The Villain: A Billionaire Romance: Chapter 24
The Villain: A Billionaire Romance (Boston Belles Book 2)
âThis came in the mail for you.â Belle tossed a thick envelope onto the kitchenette table as she made her way to the shower, stretching her arms.
It was seven in the morning. I was freshly showered, dressed, and ready for work. I hadnât been able to sleep last night, or the night before it.
Ever since Iâd left Cillian, I could barely function, but I knew I had to let him go.
For him.
For me.
âDonât forget, we promised to visit Sailor at five. Let me know if you want me to pick you up from work.â Belle proceeded into the bathroom after a long night of work. Goes without saying, I left the Telsa back at the apartment Kill had given me.
Grabbing the envelope, I frowned.
I flipped it back and forth before tearing the thing open.
My soul-purchasing contract was there, duly signed, notarized, and apostilled.
My heart hammered against my rib cage. I unfolded the contract with shaky fingers. When a note slipped out of it, I recognized my husbandâs long, bold strokes.
My soul is yours.
No terms attached.
Let me know if you have any conditions for keeping it.
I will meet them all.
Cillian
Tears welled up in my eyes.
Kill didnât believe in souls. He was giving me something that was of no value to him. As much as I wanted to believe it, I knew I shouldnât. Every time I chose optimism over realism in our relationship, I got burned.
Supply and demand.
It wasnât that I didnât believe he had a soul. I didnât question the existence of what heâd offered me. But as I ripped the contract to shreds, disposing it in the garbage can, I began to follow the footprints of Cillianâs mind.
He knew Sailor had given birth to Rooney.
Figured the sword was close to his neck, that it was only a matter of time until Hunter produced male heirs.
Wanted me back in his house.
Back, period.
To use.
To get his rocks off.
To impregnate and discard.
I wasnât falling into his cobweb. He saved me. I saved him. As far as I was concerned, weâd settled the score.
It was time we both moved on.
I turned around, grabbed my bag, and hurried out the door to the bike Iâd parked outside the building.
Nothing of his was mine anymore.
The next day, I received a text message from my husband first thing in the morning.
I had to rub my eyes twice to make sure I wasnât hallucinating. He never texted me. At least, he never initiated the texts. I proceeded with caution, wondering what heâd sent me.
It was a picture of a cloud floating in a clear sky.
Cillian: Your aunt paid me a visit. She told me I was a cunt. I did not disagree.
Cillian: Have dinner with me.
I snorted out a laugh.
He was bad, but he was trying, and the fact he did made my heart thaw, no matter how badly I knew I needed to quit him.
Belle stretched beside me in bed, letting out a soft snore.
âIs it Kill?â
âYeah.â I pressed the phone to my chest, feeling protective of him even after everything that happened.
âDonât answer.â She shook her head. âHe needs to sweat a little. See that you have a backbone.â
I deleted the message before the urge to answer it won and went about my day.
Six weeks had passed.
Six weeks, thirteen pictures from Cillian of Auntie Tilda in the sky, and a request to meet.
Now with the lawsuit out of the picture, Kill had time to put his heir plan into high gear.
I never answered any of his messages.
It wasnât about punishing my husband; it was about making sure I had my own back. I refused to be owned, even if, initially, I had been bought.
Six weeks after Rooney Fitzpatrick came into this world, I filled out my divorce papers.
I sat at the family lawyerâs office that smelled and bled of the eighties, feeling her eyes on me the entire time as I signed all the paperwork.
âYou sure you wanna do this?â she asked for the thousandth time, letting out a smokerâs cough. She reminded me of Joey from Friends agent, Estelle. âI mean, you wonât hear any complaints from me. Iâm getting my fee, but the Fitzpatricks arenât a bad family to marry into, child.â
âIâm sure.â I signed the last page, pushing it across the desk in her direction. âCan you send it to him, please?â
She shook her head.
