Cocked and Loaded: A Billionaire Romance (Small Town Bad Boys Book 4)

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Cocked and Loaded: A Billionaire Romance (Small Town Bad Boys Book 4) Page 1

by Annette Fields




  This is a work of fiction. All characters and events reside solely in the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual people, alive or dead, is purely coincidental. All characters are eighteen years of age or older.

  ©2017, Annette Fields. No portion of this work can be reproduced in any way without prior written consent from the author with the exception for a fair use excerpt for review and editorial purposes.This title is for adults only. It contains explicit sex acts, adult themes, and material that some folks may find offensive. Please keep out of reach of children.

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  Also by Annette Fields

  The Small Town Bad Boy Series

  Heavy Metal Heart

  Beauty and the Bastard

  Big Bad Boss

  BIg Bad Sinner

  Table of Contents

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  Cocked and Loaded

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ELEVEN

  CHAPTER TWELVE

  CHAPTER THIRTEEN

  CHAPTER FOURTEEN

  CHAPTER FIFTEEN

  CHAPTER SIXTEEN

  CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

  CHAPTER EIGHTEEN

  CHAPTER NINETEEN

  CHAPTER TWENTY

  CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO

  CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR

  CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX

  CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN

  EPILOGUE

  Thank you!

  Cocked and Loaded

  A Billionaire Romance

  by Annette Fields

  CHAPTER ONE

  PEPPER

  “Please don’t leave me, Dad.”

  I could barely see him through my tears but I felt the dry, brittle skin over the bones in his skeletal fingers as I clung to him.

  “Heh. Suck it up, Buttercup.”

  His voice came out weak and wheezing, but somehow just as gruff as always and dripping with his dry sense of humor. I couldn’t help but crack a smile. My dad was still in there, no matter how aggressively the cancer consumed him.

  He was still the same man who dragged me out of bed at four in the morning to pick crops before the hot, valley sun burned us to a crisp. The same man who iced my sore, tender muscles from working in the field all day.

  “I’m tough on ya ‘cause I love ya, Pepps,” he always told me. “One day you’ll understand.”

  He never put up with the shit I gave him as a rebellious teenager and I only saw him cry once when my mother left us.

  And now I was about to lose him too.

  He was as comfortable as he could be in hospice care. The doctors and nurses expected this to be my last day with him.

  His fingers squeezed around mine with the little strength he had left.

  “You don’t need my old ass dragging you down anymore, Pepps,” he said weakly. “You’ll be alright.”

  “No, I won’t,” I choked. “I still need you. I don’t know what the hell I’m doing.”

  “Yes, you fuckin’ do. You’re a goddamn Sage and I sure as fuck raised you right. You’re smarter than me and stronger than your mother ever was.”

  “But Dad, I--”

  “Listen, Pepper.” He placed both of his thin hands on top of mine. “That farm is our family legacy. That soil is in our blood. The food we grow sustained us for four generations. It’s part of us. Never sell it. Pass it onto your children. Promise me, Pepps.”

  I got my last good look at my father-- his pale, weak hands that were once strong as talons and bronzed by the sun, and the dark, sharp eyes that never missed a single detail.

  “I promise, Dad,” I whispered, never looking away from those eyes that mirrored mine, that still saw everything.

  “Good.” His eyelids began to flutter closed. “If you do, I’ll haunt your ungrateful ass.”

  I brought his hands to my lips and pressed them to the wriggling blue veins there as the strong, unbreakable Thomas Sage slipped away from me. My eyes squeezed shut but the tears still escaped.

  “I love you too, Dad.”

  When I opened my eyes again they were dry.

  And staring at my bedroom ceiling.

  Dad passed away a year ago but my dreams made it feel as vivid as if it just happened. I didn’t just miss him. Just like I told him, I still needed him.

  With a weary sigh, I swung my legs off the bed and heard the telltale creak as my feet hit one of the many loose floorboards. It was getting ridiculous how many of them needed to be fixed. Honestly, the whole floor probably needed to be ripped up in this ancient house.

  But with just me running Sage Organic Produce Farm, I had neither the time nor the funds.

  As soon as the creak reverberated throughout the house, it was followed by an excited clicking and panting noise quickly approaching my bedroom.

  “Morning Bon-bon,” I said and stuck my hand out to my pit bull, Bonny when her big, square head came into view at my doorway.

  A floorboard actually moved under her feet as she approached me, nails clicking, tail wagging, and a big goofy smile on her face.

  “You wanna learn how to fix the floors?” I asked her as I scratched her ears. “Or package and sell the crops while I learn to fix them?”

  She just rested her chin on my knee and stared up at me adoringly. Bonny looked mean but she was all bark and no bite. Dad grumbled that she was a goddamn bunny rabbit in the body of a bulldog, but that didn’t stop him from cuddling with her on the couch.

  I swore she took losing him just as hard as I did but she was there for me regardless.

