Read The Tycoon's Socialite Bride (Entangled Indulgence) Online

Authors: Tracey Livesay

Tags: #wealthy heroine, #arranged marriage, #bargain, #across the tracks, #inerracial romance, #women's shelter, #marriage of convenience

The Tycoon's Socialite Bride (Entangled Indulgence) (18 page)

Did he have the strength to determine the right thing for him? It wasn’t operating a hotel. He’d never wanted to be in the hospitality business.

Was it spending a fortune to tear the building down? He was in business to make money, not throw it away. It was a well-known hotel in an ideal location. Tearing it down made no business sense.

In terms of fortune, Holcombe was still coming out on top. He was selling his hotel and getting another potentially lucrative property in the process. Holcombe was getting what he wanted.

And what do I want?
There was no hesitation, no doubt in his mind.

Pamela. He wanted his wife and the life they’d created.

His mother had urged him to leave what happened to her in the past and move forward, but he’d been unable to do so. She’d never wanted him to buy the Holcombe.

Oh, God.

Suddenly, he knew. This wasn’t about his mother.

It never had been.

“Now, if you’ll turn to the signature page, we’re heading into the final stretch…”

Marcus saw David Holcombe’s face wreathed in smiles as he reached for a pen.

“Stop,” he said.

Every head in the room swiveled in Marcus’s direction.

“Is something wrong?” Carter asked. “We’re getting ready to sign.”

He realized for the first time how small Holcombe was, how insignificant. “You can have the building on G Street, but only if the shelter is allowed to remain.” Holcombe’s face turned red and his eyes widened in an alarming manner.

“Preposterous! I will not have a bunch of…vagrants living on my property.” Vivian Holcombe turned her nose up in disdain.

“Not a problem, since it isn’t your property.”

“You can’t do that, Pearson. We had a deal.”

“Nope,” Carter said, reaching quickly for the paperwork in front of the man. “We have a deal when we have properly executed documents.”

With a snap of his fingers, the legal assistants swiftly removed all packets from the table. David Holcombe placed his fists on the table and pushed himself to his feet.

“What do you think you’re doing? I demand to know what is going on.”

Marcus looked at the man. The moment of truth. “Do you know who I am?”

“What?”

“Do you
know
who I am?”

Holcombe narrowed his eyes. “Is this some sort of joke? An ego trip for you? If so, it’s not appreciated.”

Everything was crystal clear to Marcus. Every decision he’d made had been measured against how it would help him get to David Holcombe. The college and graduate school he attended, the courses he took, the major he studied. All done in an effort to prove something to this man. A man who’d destroyed a family’s life in one minute and forgot about it in the next. It never would have occurred to Holcombe to worry about the effect of his actions. Marcus had given him a lot of power. Now, he felt foolish.

“I’m no longer interested in your hotel. The deal is off.”

“You can’t do this.” Panic mangled Holcombe’s words.

“Watch me.”

“I’ll reduce the price. Will that get the ball rolling again?”

“No.”

Marcus headed for the doors.

“Pearson, wait! I need to sell this hotel.”

Vivian clutched Holcombe’s arm. “David, where is he going? We didn’t sign the papers. I thought you said we were getting rid of it today. We’re running out of time.”

“Shut up, Vivian.”

“The payment is due in two weeks. We don’t have time for another round of contract negotiations with a new buyer. You can’t let him off the hook!”

Holcombe wrenched his arm away and turned back to Marcus. “What will it take? Your first bid? Below market value? Name your price.”

Marcus didn’t respond. Without a backward glance, he walked out of the conference room.

“This is your fault.” The surprisingly lucid tone of Vivian Holcombe followed him. “You had to string him along, make him want it more.”

“Vivian, please.”

“You, with your needing the ‘right’ buyer. We could have gotten rid of it months ago.”

Marcus smiled slightly and headed for the elevator, leaving the golden spire of the Holcombe gleaming in the distance.

Chapter Eighteen

Pamela let herself into the estate, shutting the door behind her. The sound bounced off the marble floors and echoed throughout the foyer, emphasizing the emptiness. The midday sun shone through the spotless transom windows.

