Mr. Mitchell: Chapter 17
Mr. Mitchell: Billionaires’ Club Book 2 (Billionaires’ Club Series)
My mind was a shit-storm of a mess about Jim. Period. I was ready to rip his throat out when I assumed that he was pissed when he spotted Addy in the office with me yesterday. Then he knelt next to her. The James Mitchell façade that he carriedâand everyone seemed scared shitless ofâfaded, and the Jim Iâd been with in London, knelt to talk kindly with my daughter.
I watched Addy interact with him, all while observing Stefanie appear as if she was either going to pass out, cry, or hug me. I mean, I got it. Respect your boss, and follow the rules. Itâs as easy as that. At least thatâs how I envisioned working a job.
I could say with one-hundred-percent certainty, however, that even if I didnât know Jim from my vacation, I wouldnât have behaved the way everyone else seemed to when he entered a room. I wouldnât have hidden behind my computer, freaked the hell out if he approached me, trembled when I talked to himâall the shit I watched everyone, except for the suit-crew, do. I thought it was fucking weird, but maybe thatâs how all big businesses ran when the owner was around.
âSo, he came to your floor,â Brit said, âand then what? Finish your thought, Avery.â
âSorry. He brought Addy and me to the preschool thatâd rejected her. He seemed pretty pissed that old lady had sent more kids than just Addy away.â
âYou think he remembered you?â She lowered her voice on the phone while I finished making Addy her breakfast.
âFinish, quick, Addy,â I said, wanting to get our breakfast dishes in the sink before we walked out the door. âWeâre gonna be late.â
âAvery.â
âJesus, Britney, I donât know. Iâm trying to get out of here on time.â
âGood Lord, he had to have remembered you. He probably wouldnât have done what he did if he didnât.â
âWould it have mattered?â I said. âI mean, yeah. He remembered me. How could he not? He stared at my face for almost an entire week, so unless heâs senile, he knows who I am. He asked how long Iâd been working there, so it mustâve crossed his mind that maybe I worked for him all along.â Addy got up from the table and slid on her red sequin ballet flats. She wore them with everything, no matter how much they clashed with her outfit. It was pretty adorable. âI donât have time to talk about it right now, though. Iâm sorry. Iâll call you later. Gotta go.â
âOkay, okay. Have a good day, and call me later,â Brit said before I ended the call.
âLetâs hit it, kid,â I said to Addy. âWeâre seriously going to be late if thereâs too much traffic.â
âI work with you today, Mommy?â Addy asked as we walked out the door, and I locked it behind us.
âNo. I donât think so. That nice manâmy big bossâhe helped you get promoted yesterday.â
âMitch,â she said. âMy friend.â
We were at the car in record time, and Addy didnât give me any hassle when I buckled her in. âHeâs the boss too, Addy,â I said, kissing her forehead and moving toward the driverâs seat.
You piece of shit car, start already, I internally demanded. âPlease, God, do not let me get fired because of you,â I slammed on the steering wheel. âYou stupid, stupid, car!â
âThis car is stupid,â Addison said.
âDonât say stupid. Itâs a bad word. Mommy shouldnât say it either.â
âOh, Mom. You say bad words, I donât.â
The car started. âThank God,â I said.
âI know. God is happy that I say good words.â
âGod doesnât like Mommy saying the bad ones.â I gave her a sheepish look while backing out. âI need to work on that. Iâm sorry.â
âI wonât say stupid.â She covered her mouth, âSorry. That S-word.â
âDonât say any S-words, how about that?â I smiled.
âI canât say silly?â
âYou can say that one,â I said with a laugh.
We were close enough to work to avoid freeways, which was a miracle in itself. We pulled into the parking structure, passed all the fancy cars, and found a place on the second level. âSweet, right by the elevators.â
Thatâs when I saw the sign.
âReserved for management,â I said in defeat. âWell, maybe Mom will be promoted to manager one day, and this will be our parking place.â
âMitch will promote you. He promoted me.â
âAddy, you donât even know the word.â I laughed. âHowever, we need to work on our big words. We havenât done that in a while. So, our word for the day is promote or promoted.â
âMitch does it,â she answered.