  She watched me curiously as I stretched and yawned. My back was horribly stiff from picking produce all week and I still had lots more to do before the Cloverville Farmer’s Market tomorrow.

  Yeah, the floorboards would have to wait.

  Watching my step, I rose from the bed and made my way into the kitchen, Bonny following loyally at my side.

  I bumbled through the cabinets and drawers on autopilot, still not fully awake. It took a good five minutes for me to realize the coffee pot wasn’t heating up.

  “Are you fuckin’ kidding me?” I muttered, yanking the cord out of the socket and stabbing into the one directly below. “This one, too?”

  When the machine still failed to come to life, I mumbled a string of curses as I yanked the cord out again. Taking the entire coffee maker precariously into my arms, I began the hunt for the nearest functioning electrical outlet.

  All of the ones in the kitchen stopped working, so I carried the damn thing into the hallway bathroom and plugged it in next to my hair dryer.

  The light came out and my machine started percolating away happily.

  I sighed in relief, which didn’t last long. Bonny chose that time to start barking her head off at something outside.

  “Calm your ass down, dog,” I muttered as I unlocked the front door, dodging around her jumping and scratching. “You should know by now you’ll never catch that damn squirrel.”

  She raced out the front door at high speed like a damn greyhound. I didn’t bother to look for the object of her chase. It was still too early to enjoy the Bonny show a
nd I hadn’t had my coffee yet.

  I just poured my first cup when I heard her nails clicking on the floor outside of the bathroom, followed by a high-pitched whine.

  “Gave up already, Bon-bon?” I asked with a hint of amusement. “That’s not like you.”

  She waited until I made eye contact with her, then promptly turned around to face the front door again.

  And she growled.

  I nearly dropped my coffee. In the five years we had her, I never heard that sound from her before. It was low, threatening and ready to kill.

  “What has gotten into you?” I wondered, creeping toward the front door slowly.

  She walked forward too with her head low and her muzzle pointing straight forward, guarding me against whatever threat she sensed outside.

  I put my coffee cup down on the kitchen counter and reached for my shotgun next to the door. With a quick flick of my thumb, I took the safety off and checked to make sure it was loaded. When I spotted the two shells inside, I snapped the barrel shut and cocked it.

  I gave Bonny a reassuring scratch on the head and stepped out onto the porch, feeling more confident with the gun at my side but still uneasy. She’d never even growled like that at coyotes that wandered through our property.

  At first, nothing seemed amiss as I scanned the landscape. Our long driveway led out to the main road which would lead straight into downtown Cloverville if you followed it all the way. On either side of the driveway flanked our hop vines, which we supplied to small breweries all across California for their beer.

  Dad was smart to plant the hops right in front of the house. They looked beautiful growing on intricate trellises and provided lots of shade over the front porch.

  Beyond the hops were our hot peppers, heirloom tomatoes, squash, watermelons, and herbs. All of our fruit trees stretched out for another ten acres behind the house. And hidden between the orchards was a greenhouse where I grew my own projects after Dad got sick.

  I stepped out cautiously past the row of hop vines to better survey our whole property. Bonny, loyally at my side, pointed her muzzle directly to my left and let out that low, threatening growl again.

  With my hand on her head, I looked in the direction she pointed and finally saw the intruder she was protecting me from.

  A white pickup truck drove slowly along the dirt road that circled around the perimeter of our farm and I exhaled a breath of relief.

  “Silly girl,” I told Bonny as I scratched her ears. “That’s gotta be the seasonal workers to help with the harvest. Nice to know they aren’t flakes this time.”

  But Bonny didn’t relax. She followed the truck with her nose and her eyes, hackles raised and on high alert.

  The truck took a turn, taking the narrow dirt road between the summer squash patch and the apple orchard. I narrowed my eyes, trying to make out the sign on the door. The driver came dangerously close to running over the squash plants, which sent my blood boiling. Even seasonal farmhands should know better than to drive so close to the produce.

  Another turn and I got a clear look at the logo on the truck door.

  R. Sells Construction, Inc.? What the fuck is a construction company doing here?

  I then realized the truck was heading through the orchards. Away from me.

  And straight toward my greenhouse.

  “Fuck!” I snapped and took off running toward the truck.

  Questions and confusion floated through my mind but not as loudly as the need to get this trespasser off my property. With my growling pit bull running along my left side and my shotgun at my right, I felt confident we could scare these punks away.

  The truck lumbered slowly along the dirt roads through the farm, wisely so with all the rocks and potholes in the way, so Bonny and I were able to catch up quickly.

  To my relief, the truck took a sharp turn to the right before reaching the greenhouse. We followed the driver past the last row of apple trees and what I saw made my heart stop.

  Construction equipment.

  Bulldozers, excavators and a construction crew looking like they were getting ready for a work day.

  On my fucking farm.

  “Excuse me, but what the fuck is going on?” I asked the pickup truck driver who just got out with a tray of coffee from Cloverville Roasters.

