by Lori Ryan
Penalty Clause: Sutton Capital Series, Book Two
By: Lori Ryan
Copyright 2013, Cara Shannon. All rights reserved.
This book contains material protected under International and Federal Copyright Laws and Treaties. Any unauthorized reprint or use of this material is prohibited. No part of this book or files may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system without express written permission from the author/publisher. Electronic copies may not be sold secondhand.
Contents
Penalty Clause: Sutton Capital Series, Book Two
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-one
Chapter Twenty-two
Chapter Twenty-three
Chapter Twenty-four
Chapter Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Chapter Thirty-seven
Chapter Thirty-eight
Chapter Thirty-nine
Chapter Forty
Chapter Forty-one
Chapter Forty-two
Chapter Forty-three
Chapter Forty-four
Chapter Forty-five
Epilogue
Chapter One
Jill sighed as she watched the tan Jaguar pull up her driveway and park behind the moving van.
Crap.
She rolled her head backward, to the left, then the right, slowly trying to ease the tension from her body. It didn’t work.
Are you kidding me?
Jill didn’t bother to approach the car. If Jake insisted on coming today after Jill had told him not to, he could damn well get out of the car and come to her. Another sigh escaped Jill’s lips as Jake opened the car door and did just that.
“What are you doing here, Jake? I told you not to come,” Jill said. She continued to watch the movers as they carried out the larger pieces of furniture. Most of the furniture would go into storage since her grandparents’ home, which she would be living in temporarily, was already furnished. Only her photography equipment, her clothes and a few personal items were going to New Haven with her.
“I thought I should be here. Just in case you need me,” Jake answered in his smug little way.
It irked the hell out of Jill that she still had feelings for her ex. That even though Jake treated her like a two-year-old, and even though he’d left her for his mistress after seven years of marriage, and even though he was an obnoxious jerk who just couldn’t leave her alone, a part of her still wanted to rewind the clock and go back to the way things were before Jake told her he wanted a divorce.
Jill didn’t answer Jake. It was a waste of breath. Clearly, if he had listened to her, he wouldn’t be here right now.
“Miss, you said there were some things upstairs that you’re setting aside for Goodwill? Do you want to show us what to leave for them?” asked one of the movers.
“What? She’s not giving anything away,” said Jake. He stepped between Jill and the mover.
Jill gritted her teeth, her breath bursting out as she stepped around Jake.
“Yes, Jake. I am. I’m giving some things to Goodwill.” Jill turned to address the moving man who now looked uneasily back and forth between Jill and Jake.
“All of the furniture in the master bedroom is going to charity. Can you move it downstairs, please? They’re going to come take it after we finish up here,” Jill said.
“What? Jill, why are you giving the furniture away? It’s perfectly good. I gave you all the furniture in the house so you wouldn’t need to get anything. I’m trying to take care of you and you’re giving furniture away?” Jake loved to sound like he’d given her all kinds of favors in the divorce settlement. A big man, taking care of poor little Jill.
Jill closed her eyes and began to count. One…two…three… Oh to hell with it.
“Yes, Jake. I’m giving away the damn furniture,” Jill said, rounding on Jake as the movers retreated back into the house. “Do you honestly think I want the bedroom furniture? That I would sleep in the bed? The bed we shared.” Jill swallowed hard as she tried to finish the sentence that stuck in her throat. “The bed that you slept with her in when you cheated on me?”
Jake didn’t look the least bit chagrined. “It’s perfectly good furniture, Jill.”
“You’re unbelievable, Jake.” For what felt like the tenth time since Jake arrived only a few short minutes before, Jill closed her eyes, took a deep breath and tried to center herself. Tried to let the feelings wash off her. Tried to release the tension.
“I’d like you to leave, Jake. I asked you not to come here and I’d like you to leave,” Jill said, her eyes still closed.
“I just want to help you, Jill,” Jake said. He was indignant, as if Jill were being insensitive to his needs.
Jill opened her eyes and leveled a shuttered stare at Jake. “I need you to leave. I need a clean break, Jake. I need you to leave me alone and let me move on. You’ve clearly moved on with…Missy.” The name felt like acid coming out of Jill’s mouth. “Let me move on.”
Jill wrapped her arms around her body, hugging herself tight and turned back to watch the movers bring the last few boxes out of the house she’d shared with Jake. When the sale of the house had gone through yesterday, she had finally been rid of the last piece of communal property. She now needed to be rid of him, rid of the memories and the heartache. Distance herself from her failed marriage.
