One in a Billion (Accidentally Yours #1)

One in a Billion (Accidentally Yours #1)

By Jennifer Bernard

Chapter 1

He clicked on the interphone to speak to the man in the cabin. “Things might get a little bumpy. Fasten your seat belt and hang on tight.”

A moment later, the man himself opened the door to the cockpit. That was another thing about working for a billionaire. It was his nine-million-dollar plane and he could do what he wanted, never mind any potential safety issues. “How bumpy?”

So much for fastening his seat belt—or following any federally mandated safety guidelines whatsoever. Rory sighed and reminded himself that he’d signed up for this for a very good reason. A million of them, in fact. How else could he make a million dollars flying an airplane?

“Look for yourself.” Rory gestured at the clouds up ahead. The closer they got, the more towering and glowering they appeared. So far he hadn’t seen any flashes of lightning, but this was the tropics. Thunderstorms came with the territory. “I did mention we might be better off waiting.”

“We’ll be fine.” Lincoln Kerr spoke with the absolute confidence of a man no one dared to contradict—not even the weather, apparently. “You’re the best, right? That’s why I hired you.”

“Mmm.” Rory squinted at the SyberVision flight deck, which included advanced digital radar to identify turbulence.

It was designed to allow the pilot to find the least rocky path through the storm.

But when the screen showed all magenta, the color code for really fucking bad turbulence, it didn’t help much. “I did say that, didn’t I?”

Lincoln gave a scoffing laugh. “Everyone said that. You were the only one who could back it up. My investigators confirmed that you are, in fact, the best.”

“Nice. Can I get that in writing for my next date?”

“They also warned me about your sense of humor. Irreverent, they said. Occasionally disrespectful.”

“Sorry, sir.”

Lincoln grunted in response. His gaze was fixed on the clouds now; maybe the truth of their situation was starting to sink in.

He was getting close to forty, but you’d never know it.

He was in peak physical condition due to his ten-person staff of nutritionists, chefs, trainers, and longevity experts.

There were also whispers of plastic surgeons on retainer; his previous jawbone hadn’t been nearly so square.

The odd thing was that he and Rory looked a bit alike, though Rory was about ten years younger.

They each had one Asian parent, which might help explain it.

Rory’s mother was from Okinawa, Japan, whereas Lincoln was the product of a high-profile fling between a Korean electronics tycoon and a southern belle from Georgia.

Completely different backgrounds, but it did give them a vague resemblance.

“Do you think we should turn back?” Lincoln asked nervously.

“We don’t have enough fuel to get back to Los Angeles. We could try to fly around the storm, but it’s massive. I think we’re going to have to stay the course.”

“What about a water landing? Could we wait it out on the surface?”

Huh? “Darn it, I forgot to bring the pontoons.”

When Lincoln didn’t laugh, Rory said, more formally, “This plane isn’t equipped for a water landing. If we crash, we’re better off doing it on land.”

“You’re saying we’re going to crash?”

Oh shit. He should have watched his wording. “No, I’m saying I think you should go back to the cabin and buckle up. Don’t you have some work to do?”

That was how Lincoln usually spent the flight.

Sometimes “working” meant flying his buddies to check out investment opportunities, and sometimes it was just him on his laptop or his phone.

But either way, his focus was on the inside of the plane, not what was going on outside.

Maybe that was why he didn’t know they couldn’t land on water.

Before Rory had taken this job, which had involved signing a strict NDA, he’d done his research too.

He didn’t want to work for someone unsavory, after all.

Not even a million dollars would make that worth it.

But Lincoln Kerr was pretty much a boy scout in his personal life.

Sure, he’d been married a couple of times, but they were both women his own age.

Imagine that. He drank moderately and didn’t do drugs.

His one vice was his obsession with living as long as he possibly could, and really, who could blame him?

He’d need extra time to enjoy all that money.

Lincoln ignored Rory’s advice. Shocker. “Can I sit there?”

He pointed to the empty copilot’s seat. The SyberJet SJ30 was one of the few light jets rated for single pilot operation, which was why Rory had switched to it at the last minute, when he’d lost his copilot.

He’d been planning to fly the much larger Citation X, another of Lincoln’s fleet of private jets, but that one couldn’t be operated by a single pilot.

Rory shrugged as an air current lifted the plane, then dropped it about ten feet. “It’s your plane.”

Lincoln squeezed past him and settled his long legs into the copilot’s chair. “Flying solo into a storm. It’s a good thing you’re the best.”

