KAGE (KAGE Trilogy #1) (16 page)

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Authors: Maris Black

BOOK: KAGE (KAGE Trilogy #1)
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Kage gave her a castigating glare and wiped the kiss from his cheek. Then he stood up and stalked away from the bed, bringing our selfie love fest to an uncomfortable close.

“You know...” I spoke to Kage’s back while he stared out the window at Vegas. “This makes me think we should do a more personal style photo shoot for you, Kage. I’ve got lots of pictures of you training, and lots of video, but none of you just hanging out in your apartment.”

“You really think that would be a good idea?” His voice was flat, but at least he was speaking.

“I do. We need to get more eyeballs on you, right?” I got up and joined him at the window, staring out over the city and seeing none of it. “I do. I think it would really humanize you for your fans. It would make you relatable. We’re doing really well already with the social media accounts I’ve started. I post pics of you in different places, and it’s already getting you some followers and web hits. But some personal stuff? Yeah, I think that could be really good for us.”

Kage ran his index finger back and forth along his lips as he mulled it over in his mind. “Alright, how about tomorrow? Never mind, what am I saying? Tomorrow is Sunday. That’s like slave labor, isn’t it? Making you work on Sunday.”

“I don’t mind. What else do I have to do around here? What time tomorrow?”

“I don’t want to take advantage of you, Jamie.”

“No problem. Like I said, I’ve got nothing else to do. You’ll save me from two-thousand calories of straight carbs and fat out of the snack machine.”

“Why are you eating out of the snack machine?” Kage finally looked at me, and his expression was horrified. “I’m going to start having your meals sent up. You obviously can’t be left to your own devices when it comes to choosing food.”

“Hey, I’ve done okay on my own for twenty years. It’s not like I’m a lard-ass or anything.”

He took a moment to assess my body. Slowly, carefully. With his eyes on me like that, I almost came to regret the fact that I hadn’t yet put my clothes back on. I was standing in front of him in nothing but boxer briefs, and they were in danger of becoming too tight.

Kage took a deep breath. “You’re definitely no lard-ass.” He reached out and pinched my slight love handle with a smirk. “But you could stand to cut a carb or two.”

I wanted to huff and stomp, maybe even punch something. Because dammit, I wanted him to think I looked good. Then I compared my bod to his and relented. The guy clearly knew what he was talking about.

“Okay, you’re the boss. I’ll eat whatever you tell me to eat. But I’d better end up with a body like yours, or I’m gonna be pissed.”

Kage’s face stretched into an evil grin. “Guess you’d better start participating in my morning workouts, then. Starting Monday, you’re no longer observing. You’re breaking a sweat.”

“Bring it on,” I said with more confidence than I felt. My muscles were already protesting at the mere thought of Kage’s workout.

“I have to say, I love your choice of intern, Mikey,” Vanessa said, lounging like a cat on the bed. “He’s very
eager
.” Her emphasis on the last word gave me the distinct impression that she was fucking with me. Or maybe with Kage. I wasn’t sure which.

It ticked me off, but Kage grabbed a balled-up dirty sock off the floor near his bed and threw it at her. “Shut up or I’ll tell Jamie what you do for a living when you’re not modeling.”

Her mouth dropped open. “You wouldn’t dare.”

“Don’t mess with me, Nessy. I’m serious.”

“Fine. No more teasing.” She wrapped her arms around her midsection and gave him an exaggerated pout. It was all very flippant, but I thought she looked genuinely cowed.

“I’ll pick you up at your place Monday morning,” Kage told me. “In the meantime, eat what I send up. If you want a snack, make it high protein, low carb, okay?”

“Your wish is my command.” I aimed a smug look in Vanessa’s direction and felt vindicated when it hit the mark. “Guess I’ll get dressed and head out now. I need to go call my mom.”

 

I SAW where you called yesterday,” I told my mom when she answered the phone. “Sorry, I was in the middle of a business call, and then things went kinda haywire last night.”

