My Father's Best Friend
img img My Father's Best Friend img Chapter 3 The Billionaire
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Chapter 6 She's a Spoiled Brat img
Chapter 7 You Need to Get Laid img
Chapter 8 A Cry for Help img
Chapter 9 Business or Family img
Chapter 10 Dad of the Year img
Chapter 11 That's Her Dad img
Chapter 12 What Is This Man Doing To Me img
Chapter 13 She Wants His Time img
Chapter 14 He's Super Hot img
Chapter 15 I Get to See Him Again img
Chapter 16 Tonight Is All About Her img
Chapter 17 Call Me Andrew img
Chapter 18 Pollinate Her Flower img
Chapter 19 It's a Date img
Chapter 20 It's Only Paint img
Chapter 21 The Sound of Her Voice img
Chapter 22 He's Practically Old Enough To Be Your Father img
Chapter 23 Mom Might Be Right img
Chapter 24 Dirty Thoughts img
Chapter 25 All Apologies img
Chapter 26 The First Date img
Chapter 27 Sparks Fly img
Chapter 28 Kiss Me img
Chapter 29 What I've Been Missing img
Chapter 30 Is It Serious img
Chapter 31 Phone Flirting img
Chapter 32 A Growing Hunger img
Chapter 33 Dinner Has To Go img
Chapter 34 Can't Get Enough img
Chapter 35 Trying Out the Bed img
Chapter 36 Waking Up Together img
Chapter 37 Raven Knows img
Chapter 38 The Rules img
Chapter 39 Interrupted img
Chapter 40 Everything Falls Apart img
Chapter 41 My Father Can't Find Out img
Chapter 42 Freaking Out img
Chapter 43 The Morning Air img
Chapter 44 On a Break img
Chapter 45 The Voice of Reason img
Chapter 46 If It's Meant To Be img
Chapter 47 Three Days In img
Chapter 48 You Can't Run From the Truth img
Chapter 49 Another Man img
Chapter 50 We Have to Tell Him the Truth img
Chapter 51 She'll Never Be My Mother img
Chapter 52 Heart Emojis img
Chapter 53 Telling Her Parents img
Chapter 54 Dad Loses It img
Chapter 55 He Knows Me img
Chapter 56 She's Touching Me img
Chapter 57 In His Arms Again img
Chapter 58 And He Cooks img
Chapter 59 Confronted By Her Father img
Chapter 60 This Is Serious img
Chapter 61 When Is It My Turn img
Chapter 62 A Proposition img
Chapter 63 Plans for the Future img
Chapter 64 A Step Back img
Chapter 65 Guys Can Be Idiots Sometimes img
Chapter 66 In Trouble Again img
Chapter 67 Jealous img
Chapter 68 Telling Mom img
Chapter 69 At Least He's Not Divorced img
Chapter 70 You Just Set the Table img
Chapter 71 Stolen Kisses img
Chapter 72 The Girlfriend img
Chapter 73 The Talk img
Chapter 74 Saxton Digs Himself a Hole img
Chapter 75 A Surprise img
Chapter 76 An Important Question img
Chapter 77 Should I Say Yes img
Chapter 78 A Tropical Getaway img
Chapter 79 Hot Tub in Paradise img
Chapter 80 Bikini Off img
Chapter 81 Take Me Andrew img
Chapter 82 The Worst News Imaginable img
Chapter 83 A Family Tragedy Unfolds img
Chapter 84 Waiting is Agony img
Chapter 85 A Coma img
Chapter 86 This is My Life img
Chapter 87 You Need To Go img
Chapter 88 He's Clean img
Chapter 89 The Nightmare Never Ends img
Chapter 90 On the Outside img
Chapter 91 The Punk Who Hurt My Daughter img
Chapter 92 All My Fault img
Chapter 93 Poor Choices img
Chapter 94 I'm Here img
Chapter 95 Back Together Again img
Chapter 96 Can't Stop img
Chapter 97 Stop Shutting Me Out img
Chapter 98 Is This Goodbye img
Chapter 99 A Miracle img
Chapter 100 What Did She Say img
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Chapter 3 The Billionaire

Andrew

"Have them run the numbers again," I said, leaning back in my office chair and stretching my cramped legs. "Oh, and move that lunch meeting with Greg DuBois tomorrow from twelve to one."

On the other side of the line, Maggie hesitated. "Sir, Mr. DuBois is very busy. He-"

"If he wants a deal, he'll make time."

"Yes, Mr. Marx," my assistant agreed. "Anything else?"

"That's all for now. See you in the morning."

"Have a good night, sir."

