Rags 2 Pitches: A Secret Baby Sports Romance (11 page)

BOOK: Rags 2 Pitches: A Secret Baby Sports Romance
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Chapter Two

Kayla

 

Three years later…

 

Every year.

Every fucking year on this day, the day it had happened, my thoughts reverted to him.

Mom had picked his birthday of all days to leave. I’d been only sixteen at the time, yet I remembered it as if it were yesterday. Especially today. Especially on his birthday. I managed to get through the day by going to classes and hanging with a few friends until eight o'clock. That was when I had to go back to my room to study.

Memories of that night flashed through my mind. I shook them off and tried to study. It didn’t work, and something drew me to the bar. I could have gone to Starbucks, or even gone to my best friend, Sara’s, room. But, I didn’t.

As I opened the door to the bar that I worked. I expected the see the normal scene; the dim lighting, the college students that had a few minutes of self-indulgence and would spend that time playing pool. College students wanting to inflate their egos by trying to beat their rival in class. Or girls wanting to lay one of the sports heroes, hoping that they wouldn’t have to get a job after college. Their fate was set from the moment their soon-to-be boyfriend would play professionally. And then there were the quiet ones; wanting to be part of some crowd, huddled together hoping to get noticed, but too shy to talk to anyone.

The worn out wooden flooring and tired decor didn’t mean a thing to the students. But tonight there was a man talking to the waitress that I worked with most of the time, Brooklyn. Her fake blond hair and blue eyes were batting as if she had won the lottery as she talked to the one man that I thought was dead: my dad. I wondered if he was a ghost or a figment of my imagination. He should be dead. Not here in the flesh. Breathing. Smiling. What was he doing here?

He seemed to like the attention of Brooklyn, who was nearly half his age. He didn’t see me. They were talking, standing too close to each other. Acting as if no one else was in the bar. My heart skipped a beat as I tried to focus on him alone. I blinked my eyes, feeling like my feet were stuck in quicksand.

Why today of all days?

Was he looking for me?

He couldn’t be. He would look for Mom first, surely.

I had too many questions running through my mind. But the thing that turned my feet around and had me heading back out of the bar was fear. He still scared me. I had a new name and my hair was different, but he might still recognize me. I couldn’t take the chance. I had to leave. Not only the bar, but the campus. I had to get out of there and pretend that the last few weeks of being with my boyfriend, Chase, were a fantasy, something that I only wished could be real between us.

When we’d lived in Dallas, Chase and I had pretended that we didn’t have feelings for each other. We’d confessed our love after we went to college. I couldn’t explain to him why I had to leave. He would never understand why I was using a fake name. One that wasn’t given to me at birth. If I did tell him the truth then he would not only put my life in jeopardy, but Mom’s too. When he found out that I was missing then, he would report Kayla as the girl that is missing. Not the real me.

Mom!

Should I call her? I didn’t know what to do as I ran to my room. As soon as I got there, I closed my eyes. When I opened them, I took what I needed - a few clothes and cards - like I’d done when I was sixteen.

No one knew who I really was, and our family thought that we were dead. Mom had planned it all. I wondered how successful she had been, because Dad was standing in my student bar. Then again he was a cop; he had been trained to hunt and all I knew was I had to run.

I grabbed my cards and went to the ATM on campus. I took out as much cash as I could out of them. I broke the ATM cards with my bare hands and threw them in the trash.

“Are you really doing this?” I asked myself. I didn’t know who else I could talk to. Someone to reason with was out of the question. It was me, myself and I, I thought as my hands trembled as I started to walk away.

The craziness wasn’t in my actions, but in my thoughts. I started to sweat uncontrollably about my fate.

“It was him, wasn’t it?”

I had asked myself a thousand times.

I was no stranger to being on the run.

I dropped my phone on the floor and stomped on it.

“Damn iPhone!”

Any other phone would have been easy to break. But as I stomped on it repeatedly with so much force, there was only a crack in the screen. I smashed it against the brick wall, using all my strength to throw it, and then it started to crack, until it eventually broke.

I was no stranger to changing my identity.

I had done it once before.

The only problem was I had never done it alone.

God, I wish my mom was here.

I felt a chill run down my spine, knowing that I was doing it alone.

Knowing that, from this moment onwards, I was on my own.

 

 

Chapter Three

Kayla

 

 

I made it to New York. The city where no one asks your name. A place where I could be invisible while I figured out what to do next. I just needed time, and moving out here would buy me that. I decided to check into a motel and the next day it was all about seeing where I could make some cash.