âSorry. Your spouse must be served in person. And it has to be by a sheriff, who will then give you proof via return of service.â
A sheriff.
The list of people I knew who would pay good money to watch Cillian being served divorce papers by law enforcement was longer than War and Peace. But I didnât want to cause Kill any more trouble or humiliation.
âIs it really necessary?â
Just this morning, Cillian left me another message with a cloud.
Cillian: Spoke to your aunt (if you tell anyone I conversed with a cloud, I will flat out deny it). She said I should take you on a honeymoon. I bought tickets.
He seemed undeterred. At the same time, I appreciated him giving me my space. He never once showed up on my doorstep or bulldozed into my life like he used to.
âYes,â said the lawyer, bobbing her head like a dashboard dog. âMaybe you should talk to him if youâre so unsure. If youâre going to divorce a man, at least give him the courtesy of expecting it.â
I stood, collecting the papers.
âIâll let him know.â
I had to.
I wasnât going to stay in a loveless marriage.
Even if it was to the love of my life.
âCan I turn on the local news?â Ms. Gwen swooped the remote control from one of the round tables in the teachersâ lounge, pointing it at the television and switching the channel from sports. A couple of the male teachers groaned in protest.
I poked at my microwaved pasta, sitting in the back of the room, trying not to think about how Belle had promised to deliver the divorce papers to Cillian as soon as she woke up today, which should be at about two in the afternoon.
I couldnât go forward with the sheriff thing. I just couldnât imagine putting him through this. The humiliation. The embarrassment. The publicity of all this.
Still, the limbo had to stop. I had to move on.
âWhat are we watching?â Ms. Hazel plopped next to Ms. Gwen and me, popping a salt and vinegar chip into her mouth. âWait, is that a press conference?â
âBreaking news.â Ms. Michelle sounded startled. I kept my head down as they cranked up the volume. I heard the muttering of press people ahead of a conference, and then the intense hushed voices and loud clicks of the cameras when the person who was speaking got onstage. I refused to lift my eyes from the dish I wasnât even eating. I had this thing again where I knew if I made one moveâeven trail my gaze up an inchâthe tears would start falling.
âHey, Pers, whatâs your hot guy doing on the news?â Ms. Michelle chirped.
âBreaking her poor colleaguesâ hearts, thatâs what heâs doing.â Ms. Gwen chuckled. âEmphasis on the word poor. Whatâre you still doing here, Persy? Did you not get the memo youâre loaded?â
âWhy, hello there, honey,â whistled Ms. Regina to the TV screen in a manner I knew Cillian would hate. âYou can ruin my natural resources any day of the week.â
âLadies and gentlemen, thank you so much for coming here today. As I mentioned, this statement will be brief, and, like my temper, short.â
My eyes snapped up from my frozen meal. My throat clogged.
Cillian was standing there. My husbandâat least for nowâin one of his gloriously dark gray suits, dashing silk dark hair, and the hooded expression of a predator on the prowl. Seeing his face again reminded me why Iâd insisted he would never seek me out. It disarmed me completely.
His voice. His presence. His smoky amber eyes.
The cameras clicked enthusiastically. It was bizarre to see the man Iâd spent countless nights with on a television screen, delivering a message to the city of Boston.
Was he announcing our divorce?
Did Belle serve him yet?
âDespite proving to be a great financial resource and revealing strong potential in getting our hands on more oil, Royal Pipelines has decided to stop the Arctic exploration drillings immediately and indefinitely. All the scheduled rigs will be shut down, future plans are shelved, and the current running trials will cease to operate as ofââhe raised his arm, checking his designer watch with a frownââexactly fifteen minutes from now.â
Murmurs and gasps exploded across Royal Pipelinesâ media room. Journalists and reporters shouted questions about Green Living, Andrew Arrowsmith, and the potential clash with Greenpeace, who were rumored to pick up the lawsuit where Arrowsmith left off.
