: Chapter 28
The Do-Over (The Miles High Club Book 4)
I exhale heavily as I stare at my computer screen. I glance at my phone as it sits on the desk. I should call Hayden.
No.
Youâve called her already today.
I go back to trying to focus. The numbers all jumble on my screen.
Just a quick call.
No.
For fuckâs sake, Iâm not going to be able to focus until I know that sheâs okay.
I dial her number, and it rings out.
Hmm . . .
I text her.
Hi babes,
Whatâs doing?
I put my phone to the side and look back to my computer screen. Sheâll call me back when she can.
I get back to work, and twenty minutes later I pick up my phone again. Why hasnât she called me back? I go to call her again . . . Just stop it.
Fuck.
Iâm getting nothing done around here because Iâm worrying about Hayden all the time.
Focus.
She says sheâs fine. I should believe her. I mean, how could she not be? She has the whole of London at her fingertips.
Of course sheâs fine.
My gut is telling me that something is off with her, but perhaps Iâm looking for something that isnât there. I get back to work, and sure enough, ten minutes later I pick up my phone.
Call me . . . damn it.
Jameson and Tristan saunter into my office. âYou ready to go to lunch?â
I exhale heavily. Where has the morning gone? Iâve literally achieved nothing.
Fuck. I need to focus.
My brothers are in London for the bimonthly board meeting.
âYeah, I guess.â
âWhatâs wrong with you?â Tristan frowns.
âNothing.â I stand. âLetâs go.â
Twenty minutes later we are seated in a bar close to the office. Weâve ordered, and Iâm drinking mineral water.
âNot having a beer?â Jameson asks.
âNo. Iâve got too much to do.â I drag my hand down my face. âEver since I got back, Iâm achieving next to nothing.â
Tristan smiles as he crunches a piece of ice from his water. âThe vacation is officially over. Back to the real world, hey?â
âItâs not even work; itâs Hayden. The paps are giving her hell, and she hates the weather here.â
âThe weather?â Tristan frowns.
âItâs pretty fucking dreary here lately. The sun is a special event ever since she arrived.â I shrug. âI keep thinking that sheâs going to get used to it and adjust . . . but between you and me, Iâm not actually sure she is.â
âYou going to move out of the city?â Jameson asks.
âNo. Fuck that.â I screw up my face. âI love the city. I hate being out of town, and besides, I asked her to give me three months before we do anything. Thereâll be times in my life that I need to live in a city, and it may not just be here. It could be anywhere. She needs to know what sheâs signed up for. I donât want to go to all the trouble to move and then it doesnât work out anyway.â
They both frown and glance at each other.
âWhat?â I snap.
âSheâs on a three-month trial?â Tristan frowns. âOr are you?â
âBoth, I guess, but thatâs how long I have to work long hours in London. After that we can discuss what weâre going to do long term, but at this stage, with Elliot away, thereâs no way around it.â
âAnd then with the next two weekends . . . ,â Jameson adds.
âWhat about the next two weekends?â I frown.
âYouâve got the Paris team in town next weekend for training, and then the week after that we have a conference in Germany. So you technically wonât have a day off at home for twenty-one days.â
I pinch the bridge of my nose. âFuck. Having someone depend on you is seriously a nightmare.â
âBuy her a puppy.â Jameson shrugs.
âHave a baby.â Tristan smiles into his drink. âThen sheâll be too exhausted to give a fuck if you are dead or alive . . . let alone where she lives.â
âNot a bad plan, actually.â I chuckle.
âOr if your dick has fallen off,â Jameson mutters dryly.
âTrue story,â Tristan agrees.
âFuck that, then.â
Our lunch arrives, and we eat in silence for a while.
âWhat are you going to do?â Jameson asks.
I shrug. âNothing. Sheâll be okay, but if the sun would just come out for one minute, it would be very fucking helpful.â
My phone beeps with a text. Itâs from Hans.
Hi Mr. Miles,
Not sure if I am overstepping.
I thought I would let you know that Hayden
has had a bad day.
I frown and text back.
What makes you say that?
A picture bounces back. Itâs a photo of Hayden in a park. Sheâs sitting on the grass. Tears are running down her red face. She looks so lost and so forlorn.
So . . . unlike the happy Hayden that I fell in love with.
Her sadness seeps through the image, and I get a lump in my throat as I stare at it.
I stand. âIâve got to go.â
âWhatâs wrong?â They both frown.
I hold my phone up and show them the photo, and their faces fall as they stare at it. âFuck . . . ,â Tristan whispers. âThat doesnât look good.â
âYou think?â I throw my napkin on the table in disgust. âBye, Iâll call you later.â
I march out of the restaurant on a mission. I call Hans.
