Intercepted by Love: Part Five: A Football Romance (The Quarterback's Heart Book 5)

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Intercepted by Love: Part Five: A Football Romance (The Quarterback's Heart Book 5) Page 7

by Ayala, Rachelle


  Moonlight streamed through the window which was cracked and jagged. Cade scooted up onto the window ledge and rubbed the cloth bands over the broken glass. He missed a few times, stabbing himself, but once he weakened the cloth, he flexed his muscles and tore through the rest of it, freeing his hands.

  Untying his feet was easy. Cade checked the rest of the small house and found it empty. The drug packets on the bookshelf were gone as were the balloons. Not wanting to waste any more time, he locked up the house and walked back to his car.

  He checked his cell phone and texted Andie. Coming back now. She wasn’t here but I ran into Dick. Talk later.

  Traffic was heavy, so he tossed another text to Andie. Hope everything’s packed. We don’t have much time to make the flight.

  She was probably busy getting ready for the trip. He was going to miss her, but her father needed her more. Hopefully his condition wasn’t too serious.

  Cade fidgeted through bumper-to-bumper traffic. An hour later, he finally tore onto his street and jammed onto his driveway, almost crashing into a shiny Prius sitting in front of his door.

  The lights were on inside, and Gollie and Red barked from the backyard. Cade opened the door and rushed in.

  “Andie? Are you ready?”

  “Oh, there you are,” Roxanne said, stepping up from the sunken living room.

  Behind her, Declan stretched. “Took you long enough.”

  “What are you two doing here? Where’s Andie and Bret?”

  “Bret’s sleeping in your room,” Rox said, with a strangely triumphant smile on her face. “Come, let me show you something.”

  Woodenly, he followed Roxanne into the kitchen. She swiped a note from the refrigerator. “We got here right as she was leaving.”

  “Leaving? She caught an earlier flight?”

  “You could say that.” Roxanne patted his arm. “You might want to take a seat, here.”

  She pulled a chair from the table, but he shoved it aside. The note spelled it out. Andie wanted to do her own thing. She hadn’t wanted his help. He’d blown it by overruling her and insisting on making the trip with her.

  “Damn.” He set the note on the counter. “I didn’t want her to fly home by herself, especially since her father took a turn for the worse and she’s recovering from the concussion.”

  “Oh, I wouldn’t worry about her. She wasn’t alone.”

  “Wasn’t alone, what do you mean?” Cade’s brain felt like mush, like time had ebbed to slow motion.

  “She took off with some big, hunky guy.”

  “I don’t believe you.” Cade exited the kitchen, running into Declan. “What are you doing here?”

  “Watching Bret for you.” The actor shrugged, still speaking through gritted teeth. “What’s the matter, you lost Andie?”

  “Shut it.” He tore into his bedroom and checked the bassinet. At least Bret was safely snoring his cute baby breaths. “Why’d she leave? Who was the guy?”

  “Don’t know.” Declan stood at the doorway with his hands in his pockets. “If we’d known she wasn’t supposed to leave with him, we could have called the cops or taken a picture.”

  “She was kissing him,” Roxanne added. “Sure looked like she wanted to skedaddle with him. Luckily, she left the baby. Guess the little bird has flown the coop.”

  “Rox, we should be leaving.” Declan guided her out of Cade’s room.

  “Tootiloo,” her voice shrilled. “Call me anytime you need someone to watch our darling boy.”

  “Wait.” Cade stepped after her. “I need a few answers.”

  She shrugged exaggeratedly. “I swear, I was just as surprised as you when Andie took off. She gave me no indication whatsoever. I mean, I know she lost her memory and all that, but oh my, I’d never imagined she had such a handsome lover boy. Tall, dark, and Latin.”

  “That’s not what I wanted to ask.” Cade could barely hold his anger in check. “I need to know something personal. It might be better if Declan were to step out.”

  “Whatever you want to say to me, you can say in front of him. I’ve nothing to hide.”

  “Fine, then. How many times did I sleep with you, and would it surprise you that Bret is my son?”