It didn’t take long for me to find a job, after asking a few diners and bars if they had any work. I got a few regular shifts at a particular diner, because the waitresses seemed to be constantly sick. I wasn’t like them. I couldn’t give them my social security number and get a permanent job. I was a girl on the run. I had to keep a low profile. That meant working here for a while and then… who knew? I certainly didn’t.

“Hey girl, those abs are tight,” one of the waitresses said in the changing room.

“Yep, you can’t be too careful. I’ve always trained.”

I kept myself to myself; I had learned that from Mom when we were first on the run. ‘Only talk to those who you think you can trust and even then, you still have to be careful’… those were her words of wisdom when we first were on the run.

Right now, I was alone. I had been in the city a few weeks and usually, after a shift in the diner, I would go and change in the motel. But, tonight I just didn’t feel like being alone.

“Lately I’ve got a bit of an appetite, so my 6-abs are turning more into 2-abs.” I said as I rubbed my stomach. It was growing a little bit. Something that I hadn’t really taken any notice of until now.

She laughed as she lifted up her shirt and said, “Well, I’ve always been a 1-ab type of gal.” Sheryl was sweet, and always had a smile on her face. I knew the other girls hated her, because of her plus size.

‘The food is for the customers, not you,” some of them would smirk as Sheryl would gasp as she took out the owner's famous steak and mash potatoes. Even my eyes lit up when holding one of those plates.

Damn, it always looked so good.

But, that didn’t stop Sheryl smiling at the clients and even the other waitresses.

“You know there were a couple of girls here who left. They used to fight.”

She managed to spark my interest. Fight. That was like music to my ears at the moment. Besides my pokey bedroom in the apartment., the diner and the odd conversation with a client, I spoke to no one. Not until today.

Having this conversation in the dingy changing room, where some of the girls managed to change out of their black uniform and come out looking as if they were going on the catwalk.

I remembered there were a group of girls talking about a fight. But I assumed they were talking about the official MMAs, which I dreamt of signing up for, but the same problem: I would have to register with ID and I didn’t have any that I could use.

“Really?” I questioned as I sat down on the thin bench and waited for her to continue.

She lifted an eyebrow as she realized that she had caught my attention, “Yep, it’s not the MMA or anything clean like that. Some of those girls get beaten like crazy. One even ended up dead.”

She stopped, probably thinking that her revelation had put me off. She had no idea where I came from. I had become immune to people and their actions.

“Tell me more.”

She did, and I listened. As tempting as it was, it didn’t feel like an option. I had a steady amount of money coming in from the diners and even on the weekend I would do the odd shit at a nightclub. The only thing that could completely turn things around was if I became broke. Right now, I wasn’t there yet.

I listened, thinking it would be something to ease the pain.

That was why I had started studying karate, when I was eight. To use it on my dad. I had visions of him hitting me and me retaliating. Finally, being able to fight back brought a sense of security. But, for all the times, he hit me, I never did fight back. He was too strong. His ferocity and the shock of my own dad doing this to me, put me off each and every time. I kept promising myself that the next time I would do it. But, by the time I finally plucked up the courage, it was time to escape.

I don’t know if I ever would have used it.

Probably not.

***

 

Earl, the owner of the diner, had something that he wanted to talk to me about before I started my shift. I was sat in his office, which kind of made me nervous. Even when he’d hired me; he’d thrown me an apron and said, “Start. If you make it to the end of the night, then you’re hired.”

Today, I had a feeling that the news wasn’t good.

Then again, it was written all over his face.

“Sorry, Carolyn, I can’t keep you on anymore. Not for cash. Unless you want to start letting me pay you socials.”

I sighed, avoiding his gaze.

Shit.

“Taxes are getting higher and I need to offset all my damn expenses. The IRS are coming down hard on us all.”

I wanted to cry. I’d been lucky getting this job on my third day in the city. No one wanted to hire someone who only wanted cash. I’d heard one of the owners say it normally meant trouble. Earl had hired me so easily. And just as easily, he was letting me go.

I stood up, unable to speak. I couldn’t think; could only hand him back his apron, knowing that I wouldn’t be working that night.

That was when I saw Sheryl. I had two hundred and fifty bucks stashed at the motel - and nothing more. I couldn’t afford to live on that for too much longer. I knew I had two choices.

Prostitution, fighting or to go back home.

Wherever that was, at times I used to think it was at college. But, that was only temporary.

I had only given my body to one man. The idea of giving it to anyone who paid for it was impossible.

Which meant I would need to get into black market fighting.

Chase used to say that I worked out way too much. I couldn’t help myself. Even after years of being away from my dad, I still felt the need to stay in shape in case a man decided to use me as a punching bag. The man that used to tuck me into bed as a child became my enemy. I’d even taught self-defense classes in college.

