26
Driving up to the Connagher ranch was like stepping back in time. Victor parked his Corvette beneath the mighty maple he’d planted with Daddy and his younger brother. Mama loved all sorts of plants, but especially roses. They’d dug so many holes over the years they’d begun to joke they’d run out of acreage, which was hardly a possibility with Daddy’s thousand-acre spread.
He’d built the house with his own two hands, determined to make his own way and provide for the woman he loved who could have purchased the finest mansion in Dallas. A busted-up cowboy who’d ridden his first bronc before he could read, Tyrell Connagher had been a man of few words, hard hands and a heart as big as Texas itself.
Virginia Connagher waited on the wraparound porch as though she’d known her son was coming home, even though he hadn’t made the hour drive up from Dallas in months. She wore the same thing she always did; riding jodhpurs, English riding boots and a spotless white shirt, even though her hands and knees were dirty from digging in her garden. Her black hair was sprinkled with a bit more gray, her face lined with a few more wrinkles, but her eyes still snapped with the fiery spirit that had captured Tyrell Connagher’s heart forty years ago.
“Hi, Mama.”
“Son.” She looked him up and down and he couldn’t help but straighten his shoulders and widen his stance. He braced for her to begin questioning him, but instead, she smiled. “Come on down to the stables and see the new foals.”
Relieved, although he tried not to show it, Victor walked with her down the red-dirt road to the long horse barns behind the house. Proudly, she showed off the new stud she’d shipped in from Ireland and the yearlings in the paddock, and bit by bit, he managed to relax. The smells of sweet hay, feed and horse were as familiar to him as the two-story farmhouse where he’d grown up. He’d worked with Mama in the show ring and Daddy in the fields, rounding up the cattle and shipping them to market. He’d ridden every inch of their acreage and spent hours with Conn down at the creek fishing and swimming.
Standing at the fence and watching a sleek bay mare with her spindle-legged foal, he felt the last stone of guilt fall away. Here, he knew exactly who he was. He was the Victor, the oldest Connagher son, football champion and proud of his hard-working parents. Maybe he could convince Shiloh to drive out here with him. If she saw him here, the real Victor, then maybe…
“I saw your show last night,” Mama said, her voice too careful for him to tell what she’d really thought about it.
He propped a boot up on the bottom rail but didn’t turn to look at her. “What’d you think?”
“I was wishing your Daddy could watch it with me so we could recreate a few of those challenges ourselves.”
Victor practically choked on his tongue.
Mama chuckled at the look on his face. “Surely you wondered where you got such an inclination. Did you think I’d be horrified at the thought of my boy with a crop in his hand?”
“Yeah, I did,” he admitted sheepishly. “I guess I should have known better when Conn called me a few years ago for help.”
Nodding, Mama leaned against the fence and turned that steely blue gaze on him. “He’s not as hard as you. He never was.”
“Not as mean, neither.”
“Oh, Victor, is that what you think? That you’re mean?”
He ground his teeth and averted his gaze. I’m one mean sonofabitch, Mama. I like to hurt people. Especially the woman I love.
“I suppose you think I’m mean, then.”
That made him jerk his gaze back to hers. Just a few inches over five feet tall, she possessed the kind of quiet, commanding presence that made people snap to attention whenever she walked into a room. No one would claim she was a ravishing beauty, but once someone met Virginia Connagher, it was hard to take their eyes off her.
Reluctantly, he had to admit it was the same kind of power he’d always had. People listened to him. He never had to raise his voice, and if he did, he scared the shit out of people. He’d always assumed he’d inherited that top-dog attitude from Daddy.
Thinking back over his childhood, he tried to remember a time when Mama had ever overruled Daddy. They’d always worked like a team, smooth and well-oiled. Daddy wasn’t a big talker, but he’d always handled the discipline. A look from him could strike terror into the most recalcitrant boy’s heart, so he’d never gotten into much trouble beyond the normal boyhood scrapes. They’d both been there for him, through heartache and disappointments, like when he’d blown his knee and kissed his future goodbye.
