All of Me: A Confessions of the Heart Stand-Alone Novel
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All of Me
A Confessions of the Heart Stand-Alone Novel
A.L. Jackson
Contents
Also by A.L. Jackson
Prologue
1. Ian
2. Grace
3. Ian
4. Grace
5. Ian
6. Grace
7. Ian
8. Grace
9. Ian
10. Grace
11. Ian
12. Grace
13. Grace
14. Ian
15. Grace
16. Ian
17. Ian
18. Grace
19. Ian
20. Grace
21. Ian
22. Grace
23. Ian
24. Grace
25. Ian
26. Grace
27. Ian
28. Ian
29. Ian
30. Grace
31. Ian
32. Ian
33. Grace
34. Ian
35. Ian
36. Grace
37. Grace
38. Ian
39. Grace
40. Ian
41. Ian
42. Grace
43. Ian
44. Grace
45. Ian
Epilogue
Also by A.L. Jackson
About the Author
Connect with A.L. Jackson online:
Copyright © 2018 A.L. Jackson Books Inc.
First Edition
All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without prior permission of the publisher. Please protect this art form by not pirating.
A.L. Jackson
Editing by AW Editing and Susan Staudinger
Formatting by Mesquite Business Services
The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Names, characters, places, and plots are a product of the author’s imagination. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.
Print ISBN: 978-1-946420-26-8
eBook ISBN: 978-1-946420-25-1
Also by A.L. Jackson
Confessions of the Heart
More of You
All of Me
Pieces of Us - Spring 2019
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Show Me the Way
Follow Me Back
Lead Me Home
Bleeding Stars Series
A Stone in the Sea
Drowning to Breathe
Where Lightning Strikes
Wait
Stay
Stand
The Regret Series
Lost to You
Take This Regret
If Forever Comes
The Closer to You Series
Come to Me Quietly
Come to Me Softly
Come to Me Recklessly
Stand-Alone Novels
Pulled
When We Collide
Hollywood Chronicles
A collaboration with USA Today Bestselling Author, Rebecca Shea
One Wild Night
One Wild Ride
Prologue
Grace
A chilly breeze twisted through the intense blue sky.
A warning of the coming winter.
A cold, quiet whisper.
A premonition.
His voice twisted with seduction as he murmured the words close to my face. “I warned you who I was.”
Selfish.
Greedy.
Incapable of love.
The devil.
Maybe I’d been the fool who hadn’t believed him. The one who’d seen more in him. Something better than the powerful, callous man who stood in front of me right then.
I hugged my arms across my chest as if it could shield me from the brutality of his words. As if they could protect me from the truth I should have seen all along.
“No, you’re wrong. You’re so much more than that. I know you are. I’ve seen it.”
“You only saw what you wanted to see.”
“You told me you loved me. I trusted you. I trusted you with everything.”
“And look what that got you.”
A gust of wind whipped through. The spindly branches of the ancient oaks hissed and howled, sending a tumble of dead, dried leaves across the ground.
It stirred the chaos that raged inside me.
I don’t believe you.
I don’t believe you.
My spirit screamed it while my mind struggled to accept the reality. The truth that he could hurt me this way.
It ripped and tore at my insides.
Loss.
A grief unlike anything I’d ever felt.
Hope scattering like the leaves.
“How could you do this?” I forced myself to look up at his beautiful face.
Too beautiful. Too mesmerizing. Too dangerous.
“How could you, when you know what is at stake? When you know how badly I need you? I trusted you.” The last raked from my raw, aching throat.
As raw and aching as my heart.
He reached out and brushed his fingertips down the side of my face.
Tenderly.
A stark contrast to the wickedness that blazed from his soul.
Then his voice twisted with that dark, bitter hatred—hatred I was sure was completely directed at himself.
“You shouldn’t have.”
One
Ian
“Ian, my good man.” Kenneth Millstrom clapped me on the back. “How are you tonight?”
Good man.
Right.
As I shook the hand he extended, I kept myself from scoffing at the way he’d phrased his greeting.
Grin and bear it.
“Terrific, Mr. Millstrom. How are you?”
“Better than you can imagine.”
I let out a low whistle as I edged back, still shaking his hand as I took in his appearance.
“Look at you. Are you trying to make the rest of us look bad? Leave some ladies for the rest of us, why don’t you? It’s hardly fair.”
