Greene's Riches (A Billionaire Romance - Vol. 1)

Greene’s Riches

A Billionaire Romance

Vol. One

 

By Ana Vela

 

© 2013

 

 

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

 

And above all – Enjoy!

~ Volume One ~

She smiled over her coffee as she listened to the little girl behind her explain the meaning of love to her mildly attentive mother.

             

“It’s like when Daddy takes me to the zoo, and when Grammy brings us presents when she visits, and when Ruby licks my face,” the young girl said, her pigtails dancing as she spoke animatedly. “It’s like that, Mommy. When someone does something because you like, not because they do.”

             


Mmm, that sounds right, Sam,” the twenty-something working businesswoman answered. She was scanning the newspaper, looking for something, clearly not interested in her daughter’s four-year-old insight.

             

“The ice cream man in our neighborhood loves me, the hot chocolate girl here loves me,” she sang on as she stirred the whipped cream into her hot chocolate, occasionally dripping some on her yellow dress.  The lady in the suit next to her obviously had no idea about the spilling, or if she did, cared nothing of it.  Nevertheless, little Sam was clearly happy with her idea of love and how many people seemed to show it towards her.

 

Alexis Black watched on as the oblivious mother and daughter enjoyed their time together in totally different ways. She knew that this was probably a temporary event; soon the mother would pay attention to the child again and love her as she always had, dismissing the chatter that she had not heard as unimportant observances made of a four-year-old’s hot chocolate. But somehow, bizarrely, Alexis could not seem to shake the thought that her relationship with Brandon had been very similar to that of the mother and daughter as she could see them in this particular moment. Unfortunately, she thought, in their situation this way of relating to one another was not temporary; it had taken up the majority of the way they spent their time together.

 

As she realized this and contemplated it, Alexis felt guilty that she was the distant counterpart in the parallel and Brandon had been the child with the silly ideas that she so often dismissed. Just as the child would love her mother, he had loved her in a clinging sort of way that was less natural outside the mother-child relationship, she admitted, but she had trouble letting him go. He had been mostly a safe choice at the time she agreed to go out with him; he wasn’t the most attractive man she could be with, but he was sweet and would always care for her, and with his family money would have had no trouble doing so if they were married, she knew. She felt guilty even now for thinking about how she had known the whole time that she could probably never actually marry him.

             

Every time Brandon had brought up the future she had nodded along, agreeing with his ideas just enough to keep him at bay, but also spoke up enough about how they both still needed more time, so that he would “not rush things, when they had the rest of their lives to be together”. That’s what she had said to him, over and over, until finally one day, he decided that she would say yes if he asked in just the right way.

             

Her one saving grace in the situation was that she had seen it coming. She had been able to save him some of the embarrassment. But it still made her hold her head in shame to think that she had led him on up to that point. Sure, she had kept him from getting on his knee in front of everyone at the gala they had attended, but he had already told some friends he was going to ask and they were “sure that after three years together” she would say yes. No one had doubted her complacency, but they thought it was a choice that she had decided to stick with. She had known better, but still had let it go on, thinking she could maybe avoid marriage altogether somehow.

 

She had been selfish, she knew, and had spent some time hating herself for what she had done to Brandon, before she decided that it was time to move on and chase after her own happiness. There was no point in continuing to hate herself about it, especially now that he had started to move on too, a little more quickly than she had planned on, actually.

             

The intercom boomed from overhead. “Flight 5761 to New York will begin boarding in a few minutes. Anyone who needs special assistance or has children, please begin the boarding process now. Thank you,” the politely bored voice informed all the passengers.

             

That was her flight, she thought, feeling a little nervous for the first time since she had booked her plane ticket. She was finally doing it, finally going to see the world, traveling on her own, free of attachments. She was honestly more excited than nervous. She had always wanted to travel, but during college when she could have studied abroad, she felt like she had to stay with Brandon, not wanting him to have to worry about their relationship. That had turned out well. Then after college, they had gotten more serious, making it impossible for her to go, unless they were going together, which she really just did not feel like rushing to do. When she thought of traveling the world, she thought of doing it on her own, and now she was getting what she wanted.

             

“Oh, Samantha Elizabeth, look at the mess you’ve made,” the woman suddenly shouted after seeing the chocolate stained yellow dress. “Come on, let’s hurry and change in the bathroom before we have to get on the plane,” she said, exasperated, stuffing the newspaper in her briefcase.

             

As Alexis listened to the impatient heels click quickly away in the distance, she thought of it as the sound of her old life fading away. She could feel it.  She knew that nothing would ever be the same after this adventure.

****

 

The cabin lights came back on, waking Alexis from a fitful sleep. It had been a long plane ride from Charlotte to New York, and even longer from New York to London.  After basically spending an entire day in the world of transportation, Alexis was ready to crash, but first she would have to wait for her luggage, and then find her hostel for the night.  She yawned, feeling herself wake up as they brought the small breakfast tray by her row.

             

“Tea or coffee, miss?” the attendant asked brightly.

             

“Coffee, please,” she responded. The woman smiled and handed her a steaming cup. She realized that everyone around her was British and most were ordering tea. She thought that had just been a joke about the English. Maybe they really just preferred tea to coffee, she pondered.

