The Wrong Boss: Chapter 30
The Wrong Boss: A Secret Baby Billionaire Boss Romance (Manhattan Billionaires Book 6)
Since I was heading back to the city with the rest of the support staff, I flew commercial, jammed in between two passengers near the back of the plane. Back to reality. The trip was quick and uneventful, but I was still exhausted by the time I got off the train and considered the half-mile walk back to my house. I could definitely make the walk with my small duffel on a good day, but tonight wasnât good. The cab ride was extortionate for how short it was, but I paid the fare without complaint.
And when I opened the door to our condo and heard my daughterâs elephant steps pounding down the stairs, a bit of weight lifted from my shoulders.
âMom!â she cried, barreling toward me. She crashed into my legs and wrapped her arms around my waist. âYouâre back!â
âIâm back,â I echoed, stroking her hair.
âHailey did my words tonight and I spelled âdisputeâ right! Thatâs a third-grade word!â
âGood work,â I said, grinning as pride swelled in my chest. âAre you excited for Friday?â
âI canât wait!â she said, hopping like a bunny in her glee. She wore her favorite pajamasâwhite flannel with little bumble bees buzzing all over the fabricâand fuzzy black socks.
I wrapped my arms around her and held her tight, feeling like Iâd just stepped back into real life after a trip to another planet. It was a bittersweet feeling. âLet me put my bag upstairs and wash up, and then we can read a book together. Have you brushed your teeth?â
âYes,â Evie said. âCan I have three books?â
My lips twitched at the familiar negotiation. More books meant she could eke out a slightly later bedtimeâbut I was feeling slightly wounded and indulgent, so nodded. âSure. Go choose your books and Iâll meet you in bed.â
Evie took off up the stairs, and I turned to look at my cousin, who was leaning against the wall. She spread her arms and I hugged her.
âYou look like youâve been through the wringer,â she noted.
I huffed. âSomething like that.â
âYou want to talk about it? Seth got a case of fancy wine as a thank-you gift from a client. We could crack it open and catch up.â
âThat sounds good,â I said, squeezing her again. âBut I donât want to drink all the fancy wine before you get to have any.â I glanced at her bump, which seemed to have grown in the few days I was gone.
Hailey shrugged, smiling. âThereâs plenty of wine to be had in the future. But you look like you need some now.â
Laughing, I relented. âFine. But I owe Evie three books, and I desperately need a shower.â
âIâll have your glass ready and waiting,â she promised, and an hour later, I found out she did just that. I sank down on the sofa next to Seth and Hailey, who were snuggled up on the other end of it, and let out a long sigh.
âThat bad, huh?â Hailey asked, nudging the glass full of ruby liquid toward me.
I shook my head, eyes flicking to Seth.
Hailey grinned. âIs this a girls-only type of conversation?â
Sethâgentle, kind Sethâput up his hands. âI know when Iâm not wanted.â
âStay,â I said. âI canât just drink your wine and kick you out of your own living room.â
âIâve got some work to finish up,â he said, kissing Hailey on the forehead before bidding us goodnight.
I watched him go and let out a long sigh. That was exactly why I needed to move out and give the two of them space. They deserved privacy while they grew their familyânot me trundling in, drinking their booze, and kicking them out of their own living room.
âYou have that look on your face like youâre choking on your own guilt,â Hailey pointed out.
I jerked, meeting her gaze. âExcuse me?â
âCome on, Carrie. You always do this. You agonize over things that should be simple. Now spill. Whatâs going on?â
âI was just thinking about how you twoââI glanced at her bumpââsoon to be three, deserve your own space. You deserve privacy.â
âCarrie, you know youâre welcome here. We love living with you. It helps our finances, for starters. You pull more than your own weight. And besides,â she added, stroking her belly, âyouâll be a built-in babysitter!â
I laughed, then glanced at the stairs, thinking of Evie. âI guess I owe you about forty thousand hours of babysitting duty by now.â
âYou owe me nothing,â Hailey said. âWeâre family.â
My heart ached. How would I have made it without her and Seth? Me, who was weak and selfish and cowardly. I didnât deserve to have such good people supporting me. I didnât deserve my daughter or my cousin or my life.
âCarrie,â Hailey said, scooting closer to me. âSomething happened, didnât it?â
I slugged my wine and put the glass down. Then I took a deep breath, faced my cousin, and said, âI slept with him.â
She inhaled, wide-eyed. âOh,â she said.
