#Swag (GearShark #3) (37 page)

Read #Swag (GearShark #3) Online

Authors: Cambria Hebert

BOOK: #Swag (GearShark #3)
13.42Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Me trying to be what you wanted made me everything Mom didn’t want. She was too weak for you, and she never did give you that son. She wasn’t interested in me when she moved to Paris. She never asked me to go with her, did you know that? Not once. It was like it never even occurred to her to take her only child.”

“Your mother is a selfish woman,” he said, some regret in his voice.

“But I always had a place with you. You made that clear, even when she didn’t. It was like no matter how disappointed you might be in me, you still made room in your life. Even as a teenager, even when I was determined to push you away.”

“I have never been disappointed in you.”

“Except for the fact I’m the wrong gender.”

He measured me, pulled his hands free of the pockets, and stepped closer. “I wanted a boy. I’ve never hidden it. I was hoping for more than one child, but that wasn’t in the cards for me. Neither was a son. That doesn’t mean I’m disappointed in what I do have. I regret you feel you’ve never measured up in my eyes. I regret I never told you different.”

“You don’t lie,” I said, as if that explained exactly why he never told me any of those things.

“Then you will believe me when I say I
am
proud of you. More proud than I think you will ever realize. It was a fool thing to openly admit to wanting a son so much, because the truth is you are not and could never be a disappointment to me. In fact, looking at you right now, I am more convinced than ever not even a son could measure up to the person you are.”

I swayed a little on my feet. His words were like piercing arrows that hit their mark in the deepest part of me, the most tender flesh.

“I wanted an heir, and that’s exactly what I got. You’re my daughter, and I love you.”

Well, fuck.

I was going to cry. And not the sniffle, sniffle kind of cry either. The kind of ugly cry people needed to look away from. The kind that left your face swollen for a full day after you were dry.

I expected a lecture, a stern talking to, and yes, concern… but I didn’t expect to hear he loved me. That he was proud of me.

I sniffled, sat on the end of the bed, and looked down, trying to gain some composure.

How long had I wanted to hear what he just said? How deep did my feelings of not being good enough go?

Deep.

So deep I was pretty sure they were the roots from which the rest of my character grew from.

I never realized how wholly those words would heal something inside me.

“Maybe if I’d told you this sooner, things wouldn’t have gone as far as they have. Maybe you wouldn’t be sitting there battered.”

“This isn’t your fault, Dad,” I said as he came to sit beside me on the bed. Despite his weary appearance, he still smelled like fresh aftershave, the kind he’d worn as long as I could remember. Old Spice.

“Not entirely. Cannon and a few other members of the club are going to have a rude awakening in the next few days. This behavior stops here and now.”

“What are you going to do?” I asked. Looking up, my stomach clenched from the steel I heard in his words.

“Do what I should have done a long time ago. Clean house.”

“What does that say about me, then?” I asked. “That I had to have my father step in and fight my battles.”

“This isn’t just your battle, Joey. It’s mine, too. We’re a family, and we fight together. I shouldn’t have let you believe coming to me was somehow a black mark against your character. You endured abuse too long, and it stops right now.”

A tear slipped over my cheek, followed by another and another. My father put his arm around me, and I leaned into his side. I felt his lips on the top of my head, and it caused tenderness to awaken within me.

A girl would always have a soft spot for her daddy… no matter how old she was.

“I love you, Dad,” I whispered.

“I love you, my daughter,” he echoed. “Now…” His voice was brisk as he tightened his arm around me. “No more of this silence bullshit. You don’t ever have to prove to me how strong you are. I know. I see it on a daily basis. If someone is harassing you or just treating my daughter poorly, then I want to hear about it.”

I laughed. It was a watery sound. “Yes, sir.”

“Good. Now get your things. We’re going home. My personal doctor is waiting to look you over. And we’ll be meeting with my lawyers as well.”

“Lawyers!” I gasped, wincing because it hurt my throat.

“Oh, that criminal Cannon is going away for a long time. And you don’t really think I’m going to let that disqualification stick, do you?”

“I still want to cross over,” I stated, pulling back to look at him.

“I figured. You have my complete blessing, but Joey Gamble doesn’t drive out of the pro division with a disqualification under her tires.”

Dad always seemed to make everything seem a little less terrible, you know? Jace was my rock, my security… but not even he was as strong of a force as my father.

I leaned my head back on his shoulder. He nudged me. “Come on, then.”

“I’m not ready to leave yet. I’d rather wait until morning.”

“You need to see a doctor.”

I sat back. “I will tomorrow.”