It was several more minutes before Jill felt Jake move away. She really didn’t understand what he wanted. Why come around if he didn’t want to be married to her anymore? Was it guilt? Control? Was he trying to keep her waiting in the wings in case he changed his mind? Jill didn’t understand Jake’s motives and she didn’t care at this point. In the beginning, his continual presence had given Jill hope. Now, she didn’t want hope. She wanted this over. She wanted it over and done with.
A moment later, Jill heard Jake’s car start, listened to it as it pulled down the driveway. She began her neck rolls again. Slowly rolling back, left, right.
Breathe, Jill. Back, left, right.
Nope, didn’t help a damn bit.
Chapter Two
Andrew Weston walked into the coffee shop in the lobby of the offices of Sutton Capital where he had been Chief Financial Officer for the past five years. He didn’t look like your average corporate officer, dressed as he was in jeans and a polo shirt.
He grabbed a paper cup and lid from the stack on the counter and smiled at the two women next to him as he poured much-needed caffeine into his cup.
“Morning, Margie, Donna.” Margie and Donna worked in the mailroom at Sutton. They were always together, like two halves of a whole. And they hit on Andrew any chance they got.
“Andrew, when are you gonna stop leading us on and just choose one of us?
It’s not fair to keep us waiting for a decision,” Margie said with a cheeky smile.
“Yeah, just pick one, Andrew. We’ve been fighting over you long enough. Put us out of our misery,” Donna said.
Andrew laughed. The two of them knew as well as any woman that Andrew never dated anyone in the office. Ever. But they teased him just the same. “Sorry, ladies. How can I possibly choose between two such gorgeous women? And, if I did choose, one of you would be heartbroken and I’d feel guilty. It might keep me up at night and then I’d lose my beauty sleep. Can’t do it, ladies.” Andrew laughed as he walked to the counter.
He smiled at the balding man behind by the cash register. “Hi, Pete. Put the ladies’ coffee on my bill. And, I’ll take a bagel, too, please,” Andrew said. He put cash on the counter, grabbed his bagel and coffee and took off for the elevators.
When he stepped off on the twenty-sixth floor of the building, it took a split second to realize something wasn’t right. His assistant, Debbie, rushed down the hall toward him with an anxious look on her face that put him instantly on high alert.
“Andrew,” Debbie called out to him from a good ten feet away. “Lydia just called. Your grandmother fell on some ice on her front walk and they’re taking her over to Yale-New Haven Hospital in an ambulance. They think she’s broken her hip.”
Lydia was the housekeeper and cook who had lived with his grandmother since Andrew could remember. She was as much a part of his family as his grandmother herself. Lydia was in her sixties now and his grandmother was rounding eighty this year.
Andrew turned back toward the elevator without waiting for Debbie to tell him what he already knew. She didn’t need direction. Debbie anticipated Andrew’s needs before he figured them out himself. Andrew said she was responsible for at least seventy percent of his success. He knew Debbie would have already cancelled his appointments for the day. She also would have told Lydia that Andrew would be there as fast as he could.
Andrew raised his hand to his ear. “I’ll call you,” he said to Debbie as the elevator doors shut. Andrew stared at the numbers as the elevator counted down to the garage level. When he got to ground level, Andrew ran back to his car with no other thought in his mind than he needed to get to his grandmother, Nora.
As soon as his car cleared the garage, he spoke.
“Dial Debbie.”
The car’s Bluetooth system answered in its stilted computer generated voice, “Dialing Debbie.”
“I’m here,” said Debbie, picking up on the first ring.
“Let Jack know I’ll be taking two weeks off,” Andrew began.
“Already done,” Debbie said. “I’ve got Paul and Katelyn taking over most of your meetings. I cancelled everything they couldn’t cover.”
Andrew’s breath came out with a large whoosh as relief washed over him. He had the support he needed to care for his grandmother. Nora Weston was not your typical grandmother. She was spunky and eccentric and didn’t take crap from anyone, but she was also warm and caring and the most loving person in Andrew’s life. She had always been there for him and Andrew would now be there for her.
“Can you look into nursing care and rehab specialists that will come to the house? As soon as I know the extent of her injuries, I’ll let you know the exact care she’ll need, but for now, let’s just see where we can get the best care. It needs to be in-home though. Nora wouldn’t handle going to a rehab center or nursing home,” Andrew said.
“Got it. I think Jill Shaver’s mom needed some nursing care recently. I’ll see who she used,” Debbie said.
“There’s a carriage house on Nora’s property. I’ll move in there temporarily. Can you arrange to have some things from my condo packed and sent over? The carriage house is furnished so I just need clothes, toiletries, that kind of thing. My bike. Have them bring my bike over.” Andrew liked to ride on the days he didn’t go to the gym or play basketball with Chad and Jack, his two closest friends.
“Done.”
Andrew paused.
“Still there, Boss?” Debbie asked when the pause grew.