âYes, he probably does. Other people do it too. It works in different ways and has different meanings, but for you and me, it means to get a better thingâto do a bigger job and to make more money.â
âWe need a new car, mommy.â
âYou donât like Bunny anymore?â
âBunny is so tired, Mommy.â
âYeah, well, Iâll need a really good promotion to get a new car.â
âDaddy got one.â
I rolled my eyes and slipped the keys out of the ignition. âHe sure did,â I answered, trying not to sound sarcastic. I was a lot of things, but I wasnât the type of parent to badmouth the other. He didnât need my help to look like a deadbeat dad to his daughter. âCome on, out of the seat. Whereâs your back pack?â
âOh, no!â Addy clamped her small hands over her mouth and closed her eyes. âAt home. Oh no, Mommy.â
âMy fault. I rushed us out. Itâs no big deal.â
âWill I still get promoted from Mitch?â she asked.
âI donât think weâll see your friend today. We got lucky yesterday,â I said. âNow, grab my hand. Letâs go.â
We headed toward the walkway that was erected over the street, leading us from the parking structure to my building. We always entered on the ninth floor, and today, we made it just in time. Instead of using the elevator, we breezed down the flight of steps to where the Childrenâs Center was. When we got there, the kids were seated, and the old ninny was still present and in charge.
âI see youâve forgotten your backpack?â she said to Addy. âHow do you expect to learn if you canât remember basic things, young lady?â
âI wonâtââ Addy started making excuses for herselfâa fucking three-year-old toddlerâas the old woman towered over her intimidatingly.
âAddy, itâs okay. Go sit with the others,â I said, holding my arm up to back the woman away from Addy.
The fact that this bitch thought she could flex on my kid sent me through the roof, and I felt my self-control slipping away as Addy joined the group.
I took a long, slow, deep breath before I brought my furious gaze to meet the womanâs eyes. âYou have the fucking nerve to speak to my child as if sheâs the one responsible for her things? What the hell is wrong with you? Youâre already getting fired for acting like a miserable bitch, and you still canât help yourself?â
The look on her ashen face wouldâve led anyone else to believe that Iâd just ran over her cat. âAre you threatening me?â she said, flabbergasted.
âIâm serious as a fucking heart attack, lady. I can see the look on your face. Scolding a three-year-old for not bringing a backpack? Really? Itâs not like you sent her home with homework, is it? Did I miss that part after I picked her up?â
âMaybe you did.â
âBullshit. Listen up,â I said, pointing at her. âIf you so much as look at my daughter sideways and I find out about it, youâre going to regret it. You have no idea what Iâm willing to do to make sure my daughter is safe from predators like you.â
âWellâ¦I, umâ¦listen, this is a complete misunderstanding, Miss Gilbert.â She straightened her posture and held her head high with some level of righteous indignation that I had no idea how she had the nerve to muster.
âYouâre right about that.â I looked over at the children and the aides who sat with them. Aside from this old nag, they seemed well taken care of, and that was the only reason I didnât march Addy out of that place right then. âI trust youâll make sure my daughter has a good day. Iâll check on her later.â
I turned to leave, and there was Jim with the young Johnny Depp-looking friend of his who I met at the restaurant in London. My eyes widened, and the Johnny Depp guy seemed to be covering his grin while Jim was looking past me at the hag.
âExcuse me, gentlemen.â I plastered on the best smile I could. âI have to get to work.â
âIs everything okay, Miss. Gilbert?â Jim asked, eyes still on the woman. âMs. Spokes?â
âNo problems at all, Mr. Mitchell, Mr. Grayson,â she responded.
I stood at the preschool entryway and leveled the woman with my glare, and she didnât say another word. I shouldâve left and headed to my desk, but I didnât want this woman spinning anything.
âMitch!â Addy screamed, running over to greet her new friend. âIâm promoted today.â
âHey there, Addy,â he said as he knelt to greet her. Certainly a good call, or he wouldâve been doubled over by my daughter, ramming into his balls. She squeezed his neck, and I covered my mouth when he patted her back with one arm and remembered her name.
