The Billionaire of Bluebonnet (2 page)

BOOK: The Billionaire of Bluebonnet
4.56Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

She hadn't been Pearl's assistant for more than a week before Travis had swung by again to see how his grandmother was settling in with her new assistant.

Risa had been dazzled by the handsome man this time. Now that she wasn't being interviewed by him, she could relax and study him from across the room. And Travis Jesson was gorgeous. He was cool, and self-assured, with a strong jaw that never seemed to smile and a serious, almost stern mien. She'd half fallen in love with him that day, watching him as he fussed over his grandmother, making sure that she had the best of everything available to her. Insisting that she rest and get well.

He was kind and thoughtful and devoted to Pearl.

Of course, he hadn't even known that Risa existed. She wasn't surprised. Back then she had been a size eighteen, tall and a little too curvy. She was freckled and wore glasses, and kept her long black hair loose around her face. And since she'd been tending to his grandmother, she'd worn her usual wardrobe of jeans and a T-shirt. Travis Jesson, a divinely handsome man, hadn't even glanced at her except to inquire about his grandmother's health.

To him, she was a vague, uninteresting piece of equipment at his grandmother's house. Back then he'd no more strike up a personal conversation with her than he would the toaster. She'd realized that after blushing and stammering over her words the first time she met him, only to be crushed when he'd paid her not the slightest bit of attention.

And on his next visit, he'd brought a girlfriend.

After that, she learned, his business had blown up. His Web innovation company had developed a new piece of coding essential in online networking, and it had been bought for a ridiculous amount of money. Travis Jesson was no longer just a CEO—he was a billionaire.

He'd turned right around and started developing new technologies. Something about tablets or SmartPads or something. She didn't know much about it—just that he'd started another company and his visits to Pearl had become less frequent.

Pearl had noticed his absence, though she'd never chided him for not having the time to visit. He was successful and driven, and she understood it even if she worried about him. It wasn't his fault, she'd explain, that she was an old lonely woman. He was a busy man and had better things to do than to look in on his grandmother.

Still, Pearl had been depressed, Risa had realized. She didn't have anything to look forward to. Travis's parents were terrible at checking in. They called every few months and regaled Pearl about all the exciting things they were doing as they sailed around Europe in the sailboat Travis had bought them. Risa had seen Pearl sinking into a depression and had been unsure what to do.

Inspiration had struck at last year's Bluebonnet Fall Festival. They'd seen the pet micro pigs for sale there, and Pearl had taken one look and fallen in love. Risa had, too. The pigs were clean, smart, and adorably funny; and the cutest piglet came home with them that day.

And if he wasn't quite as good as visits from her beloved grandson, well, Pearl never complained.

Risa missed Pearl. The woman had been employer, friend, and grandmotherly figure all in one. She'd taken the job with Pearl out of necessity, but it had turned into a labor of love as they'd developed a close friendship.

But that chapter of her life was closed, Risa supposed. Time to pack up and move ahead with her life, which meant returning to the city and looking for a job in her field of expertise—teaching.

And that meant no Gregory, since her Dallas friend had cringed at the idea of a pig in her downtown apartment.

Watching Travis Jesson stare down at the pig with his lip curled in disgust, though, it was hard to imagine that they'd get along like Pearl had anticipated.

“He's a very good pig,” Risa said lamely, hitching her towel closer to her body. How embarrassing that he'd seen her in her swimsuit and without a stitch of makeup. God. She was worse than invisible right now. He probably thought she was hideous. “We're very careful with his diet so he doesn't get fat, and he doesn't bite. He's litter trained, too.”

“What the fuck am I supposed to do with a pig?” His voice was cold and clipped as he pulled a phone out of his pocket.

She studied his suit uncomfortably. Armani, probably. Or Versace. Or something equally pricey. He didn't look like a man that was here to go through his grandmother's things. He looked like a man late for a meeting. An uncomfortable sensation curled in her stomach as he punched in a number on his phone with his thumb and then raised it to his ear. “Amy? Have I had any calls? Uh-huh? Good. Okay. Tell them I'll call back shortly. I need you to do something. I want you to call every animal shelter in Houston and find one that takes pigs.”

