Read The Billionaire Bargain (Millionaire's Club) Online

Authors: Barb Han

Tags: #Contemporary, #Multicultural

The Billionaire Bargain (Millionaire's Club) (8 page)

BOOK: The Billionaire Bargain (Millionaire's Club)
7.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Daegen walked the doctor to the door and then moved to the kitchen to get a glass of water ready for when she woke.

He glanced at the tabloid on the floor. His shock didn’t register at first. There he stood staring at the picture. Astonishment wasn’t the word for what he felt next.

The boy in the photo, whom Daegen suspected to be around eleven years old, was a blast from the past. He had his mother’s eyes. Almond-shaped face. Regret ate at Daegen’s stomach lining.

He thought the man calling was just another prank.

He palmed his cell and called his assistant. “Change of plans, Nancy.”

“Yes, sir. Which account are we talking about?”

“This is personal. The boy’s mine.”

“Oh.”

****

When Rae blinked her blurry eyes open, she couldn’t immediately get her bearings. All she knew was her eyes burned, and she had an enormous headache.

Feeling around, she realized she was on a bed, lying down, and something warm and wet was on her forehead.

Her hand came up to investigate her forehead. Blood?

Daegen blanketed the doorway with his graceful athletic frame. His eyes connected to hers, and he dropped to his knees beside her. “How do you feel?”

“Confused...okay...what happened?”

“You fainted, bumped your head on the counter,” he said, worry lines deepening the brackets around his mouth. His warm smile hitched air in her throat.

It was easy to see why so many women, including herself, fell into bed with him.

Sure hurt falling out though. She had the marks to prove it. “I take it I cut myself?”

“You’ll be fine. It’s a small wound. There’ll most likely be a nasty bruise though,” he said as the back of his hand grazed her cheek, sending chills racing through her veins. “My doctor just left.”

Doctor? How long had she been out? Rae couldn’t for the life of her remember falling. A sliver of fear sliced through her at the thought she might have inherited her father’s condition. She pushed up on her arms. “I’m fine.”

Daegen raised a dark brow. “It’s just a bruise, not too bad. It’ll heal. I had my physician work up your blood just in case.”

She remembered. The tabloid. Her physical bumps might mend, but the shock of Daegen being a father and leaving his son to grow up alone might scar her for life. “Is it true? Is he your son?”

He nodded.

“How could you do that to him? Leave him all alone?” Tears streamed down her cheeks, no longer able to keep up the façade that she was okay.

An explosion of anger crossed his dark features. “Wait a minute. I had no idea. What kind of person leaves his own child to fend for himself?”

Right.
Daegen wasn’t the kind of man who could do that. “Mine.”

“I didn’t mean it like that.” Daegen’s concern was genuine, outlined by worry etched on the creases of his otherwise perfect and bronzed face. The lines were somehow deeper than she’d ever seen. He looked as though he’d seen a ghost. “For what it’s worth, Rae, I’m sorry.”

“Me too.” It took her more than a few seconds to fight beyond the squall enveloping her, and when she did, her gaze connected with the dark brooding stare of the man in front of her. She dredged a smile from somewhere deep inside herself, a consolation to him for the pain he must feel. “I want to be alone.”

“Not until I know you’re all right,” he soothed. He set a glass of water on her nightstand.

She picked it up and drained it not wanting him to see how close she was to falling apart. “Now?”

His breath came out in a hiss. “Fine.”

When she could finally gather herself again, she decided to check on her father. Damn. He was on a plane. She had no way to reach him without Daegen’s help. She was depending on him too much.

Live your life, child, not mine.
Her father’s words echoed in her head. More tears came when she realized his walking away all those years ago probably had more to do with the fact he wanted to live his own life. A life that didn’t include her.

Physically and emotionally exhausted, she pulled the covers up to her neck, curled in a tight ball, and allowed sleep to claim her.

Chapter Six

Rae drifted off, waking with a start. Daegen was there. Arms folded. Looking like he hadn’t left her side. He leaned forward and tented his fingers. “The doctor said you need more iron.” His hand opened and there was a pink pill on his palm.

“What’s that?” Rae said, pushing up on one elbow.

“A supplement.”

She turned her face away. “I’m okay. Really.”

“No. You’re not. You fainted. You might have been seriously injured when you fell.”

Hurt? He should know.