“Haywire?” she asked. “Are you behaving yourself?”

“Mom, I’m almost twenty-one now.”

“My baby’s growing up,” she said, a mix of joy and sadness in her voice.

“I’m not your baby. That would be Paul.”

“You’re one of my babies. All three of you are equally my babies. Even after Jennifer gets married in August, she’ll still be my baby. Then I’ll just have one more.”

“Oh, God. Don’t start calling Chase your baby, too. That douchebag doesn’t deserve you.”

“Watch your language, young man. I’m still your mother, and I will put a strap across your back when you come home.”

I laughed. “Since when do you
strap
people, mom?”

“Since they’ve gotten too big for their britches.”

“Okay. Well, I can assure you I don’t need a strap. I’m a working man now. I think you’d be proud of me.”

She covered the mouthpiece and yelled at Paul to put the jelly back in the fridge and rinse the knife, then resumed our conversation. “I’ve always been proud of you, Jamie. Always. I’m glad you’re doing well.” She paused. “I sense there’s something wrong, though. What is it?”

“Nothing.”

“Don’t nothing me. A mom can tell.”

“It’s just… love life issues.”

What am I saying to my mom? I don’t even have a love life.

“Problems between you and Layla?”

Layla who?

“Something like that.”

Actually, nothing like that.

“Anything I can help you with? She’s not pregnant, is she?”

“Mom! No, of course not.”

“Well, you’re not being very forthcoming, son. I just figured I’d head you off at the pass with the most difficult news I could think of. You know I’ll understand, right? Whatever it is, I’ll understand. In fact, I have some difficult news of my own to share.”

My heart leapt up into my throat. “What is it?”

“I got the test results back. I have breast cancer.”

“What?” I nearly dropped the phone. My face flushed hot, and I couldn’t think straight. My mom. This was my mom. Cancer? Was she going to die? Jesus, here I was worrying about petty little conflicting feelings I was having over some guy, and my mom had cancer.

Way to put things into perspective, God.

“It’s okay,” she said calmly, though I could barely hear her through the pounding of blood in my ears. “The prognosis is excellent because they caught it early. I’m opting for a radical double mastectomy. I’m not going to let the same thing happen to me that happened to your aunt. She kept thinking she could beat it without getting a mastectomy, and she lost the bet.”

I started to cry before I even realized I was doing it.

“Don’t cry, baby,” my mom pleaded. “Your father and I have cried enough for everyone, and now it’s time to be positive. I want the threat gone so that I can be sure I’ll be around to be a grandmother to your children, okay?”

“Okay,” I sniffed, wiping the tears away with the back of my hand.

“Really, it’s fine, son. The doctors say it will be fine, and I believe them. They can work wonders with plastic surgery these days. It’s not like it was in your grandma’s day.”

“I love you, Mom,” I blubbered. “I’m sorry.”

“Shhh, baby. Nothing to worry about. Go take care of your love life and forget about this. It’s nothing but a blip on the radar of life.”

 

SUNDAY morning, Kage started having my meals sent up. Talk about spoiling me. I was getting chicken, fish, seafood, fresh vegetables, and brown rice delivered to my door like clockwork. Possibly the coolest part was knowing that he was ordering two of everything, and that I always knew exactly when and what he was eating even though we weren’t in the same room. We were sharing a diet.

By Monday, he’d even started making pre-workout shakes for me with creatine and protein to give me energy and build muscle.

We settled quickly into a routine. We shared morning workouts, then I observed and took pictures. I started using the machines some while he trained. After lunch, I would go to the office to work in my little cubicle. Kage had failed to find me an office, but I assured him that I was fine in the cubicle, and that I wasn’t blasting any sensitive information around the office. One day I tried to work in my room, but I found I needed the office setting to keep me motivated and feeling legit. However, I did go to my room to make business calls or to talk to Dr. Washburn. Not only did it feel uncomfortable talking out in the quiet office, but Kage was right. There were certain things those people didn’t need to hear.