My heart beat so fast I thought I was going to faint.
Kill raised his hand nonchalantly, stopping the stream of questions.
âAs I said, the statement will be brief, and I will not be taking any questions. In addition to stopping all oil-rig actions, as of this afternoon, I am also the proud owner of the surrounding Arctic areas which have shown potential and promise to discover oil, meaning Royal Pipelines currently holds all the reserves and options for anyone to drill in the Arctic. Ever.
âI will explore cleaner options in my bid to grow Royal Pipelinesâ capital and am still committed to employ tens of thousands of Americans. In fact, I would like to inform our investors that I already got my hands on something far more lucrative than the Arctic and not nearly as destructive.â
The winning, villainous smile he shot the camera was of someone who was having a checkmate moment, not someone who had just given up his flagship operation. But that was Cillian. Always three steps ahead of the game.
âThe reason for my executive decision has nothing to do with Green Living. As youâre aware, Green Living had decided to drop the case against Royal Pipelines. As of today, no one had managed to pick it up and carry it through. The reason for my decision is entirely personal.
âAs some of you know, I married less than a year ago. One of the things my wife taught me was to listen. This is me listening to what she had to say. Sheâs been outspoken against drilling in the Arctic throughout our short marriage.â He paused, twisting his mouth grimly. âShe drives a Tesla, you see.â
The journalists and photographers erupted in laughter. A few colleagues shot me curious glances. My peers always asked me what I was doing here. As if waking up for work was some sort of punishment. Like they wouldnât miss our students if they quit work. I mostly ignored it, but the truth was, I liked keeping my job because I didnât know if Cillian was going to keep me.
I tried to blink back the tears, averting my gaze from the TV.
I told him not to contact me, and he kept on finding new and creative ways to reach out to me.
It took me months to turn my back on us, but I never took into consideration there may be a game changer.
That Cillian might wake up and fight for us.
âAnyone interested in hearing a joke about that time Kill drilled the Arctic but stopped because someone thawed his icy heart?â
Hunter snorted when I got off the stage, pacing behind me. Devon followed.
âNo,â Devon and I barked in unison.
Hunter nodded. ââKay. Good talk.â
We slipped through the back door, taking the elevator back to the management floor. I kept checking my watch, wondering when an appropriate time would be to try calling my wife. I finally got it. How badly it sucked to be ignored. Iâd ignored Persephone for months when I had her in my bed, sweet and willing.
Her texts, her words, her quirky observations. They were all mine for the taking.
Now I had to do the chasing, and I had to admitâthey werenât kidding when they called Karma a bitch.
The elevator dinged. I strode out to my office, waving at Hunter to get as far as humanly possible away from me. I was a surly son of a bitch these days. I cursed. I shouted at employees. I did a lot of mortal things people werenât used to from me. The other day, I said fuck while golfing with my father. He almost had a stroke.
Speaking of Athair, I spotted the old sod pacing the boardroom from the corner of my eye and made a quick, sharp turn toward it. An overhead TV replaying my press conference danced on the wall behind him. Upon a closer look, I saw Mother was there, too, perched on one of the seats by the kidney-shaped desk, fixing her makeup.
I opened the door, closed it, and waited for the storm. I didnât have to wait long.
âYou little piece ofââ
âI would not finish that sentence if I were you.â I raised my open palm, wearing an easy smile on my face. âYouâre talking to the CEO of Royal Pipelines. Disrespect me, and youâll find yourself escorted out of my building.â
âYour building?â he sputtered. âThatâs a good one. No. You would never,â my father spat out. I didnât have to grace that with an answer. He already knew I was capable of pretty much anything.
He fell into one of the seats, grabbing his head in his hands, shaking it. âI donât understand.â
âI am under no obligation to make sense to you,â I informed him.
