Billion dollar baby bargain.txt
Page 78
His human resources manager for the island hotel picked up on the second ring.
“What can I do for you, Mr. Anetakis?” he asked once Piers had identified himself.
“Jewel Henley,” he bit out.
“Your new assistant?”
“Get rid of her.”
“Pardon? Is there a problem?”
“Just get rid of her. I want her gone by the time I return.” He took a deep breath. “Transfer her, promote
her or pay her for the entirety of her contract, but get rid of her. She can’t work under me. I have a strict
policy about personal involvement with my employees, and let’s just say she and I have history.”
He waited for a moment and when he didn’t hear anything, he said, “hello?” He cursed. The connection
had been cut. Oh well, he didn’t require a response. He just wanted action.
Even if he hadn’t already been extremely distrustful of situations that seemed too coincidental, his
brother’s assistant had sold valuable company plans to their competitor. After that debacle, they’d all
assumed very strict requirements for the people working closest to them. They could ill afford another
Roslyn.
Still, his chest tightened as the car stopped outside his plane, and he got out to board. He wasn’t so much
in denial that he could refute that the night had been more than just a casual one-night stand. Which was
all the more reason to cut ties now. He wouldn’t give up any power, no matter how subtle, to a woman
ever again.
Jewel sat in Margery’s chair behind her desk filling out a mountain of paperwork while Margery
puttered around in the background making phone calls and grumbling at the printer when it didn’t spit
out the appropriate documents.
She’d spent the morning on pins and needles, waiting for Piers to return so they could at least try and air
things out and get it behind them. The old saying about an elephant in the room was appropriate, only
Jewel felt like there was an entire herd.
At lunch, she went down to the small café and nibbled on a sandwich while watching the seagulls divebomb
tourists who had bread to feed them. If Margery let her on the company computer this afternoon,
she’d e-mail Kirk and let him know she’d arrived on the island and would be staying a few weeks.
He was her only friend, but they rarely saw each other. He was forever taking assignments to far-flung
places, and she was equally determined to travel her own way. It amused her that they were essentially
lost souls who wandered from place to place. Neither had a home, and maybe that was why they
understood each other.
An occasional e-mail, sometimes a phone call, and every once in a while they crossed paths on their
travels. Those were good times. It was nice to connect to another person even if it was only for a few
hours. He was as close to a brother or family member as she’d ever imagined having.
After finishing her sandwich, she tossed the wrapper and walked back to the employee elevator. Would
Piers be back? A flutter abounded in her stomach, but she swallowed back her nervousness and forged
ahead. It wouldn’t do to let him know she was put off by their unintentional relationship. If he could be
cool about it then so could she.
When she walked back into Margery’s office, Margery looked up, a grim expression on her face. “Mr.
Patterson wants to see you immediately.”
Jewel’s brow crinkled. Maybe it was more personnel stuff to sign. Lord knows she’d had enough
paperwork this morning to choke a horse. With a resigned sigh, she turned and left Margery’s office and
went several doors down to the human resource manager’s cubicle.
He looked up when she tapped on the frame of his open door.
“Miss Henley, come in. Have a seat please.”
She settled down in front of him and waited expectantly. He cleared his throat and tugged at his collar in
an uncomfortable motion. Then he leveled a stare at her.
“When you hired on, it was with the condition that it was a temporary position. You were to be Mr.
Anetakis’s assistant for the duration of his stay here.”
“Yes.” They’d been through all of this and she was impatient to get on with it.
“I’m sorry to say that he no longer requires an assistant. He’s had a change of plans. As such, your
services are no longer required.”
She stared, stunned, for a long moment. “Excuse me?”
“Your employment here is terminated effective immediately.”
She stood, her legs trembling, her fingers curled into tight fists. “That bastard. What a complete and utter
bastard!”
“Security will escort you to your room and wait while you collect your things,” he continued as if she
hadn’t let loose with her tirade.
“You can tell Mr. Anetakis that he is the lowest form of pond scum. Verbatim, Mr. Patterson. Make sure
he gets my message. He’s a gutless piece of chicken shit, and I hope he chokes on his damn cowardice.”
With that she turned and stormed out of his office, slamming the door as hard as she could. The sound
reverberated down the hallway, and a few people stuck their heads out of their cubicles as she stalked
past.
Unbelievable. He hadn’t even had the courage to fire her himself. He let his personnel director handle it
while he ran for the hills. What a crock.
Two security guards fell into step beside her when she neared the elevator. It pissed her off that she was
being treated like a common criminal.
She rode the elevator with them in stiff silence. They walked behind her to her door and positioned
themselves on either side of the frame while she went in. How long would they give her before bursting
in? The thought amused her even as rage crawled over her in waves.
