2. Hayden

3413 Words
Chapter 2 Hayden Judge Fashions Industry sat in the heart of the city’s downtown. If legend could be believed, Marcella and Arthur Judge had started the business in a crumbling building that once stood in this very lot, on the second floor above a laundromat with a single Singer sewing machine Arthur had given Marcella on their wedding day and bits of material neighbors had cast off from their own darning endeavors. Marcella had been the art and creation—or what her husband had termed the soul—behind the clothes they made, while Arthur was the businessman. With his animated and persuasive personality, he could’ve sold sand to people on a beach. He could’ve been anything. But what he was most proud of was his wife, so he put his life’s work into selling the designs she made. And within ten years, they were millionaires with three dozen employees and business ventures around the globe. They bought the entire block around that deteriorating laundromat, razed all the buildings, and built up JFI as it stood today. But as I glanced up at the three-story building in front of me after I parked my car, I wondered if the Judges would’ve changed anything in their climb to the top if they’d had any inkling how their futures would play out. The world had been at their fingertips. It might’ve taken them years of trying until they finally had the child they so yearned for, but once Kaitlynn had come along, their life had been made on every front, a veritable fairy tale. But then Marcella had died of cancer when her daughter was six, and Arthur—the heartbroken widower—had latched on to the first gold-digging viper—er, woman—who smiled prettily and convinced him she could take care of his sweet daughter. That viper had been Lana Price-Carmichael, and she’d been another sort of cancer altogether, a deadlier, more destructive sort. Within two years of Marcella’s death, Lana had slipped her way into Arthur’s life until she’d become Lana Price-Carmichael-Judge. She managed to leech off him for the next dozen or so years until he died from a massive heart attack. Then she somehow inherited the entire company and most of his fortune along with it. Which I believe was utter bullshit. Lana didn’t exactly have Arthur’s business acumen, though, and she listened to advice from others even less. Not even a year after Arthur’s death, JFI found itself on the brink of financial ruin, and Lana had been forced to sell half the company off to Nash Corporations to save face. So here we were, another year later, and the company was back in the black—because of Ezra Nash, Lana’s co-CEO from Nash Corporations—and business was looking up again. Except I’m not so sure Arthur would be reassured by that bit of news. His only daughter was still destitute and barely keeping her head above water. That wouldn’t sit well with him, no matter what was going on with his company. She was what had mattered; I’d known him long enough to be well aware of that. Which made my mission to find out the truth behind his will even more persistent. Because none of this made sense. Arthur had left Kaitlynn mere scraps, which entailed a trust fund that had paid for her college tuition, then allocated a grand each month until she was allowed to take control over all of it when she turned thirty. Compared to the net worth of Arthur and his company, that had been nothing. Nothing at all. He’d donated more to his least favorite charities when he’d been alive. Hell, Brick and I had walked away with more inheritance than Kaitlynn had. It was all just wrong. And what made it even fishier to me was the fact that Lana had gained so much: the money (which she wasted), the houses (that she’d sold), the company (she’d nearly lost). And Arthur hadn’t even been that fond of her. It hadn’t taken him long after they married to discover her true nature; I kind of had the feeling he’d only stayed with her because he hadn’t wanted to abandon Brick and me. So why had he left Lana so much and Kaitlynn so little? He hadn’t; that was the only conclusion I’d been able to come to. It had taken me some scheming, but I’d managed to get my hands on Arthur’s last will and testament without Lana realizing it, and I’d pored over the document, searching for discrepancies. When I found none, it left me at a loss but no less determined to discover how Lana had managed such deceit. She’d done something to get what she wanted; I was sure of it. I just had to figure out what that something was. Opening my car door, I stepped from the vehicle and made my way up the walk toward the rear entrance of the building. As I passed the opening to the garden that grew in the courtyard, I could barely make out the statue in the center of the trees and bushes that Arthur had erected of Marcella after she’d died. To me, it