Go to Hail (The Hail Raisers Book 2)

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Go to Hail (The Hail Raisers Book 2) Page 9

by Lani Lynn Vale


  I’d bought all of my own cars. I paid my own health and car insurance. I was a big freakin’ girl with big girl freakin’ panties. Allegra was a spoiled rotten brat that likely didn’t wear any panties at all.

  “Do you mind leaving?” Allegra asked me.

  I looked over at Travis, giving him my ‘I don’t know what to do’ look.

  He winked at me.

  “Hannah is my fiancée, and deserves to hear everything that’s being said,” he interjected. “I’m sorry, but she’s not leaving.”

  My mouth literally dropped open in surprise, and I stared at the man who’d just uttered words I never thought would leave his lips.

  “She’s your what?” Allegra shrieked.

  I, however, was too busy trying to gather my bearings.

  Fiancée? Deserves to hear whatever Allegra had to say. What?

  I hadn’t missed that during my twenty-two minutes and thirty-nine seconds in this room…had I?

  No, I was fairly positive I’d remember being asked to marry someone, and Travis wasn’t good enough to cause me to lose my mind quite that far.

  Sure, he was excellent. Tongue tangling, for sure. What he wasn’t was one who got off on making me speak in tongues—or speaking in tongues altogether.

  No, I would’ve remembered.

  “Fiancée,” Travis repeated. “We’re getting married next year, but no, since she can’t get off of work, she’ll be unable to go on the RV with us. That’s not to say she won’t drive to those places and meet us for a few days.”

  Oh really?

  Allegra’s hard, cold eyes cut to me, and then moved back to Travis.

  “Over my dead body will you get to take her with that woman.”

  I gritted my teeth.

  This was exactly how it was with Allegra.

  They’d been divorced for seven years when I came along, and had been separated for nearly a year before their divorce. So, in no way, shape, or form was this a new thing when I came into the picture.

  Yet, Allegra always acted like she had some previous claim on Travis, and made it very clear that nobody would have him but her.

  In all honesty, it was exhausting.

  There were days that I wished I’d never met Travis.

  Then I immediately began to feel bad because if I hadn’t met Travis, I wouldn’t have my son. And Travis wouldn’t have me.

  Travis needed the proof that not all women were vindictive like his ex.

  “Well, then we can agree to disagree that you will be taking my child to Europe with you. So unless you’re willing to stay behind—which I highly doubt that you are—you’ll have to agree to those terms.”

  Allegra’s cold, dark gray eyes were positively glacial when she swept her gaze over the two of us.

  “You’ll regret this. Both of you.”

  Travis shook his head. “There’s not a single thing when it comes to you, that I don’t regret.”

  Allegra’s mouth dropped open.

  “You can’t mean that,” she said. “Alex…”

  Travis didn’t say a word.

  I knew in his heart that he didn’t regret Alex. But Alex had been the baby that had trapped Travis with Allegra. The final straw that broke the camel’s back, so to speak.

  And now that kid was acting like her father—who loved her with all his heart despite the beginning of how she came to be—was an annoying gnat to be shooed away.

  She was Allegra’s new mini-me.

  And I hated that. I hated it bad. Yet there wasn’t a single thing I could do about it.

  Travis stared at Allegra, and finally she opened the door.

  “You’ll need to realize that you’re not the only person in this town that can do the things you do.”

  Travis raised a brow at her.

  “Are you threatening me or my business?” he asked, sounding mildly curious.

  “If you want to take it that way,” she sniffed. “Have a pleasant day…Travis.”

  With that, the woman left, not once looking back.

  Travis said something quietly to someone beyond the door—likely his new receptionist—and slammed the door shut.

  I stayed where I was, wondering if Travis locked it or not. Because I wasn’t going to go pantless in front of anybody else.

  “Can you stand there and make sure that nobody else comes in?” I asked him when he started around the desk.

  He grinned and winked, his eyes going to his destroyed desk—which I was just now seeing—and back to me. “I locked it…unlike you.”

  I lifted my lip at him in a silent snarl. “I didn’t know that you were going to…” I dropped my voice down to the barest of whispers, “fuck me.”

  He started to laugh, even going as far as to lean his left hand against the desk as he bent over and guffawed.

  “Hannah, honey.” He grinned at me, and it sent shivers down my spine to see him smile at me with such happiness. “There are no kids here. You don’t have to whisper the curse words.”

  I shrugged and stood up, pulling my underwear on, followed shortly by my pants.

  The last thing to go on were my flip-flops.

  “I have to go,” I growled. “I have a doctor’s appointment in thirty minutes. I haven’t gone to the grocery store yet, and I need to get Reggie’s family tree ready.”

  He held up his hand. “What family tree?”

  I frowned. “I told you last week that both girls had family trees. You were supposed to call your mom.”

  He threw his head back and growled at the ceiling. “I forgot.”

  I winked at him.

  “I know. Which is why I called her last week when you only gave me a nod instead of doing it right then.”

  Travis’ mom and I got along famously, and everyone loved me.

  At first it was incredibly awkward to love a man that refused to return those feelings, and love his parents and family just as much as you loved your own. But now, it was as if they’d always been there, and I adored them.

