The Villain: A Billionaire Romance: Chapter 22
The Villain: A Billionaire Romance (Boston Belles Book 2)
âSir, you have a visitor.â
I didnât look up from the screen, still typing out a message to my legal team regarding Green Living.
âDo you have eyes, Serena?â
âSophia,â she corrected mildly as though the mistake was her fault. âI do, sir.â
âThen I suggest you make use of them and look at my planner. It is wide open for a reason. I do not accept visitors at this time.â
She was still standing on my threshold, wondering how to approach her new boss. At times, I was certain the definition of hell was new personal assistants going through orientation. Sophia needed to be spoon-fed everything, and her only saving grace was that, unlike Ms. Brandt, she wasnât a world-class bitch who looked like a half-melted Barbie
âItâs your wife.â She physically cringed, bracing herself for a verbal whipping.
I resisted the urge to look up from my laptop and steal a glance at Flower Girl through the glass wall.
To tell Sophia to let her in.
Nothing good was going to come out of this.
She was probably here to give me the third degree about threatening her ex-husband at gunpoint. Or maybe she finally realized how much of a fuckup I am and decided to help Andrew with his lawsuit. To testify.
My wife knew my secret.
Sam had told me about her little stint at Andrew Arrowsmithâs place as soon as he walked out my enemyâs door. I knew Persephone had seen the videos.
She had no right.
No right to butt into my business. No right to uncover what I wanted to keep a secret. No right to peel off the layers Iâd refused to shed when she tried the nice way.
âTurn her away,â I ordered, my eyes still on my monitor.
âIâm afraid she canât and wonât do that. Also, donât take that tone with her. She is your assistant, not your servant.â I heard a throaty, sweet voice from the doorway. This time, I did look up.
Flower Girl stood at the doorway. She wore a sunny dress and a stern look. I wanted to take both of them off her.
âYouâve fired Ms. Brandt.â She closed the door on Sophia, stepping into my office. âWhy?â
âThatâs not any of your business.â I closed the laptop.
âTry again.â She crossed her arms over her chest.
âBecause you hated her,â I spat out, disgusted with myself.
She smiled.
I died a little inside.
Oh, how the mighty have fallen.
I stood, gathering the paperwork on my desk to keep my traitorous eyes from wandering her way. Watching my wife was akin to watching the sun. The euphoric, blinding notion you were both immortal and pathetically human grabbing you by the throat.
âI suppose youâre here because your ex-husband has dumped you again. Am I the consolation prize?â I stuffed my paperwork into my briefcase, itching to go somewhereâanywhereâthat was far away from this woman.
The pressure signaling an impending attack pressed against my sternum. Every time she walked into the room, I had to regain my control.
âYou knew he was in town?â Her peacock blue eyes followed me intently.
âYour security cameras,â I pointed out, in case she planned on accusing me of slapping her with more private investigators.
She stalked in my direction.
âI threw him out the night he showed up. Youâd have known that if youâd bothered to answer any of my calls or actually go through the pain of giving me the time of the day when I tried to visit you at your house.â
Your house.
Of course it was my house.
Why would it be ours? Iâd plucked her out of the clinical apartment Iâd put her in, stuck her in one of the guest rooms, and expected her toâ¦what? Form any sort of attachment to the place?
âWould you like a prize for remaining faithful?â I arched an eyebrow. She stopped right in front of me. Her scent was everywhere in the room, drowning my senses, and I wanted to grab her by the shoulders and shake her. Kick her out, kiss her, fuck her, yell at her. All these possibilities exhibited both emotion and complete lack of control.
âSam told you, didnât he?â She tilted her head, examining me. She meant Andrew Arrowsmithâs laptop. The tapes she must have watched.
âHe is on my payroll.â
âSo is the rest of the city.â
âYou included, so do yourself a favor and stop sniffing around my business before I cut you off.â
âWe both know Iâm not here for the money. Now, I want to talk about what Iâve learned.â
She treaded carefully into the conversation.
