Elise
The last twenty-four hours had been the most amazing and confusing of my life. I was pretty sure I was in love with Jack, my mom had caught us post-coitus, and now I was moving out of his apartment. Iâd signed a lease earlier this afternoon once I finished helping Sophia at the shop. After nearly four weeks of searching for an affordable studio, one had finally come up three days ago, and not a moment too soon.
I would keep my promise to Jack and move out after one month. That was the deal, and it was important to me to stick to it. I refused to be the girlfriend who used her rich boyfriend for perks like free rent. Iâd worked hard to get my education and prove myself, and now was my opportunity to do just that. If we were able to survive our rocky start, Jack and I could survive a little distance. That was, if he hadnât changed his mind and was willing to date after I moved.
Weâd done everything backward: the one-night stand, then moving in together before we were dating. I wanted to make a fresh start and do things the right way for once, but I wasnât sure how he felt, though his words last night were promising.
So mysterious. Did he miss his namesake roach?
Now that I thought back, Iâd been thinking about my sisterâs old roommate even back then, naming a cockroach after him. Which was funny, and proof of how much our night together had haunted me.
I grabbed my things and said goodbye to Soph before catching a bus that put me a couple of blocks from my old apartment. Only something was wrong.
I looked at my phone to make sure Iâd walked up the correct block and had the right building.
A second later, Jack emerged from a modern stairwell.
âWhatâs going on?â I asked, glancing at my phone and walking toward him. âThis is the right place, but the buildingâs not the same. My old landlord didnât give a crap about the building and never fixed anything. But this looks brand new.â
He met me in front and faced the building. âItâs been remodeled. Do you like it?â
The exterior had been given a light taupe paint jobâno, more than that. It had been re-stuccoed with a smooth surface where once thereâd been cracks. And the old wrought-iron stairwell had been replaced with modern black railing. Someone had also torn out the concrete in front and planted hearty Mediterranean trees I recognized from working with Sophia. There was construction still being done on one side, but otherwise, the building looked almost brand new. âI canât believe this is the same place. Itâs actually cute and modern now.â
âNo more roaches,â Jack agreed. âYou want to look inside?â
We climbed the swanky new stairs and passed a family on their way down. People were living here, but the apartment Iâd rented was empty, according to Jack.
âHow do you know itâs empty?â
He punched in a code to a digital lock that hadnât been there before and opened the door. âI just do.â
My breath caught. The place was beautiful, and that wasnât a word I would have associated with this apartment when I rented it. There was fresh paint, crown molding, new hardwood flooring throughout, and a small but bright new kitchen with stainless-steel appliances and elegant white cabinets. I rushed back out to check the number on the glossy black door. âIs this really my old apartment? Thereâs no smell, and itâs charming.â
Jack nodded. âSame unit, different neighbor. Turns out the one you didnât like had a small hydroponic weed farm growing in his apartment, causing the moisture issues.â
I looked up and sighed. âThat explains a lot. But how do you know all this? Did you help them remodel?â
He waggled his head. âNot exactly. I own the building now, and I hired one of Maxâs construction crews, who were in between projects, to remodel.â
âYou own the building,â I said dryly. âLike own it, own it?â
He nodded, seemingly nervous at my response.
I pinched the bridge of my nose. âWhy would you buy this crap building?â
He looked around. âIt had good bones and was in a solid location.â
âBut why this one?â
âYour having lived here was part of it. And I hate it when owners let properties get run-down. Iâve also been looking for something my dad can move into. Iâd thought to buy a Victorian like Maxâs, but then I saw this place and figured it would do. I made an offer on the building as soon as you moved into my place.â He looked out the window to the scaffolding. âWe closed within a week and have been working on it ever since. Still waiting on the elevator installation and a couple other items.â
âAn elevator?â I threw my hands up. âJackson, how can you afford a freaking building?â
âIâve explained this. Iâve been lucky in business.â
âThis isnât luck. You bought an entire building on a whim. The cost of remodeling as fast as you did⦠That must have cost a fortune too.â
Iâd never had to point out my net worth. Most peopleâusually the wrong onesâalready knew, the sneaky bastards. After the first billion, I stopped paying much attention. Anything above that seemed ridiculous, so I left it to my accountant and Max to oversee things.