âGreen Living dropped the lawsuit. This couldâve been the most lucrative oil-rig operation in the world. I mean, you were the one who pushed for it. You were the head of research. You spent three goddamn months living on an iceberg, managing this project closely. This was your baby, Cillian.â
âYes,â I said. âAnd now Iâm interested in another baby. A human one. Which is why Iâd like my wife to be as content as she can be.â
âThis is what itâs about?â Mother jumped to her feet, finally justifying her oxygen consumption in the room. âSweetie, we appreciate you marrying thisâ¦this sweet, common girl, but there are others out there. Just as pretty, and they wonât interfere with your business. I didnât interfere with your fatherâs business.â
âNo,â I agreed. âYou also had jack-shit to say about anything, from our upbringing to our education. At the risk of sounding disrespectfulâwhich, by the way, I am happy to takeâI donât want your kind of marriage. It looks awful, inside and out. I donât want manageable. I donât want my wife to be a ghost of a mother. A yes woman. A prop. And I like my common wife just fine, Mother.â
More than like her.
Persephone sacrificed more for me in our short marriage than Mother did since I was born.
âThis beats the entire purpose of you getting married!â my father thundered, jumping to his feet. âLosing this 1.4-billion-dollar opportunity for aâ¦for aâ¦â
âSay it.â I smirked. âFor pussy, right? No other organ in a womanâs body counts for you. Least of all a heart.â
It didnât for me, either. Not until recently.
âYes!â my father boomed, throwing his arms in the air, his face red, a drop of saliva staining his lower lip. âIf I knew that was the case, Iâd have never pushed you to get married.â
âIâm glad you did.â I opened the glass door. âThis marriage has taught me an important lesson. A lesson Evon, Yale, and Harvard combined couldnât. Now, allow me to apply some of the conclusions Iâve come to in recent months and throw you the hell out of my officeâyes, my office, if I put in the sixty hour work week, Iâm the one calling the shotsâwith this tip: never, ever tell me what to do with my job, my life, and my marriage.â
I jerked my chin out the door. Both my parents stared at me, wide-eyed.
âGo on. You know how to use your legs, donât you?â
Walked away from me enough times in your lives, I was tempted to add.
Motherâs eyes glittered while she tried to pull herself together while Athair kept a solemn, dignified expression. The line had been drawn. They began to make their way out of the office. Mother stopped by the door and cupped my cheeks, gazing up at me.
âIâm sorry,â she whispered, her voice so soft only I could hear her. âIâm sorry for everything. You are right. You deserve better than what we made of our lives, Cillian.â
I kissed her cheek. âAll forgiven.â
âReally?â
I gave her a curt nod. âNow get out.â
Next, it was my fatherâs turn to stop by the door. His eyes crinkled with a mixture of annoyance and delight.
âMo òrga.â He inclined his head. âYou keep surprising me with your strength. Your brother has always been a wild card but simple to crack. Thatâs why I unleashed the Brennan girl on him. Your sisterâ¦well, she is a saint I donât have to worry about, but you.â He inhaled, closing his eyes. âYou were my damaged child, which made you so much more dangerous because we both knew you could survive anything. You think I donât know,â he whispered in my ear, getting close, too closeâthe closest heâd ever been to me physicallyââbut I do. I know about your demons, Cillian. The same ones live in the basement of my heart. Only difference is, you seemed to have slayed yours. Good for you, son.â
Disoriented and in need of a stiff drink, I strode to my office.
âMr. Fitzpatrick!â Sophia jumped from her station, sprinting in my direction as soon as I walked out of the boardroom. âYou have a visitor.â
âWho?â
âMs. Penrose.â
âCall her that one more time and you are permanently blacklisted from working at any respectable Boston company.â
Forcing myself to keep my steps even, I made my way to my office, finding Emmabelle Penrose sitting in my executive chair, her long legs draped over my chrome desk. She wore a pair of Louboutins I was pretty sure belonged to my wife, a pencil skirt, and a blouse that didnât leave much to the imagination.
And the day just keeps better and better.