Maybe he did remember a lot more than our fake roleplaying. Wait, he was just good with names. Oh, hell, he didnât have to do this at all. It was the gesture alone that had me watching and wishing Jim was in my life for a moment. If only to see this smile on Addyâs face.
âPromoted?â he asked after greeting her. âSo that means youâll be working up in the top, boring offices with me now?â
âNo, silly,â she said. âI get to go in there.â
âWhy yes, you do,â he answered. He pointed up to the man I stood next to now, âThis is my friend. His name is Alex, and heâs going to make sure you have fun teachers today. Sound good?â
âIt does.â She hugged Jim again and patted his cheek sweetly.
âAddy, go to class. Jim needs to go to work too,â I said, and then nearly choked when I realized Iâd said his name in a way that didnât fly around here.
âHis name is Mitch, Mom,â Addy said and then spun around and went into the classroom area.
âJim and Mitch, eh?â Alex said, looking at me with a knowing smile. âIâm Alex Grayson.â He reached his hand out to mine, âI believe weâve met before.â
I smiled after Jim walked with the woman into her office.
âYes, in London, when we all played musical dining tables, I think.â
He chuckled. âDo you always curse-out old ladies?â
âJust the ones who screw with my kid,â I said. âIâm sorry, but I have to go. Itâs great seeing you again, Alex.â
I left the man whoâd blown Jim up the entire time I was with him in that castle, leaving him standing there and looking at me with great curiosity, Iâm sure.
âAmir,â I said to my co-worker, âare you gonna eat those fries?â
âGod, what have we done all these years without you here?â he said, sliding the fries over to me.
âThe crows are going to be pissed when they starve to death,â Alyssa teased. âYou want the last of this milkshake?â
âThatâs where I draw the line, my friends,â I said, crunching into Amirâs still piping-hot French fries. âI donât drink after others. Total germ freak on that one.â
âNot like youâd have room for it anyway. All this food, girl,â Amir said. âYour body canât process this food. Youâre too tiny.â
âGuys, we have to get back. This will be the second time I would be late today,â I said, checking my phone and seeing the time.
âCanât have that,â Alyssa said. âOh,â she added like a mystery was being revealed, âwant to know why the execs were on the floor yesterday?â
âSomeone mentioned something about footage being erased from the company cameras after a sales manager got caught screwing a rep in his office,â Amir said.
âShut the hell up,â I said.
âThatâs the rumor. I also heard the reason Mr. Mitchell was with them was because of the documentary on his doctor friend. I think heâs a brain surgeon or something. Theyâve been recording bits and pieces, but I heard it sucks. Thatâs what Cary in media production says, anyway. Donât say I told you,â Amir said.
Jesus, and here we were talking about the boring video Jim was watching in England, which led to him getting me off in the most glorious way I could have ever desired. I had to shut these thoughts down and now. My body was already aching for that sensation againâand from only him.
âGood lord, you two. Does the gossip run that thick in this place?â I asked, changing my mindâs gears.
âWhen Mr. Mitchell comes off the top floors, yes. Everyone looks for some sort of reason heâs on their floor.â
âGoddamn,â I said. âHeâs treated like a god here, isnât he?â
âHe sure looks like one. A Greek god.â Alyssa giggled.
Try seeing the man without his clothes on, I thought with a smile.
It was a lame way to compare a man with a perfectly chiseled body and a beautiful face of perfection, but hey, sometimes you had to call it what it was.
We were stopped when Stefanie met me at my cubicle. âI have no idea whatâs going on,â she said. âMaybe it was yesterday, you know, with your daughter being here inappropriately, or something else.â
âWhat is it? Am I fired, Stefanie?â I asked, cutting her off.
âWhy would you think that?â
âBecause you look like youâre going to pass out.â
âWell, I wish I could give you more information, but I canât. Mr. Mitchell would like to see you in his office,â she said. âFollow me, please. Iâll show you to the executive elevators.â
âShould I be worried about this?â
âHeâs possibly addressing your daughter being on our floor.â
âIf he has a problem with her, maybe I do need to pay him a visit,â I said, to which she eyed me in response.
