Alpha Billionaire's Bride - Part 3
He regarded Jada. “Don’t think about what you saw. Everything will be fine. I’m going to make sure of it. Promise me you won’t worry. I’ll take care of this if it’s the last thing I do. Do you believe me?”
She nodded, unable to speak, her throat and mouth gone desert dry.
“It will be fixed, I swear it.” He reached down and gently squeezed her shoulder, then he turned and strode away, calling for Sullivan to follow and saying something about if you wanted something done right you had to do it yourself.
Trey asked Sasha if she was okay, then he too followed Ian out of the room.
Jada didn’t know where to let her gaze settle, or who to listen to. Marina kept talking, trying to comfort her, no doubt. Agatha and Sasha were arguing. All Jada wanted to do was disappear.
What did it all mean? How could this have happened?
Ian told her to believe in him. He said he’d take care of everything, that all she had to do was sit and wait for him to fix it.
Faith. That’s all she needed. But right now, faith was an impossibility.
This would be the most terrible waiting game of her life. Yet, what else was there?
Oh hell ... and hell again.
The story concludes in Alpha Billionaire’s Bride, Part 4
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Here's an excerpt from Alpha Billionaire’s Bride, Part 4
THE DOOR FLEW OPEN AND Jada walked inside. No, Ian thought with some surprise, she charged into the room.
She stopped in front of Ian’s desk, hands on her hips, eyes flashing brilliantly. “I came to ask if I can borrow a car or get a lift to a train or something. I need to get on the road ASAP, please.”
Ian was taken aback. He knew he had let her down, but obviously he hadn’t properly gauged how much. He signaled to Sullivan and Trey. “If you wouldn’t mind leaving us for a few minutes ...”
Wordlessly, Sullivan and Trey slipped out, quietly closing the door behind them.
Ian kept his voice calm and steady. “Of course I’ll provide you with any transportation you want. I’ll call in the helicopter, if you’d prefer. But before you go, sit for a moment and tell me what’s going on. You’re upset and have every right to be. I let you down.”
“It’s not that,” she said. “You haven’t let me down.”
Ian exhaled a breath he hadn’t realized he’d been holding. “Then why are you in such a hurry to get away from me?”
She sat on the edge of the chair Sullivan had vacated. “Ian, you don’t really know me, and it’s not your fault. I haven’t been myself since we met and I guess my father was right when he said I’ve been holding things back. Not on purpose, of course, but there it is, anyway.”
“It’s been stressful.”
“Yeah, but more than that, I was swept away in all this,” Jada gestured in the air. “You, the house, the lake, the stuff you bought me, the money. All of it. I let myself pretend this was real, and so I relied on it, on you, in ways that aren’t true to who I am. I shouldn’t have done that.”
“I assure you I am very real, Jada. All of this is.”
“I know, but at the same time, you’re not, because I made up this fantasy that it was okay to let you handle everything. I pretended not have the responsibility of fixing anything myself. That’s not real, it’s not who I am, and it’s not fair to either one of us.”
“That’s not entirely true that you left it all to me,” he said. “You and Marina have been working together to track down other suspects.”
“No, Marina has been working. I played amateur detective for a while, tossing out suspects like it was a game. The instant you told me you believed CGTV was behind everything, what did I do? I said okay, and fell in line with hardly a question, convinced you’d gotten it right.”
Ian winced. “I still believe CGTV is behind it all.”
“That’s fine, but it’s not the point. I have my own ideas and I shouldn’t put them aside because they’re not the same as yours. I’m used to taking charge and handling my own problems. It’s how I was raised and the only way I know how to be.” She stood up and gave him a level look. “And that’s why I need to borrow transportation so I can get home to my own car. Then I’m going to solve this case and return to my normal life.”
Ian stiffened, an image of Jada walking away from him forever bringing on a disconcerting, plummeting sensation in the pit of his stomach. “You don’t have to do this alone.”
“Oh, I’m not. Marina and Agatha are going to stay here and keep trying to contact Sasha’s enemies. And I assume your people will continue putting pressure on CGTV.”
“I meant me, specifically.”
She seemed different. More assured, direct, powered by conviction. “I won’t play games, Ian. I think you know how I feel about you. You overwhelm me sometimes, but that’s over. You’re welcome to help if you want, we can be partners, but don’t pressure me again to let you handle everything like I’m a helpless child. I don’t need you or anyone to hold my hand. It won’t go well for you if you try.”