âHello, Mr. Miles.â
âWhere are you?â
HAYDEN
I sit and stare into space. The park bench is hard and cold and laden with impossible decisions.
I have this sinking feeling in my heart, but I donât know how to stop it. Every day I get up determined to be happy.
By lunchtime Iâm in tears . . . and Iâm not a crying kind of girl.
Iâve never had a reason to cry before, and Iâm not even sure I do now.
Everything about our love is crystal clear and yet, in so many ways, messy and complicated.
I messed up, and the stupid thing is, I knew it at the time, but I didnât want to be the drama queen and cause a fight. But I should have. I should have fought harder to stand up for myself.
Looking back, Christopher should have come to London alone, let both of us get used to our surroundings before we jumped into the pressure cooker of living together in a big city.
It all happened so fast. Everything was just thrown at me, all or nothing from the very get-go.
Hindsight is a marvelous thing.
If only . . .
Christopher told me who he really was one minute before the car pulled up because he knew I wouldnât cause a scene in front of the driver.
It didnât sit well with me at the time, but I let it slide because I understood his reasoning for wanting to be anonymous, especially now that the press is hounding me day and night. I get why he needed that break from reality, and I respect him for taking it. Now that I know him, it would have taken a lot of guts to do what he did.
He wanted to find someone who loved him for him. Mission accomplished: I love him.
With everything.
But what about my choices . . . and do they even matter anymore?
I had everything mapped out, and now my hopes and dreams are just . . . gone.
Christopher is the love of my lifeâIâm talking soul mate shitâbut I know that to be with him I have to give up who I am.
For him to move to be with me . . . he would have to give up who he is.
Thereâs no fucking winner. One of us has to lose everything in order for the other to be happy.
And I want it to be me. I donât want him to suffer like this . . . but itâs harder than I thought it would be.
Lonelier.
I screw up my face in tears.
If I want to be my true self, then I canât stay living in a city. If I want a life with Christopher, then I have to stay.
Itâs not fair that I have to choose one over the other.
I canât lose either.
Tears slowly run down my face.
âHey, babe,â Christopherâs voice says from behind me.
I turn, startled.
âEverything all right?â he asks.
I turn away from him and quickly wipe my eyes. Damn it, how did he know I was here? âYep.â
He sits down beside me and stares out over the park. âWhatâs going on?â
âNothing.â I try to hide my tears. âIâm okay.â
He raises his eyebrow.
I roll my eyes. âDonât.â
We fall silent, and I troll my brain for the right thing to say.
âHayden . . . you need to talk to me . . . I canât fix this if you wonât talk to me.â
Be honest.
âI think Iâm going to go home to the States for a few weeks,â I say softly.
âWhat?â He frowns. âWhy?â
âYouâre so busy, and I . . . just need some fresh air . . . and . . .â
His eyes hold mine.
I steel myself to say the dreaded words out loud. âIâm struggling . . . and not entirely sure that city life is for me.â
âMy life is in the city, Hayden,â he replies curtly.
My eyes well with tears. âI know.â
âYou said you would give it three months.â
âI know I did.â
âItâs been only weeks. Of course you arenât settled in yet. Give it some time. Youâll come around.â
Come around?
He just doesnât get it.
âI donât want to come around, Christopher,â I snap in frustration. âIâm thinking long term.â
âMeaning what?â
âThereâs no way I could raise a family here in these conditions.â
âWhat the fuck does that mean?â he barks angrily.
I shrug.
âA shrug?â he snaps. âYou tell me you donât want to ever raise a family here, and then you answer it with a shrug? Youâve been here for two fucking minutes, Hayden.â
âDonât get angry.â
âHow could I not?â He raises his voice. âThese conditions happen to be the best of the best in London. You have a driver, you have a guard, you live in a forty-million-dollar penthouse and can do whatever you like, and itâs still not fucking enough?â
âI donât have the cleaner I fell in love with, though, do I?â I snap back. âI hate this workaholic version of you. If I met you as you are now, we wouldnât even be together.â
He sits back in the chair and gives me a sarcastic smile. âAnd there it is.â
âThere what is?â
âI wondered how long it would be until you threw that in my face.â
My temper begins to rise. âAm I not allowed to bring it up? Youâre done with that topic, so thatâs the end of it? Is that how this relationship works? Itâs your way or the highway.â
âDonât be fucking cute, Hayden. I donât like it.â
âI beg your pardon.â Adrenaline surges through my bloodstream. âI will not apologize for feeling let down by you. You brought this all onto yourself when you lied to me for twelve months, so donât you dare fucking sit there and defend your actions like Iâm the one with the problem.â
He rolls his eyes, and I see red.
âIâm going home to the farm for a while.â
âNo. Youâre not,â he snaps.