The point being, I understood Eliseâs reaction. Iâd have the same one if I were in her shoes. But I didnât want any secrets with her. âIâm not the richest man alive, but as of the last time I checked, I have about eleven billion in assets.â
She stopped talking and her jaw dropped. She stood like that for a solid thirty seconds, and I began to worry. âElise?â
âIâm sorry, I thought you said you have eleven billion dollars.â She laughed nervously. âYou must have meant millionâeleven million, right? Though thatâs still a lot.â
Shit. âYou heard correctly. Is that a problem?â
She blinked rapidly and started to pace, smacking her feet on the new hardwood. âIs that a problem?â Her voice had turned maniacal. âAre you kidding me, Jack? You live in a small apartment in your best friendâs Victorian. How can you have that much money? Youâre not spending it.â
âI spend it on new businesses.â I glanced around. âAnd on real estate, as you can see. I like living in Maxâs Victorian. He has good taste, and Iâm nothing if not practical.â
She stopped her pacing, her expression pleading. âJackson, please tell me you arenât a billionaire cash-hoarding asshole?â
Okay, this was a first. Usually, whomever I dated wanted me to take them to Lake Como on Maxâs private jet, because they knew enough about me and Max to know I could afford it. âItâs obnoxious, which is why I donât talk about money. I try not to think about it. But donât forget, money can make positive change too. I have an entire foundation that gives an astronomical amount of cash to charities and supports thousands of scholarships each year. Itâs put to good use.â
She grabbed her head, eyes wide. âI donât even know how someone becomes this rich. Are you some kind of genius?â
âUh⦠No?â
âYouâre lying! I can see it in your eyes!â
I stepped forward and reached for her hands, pulling them down. âIâve been able to give billions to programs that help people, and thatâs the best part about being rich.â
âPlease donât mention the b-word. Letâs just call it the m-word.â
âMillions?â
âYes, that. Itâs a lot, but I can wrap my head around it.â
âDonât you want to fly on my private jet to the Bahamas?â I teased. âMy exes found that to be the biggest perk to dating me.â
âI think weâve established Iâm not like your exes. And what do you mean, private jet? Do you have one?â
âNo.â
âThen why would you suggest it?â
âMax owns one, so we share. It might be fun to go on a trip somewhere exotic with Sophia and Max.â
She breathed in and let it out slowly, as though to calm herself. âSo youâre going to let Max use his own jet, and you want to take a couples trip on it? Does this sound the least bit normal?â
I glanced up. âSuppose not. Wasnât normal for me either in the beginning, but it is now. As for letting Max use his jet, what can I say? Iâm generous like that.â
Her mouth twisted, but I detected a smile. âItâs a good thing youâre cute and wear sweatpants and arenât fussy. I have no use for fussy, rich boyfriends.â
I pulled her to me. It was the first time Iâd had her in my arms since she got here, and it made everything better, even telling her the dirty truth about my wealth. âI never understood how Max and his family accumulated so much money. Then I built my own fortune. Now I understand that rich people hold their money in assets instead of houses filled with cash. It comes and goes if youâre not good at managing it. So far, Iâve been pretty good.â
âPretty good?â She waved her hand around. âWhat am I supposed to do with this?â
Her question was facetious, but I answered honestly. âI brought you here to ask if youâd consider moving in.â
âTo my old studio apartment?â
âIf you wish. Or you could skip the studio and move a few floors upstairs into one of the three-bedrooms with me. Itâs more spacious. Eventually, Iâll get my dad into the building too, where I can keep an eye on him.â
She smiled softly, and her shoulders relaxed. âYouâre a good son, Jack.â
âAnd a good boyfriend?â
She bit her lip, and the tension behind her eyes worried me. âA wonderful boyfriend. But I canât move in here. I need my own accomplishments.â She laughed sardonically. âSadly, mine consist of paying my own rent, but itâs an important rite of passage. Does that make sense?â
I gave her a small smile. âIt does, and I understand.â
âDo you still want to date even if I move out to get my life together?â
I made a disgruntled sound. âIâm not happy about it, but if itâs what you need, I can deal. And of course I want to date you. I said Iâd wait as long as it takes.â
She leaned up and kissed me on the mouth and then wiggled her nose. âI think I can still smell curry. Wouldnât the renovations have removed the smell?â
âOh, that. I paid to move the tenants and their things out during construction. No one who cooks curry that good should live in the dump this place used to be. The family came back to a better apartment, but I kept the rent the same. Your old neighbor must be making dinner.â
She reached up and cupped my cheek. âWhat am I going to do with you, Jackson? Who even does this?â
âA reluctant billionaire?â
She laughed and squeezed my waist, pressing her body to mine. âI guess I can live with that.â