âNo,â I said flatly. âYou had no right.â
âHad no right?â She laughed sadly. âIâm your wife, Kill. Whether you accept it or not. I wanted to help you. Thatâs why I decided to work for Andrew in the first place. To extract information. To get a glimpse into his most intimate place. I knew there was too much riding on this operation, and that youâd try to stop me because youâre too righteous to accept you needed my help.â
âYour job is not to save me.â
âWhy?â She parked a hand on her waist. âWhy isnât it my job to save you? Iâve lost count of the times youâve saved me. You saved me from Byrne and Kaminski, from a horse, from a poisonous flower, from my ex-husband. The list goes on and on. Why is it okay for you to give up your entire existence for the world, to put your fatherâs needs before yours, to walk through fire for the people you care about, but I canât do you this one solid?â
âBecause you didnât accomplish anything!â I boomed in her face, baring my teeth. âYou pretty little idiot, the videos you found wonât hold up in court. They are not legal evidence. Theyâre stolen, and probably fuzzy, and donât capture his face. Youâve worked for nothing.â
The frustration of knowing sheâd seen me at my worst, and for no good reason at all, maddened me. I grabbed my wifeâs arms. âYour little stunt did nothing more than put another ten-foot dent in our marriage, which, by the way, was the worst mistake of my life.â
The words flew out before I could stop them. Iâd heard of people saying things they didnât mean while angry but had never experienced it because, well, I was never angry. This was an unwelcome, humanizing first. My wifeâs blue eyes glittered with rage. I wanted to apologize but knew that the entire floor was watching through my glass office walls, and that an apology would achieve nothing.
We were done.
I was faulty. Broken beyond repair, and she wasnât going to stick around long enough to try to fix me.
âYou donât know what I found out,â she said quietly.
âI donât fucking care!â
In my periphery, I could see Hunter marching from his office to mine. He waved away the curious audience forming outside my door, shooting me a pull it together look.
Iâd officially hit rock bottom. Nothing said you were a world-class loser more than Hunter goddamn Fitzpatrick telling you to chill.
I turned my attention back to Persephone, lowering my voice but still feeling that undeniable shake. âNothing you found on Andrewâs laptop can help me win this case. The only thing you did was give him more ammo on me. Now he is probably telling people I sent my wife to sniff around his work and made her perform two jobs to try to dig up some dirt about him. Not only did you not help me, but you also put yourself at risk, and Iâ¦â
Thatâs where I stopped. And what?
Persephone slanted one eyebrow up, studying me with eyes so hungry, if I had a heart, it would break for her. She clearly wanted me to care.
âAnd you what, hubs?â she asked softly. âWhat would have happened had Andrew done something to me?â
A violent shudder ran through me.
The waterboarding.
The burns.
The beatings.
Getting locked in the confession booth for hours at a time in a dark church with only my demons to keep me company.
Coming back to him, asking him for more. To atone for my fatherâs sins. To grieve our friendship. To numb my feelings.
And just like that, I remembered who I was.
Who Andrew Arrowsmith had made me.
Who my fatherâmy whole familyâexpected me to be.
A grim smirk slashed my face like a wound. I leaned down, my lips brushing my wifeâs ear, my hot breath fanning her pale hair.
âAnd I wish heâd finished the job, Flower Girl, so I could finally go ahead and marry someone in my own league. You were a mistake. A foolish, horny mistake. Divorce couldnât come fast enough.â
I felt, rather than saw her take a step back. That was when I realized Iâd closed my eyes like a pathetic moron, inhaling her.
With her head tilted up and her spine stiff, she pulled a stack of papers from her bag and slammed it against my chest.
âIn that case, congratulations. Youâve worked really hard to show me Andrew turned you into a heartless monster. Consider yourself free from this marriage. Hereâs your parting gift from me. A Child Protective Service report deeming Andrew a dangerous, unfit father. Thought it might be of interest to you, since heâs lost custody of his children, and will be losing his job next.â
She took a ragged breath that shook her entire tiny body.
âI love you, Cillian Fitzpatrick. Iâve always loved you. From the moment we first met at the charity ball when I spotted you across the room. You were a god among mortals. Vital yet dead. And when you looked at meâwhen you looked past meâI saw my whole future in your eyes. I knew you were rich, and handsome, and powerful. Yet the only thing I truly ever wanted from you, Kill, was you. To peel off the layers, shed them with my fingernails, and have you, and love you, and save you. I thought I could change you. And I tried. I really did. But I cannot change someone who doesnât want to change. I love you, but I love me, too. And I deserve more than youâve given me. More than you are willing to part ways with. So Iâm saving you this one time, for all the times you saved me, and saying goodbye.â
She rose to her tiptoes and pressed a cold, impersonal kiss on my lips, her eyelashes brushing against my nose.
âWeâve always been so bad at respecting each otherâs boundaries. We broke our contract again and again and again. If you have a shred of sympathy for me in that cold heart of yours, donât contact me anymore. No matter what happens, no matter how much you want to tell me something, leave me alone. I need time to digest, to lick my wounds, to move on. Donât show up at my sisterâs house, or at my workplace, or anywhere I might be. Let me get over you. My heart canât take another blow.â
She turned around and walked away.
Leaving me to stand with my get-out-of-jail monopoly card, the perfect evidence against Andrew Arrowsmith, and my heart in my throat.
It beat, loud and fast.
Alive.
Angry.
And full of emotions.