made the courtyard feel like a damn cemetery, though honestly, the entire company had felt dead after Arthur’s passing. Hell, even I felt dead inside. But Nash had pumped some life into the place when he’d arrived last year, so I was determined to do my part to help restore it as well. I was going to cut out the rest of the cancer. I was going to expose Lana for all her lies and trickery, and I was going to get her removed from JFI and hopefully my stepsister’s life forever. It was the only right and just thing to do. Once I pushed my way inside, I bypassed the elevator bay and walked up the three flights to my office instead. It was one of those days I felt antsy and needed to keep on the move. That could’ve been because of my interaction with Darmon this morning, but deep inside, I knew it was more because of the dark-headed beauty I’d crossed paths with in the entrance of Kaitlynn’s building. Gabby. Beautiful women like her tended to make me question why I’d given up on dating and relationships. Because I liked women. They were soft and supple, and Jesus, they smelled divine. I especially liked the craftier, sly ones who kept you on your toes and your mind sharp. My body began to crave the physical contact I hadn’t had with one in what felt like forever until all I could remember was the brush of that elbow that had barely grazed my stomach only minutes ago. Gabby. Instinct told me she was most likely a fervent lover. She’d called out to that boy—Miguel—with a healthy level of heat and passion, her worry for him and irritation bleeding out of her with the brightest of color. How could she kiss or touch or f**k with any less tenacity? Damn, I needed to stop thinking about this. I hurried up the staircase a little faster, reminding myself that along with s*x, women came with something far more dangerous: Feelings. I shuddered and shook my head. Feelings I could do without. As soon as feelings were involved, s**t got nasty. When you let someone in, you let them cut into you and expose your soft inner tissue so they could see everything and know you inside and out, the good and the bad, the strong and the weak, the bitter and the ugly. And as soon as you trusted them with your most vulnerable bits, that’s when they struck, when they belittled and nitpicked, when they scoffed and pointed, when they humiliated and hurt you the most, and then eventually turned away, leaving you abandoned and nothing but a gaping, bleeding wound. Yeah, I could do without soft and pretty if it was just going to land me in that kind of clusterfuck. Suddenly relieved of my itching, craving desire for s*x and a certain dark-haired angel, I exited the stairwell and made my way to my office. And I know what you’re thinking. Office? I actually worked here? For the company I was certain Lana had stolen from Kaitlynn? Just what the hell kind of hypocrite did that make me? I talked a big game about seeking justice for my stepsister and eradicating Lana from our lives completely. All the while, I sat up here in my big, cushy office with a head-of-department position, which Lana had given me, and drove my nice car with the money I’d inherited from Arthur, wore my nice clothes, and lived a pleasant, luxurious life, all while Kaitlynn struggled to make ends meet, lived in a shithole, drove a piece of junk, and worked as an unpaid intern for Lana—aka the devil herself. Well, I’ll tell you why I lived the lie. Because this operation needed an inside man, that’s why. If I openly defied Lana, if I questioned her and let her know just how suspicious I was of her, if I publicly supported Kaitlynn and held her hand out in the light of day for everyone to see, then Lana would never trust me again. She trusted me very little as it was, but she confided just enough for me to get my foot in the door, which was honestly all I needed. Getting close to her and staying close was a distasteful side effect, but I was banking on the fact that the ends would justify the means. Whatever it took to expose what she was up to so I could stop her, I was willing to do. And meanwhile, it couldn’t hurt if I put everything else I had into helping JFI return to its former glory. It needed to be in good shape when it moved to Kaitlynn’s hands, anyway. After seating myself at my desk, I scanned my schedule for the day. A couple email replies and a phone call later, my personal assistant arrived, silently setting a cup of coffee on the corner of my desk. I thanked him distractedly and told him to set up a meeting for me with my top designers as I read a new development I was scanning over on my screen that just might change things in our lineup for the spring fashion show. Trends seemed to shift more often than every six months these days. It was difficult to keep up. But as the head of the Shoes