I Married a Billionaire: The Prodigal Son (Contemporary Romance) Read online




  Contents

  Title Page

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  About the Author

  Insatiable Reads Book Tours

  I Married a Billionaire: The Prodigal Son

  By Melanie Marchande

  Copyright © Melanie Marchande

  Please note: this book is a standalone followup to I Married a Billionaire and I Married a Billionaire: Lost and Found.

  All characters appearing in this work are fictitious. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

  One

  “Do you think it’s salvageable?”

  I looked up at him.

  “Okay,” he said. “All right. Never mind.”

  “I didn’t say anything.” I put the manuscript down on the kitchen island.

  One corner of Daniel Thorne’s mouth twisted up into a wry smile. “You didn’t have to.”

  It had been almost six months since someone managed to plant the idea of a biography in my husband’s head. He’d been taking meetings with writers ever since, and it had been a more difficult process than he’d anticipated. Eventually he started bringing sample manuscripts home to me, and I had to admit, the pickings were pretty slim.

  “I could deal with the, uh, workmanlike prose,” I said, standing up. “I mean, it’s nonfiction. But the grammar? And the sentence structure? It’s so awkward.”

  “I’m awkward,” said Daniel, with his head halfway into the cupboard. “Maybe this is the one. Did you eat all the Nutella?”

  I sighed. “Yes, Danny. Yes. The answer is always yes.” I walked over to him, resting my hand on the small of his back until he turned to look at me. “Don’t say things like that.”

  “I wouldn’t have to, if you’d just buy more when you finish it.”

  I made a face at him. “You know what I’m referring to, asshole.”

  He wound his arm around my neck, leaning down and planting a kiss on my forehead.

  “I’ve got a few more meetings next week,” he said. “Odds are, one of them will work out. I’m getting tired of telling the same stories over and over.”

  “Odds are?” I repeated, following him out into the living room. “Have you been following the odds so far? They’re not in your favor.”

  “I never was very good at statistics.”

  Shaking my head, I went back to sorting through the mail.

  After the first tumultuous few years of our relationship, it was amazing how comfortably we’d settled in. I found myself unable to imagine life without him. A dangerous place to be, for sure, but I was strangely content with it.

  It probably wouldn’t have been so strange if I’d been one of those girls who actively sought Mr. Right, or even Mr. Right Now. But when I’d started working for Daniel at the main office of his company, Plum Technologies, I had already pretty much given up on either of those possibilities. There simply wasn’t someone out there for me. But no, that wasn’t it, exactly. It was more that I just didn’t want to be that close to someone. The whole idea was so unappealing to me; living with someone, being accountable to them at all times, sharing every waking moment. It sounded like a nightmare - and in practice, it usually was.

  But then, there was Thorne.

  Daniel was someone who’d been burned before, maybe even more so than I ever was. That, I suppose, made him an ideal candidate. But neither one of us approached this thing with any intentions of becoming what it was now. He simply needed someone to marry so he could stay in the country, and I was broke. If I agreed to marry him, we could both get something we desperately needed.

  Well, that turned out to be true. But it wasn’t what either one of us expected.

  I suppose we were both so lonely, so starved for affection, even if we didn’t want to admit it, that just pretending to be in love triggered that endorphin rush. We were hooked on each other from day one. But it took many more days for us to admit it.

  After a few scares with the INS and one of Daniel’s crazy ex-girlfriends, we finally admitted to each other that maybe it was time to pursue this…thing, whatever it was. Naturally, after we’d finally settled into a our real relationship, some old enemies from Daniel’s past tried to frame him for insider trading. Once the nail-biting stress and chaos were over with, I suppose we’d reached a new level of…well…I’m not sure, exactly. But I was almost afraid of how much I liked it.

  Safety. Security. Not just financial, but emotional. I understood now why so many people seemed to wander the world aimlessly looking for the half to make them whole, even if it was never an ambition I’d shared. Being Daniel’s wife was deeply comforting, and deeply satisfying, in ways I couldn’t possibly have anticipated.

  I had just finished shoving all the junk mail into the recycling when he brushed past me again, heading for the fridge. “Don’t forget about that dinner tonight.”

  Ugh. I almost had forgotten. This one was for charity, although most of them seemed to be, and I could hardly keep them straight. To make things worse, Emily, the boutique owner who’d basically become my personal stylist since I started “seeing” Daniel, was on vacation. I didn’t trust my own taste, and after a few snarky blog posts I’d learned that I couldn’t wear the same dress twice to any event where there would be media coverage.

  I didn’t even know where to start. I’d been putting off the dress shopping for far too long already, and now I only had a few hours left.

  The thought of asking Daniel to come for a second opinion occurred to me, but in the end, I decided against it. I gathered up my purse and jacket and headed out into the crisp autumn air, alone.

  For some reason, I couldn’t deal with the idea of going into an unfamiliar boutique and being eyeballed by some hipster clerk, so I went to a department store instead. Which, of course, quickly proved to be a mistake.