âWhat do you mean, no, Iâm not?â
âYou told me that you would give it three months, and damn it, you will give them to me. Youâre having a bad day. Are you going to run back home to Mommy and Daddy every time you have a bad fucking day?â
Unbelievable.
âProof that you are not fucking listening to a thing Iâm saying,â I yell.
âIf you go home to that farm, then thatâs it,â he yells.
âWhat?â I screw up my face. âWhat the hell does that mean?â I explode.
âJust what I said.â He raises his chin in defiance. âI have to live in the city. It is nonnegotiable. If you choose not to give it a proper go, then . . .â He throws up his hands in defeat. âThereâs no fucking point. Iâm not doing a long-distance relationship. It wonât work.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause I need sex!â he yells.
I sit back in my seat, shocked to silence.
Wow . . .
Reality hits home like a freight train, my heart splintering into pieces.
We really arenât going to be able to work through this. I get a lump in my throat. âIf sex means more to you than my happiness . . . then I guess . . . this is goodbye.â
He rolls his eyes. âDonât be so dramatic, Hayden. You know what I mean.â
âYes, I do.â I stand. âIâm going home.â
âThis is your home.â He stands in an outrage.
I roll my eyes. âItâs just a few weeks. Whoâs the one being dramatic around here?â
âYouâre not going.â
âYou canât tell me that Iâm not allowed to go home, Christopher. I wonât stand for it.â
âYou said you would give it three months.â
âI want to go home for a few weeks. It shouldnât be a big deal.â
âNo. You stay here, and we work through this together. I will not be held over a barrel every time you get homesick. You leave me, and thatâs fucking it.â
What the hell?
I canât believe this. He would really rather we break up than go without sex?
Oh . . .
His silhouette blurs . . .
âWho even are you?â I whisper through tears.
âIâm the man who loves you.â
âAre you sure about that?â
His chest rises and falls as he struggles for air.
âIâm going.â
âThenââhe shrugsââthis is goodbye.â
My eyes search his. âJust like that?â
âI canât drag this out. If youâre leaving me without trying now, you will always leave me without trying. I can never move out of the city, Hayden. Itâs not who I am.â
Oh no.
This really is it . . . my heart constricts in my chest.
We stare at each other, so close but a million miles apart.
âI love you,â I whisper.
âObviously not enough.â He walks off.
âAre you not coming home to see me off?â I call after him.
âNo.â He turns back to face me, his cold eyes holding mine. âGoodbye, Hayden.â He disappears through the park, and I drop back to the seat, shocked to my core.
Checkmate.
I put the last of my things into my suitcase as it lies open on the bed, and I look around the bedroom.
Is this going to be the last time I see it?
Canât be . . .
No. Weâll get through this. I know we will. We love each other too much not to be together. I glance at the time on my phone: 6:20 p.m.
Where is he?
I texted Christopher when I booked my flight and told him the time Iâd be leaving. Donât tell me heâs not coming home to see me off.
I know I could stay here for a while before I go, plan it better and leave next week or something, but with him working for the next three weeks straight, another day alone in that apartment is not something I can take. And besides, Iâm angry at him for throwing the no-sex comment in my face. I know he just said it to try to shock me.
And it worked. He did . . . but not in a good way.
If anything, itâs made me more determined to look after my own happiness. I would never say something like that to him in a fight. It surprised me that he would stoop that low. Actually, if Iâm honest, Iâm not surprised. Christopher has a way of railroading me into doing what he wants me to do. This time he took the wrong route . . . I wonât be bullied with scare tactics. If he wants to sleep with someone else, he can go ahead.
I wonât be here to pick up the pieces.
âGrumps,â I hear him call from downstairs.
Heâs home.
I nearly run downstairs to find him in the kitchen. Heâs pouring two glasses of wine. My heart somersaults in my chest at the sight of him. In his perfectly fitted navy suit and crisp white shirt, he is the epitome of masculine perfection.
âHi.â I smile hopefully.
âHi.â He kisses my cheek and passes me a glass of wine. âWe need to talk.â
He takes my hand and leads me out to the living room, and we sit on the couch. I swallow the nervous lump in my throat, and I know this is it, the moment in time when we discuss our future.
His eyes hold mine. âHow long have you been unhappy here?â
âIâm not unhappy with you . . .â
âAnswer the question, Hayden,â he replies flatly.
Be honest.
âAlmost the whole time.â
He raises an eyebrow and sips his wine.
âTo clarify, Iâm not unhappy with you and our relationship. I love you, more than anything.â
âNot more than living in the country, though.â
Heâs hurt.
