Font Size
15px

I tore down Rue de Rivoli, swerved past Boulevard Haussmann, and headed for the 8th arrondissent, probably broke half a dozen traffic laws on the way.

My car screeched to a stop in front of the Hôtel Plaza Athénée. I jumped out, tossed the keys to the valet, blew past the smiling concierge trying to greet , and jabbed the lift button.

Lea’s screams still rang in my ears.

She’d sounded terrified on the phone. There hadn’t been ti to think—just act.

The lift crawled upwards. Agonisingly slow.

When the doors finally opened, I stepped out into a softly lit hallway, carpeted, perfud, and decorated to tasteful perfection.

But no amount of piped jazz or high-end fragrance could cover the drunken yelling or the reek of stale booze.

Pierre Marchand was slamming his fists against the door of room 602, knuckles bleeding onto his monogramd shirt cuffs, not that he gave a shit.

I grabbed his shoulders and spun him around to face .

Even flushed with rage and alcohol—and whatever else he’d taken—he still had that annoyingly textbook-handso face: blue eyes, high-bridged nose, thin lips, strong jaw.

His eyes were bloodshot and rimd red. ‘Who the hell are you?’ he slurred in French.

I didn’t answer. Just kept my grip firm so he couldn’t keep hamring the door.

‘Let go of , you fuck!’ he roared, spraying with breath that stank of whisky and sothing more chemical.

The lift dinged behind . Fast, quiet footsteps approached.

‘Boss,’ one of the n said.

‘Take him. Keep him contained. No phone calls.’

‘Understood.’

Pierre might’ve dabbled in fencing, but that wasn’t going to help him against four n built for real combat, not gym selfies.

They hauled him into the lift, still kicking and flailing.

I looked up at the CCTV in the ceiling. Red lights blinked back at , unblinking.

Then I knocked. ‘Lea. It’s . Ashton.’

The door flung open and Lea threw herself into my arms. ‘Ash. Thank God you’re here! Is he—?’ She was trembling.

‘He’s gone.’ I stepped into the room behind her. ‘Tell what happened.’

Lea sat down on the ottoman. The carpet around it was littered with crumpled tissues. Her face was blotchy, eyes raw from crying. She stared at the floor.

‘I... I called him after you left.’

‘When I specifically told you not to.’

‘I know. I’m sorry.’ She still wouldn’t look at . ‘I just thought... if I told him what you told ... that if he really loved , he’d quit the drinking, the drugs. And if he couldn’t, I’d leave. I didn’t know he was already in Paris. I thought...’ She put her face in her hands. ‘I don’t know what I was thinking. I swear.’

‘You told him you were staying here?’

‘I didn’t. But it didn’t take him long to find out. The hotel owner’s a family friend of his dad’s.’ She gave a bitter smile. ‘That probably explains why no one ca when I called security. I should be grateful they didn’t just hand him a key.’

‘Pack your things.’

‘What?’

‘You can’t stay here.’

She stood up slowly, hesitantly. ‘But... what about Pierre? Where is he?’

‘Contained. For now. But I can’t keep him there long. The hotel knows I took him.’ I’d be hearing from the Marchand family any minute.

She disappeared into the bathroom. When she returned, her face was washed, and she’d changed into fresh clothes.

‘Where are we going?’

I ran through the options.

The Marchands had deeper roots in Paris than I ever would. Their family had been embedded here for centuries.

‘What’s your decision?’ I looked at her. ‘Still holding out hope for a reunion?’

If so, she wasn’t worth the risk. I couldn’t afford soone with that kind of vulnerability.

Lea gave a watery smile. ‘I might’ve been blind and in love, Ash. But I’m not that blind. I’ve made my decision. I’m leaving him.’

‘For good?’

‘For good.’

‘Then you’re coming to Skyline. He won’t be able to touch you there.’

She nodded. ‘What about work?’

I gave her a look. ‘You really think I don’t know what goes on at Titanova? You don’t need an office to do your job.’

She laughed softly. ‘Fair.’

I grabbed her suitcase and we checked out.

‘Hope you had a pleasant stay. Where are you off to next?’ the receptionist asked with a blinding smile.

I stared at her until the smile faltered, then vanished. A pink flush spread over her cheeks. ‘I just ant, so I could arrange a taxi.’

‘That won’t be necessary.’ I walked out with Lea.

‘She probably has orders to follow us,’ Lea said under her breath.

‘I know.’

Which was why I took the long way round, zigzagging through different arrondissents until I was sure no one was tailing us.

We arrived at Rue de l’Abbé Grégoire just after ten.

I led her up to the seventh floor and unlocked the door. ‘I bought the building under another na. Pierre won’t find you here.’

‘I should thank you, but I know you hate that,’ she said, taking in the flat. ‘So—hug?’ She opened her arms.

I didn’t move. ‘Get so rest. Order room service if you want.’

‘You haven’t eaten either. Stay. Share a al?’

‘I can’t. In the morning, I’ll introduce you to my wife.’

‘Your wife?’ She blinked. ‘Rusty ntioned it. I thought he was joking.’

‘He wasn’t.’

‘It’s just... hard to imagine you married. Of all the guys in the gang, you were the least likely.’

I wished Mira could’ve heard that. Maybe then she’d understand why I insisted on the wedding. Without a very public, very official ceremony, no one believed when I said I had a wife.

‘Goodnight. I’ll see you in the morning.’ I closed the door behind and took the stairs up to the next floor.

Mira was awake.

‘How was the dress fitting?’ I asked.

‘Who is she?’ she asked at the sa ti.

You are reading One Night Stand With My Ex's Billionaire Enemy Chapter 253 Ashton: No Room at the Ritz on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

The Lucky Farmgirl cover
Similar genre

The Lucky Farmgirl

Bamboo Rain ·Romance

TheFourthBrotherhadsquanderedhiswealththroughgambling,leavingtheirmotherinacriticalstate.Tomakemattersworse,thecreditorsevenaskedthemtosellManbaoto...

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.