My father’s shrewd gaze landed on Jace’s duffle bag. “This have to do with the owner of that bag?”

I nodded.

“The staff at the house says he was with you the night before you flew here.”

Of course they did. The staff was a bunch of big tattlers. “I’m an adult.” I reminded him.

“You’ll always be my little girl.”

I melted a little at his response.

“So you and Lorhaven… I guess that explains why he bloodied up Cannon so good.”

“I caused some of that damage, too,” I protested, indignant.

He chuckled. “Of that I have no doubt.” He stood from the bed. “All right, I’ll have the doctor at the house tomorrow, late morning.”

“At the house?” I wondered.

He nodded. “Less press that way.”

I agreed and walked with him toward the door.

“So when am I going to get to meet this Lorhaven?”

“Soon.” I promised.

“Looking forward to it. I’m sure he must be something to have caught my daughter’s eye.”

I smiled. “He’s something.” I agreed.

Before opening the door, he glanced at me. “There’s something else I need to ask you about, Joey.”

I nodded.

“Did Hopper know about this? Did he sit idly by why you were hazed?”

I was shaking my head before he was even done asking. “They never did it when Hopper was around. I honestly don’t think he knew how bad it was.”

“But he knew something was happening…” he surmised, a displeased note in his voice.

“He saw the pictures they, uh, taped up in the garage. He came down on them. Hard. They stopped for a while. I think Hopper just assumed they never started again.”

“I see,” he murmured. What it is he saw I wasn’t quite sure.

“Please don’t take it out on Hopper, Dad. You know he has his own personal demons to battle. Battling mine isn’t his responsibility.”

“It is as a manager,” he replied, tight.

“If I had spoken up, Jay would have come to you,” I said, absolute surety in my words. Jay Hopper was a lot of things. A tortured soul. A recluse. A private man. My friend.

He was
not
an abuse enabler.

I could never believe he would stand by and allow men to abuse me.

“You let me worry about Hopper,” he said, leaning in to kiss my forehead.

I wasn’t sure what that meant, and it made my stomach clench.

He must have read it on my face, because when he pulled back, he sighed heavily. “You know I have a fondness for Hopper. Don’t worry.”

I nodded, tears coming back into my eyes. My father frowned, and I tried with all the will in me to snuff out my emotional display.

“You’re sure you won’t come with me now?”

I shook my head. “No, Jace is right next door. He’s coming back.”

“Drew and Trent are just down the hall,” he said, as if that made him feel better.

“I know.” I smiled.

“I love you, Josephine.”

“I love you, too, Dad.”

When he was out in the hall, I called out to him. He turned. “Thanks for coming.”

“You’re my daughter. And a damn good one at that.”

I watched him until the elevator closed and he was completely gone. A shuddering breath left my chest. I was still stiff and sore from everything that happened tonight, but I felt lighter. Less bleak.

My father was proud of me. Of the woman I was.

I had Jace, free and clear, no secrets or pride between us.

Today had been a shitty, shitty day…

But maybe not as shitty as I originally thought.

 

Lorhaven

I’d never been a nervous guy.

I wasn’t about to start that shit now.

It didn’t matter that Ron Gamble was a powerful man. He wasn’t the first the one I’d ever dealt with. It didn’t matter I was standing in the center of his office, which looked more like a study off the set of a movie. I’d been in offices with equal prestige.

He was my girlfriend’s father.

Correction, my one-and-only’s father.

I’d never had a talk with the girlfriend’s father before.

Correction, yes, I had.

When I was sixteen and horny as hell. Those conversations went in one ear and out the other. I didn’t listen to that shit.

This was different. Josie was different, and Gamble was her father. I wanted his respect.

Okay. Fine. I was nervous.

Fuck if I’d show it, though.

Josie wasn’t even here. She was at the track with Drew and Trent, likely having the time of her life speeding around in my damn Lotus.

Maybe that’s why my guts were churning. I gave the woman the keys to my car.

It was going to get me some serious bedroom action later, though.
*wags eyebrows*

The sound of a throat clearing had me spinning around. Gamble stood near his desk, looking at me, his eyebrow raised.

“Did you say something?” I asked.

“You got a hearing problem?” he asked, gruff.

“I gave Josie the keys to my Lotus,” I deadpanned.

Gamble threw back his head and laughed. “Have some scotch, son. You’re gonna need it.” He went over to the bar where glasses sat along with a dark bottle of liquid and poured two glasses. I accepted it when he handed it over.