Shedding her uncomfortable heels, she sank onto the bed like a deflated balloon. Damn the man. She
had enough money to get off the island, but little else. Certainly no money to plan her next venture.
She’d spent what she had to get here and taken the good-paying job to restock her resources. With the
money earned in this job, she would have been able to travel, albeit economically, for the next six
months without worrying about finances.
Now she faced the only choice available to her if she wanted a roof over her head. Going back home to
San Francisco and the apartment that belonged to Kirk was her only option.
It had been an agreement between them. If she ever needed a place to stay, she was to go there. The
utilities were taken care of each month and the pantry was stocked with staples.
She didn’t even have a way to contact him other than e-mail, and sometimes he went weeks without
checking it. She just hoped he hadn’t planned one of his rare trips home at the same time she’d be there.
Her fingers dug into her temples, and she closed her eyes. She could look for work here on the island,
but she’d already exhausted most of her possibilities when this job had landed in her lap. Nothing else
paid nearly as well, and now she had no desire to stay where she might actually run into Piers Anetakis.
The worm.
San Francisco was it, she admitted with forlorn acceptance. Hopefully she could land a job, save up
some money. Having a rent-free place to stay would be helpful but she hated to take advantage of Kirk’s
generosity.
“Damn you, Piers Anetakis,” she whispered. He’d managed to turn the most beautiful night
of her life
into something tawdry and hateful.
With a resigned shake of her head, she knew there was little point in feeling sorry for herself. There was
nothing to do but pick up and go on and hopefully learn a lesson in the process.
Four
Five months later…
P iers descended the steps of his private jet and strode across the paved runway to the waiting car. The
damp, chilly San Francisco air was a far cry from the warm, tropical air he was used to. He hadn’t taken
the time to pack appropriate clothing, and the thin silk shirt and light suit coat didn’t offer much in the
way of protection from the pervading chill.
The driver had already been instructed as to Piers’s destination, so he sat back as the car rolled away
from the airport toward the hospital where Jewel was being treated.
What had happened to her? It must be serious if she’d broken down and phoned him after he hadn’t been
able to uncover her whereabouts for five months. Guilt was a strong motivator, and yet his efforts had
come to naught.
No matter. He now knew where she was. He’d see to it that she had the best care and settle an amount
on her to compensate her loss of employment, and then maybe he could get her out of his head.
When they finally rolled up to the hospital, Piers wasted no time hurrying in. At the help desk he was
given Jewel’s room number, and he rode the elevator to the appropriate floor.
At her door, he found it slightly ajar and issued a soft knock. Not hearing any summons, he pushed the
door open and quietly walked in.
She was barely more than a rumpled pile of sheets on the bed, her head propped haphazardly on her
pillow. Her eyelashes rested on her cheeks, and her soft, even breathing signaled her sleep.
Even in rest, she looked worried, her face drawn, her brow wrinkled. Her fingers were clutched
bloodlessly at the sheet gathered at her chest. And yet she was as beautiful as he remembered, and
unfortunately for him, he’d been haunted by her beauty for the last five months.
He removed his suit coat and tossed it over the chair beside her bed and then settled himself down to sit
and wait for her to wake. The slight movement alerted her, and her eyes flew open.
Shock registered as soon as she saw him. Her eyes widened in what looked to be panic. Her hands
moved immediately to her stomach in a protective gesture he’d be blind to miss.
Then he saw what it was she was protecting. There was an unmistakable swell, a taut mound that
shielded a baby!
“You’re pregnant!”
Her eyes narrowed. “Well, you needn’t sound so accusing. I hardly got that way by myself.”
For a moment he was too stunned to realize her implication, and then when it came, it trickled like ice
down his spine. Old memories came back in a wave, and hot anger quickly melted away the cold in his
veins.
“Are you saying it’s mine?” he demanded. Already his mind was moving in a whir. He wouldn’t be
trapped again by a conniving woman.
“She,” Jewel corrected. “At least refer to your daughter as a human being.”
Damn her. She knew that by personalizing the vague entity she shielded that he’d be inhuman not to
react.
“A daughter?”
Against his will, his voice softened, and he found himself examining her belly closer. He impatiently
brushed aside her cupped hands and then snatched his own hand back when her belly rippled and
jumped beneath his fingers.
“Theos! Is that her?”
Jewel smiled and nodded. “She’s active this morning.”
Piers shook his head in an attempt to brush away the spell. A daughter. Suddenly he envisioned a tiny
little girl, a replica of Jewel but with his dark eyes. Damn her for making him dream again.
His expression hardened, and he once again focused his attention on Jewel. “Is she mine?”
Jewel met his steady gaze and nodded.
He swore softly. “We used protection. I used protection.”
She shrugged. “She’s yours.”
“You expect me to accept that? Just like that?”