  There was absolutely nothing that appealed to me, style-wise, but I was going to have to make the best of it. I couldn’t quite wrap my head around the colors either. Did all the designers get together this year and say, “let’s make everyone dress like they’re appliances in a 1970s kitchen?”

  After flipping through rack after rack of sartorial disasters, I was beginning to feel intensely discouraged. I never should have put off my shopping until the last minute, but these events had become so routine to me - so boring, even - that I just ended up procrastinating. I supposed this was my punishment. A purgatory of browns, oranges, and avocado-greens.

  Then, suddenly, something caught my eye.

  Excitedly, I grabbed the hanger and wrestled it out from the back of the pile. It was something in a deep red, something that actually looked like a color that a human being would want to put on their body. I finally pulled it free, and held it up under the light.

  My heart started to sink. The color was as lovely as I’d hoped, but the style…well, it was admittedly difficult to tell while it was slouching over a hanger, but it just didn’t seem right at all. The fabric was sort of thin and stretchy, the shoulders somehow overly square, and the two sides sort of met and folded over each other in a deep V at the neckline. It was very early eighties, actually, now that I looked at it more closely.

  Did I accidentally time-travel this morning?

  Oh, well, there was nothing for it. I absolutely
was not going to wrap myself in something that matched my dad’s used VW Beetle that he had when I was a baby, so I had no choice but to try on this monstrosity of a red dress. Maybe it would be better than I expected.

  In the fitting room, I didn’t dare even turn towards the mirror until I’d finished pulling it on. And even then, I had the insane urge to cover my eyes and just peek between my fingers.

  I gritted my teeth.

  It wasn’t terrible.

  The v-neck was so low that it almost showed part of my stomach, and the strange fold made it look like my breasts were different sizes. It was very clingy around the middle. The length was strange, too, just below the knee, as if it had been designed for someone much shorter than I was. Or much taller.

  Overall, though, it wasn’t a complete disaster. And it was passable for just one night. Anyway, it had to be better than committing the cardinal sin of re-wearing a dress.

  As I reluctantly paid for my purchase, I fought off the uneasy feeling that I was becoming exactly what I didn’t want to be. I was letting my decisions be influenced by strangers. Strangers whose entire job was to watch and criticize my every move. I was playing right into their hand, even if I was rolling my eyes while I did it.

  But what choice did I have, really? I was going to be labeled as something, one way or the other. If I followed their ridiculous “rules,” I was shallow. If I accidentally put a toe out of line, I was laughable. And if I just decided to forget the whole thing and live my life like a normal person, I was the quirky, crazy, anti-establishment oddity that would have everyone shaking their heads - and smiling, maybe, but with pity. Will she ever grow up?

  No matter what I did, I was still defined by their standards. And so tonight, I was going to show up at a benefit dinner for some charity that I’d probably never heard of, in a dress that looked like I’d pulled it out of my mom’s closet. The best I could hope for was that someone would call it “retro” and that would be the end of the discussion.

  I tossed the bag into my car, angrily, and drove home so aggressively that I swore I saw a few cab drivers cringe in fear.

  “What if I just didn’t go?” was the first thing I said as I flung myself dramatically through the front door. The bag landed with a sad little thump.

  Daniel didn’t look up from his phone. “It might look odd,” he said. “I mean, considering.”

  Considering. Obviously, I was supposed to remember what this benefit was actually for, and it probably had something to do with me. Women? Starving artists? The fashion-challenged?

  “I don’t understand what’s happening with dresses this season,” I said. “There’s literally nothing good out there.”

  “Did you go to Emily’s?” was his first question, predictably. “Her friend’s keeping it open for the week, you know.”

  “I know. I can’t stand the way she looks at me.” Every time I went there when Emily wasn’t around, I could feel the judgment and distaste radiating off of her friend in waves. Apparently, she was descended from some obscure line of European royalty, but in my opinion that was absolutely no excuse.

  Daniel, bless him, just stood up silently, came over, and kissed me gently on the forehead.

  “It’s going to be a lovely night,” he said. “I promise. And you’ll look as beautiful as always.”

  I melted a little.

  “I’m sorry,” I said, wandering over and collapsing onto the sofa. “I’m just…I don’t know, I’m just tired.” It was true, and I was just now realizing it. I had absolutely no right to be, really. I drew pictures when I felt like it, had a few gallery showings every month, and went to charity galas where the most taxing thing I had to do was smile all night. But for some reason, lately, I’d just been exhausted. It didn’t matter how long I slept, I’d wake up bone-tired and drag myself through the rest of my day, aching to collapse into bed again.

  Daniel followed me to the living room, lifting my legs up by my ankles so he could sit down, and then letting them back down to drape across his lap. “You seem to be sleeping well enough,” he said.

  “I don’t know what that’s supposed to mean,” I grumbled, draping my arm over my face. Somehow, even the sunlight filtering through the blinds was more than I could take right then. He was trying to tease me about my snoring, but I wasn’t really in the mood. I still wasn’t sure if I actually did it, or if he just claimed that I did because he enjoyed my outraged denials so much.