Rather than extinguishing the five hundred fires wreaking havoc in my life, I opted to take the car, drive to the closest liquor store, stock up on the cheapest, most punishing brand of vodkaâthe type certain to give me a hangover from hellâand drive to the ranch.
I got drunk with my horses (I did all the drinking; they were there to watch me through the half doors of their stalls), with my phone turned off. Flower Girl was finally done with me. Mission accomplished. Now when I had Andrewâs downfall in my back pocket, when I knew heâd drop the lawsuit thanks to her, all I wanted to do was go down in flames right along with him.
I took a swig from the vodka, slouching against the wall in the barn, surrounded by horse shit.
I closed my eyes. A snippet of a few weeks ago played behind my eyelids.
Of Persephone pulling me to the laundry roomâI had no idea where that room was, exactly, before that momentâhopping on a working washing machine, spreading her thighs for me, and moaning my name as I fucked her hard.
I opened my eyes, rubbing at them. It was dark outside. I mustâve passed out a few hours ago and blacked out.
Excellent. A few more months of this, and I should be good to go back into my previous state of numbness.
Yellow headlights shimmered from outside the open door of the barn. Tires crunched hay outside. Someone was coming.
I let go of the empty vodka bottle, watching as it rolled all the way to Hamiltonâs stall. The asshole almost cost me a wife. Fucker.
The intruder killed the engine, flung the driverâs door open, and stepped out, the crisp sound of leaves under their boots grating on my nerves.
âKill? Are you there?â Hunterâs baritone demanded. Since when did my brother turn into an authoritative, respectable figure?
âNo,â I growled, knowing he was going to come in anyway.
He did just that, halting at the door to the barn with his hands on his hips.
âSailor had the baby. I have a daughter.â
I expected to feel the relief of him not having a son, a true heir, someone to take over Royal Pipelines, but all I felt was emptiness. I knew normal people would be happy for their brother. I wasnât normal.
âCongratulations,â I said monotonously. âAre the mother and daughter healthy?â
âVery.â
âGood. I opened a trust fund in your childâs honor. Three grand a month until college.â
âThanks, but thatâs not why Iâm here.â He took a step inside, closing the door behind him. âSam found out Andrew put Paxton Veitch on the plane back to Boston. Thatâs how he got here. Arrowsmith was obviously trying to stir shit.â
Paxton was no longer a threat.
He was probably never a threat.
The only person standing in my way to having Persephone Penrose was me, and I did a hell of a job at keeping us apart.
I unscrewed another bottle of vodka. My bladder was screaming at me to stop drinking, but my brain urged me to keep going until the blissful numbness was restored.
âI know,â I drawled. âI got it out of Paxton myself. Apparently, Iâm the only son of a bitch around qualified to get shit done.â
âDoubt it.â Hunter sighed.
âWhy?â
âBecause youâre currently trying to loosen the bottom of a liquor bottle.â
My brother grabbed the vodka from my hand, turning it upside down. I took the opportunity to wobble to my feet. I turned around and took a piss. Strictly speaking, pissing in my horse stable was vandalizing my own property. Then again, punishing myself seemed like a good idea.
I turned back around. Ceann beag handed me the bottle silently. I glared at him. At all six versions of him.
âI took care of the Arrowsmith problem,â I said blandly. âWell, my wife did.â
âThatâs not why Iâm here, either.â
âWhy are you here?â I squinted. âGo be with your family.â
Hunter had a family of his own. A real family, shaped and molded by him and his wife. His wasnât rotten from the inside, built on the ruins of social standing, old money, and greed.
âI am with my family.â He grabbed the bottle in my hand, throwing it aside with a frown. âWith the family who needs me right now. And Iâd very much like to go back to the one Iâve just created, so would you tell me what the fuck is going on with you?â
I zigzagged to the door, flung it open, and stepped out of the barn. Hunter grunted, following me. It wasnât lost on me that the tables had turned. I was the shitshow brother now, and he was the responsible family man.
âShe saved my ass,â I said as my brother tracked me down the dirt path back to the main cabin. âTutoring that assholeâs kids. Digging up dirt on him. She did it for me. All this time, I thought she was just getting back at me for being cruel to her.â
âYou cursed,â he noted.
No fucking shit, Sherlock.
And it felt too good to fucking stop, dammit.
Since Touretteâs syndrome was known as âthat cursing disorder,â Iâd made it a point to never utter a swear word. There was no better way to distance myself from the stigma. But profanity was never my problem. Iâd never cursed during my attacks.
At that moment, though, I had an acute case of not giving a fuck.
Not giving a fuck if people found out.
Not giving a fuck if cursing wasnât proper or well-mannered.
Not noble enough for the heir of Royal Pipelines.
âPersyâs in love with you,â he grumbled, still following me.