  “Huh, what?” She opened her mouth, gasping. “Is that some sort of trick question?”

  “Not really, Rox. Is it possible that I fathered Bret?”

  “Well, you’re the legal father.”

  “No, that I’m his biological father. My sperm. Your egg. That kind of father.”

  Her eyes drilled into him and she sneered. “Stop trying to trick me. How would I know?”

  “It’s really quite simple, Rox. You admit to sleeping with me New Year’s Eve. What about Halloween, or the weeks after? Did we sleep together then?”

  “No, we never. You were dogging those beauty pageant contestants, the plus sized older women, if I recall.”

  Behind her, Declan laughed through his teeth, a hissing sound that made him want to knock the rest of his teeth out.

  “So, you’re one hundred percent certain Bret is Dick’s baby?” Cade asked to clarify.

  “I didn’t say that.” Roxanne tossed her hair over her shoulder. “He’s whoever your mom says he is.”

  Chapter Eleven

  If Hollywood Boulevard was filled with sights and sounds, Las Vegas Boulevard beat it by a thousandfold. Andie’s head spun as Owen drove her up and down the street, pointing out landmarks from a fake Eiffel tower to a fake Sphinx, a fake Statue of Liberty and other cultural icons. He’d wanted to go on a thrill ride at the Stratosphere, but she had to turn him down. Her stomach couldn’t handle anything stronger than weak tea and biscuits. The way he drove the land yacht didn’t help either.

  “I’m not feeling that well,” she finally said after he pointed out the Miracle Mile and Planet Hollywood. “Can we find a drugstore?”

  “We don’t need to. Our handlers say they will acquire everything we need. Was something missing from the kit?”

  How was she going to tell Cade’s lawyer that she could be pregnant?

  “I’m not sure I can go through with this.” She held her head in her hands. “I haven’t been able to sleep, and I feel like I’m going to screw up.”

  “Hey, jitters. It happens to all of us. Do you really want to pull out?”

  “Depends,” Andie said. “That’s why I need a drugstore.”

  “Okay, let’s go into one of the malls. They have them all over the place. You want to shop while we’re at it?”

  “Not really. I still have to review the rules of roulette.”

  “It’s really simple,” Owen explained. “All you have to do is place a chip on red for the home team and black for the visiting, then another one on the number of the point spread. Someone in the casino will watch you and put the bet in for whoever you’re working for. You do it however many bets your mark is making. It doesn’t matter if you win or lose your chips, so there’s no need to worry about the odds.”

  “If it’s so easy, why am I doing this?”

  “Because they need to distance the betting on the football game from the payoff. No one can connect the two, and most people won’t suspect you of having any interest in a football game. Also, a pretty woman’s a great distraction for all the other people around the high rollers table.”

  “Pretty sexist, if you ask me.” Andie huffed. “I’d think it would be better for an unnoticeable guy to make the bets.”

  “Not really. Casinos are leery of nerds with pocket protectors. Try and relax.” Owen pulled the Town Car up to a valet stop and handed him the keys.

  They strolled around the mall, hand in hand, as if they were a vacationing couple. Andie located a drug store and asked Owen to wait for her out front. She didn’t want word getting back to anyone about her possible pregnancy, but at the same time, Cade had a right to know. Maybe it would lessen his anger at her for supposedly ditching him and running off with George.

  Fortunately, the drugstore had a
bathroom in the back. She paid for the pregnancy test stick and an activated prepaid cell phone and shut herself in one of those single person bathrooms. Cade had to know the truth. She could only imagine what lies Roxanne had told him, but then, even if she’d told the truth, he would still be hurt.

  She followed the instructions on the pregnancy test, then plugged the prepaid phone charger into the wall socket. She closed her eyes and breathed, trying to steady her nerves and chase the jitters away.

  She shouldn’t stare at the test indicator, but she couldn’t help it. Gradually, the plus sign appeared, dark and purple along with the control line. Pregnant.

