
The Crown Ranch 2: Missing Out on Life
highlight_author
Valerie J. Clarizio
highlight_reads
40,1K
highlight_chapters
13
Chapter One
Book 2: Missing Out on Life
Meredith leaned back in her deluxe leather chair, staring at the city of Louisville from the windows of her fourteenth-floor office. A satisfied smile tugged at her lips. Soon, sheād be viewing this great city from the corner office.
Ten minutes ago, Kenneth, her boss, announced his retirement. Heād been grooming her to take over for the past several years. They had an unspoken and unwritten understanding. Sheād soon be the CEO of Banner Development, the position sheād set her eye on the second she walked through the door six years ago. Sheād given her life to this company, and it was about to pay off.
During Kennethās announcement, heād mentioned the board would name the new CEO within the month. About half the worker bee gazes flew to her, but the other half landed on her nemesis, Sawyer Donovan. Poor Sawyer. He probably didnāt realize the wait to announce the new CEO was just a formality.
Meredithās confidence was reaffirmed by some of the looks sheād received from the staff, but admittedly, disapproving looks came from some employees as well. She shrugged. Sawyerās team. It was no secret her quick climb up the corporate ladder had pissed off a few people along the way, but that was the cost of success.
Adrenaline rushed through her veins. By the end of the month, sheād be running this company. She needed to celebrate, but how? She could call her sister, Anne, her one true friend in this world, but Anne likely wouldnāt be able to find time to drive the thirty miles to Louisville from Bourbonville. Between her two kids and loser husband, poor Anne never got to do anything. Meredith sure as hell wasnāt going to drive to her hometown of Bourbonvilleāthe place she hated most in this world and vowed sheād never return since the day she left. Nope, not returning. She hadnāt even returned for her sisterās wedding to that piece of crap husband of hers or for her good-for-nothing parentsā funerals. So, she could hardly return to celebrate her soon-to-be job promotion. It wouldnāt be right.
Meredith drummed her fingers on her desk. Iāll text Jameson. Heāll celebrate with me. A celebratory romp was just what she needed. Who would argue with that?
Jameson, are you free tonight? I could use your company. 9:00, my place?
Jamesonās reply was instantaneous. 9:00? You canāt at least buy me dinner before you use me? LOL
Meredith giggled. Like he cared. Sorry, no can do. Busy at work securing my future.
She didnāt need to explain that to her go-to friend-with-benefits. He was made from the same mold. They were all about work with a little meaningless pleasure on the sideāthe harmless, no-strings-attached kind.
See you at 9:00.
Good ole Jameson. Dependable. Noncommitted. Perfect.
Meredith pulled into her parking garage to find Jamesonās vehicle already parked in one of the guest slots. Great. She wasnāt in the mood to wait for him. Needing nothing more than a night of meaningless, hot sex to both celebrate her soon-to-be promotion and to relieve some stress, she couldnāt wait to get to it.
She stepped off the elevator to find Jameson leaning against her door. His piercing blue eyes twinkled when he gave her a playful little wink. Theyād been at this long enough for her to know she meant no more to him than he did to her. They cared about each other, but love was not in the cards for them. They were simply there to make each other feel good when needed.
Meredith unlocked her door, then wrapped her fingers around the hot pink tie her lover wore and yanked him into her apartment. His hot, hungry mouth covered hers. Parting her lips, she invited him in. Gentle was never Jamesonās thing, but tonight he seemed overzealous. Great. Thatās just what she needed.
Within seconds, theyād made their way to her bedroom, leaving a trail of clothes behind them. She pulled free from his hold, spun, pulled a condom from the drawer of her nightstand, and ripped it open.
He arched a brow. āSomeoneās in a hurry tonight.ā
She batted her eyes. āYou got a problem with that?ā
Jameson snatched the packet from her hand. āNot at all, babe. Prepare yourself for the ride of a lifetime.ā
Her ringing phone echoed from down the hall, and she made a move for it.
āDonāt,ā Jameson growled.
āIt could be important.ā
āTheyāll call back.ā
After all this time together, he should know better than to ask her not to answer her phone. It was probably work, and now, during the upcoming weeks in particular, was not the time to miss a work call.
She reached out and ran her hand over his shaft. āIāll be right back.ā
Meredith ran to her phone, hoping to catch it before it went to voicemail. In her haste, she didnāt look at the caller ID.
āMeredith Wellington.ā
āHi. This is Detective Jorgenson from Chandler County. Iām looking for Meredith Barker.ā
Meredithās heart slammed into her chest. Detective. Why was a detective calling her? And Barker. No one had called her Barker in a long time. Not since sheād changed her name when she left Bourbonville, her hometown in Chandler County. The last thing she wanted was for anyone to remember her real last nameāthe name she inherited from her useless father.
āIām Meredith Barker.ā
āIām afraid I have some terrible news. Your sister is dead.ā
Dead. Meredithās weak knees gave way. Her pulse pounded in her ears. She knelt on the carpet trying to process what sheād just heard. It couldnāt be true.
āHello.ā
Meredith swallowed the lump in her throat. āMy sister?ā she squeaked out.
āYes. Iām sorry to tell you this, but we need you to come pick up the kids.ā
Kids. āWhat?ā
āYour nieces. You need to pick them up.ā
Why her, and what happened to her sister? She hardly knew those kids. And where was their dad? She knew the answer to that. He was probably at the pub where he spent his days and nights while leaving Anne home to do everything by herself. Her useless brother-in-law was no better than her dad.
āWhat happened to Anne, and what about their dad? Whereās he?ā
āWeāre looking for him. Anne wasā¦ā The detective paused and cleared her throat. āā¦beaten. She suffered some head trauma. She didnāt make it.ā
Tears rolled down Meredithās cheeks. That piece of shit brother-in-law of hers had beaten her sister to death.
āMaāam?ā
Meredith tried to respond, but the pain and grief swirling in her head cut off her words. Youāre tougher than this, Meredith. Suck it up. Thisāher niecesāfamily was the one thing that could get her back to Bourbonville. āIām on my way.ā




