Blank: Alpha Billionaire Romance
Page 1
Table of Contents
Title Page
Book Description
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
More books from Cassie Wild
BLANK
By Cassie Wild
This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locales or organizations is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2016 Belmonte Publishing LLC
Published by Belmonte Publishing LLC.
Book Description
"They say I just woke up from four months in a coma but that's not the worst...I have no idea who I am!"
When nineteen year-old college student, Preslee Keats, wakes up after four months in a coma, she has no recollection of what happened, of how she ended up in the hospital. All the police can tell her is that she was in a car accident and the other driver still hasn't been found.
Soon after coming to, Quaid Fields, a high profile defense attorney, comes to visit her. To her surprise, he offers her a hundred thousand dollars to 'help her get back on her feet.' Realizing that this sort of money never comes without a catch, she doesn't want to take the bait.
However, after learning that she lost her job and are now facing mountains of education and medical bills, she may have no choice. And if she does accept, what does that say about the kind of person she really is?
Don't miss BLANK, the latest erotic romance by Cassie Wild.
Chapter 1
Preslee
“It’s nine on a Friday night and you’re nineteen years-old, shouldn’t you be out having fun or something?”
I rolled my eyes and grimaced when my best friend answered the phone with her usual lecture.
“A simple ‘Hello’ works wonders too, ya know,” I said, distracted as I searched through my purse to find my car keys. “You know that I have class on Friday nights, so save it.”
Ava’s rich, throaty laugh came through the line, so addictive it forced me to grin. “You know I’m teasing. How was it tonight?”
I sighed.
“That good, huh?”
I finally managed to find my keys and threaded them between my fingers, closing my fist. Voila. My own Freddy Krueger-style weapon, responsible for getting women such as myself through dark parking lots since God knows when. I stepped out into the deserted parking lot, the chilly, early-November air sending a shiver through me. I’d parked under a light, as close as I could get to the entrance of the community college. My last class had gotten out half an hour earlier, but I’d been waylaid by a professor who’d wanted to chat about some of the comments he’d made on my latest research paper.
“Ehh, school is school,” I told her. “Some classes are better than others.”
“They can’t all be CSI-level stuff, Pres,” Ava reminded me dryly.
“I get that,” I said. “But can you tell me why anybody needs to take Introduction to Computer Science? I mean, why not have a course about walking? Or breathing?”
I’d been frustrated since the first day of class when my professor had introduced us to this novel thing called a keyboard. I’d seriously started doubting the veracity of my school’s reputation at that point.
Ava laughed again. I knew that she, of all people, understood my frustration with that particular course. She’d been a computer whiz since she’d laid her hands on her first hard drive. The technological complexities that baffled me, she could take apart and piece back together again. Bugs, malware, fried discs, and malfunctioning fans, you name it, she could fix it. “Just a few more weeks and the last of your introductory classes will be over,” she pointed out.
I kept my eyes and ears open as I walked, keys at the ready, and vaguely wondered if men ever felt the need to be so cautious when walking across a dark parking lot. Probably not, I thought as I reached my small, silver sedan. Being barely five foot two didn’t really help either. I’d taken a couple self-defense classes, but I only had so much to work with.
A slight shift in the light drew my attention. The shadows outside of my bubble of light shifted. I fumbled to insert my keys in the lock as a large figure stepped from the recesses of the darkness and drew closer to my cowering form.
Shit. Shit. Shit. A flash of metal had me panting as I finally got the key in the slot, hopped in the car and pressed the automatic lock button. I gripped the wheel until my knuckles turned white and checked my rearview mirror. The man stuck to the shadows, leaving me only with the impression of someone huge.
Granted, it could’ve been my imagination, but I wasn’t going to stick around to find out.
I heaved a sigh of relief as I pulled out of the parking lot, leaving the creepy man – or my imagination – behind.
“So what are you up to tonight?” I asked Ava, switching on the phone’s hands-free function. Safety first. It was a twenty-minute drive down dark back roads, and I appreciated the voice on the other end of the line keeping me company along the way. The maybe-person I’d seen or hadn’t seen had definitely rattled my nerves
And, like always, Ava was there. Ever since I was five years old, Ava had practically been my other half. When her family moved next door, we’d clicked almost immediately. It happened on our first day of kindergarten, when we’d walked to school together, and Ava had taken my hand to cross the street. In that moment, I’d known we’d be friends forever.
It was a friendship that had gotten us both through hard times. More than the average, typical teenage angst stuff – we’d definitely gone through that – but our connection ran much deeper. Ava’s parents had never had what you’d call a happy marriage. Even when we were little, she’d been forced to watch violent fights between her mom and dad almost every day. Stuff no one should ever have to witness. Definitely nothing a kid should see or hear.
During the worst of the fights, Ava had always escaped to my house. If it was late at night and my mom had already passed out, Ava would throw stones at my window until I opened it and helped her climb up. We’d huddle together in my bed and tell stories of the lives we’d lead when we’d grow up and still lived next door to one another. And about our babies who would grow up to be best friends too.
