Fast and Loaded: A Bad Boy Sports Romance (27 page)

BOOK: Fast and Loaded: A Bad Boy Sports Romance
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Ayron again. Damn. I miss her.

The executives read over the information, nodding and smiling as they do.

What the hell could she have written to make these people smile?

Trevor looks irritated.

“Are there any other questions before we begin making our decision?” he asks.

I roll my eyes and smile because it makes me think of Ayron.

“Is this funny to you?” Trevor huffs. “This lack of respect for the company—”

“Let me stop you right there,” I say. “Dana, please go out of the room for a few minutes.”

She looks confused, but does as she’s told. I then pull my phone from my pocket and press play.

On the large flat-screen mounted in the conference room, the video of Trevor screwing a second-floor secretary, who is also the niece of one of the board members on a company desk, pops up. Gloria had connected my phone to the screen through an app prior to the meeting.

Eyes bulge, mouths drop, faces twist and turn away.

“What did you have to say about respect?” I add. “While I may have punched you after you provoked me—using my insecurities about my mother’s death was really low, might I add—I refrained from hunting you down and knocking in your face when I found out how you treated my sister and several other women in this company, who were shuffled around after you used them.”

Trevor’s face reddened.

“I—if you—this is not about me,” he says, sounding frustrated as he stands and stomps out of the room.

I turn off the video.

“For each action, there is a reaction or consequence,” I recite. “Because of my actions, I have learned so much more about life and myself. I look forward to hearing your decision. Thank you for your time.”

After the meeting, I walk evenly to my office.

Gloria sits forward anxiously at her desk, which is right next to my door.

“Did it work?” my assistant questions.

“Like a charm.”

I give her a high-five.

“Devlin,” my father calls out, moving toward me. “Let’s talk in your office.”

I mirror my father’s serious expression.

“Yes, let’s talk,” I agree.

Inside my office, my father sits quietly.

“Why didn’t you tell me about Trevor?” he says in a crisp tone.

“Why didn’t you tell me about Ayron?” I counter.

It doesn’t faze him.

“Would you have gone to counseling otherwise? Would you be on the verge of getting the company you’ve been fighting for if I hadn’t?” he responds in that know-it-all voice.

“But to pay Ayron to make me fall in love with her?” I protest, raising my voice. Damn respect at the moment, David Masters had crossed a line. “Why not a housekeeper or another tennis coach?”

My father has a steel poker face, but the short snort he releases, his lips slightly cocking to one side, reveals a hell of a lot.

“You didn’t think I knew about that.”

“Since you have it all figured out then, son,” he says, standing. “It’s true. I have not always been the present father that you needed.” He moves closer to me, straightening my not crooked tie. “I made sure to strategically appoint people in your life that could help you, give you what I couldn’t. Shit, what I didn’t know how to give.” He steps away then and looks me in the eye. “My mother didn’t even know who my father was. Six kids, at least four fathers, was a lot to keep track of. I wasn’t always equipped.”

I sigh.

‘’I just want you to be proud of me,” I tell him, biting back any emotion like a damn child. And I realize, it’s true.

“Son,” his face brightens. “I was proud of you the day you were born. I don’t even know where to start. Smart, strong, determined.”

“Well, you don’t have to try and fix me anymore,” I tell him honestly. “I’m all right.”

He smiles.

“All right.” He nods and moves toward the door.

“Have you already paid Ayron?” I question. “I was thinking of giving her a little extra for the hassle.”

He ponders for a moment, as though questioning whether or not tell me.

“She had a friend return the money, along with her statement,” he says.

“Oh,” I voice, and can’t think of any words to say, just her face.

Ayron needs money. I’d seen her car.

“If you love her, son, you should go to her,” my dad says. “I know the burden of heartbreak.”

“No fixing me,” I remind him.

He laughs before exiting.

I had confessed out loud that I loved Ayron. Do I? It had to be a slip of the tongue. I just needed to prove a point to my father.

* * *

W
alking
through the door of my home, I feel like a weight has been lifted. I don’t care what they decide. There is so much more to life than the business.

Mufasa had retreated to the rock cave. He rarely came out to swim to spot where Sarabi had been.

“I feel you, fish friend. I’m by myself, too,” I say.

I loosen my tie and turn on the television in my bedroom. The local evening news is on and I turn it up before slipping into a pair of pajama pants and a T-shirt.

I had kind of given up on the local news, opting for the cable networks that focus more on finance and the stock market, but Ayron never missed the local evening news if she could help it.

I turn the volume up as a breaking news story alert flashes across the scene.

“The entire 3300 block of Kingsley Avenue has been evacuated due to an apartment fire. Emergency vehicles are on the scene,” the reporter states in a serious tone. “There have been three confirmed fatalities. No names have been released.”

I dial the number that I had for Ayron and it goes straight to voicemail. I had never bothered to get any other number for her since she always answered the phone that I had given her.

