Chapter 53
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Blame It on the Billionaire
by Naima Simone
One
Honor thy mother and father.
Grayson Chandler smothered a sigh. With all due respect to Moses, but if he’d been stuck listening to Grayson’s mother nag on
and on and about his lack of duty, loyalty and wife, the prophet might’ve asked God to nail down the specifics on that
commandment.
Swearing. Out.
Muzzling. Out.
Faking a coronary episode to avoid her complaining. Gray area.
For a moment, a flicker of guilt wavered in Grayson’s chest. But at the moment, he was caught in his mother’s crosshairs. Pit
bulls with lockjaw had nothing on Cherise Chandler. She didn’t let go of something—whether it was a project, a subject or a
grudge—until she was done with it.
Which didn’t bode well for him.
He was thirty years old and president of KayCee Corp, one of the most successful global tech start-up companies in the country
and he hadn’t been a child to be controlled long before he left his parents’ house. For years, he’d answered only to himself, owed
no one else explanations or justifications.
Yet none of that mattered when it came to the crystal blue gaze that could make him feel like the little boy who’d been busted
hiding a stray dog under his bed for a week.
Hell.
Parental guilt trips were a bitch.
“Grayson, your stubbornness is becoming ridiculous,” his mother said, a note of irritation in her voice. She shifted closer and a
small frown marred her brow. “You’ve proven your point with this little business venture of yours and Gideon Knight’s. But your
father needs you now, your family needs you. It’s time to stop playing at CEO, step up and take your place at Chandler
International. It’s your responsibility. Your duty.”
He clenched his jaw, trapping the vitriolic stream of words that scalded his throat. This little business venture. Time to stop
playing. As if striking out on his own without the emotional or financial support of his Chicago old-money, well-connected family
was the equivalent of a rousing game of Monopoly. With those few words, she’d dismissed years of his and Gideon’s hard work,
relentless determination and resulting success.
He should’ve been used to this casual disregard. Of his accomplishments. Of him. As the second son, the “oops baby” of Daryl
and Cherise Chandler, he’d been an afterthought from birth. But somehow, his skin had never grown that thick.
Another black mark in the “Why Grayson Isn’t Jason Chandler” Column. Right under rebellious. Selfish. And disloyal.
Didn’t matter that he’d had a hand in founding a tech platform that served major businesses and assisted them in tracking their
shares with its unrivaled software. Didn’t matter that his business was one of the most successful start-ups to hit the financial
scene in the last five years.
None of it mattered because it wasn’t Chandler International.
Dammit.
Grayson shoved his hands in his tuxedo pockets and glanced away from his mother’s scrutiny. Guilt and shame knotted his gut.
He was throwing a pity party, but at least he was alive.
Jason couldn’t say the same.
And because his mother had lost her son—her favorite son—Grayson imprisoned the sharp retort that weighed down his tongue.
“I take my position at and ownership of KayCee Corp as seriously as Dad does with Chandler. I also understand my obligation to
our family. But as I’ve told both of you, my company is my legacy just as Chandler is Dad’s.”
“Don’t be deliberately obtuse, Grayson. It’s not the same—”
“Mother,” he interrupted, voice cold. “Now isn’t the place or time for this conversation.”