They’d seen him at the lowest point of his life. His dreams turned to shame, his love lost, his victor’s heart broken by the biggest loss in his life.
His gaze fell on the old barn in the distance. Worn gray wood still stood, lost and forgotten amidst the shiny redwood and white fences of the newer horse barns. When his last hope of returning as a pro-quality quarterback had died, he’d retreated to that old barn, too ashamed to come home and face Daddy. Too heartbroken to risk his pity.
“As soon as I noticed my old crop was missing from the barn, I should have had a talk with you.” Mama’s voice was as gentle as the hand she dropped onto his forearm braced on the fence. “But you’d been through so much already, and you didn’t ask any questions. I watched, I waited, and you seemed to move on with your life. When Conn went to you for help, I thought you were settled and comfortable with your needs, but maybe I was wrong. Maybe I should have talked more openly with you.”
“This isn’t the kind of thing a man wants to discuss with his mother.”
She laughed again, shaking her head. “You could have asked your Daddy, but he could have only helped you understand the other side.”
That made him whip his head back to her face. “Daddy was a submissive?”
She snorted. “There wasn’t a submissive bone in your Daddy’s body. He never wanted to be conquered or tied up. He wasn’t into that kind of game and neither was I.”
Dreading her answer, Victor asked, “What were you into?”
“Pain,” she answered simply. “I used to joke that a bronc rider would have to be a masochist to get back on after getting trampled a few times.”
Victor tried to think of something to say, but he couldn’t. He couldn’t imagine his weathered father submitting to the sting of a lash, let alone asking for it. The man had worked from sunup to sundown every day of his life, raised three God-fearing respectful children and died loving only one woman his entire life. Victor had always thought him the strongest man in the world, fearless on a horse, even the wildest, rawest green broke mare. He just couldn’t imagine the same man asking someone—a woman, his wife, no less—to whip him.
“Do you think I liked knowing that I yearned to hurt your Daddy?” Mama asked sharply, her fingers tightening on his arm. For a woman, she had a fearsome grip. He’d always assumed her strength came from a lifetime of training show horses, but now he wasn’t so sure. “Do you think it made him feel like a man in our day and age? To lock the door of our bedroom, strip off his shirt, grip the bedpost and ask me to whip him within an inch of my life? I had to, son. He had to. The need was there, eating away at him constantly. He needed the pain as much as I needed to give it.”
She turned away, but not before Victor saw the sheen of tears in her eyes. “He said once that he wished I were a man so my arm didn’t give out quite so quickly. He’d meant it as a joke, but it hurt, son. He could have taken much more than I could ever give him. For years, I worked out with the whip and crop, training my arms and body to make sure I met his need to the best of my ability. So don’t you look down on yourself, Victor Connagher, or you’re looking down on me and his memory.”
Victor hung his head. “I don’t want to hurt anyone, least of all someone I love.”
“The young lady on the show?” He nodded, so Mama asked, “When do I get to meet her?”
“Maybe never. She left me.”
“I saw the way she looked at you, son. Even on TV, I co
uld see that woman would give her heart and soul just to see you smile. So why would she leave you?”
“She needs more than I can give.”
“Can, or will?”
He growled deep in his throat and jerked his hair tighter, but the pain didn’t help. Not this time. Nothing would east the raw, aching need burning in his gut. Nothing but Shiloh.
“It’s got to be difficult for a woman to find the right man when she needs to be hurt. Women in our society have fought tooth and nail to get to the place where they can demand what they want in bed, but pain is a different beast all together. It’s not politically correct for a woman to play the submissive, but it’s somehow even more horrible if she needs pain too. If someone had dared hurt Ty in a way he wasn’t interested in, he would’ve plowed his fist into the bastard’s face. What’s your woman supposed to do, son? Walk up to a stranger and ask him to hurt her? How’s she going to be able to get him to stop when she’s had enough?”