department for one of the top companies in the industry, I was determined to do just that. “Lace-up boots,” I muttered, jotting down notes as I read the report in front of me. “Rhinestones on pumps, retro sneakers, square toes, platform boots. Jesus, not platforms again.” The last time we’d gone through that fad, it had ended before we’d even gotten our stock on the shelves. We had experienced quite the loss in profit there. I rubbed at the spot on the center of my forehead that began to ache whenever I grew stressed and wondered if anyone would notice if we simply skipped over platforms this time around. It was definitely an idea worth broaching to my people in our meeting this afternoon. “Shocking news,” a familiar voice announced as my brother swept into my office and settled himself negligently in the chair across from me. I arched him a dry glance as he perched his feet on the corner of my desk, dangerously close to my cup of coffee. “So, I see,” I told him, frowning at the way a crumb of chocolate dropped onto the lapel of his suit jacket when he took a bite from the Snickers bar he was eating. The candy was probably his breakfast. “You’re actually here before nine a.m. Shocking indeed.” Rolling his eyes, Brick flicked the chocolate off him and retorted, “Once again, your humor falls flat, bro. But no, my news is actually this: Nina, the vixen I’m currently banging, has a sister coming into town this weekend, so we need another guy to fill out a double date. Dinner, a show, and most likely knocking a whole lot of headboard against the wall before the night’s over, if big sis is anything like Nina. And I have chosen lucky you to be number four for the evening, so you’re welcome. Don’t say I never gave you anything.” With a sigh, I kept working on my notes for the upcoming meeting as I mumbled, “No, thanks.” “No, thanks?” Brick screeched incredulously, tearing his feet off my desk and sitting upright. “What do you mean, no, thanks? I’m handing you a sure thing there. What’s to refuse?” Feelings, I wanted to answer. But what I said was, “Hmm. Let me think about this. You want me to keep the ugly older sister preoccupied with stilted, awkward conversation and uneasy pauses so you don’t have to give up a weekend of s*x with your pretty new flavor of the month. So, yeah.” I shook my head and went back to writing. “That’s a hard pass from me.” “Hey. What makes you think she’s the ugly sister?” I rolled my eyes. “Because you’re willing to pass her off to me.” “Well, for your information,” he went on primly. “Both women are equally gorgeous. Not that it should matter. Gah, you’re such a shallow prick, Hayden. Only concerned about a woman’s appearance and not her personality. Big sister might be a perfectly lovely woman, you know.” I glanced at him dryly, surprised his pants weren’t smoking from all the bullshit he was firing at me. “So you like this Nina woman you’re banging for her brains, is that it?” He winced. “God no. She’s as dumb as a post and a b***h to boot. But she’s got an ass that won’t quit and she’ll take it in the back door.” Lifting his hands, Brick shrugged as if he were helpless but to capitulate. “Who am I to complain about her lack of smarts? That seems like a prejudice against the academically-challenged to me.” Now that sounded more like the little brother I knew. “So, if they’re equally gorgeous,” I countered. “Then why aren’t you chasing after both of them?” Brick paused with his mouth agape as if to contradict me, but then he frowned, thinking my suggestion through and lifted a finger. “You know what? That’s a damn fine idea. So f**k off; I recant my invitation. You’re out, and I’m in. Both of them.” Wagging his tongue, he stood up to tap out a farewell rhythm on the corner of my desk with his hands, then he veered toward the doorway. “Yeah, good luck with that,” I called after him sarcastically. He lifted a finger over his shoulder. “Don’t need it, but thanks for the sentiment.” Once he was gone, I set an elbow on my desk and rested my chin in my hand, studying the chair where my brother had just sat. He hadn’t changed much from the boy he’d been. He might’ve grown up to like the ladies a little too much for his own good, but he still had his unrepentant sweet tooth and annoyingly perky personality. And I loved the kid more than I thought possible. Somehow, his time under Lana’s thumb hadn’t changed or hardened or darkened him. Underneath his flirty, skirt-chasing manner and cocky grin, he had a heart of pure gold. I think I was more relieved by his preserved personality than I was saddened by the way life had changed and hardened and darkened mine. Shaking my head, I forced my mind from such thoughts and returned it to business. Except a knock on my door interrupted me. Bruno poked his head into my