Two weeks later
âReady?â I squeeze Bonnieâs hand tightly.
She smiles, failing to hide the worry etched in her beautiful face.
The London Marathon is tomorrow; she needs to do this first, so she can concentrate on the race.
He opens the door before I can ring the bell. He must have been listening on the other side.
âDad,â Bonnie says breathlessly beside me.
âMr. Casey.â I stare at the man Iâve been obsessing about for weeks. He looks older than his seventy years. Maybe a guilty conscience does that.
Heâs a free man until his court case. With no other criminal record, heâll get a suspended sentence. Likely community service.
Months ago, I would have fought the verdict tooth and nail.
Now, Iâm relieved.
âFrank,â he says nervously, refusing to look me in the eye. âCall me Frank. Please come in.â
I can tell by his tone he doesnât mean it. My company built this flat, but Iâm not welcome here.
Bonnie warned me he likely wouldnât apologise. Her mum said he doesnât want to see me.
Well, thatâs bloody tough. I want Bonnie to repair her relationship with this man. Heâll just have to tolerate me.
We walk in behind him to the kitchen, gripping Bonnieâs hand.
I take a moment to inspect the interior as I always do in one of my flats. Itâs one of the social housing flats. Itâs not as shiny as the luxury high tech ones but itâs a damn sight nicer than the old grey council blocks.
âTea,â he mumbles. âWhiskey?â
âTea.â I clear my throat. âWeâre on my bike tonight.â
âTea!â Bonnie cries in a high pitch.
âI have biscuits.â Frank Casey shuffles around the kitchen, ignoring the elephant in the room.
âDad,â Bonnie croaks, on the verge of tears. âIâve missed you. Can I have a hug?â
He rummages for bloody biscuits and for a second I think the fucker is going to ignore her.
Iâm about to say something when he stops and turns, staring at the floor.
Her soft hand tightens in mine then she releases me and tentatively moves towards her dad.
Donât break her heart, you shit, I warn him with my eyes.
Perhaps heâs not the soulless sap I thought, because tears brim his eyes when he gives his daughter a quick, awkward hug.
My heart constricts.
Iâll do anything for her. Including forgive this man. Forgive a man whoâs too proud to say sorry. That, and let him off with half a million pounds. And buy back his house.
This man is my fatherâs killer and my loverâs father. It sounds like a sick poem.
Okay, so he didnât twist the knife directly . . . but he let my father die.
I can be the bigger man.
âFrank, Iâd like to put the past behind us.â
For the first time, he meets my gaze head-on, suspicion evident in his eyes. âThereâs a court case coming up. If coming here is your way of intimidating me, son, well Iââ
âItâs not,â I cut in firmly. âEventually Iâll ask you for your daughterâs hand in marriage and Iâll need your blessing.â
Bonnie splutters beside me. âW-What?â
I shrug and give her a wink. âIâm a traditional guy.â
âOh my God, Jack.â She laughs nervously.
I squeeze her hand. We can talk about our future later.
I havenât told Bonnie yet about buying her fatherâs house. Sheâs still continually apologising, and I donât want her to feel as if she owes me. And I especially donât want her to feel like Iâm buying her love. Iâll wait until the dust settles.
âSo, Frank, how about that tea?â
He nods and turns his back to open the cupboard.
But not before I see something flash between father and daughter.
Hope.
One day later
Although Iâve done everything right, I feel sick with nerves.
I lubed my nipples (and Jackâs too). Iâm stuffed with protein. And Iâve found the perfect ass to pound the pavement behind.
The London Marathon starts off conveniently close to Jackâs house in Greenwich. Thousands of us shuffle from leg to leg, waiting for our signal.
What an atmosphere.
The owner of the perfect ass turns to wink at me.
The horn blasts for our section.
The two lovely mounds of muscle flex as their owner falls into a rhythm and I follow in quick succession.
My strategy must have been published in Runners Weekly. All eyes are on the target.
I chose his running shorts. After declining my first request for mankini bottoms, he conceded to tight-fitting Lycra shorts, which probably means Jackâs dick will make front page news during marathon coverage.
That delectable derrière will be mine tonight.
Iâm the luckiest girl in the world.
So, 26.2 miles of this . . . easy.
Two weeks later
Itâs funny how even the biggest things die down and become yesterdayâs chip paper.
Besides Darren constantly nagging me to ask Jack about upping the budget before I orgasm, nobody seems to be that bothered about us anymore.
Nisha said she did me a favour by sleeping with Darren because thereâs more gossip about that than Jack and me.
Thereâs only one person in the company it bothers. Max hates that Jack and I are a couple. But whatâs good for the goose is good for the gander. He started it. Heâll never say it of course, but his passive aggressive comments are moving more towards the aggressive end of the scale.
