Dani Wade – A Bride's Tangled Vows (страница 3)
Something about her rubbed Aiden wrong. She didnât belong in this room or with these people. Her beauty and grace shouldnât be sullied by his grandfatherâs villainous legacy. But that calm, professional facade masked her feelings in this situation. Was she just here for the job? Or another reason? Once more, Aiden felt jealous of her, wishing he could master his own emotions so completely.
But he was out of practice in dealing with the old man.
This time, Christina retreated to the shadows beyond the abundant purple bed curtains. Close, but not hovering. Though keenly aware of her presence, Aiden could barely make out her form as she leaned against the wall with her arms wrapped around her waist. It unsettled him, distracted him. Right now, he needed all his focus on the battle he sensed was coming.
âYour grandfather is concerned for the millââ Canton said.
âI donât give a damn what happens to that place. Tear it down. Burn it, for all I care.â
His grandfatherâs jaw tightened, but he made no attempt to defend the business where heâd poured what little humanity he possessed, completely ignoring the needs of his family. The emotional needs, at least.
âAnd the town?â Canton asked. âYou donât care what happens to the people working in Blackstone Mills? Generations of townspeople, your motherâs friends, kids you went to school with, Marieâs nieces and nephews?â
Aiden clamped his jaw tight. He didnât want to get involved, but as the lawyer spoke, faces flashed through his mindâs eye. The mill had stood for centuries, starting out as a simple cotton gin. Last Aiden had heard, it was a leading manufacturer in cotton products, specializing in high-end linens. James might be a bastard, but his insistence on quality had kept the company viable in a shaky economy. Aiden jammed a rough hand through his damp hair, probably making the spiky top stand on end.
Without warning, he felt a familiar surge of rebellion. âI donât want to take over. Iâve never wanted to.â He strode across the plush carpet to stare out the window into the storm-shadowed distance. Tension tightened the muscles along the back of his neck and skull. Familial responsibility wasnât his thingâanymore. Heâd handed that job over to his brothers a long time ago.
Aiden realized he was shifting minutely from one foot to the other. Creeping in underneath the turbulence was a constant awareness of Christinaâs presence, like a sizzle under his skin, loosening his control over his other emotions inch by inch. She drew him, kept part of his attention even when he was talking to the others. How had she come to be here? How long had she been here? Had she ever found a place to belong? The heightened emotion increased the tension in his neck. A dull headache started to form.
âYou knew something like this was coming, considering your ageââ Aiden gestured back toward the bed ââyou should have sold. Or turned the business over to someone else. One of my brothers.â
âIt isnât their duty,â James insisted. âAs firstborn, itâs yoursâand way past time you learned your place.â
As if he could sense the rage starting to boil deep inside Aiden, Canton stepped in. âMr. Blackstone wants the mill to remain a family institution that will continue to provide jobs and a center for the town. The only potential buyers we have want to tear it down and sell off the land.â
Aiden latched on to the family institution part. âAh, the lasting name of Blackstone. Planned a monument yet?â
A weary yet insistent voice drifted from the bed. âI will do what needs to be done. And so will you.â
âHow will you manage that? I walked out that door once. Iâm more than happy to do it again.â
âReally? Do you think thatâs the best thing for your mother?â James went on as if Aiden hadnât spoken. âIâve worked my entire life to build on the hard work of my own father. I will not let my lifeâs work disappear because you wonât do your duty. You will return where you belong. Iâll see to that.â
Aiden used his hand to squeeze away the tightness in his neck. âOh, no. Iâm not buying into that song and dance. As far as Iâm concerned, this family line should die out. If the Blackstone name disappears, all the better.â
âI knew youâd feel that way,â his grandfather said with a long-suffering sigh. âThatâs why Iâm prepared to make it worth your while.â
* * *
Christina listened to the men spar with one another as if from a distance. Shock cocooned her inside her own bubble of fear.
Aidenâs gaze tracked the lawyerâs movements as he spoke, but Christinaâs remained focused on Aiden. The impenetrable mask of rebellion and pride that shielded any softer emotions. The breadth of his shoulders. The ripple of muscles in his chest and forearms, reminding her of his strength, his dominance.
Could a man that strong prevail over someone with Jamesâs history of cunning maneuvers, both business and personal?
âWhy donât you just lay it out for me,â Aiden said, his voice curt, commanding the immense space of the master suite. A shiver worked its way down Christinaâs spine. âThe condensed version.â
This time, Canton didnât look to James for permission. Proving he learned quickly, he cleared his throat and continued.
âYour grandfather set up legal documents covering all the angles,â he said, pulling a fat pack of papers from his briefcase. âIt essentially hands you the rights to the mill and Blackstone Manor.â
âI told you,â Aiden said. âI donât want it. Sell it.â
Christinaâs throat closed in sympathy and fear.
âWe can,â Canton said. âThe interested buyer is a major competitor, who will shut it down and sell it piece by piece. Including the land Mill Row is built on. And every last one of the people living in those fifty houses will be turned out so their homes can be torn down.â
James joined in with relish. âThe money from the sale will make a splendid law library at the university. Not the legacy Iâd planned,â he said with a shrug. âBut itâll do.â
Canton paused, but James wasnât one for niceties. âGo on,â he insisted.
Canton hesitated a moment more, which surprised Christina. She hadnât cared for the weaselly man from the moment sheâd first laid eyes on him, and his kowtowing to James had only reinforced her first impressions. For him to resist the old manâeven in a small wayâwas new. Maybe having to face the person whose life he was ruining awakened a small bit of conscience.
âIf you choose not to take over, Mr. Blackstone will exercise his power of attorney over his daughter to place her in the county care facility. Immediately.â
A cry lodged in Christinaâs throat before it escaped as she envisioned the chaos this would unleash, the disruption and danger to Lily, Aidenâs mother. Sheâd cared for Lily for five years, from the moment Christina had received her nursing degree. But Lily had been a second mother to her long before that, the type of mother sheâd never had. The last thing sheâd allow to happen would be handing Lily over for substandard care.
Aidenâs intense gaze swiveled to search the dark recess where she stood. The shadows comforted her, helped her separate from the confrontation playing out before her. But that intense gaze pulled her forcibly into the present. His brows drew together in concern, the only emotion to soften him so far. She could literally feel every time his gaze zeroed in on herâa mixture of nerves and a physical reaction sheâd never experienced before today.
But then his eyes narrowed on his grandfather, his face hardening once more. âWhat would happen to Mother there?â
James smiled, as his hateful words emerged from taunting lips. âChristina, I believe youâve been to the county care facility, havenât you? During your schooling, wasnât it? Tell Aiden about it.â
Christina winced as she imagined what Aiden must be thinking. Only someone as manipulative and egocentric as James could determine that this scenarioâdisowning his own invalid daughterâwas the best way to preserve his little kingdom. Her voice emerged rusty and strained. âItâs gotten an inferior rating for as many years as Iâve been a nurse, and itâs had regular complaints brought against it for neglect...but very little has been done because itâs the only place here that will take in charity cases for the elderly or disabled.â
âHow do you know I donât have enough money to take away that option?â Aiden asked, a touch of his grandfatherâs arrogance bleeding onto that handsome face.
Canton replied. âYou can try, but with power of attorney, your grandfather has the final say.â
âWeâll just go to court and get it transferred to one of my brothers.â
But not himself, Christina noted.
âYou can, and I canât stop you,â James said. âBut how long do you think that case will take? Months? A year? Will your mother have that long...in that environment?â