  Wow. She was going to have a baby with Cade! Andie took a deep breath and bounced on her toes. She hugged herself and exhaled. This should be a dream come true, except all was not right. By now, Cade could have slammed his heart shut against her.

  With fumbling fingers, she powered up the prepaid cell phone. It had a signal. What should she say? How should she say it?

  * * *

  Cade ran himself ragged going first to the police station, then back home, then out again to the rehab facility. Despite Roxanne’s razzing on him and Andie, she was still Bret’s mother, so he’d allowed her to take Bret to the apartment she was living in with Declan.

  Sitting in the parking lot of the rehab facility, he checked his cell again. Something strange was going on. Andie had sent him text messages. The first one said she was getting on an airplane. Another one said she was on a layover in Buffalo, but she had not replied to any of the messages he sent, which was pissing him off. Had she really left with this mysterious man or was Roxanne pranking him?

  Meanwhile, the police had no clue where his mother was and in any case, they didn’t believe there had been foul play. The banks his mother had accounts at refused to let him know the status of her account, and he’d stupidly forgotten to copy down the account numbers so he could have called the automated phone system.

  Cade called his lawyer. Maybe Owen could somehow talk to the banks for him. His assistant answered the phone.

  After Cade explained what he wanted, she said, “I’ll relay the message, but Mr. Williams is out of town with a client. He should be back on Monday.”

  Monday? That would be too late. Every minute he missed finding his mother was another minute that allowed Dick to locate her and shake her down. Face it. As soon as she gave the password, she’d be worthless and expendable.

  He got out of his car and paced through the lobby of the rehab facility. There had to be a clue somewhere. The receptionist was understanding, but unconcerned.

  “Can I please check her room? Maybe she left a note,” Cade said.

  “Sure, I’ll have security let you in.” She picked up the phone.

  Cade followed the guard to his mother’s room.

  The guard unlocked her door. “Everything seems to be in order here. We found no more dope.”

  “That’s good, although if she comes back, I’d like to change rooms. My mom’s pretty ingenious with ways of hiding stuff.”

  “They all are,” the man said. “Well, have at it.”

  Sure. Cade scanned the surfaces of the neat room. Everything was spare and spartan to lessen the possibility of hiding places for drugs. He flipped through a book she had left face down on her pillow, something called Broken Build which looked like suspense and danger with a hot chick on the cover. No slips of paper fell out. He opened the drawers of her night table and checked underneath the surfaces and between the mattresses. He went through her clothes in the dresser and found nothing out of the ordinary. The top drawer had a few maps and hotel bills, tourist pamphlets. Rules for common casino games slipped out of a guidebook for Las Vegas. Strange. His mother had been a card shark in her youth, even spent time dealing blackjack. Why would she need rules?

  His skin crawled at the instructions scribbled on the back of one of the pamphlets. Home team: red. Away: black. One chip on red or black. Another on point spread or range of spreads. Bet zero to erase last bet.

  What the hell? The handwriting seemed familiar. Cade folded the pamphlet and put it in his pocket. Where was his sister arrested? Some casino somewhere. They’d accused her of stealing chips, then pinned the betting on her. Ronaldo had followed that trial and been engrossed in the testimony.

  Cade called his friend. “Hey, you free for a bit? I need to run something by you. Can I meet you somewhere?”

  “Sure, go ahead,” Ronaldo said. “I’m not in town. What’s on your mind?”

  “Remember you were following Joanie’s trial and all the testimony? You remember which casino game she was playing? How’d they nail her on the betting scheme?”

  “Oh, they never did. She plea bargained. She was caught in a hotel room with beaucoup amount of high value chips. One of the dealers accused her of betting against the Flash and she denied it. Of course the media was all over it and Roxanne was spreading rumors. In the end, they couldn’t prove how she’d gotten the exact spread in.”

  “I think I know, and I might know who was behind it.”

  “Uh, really?” Ronaldo’s voice was so sharp, it drew a welt on his ear.

  “Forget I said anything. Talk later.”