Which is why what Iâm about to do feels all the sweeter.
I step in line with Max as we walk out of the Monday morning meeting.
His cold gaze meets mine. âI have one minute, Bonnie. Is this urgent?â
âThatâs fine,â I say casually, keeping up with him. âShall I pop in an invite in your calendar about handover?â
âWhat?â he snaps. âHandover for what?â
âHandover for me leaving, Max.â I look at him innocently.
He stops in his tracks. Finally, I have his full attention. âWhat are you going on about?â
I feign confusion. âDid the partners not tell you?â
His eyes sharpen. âTell me what?â
My mouth forms an âOâ and my hand comes up to my throat. âOh dear! Iâm leaving in three days. I handed in my notice weeks ago. I canât believe the partners didnât tell you.â
Actually, I can. I bet on it.
He freezes. Not breathing. Not blinking.
His face turns a deathly white. His mouth gapes and I resist the urge to pop something in it, like my pen.
âWhat the fuck, Bonnie?â he hisses and some spit lands on my cheek. âAre you serious? This is ridiculous. No.â He shakes his head violently. âYouâre under an obligation to tell me. You canât just up and leave without notice. This is negligence!â
âMax.â I smile sweetly. âDidnât you hear me? I did give notice. I told the two most senior people in the company. Itâs their responsibility to disseminate important information and put in place contingency plans. Itâs not my problem if Iâm not important enough to talk about in the boysâ club.â
I curse myself for the unprofessional slip. Boysâ club slid off my tongue before I could stop it. Still, the look on his face is worth it.
âIâm not surprised Bradshaw and Brown didnât inform you,â I continue, tipping my chin up. âNot because theyâre trying to screw you over but because they donât value my worth. I was always hidden under you. But that,â I say simply, âis not my problem.â
Max looks like he might vomit. âBut the presentation,â he whispers hoarsely.
I didnât realise how much Max needed me until I handed in my notice. Heâs only figured it out right this minute.
I do the majority of the work and Max takes the credit. He has a presentation for our second milestone in a few daysâ time and heâs royally screwed.
Not my problem.
As Jack said, this is business.
If Bradshaw Brown loses the account because I leave, then itâs their fault for being short-sighted.
Iâve done knowledge transfer for Nisha and Steve. I wasnât going to leave them in the lurch.
âWhat the fuck, Bonnie?â Max rarely curses at work. He puffs air into his reddening cheeks. It pleases me that itâs an unattractive look on him. âYou bang a billionaire and think you can skip off into the sunset? How could you not tell me this?â
I smile apologetically. âWell, this is quite the oversight, do forgive me. Especially since youâve always been upfront with me throughout our relationship.â
He narrows his eyes suspiciously.
I donât feel the need to tell him I know about his cheating on me. Itâll drive him crazier trying to figure out if I do.
Revenge really is best served cold.
No tantrums. No drama. Just getting back at Max in the most passive-aggressive way I can find.
âDonât worry, Max,â I say gently, adopting my most concerned expression. âJack knows youâre his biggest fan. Iâm sure youâll convince him to extend the deadline. I can ask him to sign his biography for you if you like?â
His nostrils flare to full capacity as he pulls in so much breath Iâm surprised if thereâs any oxygen left for the rest of us.
I try not to grin as I turn and saunter away.
You can definitely read a man by his nostrils.
Three months later
Jack slows to a halt outside the Archie Knight Boxing Centre.
He might own half the London skyline, but this small community centre tucked away beside the Motor Works factory is his dream.
Sometimes he coaches here himself.
Iâm only home from Astana for three days.
Weâve managed to make it work. If you asked me at Kateâs wedding whether I would trust Jack Knight to do a long-distance relationship I would have laughed my face off.
Now I trust Jack more than anyone else in the world. And Iâll do everything in my power to make sure he trusts me.
We see each other in person once every three weeks but I always feel like heâs with me. Heâs my biggest champion.
I miss him shitloads though. I miss my clit sucker too, but I canât tell Jack. I didnât have the guts to take it to Astana in case airport security searched my bag.
Heâs right, he does have a lot of settings but come on, Jackâs lips donât vibrate.
Itâs worth sacrificing the clit sucker for a few months because working with Lauren Torres has been more than I could imagine.
Iâve never felt so alive.
For so long I let my dream be stifled into something smaller. Something mediocre. I was blind to how cynical Iâd become working under Max.
All I wanted was to be the best architect I could . . . under Max.
But thatâs not my dream. Thatâs Maxâs dream, with him standing at the top of the hierarchy.