She struggled to sit up against her pillows, her fingers clenched into tight balls at her sides. “I haven’t
slept with another man in two years. She’s yours.”
He wasn’t the gullible fool he’d been so many years ago. “Then you won’t object to paternity testing.”
She closed her eyes wearily and sank back into the covers. Hurt flickered in her eyes when she reopened
them, but she shook her head. “No, Piers. I have nothing to hide.”
“What is wrong with you? Why are you here in the hospital?” he asked, finally coming around to the
matter at hand. He’d been completely blindsided by the discovery that the child she was pregnant with
was…could be his.
“I’ve been ill,” she said in a tired voice. “Elevated blood pressure. Fatigue. My doctor said my job had a
lot to do with it, and he wants me to quit. He says I must quit, that I don’t have a choice.”
“What the devil have you been doing?” he demanded.
She lifted one shoulder. “Waitressing. It was all I could find on such short notice. I needed the money
before I could move somewhere else. Somewhere warmer. Somewhere I could make more money. It’s
very expensive here in San Francisco.”
“Then why did you come here from the island? You could have gone anywhere.”
She cast him a bitter glance. “I have an apartment here. One that is paid for. After I was fired, I had little
choice in where to go. I had to have a place to sleep. I intended to save enough money and then go
somewhere else.”
He flinched as guilt consumed him. Damn, but this was a mess. Not only had he had her fired, but he’d
sent a pregnant woman into a bad situation.
“Look, Jewel, about your firing…”
She held up a hand, her expression fierce. “I don’t want to discuss it. You’re a coward and a bastard of
the first order. I wouldn’t have ever spoken to you again if our daughter didn’t need you, if I didn’t need
your help.”
“That’s just it. I never intended for you to be fired,” he said patiently.
She glared at him. “That’s hardly comforting given that I was fired and that I was escorted out of your
hotel.”
He sighed. Now wasn’t the time to try and reason with her. She was growing more upset by the minute.
If she chose to believe the worst in him, and it was obvious she did, he was hardly going to change five
months worth of anger and resentment in five minutes.
“So what is it that you need from me?” he asked. “I’ll help in any way I can.”
She stared at him, suspicion burning brightly in her ocean eyes. Maybe he was wrong to want his
daughter to have his eyes. No, she should definitely have Jewel’s eyes. Dark-haired like him, but with
her mother’s sea-green eyes. Or were they blue? He could never tell from one moment to the next.
Then her shoulders sank, and she closed her eyes. “My physician won’t discharge me until he’s certain I
have someone to care for me.”
She said the latter with a measure of distaste, as if it pained her to be dependent on anyone.
“I’ll be on bed rest until my surgery.”
Piers sat forward. “Surgery? Why do you need surgery? I thought you said you were only ill. Blood
pressure.” He knew enough about that from his sister-in-law’s pregnancy to know that the
prescribed
treatment for stress or elevated blood pressure was merely rest and to be off one’s feet. “You can’t have
surgery while you’re pregnant. What about the baby?”
She stared back at him patiently. “That’s just it. When they did a sonogram to check on the baby, they
found a large cyst on one of my ovaries. Instead of shrinking, as a lot of cysts do during the course of the
pregnancy, this one has gotten larger, and now it’s pressing on the uterus. They have no choice but to
remove it so that it won’t interfere with the pregnancy or possibly even harm the baby.”
Piers cursed. “This operation, is it dangerous? Will it harm the baby?”
“The doctor doesn’t think so, but it has to be done soon.”
He cursed again, though he didn’t allow the words past his lips. He didn’t want to be ensnared in another
situation where he stood to lose everything. Once a fool, but never again. This time things would be
done on his terms.
“You’re going to marry me,” he announced baldly.
Five
“Y ou’re out of your mind,” Jewel burst out.
Piers’s eyes narrowed. “I’d hardly say my speaking of marriage constitutes an unsound mind.”
“Crazy. Certifiable.”
He bristled and let out an irritated growl. “I am not crazy.”
“You’re serious!”
She stared at him with a mixture of stupefaction and horror.
His breath escaped in a long sound of exasperation.
Her mouth fell open. “For the love of God. You think I’d marry you?”
“There’s no reason to sound so appalled.”
“Appalled,” she muttered. “That about covers my reaction. Look, Piers. I need your help. Your support.
But I don’t need marriage. Not to you. Never to you.”
“Well if you want my support, you’re damn well going to have to marry me for it,” he growled.
“Get out,” she bit off. She held a trembling hand up to point to the door, but Piers caught it and curled
his fingers around hers. He brought it to the edge of the bed and gently stroked the inside of her wrist.
“I shouldn’t have said that. You made me angry. If you’re pregnant with my child, of course you’ll have
my support, Jewel. I’ll do everything I can to provide for you and our daughter.”