office. “Morning, Mr. Hayden. You got any trash for me today?” “Always.” I automatically reached for the small black receptacle located under my desk and pulled it out to hand to him. There was actually very little inside since Bruno was so fastidious and usually made his trash rounds once or twice a day, but he wouldn’t mind. I think he made so many rounds because he just liked to talk to everyone. Bruno had actually been the first employee hired by Marcella and Arthur Judge when they turned their two-person operation into a company. He was also the only employee still remaining with JFI after Lana has taken over, other than myself and Brick, that is. Maybe she hadn’t fired him because he lived on the spectrum with high-functioning autism; she didn’t think he could be any kind of threat to her throne. But she was wrong about Bruno. The old man was a smart, loyal, and dependable employee. He could’ve done anything he wanted here. Knowing Arthur as I had, I’m sure he’d offered Bruno advancement, except Bruno just wanted to remain where he was as the building’s caretaker. If I had asked him why he’d always stayed where he was, he probably would’ve told me—in a lengthy, detailed way—but for some reason, I never did. He seemed to enjoy his life as it was, and that was more than most people could ask for. More than I could ask for, it seemed. “Still sticking to the granola bars, I see,” he mused, examining what I had to offer him as he dumped my trash into his rolling cart. He always made a comment on the contents of my trash can. Some people collected stamps; Bruno nosed through people’s waste. “That’s good.” He nodded his approval when he handed the can back. “You’ll live longer than that crap-eating brother of yours. I tell you, there’s nothing but candy remains and chip bags in his bin.” “Sounds about right,” I answered as I retrieved my receptacle. “I don’t know how he stays as healthy as he does,” Bruno went on, turning away only to snap his fingers and point in the air before pausing and turning back. “That reminds me; speaking of health issues, I thought that old lawyer of Arthur’s was dead.” I sat up, lifting my eyebrows, because I totally hadn’t expected to hear such a comment. It’d almost been two years since anyone had spoken Arthur’s name in my presence. Hearing it now, caused something to shift and then constrict in my chest. God, I missed the sharp, old bastard. “He is,” I answered, shaking my head in confusion as I frowned at Bruno. “Why? What made you bring him up?” Randolph Finley, my stepfather’s lawyer had died not long after Arthur himself had. I’d actually been trying to get into contact with Finley to ask more about the will he’d drafted for Arthur when the news had come through that he was gone. It’d been a harsh blow for me in my quest for answers, since I had a feeling Finley—or Fin Tin, as Arthur had always called him—could’ve helped me discover a lot. “Well, I was wiping up a tea spill in Ms. Lana’s office this morning,” Bruno answered, lifting his eyebrows with meaning, which told me the spill had most likely not been an accident but one of Lana’s temper tantrums where she’d no doubt tossed it across her office, probably at someone—that someone most likely being Kaitlynn, her unpaid intern. “And she called some bugger on the phone Fin Tin.” “What?” With a single blink, I stared at him, my skin going ice cold. Then I shook my head slowly. “That—that’s not possible.” Except all the while I murmured the words, thoughts and questions raced through my mind. Fin Tin wasn’t a common nickname. Who else would she have called that? Damn, was he still alive? I guess I’d never questioned it or gotten it confirmed. Why the hell had I never gotten confirmation? But why would someone fake their own death? And why would he contact Lana of all people if he was still alive? I wasn’t even aware the two had known each other that well. Unless—unless they’d secretly been in league together. And maybe he’d altered Arthur’s will for her without Arthur’s knowledge about it, in which case, hell yes, he’d have to fake his own death afterward to escape any kind of consequences in case the truth ever came out. Holy s**t. Across the room, Bruno was shrugging. “Ah well.” He pushed his cart toward the door. “Maybe I heard her wrong. She could’ve said Fenton or something like that. My ears aren’t what they used to be, you know.” “Yeah. Maybe.” I nodded, blindly agreeing as he meandered from my office, shutting the door behind him and leaving me stunned and full of new conspiracies. Staring straight ahead, I sat in silence with nothing but racing thoughts banging around the inside of my head. “Fin Tin,” I repeated aloud. Was it possible he was still alive? If he was, this changed everything.
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