I rode up to the sixty-fourth floor silently, and I walked out to floor-to-ceiling glass windows that overlooked downtown LA. Iâd bet that without smog, youâd see the ocean from up here. It was exquisite.
Speaking of exquisite, so was the woman who stood in front of a massive reception desk, looking at papers on the counter. She wore a form-fitting, business suit with her red-soled stilettos, and had perfectly coifed hair, skin, and manicure. It was a much different world up here. Was Jim lying about not screwing secretaries or anyone who worked for him? This chick was drop-dead gorgeous. Her eyes were a brilliant blue, and they lit up when she spun around and saw me, or so I thought. She was actually beaming at Alex, whoâd gotten off the elevator next to mine and was approaching me from behind.
Alex offered up a grin to herâone of those grinsâand if this chick had been in a shitty mood before, Alex had changed it instantly.
âMiss Gilbert is here to see Mr. Mitchell,â the elevator cop told her as he held the doors from closing. âHowâs your day, Miss Flores?â
âGreat, Mike. Thanks for sending up Miss Gilbert.â She took papers sheâd been examining near a keyboard on the other side of the desk before turning to face me again. âMiss Gilbert, please follow me.â
That was it for the sweet talk. I was walking the green mile down a hallway where fancy, English-looking artwork hungâthe only artwork Iâd ever seen, anyway. It mustâve been the hallway to Jimâs office. Two double doors opened after Miss Flores ran a security card over a security pad.
She knocked as the doors opened. âMr. Mitchell?â
âYes, Summer?â he asked distantly.
âMiss Gilbert is here at your request.â
âThank you,â he said.
I looked at her in confusion, and she just kept her poker face and walked away, leaving me to meet Mr. Mitchell in all his glory.
I held a hand over my heart, and it wasnât because of how gorgeous Jim looked, sitting in his dark gray, three-piece-suit either. The red tie set off the striking features of his face, but this corner office, surrounded by windows overlooking Los Angeles, was enough to bring me to my knees.
âJesus Christ,â I said softly, looking to my left, right, and back to where Jimâs large, exquisite desk was. âNo wonder Englandâs countryside is in pictures out in that hallway. Where the hell would you hang a picture with windows instead of walls?â
âNervous chatter?â Jimâs voice quietly rang into my ears. âSince the first moment I met you, I would have never pinned you for having a nervous bone in your body.â
I looked at him and grinned. âThis is so beautiful,â I said, ignoring him calling me out on rambling. âHow do you get anything done with these views?â
Jim rose from his desk and pulled off his jacket. My eyes widened when I saw the shirt he was wearing under his black vest. That was the shirtâthe shirt he hated. He fucked me inâwell, I fucked him in. Shit. You need to chill out, Avery.
âNice shirt,â I said. âA little bird told me that you hated that shirt.â
âWas that little bird chirping through a magazine article you read?â He smiledâthe Jim smile. âPerhaps it was in a gossip column?â
âNo. I think the bird told me first hand.â I arched an eyebrow at him.
âA real-life speaking bird, huh? You must know a lot of parrots,â he said. Then he grew serious, and that scorched-earth look was creeping its way up. âWill you please have a seat, Miss Gilbert.â He pointed toward the luxurious leather seats across from where he sat in his billion-dollar, most likely Corinthian leather chair.
âThe scorched-earth look doesnât work on me,â I said, crossing my legs and trying to determine why I was here. âWhat do you need? Stefanie is pretty much packing my desk up right now.â
He ran a hand through his hair and pursed his lips. âDid you have to cuss out Ms. Spokes this morning, Avery?â he asked, half humored and half annoyed.
âShe was a bitch to my kid, Jim. Sorry, Mr. Mitchell,â I said, my irritation beginning to grow. âThat woman deserved a stiff slap across her face; sheâs goddamn lucky I didnât give her that instead of a few harsh words.â
Jim glanced down at a piece of paper. âIt also states here that you threatened to kill her?â He shook his head and licked his lips. âWhy am I not surprised?â I saw the look on his face. This was him holding back laughing, but trying to remain serious.
