: Chapter 24
The Stopover (The Miles High Club Book 1)
There are moments in your life that you know you will remember forever.
Certain situations that are poignant and have shaped who you are.
Last night was one of them.
What kind of psycho rips roses to shreds with her bare hands while screaming like a lunatic? Shame runs through me.
This . . . is the level Iâve stooped to.
Strangely enough, last night was the first time Iâve slept well in weeks. As if releasing a little of the steam in the pressure cooker has somehow calmed my soul.
I donât feel guilty for being so mean . . . normally, I would. But Jameson Miles is an enigma all of his own . . . one that I can no longer pity.
âI wouldnât be friends with a selfish prick like you if you were the last person left on earth,â I said . . . screamed actually. It was a mean thing to sayâthe worstâbut he got what he fucking deserved. The doors of the elevator in my building open, and I step out into the foyer and walk out into the street.
âWhat the hell happened here?â I hear the woman in front of me mutter under her breath as she stops and looks around at the carnage.
There are yellow rose petals strewn everywhere; flower buds that are squashed and bruised lie on the concrete. Out on the road the carcass of the flattened bouquet with the big cream satin bow lies.
Jesus . . .
I drop my head and stomp past the crazy. I glance up at the ceiling to see where the cameras are. I wonder if anyone saw it on the security footage.
I hope not . . . how embarrassing.
I get on my bus and open my Kindle. Iâm not reading my usual rom-com genre. I canât stand the thought of all that love bullshit. Iâm mixing it up and reading Pet Semataryâmaybe thatâs it. Maybe Steven King is taking me to the dark side. The side where you donât take shit, and payback on yellow roses is due.
Good for him . . . bring it the fuck on. I swipe to the next page.
Every dog has its day.
Jameson
I sip my coffee as I sit in the café across the street from Miles Media. Iâve been coming here the last few days before work. Alan told me that Emily used to come here with her friends. Iâm hoping to run into one of them.
Why? I donât know.
Emilyâs words from last night are playing over and over in my mind.
I wouldnât be friends with a selfish prick like you if you were the last person on earth . . . I wouldnât want to be friends with me either if I were her.
Iâve never seen her so angry . . . or thin. Sheâs lost a lot of weight. I hate that Iâve put her through this shit.
I sip my coffee, and I feel a hand rest on my shoulder.
âHey,â Tristan says as he sits down beside me on a stool.
âHi.â
âLooking for Emily?â he says casually.
âNope.â
âLiar,â he replies with a cheeky grin. âHey, the boys and I have organized a trip to Vegas for us this weekend. The jetâs all lined up.â
I screw up my face. I could think of nothing worse.
âItâll be great. Drinking, gambling. Add some beautiful women to the Miles-High Club. You need to snap out of this and get back on the horse. Iâm thinking a blonde or two . . . forget about the brunettes for a while, and besides, we need to celebrate your innocence. Elliot and Christopher fly in on Friday.â He winks as he tries to sweeten the deal.
âYeah, that sounds completely shit,â I mutter dryly.
âI donât care what you say. Youâre coming.â
I stare straight ahead. Iâve lost the ability to get excited about anything lately.
He falls serious. âIâm worried about you, Jay.â
I roll my eyes.
âWe all are. Youâre acting completely out of character.â
âIâm fine,â I murmur into my coffee. I look around once more, remembering why Iâm here.
âWhy donât you just go to her house if you want to see her?â he says.
âI tried that last night.â
âHow did it go?â
I puff air into my cheeks. âShe went postal and . . .â I pause as I try to explain the situation. âI took her yellow roses, and she smashed the fuck out of them like a madman.â
âYeah?â He smirks and then smiles broadly as if impressed. âWhy would you take her yellow roses and not red ones?â
âI thought . . .â I exhale heavily. âI thought yellow was safe, signifying friendship so that she would talk to me. I just wanted to talk to her.â
âYou didnât tell her that, though, did you?â
âYeah.â
He gives a subtle shake of the head as if Iâm stupid. âHow did that go down?â
âThatâs about the time she turned into the Hulk.â
âI donât blame her, to be honest.â
My eyes flick to him in question.
âYou well and truly fucked her over.â
âI did not fuck her over,â I spit. âIâm trying to protect her.â
âListen, you can lie to yourself all you want to. But donât bother lying to me. Youâre a bad liar . . . the worst.â
âFuck off, man; itâs too early for this shit.â I sigh.
