â
âDonât be ridiculous. Catherineâs just a woman, nothing special.â
âBrooke. Look at her.â
âOkay, fine. An unusually pretty woman. Still nothing special.â
âYou think that because her family lost its money, but breeding-wise itâs one of the top families. Better than the Lloyds, apparently. Aunt Olivia found Catherineâs marriage to Jacob acceptable only because the guy was rich.â
âWell thatâs a good, pure-minded reason to approve of someone. But you know what? If being a Fairchild is such a big deal, youâre a big deal too. Youâre one of them.â
âNo, Iâm not,â Amandine said. âMy mom threw everything away when she chose my dad. âA penniless nobody with no prospectsâ, as my aunt and uncle used to say.â
âWhat the hell? They said that to your face?â
âGood lord, no. Nothing so unbecoming. But you overhear stuff.â
âWhat a bunch of snobs. If youâre such a lowly nobodyâ âBrooke snortedâ âwhy were you asked to be her maid of honor? Why not one of her high-society friends?â
âCatherine hated them. They treated her like dirt after her father lost all his money in bad investments.â It had destroyed Catherineâs position as the queen bee of her social circle, and sheâd never forgotten or forgiven those whoâd humiliated her.
âSo much for fancy families,â Brooke said, almost too gleefully.
âIt worked out for meâ¦sort of. If it werenât for that, I might not have crossed paths with Gavin again.â While the newlyweds had enjoyed their wedding night, sheâd slipped into Gavinâs bed and seduced him, convinced it would be the only time sheâd be able to have the man she loved.
Reality had intruded the morning after, and sheâd snuck out of his room and run back to L.A. She hadnât expected to see him again, but one day sheâd gone to work at the local Art4Kidsâa charity that provided free art lessons to inner-city children so they would have a positive outlet to express themselves and avoid getting into troubleâand Gavin had shown up with another board member.
He was scheduled to give a speech. Sheâd thought he would just go through the motions, but that hadnât been the case. There was a Q&A session after the speech, and heâd responded to each childâs comments and questions with thoughtful consideration, attentive and concerned as he spoke with kids about their experiences and solicited opinions about how the foundation could serve them better.
A hand went up. It was a skinny teenage boy named Shawn. Heâd been with the program for a few months. âMr. Lloyd?â
âCall me Gavin.â
âOkay, Gavin. Um. I donât want to sound greedy or anything, but do you know if we could eat, like, some snacks or something?â
A few other kids had started to nod. Their parents didnât have enough to feed them, and oftentimes the school breakfast and lunch were the only real food they got. Amandine remembered how much her brother Pete used to eat when heâd hit his teen years.
âThat can be arranged,â Gavin had said without missing a beat. âHow thoughtless of me. Snacks to tide everyone over until dinner is a great idea. Iâll make it happen.â
A huge smile split the boyâs face. âThanks, Gavin!â
The board memberâs secretary had scribbled something on her notepad.
Gavin turned to her. âOrder pizzas and drinks for everyone. Send the bill to my admin.â
Anticipation rippled through the kids.
âItâs almost five thirty,â the secretary said.
âWhat about it?â
âThatâs our closing time.â
Gavin smiled. âBetter hurry, then.â
Later, heâd approached Amandine and asked her out. She might have turned down the Gavin from the wedding, but not the man from the foundation.
And the rest, as some would say, was history. In a year they were married.
âI donât know if that was such a good thing,â Brooke said with a frown. âI hate seeing you so anxious and worried about fitting in with his crowd and going along with what he wants.â
âOh, I donât mind all that. Itâs justâ¦â Amandine hesitated. âHeâs never once mentioned the word âloveâ.â
âSeriously? Not even when he proposed?â
Amandine shook her head, a fresh wave of humiliation washing over her.
