: Chapter 14
The Last Eligible Billionaire
Hayes touched my breast.
I know, I know, grow up, Begonia.
But this isnât a junior high oooh, he touched your buuuuuutttttt moment.
This is a grown-up, Mr. Stiff and Proper and Cranky accidentally brushed my breast with his hand and it made goosebumps race over my skin and my nipples tight and my panties wet and none of it matters, because he rejected my proposal this morning, and now, heâs openly staring at me as we eat the Cranfordsâ leftover crab cakes and the Perwinklesâ homemade bread and the Brownsâ hand-picked sugar snap peas from their garden, while sitting next to a campfire on the beach.
I swipe at my mouth. âDo I have crumbs?â
âThis is oddly delicious.â
Heâs so adorable.
No. Stop it, Begonia. Heâs aloof and cold and you cannot save him, so donât even try.
I swipe at my mouth again, but this time, Iâm trying to rub the smile off so I can match his seriousness. âEven commoners on coastal islands have to eat, and sometimes they like their food to taste good.â
âYoohoo! Mr. Rutherford? We wonât look if you want to kiss on Ms. Begonia here, but we heard you were having an impromptu romantic date, and we thought you might like some music.â
I glance up the small hill to where three locals are descending with violins, and I canât help clapping my hands. âOh my gosh, yes! That is so sweet of you!â
âYou havenât heard them play yet,â Hayes mutters.
âDonât be so negative. How often do you get serenaded by people who rarely have an audience?â
âYouâd be surprised.â
âHush and eat your peas, or thereâs no pie for you. And if that pie tastes half as good as it smelled while it was baking this afternoon, you definitely want pie.â
His gaze lands on me, lit only by the crackling fire, and I suddenly wonder if he wants âpieâ to be a euphemism.
That searing look says yes.
Or it might say Iâm going to murder you in your sleep.
âWeâll take a minute to get warmed up, and then itâll be nothing but the best music youâve ever heard outside of a symphony hall until our fingers fall off or you decide itâs time for you or us to go home,â the ringleader of the violinists calls. Theyâre setting up a little way down, like they know just the right amount of space to give us so we can enjoy the music but still hear each other talk.
âThank you so much for giving us music,â I call back with a smile. âIâm sure you have better things to do tonight.â
âJust the dishes.â All three of them laugh.
I smile at Hayes. âWhatâs the strangest place youâve ever been serenaded?â
He holds my gaze while he sips discount wine out of the silicone cup that the local post office manager donated to our picnic tonight. âI was with Jonas in Los Angeles, with limited security. He was coated in stage make-up that made him look approximately sixty-five for a fifty years later scene, and he wanted a cheeseburger from a local joint just outside the studioâs gates. Seemed safe enough, but a small gang of teenage girls spotted him and recognized him.â
I laugh. âHyacinth totally wouldâve been in that group. So you were serenaded in a burger joint?â
âNo. We took off at a run, and we ended up thinking weâd lost them when we dove into a single port-a-john at the edge of an alleyway, but teenage girls are terrifyingly smart, and they surrounded us, belting out the tunes from that god-awful film where he played a rock star until security arrived and rescued him.â
I try to stifle a giggle, and I fail miserably. It takes me a minute to stop long enough to whisper, âAt least you know this performance canât possibly stink like that one.â
A rare smile tilts his lips behind his wine cup. âI concede your point.â
Maybe itâs the wine. Maybe itâs the campfire under the stars. Maybe itâs the first notes of the violins sending music out into the world. Or maybe itâs his smile.
Whatever it is, I canât stop myself from leaning over and pressing a kiss to his cheek. âFor appearances,â I whisper.
Heâs stiff as my former mother-in-law, but he slides a hand around my waist, tugs me close, and tilts his head to mine, capturing my lips in a long, slow, languid kiss.
My hand wobbles, and he takes the flexible cup from my hand, still kissing me, coaxing my lips apart, his large hands gripping me more firmly, and all I can think about is my horrible proposition earlier.
Does this mean heâll do it?
Does it mean heâll have sex with me?
Or is this for appearances?
Hayes Rutherford should taste like charcoal and day-old dishrags, but instead, he tastes like sin and temptation. Heâs in a tux, on a homemade quilt loaned to us by a woman he dated once, the firm muscles in his arm brushing against my chest while his fingers dig into my hip and waist and his thumbs rub up and down over my dress. The sea breeze is making the kiss salty, the violins settling into âSerenade in G Major,â and I wonder if this is what it would be like to make love to him.