“Look. I have a proposition,” he said tentatively.

Not another one of those. “What now?”

“I know. I was an asshole before. But, look, your father’s plane doesn’t arrive until morning. Let me take care of you until then.”

She glanced at the clock. Her breath came out in a huff. She appreciated the apology but allowing Daegen to take care of her was a slippery slope. “Don’t you have other more important business to attend to than babysitting me?”


You’re
my priority. I want you to relax and be well so you can take care of your father. This is a marathon, not a sprint, my sweet. You’ve been neglecting yourself. I want to change that. When’s the last time you allowed someone to take care of you?”

What? Let her defenses down so he could grind his heels on what was left of her heart? No thanks.

“I’ll take a hot bath, and I promise to eat better. Satisfied?”

He moved to her side and took a knee. “No. It’s not good enough. Besides, I have another plan.”

He was different. More intense. “Are you still upset about Daniel? I need to know if me being a father is a deal breaker.”

Her heart thumped in her chest. “I don’t know if upset is the right word. Shocked, maybe. I haven’t had time to absorb the news. I just found out.”

“So did I.”

“And you seem to be taking it in stride.” He wasn’t. She could see his body trembling ever so slightly.

“What choice do I have?”

“You plan to step up, don’t you?”

“I have every intention of giving that boy the family he should’ve been born with,” Daegen said intensely, his jaw set.

She could tell he meant those words with every fiber of his being. Warmth she couldn’t explain threaded through her. She had to admire a man so dedicated to his child. Especially one he’d never met. If he was being this honest with her, she could risk a little trust. “So, you really never knew?”

His head shook. “No idea.”

“His mother never contacted you?”

“No. I’ve been getting phone calls from a man who claimed to be the relative of my ex-girlfriend.”

“Isn’t that about the same time Forbes named you richest man of the year?”

He nodded with a harsh sigh. “Brought out a lot of crazies.”

“I can only imagine.”

“I dismissed the whole idea as...
that
.”

“How on earth did he manage to finally get through to you?”

“He was persistent. Threatened to go to the press. My assistant decided I should hear him out. She begged me to consider taking his call.”

“You didn’t.”

“I’d never spent time with anyone with his last name. Didn’t make the connection.” His shoulders came forward. His face twisted. “Turns out he’s the uncle of someone I dated a long time ago.”

Was Daegen really talking to her about something important? He’d never revealed details about his life when they were together before. Was he ready to open up and discuss his past? “When did you figure out the connection?”

“Today. The tabloid.” He held out his palm with the supplement still on it. “He has her eyes.”

Every move in Daegen’s life was calculated. She could scarcely imagine him slipping up and getting someone pregnant by accident. Then again, it was a long time ago. Maybe he learned to be cautious the hard way.

Reluctantly, she took the iron pill and downed it with a swallow of water. Then she really looked at him. His coppery eyes were filled with storms and chaos. His face pale. “You didn’t see this coming, did you?”

His elbow rested on his knee. His hands clasped. “It was like seeing a ghost.”

“Did you love her?” A pang of jealousy stabbed Rae.

“Yes. In every way a nineteen-year-old boy could. We were young. I suppose it was puppy love.”

A vulnerability she hadn’t known existed shown through the pain in his face. She pushed through her own heartache. On some level she realized she was being silly for feeling this way about a childhood crush. “I wonder why she didn’t tell you.”

“Our families. They didn’t like us being together. Especially hers.” Anguish darkened his smoky eyes. The storm behind them magnified.

Rae pressed her hand to his. She was surprised at how fast his fingers wound together with hers. “And you never heard from her again?”

“They shipped her off. I did what every love struck nineteen-year-old would do. I ran away to look for her. It took me a year to find her.” His gaze dropped. His hands trembled. He was holding back his emotions with everything he had.

Rae’s heart nearly tore into pieces.

“By the time I found where they’d stashed her, she was dead. Suicide.” His hands fisted.

“And you’ve been blaming yourself ever since.” Damn.
Is this the reason you held back? Too scared to allow another woman in your heart?

His shoulders quaked.

Rae pulled him into an embrace.

His body stiffened, and he pulled back. “Why didn’t you tell me you had family?” He turned the tables.

Little did he know how much they had in common. “I’m afraid we’re swimming in the same boat. I don’t know him. I mean, obviously, I had a father. I remembered him. But I had no idea where he went or what he was doing. For all I knew he was dead. Oh, but I fantasized about him.” A hot tear leaked from her eye.