  Before I could exit like I’d originally intended to do, he hooked me around the waist and brought me around to face him.

  “I know that me telling you that I was ready to make this work, and that I loved you, isn’t enough. I know that you’re going to need time from me, and I’m willing to give that to you.” He paused. “You’ve been there through everything over the last year. You’ve stayed when any other woman would’ve run. I owe you so much, but I’m going to keep asking you for more. I’m going to take, and take, and take, until you don’t think you have anything left to give. Then, when I’m sure I have it all, I’m going to marry you. Tie you to me forever, and make sure you don’t ever want to leave. I’m going to treat you the way you deserve to be treated, and I won’t fuck this up. I might, upon occasion, do something stupid. But just know that if I do, I’ll always make it up to you.”

  Those words might’ve sounded stalkerish coming from anyone else. Coming from Travis, though, with his eyes locked on mine?

  Not nearly as scary.

  “Okay,” I whispered.

  He dropped his forehead to mine, breathed me in for a few long seconds, and then let me go with a soft kiss to the tip of my nose.

  “Be careful.”

  My smile was brilliant.

  “Yes, sir.”

  He winked. “Now you got it right.”

  I rolled my eyes and left, doing what I said I was going to do.

  What I hadn’t expected when I got to my staff meeting, however, was to be fired.

  Chapter 12

  There should be a calorie refund for things that didn’t taste as good as expected.

  -Coffee Cup

  Travis

  I pulled up to the house, took a short look around to ascertain that I was alone, and pulled the wheel hard to the left. Making sure I was in a good position, I backed the tow truck up to the car that was sitting in the middle of the driveway—in a seed
y part of Hostel—and got out.

  My eyes quickly dashed around the area, noting that there were three people that I could see out on the porches of various houses, and of the three people, only one looked like he gave more than one shit that I was taking possession of a car by force.

  Keeping my eye on him out of the corner of my eye, I got all the hooks, cables, and chains attached to the car, and then started to tighten them.

  By the time that the back end of the car I was sent to repossess by the bank was safely hitched up onto my tow truck, only five minutes had passed.

  However, it was the sound of the winch working that made the right amount of noise to alert the man in the house who owned this particular car.

  “Hey!”

  I finished locking the car into place and rounded the back of the truck.

  I’d just opened the door and was lifting my leg inside when the man rounded the hood of the truck and slammed his hands down on the door.

  It closed right on my leg, but I didn’t let on that it hurt.

  “Can I help you?” I questioned calmly.

  If I’d responded with anything else, I knew from experience that I’d be sparking the man’s ire—even more than I already had.

  “That’s my car. Put it down.”

  I shook my head. “It may be your car, but since the note hasn’t been paid on it in over four months, the bank that you purchased the loan from is legally free to take it back. Which they’ve done.”

  “You can’t do that!” he screamed.

  And then he started to reach for his pants.

  I chose that moment to slam the door shut, wincing when the first bullet ricocheted off the bulletproof glass that Dante and I had decided to splurge on.

  It’d cost us a fucking mint to put it into five new trucks, but at this point, as I looked at the bullet that would’ve gone straight into my goddamn chest, I was grateful that we’d spent it.

  And as the next shot bounced off right around where my head would’ve been, I said a prayer.

  “Shots fired,” I heard over the radio in the truck.

  I was linked into the police ban of the county, and although we no longer had a local police department, we did have a sheriff.

  A sheriff that had bigger fish to fry most times then to come patrol the tiny town of Hostel.

  ‘Shots fired’ however, was going to get the Sheriff, as well as any law enforcement within a twenty-minute radius to head toward the shooting.

  The volunteer fire department would’ve also answered the call, but since the shooter was still firing at the truck—surely, he’d be out of bullets soon—they couldn’t come any closer until he was contained.

  But when he reached into his pocket and produced another magazine, I realized that this man would literally fire at me for hours if I continued to just sit here.

  Which was why I chose to do what I did next—leave.

  The man apparently had been anticipating that I’d do it, because the moment the truck went into gear, he threw himself at the car before it could pass.

  He yanked the car’s door that I’d had hooked up to the truck open, and launched himself inside head first.

  I looked at the ceiling and called into dispatch, using my own code that the sheriff’s department had given The ‘Hail Raisers’ as he’d dubbed us early on in Dante’s and my tenure.

  “Dispatch, this is 0224 requesting backup to 20029 Boddy Road. I have a white male trying to remove his car from my possession.”

  “10-4, 0224. Backup is on the way.”

  I rehung the microphone and stared in my rearview mirror for all of ten seconds before I pulled my phone out of my pocket and started to browse Pinterest.

  Don’t ask me why I was cruising Pinterest. Honestly, it was Hannah’s fault. I’d been a Pinterest virgin before Hannah had come into my life, and ruined me.

  While I was cruising ‘old collectible cars’ my mother called. I winced, wondering if she would call back immediately if I ignored it, and decided that yes. Yes, she fucking would.

  So I bit the bullet and answered it.

  “Hey, Ma,” I greeted her.