“You call my daughter Josie,” he said, staring at me over the rim of the glass. He had quite the stare on him. I’d like to see him and my father in the same room. This guy was probably a match for him.

Well, his reputation preceded him, but I’d never met him until now. Even after a couple months of dating Josie and being with her every chance we got.

“Unlike you, I’m pretty happy she’s a girl,” I quipped.

His eyes narrowed. I took a sip of the scotch and appreciated the way it burned my throat. I might not be my father, but I definitely had some of his, uh, gumption.

“I’ve never made a secret I wanted a son. But I love my daughter very much. She’s the only child I have.”

“I know that. She loves you,” I told him.

“Then you must know I’ll do anything for her.”

I lowered the glass from my mouth. “This the part where you try and run me off?”

“I had someone look into your background.”

“Ah, found out all about the skeletons in my closet, did ya? Should have asked. I would have given you the information personally.”

“I actually believe that,” he mused.

“I’m not a liar,” I said.

“Illegal betting, gambling, and attempted murder are nothing to be proud of.”

“I’m not proud of it.”

“I’ve met your father. We actually do some business together,” Gamble said, dismissing my criminal past. For now, anyway.

“I don’t like him,” I said, taking another sip of the scotch. It was some good shit.

“Me either.”

I smiled.

Gamble scrutinized me from behind a shrewd stare. I bet he read people better than most people read books. “You’re nothing like him, though, are you?”

“No. And I never will be.” I confirmed.

“You beat up Dean Cannon, outed him to the press.”

“He hit your daughter in the face,” I growled. “He deserved worse than that.”

He pushed away from the bar, carried his glass over behind his desk, and set it down on a stack of papers. He was still dressed for work even though he was at home and it was after hours. His suit was clearly tailored, and his red tie looked freshly tied. I was willing to bet he wore red just because he was meeting me and wanted to have a touch of the color of blood on him.

Like that would intimidate me.

“I agree with you. That’s why I told him if he pressed assault charges against you, he’d find out exactly how much worse I thought he deserved.”

I stared at him in shock. “That’s why he didn’t press charges? Because you threatened him?”

Gamble held up a finger. “I didn’t threaten. I merely informed.”

I laughed. “Right. Well, thanks for saving me the trouble of a lawsuit. And thanks for the hurt you put on him and a few others that were involved in Josie’s hazing.”

All of them were out of his club. Cannon was totally blackballed from racing and actually serving time for cutting her brake line. Stupid shithead didn’t know him sneaking in and cutting her line was on surveillance cameras. The little scene of harassment they pulled on her when she was fresh out of the shower and in the garage for clothes was all caught on camera, too.

When I saw Cannon in court, he looked worse than a baboon’s asshole. Something told me Gamble had some connections on the inside, and Cannon’s stay in lock-up while awaiting trial was anything but peaceful.

“A lot of men with the same amount of power I have do business differently. I don’t lie and cheat in my dealings. My deals are all honest.”

I didn’t say anything, just stared at him.

“But I’m not a fool, and I wasn’t born yesterday. This world is cutthroat, and when you have money and power, everyone always wants a piece.”

“That about sums it up.” I agreed.

“This wasn’t the first time scum has messed with my daughter. This is the first time it went on so long without my interference. She’s older now, has her own life. Even so, it probably won’t be the last time she’s a target for what she does and who she is.”

Just the words made my blood boil. I slammed the glass down on the other side of his desk and leaned over it to look at him intently. “I won’t allow it.”

Gamble’s mouth curved up on one side. “I know. I certainly hope you don’t get caught up in illegal dealings in the future, but I will admit, your checkered past seems more like a plus than a negative.”

I laughed. “Well, that’s a first.”

“When you have a daughter someday, you’ll understand.”

The vision of Josie and all her wild hair with a small pink bundle in her arms swam before my eyes and pierced my chest. Possessiveness wrapped around me and that image like the heaviest blanket I’d ever felt.

“I’ll do anything to protect her,” I told him. “I’m in love with your daughter, and love isn’t something I give out freely.”

Gamble nodded, pulled out his desk chair, and sat down. “Good. Glad we got that out of the way.”

I blinked. That was it? I passed father inspection? And I did it by being the dick I always was.

“You seem surprised,” Gamble mused.

I sat down, snatched my drink off the edge of the desk, and took a swallow. “I am.”

He made a scoffing sound. “My daughter is happier than I’ve ever seen her. Keep her that way and you won’t have a problem from me.”

“Fair enough,” I said.

“Now, about your brother,”

I stiffened, my body tense. “What about Arrow?”