The guy was in his late fifties and stuffed into his tux. He was also the senior partner in my firm, so that meant I had my nose shoved so far up his ass I was surprised I hadn’t convinced myself that the sky had turned brown.
But a man had to do what a man had to do.
I had one singular goal. And I’d do whatever I had to do to reach it.
Kenneth chuckled. “Ahh . . . no need to worry, son. My Sally is plenty for me. I’ll leave the rest of these young things to you.”
One thing I had to say? Dude loved his wife. I didn’t get it. But whatever.
He took a sip of his champagne before he lifted his flute and gestured around the packed ballroom. It took up the entire top floor of the posh, historic hotel in Charleston, South Carolina.
It was where our annual gala was being held, the fundraiser a mecca for Charleston’s elite year after year.
“So, what do you think?” he asked.
My eyes scanned the room.
People mingled in gowns and suits and tuxes.
Voices lifted and laughter loud.
Egos bloated.
Pretension so heavy there was no air left in the glitzy room.
Sucked dry by the people parading around in their pompous best.
There they all were, acting like they actually cared about what they were raising the money for when,
really, they were only there for the sake of being seen.
I hated this bullshit.
But it didn’t really matter what I felt, did it?
I sent Kenneth my best counterfeit grin. “It’s fantastic. I couldn’t imagine a better way to spend a Saturday night. You’ve outdone yourself this year.”
“You think so?” he asked, just begging for the affirmation, chest puffing out, meaty palm clutching his flute.
“Absolutely.”
So yeah. I was laying it on thick.
But the thing was? I was right there. So close to getting what I wanted that I could actually taste it. A sweet, frantic desperation that danced on my tongue and spun through my insides. Fingers itching to finally possess the prize.
I learned at a young age that I was the sun. It was up to me to make the world gravitate around me.
If I wanted something, I reached out and took it. Made it mine. I didn’t wait around to stumble upon something good. For something to fall into my lap or for some good fortune to come my way.
I worked for it. Gave it whatever it took. What was it they said? You can’t win if you don’t play?
I played hard, and I fought harder.
Took what I needed because I couldn’t sit around relying on someone else to hand it to me.
Some people might call me an asshole. Callous. Ruthless.
Fuck that.
I called it tenacity.
I was a warrior.
A survivor.
I’d never go back to that place where I was hungry. A scared little kid dressed in tattered, dirty clothes, curled up in a ball on a filthy floor with an empty stomach and bruises littering his body.
Begging for someone . . . anyone to help.
The only person who ever had was my brother, Jace. He’d been my protector. The one to stand up and take the blows, the one to lie and steal, providing for me the only way that he could.
He taught me from the get-go that the only thing we had was each other. He and my best friend Mack were as far as my trust went and that was exactly where it ended.
Because I’d never allow myself to go back to that disgusting place of depravity and poverty and desolation.
A memory hit me faster than I could stop it.
Disgust crawled beneath the surface of my skin. I almost wanted to squeeze my eyes closed against the image. To refuse it. Forget it.
But I didn’t.
I held on to it.
Embraced it.
Let it become a weapon and a reason.
Truth was, there was no forgetting exactly how that horror had felt. I’d been seventeen when I’d stood there in that doorway, blinking into the hollow, vacant room. Death screaming back.
It was the exact moment I’d felt a light go dim inside me, and I could physically feel the darkness rushing in to take its place.
It had obliterated a hope and a love and a loyalty that I never should have felt in the first place. I’d been nothing but a stupid kid who’d clung to an idea that was ignorant and pathetic.
It was the first moment in time when I knew I would do whatever it took to make it. When I’d made an oath to myself I’d never again allow someone to hold me back or push me down.
So, there I stood.
One step away from the goal I’d set for myself that day. I’d promised myself that whatever direction I went, whatever career or profession I chose, I would land at the top of it.
I’d reach the pinnacle even if my fingers and nails were ripped to shreds and bleeding from clawing my way there.
Even if it meant pinning a fucking fake smile on my face and pretending like I wanted to be here.
Besides, it wasn’t really Kenneth’s fault that he was the bossman. He actually was a decent guy. Didn’t mean that I liked that what he said was final. That he was the one who held my ultimate success in his hands.
There was always a hierarchy.
I was almost to the top of it. I wouldn’t stop until I took his place.
Kenneth sent me a searching glance, right back to business. “How’s Bennet? Tell me you’re keeping him happy.”
