Dirty Brawler: A Bad Boy Sports Romance (with bonus novel!)

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Dirty Brawler: A Bad Boy Sports Romance (with bonus novel!) Page 29

by Teagan Kade


  “This never happened.”

  A thin smile opens up on her face. “What never happened?”

  Good girl.

  Mexico City is a fucking horrendous to drive around in, but this is something I couldn’t leave to anyone else. I look over at her and for a moment consider finding a quiet alley and fucking her senseless, but I don’t have the balls.

  Like kidnapping her is any better.

  I hear my father. Whatever it takes, Steven. Whatever it takes.

  It’s what needs to be done.

  At least that’s what I tell myself as we pull into the hotel, palms sweaty.

  I get the key from the front desk and bring her in from the back. She’s light as a feather, even unconscious.

  I’m sweating an Olympic pool in this heat. I get her into the room, toss her on the bed, taking out a cable tie and cinching her hands tight behind her back.

  I tilt her head to the side so she can breathe. The last thing I need is for her to suffocate. I’m not willing to step up to murder just yet. Give it time, though…

  I go to tie her ankles, stopping momentarily to lift her skirt and get an eyeful of the snatch Andy’s supposedly so obsessed with. I start to get another chubby, letting her skirt fall back into place.

  For a second I think about calling it all off, but it’s gone too far now. I’m committed. I remember the threats, the money at stake—I’m going through with it. I have to. I won’t survive if I don’t.

  I take out the burner phone and the vocoder I’ve had for a while. Haven’t used this crap since my days in the corporate trenches.

  I’ve got to hand it myself, so far, so good. If all goes to plan, I’ll be five-million dollars richer come morning, every debt I have gone like that. That will buy me all the pussy I’ll ever need.

  Andy

  Somehow it’s even hotter at the Autodromo Hermanos Rodriguez, a real dustbowl of a track. That’s the thing about Mexico. It gives off the illusion that everything is ship-shape, but look closer and it’s all a patch job waiting to fall apart.

  I try Sara. I haven’t heard from her since this morning. Lately we’ve been texting each other non-stop. It’s weird. She’s tied to that phone. I’ve never known her to turn it off. Maybe she really is having a lesbian affair?

  I look to Klaus, who’s still busying checking over the car. He’s the only one of these grease monkeys I trust. “So? All good?”

  He cleans with hands. “I can’t find anything wrong with it, Andy. I’ve been over it three times.”

  “Okay.”

  There’s comfort knowing at least the car is up to scratch today. Question is, am I?

  I’m running over the track layout when my phone rings. I don’t recognize the number.

  It could be Sara.

  I answer. “Yes?”

  The voice that replies is modulated, robotic. “If you want to see your girlfriend again, lose the race.”

  I’m caught off guard. I look around expecting to see a masked figure in the distance, but the lot’s empty. What the fuck? “Who is this?”

  “Lose the race and she will be returned. Win and she’s dead.”

  It has to be a joke, I think.

  The line goes dead. I hold the phone, staring at it, unable to comprehend what’s going on, but this is Mexico. People are kidnapped all the time. People are killed all the time. Someone’s betting big on this race and they want me to take the fall, or at least that’s how they want it to look. Something about the phrasing tells me this is no joke.

  It takes a while for the dread to settle, but when it does I get straight into action.

  I try Sara again, but her phone’s still off. In the few minutes I have before race time, I call her sister, then Caliber, but no one’s heard from her. She’s not in her suite, not at the track and no one’s seen her around the pits all day. I’m starting to get very fucking concerned.

  The head mechanic is waving me towards the front of the garage. “Andy, it’s time.”

  I pace, hands on my head. I have to make a decision soon.

  “Shit!” I shout, kicking my boot into the ground.

  There’s no way around it. I could call the authorities, but what are they going to do? The race starts in minutes.

  It’s a joke, a bluff.

  My phone buzzes again. I swipe across to a picture of Sara lying on a bed, hands tied behind her back, eyes closed.

  Fuck.

  I can’t take the risk. I have to lose.