Daegen wiped it, tucking a loose tendril of hair behind her ear. “What happened?”

Rae didn’t want to go into that now. She didn’t want to feel like that six-year-old standing on the edge. Crying. The pain so overwhelming she didn’t think she would be able to breathe. “It doesn’t matter.”

His gaze traveled over her, assessing. “Your mother?”

That she could talk about. Rae shrugged. “She took off with another man before I could sit up.”

Everyone leaves.

“I’m sorry.”

Rae could see him kneeling there with his pain raw and exposed. Part of her wanted to tell him just how much she understood. To comfort him. And find some relief herself. But the other part of her couldn’t expose a vein in that way. She felt a bond growing between them as they shared their pasts, and part of her was afraid to scare it away by pushing for more.

“Doesn’t matter. I didn’t know her,” she said with a nonchalant air she didn’t own.

Daegen’s gaze paused thoughtfully on hers. “Then tell me more about your father.”

The invisible band tightened around her chest as her shoulder blades felt an all-too-familiar pinch. She didn’t talk about her father with anyone.

Daegen’s hand squeezed hers and the band loosened. “I want to know everything about you.”

She hugged her elbows into her chest and rubbed the goose bumps from her arms. “I was six when he turned me over to CPS.”

Anger flashed across his features. “Why would any man do that?”

“He was injured. Couldn’t work. We were starving.” She didn’t expect a man like Daegen to understand the hopelessness that came with not being able to provide for a family.

He flattened her hand and pressed a kiss to her palm. “Do you know what happened to him?”

She shrugged. “We had no other family to help us out. He said I was getting too skinny.” A beat later came, “I’m not sure who cried harder the day he turned me over to child welfare services.”

“What happened to you?”

Pain ripped through her chest like a serrated knife. “I was sent to a farm to live with foster parents. There were half a dozen of us sleeping in the same room. They took in kids to keep the farm going. Guess we were cheap labor.”

Rage flashed across his features for an instant. His expression was otherwise kind, understanding, and not at all what Rae expected. Her heart warmed.

“That explains a lot.”

She watched him intently. “What does that mean?”

“Why you seemed so focused on your work before. I’d never met anyone so fiercely determined to make it on her own.”

The words were a reminder of how much she’d failed. They stung. “And here I am depending on you.”

“Accepting help when needed doesn’t make a person weak.”

She lifted her brow. “When was the last time you counted on someone else?”

He locked onto her gaze. “Today.”

The cloak of darkness that had enveloped her heart far too long released its grip. A little more light. A little more warmth.

She took a deep breath and continued. “By the time I found my father again, he was dying in a low-budget government run home.”

“But you saved him.”

An avalanche of emotion flooded her. “I got him this far.”

“I sure as hell hope he’s grateful.”

A puff of air burst from her lips. “He doesn’t even want to live.”

“Why would you think that?”

“I don’t. I know. He doesn’t have to die. He’s given up.”

Daegen’s lips drew together thoughtfully. “He isn’t going to want to live any more if he knows how tired you are. He’s most likely blaming himself. If you look exhausted, he’ll feel even worse.”

Stunned, her mind spun and she needed a chance to carefully process Daegen’s words. “I-I can’t think about myself right now.”

“When do you ever?”

Panic gripped her. This was too much, too fast. She gathered herself, sitting up. She had to put up a wall between them if she were going to survive. Sharing as much as she had felt about as comfortable as opening a vein and bleeding out. What made matters worse was how close she felt to him. Dangerous emotions.

She couldn’t afford to lower her defenses.

She’d been foolish to think any real happiness could last. She would not leave herself vulnerable to that kind of pain again. Because she could scarcely breathe as it was.

BOOK: The Billionaire Bargain (Millionaire's Club)
7.96Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Repeating History (History #1) by Hanleigh Bradley
Rage Unleashed by Casheena Parker
Paradise Encounter by Anthony, Pepper
The Cat, The Devil, The Last Escape by Shirley Rousseau Murphy and Pat J.J. Murphy
The Marriage Contract by Cathy Maxwell
Unremembered by Jessica Brody
Shadows of the Redwood by Gillian Summers
Not To Us by Katherine Owen
Joan Makes History by Kate Grenville