Lawrence Bennet.
My guts curled with the name. Lawrence Bennet was one of the firm’s biggest clients. One I’d brought on.
He’d taken me under his wing when I was seventeen. Becoming a father figure when my life had gone to shit. Getting behind me on my quest to become who I was today.
I’d thought he was there to help me.
Thing was, the asshole had had me involved up to my nose in shady shit before I even realized he was putting me in shackles. Dragging me into a seedy world I never should have stepped into.
Over time, it’d only gotten worse, his hold cinching tighter.
He was a loose end that needed to be snipped.
Problem was, I wasn’t sure how to cut that thread without sending myself falling. Fucker had ensured that when he became my firm’s most important client.
“I can assure you Bennet is taken care of, sir. He’s my first priority.”
“That’s what I want to hear.” He lifted his drink in approval. “You keep going the direction that you are, and you’re going to do big things. Big, big things.”
That was the plan.
Kenneth downed his champagne and tipped me a knowing grin. “Guess we’d better get back to it, eh? There are asses to be kissed.”
A light chuckle rolled out. “I think I might have kissed plenty for the night.”
He quirked a playful brow, his voice only half-horrified. “Don’t tell me you’re talking about me?”
Surprise tumbled out in my laughter. “Never,” I told him, something wry in my grin.
He squeezed my shoulder, all too knowing. “You’re a sly one, aren’t you, Jacobs?”
There was a gleam to his eyes, a hint that maybe he did have an inclination of the lengths that I would go. That he knew I’d do whatever I had to do, in every and any situation, to get the result to land in my favor.
“Nothing but an open book.”
Right.
I was a fucking impenetrable safe.
A goddamn tomb.
“Ah, we all have our secrets. Main thing is knowing when they’re worth keeping.” With a parting wink, he left me with that thought to chew on.
Got the sense he was leaving me some kind of prediction. An omen. Like he knew something he shouldn’t.
Unease spun, and I blew out a frustrated breath before I turned and wound deeper into the party.
Chin lifted like I owned the place.
One day I would.
One day I would own everything.
I made a beeline for the bar that lined the back of the luxurious room. Everything was shiny and gold and gaudy, ornate tapestries hanging from the high walls supported by massive columns, the sky-high ceiling painted blue and dotted with cherubs and clouds to give the effect that you might have actually spent enough dough and bought yourself a plot in heaven.
I lifted a finger toward the bartender, who gave me a slight nod in response. If I had to be here, I was going to make the best of it.
He poured me two fingers of my favorite scotch and slid the glass across the bar. My shaking hand settled around the tumbler, relief in the sensation of the alcohol on my tongue when I lifted it to my mouth.
For the barest beat, I almost felt human. Like I was the same as every other asshole in the room. Like I hadn’t fought and clawed and cheated my way to get there.
I started to push away from the bar to go do some more of that ass-kissing I was supposed to do, when my gaze tripped.
Snagged.
Usually these events bored me to death, but my dick was suddenly very interested in what the benefit had to offer.
Good God.
All I saw was legs.
A mile of them.
Toned and thick and delicious.
Shown off by this beige gown that should be illegal with the way a slit cut all the way up to the center of a lush, creamy thigh, a sp
arkling jewel gathering the fabric of her dress to that spot.
A motherfucking beacon guiding some poor soul who’d been lost at sea.
I might not be poor or lost, but I sure as hell could use a night of saving.
I let my gaze roam, higher and higher, inch by inch, eyes devouring this girl who was nothing but ample curves and tempting flesh.
I trailed all the way up until I was taking in the profile of her face.
Angled chin and a narrow nose. The girl was nursing a bubbling glass of champagne where she sat by herself at the opposite end of the bar.
Aloof and unapproachable . . . and somehow . . . soft.
That alone made me want her.
Blonde waves tumbled down her back, so long I was pretty sure the locks touched her ass, lips pouty and plump as she brought the rim of her glass up to take a sip.
Shit, she was stunning. Like maybe she’d been carved into the elegant room. A part of the décor.
My mouth watered. It was instant, the way I was imagining running my hands over that soft skin, wrapping those legs around my waist as I pounded into her, all the wicked things I’d do to her.
Transported.
Lost for a night.
That sweet body a sanctuary.
Discomfort radiated from her in crashing waves, her spine stiff like she didn’t want to be there any more than I did.