âAnd I havenât told him about Evie.â
âOh,â she repeated.
âAnd he ended his engagement.â
âOh, dear.â
I leaned back against the couch and groaned. âThen this morning, Iâd just about worked up the courage to tell him everything, and he got a phone call saying his fiancée got in a car accident and is in the hospital.â
Hailey blew out a long breath. Apparently even she was beyond words. Groaning, I slapped my hands over my face.
âOkay,â Hailey started, ever the pragmatist, âthatâs okay. The timing is terrible, but, you know, the show must go on.â
I split my fingers and looked at her through the gap. âThat makes no sense.â
She tilted her head back and forth. âWell. Fine. But this is salvageable!â
âHe kept telling me that he couldnât believe I came back into his life. He talked to me likeâlikeâ ââ
âLike?â
âLike heâs in love with me!â Tears welled in my eyes and I brushed them away. My hand shook as I picked up my wine glass, and I tasted none of the drink as I drained my glass.
When Hailey spoke, her voice was so, so gentle. âWhy does that make you want to cry, Carrie?â
I shook my head. âI donât know.â
She reached over to rub the space between my shoulder blades. âAll right,â my cousin said, dropping that line of inquiry, probably sensing that I was lying to her. I knew exactly why it made me cryâit was because I was in love with him, but Iâd screwed up so monumentally that Iâd pretty much guaranteed weâd never be together. How could we, when Iâd lied by omission for this long?
As if she could read the direction of my thoughts, Hailey asked, âWhy didnât you tell him right away, Carrie?â
âBecause Iâm a coward.â
âI donât think thatâs it. A coward wouldnât be able to raise a little girl as well as youâve raised Evie.â
âYou and Seth have helped with that.â
âYouâre her mother, Carrie,â Hailey chided. âYouâre the one whoâs done all the parenting.â
My throat was so tight it burned.
âA coward wouldnât have gone out and looked for a job like you did in those early years, or excelled the way you did, or pushed for more career progression now. So why didnât you tell him right away?â
I opened my mouth, but nothing came out. Tears ran freely down my cheeks, and all I could do was shake my head.
Hailey sighed. âI guess it doesnât matter. We should figure out how youâre going to tell him now.â
âIâll sit him down. Maybe at dinner. A café. Somewhere public.â
âOkay.â
âAnd then Iâll just say it. Iâll rip the Band-Aid off. âCole, Iâ Youâyouâre my daughterâs father.ââ I stumbled on the words; even in a role-play, I couldnât do it.
âGood!â Hailey encouraged. âGood. Then heâll be shocked, maybe angry, and youâll sayâ¦â
I looked at her, lost. âIâll say⦠I have no idea what Iâll say.â
âYouâll explain why you didnât tell him.â
âRight. I was shocked. I was afraid heâd want to take her away from me, and equally afraid heâd want nothing to do with either of us.â
Hailey nodded supportively. âOkay! Weâre getting somewhere!â
I cringed, sank down into the cushions, and groaned. âHeâs going to fire me immediately.â
âProbably, yes.â
âAnd then heâll point his army of lawyers at me.â
âPossibly. But youâve got Carla!â
âStop being so fucking cheery, Hailey. I canât handle it.â I said it half-jokingly, snort-laughing as tears sprang from my eyes again.
Hailey laughed with me, wiping her own eyes as she leaned her head against my shoulder. âWeâll get through this,â she promised. âYou have a home. You have your daughter. You have me and Seth. Everything will work out.â
I nodded, reaching over to pat her hand, grateful that she couldnât see the look on my face. Because all I heard when she said that was how much of a failure I was. I had a home that she provided for me, because I couldnât afford one on my own. I had a daughter who deserved so much more than me. I had her and Seth to keep me afloat when I couldnât manage to build my own life like a functioning adult.
Once Cole saw me for what I wasâa failure of a human, a selfish coward, and a liarâhe wouldnât look at me like I was all that mattered in the world. The false image would shatter, and all this would be over. Heâd fight me for Evie, or heâd disappear from our lives forever. I would never again have the right to touch him or kiss him or laugh with him.
And after all that, when the dust settled and I cobbled my life together from the rubble, I would still be in love with him.