  *

  I make mistakes, but they’re calculated. I keep on Carl, keep the pressure up. I’m going to lose, I tell myself, but it’s not going to be by much.

  Even if I wasn’t deliberately trying to throw in the towel, I’m not sure I could take this one out. Carl’s driving like a man with something to prove, taking big risks and pushing the limits.

  Coming into the last lap, I see an opening down his right. I could make it, surprise him with a switch. I almost do it by instinct until I picture Sara, lost, hurt… abandoned. Get her back.

  I ease up on the throttle and let Carl cross the line, pushing through in second and slipping ten points behind Carl in overall. It’s not the Grand Canyon, but it’s not going to be easy to claw my way back either.

  As soon as I’m out of the car, I’m running to the desk for my phone.

  I notice Steven is missing, can’t recall hearing him at all on comms during the race. If he’s behind this, he’s going to pay.

  The phone rings in my hand. I answer. “Yes.”

  The voice: “Hotel Sombario, room fifty-five.”

  I throw the phone down.

  “Andy!” calls Klaus. “Post-race briefing,” but I’m already running to the back of the pits.

  I flag down the first taxi I can find out on the road.

  *

  Hotel Sombario is on the outskirts of Mexico City, little more than a white-washed building surrounded by squalor.

  I run in, run right past the front desk and up the stairs.

  I find Room Fifty-Five, covered in sweat and breathing hard. The place stinks, rancid. A call girl smiles walking past, if it’s even a girl at all.

  I knock. “Sara!” but there’s no answer.

  Fuck this. I’m so wired I can hardly think. I stand back and kick in the door, wood splintering off the hinges.

  I run in, finding her face down on the bed.

  No. God, no. I flip her over, fingers at her neck. There’s a pulse.

  Her eyes open, glassy. “Andy?”

  I pull her close. She’s clammy, cold, but she’s alive. “Jesus, I thought I’d lost you.”

  “Andy?” she says, confused. “Where am I?”

  I hold her away. “What do you remember? Who did this to you?”

  She sits up, woozy, hand to her forehead and eyes struggling to adjust to the light. “I went to lunch with Stacey. I ordered a salad…”

  “And?”

  She shakes her head. “I don’t know, I… can’t remember.”

  I shake her. “Think. It’s important.”

  “Andy,” she says, eyes wide as she takes in the hotel room, “what’s going on?”

  “Do you remember anything else?”

  She lowers her head. “No.”

  “Sara!” I shout, patience lost.

  She starts to tear up, terror filling her features.

  I take her by the back of the head, pull her to my shoulder. “I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I thought I’d lost you.”

  She leans back. “What happened, Andy? Tell me.”

  “I think you were drugged.”

  “Drugged?”

  “But you’re okay now. You’re safe. Come on. Let’s get the fuck out of this shithole.”

  I help Sara to her feet, ignore a maid yelling at us in fiery Spanish me as we pass.

  I place three hundreds down on the front desk as we walk by. “For the door.”

  The clerk picks up it, confused.

  I help Sara into the passenger seat of the w
aiting taxi, let her sleep while I consider what to do.

  I have no doubt Steven was behind this somehow, especially if Stacey was involved, but I can’t prove it, not yet. Until I can, I need to think. I need to get ahead of him—whatever it takes. He hasn’t even begun to fathom the darkness and fucking fire I can summon when required.

  CHAPTER TWENTY: BRAZIL

  Sara

  From the moment we set foot in Sao Paulo, I love it. It’s big, exciting and beautifully multi-cultural. In light linen, Andy looks right at home.

  We’re on a yacht for a photoshoot, Andy looking to the city. “I paid a local boy to take me up there once.”

  My chiffon dress flutters in the ocean breeze, the briny smell coming off the water refreshing. “Where’s that?”

  He points. “The favelas.”

  “Why?”

  “There’s this dish they do up there, a stew,” he rubs his belly, “you need a concrete-lined stomach, but it’s incredible.”

  “You weren’t worried about your safety?”

  “If you’re not looking for trouble, it rarely finds you.”

