Inevitable: Chapter 22
Inevitable: A Billionaire Second Chance Romance (Stonewood Billionaire Brothers Series)
Leaving that damn womanâs apartment was like leaving a song unfinished. Aubrey spoke to me like the perfect melody, a harmony that wrapped you up and stuck on you for days. When I got that close to her, she was that damn hook in the song that made me forget any other song existed.
I would rather have climbed through barbed wire than her doorway at that moment. Because whether she wanted to admit it or not, we made the perfect song together. No other man could get her off like I did.
At least I fucking hoped so.
That hope had me spiraling. I got back to Jayâs empty house and figured focusing on the algorithms for my new app would help.
Instead, I tried to break down her facial expressions. I couldnât read her as well anymore and didnât know if she meant everything sheâd said.
Did she think learning about the bullshit Frank and I talked about would help, would allow her to forgive me for leaving her?
Hell, I could barely forgive myself.
Add to it the shit I did for him while he rotted in prison, not even the devil would forgive me. Probability was not in my favor, and I wasnât willing to risk her never talking to me again.
Iâm not proud to say I spent hours working over a single glitch in the app and it amounted to nothing. I couldnât focus on how we were going to swing the PR. I couldnât focus on when the best dates were to maximize profits on the launch concert. I could barely focus on what music should be put into the app first.
Walking down to the lake finally cleared my head. Any lake was an old friend of mine, ready to bring clarity where it was needed.
Mostly because every lake reminded me of her. The calmness, when everything was quiet at night, lapped quietly at my soul and soothed every nerve just like she could. When the winds picked up and the waves crashed into the rocks nearby, I remembered her wild and free near the lake that night so many years ago, begging me to let go with her. Her dark hair caught in the wind, whipping away at the world, her eyes a vivid green, and her soul so lit up, it battled out all the darkness around her. Sheâd finally become herself, and there was no way I would ever let someone take that independence from her.
All of this was for her. She may never know it but protecting her from her father was about the only thing I was willing to give her up for.
I didnât waste more time there but jetted back to the city to work out more details.
My flight took longer than expected. It allowed me to map out the investments I wanted to make, calculate the stocks with just the right amount of risk, and discover that the app would generate more success than Stonewood Enterprises had ever expected.
My driver was waiting for me when we finally landed. He mumbled something about Isabel instructing him to tell me to call her. I grunted and as I slid into the black SUV, my shoulders relaxed like a damn weight had been lifted.
Here, I was comfortable. I was a Stonewood and that held the most weight in this city. My instant fame from one album didnât matter in the city where my name overpowered it. People feared and respected us here. It reminded me of why I left in the first place.
Here, I could hide away from my demons and could make something of myself so I didnât have to focus on selling my soul to the devil.
I remember distinctly the day the news broke of my visit to see Aubreyâs dad in prison. Tabloids everywhere captured me striding into the building and variations of âJax Betrays Family by Visiting Whitfieldâ were the headlines. Walking into Stonewood Enterprises that day to let my dad know the news wasnât something to look forward to.
He mirrored an older version of me, a version that had been around the block, had calculated his every move, and had learned everything the hard way.
He was a better man and a scarier one. Before I walked into his office, I almost turned around and fled back to my mother, thinking nothing could be worse than disappointing and facing him.
Walking through the doors and seeing the look he had on his face made me realize two things that day. My father wasnât just a ruthless businessman, he was also a ruthless father.
âYou all right, son?â he asked quietly, his eyes working over my face as if he could find the answer before I opened my mouth.
I nodded and let him scrutinize me more.
He nodded back at me as if heâd come to the conclusion that day that I was a man, a Stonewood man. âYou want me to handle this with Frank and the tabloids?â
âIâve got it taken care of.â
âYour mom loves Frankâs girl like her own, Jax,â he warned.
âYeah, and I love her more than I do my music, my life, and my damn soul combined,â I answered back.
He sighed and ran a hand over his face. âI figured that. Be careful, then.â
âAlways am when it comes to whatâs mine.â
My father rubbed the side of his mouth before saying, âI thought that once too. Donât make the same mistakes I did. This city is a good place to find yourself and lose yourself all at once,â he whispered almost to himself more than me. He looked down at a picture on his desk, one I knew was of my mother.