She hurried to her rooms, thankful she’d planned her visit perfectly. The Senator was probably on the Hill, wining and dining members of Congress. Alice had lunch with her ladies’ group on Tuesdays and would be gone all afternoon. Pamela wanted to get in and out without alerting anyone to her presence. She’d stayed at the Four Seasons the past few days, but she’d gone through the clothes she took when she left Marcus’s house. She couldn’t bear to go back and have memories torment her. The estate seemed the lesser of two evils. Afterward, she was meeting Shelly at the shelter.

She felt nauseous. The women’s shelter…

She glanced at her alarm clock and saw it was after one o’clock. Marcus would have scheduled the signing for the morning, anxious to finally achieve his goal. So it was done. Marcus had signed the papers. He was the proud new owner of the Holcombe and David Holcombe now owned the women’s shelter building.

Thankfully, some wisdom had come from this experience. She couldn’t marry a man who wouldn’t put her first. And what about their children? Did she want to be married to a man who would put his business interests before his children’s well-being? She remembered how she’d felt as a child and knew that wasn’t a consideration. She didn’t trust that he wouldn’t lose his priorities to another big deal. And if she couldn’t trust him to put her first, they had no future together.

Annoyed to find herself crying—again—she brushed her hand over her eyes and got back to work. She heard a noise and spun around to find her father standing in the doorway. He was impeccably dressed, as usual, but dark circles bruised his eyes and tension carved new lines into his face. He looked exhausted.

Steeling her heart, she continued packing. “I thought you’d gone to the Hill today. I won’t be long. I needed a few things.”

His presence drew the fresh air from the room, leaving her suffocating in the thick silence left behind.

The waiting game.

Sorry, Dad, you’ll have to play that game by yourself.
She was no longer participating in his mental recreational activities.

“If there’s nothing else…”

He cleared his throat. “It’s been a while since I’ve seen you here, in your room.”

“Marcus and I have been busy.”

Saying his name added another contusion to her heart.

“I’m not surprised. Men like Pearson don’t understand the importance of tradition and family. He probably keeps you occupied on purpose so you can’t visit.”

“I know you find this hard to believe, but I have my own mind.”

The words burst out of her, the dam built by upbringing and societal politeness fracturing into a million little pieces.

“You made your feelings clear. Marcus was not what you wanted for me, but that wasn’t your decision to make. He was my choice, and you should have respected it. But you can’t respect what you don’t see, and we both know you’ve never
seen
me.”

“I wish that were true. The problem is I see too much. You are the youthful embodiment of your mother.”

Her lips parted at his words. He never mentioned her resemblance to her mother.

“You must be disappointed I’m not more like her.”

“You’re exactly like her. Not in the things you do,” he amended when she crossed her arms over her chest, “but in your heart, your compassion. That’s all your mother. She made me promise to take care of you and I thought that meant making you in her image.”

He came farther into the room, sinking onto the edge of her antique Victorian chaise longue. He dropped his head into his hands.

“I tried to do what she wanted, but I failed. I’m your father, but Alice has been more of a parent to you than I ever was.”

He looked up, and Pamela was astonished to see tears pooling in his eyes.

“I’m sorry, Pamela. Despite my incompetent efforts, all I’ve ever wanted is for you to be happy.”

Pamela slid to her knees before her father and put her arms around his neck. They held each other for a long time. Later she would dissect every word and phrase. Right now it felt good to be in his arms.

She needed to make a decision about her future. What made her happy? What did she want to do with her life? She knew she had to start putting
herself
first, not the family, but the Senator wouldn’t understand.

Maybe not, but she needed her
father
to understand.

She took a deep breath.
You can do this, Pamela.
She lifted her chin to look into her father’s eyes, heedless of the tears streaming down her face.

“Daddy, there’s something I need to tell you. About Devin.”