  “How long have you been feeling like this?” he asked, stroking my leg gently. He sounded more concerned now, probably because I didn’t even have the energy to argue with him about what noises I might or might not make while I was asleep.

  I shrugged. “Dunno. Feels like forever, but probably more like a week. Probably coming down with something.”

  “Everyone’s sneezing,” he agreed. “Maybe you ought to go in and see someone. Just in case. If it’s the flu, you don’t want to wait too long or the treatments won’t work.”

  “I’m not that tired,” I said, which wasn’t strictly true. But it was a different kind of tired than I’d ever really experienced, even when I was sick.

  Daniel, for his part, never seemed to succumb to anything that went around. Since we’d been together, he’d seen me at my most pathetic - pale and sweating, shivering and sneezing and worse - but our situations had never been reversed. I smiled a little bit, trying to imagine Daniel with the sniffles.

  He was stroking my leg gently. “Just find a way to live through tonight, and then you’ll get a few days off from all the taxing duties of being my wife.”

  I moved my arm, and opened one eye to look at him. “All of the duties?”

  He grinned. “Well,” he said. “Maybe not all.”

  ***

  I took a deep breath, and stepped out of the town car.

  John, the driver, gave us a jaunty wave. I smoothed my hair and took Daniel’s arm as we approached the huge marble staircase. They certainly spared no expense for this one.

  The banquet hall was grand, and already packed to the gills with people. We made our way through the crowd, searching for the place cards with our names on them. I knew the drill by now. If you walked with purpose, you were less likely to end up with a microphone or a camera shoved in your face.

  “Hey, Thorne! Thorne!” Someone was waving from across the room, and he looked about ready to elbow his way through the sea of people like a runningback. Daniel, his smile frozen, started towards him to meet halfway. I followed.

  Once he was closer, I recognized the man. He was the owner of the company whose stock Daniel had been accused of trading on inside information; I had only met him once or twice, when he’d testified in the trial. I couldn’t quite recall his name. Stephen something?

  “It’s good to see you,” said Daniel, shaking his hand, almost sounding like he meant it. “How’s everything been?”

  “Oh, just fantastic. Great.”

  Stephen’s wife was looking me up and down. “Hello, dear,” she said, doing a decent job of covering up the fact that she couldn’t remember my name either. “That’s a very - interesting dress.”

  “Thanks,” I said, although I was pretty sure it wasn’t a compliment.

  “The color’s certainly appropriate for the occasion, though,” she said. I glanced around the room; there actually were a fair number of other women in red.

  “Right,” I said. “Because of…the…”

  “Women’s heart disease awareness,” she said, her smile warming a little. “Don’t worry, I have trouble keeping track of them too.”

  I let out a long breath. “Thanks. Now I know what my, uh…talking points are, I guess.” We’d been standing still too long. I could see the journalists starting to descend upon us. “Is the dress really that bad? It was all they had at the store that wasn’t…even more horrible.”

  “Oh, it’s fine,” she said, in a tone that made me not quite believe her.

  “Mrs. Thorne,” said a journalist, before rattling o
ff her name and affiliation so quickly that I immediately forgot. “How are you doing tonight?”

  “Great,” I said. “Just great. How are you?”

  “Do you have any personal connection to the cause tonight?”

  I breathed a silent prayer of thanks to Stephen’s wife, What’s-Her-Name. “Well, you know, as a woman, of course I’m deeply concerned about the fact that heart disease is often overlooked. It’s a number one killer of women, yet it’s still thought of as being a men’s disease. Most people don’t even know how to properly resuscitate a woman, or hook her up to a defibrillator. Their heart attack symptoms are different, even. It’s important that we get the word out about these issues. Women are dying every day.” I was rattling off facts that I vaguely remembered having read in some news article online, and I could see that the journalist’s eyes were starting to glaze over. “Anyway, that’s…you know, that’s just how I feel about it.” It was a pretty weak way to end it, but hopefully they’d cut that part out for their quotable quote.

  “Thank you, Mrs. Thorne,” she said. “Your passion is…inspiring.”

  “No problem.” I drifted over towards Daniel, who’d been drawn into the orbit of another journalist.

  “…and I think every man should be concerned - I am. For my wife, for my sister, for…my daughter, someday, if…” he drifted off, glancing at me as I approached.

  “You’re planning to have a family? Any time soon?” The journalist had a gleam in his eyes.

  “Well, no. No,” Daniel modified, quickly. “We don’t - well, we’ve still got plenty of time. I’m young. We’re young. And the way things are now, it wouldn’t really be fair to a kid. I work long hours. Someday. Maybe. I don’t know.”

  The journalist finally took pity on him, and directed the line of questioning elsewhere. I stood by, hearing the words, but lost in thought about what he’d said before. Daniel and I had talked about children. Honestly, I was a little terrified of the idea, and he seemed pretty reticent as well. He seemed convinced that his own father had never wanted them, and he couldn’t stand the idea of becoming like that. I could understand the impulse, even if I was convinced that he’d be a much better dad than his father ever was.