  Cade hung up as quickly as he could. That was dumb. He should have only pumped information out of his friend, not let on that he knew anything, especially if his mother was involved.

  Chapter Twelve

  “Andie, you okay in there?” Owen knocked on the door of the bathroom. “We have to get going. Natasha’s waiting for us at the you know where.”

  “Another minute, ho-on-ney.” Andie made sure to drag her accent out in a Midwestern way in case anyone was listening. She tossed the pregnancy test into the trash bin and stuffed the phone and its charger into her purse before exiting the restroom. Too bad she hadn’t gotten enough charge to send text messages.

  “You feeling any better?” Owen laid a concerned hand on the back of her neck.

  “It was just gas.” Andie patted her tummy. “Much better now.”

  “Great, you’re going to get your cosmetic treatment. It’s really cool, you’ll see.”

  Andie really needed to put the brakes on this. Owen acted like they were playing spies and secret agents in a James Bond movie. While they were supposedly sightseeing, he’d been playing with his spy camera GPS locator watch and checking the readings on his smartphone.

  Which was stupid. If this were really James Bond, they’d have secret weapons that could drill holes in craniums or shoot a pin sized poisonous dart from a hundred feet. Instead, they had to rely on unknown agents to protect them, and trust they were tailing them without being seen.

  “This job might be too dangerous,” Andie said. “I have to think about my family.”

  “Which is exactly why you have to bust the big guys. They took Cade’s mother and threatened Bret. How do you know they won’t go after your mother or father?”

  “You really think so?” Andie fanned her face and stopped in her tracks. “How would they connect my parents?”

  “Your mother stayed with you a few weeks, right? I’m sure they might have seen her around.” Owen led her to the valet car park pavilion. He handed the valet his ticket. “Anyway, you think about it. We’re so close, I can feel it. Besides, we need to clear Cade’s name once and for all.”

  “True, and Cade’s not even playing this weekend, so if something goes down, it’ll prove he’s innocent.” Andie’s chest was tight with the pitter-patter of her heart threatening to escape.

  “You should see what Natasha has for you.” Owen helped Andie into the car and tipped the valet. He walked around the front and strapped himself in. “It’s in one of those super secret federal buildings, outside of the city, of course.”

  “Okay, sure, I’m game.” Andie shut her eyes. It would be over soon, and she didn’t come this far just to chicken out. Owen had her back. He’d take pictures of any people who spoke to her and also trail her when she was invited to the private
roulette table. He was also good at causing distractions by dropping drinks or bumping into people or stepping on their feet in case she need to make a quick getaway.

  “Good, you get some rest while I drive.” Owen turned on the satellite radio and drove down the road to the jaunty down-home tunes of a Cajun zydeco station. “I’m looking for some crawdads and hushpuppies for dinner. You up for that?”

  “Yes, I’ll try anything once.” She couldn’t help smiling. The tunes were upbeat and bouncing, and the fiddle and accordion made her feel light and free. “We make a good team, don’t we?”

  “Oh, yeah, you ought to consider working for the FBI. You get all the perks of being an actress without the paparazzi.” He bobbed and swayed to the music as they exited the city proper and drove by rows and rows of warehouses.

  * * *

  Cade went home and dug through his kitchen, finding the phone number Andie’s mother had left for him.

  By his estimation, Andie should have arrived at Itasca’s tiny county airport already. For whatever reason, she must have listened to his voicemail and decided to ignore him.

  He deserved an explanation, especially having this mysterious George take her to the airport, and if Roxanne could be believed, kissing her. Andie must have known how worried he was about his mother and how much stress he was under. Just because she was mad at him for intruding into her family, didn’t mean she should blow him off with no news and the kissing display.

  He entered the phone number for her parents’ house and her mother picked it up.

  “Hi, Pam, this is Cade. I was wondering how Mr. Wales is doing.”

  “Oh, how thoughtful of you to call. James is doing better, driving me nuts with his speaking machine,” Pam said in a breezy tone. “By the way, we haven’t heard back on whether Andie was going to come home this week or postpone it again.”

 

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