  Trouble—it sure as hell found us in Mexico. We haven’t really spoken about it, but a night hasn’t gone by where I don’t wake up covered in cold sweat, heart beating out of my body. “Who said that?”

  “Andy Fortes.”

  A PA holds onto the side of the yacht a little green around the gills. “We’re ready for you now, Mr. Fortes.”

  The photographer waits at the front of the yacht, an assistant holding a diffuser looking like he’s about to be blown overboard at any moment.

  “Duty calls,” winks Andy, walking away.

  I take a moment to consider where I am, how far I’ve come from Rosie, from the Big Apple to the world.

  You are dating Andy Fortes and he is head over fucking heels in love with you.

  I cannot help but smile, my heart doing little somersaults in my chest, nostrils flaring and eyes closing, the gentle rocking of the yacht magical. I open my eyes, but the sun remains. For a moment the abduction is forgotten. There’s not a cloud on the horizon.

  Yet.

  *

  Race preparation is proving particularly difficult for the team. I imagine they’ve been drinking too much caipirinha. One glass almost knocked me out completely.

  A shipment of tires has gone missing, a problem with the data-logging software. Steven’s pulling his hair out all day, Andy keeps his distance but looks similarly agitated. Tensions are high.

  Andy stands by my side, mechanics rushing around manically. “I’m going to confront him, get him to admit it.”

  “Who and what?”

  But I know.

  “Steven.”

  I take his arm. “Don’t, not this close to the end of the season. We’ll deal with it after the championship, take it to the police.”

  “It’s not fucking right, Sara. He was responsible. I know it. He shouldn’t go unpunished.”

  “You don’t have proof.”

  “I don’t need it. I’ll talk to him man to man, look him in the fucking eye and ask the question.”

  “You can’t possibly think that will go well. Even if he is responsible, what benefit does he get from admitting it? You think you’re so alpha you can puff out your chest and he’ll confess everything?”

  He stiffens. “Yeah, I kind of do.”

  “You’re impossible.”

  “To love?”

  “No, but I’m telling you. This is not a good idea.”

  He walks off, calling behind himself, “We’ll see”.

  Damn it.

  I trail him to the transporter and Steven’s office.

  I crouch beside the door.

  “Got a moment?” says Andy, standing in the doorway.

  “I’m a little busy, Andy. Can it wait?” comes Steven’s icy reply.

  Andy walks in and closes the door, but I can still hear them. “No,” he says firmly, “it can’t”.

  “If this is about Carl…”

  “It’s about Sara.”

  “Sara?” Steven sounds surprised. “I don’t care if you two are seeing each other. Fuck in the middle of the grid for all I care.”

  Andy comes straight out with it, blunt as a butter knife. “You were behind it, weren’t you? You kidnapped her in Mexico.”

  “What?” Steven’s trying to sound confused, but he’s not pulling it off. There’s hesitation in his voice.

  “I know it was you. Stacey said as much.”

  Andy’s bluffing.

  “Stacey? Stacey Solomon, the party planner? What the hell are you talking about, Andy?”

  Andy starts to shout, temper lost. “Fucking have the balls to admit it, Steven. Why the fuck did you do it? I mean, I knew you were a cunning, crafty bastard, but that shit? Too far, my friend, way too far.”

  “Andy, you’re making no sense here.”

  “Really?” Andy laughs. “You deny it, kidnapping Sara and forcing me to drop the race?”

  I think Steven’s standing up. “You need to leave—now.”

  “Admit it and I’ll go. I’ll even let you keep your consciousness.”

  “Are you threatening me, Fortes? I’ve been threatened before and I do not take kindly to it.”

  “I imagine you have.”

  “Listen to yourself,” Steven shouts. “You sound insane.”

  “I don’t have proof, asshole, but I know it was you. If you think that’s going to scare me off, you’ve got another thing coming.”

  Andy, I plead, come on.

  He’s not done. “You’ve gone too far this time, Steven. It’s personal now and I’m not stopping until you’re destroyed, begging on your knees for my forgiveness.”