âWhat the⦠So why did you say yes?â
âBecause.â Amandine blinked away her tears. Heâd seemed so uncertain and earnest when heâd popped the question. Sheâd never seen him like that. Ever. âI loved him so much. I still do.â
âAwwwâ¦â Brooke put her arms around Amandine. âIâm so sorry. I wish youâd told me.â
âI thought I could make him love me.â Amandine pulled back, sniffing a bit, and tossed her hair over a shoulder. âHow do I look?â
âAbsolutely fantastic. Letâs just, um, get you a tissue, though.â
Despite herself, Amandine laughed. âOkay.â She put on the dress and shoes Brooke had brought.
âAnd hey: no matter what happens, donât let anything or anyone make you feel less than worthy. Youâre a gem, Amandine. If Gavin canât see that, pfft. His loss.â
With Brookeâs pep talk still in her head, Amandine arrived at the restaurant at twelve thirty sharp. The maître dâ took her to the seat in the back. It wasnât as nice as the table sheâd gotten for dinner, but it wasnât terrible for a last-minute reservation. Gavin mustâve called in some big favors to get itâLa Mer always had more customers than it could accommodate.
And it always helped when you were the best friend of the owner.
She requested a glass of OJ and glanced at her watch. It was white gold and encrusted with diamonds, a present from Gavin after heâd missed a movie night. Thankfully their date had been in their home theater room, so sheâd been spared public humiliation.
Sorry , something came up .
Sorry , I canât make it .
Priceless gifts always followed the excuses.
Had he been too busy for Catherine as well? Or was it just Amandine?
Before she could brood further, Gavin appeared. âHey.â He took a seat across from her, his perfectly tailored suit settling over his body. The white silk dress shirt looked stark against the tanned skin of his strong neck. He looked like a pirate, of the very well-off variety. âReally sorry Iâm late. Bad traffic.â
âShould be worth at least a sapphire bracelet,â she muttered.
âWhat?â
âNothing.â
Gavin gave her an odd look but didnât probe.
The waiter brought a wine list and menu, and Gavin studied them. Her gaze fell on his left hand, and the breath caught in her throat at his bare ring finger.
âWhat happened to your wedding band?â she asked, unable to stop herself. Her voice was scratchy and hoarse.
âLost it.â He looked up. âWhat do you think aboutââ
âHow?â
âEh?â
âHow did you lose it?â
A frown scrunched his brow. âI was doing some garden work.â
âWe have two gardeners.â
âNo, in Houston.â
âWhat? Why? Catherine has gardeners too.â
âActually, she fired them.â
âSo you were doing landscaping work in her garden? On our anniversary?â
He nodded. âIt was that orâ¦â
His mouth kept moving, words marching out one by one, orderly and smooth. Amandine couldnât hear them over the buzzing in her head. Gavin hadnât just gone to Houston for âdamage controlâ, as Mark had put it. Heâd been doing Catherineâs yard-work on their anniversary, and all the while Amandine had been waiting for him at La Mer.
At least people thought heâd been doing âdamage control.â If theyâd known the truth, they wouldâve looked at her with something far worse than pity.
He stopped and peered at her. âAre you okay?â
âYes,â she said automatically, out of habit. Then she realized she wasnât okay. Not at all. âNo. Iâm not.â
âIâm sorry I missed dinner.â
âGavin, âsorryâ isnât going to cut it.â
âI know.â He sighed. âIâve arranged forââ
âAnd I donât want some damn present to make up for it either.â To her horror, her eyes started to sting with tears. She blinked them away. âI canât believe you spent our anniversary with Catherine, rooting around in her garden, after telling me youâd spend it with me. You made it sound like whatever was in Houston was extremely urgent, but now I see that wasnât the case. You just wanted to go there.â
âThatâs not true. She was hysterical.â
âShe has staff to take care of her.â
âShe fired everyone. Bee called me because she was so worried.â
âSo? It didnât have to be you.â
âWho else couldâve gone? My mother? Ethan? You know how they feel about her. Sheâs my sister-in-law.â
Fury expanded inside Amandine like an exploding fireball. âFirst of all, no, she isnât. Her marriage to Jacob was never valid,â she pointed out, doing her best to contain her anger. âAnd second, Iâm your wife .â
âWhat would you have done in my place? I never thought you would be this cold. Sheâs your cousin. You were her maid of honor.â
âDonât try to make this about me.â Her voice shook, and she took a slow, deep breath.