  A jolt had me glancing up to the rearview mirror as I watched the man try to drive his car off of my truck. With the back end suspended by the frame, and the only thing with purchase being the front tires, I had no doubt that he wouldn’t be able to go anywhere.

  But to be sure, I lifted the front end just a little bit higher, allowing only about an inch of tire to touch the pavement.

  “Hey, sugar,” my momma said. “What time can I expect you and Hannah for dinner tonight?”

  I looked at my watch and contemplated telling her no.

  I knew better, though. She’d hold dinner until midnight if she had to. Then my father would call me all pissed off because he was made to wait, and I’d never hear the end of it.

  “I don’t know…”

  “Finley and Leida are here for the weekend. I’d count it as a favor if you deigned to grace us with your presence. I already know that Hannah, the girls, and TJ will be coming.”

  I winced, remembering that Alex would be there tonight. I’d forgotten that she was coming, which instantly made me feel like shit.

  What I loved, though, was that she had no problem speaking directly to Hannah.

  They had a special relationship, and had from the very start.

  The first day that my mother had met Hannah had been the day that Hannah had come to my office to tell me that she was pregnant. It’d all been rather awkward, and to be honest, I was fairly sure that my mother fell in love with Hannah, right then and there.

  ***

  250 days ago

  “Thanks for lunch, Mom,” I murmured softly. “Are you okay?”

  My mom looked every single one of her sixty-six years, and she hadn’t used to. She was a farmer’s wife, and later a businessman’s wife. She’d always aged well, but the passing of Dante’s wife and children, as well as my sister taking her life, had taken its toll on her.

  She wasn’t the same smiling woman that she used to be, and I could understand why.

  It didn’t mean that it hurt any less to see.

  “I’m okay, baby.” She smiled. “I’m heading to see Tobias and Finley this weekend. Was there anything you wanted me to take to them?”

  I shook my head. “I sent the stuff I had for Tobias in the mail last week. He got it and sent it back to me already.”

  She nodded, her eyes taking on a faraway look as her eyes focused on Dante’s empty office door.

  “How’s Dante?”

  I didn’t have any good news for her. What Dante was, was not good. In fact, if there was one thing he was, it was a mess.

  “He’ll get there, Ma,” I soothed.

  I didn’t mention that my brother had gotten rip roaring drunk two weeks ago and fucked some random woman he’d met at the club, and then had skipped town the next day.

  Though, it wouldn’t be long before she knew.

  Especially since that same girl was the same woman who was the hostess at the club for a little over a month—that was before Dante had broken her with whatever he’d said or did. She wasn’t a gossip by any means. In fact, she was so quiet, I never would’ve expected her to go for Dante in the first place.

  She’d lived across the street from me for a little over two months before she’d shown up for a job interview. The man in charge of hiring hadn’t known the connection to me, and had taken her on with exuberance because we were so short staffed.

  It would only be later, when Dante was taking her home and showing up at my house the next day hungover as hell asking for a ride, when we realized who exactly she was.

  Regardless of what Dante had done, it was a big fucking mess. She knew that Dante was in no place to be doing what they did, and she showed that by leaving the very next day. Everyone in the entire freakin’ town had known about Dante. Everyone, including her.


  We hadn’t seen her since.

  “I hope so,” she whispered, voice shaking. “I miss them so much. It’s so hard not being able to kiss them. I miss waking them up from their nap and having baby girl ask me to bake something.”

  Baby girl was what my mother called Dante’s eldest. She was the second grandchild in the family, and since Leida, her first grandchild, didn’t live here, she’d been the most spoiled. Then came along Dante’s baby, and my mother was in love.

  From the moment Dante and his wife had returned to work after having her, my mother had watched them instead of them being taken to daycare.

  Now, my mother had time on her hands, and she used that time to think about the things that she could no longer change. Now she used most of her free time to bother me, and visit with our other brothers who lived a couple of hours east.

  “I know you do, Mom,” I grunted and stood, wrapping my arms around her. She was smaller than the last time I did this. “You need to eat more.”

  She started to laugh a watery laugh, and my belly clenched.

  “I want you to find a woman, Travis,” she whispered. “I want you…”

  A knock came at my door, and I looked up to see Tate Casey standing there. “You have a visitor.”

  I looked past Tate’s shoulder to see Hannah shifting from foot to foot nervously.

  Then, her face went pale, and she slapped a hand over her mouth.

  My body clenched as I made a move toward Hannah, but before I could so much as let my mother go, she was running toward the front door of the building.

  I let my mother go and cursed as I ran after her, coming to a stop outside just as Hannah bent over the flowerbed that my mother had insisted we put in ‘for aesthetics’ and lost her lunch.

  “Hannah…” I paused. “You okay?”

  She squatted down and placed her hands over the back of her neck. “I’m pregnant. You got me pregnant.”

  A gasp left my lips, as well as my mother’s, who I hadn’t realized had followed me out.

  “Come again?” I blinked.

  She looked at me, leaving her hands on her neck where they were, and nodded miserably. “Yep. You heard right.”

  “Oh, my God,” my mother cried, sounding happy, but trying to act like she wasn’t.

 

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