âNever mind. Wrong sister.â I waved Sophia off, pushing open the glass door and closing it after me. I leaned a shoulder against the glass wall, tucking my hands into my front pockets.
âCillian! Howâs life treating you?â Emmabelle purred, looking up from her phone.
âLike I fucked its underage daughter, and now itâs out for revenge,â I answered blandly, pushing off the wall and taking a seat in front of her. I wasâand always would beâunruffled by her entire Dita Von Teese on steroids act. Her cry for attention fell on deaf ears in my case.
âFeet off the table,â I instructed. âUnless you want them broken.â
âOh, dear, someoneâs in a mood.â She removed her legs from my desk, dumping her ugly secondhand Prada bag on top of my laptop. I resisted the urge to hurl her out of my window. I doubted it would win me any points with my wife. âIâm afraid things are about to go from bad to worse.â
âI sincerely doubt thereâs room for deterioration,â I lunged back.
âThen Iâm here to prove you the sky is the limit, baby.â She plucked something from her bagâa stack of papersâand slid it across my desk with her pointy scarlet fingernail. âYouâve been served.â
I didnât touch the papers. I glanced down and saw my wifeâs handwriting. Curvy. Romantic. Small. Like her.
For a second, the temptation not to feel was overwhelming.
To laugh it off.
To kick Emmabelle out.
To show her that I didnât care.
Then I remembered it was exactly why I had to fight to get my wife back.
âThe answer is no,â I said mildly, cracking my knuckles under the table. âI told Persephone divorce wasnât an option. It is tacky, brings bad press, and besides, sheâs yet to fulfill her part of the bargain.â
âYou realize youâre not God, right?â Emmabelle cocked her head sideways. âYou canât just snap your fingers and make people fall in line.â
I stared at her. âProve it.â
âShe doesnât want you anymore.â
âI can change her mind.â
âWhat makes you think that?â Belle grinned, her eyes glittering.
âShe wanted me before I even tried. Now that I intend to make an effort, she wonât be able to resist me. Either way, we both know youâre walking out of here with the divorce petition if I have to fucking feed it to you. This has no legal ground. Youâre not the sheriff, and Iâm not a guy you can push around. If it comes to court, Iâll ask the judge for coupleâs therapyâand will receive itâseeing as weâve been married for a short period and no adultery or abuse has occurred.â
âThatâs what I thought.â Emmabelle chuckled, withdrawing the papers from my desk and tucking them back into her bag. âLook, Iâm not your biggest fan for numerous reasons. At the top of them is the fact you planned to lock my baby sister in a suburban McMansion and have her produce heirs for you while you stayed here and lived the big life. But Iâve come to accept that, despite your sociopathic shortcomings, youâve truly grown to love her. Am I right?â
There were many offensive things on the tip of my tongue, but Emmabelle had the advantage today. I had to let her have her day in the sun, even if I wanted to burn her down.
âYes,â I agreed sullenly. âI love your sister very much.â
So much it goddamn fucking hurts.
âWell, maybe itâs time to tell her how you feel.â Belle stood, scooping her bag and hurling it over her shoulder. âYouâve been apologizing for the wrong thing the entire time. Persephone didnât leave you because youâre an asshole. Heck, Iâm sure itâs half of your charm. She left you because she thinks youâre incapable of feeling. Prove her wrong.â
âHow the hell can I do that, seeing as Iâm not supposed to see her?â
âSays who?â She blinked in surprise.
âSays her,â I growled. âShe told me not to come after her.â
âSince when do you listen to what my sister says? One of the very things she loves about you is that you do whatever the hell you want. Always.â
Of course, the one time I decided to obey, it was to the wrong fucking instruction.
My sister-in-law tapped my shoulder as she exited my office.
âGo get her. Sheâs waiting, and Iâm growing tired of taking my flings back to their apartments because sheâs in my bed.â
It was time to break one more promise.