Rage exploded in Victor at the thought of another man laying a hand on Shiloh. He wanted to hold her, love her, and yes, hurt her. Exactly the way she needed it.
“If she needs to be hurt, then it’s better done by someone who loves and cares for her well-being than an arrogant fool with a whip who doesn’t give a damn about anything but putting on a show. Do you love her?”
Victor clenched his jaws and nodded. God, yes, he loved her. He hadn’t been able to sleep last night, tormenting himself with the memory of the pleasure she’d given him, mixed with the guilt of the cut on her back. He’d lain there all night, hating himself but rock hard and aching with the need to do it all over again. All I could think about was how fucking good it’d felt to hurt her.
“Give it up, then.” At the flat, cold tone of Mama’s voice, he jerked his gaze up to search her stern face. “If you hate that crop so much, then leave it here and go back to her without it.”
His right hand flexed and clenched, aching to wrap around the leathered hilt. Could he give up the crop he’d carried all these years? Then what would he do in the dark hours of the night when need hammered inside his skull and vicious claws shredded at his control? When he couldn’t bear it any longer? If he didn’t have the crop to satisfy those urges…
Stunned, he realized that even without the crop he’d still have this need to hurt and ravage and punish. He’d always be on the cutting edge of pain, whether he wanted to admit it or not, whether he abandoned the crop here at the ranch, hid it in a drawer, or left it hanging in his closet so he could order his submissive—Shiloh, the only submissive for him—to fetch it and prepare for punishment.
Which she needs as much as I need to give.
“You can’t deny this side of you, son. You’re only lying to yourself.” Mama reached out and gripped his upper arms, leaning closer so she could stare up into his eyes. He might be a foot taller, but she made him feel like a little boy again. “We didn’t raise you to be a liar or a quitter. You might have lost a game, but everything’s on the line now. This is the biggest game of your life. You’ve searched your whole life for a woman who could love you and accept the pain you need to give. Are you going to let her get away?”
He smiled, not the nice, gentle smile a son would give his mother, but the grin of a confident conqueror bent on razing his enemy to the ground. Even—especially—my own stupid hang-ups. “No, ma’am.”
“You go get her, son, and you bring her home this very night. I want to meet the woman who finally claimed my Victor’s heart.”
“Soon,” he promised, leaning down to kiss her cheek. “But not tonight. We have to finish taping the show first.”
“Then you’ll bring her to the ranch?”
“If she’ll come, yes.”
“Remember, give her the pain you both need, son, but hurt her with love and hold her when you’re done.” Mama smiled back and Victor felt a chill inch down his spine. “And don’t worry, she’ll come, or I’ll fetch her myself.”
27
Throughout the weekend, Shiloh’s finger had hovered over the delete key of her blog a hundred times, but she couldn’t bring herself to do it. Those filthy words and secret fantasies were all that she had left of him. She’d turned off the comment feature, but not before her in box was stuffed with responses from people she didn’t know.
She stared at a blank post, trying to think of something, anything to say, but she felt frozen and numb. She’d lost him, and now hundreds of thousands of people would witness her misery.
She’d never considered herself a coward, but walking back into VCONN Tower Monday morning took considerably more courage than she possessed. After a weekend of lying around the apartment feeling sorry for herself with an ice pack on her ass, she didn’t want to see Victor Connagher ever again.
No, really. She’d just pack up her office and sneak out the back door before he even knew she was in the building. She could move to California, live with her mother’s stepchildren, and keep far, far away from her stepfather so Mom wouldn’t bring up the past. Maybe they could use a BDSM reality show in Hollywood.
Who am I kidding? I want nothing and nobody else but Victor.
Lifting her chin, she marched into the building as though she owned the place. No one would ever take Victor’s place in her heart, even though it felt like a herd of horses had trampled said heart and crushed it beyond repair. She’d waited all weekend for the phone to ring, or for Victor to drive up and beg forgiveness. She’d dreamed that he would come for her, dragging her kicking and screaming back to his penthouse and whipping her with his crop until she swore to never leave his bed again.