I especially felt skittish about revealing anything to Catwoman Cathy or Mark Gladstone. They were altogether too nosy, giving me the third degree every time I walked through the door. They always wanted to know how Kage and I were getting along, and I always told them as little as possible. It was weird. I always wondered what they could possibly get out of know all of my business, but after a while I figured out that it was probably just the thrill of gossip that drove them. No doubt they discussed everything I told them amongst themselves and with anyone else who would stand still long enough to listen.

It got to the point I felt like I was being felt up every time I entered the office. I know that sounds icky, but that’s how it felt.

Mark Gladstone still tried to chat me up in private, like we were buddies or something. I was polite, but I tried to limit our conversations with excuses and sudden bathroom urges. He thought he was God’s gift to the universe, but he definitely wasn’t the kind of guy I could ever consider a friend. If it hadn’t been for needing to feel like a real professional, I would have stopped going into the office altogether.

On Tuesday afternoon, I’d used some of the photos I’d taken to create a press packet. Well, really it was a glorified flyer, but I used every ounce of creativity I had in me to make it appealing. I painted Kage to be this infamous underground fighter who was on the verge of becoming a superstar. It wasn’t true exactly, more like a forward-looking statement, but it was based on fact.

Through snippets of conversations and a few comments Kage had made directly to me, I’d pieced together a picture of what was really going on in the Michael Kage camp. To be honest, I’d almost begun to believe he was just a rich guy with a hobby— that he’d probably never even been in a real fight. But the truth was more dramatic and bizarre than a publicist could have hoped for.

Kage had been training to be a fighter all his life, since he was around four years old. It’s all he ever wanted to do. I wasn’t clear on the specifics of how his uncle ended up being his guardian, or where his parents had gotten off to. But I did know that his uncle was just as serious as Kage about him getting a UFC contract and becoming a champion. He’d poured a lot of money into Kage’s training, and then when he felt Kage was ready, he did the unthinkable.

He offered a reward to anyone who thought they could beat his nephew in a private MMA fight to the finish. The fights were broken up into typical three-minute rounds, but the difference was, there were no judges. The fight could only end with a submission, a KO or TKO, or a forfeit. Originally, the prize offered was ten-thousand dollars. Big bucks for a struggling lower-level fighter. But as Kage began to require stiffer competition, the amount went up.

By the time I came to the Alcazar, the prize for defeating Michael Kage was one-hundred-thousand dollars.

It was as yet unclaimed.

Now technically this was a rumor, or a legend if you will, because I had seen no real evidence that Kage had ever participated in a fight other than his sparring practice with Marco. But I believed it, just as I was coming to believe that Kage could walk on water or make a blind man see.

So I used the legend to our advantage on the flyers. I sent them to three large gyms within driving distance of Vegas announcing that this mysterious undefeated fighter would be in their area soon if they’d like to have him stop by. I didn’t attempt to charge for appearances. In my mind, this was just a way to get Kage used to the exposure while getting the word out about him. People associated with the MMA world needed to know the name of Michael Kage.

I didn’t know what kind of response to expect, but I was thrilled when one of them called on Friday to book him.

“What did you do that for?” Kage asked when I told him what I’d done. “Am I gonna have to miss two workout days for that?”

“Yes. But it’s a good idea. It’s just one appearance, but we need to get used to this kind of thing, Kage. One of these days, people are going to be dying to get you in their gym. Think of it as a trial run.”

He nodded. “Okay, I just don’t know what to expect. Do other guys do this?”

“I think so,” I told him. “I’m pretty sure they do.”

He laughed and ruffled my hair. “Me and my rookie publicist. Alright, if you want me to do it, I’ll do it. It could be fun to take a road trip.”

I didn’t tell him, but I thought a road trip sounded fantastic. “Do we need to rent a car?”

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