âKill her?â I rolled my eyes. âIâm not in the mafia, for Christâs sake. I told her sheâd regret messing with Addy again, though, and I meant it. That bitch was completely out of line.â
âYou can understand why that might sound mafia-like to an old woman from Santa Monica, Avery,â he said, trying to hit me with that look again. I noticed him rereading the paper in front of him, and then I saw that tick he seemed to have when deep in thought. He touched each fingertip, one-by-one, to his thumb while he read. âYouâve been here for nearly nine days, yes?â
âYes,â I said, angry that Iâd fucked-up a new and excellent job. Jim was too serious, and I was too pissed that Iâd let that woman get the best of me today.
âWell, Iâve never seen someone get reported to me in that amount of time. Honestly, I donât believe Iâve ever had anyone reported to me for their behavior ever. Not unless thereâs some sort of sexual harassment charges, but in your case,â he looked at me, âitâs regular harassment charges. It takes a hell of a lot to bring an employee past my HR team and directly to me. Would you know why that could be in your case and after only nine days working here?â
âI donât know.â Tears were welling up in my eyes now. âWhy donât you just tell me?
âAvery.â He came across the desk and sat in the chair next to me. âI see that you are quite protective of Addison. I would have hoped you trusted that I was taking care of that woman after I talked with her yesterday. I didnât need your threats toward her this morning to add to my removal of her.â He smirked. âIâm fairly sure you wouldnât have followed through on those threats too.â His eyebrow arched, and damn, I missed him. âBut it makes my case to remove her from that preschool more difficult than it needs to be.â
âYou have to understand something about me,â I said, turning to face him and appreciating him coming to my side of the desk, perhaps as an understanding boss instead of the big exec standing imposingly behind his desk. âIâve been in too many positions to protect Addy from the BS that comes her way. That woman started giving her the third-degree for forgetting her backpack. Sheâs three! I wouldnât tolerate that from any teacherâhere or at another preschool.â
He took my trembling hands into his large ones. âMy lawyersââ
âYour lawyers? Are you suing me for this?â
âNo.â He sighed. âMs. Spokes threatened to sue my company over your behavior today. The lawyers were brought in with human resources and Alex late this morning. While we went through the surveillance footage, we noted a behavior with the woman thatâwell, letâs just say, sheâs not suing anyone after the discussion we had with her. She signed off to leave the company.â
âWhat the hell was on those videos? I have a right to know. Did that woman fuck with Addison afterââ
âNo,â he said, rubbing the back of my tense hands. âShe was negligent in her work. The videos also proved that she wasnât acting according to her job requirements. Thank God other teachers were in her company, or perhaps, children could have been harmed. She was getting paid to play solitaire on her computer. She was given the option to pay us back for lack of working for the two years of having her with us or leave without a fuss.â
âSo Iâm not fired?â
âActually, no,â he said. âBut I am kindly asking that if you are upset with staff, you do not threaten to make anyone regret it next time.â
âIf they come at Addy?â
âYouâll come directly to me,â he said with that CEO voice that was sexy until he used it on me. âI will handle it. We have security watching the preschool nonstop. No reason to go all Godfather and threaten to make anyone sleep with the fishes, okay?â
âAll right,â I said. âIs that it then?â
He pulled his hands from mine and stood and smiled. âYes. I would like to say that I donât ever want to have to see you up here in my office again,â he pinched his lips together as I stood, âbut that wouldnât be true.â
His face seemed pained like he meant something else, butâhell. I had no idea.