             

She hoped she did not seem like this was her first time going abroad. It did not matter to her that it was really, she just did not want to come across that way. As a journalist, she needed to begin trying to blend in as much as possible, only speaking when spoken to and asking
all of the right questions, if she was going to make this Travel Journalism job she had basically invented when talking to her boss before leaving the magazine. She had convinced him to put a travel section in the Modern Woman of Today, saying that she could give the perspective of a single woman out on her own experiencing the world and being fearless. Jacob loved it when anything made women seem “fearless” or “fierce” and so she had been able to convince him.

             

She did actually think it was a good idea, but she had been worried because she asking the magazine to at least fund her flight over, which they had agreed to only because of her outstanding record working for them since she started as a college intern nearly five years ago. 

             

The magazine was not going to pay for anything more than her first flight over and her first night’s stay in the hostel she had chosen. She had saved enough money to get by for a few months traveling at least, but she knew that the sooner she had stories that the magazine would pay for, the better.

             

She gazed out of the window as she finished her croissant and orange juice and the plane began to slowly descend. Maybe it was foolish, but for now, not knowing any better, she felt ready to take on the world and scared to death at the same time. She hoped that once she landed she would find that there was no reason for the latter.

 

****

 

             

The first couple of days in London had been exciting and a little nerve-wracking, but Alexis decided that was to be expected. Of course,
she had made her first big mistake: she had forgotten all about changing currency. Fortunately, she had a credit card with her that she could use in most stores and restaurants, but you still needed cash if you didn’t reach a minimum payment, plus there were the outrageous ATM fees. She hadn’t thought about how much money she would just be giving away every time she went to get cash out of the machine when she had not prepared well for the currency change. Besides the money issue and trying to find her way around in a place where she felt so disoriented, as if being on a different continent actually made the maps harder to read, she had been having a really wonderful time so far. She immediately met a few other travelers, as London was full of people who were not born there, and they made tentative plans to go places and do things together, but there was not the strong friendship that required everyone stick to these plans. No one was mad at her if she decided to go on a tour instead of to the coffee bar or out exploring instead of shopping, but it was nice to have the plans just in case she ended up alone. So far, traveling was wonderful. Today, however, she was making herself start work, and she had no idea how she was going to pull it off.

             

It was difficult enough to make herself get her computer out of her work bag and document what she was experiencing at some point every day; she felt the constant need to be out experiencing, and for once in her life, it seemed more important than ever to observe without judging. This urge made all of her entries so far very journal-like, rather than the intro, climax, and a resolution with a strong point to get everyone riled up that she was used to.

             

She knew she would have to put that bad practice behind her tonight. She needed to put on her Press Pass and try to hide the deer-in-the-headlights look that she was sure she had been wearing since she stepped off of the plane. Jacob had video-called her the day of her arrival to make sure that she had made it safely, allowing her an answer that could not have been much more detailed than a simple nod before rattling off information about an International Fund Raiser that Janice Williamson would be attending; therefore she would be attending it as well.

             

Alexis’s interest was piqued. Janice Williamson had been in the frenzied media spotlight for the last two months, after her husband had attempted to embezzle money from their company and spend it on his relationship with his mistress. The mistake he had made was believing that his loving wife would stand by him based on her lack of awareness about either situation, when the claims starting coming out from the accountants that something was not right. For such a successful businessman, Jack Williamson had been very bad at hiding both his affair and his deep pockets. The conversations he had been having about his plans with the mistress, Linda Blake, made the entire sordid affair public before he had a chance to execute any of them, though he had succeeded in informing many social networks of his strange bedroom habits. In the end, his wife Janice Williamson was just what Modern Woman of Today was all about; she had showed her incredible strength by kicking him out of their home immediately and quickly taking over the company by convincing him and his lawyer it would be best for him take his small pieces of dignity and let her fix his mistakes. Since she had taken over Ameriblast, the stock had skyrocketed; the pro bono work alone was enough to draw positive attention to the company, and women around the globe were talking about her success. The woman was going to be on Oprah in a month – a sure sign you’ve made it, if there ever was one.

             

Janice was a celebrity in Alexis’s world, and it was Alexis’s job to be at the same event she would be speaking at tonight with her notebook and camera. It was a dream come true in the reporting world, and still Alexis was worried that she would somehow mess it up just trying to show up and get through the door.

             

She was the kind of journalist that did internet research and gathered information through phone calls and using her many smaller networking connections to create bigger ones; she had never been the sole reporter to attend such an important event and try to cover it all on her own. She worked for a magazine, and even though it was not some girly lifestyle magazine like she had hated growing up, it was not some world-renowned, important newspaper where the reporters were pushy and focused. On the phone, prying for information, she was a tigress; at least she knew the right people to offer company tickets to in order to get what she needed, but she worried that in person, at a ridiculously important event like this, she would trip, or not be allowed in because she missed some small memo about the dress code, like no open-toed shoes. She knew she was being silly now; but she decided to wear her close-toed sling-backs just in case.

****

 

             

Other books

Quinn's Revenge by Amanda Ashley
All This Talk of Love by Christopher Castellani
Cut Out by Bob Mayer
Murder by Manicure by Nancy J. Cohen
The Johnson Sisters by Tresser Henderson