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The Last Eligible Billionaire(76)

Author:Pippa Grant

Chad wouldn’t have walked across the foyer to wrap me in a hug and hold me tight as if he were holding on for dear life the way Hayes is right now, like he truly didn’t want to be in the office and is glad to be home.

He wouldn’t have bought me so much as an at-home clay-painting kit, never mind a pottery wheel and clay.

And Chad and I could’ve afforded a used pottery wheel and clay.

I’d sometimes stalk them on eBay when I was feeling unsettled.

And I’m not letting Hayes off the hook because he bought me a pottery kit to use at his house, kiln and all, and had his staff set it up for me in a room with a window overlooking his solarium with all of the pretty plants and hot tub and indoor waterfall.

I’m letting him off the hook because he has zero obligation to apologize to me, to acknowledge that he made me worry, that he should’ve called, that he broke our date, because this is all fake, but he’s doing all the things someone he’s in a relationship with deserves anyway.

“You must be famished,” he says into my shoulder.

“I had some duck with your family. And it was only mildly awkward when Uncle Antonio started talking about a few women he knows that he could invite out here, and then when your mother asked if he was ready to date again to try to cover for him, and then when Keisha pretended she was whispering to me that they’re all a-holes, when she wasn’t actually whispering at all and everyone heard her. What about you? Have you eaten?”

“We stock Razzle Dazzle treats in all the offices.”

“Hayes.”

I can feel his smile as he shifts his head on my shoulder. “I’m shocked, bluebell. You seem the type to embrace snacks for dinner.”

“On vacation. Not when you’re working fourteen-hour days.”

He kisses my neck, sending delightful shivers dancing across my skin. “Apologies for your awful dinner.”

“That was actually just the soup course. Dinner itself wasn’t all bad. Fran?oise and I made friends today, so she snuck a live cricket onto your mom’s plate, and then Marshmallow tried to save her from the scary cricket and ended up running across the table and almost catching his fur and another tablecloth on fire. I think you should have a no-candles rule as long as Marshmallow and I are in residence.”

Hayes’s whole body is shaking.

“Are you laughing or having serious regrets about bringing me here?”

Marshmallow stalks into the room with an umbrella clenched in his jaw, and he growls low like he’s threatening Hayes to not answer that question wrong.

“I’m laughing.”

He is. I can hear it, and it makes my stupid back-stabbing heart freaking sing. “At me, or with me?”

“Out of sheer regret that I missed the show. Is my mother packing her bags yet?”

“She says she has to be in Los Angeles for a dinner for some foundation tomorrow.”

“Excellent. Did you make lovely art today?”

“Shh. No more talking until you eat something good for you.”

He kisses my neck again, and this time, I can’t ignore the way his touch electrifies my skin and makes my nipples pebble and sends my vagina into a tailspin of can we try last night again without the fire and literal sprinklers to put us out, please?

“F-food,” I try to order.

“I believe I’d prefer sleep.”

“You need both. And I mean sleep in the real sense of the word sleep.”

“Is the bedroom fixed?”

I sigh. “No. Your housekeeper and Keisha had an argument over whether the table that was under the flaming tablecloth could be saved, and the chairs still smell like smoke and stale water, and apparently having a clay art room assembled in an hour is as far as your money went today.”

“Hm.” He pulls away from where his breath is tickling my neck, grabs my hand, and drags me deeper into the house, past the formal sitting room in front, the dining room across from it, then the doorway to the east wing, and around the corner and through the arched stone entryway to the massive kitchen.

I smile. “A-ha! You are hungry.”

He hands me a massive picnic basket topped with a blue checkered picnic blanket that’s sitting on the island. “Can you hold this?”

“It’s a little heavy, but yes, I think I can—erp!”

In one swift motion, he hefts me into his arms and heads for the back door, me clutching the picnic basket in my lap, him holding onto me.

“Hayes.”

“Robert, close the door behind us, and don’t let anyone else leave this house if they want to live,” he calls over his shoulder.

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