He did that sexy lip pucker thing while he bit the inside of his cheek. âAvery, let me take you out or something. Give me another chance. I know I fucked it up with the senseless words you overheard on that call with my brother. Truly, I never meant them. The second you walked out the door on me, I realized I was a jackass to even think like that, whether or not I was frustrated with my brother probing into my life.â
âI have a hell of a life. You know I have issues. Iâm a single mom who deals with a fucking drug addict for an ex.â I laughed in disbelief that he was trying to have a shot with me. âI canât bring you into that. You knew that when you were on the phone that day. Itâs not a life you want, trust me.â
âIf itâs too horrible for me, then why do you allow Addy to live in this life that is so terrible for you?â
âGood point.â I blew out a breath. âBut I canât explain it. It would be worse for you. Trust me on that.â
âHow much worse?â He waved his hand at his office. âI run this entire place, I have countless employees here and in my London office that I am responsible for, and all the shit that goes with keeping it all running smoothly. Why canât I have a chance with the one thing I feel might mean more to me than all of that?â
âYou canât mean that,â I said. âIt was a fling, and you know it. You saw the good side. You saw the Avery that wasnât living in an average, bullshit day. And you never met the single mom Avery.â
âI want to know that side of you as well. Just give me a chance and allow me to determine whether or not I want to be with the real you.â
âYeah, that smile.â I shook my head, smiling back at him. âThat cocky smile. Itâs going to screw your ass over, you know. I have a psycho ex who will despise you.â
âMost exes hate themselves for losing the best thing they ever had, then project it onto the one who took their place.â
âOh.â I planted my hands on my hips. âSo you took his place? Youâre quite confident, Mr. Mitchell.â
âHopeful,â he said. âAnd for the love of God, call me Jim.â
âOkay, fine,â I said. âYou want a shot at my shitty life? Being around the bullshit? Because you donât look like you get dirty.â
He held his hands out. âI believe I got this shirt quite dirty at one time.â He smirked.
âYou have no idea what the hell youâre doing, do you?â
âI just know I want a chance with you again. I canât get you out of my mind. What I did to you.â He ran his hand over the light growth on his chin. âIâm full of regret for hurting you and desperately sorry for those painful words. Allow me a chance to prove to you I knew I was foolish and wrong.â
âOkay then, smart guy.â I smirked at his lightened features. âTomorrow night is big-mac night.â
âMcDonaldâs?â he questioned. âI can take youââ
I held my hand up. âItâs Addyâs night. Youâre welcome to join us if you want. She deems you are her good friend anyway.â I narrowed my eyes at him. âI will warn you now, Jim Mitchell, if you hurt herââ
âIf it doesnât work out between us, I promise Addy will still be my friend.â
âIâm so serious. Sheâs not to be hurt in this. Her dadâs already doing a fantastic job with that.â
âI understand. Weâll take it all slow. I will prove to you I wonât hurt either of you.â
âYeah. Weâll see about that.â
âLet me just kiss you or something.â
Jimâs cell phone rang, then his office phone, while his door opened to reveal Alex. Jim glanced at Alex with the startling act of all communication for the man happening at once. âWhat the hell?â he said. âIs the goddamn building on fire?â
âNo, we just ran the first part of Collinâs docuseries.â
Jim looked at me then at his phone, which was still ringing off the hook. âDo I even want to answer that?â he asked Alex.
Alex laughed. âLetâs just say Jacob will be quite jealous that he was a test subject. We were successful in ensuring better for privacy for Collin with the new methods used while airing this new series on neuroscience for Saint Johnâs.â
âExcellent news. Go ahead and field that out to the PR groups while I handle these phone calls.â
âCollin and Jake are meeting us at Kinderâs tonight. Nice job, man.â He looked at me. âNice to see you again, Avery,â he said. âAll right, my job here is done. Iâm clocking out.â
âOkay, Iâm leaving too,â I said.
Jimâs phones were going into ringing frenzies. âTomorrow night sounds great, Avery,â he said, stopping me from following Alex out of his office. âSo, I guess it will be a big mac for Addy and me, and Iâm guessing three or four of them for you?â he teased, his phone still constantly ringing. âDammit, I have to get this call. Your department might be insane, but just ignore it, and know that Iâm going just as crazy up here.â He winked, and I could tell he was my Jim from England again.
I had a responsibility to myself, my daughter, and really, any man that I datedâin that order. If I was a mess, it filtered in and hurt Addy. I never brought men around her, but right now, she knew Jim as Mitch, her friend. So, a little fast food get together never hurt anything. Of course, I would ask Addy about Jim joining us first. She would have to be cool with the fact that we would have a new friend with us on her and momâs mid-week date night.