One day, I want to be a Lauren Torres.
âReady to visit your dad, darlinâ?â Jack asks.
I nod. Dad got a suspended sentence for two years with community service.
Dad lives only a few streets over in the new social housing as part of Jackâs regeneration project. I still love to hear from Jack and Nisha about whatâs happening on the project.
Dad greets us with a smile. Itâs more genuine than the last visit.
âFrank,â Jack jumps off the motorcycle to shake his hand.
Someday soon Jack will get his apology.
But for now, weâll just accept . . . progress.
Roughly one and a half years later
âHappy thirtieth, darlinâ.â
We are dancing in the garden of our Greenwich home with fifty of our closest friends.
âThank you, Jack.â She smiles up at me, eyes shining and emotion wells in my chest.
My girlfriend is making a name for herself. Sheâs working her way up in Lauren Torresâs company. Now she adorns more heritage architecture articles than gossip rags exposing so-called threesomes between us and Michelle Allard.
Next week we are attending the UNESCO Cultural Heritage Conservation Awards and Bonnie and her team have been nominated.
The body-hugging brown leather dress compliments her slender athletic figure perfectly. Her blond hair is swept up in a French braid. Wisps of hair escape, framing her jawline. My dadâs chain adorned with crystals clings to her collarbone.
My sexy Viking.
Her hips thrust in a steady sensual rhythm against mine and she has a gleam in her eye.
Blood flows south.
Fuck. Nowâs not the time for my dick to pay homage to his favourite person.
I shoot her a warning look.
I have something much more important to do.
âYou havenât got your present from Lucy yet.â
âNo.â She groans. âI donât want any more dead birds.â
I chuckle. âI hope youâll like this more than a dead bird.â
I nod over to the DJ.
The music lowers and my stomach squeezes tight.
Everyone goes quiet. Most of our close friends know what Iâm about to do.
Poppy walks in with Lucy beside her, both delighted at being the centre of attention.
I eyeball Lucy. Donât fuck this up for me.
Bonnie looks at me in confusion.
She scans the garden then turns back to me and asks in a lowered tone, âWhatâs going on, Jack? Is there something wrong with the sound system?â
Thereâs nothing wrong with the sound system, but my fucking heart might give in. This is definitely one of the most nerve-wracking things a bloke has to do. Or a gal.
âNo, Bonnie, everythingâs fine.â
With clammy hands, I untie the ribbon around Lucyâs neck as she gives me a lick. Attached is a small box.
Dannyâs wife, Charlie smiles at me encouragingly. They finally got married a few months ago.
Bonnieâs hands go to her mouth when I drop to one knee. She looks like she is about to scream but no sound comes out.
For the first time in my life, I donât know if Iâll be able to get my words out. Itâs a risk doing it in front of everyone.
I look over at her dad and he nods. Iâve already asked him.
âBonnie, Iâve waited forty years for this. Thereâs a lot Iâve been blessed with in my life. I was obsessed with building the most prestigious hotels, the tallest office blocks, the most luxurious apartments.â I pause to take a breath. âThe truth is all I need is you. So long as youâre with me, Iâd happily leave it all and work on a construction site. You are, and always will be, the love of my life. Will you marry me?â
She stares at me with wide eyes. Her lips part but she remains quiet.
Bonnie? Donât leave me hanging.
âYes!â she squeals, flinging her arms around me. âOf course, I will.â
The day after the proposal
The lounge room door bangs open so loudly I scream.
âJa-ack?â I stammer, his name barely off my lips as a naked Jack barrels through the lounge pushing me backwards until he has my back pressed against the wall.
Everything about him is erect. He towers over me standing to his full height with his cock pushed against my stomach.
His piercing brown eyes blaze down at me as his jaw works. His hair is dishevelled, and his bare chest is glistening with sweat.
He looks unhinged. What the hell is wrong with him?
âAre you okay, Jack?â
He doesnât answer. He grabs my wrists and forces my arms against the wall.
âThereâs my little mate,â he growls. His teeth come down to graze the delicate skin on my neck.
His little mate?
Doesnât he mean fiancée?
His teeth continue to pull at my neck as his hands hold mine above my head. Itâs like heâs swallowed a gallon of testosterone and Jackâs levels were already through the roof.
I yelp a little.
âI can smell your arousal a mile off.â
Oh, my God.
âYouâve been reading my books,â I gasp. âWhich one?â
âDid I give you permission to speak?â His eyes darken in a predatory smirk. âThe one hiding under your side of the bed.â
Oh.
A little shiver escapes down my spine.
Iâll never survive that epilogue.
The Novel will be updated first on this website. Come back and continue reading tomorrow, everyone!