Quiet.
Intense.
Thorough.
A light flashes behind my eyelids, and he breaks off with a muttered curse.
âHey! Hey! Get back here.â
The music stops, and one of the ladies playing takes off at a run up the hill. âPaparazzi! Paparazzi!â
The cry is echoed above, like the whole townâs on alert.
âGo back to playing,â someone yells in the distance. âWeâll get him!â
Hayes glances at me, but his gaze doesnât meet my eyes. âThat will be quite effective in convincing my mother to stop throwing other women at me for a while. Thank you.â
A startled gasp slips out of my lips. âYou knew?â
âHush, now, darling, the sea has ears.â He takes his wine cup again. âAnd Iâm sure my security detail will do whatâs necessary.â
He knew. He knew there was someone waiting to take his picture, and now he canât be seen with another woman without being labeled a playboy, and his family couldnât possibly have that.
He set us up.
Heâs not kissing me because heâs thinking about having sex with me.
Heâs kissing me because we have a deal, and the deal is to keep his family from trying to play matchmaker.
He doesnât want to date anyone.
Iâm suddenly grateful that weâre in the dark, lit only by a fire, because itâs not the fire making my cheeks hot.
Itâs the warring feelings of wanting to kiss him more while knowing heâll only kiss me for convenience.
Self-respect, Begonia. Have some self-respect.
The violins pick back up. Marshmallow rolls onto his back with his legs curled over his belly, dozing peacefully in front of the fire. And Hayes returns his arm around me as if this is precisely where he wants to be.
My movements are stiff and unnatural as I cut off a block of cheese and hold it out for him, silently inviting him to continue the ruse by eating out of my hand.
His jaw tightens, but he leans in, his lips gliding across my fingers and making my stupid body shiver in response as he takes the morsel with his mouth.
âWhy do you want to be alone so badly?â I ask quietly.
He stares at the fire while he chews, and even after he swallows, he doesnât answer me right away.
I donât rush to fill the conversation, despite every instinct inside of me screaming for me to say something to make the awkwardness go away.
Smoothing things over, eliminating the tension, making people feel good about themselvesâthatâs what Iâm good at.
Asking hard questions and waiting for answers that might not come?
Thatâs for people who are not me.
âI donât wish to be alone,â he finally replies. âBut my life doesnât lend itself to any other option.â
âWhy not?â
âBegonia, you tried to offer to write my mother a check for the dress youâre wearing while simultaneously asking her not to cash it for two weeks until your next payday. You bought cheese from the clearance bin at the market this morning, and you promised Kristine weâd use a dryer sheet when we wash this quilt before returning it to her tomorrow. When I say you wouldnât understand, you have to trust that you truly could not possibly understand. It has nothing to do with your character or your intellect, and youâve done nothing wrong, but you cannot understand.â
âSo people have taken advantage of you and your money your whole life, and you have trust issues?â
He snorts softly. âDrop it, Begonia.â
âWill you have sex with me if I drop it?â
His whole body jolts, and I end up on the receiving end of a glare that should be setting someoneâs hair on fire.
And I laugh.
I shouldnât.
The first man Iâve made a real pass at since my divorce is glaring at me like Iâm the most inconvenient thing in the world, and Iâm laughing.
I pat his knee. âDonât worry,â I whisper. âIâm working on finding my self-respect so that I actually enjoy it when I finally have sex again.â
He squeezes his eyes shut and sucks in an audible breath through his nose, nostrils flaring, jaw ticking, aura screaming will this night never end?, and suddenly, itâs not funny anymore.
Concentrate on the picnic, Begonia, I remind myself. Enjoy this lovely picnic.
The entire little town came together to make sure we enjoyed ourselves on the beach tonight. But for the kindness of strangers, Iâd be having a leftover egg bake from this morning all by myself in the garden back at the mansion.
It wouldnât have been a bad way to spend the evening. The gardens are lovely, and so are the stars, though the egg bake wasnât entirely edible.
But instead, there are violins, a campfire, a homemade quilt, more delicious food than a dozen people could eat in two days, marshmallows for roasting over the fireâMarshmallow roasting himself near the fireâand an apple pie and wine in glow-in-the-dark silicone glasses to finish it off.
All while weâre wearing formalwear.
And there will be pictures in the paper, so Iâll be able to talk to Hyacinth all about it as soon as I get a cell signal again when Iâm in New York next week.
And Iâm going to New York.
Thereâs so much to be grateful for.
But my companion is not currently one of those things.
And he probably wonât ever be.