âSheâs still waiting for you whenever youâre ready to give up this life, Dad,â I mumbled.
He grunted, and I left him to his own thoughts because I had my own thoughts to sift through that day. I had to come up with a plan to cut ties with Frank, fulfill his requests, and protect the damn spitfire that had me wrapped around her finger.
Chicago held so many memories, but I found comfort in knowing I was doing the same thing as my father. I was able to hide from my true self, the one that felt fucking pain every time I saw a glimpse of a woman who looked like Aubrey or a magazine that captured her hanging out with Jay or Roman.
People either go to the big city to be a star or to disappear into the masses. No one cares what anyone else does there unless they are doing something phenomenal. The beauty of the cityscape is that a person can either change it by creating their own empire or get lost in it without anyone noticing they ever existed.
I accomplished both of those things by moving there.
My cell rang, and I scrubbed my hands down my face as I glanced at the screen.
Isabel.
Because the damn woman couldnât give me a second to breathe once I was back. I ignored it, knowing I needed a good nightâs sleep and barked at my driver to take me home.
That night, I dreamt of Aubrey wrapped around me, in her neutral-colored clothes and all.
Going to see Frank in prison the next morning would make the headlines. I knew when I saw two SUVs following. Theyâd snap a picture and build a story on anything they could right now. With the app set to launch in just a few weeks, anything was more than nothing to them.
âWant me to lose them, boss?â My driver asked.
âNo use, really. Others will be waiting when we get there.â
My phone rang, and I saw that Isabel was calling again.
My driver chuckled to himself.
I shot him a look and he outright laughed at me. Probably the only man who would. âI told you to call her last night, boss.â
âShut the fuck up,â I said as I pushed the privacy window button.
âIsabel, Iâm busy,â I answered.
âYouâre on your way to that god-awful prison. You canât be that busy.â
âNews already?â
âYup. Theyâve got your SUV on live TV. Now that leaves me to clean up the PR mess before your launch, and honestly, we donât have time for this shit, Jax.â
âThis shit is what I pay you to make time for.â
âThen maybe you should answer your phone when I call so you can prepare me for making time for it.â
I sighed. âIsabel, Iâm not in the mood. You know what Iâm doing. What do you want?â
âWell, I want a call when youâre back in town, Jax.â She sounded a little hurt but Iâd become immune to people feeling hurt when they worked for me. âWe could have gotten dinner or something.â
âLike you said, I have this launch coming up. I donât need to remind you that it is a multimillion-dollar launch that needs my time and attention more than you need it at dinner.â
âIâve never wasted your time, have I?â
I smiled. âNo, you havenât. Yet. You are a pain in my ass though.â
âSweet talk from the boss,â she purred. âI love it. Does my boss want to scratch an itch tonight with me? I havenât been fucked since youâve been gone.â
Just like her to cut straight to the point. âThatâs not my problem. You can sleep with whomever you want.â
âRight. Well, I recall having to make out with you for every one of your launch concerts, which somewhat limits my little black book, considering no guy is willing to step on your toes. And letâs be honest, youâre easier than most men I sleep with. Might I remind you, we seem to work, Mr. Stonewood.â
I grunted because, normally, she was right. The woman had an uncanny knack for knowing how to do well in the PR industry, which included manipulating our relationship in the press just the way she wanted. It had always served in both of our favors, in more ways than one.
I just wasnât so sure it would serve me well in the future.
âHow are we trending? Is our launch date still looking good?â
âOf course.â
âThen thatâs all I need from you now.â I hung up, not willing to discuss anything else with her, as we pulled up to see Frank.
Over the years, the jitteriness of facing him had subsided. Itâll make a damn man out of you walking into a prison and facing a monster. I used to hope Iâd become like Jett or my dad, but they lacked one thing I learned by coming to visit Frank for all these years.
I learned that power doesnât just come from doing everything right, from calculating and stepping in all the right directions.
Sometimes, power comes from fear. Facing the fear over and over again until you are manipulating it and breathing the fear onto everyone else. What most people couldnât do though, was learn to calculate the fear and unleash it at just the right second.
The time drew near with him, it would be only a few more visits, then Iâd never have to see him again.