Risa sucked in a breath. He wasn't going to do that to such a sweet pig, was he? Even now, Gregory rubbed and leaned against her bare arm, wanting to be scratched. He was such a good, well behaved pet, and so smart. Which Travis would know, if only he'd give him a chance.

Pearl would have been heartbroken at the thought of her beloved pig being turned over to a shelter by her adored grandson.

She had to do something.

“That's right, I said
pig
,” he snapped into the phone, ignoring Risa as she stood. “
P-I-G
. Ask how much in donations they'll need to take one off of my—”

Risa snatched the phone from his hand and began to walk away with it.

“Hey,” he called after her, furious. “What the fuck are you doing?”

She walked a bit faster, her steps almost a run as she bolted for the pool. Gregory danced in happy circles at her feet, snorting and squealing with excitement. He thought they were playing a game.

To her surprise, Travis Jesson caught her by the waist and her towel fell to the ground. Gregory immediately grabbed it and dashed off with it, grunting happily. A big hand wrestled the phone out of her hand, though she did her best to hold on to it. She was standing really close to the pool, too, and when he wrenched it out of her hand, she had to hold on to him to keep her balance.

For some reason, though, he wasn't letting her go. Instead, he stared down at her, at her heaving breasts in the black bikini, and she felt exposed and vulnerable hugged up against his gray suit.

“Why did you do that?” he snarled at her.

“Your grandmother would be devastated if you sent her pig to a shelter. She loved that pig. She got it because she was lonely. You would know that if you'd come to see her in the last year or two.”

He seemed to flinch at her accusatory words. Dark eyes stared down at her, a mixture of fury and something else burning in them.

She was getting through to him, though. “Pearl wanted you to have that pig. She wanted it so much that she had them add it to her will specifically. Not me. You. Would you disappoint her like this? Can't you give him a chance?”

Travis leaned in and Risa's heart fluttered. Her hands were still curled on his shoulders, her heaving breasts pressed against his chest. It was almost as if . . . he was going to kiss her. Forgettable Risa Moore? Kissed by the most eligible billionaire in Texas?

“Mr. Jesson?” A tinny, thin voice emerged from the phone at the same time Gregory gave a playful squeal from the side of the yard.

The spell broken, Travis released her and put the phone back to his ear, his gaze moving off of Risa and staring blankly into the distance. “Just call my driver and tell him that I'm staying overnight. He can come and get me in the morning.”

Risa stepped away to catch the towel that Gregory was dragging all over the yard with playful excitement. Her mind was in turmoil.

Travis hadn't canceled his plans to drop the pig off at the shelter. But he was staying here. She gathered up the towel and knelt to scratch Gregory behind the ears, glancing back at Travis.

She found his gaze on her, even as he spoke into his phone and discussed business with his assistant.

Risa shivered. Was it anticipation or dread curling in her stomach right now?

* * *

After years of working for an elderly woman with health issues, Risa was a very light sleeper, attuned to waking up at the slightest hint of noise. So when she heard the low murmur of a man's voice, she sat up in bed and glanced over at the clock.

Two in the morning.

What exactly was going on? Was Travis still working? She scrubbed at her eyes and tossed the covers aside, getting out of bed. She shouldn't be so nosy, she knew she shouldn't, but there was just something about Travis Jesson that made her toss aside all common sense. Pulling on a pair of pajama bottoms over her panties, she straightened the T-shirt she slept in and moved for her door, ignoring the bobbing of her full breasts. She should get a bra if she was going to talk to Travis.

Then again, she just wanted to spy on him, and going braless meant that she'd avoid a midnight confrontation, which was smart if she didn't want to creep the guy out. Since it was just spying, braless it was.

She carefully opened the door to her room, holding the handle and opening the door slowly so it wouldn't creak. She began to head down the hall to the guest room where she'd left Travis, only to find the murmur of Travis's voice coming from the opposite end of the house. Intrigued, she padded down the hall to the stairs, and peered down from the top of the banister.

The kitchen light was on.

Risa crept down the stairs, heading for the kitchen, her curiosity good and piqued now. She could still hear the low murmur of his voice. A late-night business meeting? A phone call? She approached the kitchen doorway and peered in.

Travis Jesson sat on the floor, his back against one of the kitchen cabinets. A half-empty bottle of whiskey sat on the floor next to his hand. A large photo album was cradled in his lap.