âChris, I just . . .â I hesitate, unsure what to say. I need all the facts in front of me. âWhere do you see your permanent home being?â I ask. âLong term, like where do you see your children growing up?â
âBetween London and New York.â
âIn apartments?â
âYes, my apartments are bigger than most houses, Hayden.â
âI know.â I nod. âItâs true; they are. And will you always work for Miles Media?â
âOf course I will; itâs my familyâs business. Iâll never leave the company.â
âOh.â I sip my wine, unsure what to even say to that.
His future is set in stone.
âIn a perfect world, where do you see yourself living?â he asks.
My eyes search his, and I donât want to say it out loud, because once I say it I canât take it back.
âPlease, just be honest, Haze,â he says softly.
âOn the land.â
âWhere?â
âI donât know.â I shrug. âNot necessarily my parentsâ farm, but something similar. I eventually want my own animal husbandry business. Itâs what I do, what I love, and Iâm missing it so much.â
I see the hurt flash through his eyes.
âWould you . . . ever live on a farm?â I tentatively ask. âCan you see yourself living in the country?â
âNo.â
âWould you ever try it?â
âNo point. I already know that I would hate it.â
We stare at each other as a realization begins to set in.
âWhat do you hate about the city?â he asks.
âEverything.â
âSpecifics.â
âThe pollution, the people, the chaos, the paparazzi. Itâs just so loud and on steroids. I donât feel myself here.â I take his hand in mine. âAnd I desperately want to because I love you, but I already know that to be here, I have to give up who I am.â
His haunted eyes hold mine.
âAnd maybe I should do that . . .â I shrug. âI just . . .â
âNo.â He cuts me off. âI donât want you to do that.â He cups my face in his hand. âYouâre perfect the way you are. Donât change a thing.â
My eyes well, and a tear escapes and rolls down my face. He wipes it away with his thumb.
âWhat does this mean for us, Chris?â I whisper.
His nostrils flare. âIt means I have to let you go.â
The lump in my throat hurts as I try to hold in my tears.
He kisses me softly. âI canât ask you to be someone youâre not, Hayden. Because I know for certain that I canât change who I am.â
Oh no.
âBut I love you,â I whisper.
His eyes well with tears. âAnd I will always love you.â
He takes me into his arms and holds me tight, and the dam breaks, and I cry against his shoulder.
âBut how . . . can two people be so in love and it not work out?â I sob.
âBecause fairy tales arenât real.â
I cry harder. âDonât say that.â
âDeep down I always knew it.â
I pull out of his arms. âI donât believe that.â I begin to get panicked. He really is saying goodbye. âNo. Iâll stay. Weâll work it out. We can do this,â I splutter. âIt will be okay.â
âNo, Hayden. We wonât.â He stands. âGet your things. Iâm taking you to the airport. You will not be unhappy for one more minute because of me. I made a promise to your father that I would look after you, and this is me doing that.â
âI donât want to go,â I whisper.
âBut you donât want to stay.â
I sob out loud, and he walks from the room and two minutes later returns with my suitcase. âCome on.â
I screw up my face in tears. âBut we love each other.â
âThis is one of those cases where love isnât enough.â
My heart constricts. Oh no.
âGet your things.â He wheels my suitcase to the door and walks out into the foyer. I walk around the apartment, sobbing, as I find my handbag and everything I want to take.
The worst part about it is, deep down I know that heâs right.
I have to leave, and he has to stay.
I take one last look around the beautiful apartment. Itâs always felt so cold and unwelcoming to me . . . and now I know why.
Itâs not my home.
I screw up my face and cry harder. I walk out the front door and get into the elevator.
Christopher is solemn and staring straight ahead. We ride down to the ground floor to the soft sounds of my sobs. He wheels my suitcase to the car and puts it into the trunk and gets in behind the wheel.
I cry all the way to the airport while he holds my hand in his lap, occasionally lifting it to kiss my fingertips.
We get to the airport, but instead of parking the car, he pulls into the drop-off parking bay. âYouâre not coming in?â I whisper.
His eyes well with tears. â. . . I canât.â
âBaby . . .â I sob.
âDonât.â He gets out of the car in a rush, and I know he needs this over with. He pops the trunk and gets my suitcase out.
We stare at each other. An ocean of heartbreak and sadness swims between us.
âIâll call you when I get there?â I whisper.
âDonât.â
I frown.
âThis needs to be a clean break.â
Oh.
He takes me into his arms, and we stand on the street hugging, both in tears.
âIâll always love you,â he whispers.
âI love you.â I cling to him tight.
This canât be the end.
As if unable to stand it, he pulls out of my arms in a rush and gets into the car and, without looking back, pulls out into the traffic.
I stand on the sidewalk and through blurred vision watch the sports car disappear down the road. âGoodbye, my love.â