“I should have taken better care of her, Debbie.” Andrew’s voice was thick and heavy with regret. “I should have realized Nora and Lydia were both getting older. Taking care of that house alone is too much for them. I should have had a groundskeeper to be sure the walkway was shoveled and de-iced. I should have––”
“Nonsense,” Debbie said, her tone sharp enough to cut off Andrew’s pity party. “None of us ever knows when these things will happen. Nora hides any needs she has quite well and she wouldn’t have let you dote on her. You had the sidewalks shoveled and driveway plowed by a service. Nora wouldn’t have accepted more than that. She would have scoffed at a full time groundskeeper. We’ll just set things up differently now that we know she needs more help. That’s all we can do.”
“Okay,” Andrew said, but he still felt the guilt.
Andrew’s parents didn’t believe in hugs and kisses or giving encouragement. Growing up, no one other than Nora had told Andrew she was proud of him. No one other than Nora told Andrew to follow his dreams. Andrew’s parents were concerned only for their reputation and accumulating wealth. And when his parents didn’t like the way things were going in Andrew’s life, they paid people to change things.
The last payoff, almost eight years ago, had resulted in Andrew cutting all ties to his mother and father. But luckily he had Nora. She had always been there for him as Andrew grew up and he thought of her more as a parent than he did his mother or father.
“I’ll call you when I know something,” Andrew said.
“I’ll start arranging things from this end,” Debbie said. Andrew knew Debbie likely had half of the items on her list completed as they spoke.
As Andrew navigated the quick ride through downtown New Haven to the hospital he thought of all his grandmother had done for him over the years. When his parents didn’t bother to stay in the States for Christmas or summer breaks, Nora sent for him. She brought him home from boarding school to her estate in Westbrook so often Andrew thought of her estate as his home. Nora was the one who stood up to his parents when Andrew wanted to go to sports camp instead of the academic camp his parents had lined up.
Nora went to his graduation from high school, then college, and finally Yale Business School. Andrew’s parents did not. Nora backed Andrew when he decided to go to Yale instead of working at his father’s marketing firm. And when his mother and father had finally breached all reasonable boundaries, trying to control his life by paying the woman he loved to abort his child and leave Andrew’s life for good, Nora cut ties with Andrew’s parents at the same time Andrew did.
Andrew’s parents wouldn’t be at the hospital for Nora today. In fact, they wouldn’t even be called and informed Nora was injured.
Andrew pulled into the parking lot at Yale-New Haven Hospital and jogged across the covered walkway that connected the parking lot with the hospital building. He spotted Lydia at the front desk in the Emergency Room filling out paperwork.
“Lydia, where is she?” Strain and worry lined Lydia’s face.
“They took Nora upstairs to x-ray, sweetheart, but the doctor is already fairly sure she’ll need surgery. If you sign here, I’ll finish her paperwork, and you can go on up and be with her.”
Andrew signed the paperwork, kissed Lydia on the cheek, then went to find the elevators to take him up to radiology. Lydia joined him twenty minutes later when he moved to the surgical waiting room. They settled in for a long wait while Nora’s hip was pinned back together.
By the time Andrew left the hospital four hours later, Debbie had already researched the type of surgery Nora was undergoing and the aftercare that would be needed. She also arranged for more help at the house to be sure that Nora and Lydia wouldn’t want for anything. For once in his life, the ridiculous amounts of money sitting in Andrew’s bank accounts would be put to good use.
***
A week later, Andrew had Nora se
ttled back home with around-the-clock nursing care and a physical therapist scheduled every second day to help with Nora’s rehabilitation. The clean nature of the break in her hip and the fact that Andrew was able to provide in-home care meant that Nora avoided a stay in a rehabilitation center. She’d been happy to come straight home instead.
Andrew hired a full time groundskeeper/maintenance man. And he hired a cleaning service to take over the house cleaning and another service to deliver groceries twice a week. Lydia drew the line at letting him bring in someone else to cook.
“No one’s taking over my kitchen,” she had said firmly and Andrew decided the fight probably wasn’t worth having. Besides, he had a soft spot for Lydia’s cooking. Andrew wasn’t sure he could give up the meals Lydia stocked in his freezer on a regular basis.
Andrew had a hospital bed set up in a downstairs sitting room so Nora wouldn’t have to go up and down the stairs. He had tried to install a lift on the staircase, but Nora wouldn’t hear of it. She told him flat out this was a temporary health setback and she wouldn’t stand for permanent changes to her home. Especially not something as ugly as a lift. Andrew grudgingly gave in. For the time being.
Andrew had already had to fight to get Nora to accept his money for these things.
“I’ve got plenty of my own damn money. I can pay for things myself,” she’d said.