The Billionaire’s Second Chance by Kimberly Krey Page 0,8
you going to tell them?”
Determination rushed through, planting a hot streak of adrenaline through her core. Viv sniffed, nodded, and inhaled with a new burst of confidence. “I’m going to tell them yes, I’ll take the job.”
Chapter 5
“What if she doesn’t show?” Duke asked as he looked out the window of his private jet.
“She’ll show,” Perry assured through the line. “She’s a professional. You think she’s going to toss her whole career over an ex-boyfriend? Please.”
Duke wasn’t sure if he was more relieved or offended at the comment.
Riley Shay, with the help of famous photographer, Zee, had come up with a vision for the spread. He didn’t know much about it, only that it would highlight the perks of his billionaire lifestyle.
For that reason, Vivi—the one who’d be reporting on that lifestyle—would accompany him on his private jet. Then stay in his personal multi-million-dollar estate on the island.
The irony was rich. The last thing Duke would want to do—if given a second chance with Vivi Tripoli—would be to flash his fortune in her face. She’d come to despise money, something she relayed to him when he tried to get her back a year after the breakup.
His mind darted back to that moment. Vivi had moved off campus at that point and was taking several of her courses online from what he’d heard. But he had spoken with her over the phone. Pled with her was more like it.
With a year of reflection under his belt, Duke had explained his side of things, asked if she’d consider meeting in person, but she’d refused. ‘Whether you know it or not,’ she’d said, ‘money and status matter to you. You’ll be happier with someone like Sylvia.’
The words never had rung true, but that didn’t matter. What he’d done had left a lasting impression. One he hoped to, after all this time, dispel once and for all.
Duke glanced around the interior of the jet once more. “It’s not very original to focus on the whole money thing.”
“I think it’s genius,” Perry said.
“Yeah, you would.”
Duke paced the length of the jet’s den. A long, leather sofa stood to his right, a flat screen and wet bar at his left.
“Stuff like this doesn’t impress her.”
“You don’t even know her anymore,” Perry said.
Duke slowed his pace, eyes settling on the diamond-crusted base of the ice bucket. “I know her well enough.”
His pulse picked up as he pictured Vivi’s hypnotizing brown eyes. The way she’d reacted to him at the meeting. He’d watched her shift from polite to pissed in point two seconds. Talk about intimidating.
As it was, Duke was barely stomaching his first taste of humble pie after the whole twin swap thing. Now he chanced eating more of it—possibly a hefty serving right to the face, courtesy of the one and only Veritå.
“What time did you say she’d get here?” he asked, ducking to glance out at the runway.
“About ten more minutes.”
Duke was starting to regret his habit of arriving early. In business deals, he used the extra time to soak up the environment, get acquainted with his surroundings, and often use them in some way to help close the deal.
Even on the Benton family’s TV show, The Lion’s Den, Duke would arrive early, absorb the energy of the live audience from backstage, and muse on the struggling businesses he hoped to score over his siblings.
But having to wait for Vivi to show was putting Duke on edge.
“You are so lucky she said yes to this,” Perry said with a sigh. “This is going to be a life changer. Mark my words.”
Duke had no doubt that it would. He just wasn’t sure which ways it would change. In the week that had passed since their meeting with Slipper Magazine, he’d spent night after night stewing over the pros and cons of doing the article.
The odd thing was, his focus had taken a drastic shift from the moment he’d seen her. No matter how hard Duke tried to focus on his public image, it kept darting back to the same place like a stubborn compass.
Forget his plummeting popularity and damaged image. All he could focus on, all he could think about, was getting a second chance with the woman herself.
Ambivalence.
It wasn’t the first time Viv had gone into an interview dominated by the emotion. While flying to Austin, Texas for her job with football legend, Tom the Bomb, a man made infamous by his chauvinist persona, she worried he’d only prove the public right.
Viv had known that