How could she have been in denial all this time? Gavin would never love her. He probably didnât even want her love.
What she felt for him was never going to be enough to make their marriage work. Itâd been three years, and she no longer knew how to act around him without feeling miserable. Her parentsâ marriage had survived only because theyâd been in love. Both of them. Her dad had never had any money. Most women wouldâve left a husband like that within months, but her mother had stayed until the very end.
The only option available to Amandine was so obvious, so painful. âIâll have my attorney call you.â
âWhat?â He stared at her. âWhat are you saying?â
âSomething that shouldâve been said a long time ago: I donât think our marriageâs going to work.â She rose.
âWhere are you going?â
âNone of your business.â
He grabbed her wrist. âSit down.â
âLet me go or Iâll make a scene.â
âAmandine,â he warned.
âTry me,â she said, a hair louder. âIâm not well-bred enough to give a shit.â
âWhy are you doing this? You arenât going to get anything by it.â
âDonât worry. I remember our prenup.â
âThatâs not what I meant.â
No. Nothing was what sheâd hoped he meant. âI donât care anymore. Now let go or Iâm going to scream, âWhy are you hurting me?ââ She looked around. La Mer was full of businessmen and socialites. âI swear I will.â
He narrowed his eyes, but released her wrist. The muscles in his jaw ticked as he clenched his teeth.
âGood-bye, Gavin.â She forced the words past the hot lump in her throat and walked out.
* * *
Gavin took a seat at the bar. There was no point in hogging a table alone.
âHey, whereâs Amandine?â Mark said from the other side of the counter. He was wearing a well-fitted white button down shirt and black slacks and for all the world looked like one of the bartenders.
âLeft.â
Mark came out and took the stool next to Gavin. âWhat happened?â
âShe walked out on me. Can you believe that? A day after our anniversary.â
Mark winced. âOuch.â He signaled a real bartender. Two cold bottles of beer appeared.
Gavin glared at the beads of sweat forming on the dark green glass. âI know I screwed up, but itâs maddening she wonât give me a chance to make things right.â He took a long swig. He preferred bourbon, but beer would do.
âGive her some time to cool off.â
âShe wants me to talk to her lawyer.â
âJesus. As in divorce?â
Gavin ground his teeth. âSheâs furious. She even blames me for helping Catherine, but what was I supposed to do when sheâd totally flipped out?â
âOh.â Markâs eyes widened with understanding. âYou spent yesterday with Catherine and you told Amandine that?â
âWellâ¦she asked,â he said defensively. He hadnât wanted to discuss it with Amandine, but he wasnât going to lie to her about it either. That wasnât the kind of marriage he wanted.
âCatherineâs your ex.â
âSheâs my sister-in-law.â
âYou almost married her.â
Gavin winced. Mark knew about his pathetic proposal. âThat was years ago, and she chose Jacob. Besides, Amandineâs her cousin and was maid of honor at the wedding.â
âReally? How would you feel if Amandine had spent your anniversary with an ex she almost married?â
The muscles in Gavinâs cheek flexed, and his grip around the bottle tightened.
âYou just proved my point,â Mark said and drank his beer.
Silence stretched between them.
âShit,â Gavin bit out finally.
âWant some advice? Forget Catherine and the family scandal. Focus on Amandine for a while, unless you really donât care what happens to your marriage.â
âI care.â
âThen spend some time with Amandine and give her something you havenât given her yet,â Mark said. âLike, personal attention. Time alone. That kind of thing.â
âWhatâs the point?â Given how angry she was, she was likely to push him over the rail of the yacht he was planning to get her.