âSheâs in love with the idea of me.â Many women were. âWhat it comes down to is this, ceann beag. She is, and always will be, a woman Iâd bought like a sack of potatoes. She came with a price tag, like all the women before her. And if you can buy it, you can replace it. Iâll find someone else. And Persephone? Sheâll marry again, too.â
Hunter stopped. I soldiered on, past the cabin, toward my car. I needed to get over this little self-pity party, drive back to the office, and start putting things in motion.
Suddenly, I felt something heavy and damp plastered to my back. I turned around. My brother had thrown manure on me.
âWhat the fââ
âYou asswipe!â He crouched down, grabbing another ball of manure in the dark. Iâd never fought with my younger brother. And weâd definitely never been physical. There was nothing brotherly about us, other than the title.
He knew it.
I knew it.
Hunter aimedâand caughtâmy shoulder.
âStop it,â I growled, narrowing my eyes at him.
He ignored me, kneeling to grab more manure. A childish zing of vengeance sparked inside me. I lowered myself to grab as much manure as I could find.
âShe was never in love with your persona, assface.â Hunter swung his arm backward, like a baseball player, and caught me in the chest. I aimed my ball of shit to his face, striking a good portion of his neck and chin.
Now we were both in deep shit. Literally.
âStalin had a more loveable character, you moron. She was always stupidlyâand may I add unreasonablyâin love with your ass!â
He threw another ball at me.
I threw one back at him.
âShe owed a lot of money,â I yelled back. âI paid her debt. Thatâs why she married me.â
âI know!â Hunter laughed hysterically, deserting the manure and pouncing on me. He shoved me to the ground, twisting the lapels of my blazer as he pinned me down. âI know, because after the night Persy came to accept your offer in the blizzard, I knocked on her door. I knew I had to make it right. Not for her, or for you, but for my wife. I didnât want anything to upset Sailor so early in the pregnancy. Persy told me about her debt. I offered to pay it in full and wrote a check right in front of her.â
I blinked at him, confused and disappointed with myself for wanting to hear the rest, blood thundering through my head.
âYou wrote a check?â I growled. âDoesnât your generation Venmo?â
He lowered his head to mine, his eyes burning with rage. âShe tore the bitch up in front of my face and told me she was marrying your sorry ass. She wanted to marry you! Stipulations and assholery included. Now my question is thisâhow did you manage to lose her? How did you let the only girl youâve ever loved justâ¦go?â
âI donâtââ
âOf course you do!â He smashed my head against the dirt. I twisted, grabbing him by the shirt and rolling him over, switching our positions so I was on top of him now.
âYou fool, anyone with a pair of working eyes could see youâre crazy about her. You couldnât look Persephone in the eye like a six-year-old for as long as youâve known her. You couldnât bring yourself to attend her goddamn wedding. Youâve had it bad for her from the moment you saw her. You let her go because of your stupid insecurities. Because you are so convinced youâre Hades, doomed, dark, and unredeemable, you havenât even bothered to read the myth all the way.â
He reached to wrap his fingers around my throat, pressing, draining the oxygen out of me.
âPersephone!â He clasped harder.
âLoved!â He shook me by the neck.
âHades!â
âI donât l-l-l-love her.â I heaved, plummeting into his face with my fists. Stuttering. Losing it.
Hunter smiled through the pain.
âSay it louder,â he whispered.
âI donât lo-lo-lo dammit! Love her!â I punched him again. This time his jawline.
âLouder.â
âAre you an idiot?â I didnât know why I asked this question. I was already well aware my brother possessed the intelligence of a turkey. A cum-stuffed one, for that matter. âI donât love my wife.â
He punched me back, laughing. We rolled on the ground, hitting each other, yanking hair, poking eyes, cursing, and grunting like two cavemen.
Like two brothers.
I kept saying I didnât love her, and Hunter kept cackling as if that was the funniest thing heâd ever heard.
I didnât know how much time had passed, but when we were done, we both looked and smelled like horse shit.
Panting and sweating, we were covered in mud and manure head-to-toe.
Hunter was the first to stand and stomp back to his car.
âApologize,â I demanded to his retreating back. He waved me off.
âSiblings donât apologize. They just start acting nice to each other. Now, you ainât driving anywhere after polishing off a bottle of vodka. Get your ass in my car. Iâm throwing you in the shower and taking you to see your niece.â
I opened my mouth to say something. Even though he couldnât see me, he still raised his palm in warning.
âSave it, bro. I donât care. And if youâre worried about seeing your estranged wife at the hospital, donât. By the time we get there, sheâll be at work. You didnât even ask what my daughterâs name was.â He threw the driverâs door to his Audi open.
âWhat is it?â
Please donât let it be Grinder or Nature Valley.
The smile that broke on his face threatened to crack it in two.
âRooney.â