“I hear he can drive.”

“Who told you that?” I asked, suspicious.

“Drew, Trent, my daughter,” he listed.

“He can drive,” I allowed.

“I’m down a whole lot of drivers since the shakeup in the pro division.”

I felt the bottom fall out of my stomach. “Are you saying you want my brother to drive for you in the pros?”

“It’s crossed my mind.”

Everything inside me went flat. “No.”

Gamble’s eyebrows rose. “No?”

“My brother is gay.”

His eyebrows rose with the news, but then he said, “So is Drew Forrester.”

“Drew Forrester drives for the much more liberal NRR. The pro division is stodgy and old school, a fact you well know, especially after what happened to Josie.”

“I can understand your concern.” He agreed. “I think the pros are changing. My daughter was the catalyst in that. Your brother could be coming in at the right time.”

“My brother isn’t your guinea pig,” I refuted tightly.

“Maybe think about it. Ask him if he would like a tryout. Hopper is anxious to get him on the track.”

Hopper.
I bared my teeth.
“You sure it’s his driving Hopper’s interested in?”

Gamble pursed his lips. “Your fierceness extends to your brother.”

“My brother has been through a lot. He and Josie are at the top of the short list of people I care about.” I paused, then sat forward. “And frankly, I’m fucking shocked Hopper is still on payroll. You actually believe he didn’t know about all the shit Josie was being put through?”

“I’ve spoken to Hopper. At length. I will admit, I think he was in the wrong, but I don’t think he knew everything Josie was going through. He’d come down on Cannon in the past for his actions. I think Hopper was foolish and thought he’d dealt with it.”

I snorted. “What a crock.”

“Hopper will not be managing my daughter in the NRR. He’s staying with the pros, much to his displeasure. I’m sure that will make you happy.”

“That he’s away from Josie? Yes. But the fact you want to stick him and my brother together? No.”

“Noted.”

I stood up. I was done here. “I’m going back to the track. Gonna make sure my car is still in one piece.”

Gamble pushed out of his chair.

I held out my hand over the desk. “Thank you for taking the time to meet with me.”

“I respect a man who takes time to get a father’s blessing.”

“I didn’t ask for your blessing,” I said as he shook my hand.

“Not in so many words, but that’s why you’re here, isn’t it? You want to make sure I approve because you plan to marry my daughter.”

“I plan to marry her,” I said with no hesitation. “But not right now. I don’t even have a ring.” I mean, shit, I’d never even really thought about it ‘til now. Sure, it was a given I would marry her. Someday. We were too busy right now dating, driving, and getting to know each other better. We hadn’t even moved in together yet. But that was about to change. This driving back and forth to see each other was shit. I wasn’t doing it. I wanted her in my bed every single night.

As if he read my mind, he said, “All in due time.” He released my hand. “This house is plenty big if you two want to live here.”

“I’m not living off my girlfriend’s father.”

A satisfied glint came into his eyes. “I was hoping you’d say that.”

Ah, a test. Lucky me, I passed.

I headed for the door. His voice rang out behind me. “After you save your car from my daughter’s clutches, dinner will be on the table. Drew and Trent will be here, too. Bring your brother.”

I glanced over my shoulder. “Okay. We’ll be here.”

He nodded.

“But this doesn’t mean Arrow will drive for you.”

“Understood.”

I liked the guy. Respected him. I definitely understood where Josie got her stubborn mule head from. I could see how it might be hard to grow up with such a father. Hell, in a lot of ways, I had, too.

I liked his no apology way of living. He didn’t back down from who he was. He didn’t try and change. It was what it was.

Although, he did apologize once. To Josie. For not seeing what she went through sooner and for making her feel like she had to hide any struggle she faced. They had a long talk about her past, how he wasn’t holding it against her now or expecting her to revert back to her hell-raising ways. In short, she finally got the approval she’d always wanted from him and his respect. After talking with him today, I knew she’d had that a long time ago, she’d just never realized it. It took him telling her flat out to make her finally see.

Shocked the shit out of Josie. She still had a shell-shocked look on her face when I met her after their talk. But really, that’s what made me respect Gamble more. He gave her something that day no one else could give her, something she truly needed.

Other books

The Rogue by Janet Dailey
Scarlet Nights by Jude Deveraux
Never Been a Time by Harper Barnes
Frozen Hearts by Teegan Loy
The Silent Pool by Phil Kurthausen
Wanted: Fairy Godmother by Laurie Leclair
My Lunches with Orson by Peter Biskind
Crystal Cave by Mary Stewart