âGavin, sheâll probably forgive you if you grovel a bit. Sheâs too soft and gentle to hold a grudge.â
âSheâs the one who brought up lawyers.â
âIf she really wanted to divorce you, she wouldnât have come for lunch or asked you about what you were up to yesterday. Okay? And you really donât want to lose her. Sheâs good for you. You actually look relaxed around her. You werenât like that with Catherineâ¦or anyone else you dated, for that matter.â
âYou donât know what youâre talking about.â
Success and wealth drew women like roses did honey bees. Gavin had learned the lesson the hard way over and over again, starting when he had been just thirteen. Jacob had swooped in and taken a girl Gavin had harbored a major crush on for months. Older and more sophisticated, Jacob had faced no trouble getting the girl. When Gavin had confronted his older brother, Jacob had laughed.
âWhat? I didnât see your name tattooed on her anywhere.â
Gavin had bristled. âYou knew.â
âAnd I promised to teach you an important lesson.â Jacob had smiled. âShe turned you down because you didnât have anything to offer that I couldnât top. I have more experience, more money, more confidence and more success. Plus Iâm taller.â
âShe said she liked me!â
âSo? Unless sheâs spreading her legs for you while sheâs saying it, itâs all negotiable. Womenâll latch onto somebody else who is âmoreâ than you just like theyâll toss a sweater back in the bargain bin because they found another one that was a better deal.â
Gavin had never forgotten Jacobâs words. His life experience merely confirmed Jacobâs harsh lesson.
When women said, âItâs not you, itâs me,â they really meant, âI found a guy with more money and more success than you.â
So Gavin had done everything in his power to make sure he was more than others, even though heâd suffered another loss to Jacob when Catherine had decided to become Mrs. Jacob Lloyd.
At least that had been a blessing in disguise. In hindsight, it was obvious he and Catherine were incompatible. Gavin had been more in love with the idea of marrying a beautiful girl from a respectable family and having a proper wife than the girl herself.
He considered Amandineâs behavior. Sheâd appeared in his bed at Catherineâs wedding. Then afterward, sheâd tiptoed out of his room and returned to her life in L.A. Gavin had chalked it up to a one-night stand. She had, after all, been drunk, and he was experienced and jaded enough to know his oldest brother was wrong about one thing: women could spread their legs for a guy without really liking him. Still, something about the encounter had bothered him. Women didnât generally run from him. Heâd never really had to chase any of themâ¦until Amandine.
He might have never seen her againâand wouldâve done his best not to think about herâif she hadnât worked at the Art4Kids Foundation as an art teacher. It was one of his pet charities, and he checked in periodically to make sure everything was being taken care of.
âHello, Amandine,â heâd said at the end of his visit with one of the foundationâs classes.
âGavin,â sheâd said, her eyes slightly wary.
âHow are you?â
âGood! Thank you.â
âI believe youâre done for the day?â
âUmâ¦yeah, actually, I am.â
âExcellent. How about dinner?â heâd asked, his mouth moving almost on autopilot, shocking him. Maybe his subconscious had known then she was the one for him.
âI, uhâ¦â
âSay yes.â
Sheâd looked at him for a long moment, worrying her lower lip, then nodded.
A year later, theyâd gotten married in an elaborate ceremony. Everyone from their families and friends had been invited, and no expense had been spared. Heâd wanted to give her the fairytale wedding all women dreamed of.
Being with him had given her access to his social circle, which teemed with the kind of successful, wealthy men any woman would love to get her clutches on. Who was she moving on to after getting rid of him?
Normally he wouldnât have cared. Women were everywhere, but he didnât want Amandine to hook up with someone sheâd met through him.
But what if itâs something else? What if sheâs genuinely unhappy about something?
Why wouldnât she tell him if that was the case?
âI know what I see,â Mark said. âYou married her for the most obvious reason men like you marry a woman. There was something special there, right? So donât let a minor hiccup become full-blown pneumonia. Grovel for a bit, get her back, and next year donât let anything get in the way of the anniversary dinner. Problem solved.â
Gavin only vaguely noted his friendâs remarks. He finished his beer and went out, murmuring something about an appointment he couldnât miss.
He slid into his car the minute Thomas opened the door. His heart had never squeezed like this when heâd lost a woman. If theyâd wanted to leave, then fine. They had his blessing. But Amandine was different. She was his wife.
That had to be why his throat felt tight like he was suffocating. It couldnât possibly be anything moreâ¦could it?