Sheryl smiled as her eyes lit up, “Girl, the other night you said you weren’t interested.”

I whispered, “Earl’s had to let me go. So I need to get interested.”

I did, because the clock was ticking. The first couple of nights I had thought about going back. But it had been eight weeks. Maybe I had made a mistake and should have gone back to Chase. Begged for his forgiveness, and then told him the truth about my dad.

The problem was I couldn’t.

Maybe it was pride.

Maybe it was stubbornness.

But there was that feeling deep down inside of me, that kept me in New York.

And right then I knew it was the same thing that had kept me going back home each and every night knowing that my dad could turn around and beat the shit out of me.

Fear.

 

 

 

 

Chapter Four

Chase

 

 

I didn’t feel like going. It was four weeks until the end of college, and the last thing I felt like doing was going to a black market fight. Seeing a couple of girls beat the shit out of each other wasn’t exactly my idea of fun.

“Chase, you need to unwind. Shit, man, I went to the semifinals, and this thing is fucking hot. Hotter than hot,” Reg said. He’d been my best friend since high school. After Kayla left campus, I’d needed a change. I didn’t feel like going to Stanford anymore, so I’d switched to Yale. Dad was happy; it was the tradition in our family for all Logan men to go to Yale. As soon as I told him that I needed a change after the first semester, he didn’t waste any time making sure that my transfer happened.

When you’re as rich and influential as my dad, shit like that happens all the time. I knew that for the average student this was near enough impossible. But for Dad, anything was possible.

“Final year exams, man. We should be studying,” I blurted out as I got my scarf and coat. I knew that if I didn’t go, I wouldn’t hear the end of it. Going to any type of fight just reminded me of Kayla, and the last thing I wanted to do was have her on my mind.

The first year had been painful.

I’d finally confessed my true feelings to her the first night we’d started college. We had been playing a cat and mouse game for years. When she’d first moved to Dallas, she was an awkward, shy girl who didn’t want to talk to anyone, especially me. But boy, did she love to fight. The teachers told her to save it for the ring, but that didn’t stop her from trying to bully nearly every guy in school.

Our parents met at a parents’ meeting. They hit it off from the start. They started dating and, before we knew it, we were living in the same house.

That was when things got awkward.

The shy girl who loved to fight had started coming out of her shell, after our parents dropped us at college. As soon as they left, I went to her room and had it out with her.

“We’re at the same college. Our dorms are across the campus from each other, so we don’t need to be friends. But at least stop pretending that we don’t know each other,” I blurted out. It was a speech that I had rehearsed for many nights. I was like a lovesick teenager. Which was kind of crazy, because I was kind of popular at school. The guy with a wealthy dad and who gets good grades earns some popularity in school. I was the one who held pool parties, went on expensive trips, and at times could take a friend or two on the trip.

Kayla replied with a smug look on her face, “Make me!”

That statement resulted in her being tackled, and I got her in a compromising position, and I couldn’t wait to kiss those lips. They were thick and full and just screaming out my name as she lay underneath me that day. I got hard just thinking about it.

From that moment onwards, I’d known she was mine. Not just in my dreams, but in reality.

 

***

 

“Shit, man. We all know you don’t need to study. Your dad’s an oil tycoon for crying out loud,” my roommate, Miles, screamed out, as if there was an audience in the room.

He didn’t hide the fact that he hated that my dad was filthy rich, but we’d ended up sharing a room at college. He had worked like crazy to get into Yale from the public school his parents had put him into; worked two jobs, even though he was on scholarship. No one in his family had been to college. Studying wasn’t easy for him, but it came naturally to me. Yet, that didn’t stop him from accusing me of cheating, or my dad of buying my grades, whenever the results came out.

I hated going out with him, but Reg had insisted, saying, “Come on, in a few months’ time you won’t see the guy again.” Those few months felt like a lifetime. Especially because both my roommate and my best friend loved the underworld MMA.

I just didn’t get it.

Some girl had died at the last fight they went to. They said she was beaten to a pulp. I just didn’t understand why anyone would get any sense of enjoyment out of it. The whole thing felt crazy to me.

“We are at one of the most prestigious colleges. We’re educated men, and yet you guys get a kick out of seeing grown women beat the crap out of each other. Why not just get a prostitute?”

I wasn't sure why I was comparing one to the other. But BDSM seemed to be the thing at the moment. I was sure that Miles would engage in something like that.

“Hell no,” Miles blurted out. “You could catch something.”

I shook my head, because that made no sense. I was trying to make a point, but as usual it was wasted on Miles. His head was always somewhere else.

 

 

 

 

 

BOOK: Rags 2 Pitches: A Secret Baby Sports Romance
12.94Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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