  Steven’s voice moves again. “You better watch yourself. You forget who provides the cars you drive, your team… your safety.”

  Andy’s voice moves forward in the room to match. “What the fuck did you just say?”

  I’ve got to get Andy out of there before he explodes. I stand and push the door open, locking my arm around his. “Andy, he’s not worth it. Let’s go.”

  He finally relents, backing away slowly but keeping his eyes locked on Steven. He shakes his finger at him. “This isn’t over.”

  Steven smiles back, shuffling papers. “No, I don’t think it is.”

  Outside, I know nothing I can say is going to get Andy to cool off. He wants blood.

  “I’m going back to the hotel,” I tell him.

  He seems surprised. “You’re not staying for the race?”

  “I’m sorry, Andy, but after what happened… I don’t feel safe.”

  “I can get extra security, whatever you need.”

  I place my hand reassuringly on his chest. “It’s fine, really. I’ll watch it on TV. Win, okay?”

  “Oh, I’ll win alright.” He looks to Steven’s office. “I’ve never been so determined in my whole life to stick it to someone.”

  “Are you sure he was behind it?”

  “He was behind it alright, and now he has to face the consequences.”

  *

  I can’t deny I’m nervous even locked in my hotel suite. I haven’t let on to Andy, but the whole kidnapping thing has me seriously rattled. I’m even scared to bring it up with Gretchen, let alone Mom. She’d never let me leave the US again.

  The worst part of it all is that I still don’t know what happened to me between the lunch with Stacey and Andy rolling me over in some strange hotel in Mexico City. Anything could have happened, not that I’m hurt. I’d know if they’d… I don’t even want to think about it. And who are they? I know Steven wants to see Andy fail, but surely he wouldn’t go that far. It’s too much even for him.

  I try not to think about it anymore, switching on the TV.

  During qualifying, Andy is on fire. He drives like a man with a point to prove, smashing the lap record and easily making pole position, Carl second.

  The race is no less intense, but Andy is untouchable.
Carl tries, weaves behind Andy almost constantly but in the end cannot make the ground required to pass. He’s forced to take second and eighteen points, Andy’s twenty-five narrowing the gap between them to four points overall. One more win and he’ll be ahead.

  *

  Come night and the party may as well be Checkpoint Charlie. It looks like a party but it sure as hell doesn’t feel like one.

  I keep my distance from Steven and Stacey, even Carl. I stay close to Andy where I can, continuously checking behind me seeing shadowy figures in my head with syringe in hand, a bag and rope… I’ve been dreaming about them, dreaming over and over about being tied up and helpless, and Andy is there but never close enough, always an inch or two away from saving me. The room fills with water and I drown, black and lonely in the darkness.

  I take a breath and focus on Stacey. I don’t want to talk to her, but I have no choice. She was the last one to see me. I’ve been putting it off, but no longer.

  Andy sees me walking towards her. “Where are you going?”

  “Just a little girl-to-girl chat.”

  “With fucking Stacey?”

  “Trust me.”

  Stacey sees me coming. If she’s surprised. She doesn’t show it. “You’re looking better.”

  “Why did you ask me to lunch, honestly?”

  “Honestly? Okay. I wanted to find out what Andy saw in you.”

  “Wow, that is honest. And?”

  “I can see it, but I have to admit you’re a bit of a lightweight when it comes to handling your drink.”

  I’d slap that smug smile right off her face if it wasn’t for the countless cameras in here. I keep myself in check. “What happened? I don’t remember much after main course.”

  She looks away. “You were drunk. I called a cab and helped you in, told them to take you back to the hotel. I tipped the driver well.”

  “Which company?

  She chokes a little on her champagne. “Company?”

  “Taxi company? Which one did you use?”

  “Why, did something happen?” She’s avoiding the question.

  “You could say that.”

  Feigned concern. “Sara, I had no idea. Did he…?”

  I shake my head. “No, but I do need to know the taxi company you used, chase them up.”

  She takes out her phone, pretends to run through her call log. “I can’t find it, sorry. Must have lost the number when I did a system update the other night.”

 

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