âTristan,â the girl behind the counter calls. He stands and gets his coffee and slaps me on the back. âYou staying here, being a miserable prick?â
âFuck off,â I grunt. He smiles and leaves without another word.
I exhale heavily and stare back down at my coffee. I get a vision of the hurt on Emilyâs face last night, and my chest constricts. I keep going over and over it in my mind, and I just want to know that sheâs all right. Maybe then I can forgive myself and stop thinking about her every minute of every day. I take out my phone. Iâll call her.
No, she will only hang up. Iâll text . . . what will I write?
Good morning.
Murder any roses today?
I hit send and wait. I drink my coffee and stare at my phone as I wait for her to reply . . . she doesnât.
Twenty minutes later, I text her again.
Please talk to me.
I order another coffee as I wait. Itâs 8:15 a.m., and I know she hasnât started work yet. I also know that she would have her phone on her and is purposely ignoring my texts.
Fuck this. I dial her number, and it rings . . . I close my eyes as I wait.
It rings and then declines.
Fuck. She hit reject.
I text her.
Answer your phone or Iâm coming over there.
My text doesnât go through . . . huh? I call again, and the call wonât connect. Whatâs going on? I try again . . . nothing. For ten minutes, I continue to try to get through. I canât. Whatâs going on?
I type into Google, âWhy canât I text or call someone?â The answer bounces back that cuts to the bone.
âYouâve been blocked.â
She blocked my number? What the fuck?
Anger surges through me; nobody has ever blocked me before. Not in business or personal . . . and never a woman.
She really doesnât want to be friends with me . . . in any shape or form.
My heart sinks. How the hell did I fuck this up so badly?
I stare at the Miles Media building through the window, and the thought of going there today and playing the facade that everythingâs okay is just too much.
I text Tristan.
Iâm taking the day off.
See you tomorrow.
I sit and finish my coffee, and a song comes onââBad Liarâ by Imagine Dragons.
I listen . . . Tristan just called me a bad liar, and ironically, the lyrics ring true. With a sad damnation to hell, I drag myself out of the café and into a cab.
âWhere to?â the cab driver asks.
âPark Avenue.â
The cab pulls out into the traffic, and I put my headphones in, hit Spotify, and listen to the song again.
âBad Liarâ . . . my new anthem.
I flick through the travel images on Google. Iâm going to take a skiing trip.
Switzerland, I think.
I need to get away. New York is just too small . . . or suffocating . . . or life threatening . . . or something that I just canât quite put my finger on. Either way, Iâm getting the hell out of here.
She blocked me.
I might work from London for a while . . . yeah, I could do that. Would make sense.
And I would get to spend more time with Elliot and Christopher. My heart drops as I remember someone else who lives in London. Iâd be closer to Claudia, and I broke her heart the other day again too.
She wanted me back, and I told her that I donât think I ever loved her . . . she got angry, and basically, itâs a fucked-up situation all around.
No, I canât work out of London . . . too complicated. Scratch that idea.
How long will I go to Switzerland for? I go over the dates. Maybe a month?
Hmm . . . I bring up my work diary and begin to go through it. Iâm owed a lot of holidays, and I guess I may as well take some.
As soon as I step into my apartment, my security phone goes off, and I answer. âHello.â
âGood afternoon, Mr. Miles. Mrs. Miles is here in the foyer to see you.â
I close my eyes. Shit. âYes, thank you. Please let her in.â
Moments later the elevator doors open, and my mother steps out. Her face lights up when she sees me. âHello, darling.â
âHi, Mom.â
She takes me into her arms and holds me close for a moment as if sensing something is off.
âWhat are you doing here?â I smile as I pull out of her arms.
âI should ask you the same thing,â she replies as she follows me and sits down on the couch.
âI just . . .â I pause as I try to articulate my lie. âI just need some time off after all that embezzlement shit.â
Her eyes hold mine. âGood, Iâm glad.â
âCan I get you anything?â I stand, uncomfortable lying to her.
âSome tea, please, darling.â
I walk into the kitchen and begin to make her tea. I take out her fine china pink-and-gold teapot and cup, the one she always drinks from when sheâs here. She follows me and sits at the kitchen counter.
âDid Tristan send you?â I ask with my back to her.
âHeâs worried about you.â
âIâm fine, Mom.â
âIâll be the judge of that. Whatâs going on with Emily?â
âNothing.â
âWhy not?â
âEmily and I arenât together anymore.â
âBecause?â
I keep making the tea.
