: Chapter 32
The Last Eligible Billionaire
In the past fifteen to twenty years, Iâve made an art out of avoiding anything that will give me regrets.
This evening, Iâm living two decadesâ worth of regrets in the span of under an hour.
âThe damage will be minimal,â I tell Begonia as we taxi down the runway at JFK. âThe paparazzi know my family will pay a pretty penny to squash scandal. My team is on it.â
She nods and stares out the window. âOf course. That makes sense.â
âWe should get married.â
The words leave my mouth and I can practically see them traveling the short distance in Jonasâs private planeânot mine, since itâs still delivering Hyacinth homeâfrom my lips to her ears. I want to snag them back before they register inside her brain, but I canât, and I know it.
Iâm also completely, selfishly thrilled with this turn of events.
I marry Begonia so that even if rumors swirl about what we were doing in public and why we disappeared from the gala, the scandal will be outweighed by the news of our wedding.
We were overcome with emotion at my proposal and didnât want to wait another minute to tie the knot.
My familyâs reputation will take a hit, but not as much as it would if we didnât get married. People tend to forgive you when you do the right thing, even if the standards my family are held to are ridiculous.
But tonight, I donât care.
Once I marry Begonia, Iâm free.
Free in the sense of not having women swarming every time Iâm at an event, even with my girlfriend, because wife is so much more permanent.
Rutherfords do not cheat.
And we can socially ruin anyone who dares to suggest that we should.
Iâll no longer be the last eligible billionaire in the world. The damage to my familyâs name will be minimal.
And I get to keep Begonia.
Weâre friends.
Friends with benefits.
Iâll provide her with a comfortable life and request in return a wife of convenience, at least for a while.
Surely someone else will have joined the ranks of the worldâs billionaires within a year or two. Iâll be written off as that Rutherford who couldnât hold his marriage together, convince my family Iâm utterly miserable at the idea of having to date, and never have to worry about this again.
With the exception of the horrified gonging in my heart at the thought of letting Begonia go.
She gapes at me from the wide executive chair across from me. âWe should what?â
âMy lawyer will draft a prenup before we land that will provide a comfortable stipend for you regardless of what happens next. I require at least two full years of marriage in exchange for supporting you in whatever endeavors would make you happiest, from teaching to making your own artwork to exploring anything else that would fill your heart with joy, and at the end of two years, if youâve found someone else you would rather be with, Iâll grant you a quiet divorce with assistance for transition back to a normal life.â
She doesnât answer.
She doesnât have to.
Her agitated green eyes are doing all of the talking for her.
But I wanted my next marriage to be for love, Hayes.
What I wouldnât give to wrap my arms around her and make her all the promises that terrify me to my core.
Iâll love you, Begonia. I donât know how not to.
There will never be another woman who affects me the way you do.
You are my one. You are my only one, the one Iâve waited my whole life for.
But therein is the problem.
Loving her is easy.
Being loved back by her?
She adores everyone.
Who am I to think I could be the man she would love above all others, when a woman like Begonia could have her pick of any man in the world?
Any man in the world. Someone who can love her fully without reservation or fear. Someone who could stand by her side and enjoy peopling, as she calls it. Someone who has more to offer her than money.
âIâll do my best to charm your mother, though of course, itâs in everyoneâs best interest if she abhors me. That will make our eventual split easier on you. And I work long hours, as youâve clearly realized, so if you wanted to live and work in Richmond as youâve been doing, I could commute back to New York during the week, keep my own quarters near you on the weekend, and be as little of an inconvenience in your life as youâd like me to be.â
Her chin wobbles, and her eyes go shiny. âThatâs what you want.â
âItâs what must happen, Begonia. I canât be the cause of scandal to my family, especially given my new position in the company, and I donât know if my influence alone will be enough for you to keep your teaching job if those photos appear anywhere.â
Itâs the best plan.
She becomes mine, for a solid reason, without me having to put my heart on the line.
I can live with knowing Iâm not her one greatest love, so long as I get to live with her.
âTake me home,â she says quietly.
I blink. âBegoniaââ
âTake. Me. Home.â
âThis is the only clear way toââ
âI love you, Hayes. I. Love. You. And I donât want to. I didnât want to. I just got divorced. I donât fit in your world. Iâm still finding myself again. And I could roll with it. I could. Youâre supposed to love people. Thatâs what makes the world a better place. And youâve been nothing but everything I always dreamed I wanted in a partner, except for one thing. You donât love me back. Iâve spent too many years sacrificing what I deserve for what I thought shouldâve been good enough. I wonât do good enough with you. I wonât do easy with you. Or anyone. I will not settle for anything less than all-consuming, no-holding-back, nothing-else-matters, we-are-in-this-together, I-love-you-so-much-it-hurts love.â
A tear slips down her cheek, and she swipes it away as if itâs whatâs committed the most egregious error of this evening.
It has.
That tear is single-handedly splitting my heart in two. And I have a choice.
I can tell her I love her back, risk that Begoniaâs love is fickle, that sheâll fall in love with someone else as easily as she falls in love with the sunrise each morning, with a funny design on her toast fresh out of the toaster, or with someoneâs hairstyle at a formal event, and try to do all in my power to keep her, all while never knowing for sure that Iâm truly what she wants.
If Iâm merely convenient.
The first man to give her a glimpse of better, but not necessarily the man who would be best for her.
Or I can stay safe.
Let her go.
Weather the scandal alone.
And know that I wouldnât have been able to keep her. That this bright, vibrant angel of life couldnât have ever been mine.
Not fully.
Sheâs the sunshine, hurtling about the universe bringing light to all she touches, and Iâm the tree.
Solid and dependable. Rooted. With a few broken branches.
But the fact remainsâwhile the tree needs the sunshine, the sunshine will never depend on the tree.
âDo you love me, Hayes?â she whispers. âCould you love me?â
For fuckâs sake. How could I not? âBegonia, I know very few people in this world who could know you and not love you.â
âBut do you love me?â
Three words.
Three of the most damn impossible words in the English language.
Thatâs what it would take to keep her.
For tonight.
But what happens tomorrow?
I asked her to pretend to be my girlfriend so that sheâd be a shield between me and anyone with an opinion about my love life after I became the worldâs most eligible billionaire. How ironic, when sheâs the one who should have men lined up around the block for a chance at her hand.
Sheâs loyal to a fault.
She wouldnât cheat.
But sheâll find someone newâpossibly someone I knowâand sheâll be miserable, and then sheâll leave me too.
I thought I hurt when Trixie left me.
That grief would be nothing compared to watching Begonia go after convincing myself I could make her happy.
âHayes?â she whispers.
I rise. âIâll instruct the pilot to change course.â