  “Mornin’ to you too, missy,” he replied in an amused tone. “What’s it look like to you?”

  “It looks like you’re fucking trespassing onto my farm,” I shot back. Bonny punctuated my statement with a low growl.

  “Yeah, sorry about driving through. I just wanted to take a shorter way to work,” he answered sheepishly.

  I blinked.

  “Okay. What about all this?” I gestured out in front of me to all the equipment coming right up to my trees, and the crew, all of which were now staring at me.

  “Um, it’s our work site, lady.”

  “Like hell it is!” I shot back, my face growing hot and my blood pressure rising. “This is still my property!”

  “Afraid not, miss,” he answered smugly. “We’ve got all our permits and clearance from the city. This land has been cleared for development.”

  “That can’t be true,” I said through gritted teeth. “My property line extends out to the base of the Solano Hills. I have it clearly laid out in our deed.”

  “Come back with your lawyer then,” he said, turning away flippantly to hand out coffees. “And maybe when you’re not on your period, pumpkin.”

  That got a guffaw of laughter from the rest of the construction crew like it was the funniest thing they ever heard.

  I just stood there, humiliated and pissed off, incredulous that people could act this way. Any one of them could walk two feet to one of my apple trees and just pluck the fruit for themselves.

  My mind suddenly flashed to a memory with my dad. I was seven years old and crying because some older boys shoved me to the ground and I skinned my knee.

  “Don’t ever be afraid to defend yourself, Pepps,” Dad told me as he slapped a Barbie band-aid onto my scrape. “You’re a Sage. You’ve got bigger balls than any of those pussy motherfuckers that like to push girls around.”

  Every expression on the crew members’ faces turned from laughter to horror as I raised my shotgun in the air.

  And pulled the trigger.

  CHAPTER TWO

  REAGAN

  I watched as the sun rose over the Golden Gate Bridge, lighting up the hill sides and chasing away the dawn. I knew I chose this office for a reason.

  The crystal-clear floor to ceiling windows made me feel like I could step out and float on the puffy fog rolling out. I paid a pretty penny for this view and it was worth every cent.

  Beep!

  The intercom on my massive mahogany desk chimed with a message, interrupting my morning tranquility.

  I set my espresso down with a sigh. It was too damn early to answer the demands of the world but I didn't reach this position and status by ignoring problems.

  I hit the button to answer the line to my secretary just outside my office.

  "Yes, Justine?"

  "You have a call from the manager at the Cloverville site," her voice was small, high-pitched and nervous. "He said there's an important issue with one of the locals."

  What the fuck, Jose. You're the best in the business. Why are you bothering me with this shit?

  "Put him through," I told her.

  "Yes, sir," she squeaked.

  I sighed again as I sat down and pinched the bridge of my nose while I waited for her to transfer the call.

  I know what you're wondering and yes, I've fucked my secretary. I didn't intend to become one of those rich assholes and yet here I am.

  It wasn't her fault. I came onto her after too much Scotch at a company party after a long dry spell. She didn't deserve to lose her job because of my fuck-up.

  But ever since then she acts like she's afraid of me, like she's worried I'm going to blackmail her or some shit. I understand her f
ear but that would never happen. Screwing over employees was a one-way ticket back to the slums of Oakland and I had no intention of trading my view of the bay for one of a piss-stained alley.

  My desk phone rang and I answered it immediately.

  "What's going on, Jose?"

  "Sells, this job site is right next to a goddamn nutcase. She's shooting a fucking gun off into the air and saying we're on her property!"

  "Whoa, what?"

  I sat up abruptly in my seat. It had to be a prank. You never know with construction workers but Jose sounded scared out of his mind.

  "Is the crew in danger? Did you call the police?"

  "No one's hurt, she's just waving the thing in the air and yelling at us to leave. We did call but the cop on the phone just laughed and told us not to fuck with the Sage family. What the fuck is this place, Sells? This town is fuckin' weird."

  I heard a female voice yelling in the background along with a dog barking. She said something like, "Is that your boss on the phone? Let me talk to him!"

  "She wants to talk to you," Jose confirmed in my ear.

  "Talking on the phone won't get anywhere with someone like this," I said, rising from my seat. "I'll be there in a half hour."

  I hung up the phone and immediately paged Justine.

  “Please tell Kenny to prepare the helicopter. I’m going to the Cloverville work site.”

  “Yes, Mr. Sells,” she said meekly.

  I polished off my espresso and took a deep breath to steel myself before exiting my office. Justine sat just outside my door at her own desk, typing away at her keyboard and not looking up.

  “Hey listen, Justine,” I said, hoping I didn’t sound like a complete asshole.

  The typing stopped and she looked up just slightly over her thick-framed glasses.

  “If working here makes you uncomfortable after what happened, I understand,” I began. “You can move to another department if you’d like with no decrease in pay.”

 

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