She waited for me to hang up first, something both of my full-time assistants had been groomed to do. With my home office silent once more, I got back to work on my computer, pulling up the files I'd been perusing.

After reading two words, though, there was a knock on the closed door.

"Uh-huh?" I called.

Karen opened the door halfway and peeked in, an apologetic smile on her face. "Sorry, Mr. Marx. I didn't want to interrupt you while you were working."

"It's fine."

I was always working. Even in my sleep, I ran numbers and shook hands. Being CEO of the top investment company in the country wasn't a job that you left at the office. It was a lifestyle that flowed in your blood. The drive to create and build was innate. You were born with it, or you weren't.

"I just found this in the laundry." Karen finally entered the room, showing me the crumpled, yellow piece of paper in her hand. I reached across the table to accept it.

"It's dated from Friday," Karen explained.

My jaw clenched as I read the short note. "Right."

Deep breath in. Deep breath out.

Yelling would do no good, but shit, did I want to shout right then and there.

"Where is Raven?"

"She's in her bedroom."

"Send her down her before you go."

"Yes, sir. Good night."

"Good night, Karen."

The housekeeper slipped out as quietly as she had entered, and I sat in my chair, my fingers clenching. Maybe there was something to those stupid stress balls after all. I was ready to squeeze the living hell out of something.

A couple minutes passed, and Raven didn't come down to my office. My anger spiked, causing me to get up and pace around the room.

Five minutes.

Another knock.

"She won't come out of her room," Karen explained.

"Fuck," I hissed under my breath. Leaving the bottom-floor office, I stomped upstairs. The music coming from my daughter's room could be heard from the hall.

"Raven!" I raised my fist, ready to pound on the door, but it flew open in front of my hand.

"What?" she nonchalantly asked, hand on her hip and towel slung over her shoulder. Judging from the one-piece bathing suit she had on, she was about to take a dip in the indoor pool.

"What's this?" I held out the note from her high-school principal.

A brief look of surprise flashed across her face, but then she quickly masked it, features becoming flat once more. "Do you need me to read it for you or something?"

Normally, I'd have given her an earful for such back talk, but at that moment there was a bigger fish to fry.

"This is the third time you've gotten in trouble since your senior year started, and it's only September. According to this note, you threatened another student. On Friday. So why is my housekeeper finding this note in your laundry on Sunday night?"

"Wow, so much for female camaraderie." Raven's eyes rolled. "Is this what you're paying Karen for? To be a bitch and rat me out?"

Not looking for a response, she pushed past me and headed down the hall. I stayed hot on her heels. This shit had been going on for at least the last year. Acting out at school. Not turning in assignments. Being moody and distant at home. The worst part was that Raven couldn't explain her behavior.

"You know this isn't about Karen. Don't try to shift your personal responsibility onto her. All she does is take care of you. You should feel lucky she cares so much."

"Yeah, Dad, okay," she sarcastically answered as we both clomped down the stairs. "Thanks for that. You sound like a broken record. You know that, right?"

If there wasn't already steam coming out of my nose, there had to be at that point. I'd tried yelling before, though. Just like everyone said, it wasn't the best parenting tactic.

I'd also given her space. Not that I hadn't been doing that before.

So what the fuck else was I supposed to do?

Raven whipped the door to the pool open and then made a move to shut it in my face. I quickly grabbed it, though, stepping into the heated room right behind her.

"What is it you need, Raven? You have everything already."

Dropping her towel on a chair, she kept her back to me and pulled on goggles.

"You're beautiful and smart. You can have and be anything you want in life, but not if you keep acting this way. The only person you're hurting is-"

She dove into the water, the splash cutting me off. Her form moved below the surface, effortlessly gliding all the way to the opposite end of the pool. On the other side of the glass walls, the yard sat dark. Beyond that, Seattle's city lights twinkled.

My whole life, I'd worked to give Raven everything she would ever need, but I hadn't been blind about my gifts either. Growing up in a working-class family taught me the value of accountability, of learning how to take care of myself.

So though Raven lived in a big house and didn't want for anything physically speaking, I'd also consciously put her in public school rather than in private. And no thousand-dollar smartphone, or whatever shit it was she wanted next. Kids didn't need that stuff.

So where had I gone wrong?

I didn't know, but I needed answers right away. I'd already wasted enough time with this pointless dance. I still had two more calls to make before the end of the night and a briefing to go over for the next morning's meeting.

Just as Raven emerged from the water, I went to the wall and killed the lights. Darkness enveloped the pool room.

It was time to teach my daughter a lesson.

            
            

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