My stomach knots.

I’ve got to find Ayron.

C
hapter 17-Ayron

Agnes’ hospice room smells sterile, but it doesn’t matter to me. I have been here since I returned from New York to find that she had suffered a small stroke. She doesn’t do much of anything but sleep now. She’s tired, I can tell. When she speaks, it is slow and takes a lot of effort. I don’t say much to her, just sit with her, lay near her in the bed and watch reruns of ‘I Love Lucy’—it’s her favorite show.

“Smile,” she utters slowly through her new crackly voice.

I shake my head.

“I don’t have a reason to smile.” I shrug.

“Young. Living,” she struggles.

“Yeah, but I’m alone,” I respond wearily. Somewhere along the line, I had become all right with being by myself, satisfied with only Monique and Ms. Agnes as companions. My time with Devlin changed that.

“I really messed up,” I admit to Ms. Agnes.

I look over at her clock, just to do something, and notice that it is time for the local evening news. I had to force Devlin to watch it.

“Love wins.” She gives a half-cocked grin.

I pat her shoulder. I wish that I could believe that. I learned my lesson with Devlin and Lance: love does not conquer it all.

A breaking news segment flashes onto the screen.

“Look at that fire, Ms. Agnes,” I tell the woman. Blazing waves and smoke plume out of an elegant building.

“Yours.” Agnes points, her face twisting into a grimace.

My heart drops when I see the townhouse building where everything that I own is housed, going up in flames.

“Oh no,” I stand, my heart pounding. “No. No. No. I have to go, Ms. Agnes. That’s my building.”

I kiss her cheek.

“I’ll be back as soon as I can.” I curve my pointer finger and thumb to make the letter ‘u’ and place it over my heart.

Agnes slowly does the same. This is our signal for I love you, something we recently added, since her speaking has been difficult.

* * *

W
hen it rains
, it pours.

I hit the steering wheel in frustration. Cars are not moving, especially not mine, and the freeway feels like a parking lot. Clenching the steering wheel, I attempt to switch lanes and then honk my horn to try and ease my way into what seems to be the faster stretch.

Why is this happening? Everything is crashing all around me. I feel like I am trying to doggie paddle through the Atlantic Ocean.

“Asshole,” I yell out of the window, feeling a spike of anger as I am finally able to break into the gridlock and move forward some.

I sigh. I have to keep it together, stay the wall, or I may fall to pieces.

My cell phone rings and I answer the call using my hands-free device.

“Are you all right?” Monique’s frantic voice booms from my speaker.

“No. I’m answering the phone from hell,” I respond sarcastically in a clipped tone.

“Don’t be mad at me because your well went dry,” she chides. “I’m trying to make sure that you’re still alive.”

“Thanks,” I sigh. “I'm fine—I mean, I'm not fine. I was with Ms. Agnes, but I'm driving home now.” I pause, realizing I may not even
have
a home to return to. But it was so kind of Monique to call. "I didn’t mean to lash out. At least someone cares.”

“You should be honored that I do,” she jokes. “But I’m not the only one checking to make sure that you are all right.”

“Who else would care?” I ask, mentally listing all of the people I know who would know to call Mo to check on me.

“I told you that you should have at least given that poor man your phone number.”

“Devlin called?” I question—surprised, angry, and interested all at once. “That ‘poor man’ left my ass naked in a strange state in the middle of the night. Forget him.”

Monique grunts into the phone.

“I’ve had worse. How did you expect him to react?” She replays the same question that she had asked me after I told her my sordid tale a few days ago. “You know that you would have been pissed, Ayron, and probably would have done worse. At least he made sure that you got home.”

“Why did he call you? What did he have to say?” I ask, deciding not to rehash that conversation again.

* * *


I
thought
you wanted to forget him?” she teases me.

Before Monique flew to London for a tech convention last night, she had been trying to get me to call Devlin and apologize. If he had wanted an apology, he would have stuck around to talk like a grown man and not run off to pout. He made his decision. It hurt my feelings, but I’m going to have to deal with it.

“I know that this international call is spiking up your bill—are you going to tell me or not?”

“Oh, these calls are totally on the company’s dime. It will be itemized and reimbursed,” she laughs. “Since your scared ass wouldn’t turn in your own damn statement, or talk to Daddy Masters about rejecting the payment, the secretary Gloria had my number on file. He must have gotten the number from her.”

“What did he have to say for himself?”

“First, he had to bring me up to speed on the fire. Then he asked if you were all right since I wouldn’t just give him your number,” she tells me.

“Thank you for having my back,” I say.

“Oh, don’t get it twisted, I’m going to give him your number. I needed to know that you were all right first,” she sounds off in her normal sassy tone.

BOOK: Fast and Loaded: A Bad Boy Sports Romance
5.24Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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