Strangest of all, Gregory was lying beside Travis, his head on Travis's knee, watching him.

As she stood in the shadows, Travis took another swig of whiskey and turned the page in the photo album. “This is me when I was a boy,” he said, pointing at a picture on the page and staring at the pig snout resting on his knee. “I had a dog. Not a pig. What the fuck am I supposed to do with a pig?”

The pig said nothing, of course, only inched closer to his hand, looking to be petted.

There was a slight slur to Travis's words, and judging from the amount left in the bottle—a bottle that Pearl had saved for special occasions—she knew he'd been here for some time. And he'd drank quite a bit.

“Risa says I'm supposed to keep you.” He leaned his head back against the cabinets, staring at the ceiling. “Grandma wanted me to have you. I'm not sure she realized how busy I am. I'm due in Tokyo for two weeks at the end of this month. Pretty sure Japanese hotels don't like pigs.” He thumped the back of his head against the cabinet. “So either way I look at this, I disappoint someone again. If I keep you, I disappoint my business partners because I can't go to Tokyo with a pig. If I get rid of you, I disappoint my dead grandmother. And Risa.”

He shook his head and took another swig from the bottle.

Well, now, this was interesting. Real interesting. Who knew that a little whiskey and a conversation with a pig would show that Travis Jesson had a heart after all? A smile curved her mouth.

“I should have been here, pig,” he said softly. “Should have been here to say good-bye.”

Sadness made Risa's smile fade. There was a wealth of guilt in his voice. He blamed himself for not coming to see Pearl toward the end. Not coming to her funeral. The sad thing was—no one blamed him but himself. Pearl had thought the sun rose and set on Travis. She'd never blamed him for being busy.

Risa leaned against the door frame, admiring the odd picture of billionaire and pig. Travis's hair was rumpled as if he'd been sleeping. His chest was bare, and he wore boxers. Nothing more. His chest was broad and sculpted, a light brushing of dark hair on his pectorals. He was tanned, too. Tanned and gorgeous and entirely too delicious for someone as plump and frumpy as her.

She sighed. It didn't mean he wasn't the object of every dirty fantasy she'd had during the last few years. It just meant that that's all they were—fantasies.

At her sigh, Gregory's head went up and he looked to the doorway. His little skinny tail thumped and twirled rapidly.

Damn it.

Travis's eyes narrowed and he set down the bottle just as he was about to take another swig. “Who's there?”

Risa crossed her arms over her chest protectively, wishing she'd decided on the damn bra, and stepped out of the shadows. “Just me. I heard someone talking.”

Her face heated as his gaze skimmed over her figure—the baggy sleep pants, the thin T-shirt. She probably looked like an utter wreck. Then again, she thought to herself, so did he. She forced herself to be casual, to move to his side and sit down on the floor next to him, pulling her legs up against her chest. “Can't sleep?”

His mouth curled into a hard smile. “Oh, I can sleep. This pig, however, thought he should sleep with me and that woke me up.”

Risa bit her lip to stop the smile from curving her mouth. “He always slept with Pearl. I imagine that he was lonely and figured you'd do.”

Travis snorted and took another swig from the bottle. After a moment's contemplation, he offered it to her.

She took it and tried to imitate his swig. It burned, though, and she began to cough, pressing the back of her hand to her mouth. “God, that stuff is awful.”

“Nah,” he said slowly. “It's my favorite. Grandma always kept a bottle at the house because she knew I liked a whiskey after dinner.” He stared at the bottle, and his mouth twisted into an ugly expression. “There was dust on the bottle. She must have been holding it for a long time.”

She said nothing. What could she say? But he seemed so lost and alone that she reached out and clasped his hand, aching for his sorrow. “I miss her, too. She was a great lady. And she was ninety-eight, Travis. She had a long, full life and she didn't mind that you were busy.”

Other books

Dreamscape by Christie Rich
Battleground by Keith Douglass
Take a Dive for Murder by Millie Mack
El lugar sin límites by José Donoso
Watch How We Walk by Jennifer LoveGrove
Bones of the Earth by Michael Swanwick
Alchemist by Terry Reid
Dark Endings by Bec Botefuhr