But that hope had died long before Monday morning. She’d loved him for so long that she’d never really thought about what her life would be like without him. Working with him would be pure hell. Acting out a scene with the Master, impossible. Yet her own stupid, aching heart refused to give up so easily. At least on set, he wore the mask of the Master. If that’s all she could have of him, she’d take it, and hopefully those sweet moments of pain would last her the rest of her life.
She scanned the hallways as she made her way to her office, praying she wouldn’t run into him until they were on set and their roles defined. There, she knew what he expected of her. They’d film the last few scenes and be done.
Her heart shriveled in her chest and died all over again at the thought of losing him. Never seeing him again. Never feeling the strength of his hands, the commanding way he gave pain, knowing she would take whatever he chose to give, without question or hesitation.
No, the hesitation was on his side, waiting like a starving wolf to devour him.
She made it to her office without incident, which ironically pissed her the hell off. The bastard couldn’t even bring himself to come down to her office and say a few words to her before the most crucial scenes of the show. What if she’d chosen to blow him and America’s Next Top sub off? Oh, but he’d known she’d never do that. This show was her baby, even if she couldn’t be his.
She’d managed to work herself into full-blown rage by the time she changed into the corset and thicker petticoats—to hide the vibrant bruises on her ass and thighs. Fury was easier to handle than hurt. She’d rather punch him in the mouth and bloody his lip than let him see her crying or upset.
Somebody knocked on her door and her heart galloped up into her throat. “Yes?”
Andy stuck his head inside and she had to clench her hands at her sides to keep from ripping his head off. “V wants us to report to his office first and go over the next segment together.”
She clamped her mouth shut and forced herself to count to ten…twenty…before she could respond without venom. “I’ll be there in a few minutes.”
Andy arched an eyebrow at her and propped his shoulder against the door. “Anything going on that I should know about?”
“Why would you say that?”
“Oh, no reason, other than Mal acted strange all weekend, and now you’re fuming. Did Mal and V get into a
fight over the weekend?”
“How should I know? I haven’t seen Mr. Connagher since Friday night’s premiere.”
Andy snickered. “Of course. Like you didn’t spend the entire weekend with him.”
“I didn’t.” She grabbed the storyboards she’d prepared days ago—when she’d been so sure of earning Victor’s collar—and stomped toward the elevator. “Like I said, I haven’t seen him since Friday night.”
“Wow, you’re telling the truth.” Andy rushed after her. “Did you two get into a fight or something?”
“It’s really none of your business.”
“Oh, come on, Shiloh, give me a break. Mal kept snapping at me all weekend and punished me for no damned good reason other than she was in a pissy mood. I thought she was mad at me, although I have no idea why.”
Shiloh rolled her eyes. Yeah, of course he had no idea that his Mistress knew he was a lying sneak of a submissive who had betrayed her confidence and leaked details of her show.
“Is she mad because I cut out early from the party?”
She punched the button again and wished the elevator would hurry up. “I honestly don’t know.”
“So what’s up with you and V?”
“Again, that’s none of your business.” Thank God, the elevator opened and she stepped inside. Too bad the door wouldn’t zip shut and leave the nosy bastard behind.
“Did the Master finally freak you out? I’ve heard the rumors, you know. V’s pretty nasty when he wants to be. Even Mal’s afraid of him, although she won’t admit it.”
Shiloh turned and jabbed her finger into Andy’s chest. “I’m not afraid of him, he didn’t freak me out, and I like him nasty, all right? Now back off and leave me the hell alone.” By the end of her tirade, she was yelling loudly enough to hurt her own ears.
“Sheesh, fine. Give a guy a break.” Andy’s eyes flared wide and he let out a little squeak. He squeezed past her and darted out of the elevator. “Sorry we’re late. She had to get a few things from her office.”
The Connaghers Series Boxed Set Page 46