âLook at me, Jameson.â
I drag my eyes to hers.
âWhy arenât you with Emily anymore?â she asks.
âEmily deserves better.â
She watches me.
âFerrara.â I frown as I get my wording right. âI donât want this life for her.â
âYou donât want her being with a workaholic, you mean?â
I shrug as I pass her the cup of tea.
âSo, you ended it with her . . . for her?â
I purse my lips as I remain silent.
âWell that proves it, Jameson.â
âProves what?â
âThat sheâs the one.â
I frown.
âYou know, ever since you were a tiny little boy, youâve done this.â
âDone what?â What is she talking about?
âWhen you were very little, maybe three or four years old, you used to have this little pale-blue pickup truck.â
I listen.
âYou loved it. It fit in the palm of your hand, and you always carried it around. It was your pride and joy.â
I smile softly.
âThe thing is, Tristan loved it too. He had his own, but yours was the special one. And even though you loved that truck with all of your heart, the moment that Tristan got upset about anything . . . you would give it to him. You couldnât stand seeing him upset, and you felt responsible to make him happy.â
I frown.
âAs you grew up, I watched you do this many times, Jameson, with many things. To the outside world you were aloof and cold, but for the ones you loved, you would do anything to make them happy. You have more heart than sense.â
My eyes hold hers.
âWhy do you think that Emily wouldnât be happy with you?â
I stare at her for a moment as a clusterfuck of emotion runs through me. âBecause eventually, Iâm going to let her down,â I whisper.
Her face softens. âJameson darling, how? By working too hard? By being too honorable to your family business?â
I close my eyes.
âIâm in love with a man just like you, Jameson. You know him well, your father. He, like you, is a workaholic.â
âHow . . . ?â I frown. âI donât know how to do both, Mom.â
âThen work it out.â
I stare at her.
âEmily loves you, Jameson, not your money . . . or your company. She loves you . . . just you.â
I drop my head.
âStop being so damn selfless, and do what you want to do.â
âI donât know what that is anymore,â I whisper.
âOh, nonsense,â she snaps. âTell me something. If you were on a deserted island, who would you want by your side?â
âEmily,â I whisper without hesitation.
âBeing in love is like being on a deserted island, Jameson. You focus on them and them only, and you make everything else fit around that person.â
I inhale deeply.
âIf you donât want to travel into the future with her, donât. But donât you dare pull away from your own happiness to protect her.â
I clench my jaw as I listen.
âHow one man can be so ruthless in business and so giving to those he loves, I will never understand . . . but, the fact that your father is your carbon copy, I know itâs possible.â She cups my face in her hand. âThe man I love and the man that the world knows are two very different men . . . and thatâs just how I like it. I like that Iâm the only one who gets his softness.â
I smile softly.
âI am your fatherâs world, Jameson; he made it work around the company. Never once have I felt neglected or unloved. I have always come first to him.â
I stare at her as her words roll around in my head.
âThe man that Emily loves and the one that you think you are are two very different men. You need to allow yourself to be who you are with Emily be the Jameson Miles that the world knows. Itâs not one or the other like you think it is. The fact that you have put Emilyâs happiness ahead of your own cements that she is the one who has been chosen for you.âand
âShe wonât speak to me,â I whisper.
She stands. âThen make her listen.â She takes me into her arms. âGo and get your love, and grab her with both hands . . . and never let her go.â She kisses me on the cheek and, without another word, leaves my apartment.
My motherâs words ring home, loud and clear.
You need to allow yourself to be who you are with Emily and be the Jameson Miles that the world knows. Itâs not one or the other like you think it is.
Itâs five oâclock in the morning, and I lie and stare at the ceiling of my living room from my couch. Iâm still fully dressed in the clothes I wore yesterday. I havenât slept all night.
My motherâs words keep going over and over in my head.
She thinks that I can be both the man that Emily wants and the man that I need to be.
As I see it, I have three options. The first is to walk away from Miles Media so that I can be a man worth being with. The second is to let Emily leave my life forever. My stomach twists as I imagine living my life without her.
The third is to try to be both . . . is it truly possible to live as two men?
I stand, and for the first time in a long time, I have crystal-clear clarity.
Fuck this.
Iâm going to try, and if I canât make it work, I will leave Miles Media.
Iâm getting my girl back.
She comes first.