“Amy’s probably thanking her lucky stars she was sick. That was one reason why…” He trailed off.

“Why you wanted to postpone this trip.”

Rory nodded, his focus almost entirely on the flight deck.

“Amy wasn’t sick. I wanted this flight to be as low-key as possible.”

It took a moment for that to penetrate. “That’s why you specified no flight attendant, too?”

Lincoln nodded. The no-flight attendant order had been a first, in Rory’s experience. He’d filled a cooler with snacks and drinks instead. What was going on here?

“Care to tell me why we’re headed for that enormous thundercloud with no support staff?”

Lincoln gave him nothing but a raised eyebrow in response.

“I signed an NDA, you know. I can’t ever talk about anything you tell me until a hundred years after my death. Strangest NDA I ever saw. Were you worried my ghost might spill your secrets?”

Lincoln snorted. He pressed his hands on his thighs, an uncharacteristically nervous gesture. Lincoln Kerr was known for his cool. And his expensive clothes. Those linen trousers were from Brunello Cucinelli, and didn’t deserve to have sweat rubbed into them. “Lawyers. They earn their money.”

“Welp, looks like your pilot’s about to as well.” The deep purple darkness of the storm intensified as they flew closer. Clouds roiled and boiled inside that mass of unstable air. And finally…a bolt of lightning blitzed across the sky.

Rory checked on his air data computers, then on his boss.

A line of sweat had appeared on Lincoln’s upper lip. “Jesus Christ,” he muttered. Part prayer, part swear.

“Are you sure you want a front row seat to this? You might be better off—”

“No.” Lincoln cut him off. “I’m staying here.”

Great. Now he had to manage the storm and the billionaire. “Your call, sir.”

With a roar, the plane hit the first rain at the edge of the storm. A wall of water slammed against the cockpit. The frame of the SyberJet shuddered as if it might break apart at its welds. Rory adjusted the thrust to compensate.

“What’s your plan here?” Lincoln asked. His hands white-knuckled on the console.

“My plan is to stay in the air no matter what it takes. If that doesn’t work, my next plan is to find the safest possible place to land.”

“In the middle of the Pacific?”

“We’re getting close to Hawaii now.” Their destination was Maui, but the first island they’d see would be the Big Island.

Rory wasn’t sure what was taking them to Maui.

None of Lincoln’s properties were located there, or any of the homes of the woman he was currently seeing.

Lincoln didn’t ever share details of his business with a lowly pilot.

“And we’re going to make it there?”

“Am I the best or am I not the best?”

Which, of course, didn’t answer the question. That storm…those winds had to be over eighty miles an hour. Lightning could take out their avionics. Wind shear could send them plunging downwards. Their only chance would be if they made it to land. Crashing into the ocean would be certain death.

“Answer the question.” Lincoln was used to being obeyed; maybe that was why his voice sounded like a whip, even through the rising din of the rain against the cockpit.

“I don’t know,” Rory shot back. Every muscle in his body vibrated with tension, too much to watch his words. “I’m not God. I can’t see the future. I’m going to do my best because I want to fucking live as much as you do.”

Lincoln startled and turned his face toward Rory, almost as if he’d never looked at his pilot before. “You do? Why?”

“Why? Why? What are you saying, that just because I don’t have a billion dollars I have no reason to live?” He was really off-script now. The billionaire employee handbook didn’t include yelling at your boss. “Well, I do. My family needs me.”

“You aren’t married.”

Darkness engulfed the plane as they flew into the first towering cloud. The SyberJet had never seemed so tiny before. “I have parents,” Rory yelled. “A grandmother. A brother who depends on me. Not that it’s your business.”

“I already know about them.” Lincoln waved a hand almost dismissively. “From my investigator.”

“So they’re not a reason to live? Fuck you, man.”

Lincoln’s jaw dropped and his sculpted face lost several shades of color. “You’d never talk like that if you thought we were going to live. Damn, we’re really going to crash, aren’t we?”

Rory jerked his attention back to the flight deck. Lincoln had a point. Some part of Rory had let loose the chains on his better judgment. Right now, he was just a guy desperately trying to keep a plane in the air.

“You should have listened to me.” The relief of speaking his mind was intoxicating. “Whoop!” he hooted, as if they were on a roller coaster instead of flying through a thunderstorm. “Damn, that felt good. I told you so. I told you so.”

“Shut up or you’re fired.” Lincoln gripped the armrests of the copilot’s seat.

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