Pamela moved to the next item on the list, determined to finish this workshop despite being unable to muster the enthusiasm the women deserved. She should have listened to Shelly and taken a couple of days off, but she thought if she could immerse herself in work, she could put off dealing with her anguish and the breakdown that was sure to come.

“Avoid office politics. You can never win in those situations.” The door to the shelter’s rec room opened. “I need a few more minutes, Shelly.”

“And I need to see my wife.”

Marcus stood in the doorway. Despite her frustration, a wave of euphoria swept through her and the papers slipped from her fingers to the floor.

It had been a day since the signing, five days since she’d last seen him. Her eyes devoured him, like a starving woman given chocolate. His blond hair was swept back off his forehead. His blue eyes glittered feverishly, the hunger in them unmistakable. They swept her from head to toe.

She shivered, her body blooming beneath his gaze. She hated the effect he had on her, even after he broke her heart. “What are you doing here?”

“Looking for you.”

She shook her head and gestured to the eight women sitting in a semicircle. “This isn’t the place.”

“If you’re here, then this is where I need to be.”

Her throat tightened and she clutched her elbows, trying to hold herself together. “Why are you doing this? Nothing has changed.”

“You’re wrong. Everything has changed. Look, can we go somewhere and talk?”

He started toward her, and she took several steps away from him. One of the women, Robyn, stood up and faced Marcus. “You’re the one Shelly and Pamela were talking about? You’re the reason the shelter has to move?”

“Dammit, Pamela—”

The other women rose from their chairs and faced Marcus, forming a human barrier between them.

“You should go.”

She almost felt sorry for him. He stared down at his feet, his chest rising and falling. She hoped he would listen to her and prayed that he wouldn’t. Then he straightened and she saw his set jaw and narrowed eyes. Gaze swinging between her and the women, he shrugged.

“I don’t think I could fully explain to you how it felt not to be able to take care of my mother. I blamed it all on David Holcombe. I made decisions and amassed this empire all with the thought of getting my hands on the hotel. The funny thing is I never thought beyond that point. Would it remain a hotel? Would I tear it down? I just focused everything on getting it.”

Pamela could feel his words knitting the tears in her heart, but she forced herself to remain where she was.

His gaze was steady and clear. “I realize that by living in the past I was destroying my present and the chance of a future. With you.”

His eyes were powerful magnets, drawing her into their field, rendering her incapable of looking away.

“None of this matters. You broke your word and gave David the shelter’s building. I can never trust you again.”

He shook his head. “No, that’s what I’m trying to tell you.” He took a step toward her, but Robyn and the others held their ground. He fell back, holding his hands up, palms out. “That’s what I’m trying to tell you,” he repeated. “I didn’t give Holcombe the building.”

“I don’t understand. How did you buy the hotel without giving away the shelter?”

“I didn’t. I withdrew my offer.”

She closed her eyes. “No. You wouldn’t. You wanted—”

“I thought I did, but I only wanted what it represented. Power, security, acceptance. I’ve had those for years and I still wasn’t happy. That’s when I realized being with you is what’s made me truly happy.”

“Then you still own this building?”

“No, you do.” He extended a rolled-up piece of paper tied with a red bow.

Robyn took it from him and handed it to Pamela. The words blurred on the page and she had to read the document twice before its meaning became clear.

“It’s a deed. Pearson Enterprises conveyed the building to me…for one dollar.”

“I’m a businessman. I couldn’t give it away for free.”

She couldn’t breathe. Shock, confusion, excitement, and hope all warred for dominance.

“Does that mean we get to stay?” Robyn asked. Pamela looked at them and nodded, tears running down her face.

The women looked at each other, glanced at her, then at Marcus, and took several steps back.

Marcus covered the distance between them and took her in his arms, squeezing her so tightly, she had trouble breathing. But she didn’t care. He was here, he hadn’t given the building to Holcombe, and he loved her. That’s all that mattered.

“Nothing is as important to me as you are. I love you, Pamela. I’ll never forgive myself for any minute when you didn’t know that, when I let you believe a building meant more to me than your happiness. But if you’ll let me, I’ll spend the rest of my life making it up to you.”

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