“Another exciting night in the life of Ava McCall,” she said. “One of my customers recommended me to a friend of his who needed a virus removed from his laptop. It amazes me what people search for on the internet and think nobody will ever find out about. Don’t these idiots know how to clear their search history? Especially if they’re going to hand their computer over to another person? That’s like Internet 101, for god’s sake.”
I laughed. “What is it this time?”
“Okay, so the guy comes to me with this old-as-shit machine and tries telling me with a straight face that one day his computer started randomly acting all glitchy. Out of nowhere, of course. He’s
totally innocent. He spends all his time playing games and, like, watching videos of puppies and kittens or something. So anyway, I run a basic search of his Internet history and oh, surprise, surprise, there’s some of the most ridiculous porn I’ve ever seen in my life. I mean sites with names like peeonme.com and asianslutsneedaspanking.com, and those are just the two that stick out in my mind; there were at least a dozen others in the cache.”
“Wow – that guy’s been busy,” I said. “I hope you washed your hands after touching the keyboard.”
She laughed. “Took a bath in Clorox, so all’s good there. So anyway, that’s my night. Trying to locate and remove the million and one pieces of malware on this computer thanks to some shady porn habits. At least he didn’t haggle over the price. You know, one guy actually wanted to pay me thirty dollars to clean up his machine, install better security, and a daily backup solution? I don’t mean per hour, either. I mean total, for the entire job. People are so stupid.”
I’d always loved Ava’s blunt take on everything and everybody. Most things were cut-and-dried to her. She might not have graduated at the top of our high school class or even considered college since she’d always been more street smart than book smart, but she had the sort of innate intelligence that couldn’t be taught. I knew some seemingly smart people who could hardly tie their shoelaces, but Ava could read people in an instant. Her observations were normally spot-on. She could cut to the chase with no problem because she didn’t give a damn about what people thought of her.
“So I was thinking,” I said, changing the subject, “that Thanksgiving’s only three weeks from yesterday. We still on this year?”
“When are we ever not on?” she replied with a smile in her voice.
Every year since we were twelve, Ava and I had practiced a little holiday ritual. Since her parents inevitably wound up tearing the house apart by the end of the night, and my mother would rather take a bottle of wine to bed than sit down and enjoy a nice meal, Ava would come over and we would cook a little feast of our own. I’d been cooking for myself since I was around six, anyway, so it wasn’t much for me to put together Thanksgiving dinner.
“Your place, or mine?” I asked.
“Maybe we should do it at your place,” she said. “My oven’s been acting up lately. Nothing ruins Thanksgiving like an undercooked turkey. We learned that the hard way.”
I snickered, remembering that particular Thanksgiving when we’d ended up with the trimmings since the turkey had needed an extra hour in the oven. “I’ve been so busy with school, my place is a mess. I don’t even have time to shop for groceries.”
“You know my kitchen’s way too small,” she pointed out.
That was true and I’ve spent enough time in my life trying to cook in a tiny kitchen with no counter space. I shuddered at the memory of my mom’s kitchen. You couldn’t even call it a kitchen. It consisted of a cooktop meant for camping and a ten-year-old toaster oven. That made my decision for me. “Yeah, you’re right. Let’s have it at my place.”
I’d only moved in over the summer, right after high school graduation. I’d saved every penny I’d earned from my after-school job, and as soon as I’d walked across that stage and got my diploma, I’d packed up and left. It couldn’t have come a day sooner, as far as I was concerned. This was my first major holiday in my new apartment. A momentous occasion. I’d been waiting forever to truly be on my own, and it was important to make fresh, joy-filled memories without the taint of my past.
“Awesome. Give me a call tomorrow and we’ll talk over the specifics,” Ava replied. “Let me know what I can bring over, what I can buy, that sort of thing. I’d make the whole grocery list by myself, but you know how absentminded I am when it comes to the domestic stuff. I’d probably get all the way home from the store and realize I forgot the turkey.”
The sad thing was, I could actually picture it. Her gunmetal gray eyes widening in horror as she scrambled back into the car and sped to the nearest grocery store. Probably sometime around noon on the day itself.
I shook my head, still laughing at the mental image, and told Ava I’d call her in the morning. I hung up so I could concentrate on a particularly winding part of the road. Talking with Ava never failed to make me think about where we’d started, and how far we’d come. While Ava now lived in a small apartment, and spent Friday nights removing porn from other people’s computers, it was miles ahead of where we’d grown up.
I planned to go a bit further myself. As a child, I daydreamed of working as a forensic scientist for the FBI. When I’d wanted to escape from my mother’s jibs and criticisms, I’d flip on the TV and get lost in the mysteries that threaded through countless crime shows. It was more than the blissful escape from reality that took over when I watched these shows. It was the concept of justice that I’d always loved. Putting together pieces of a puzzle, reconstructing faces, running DNA samples, solving cold cases.
That would be me one day. I could leave my shabby childhood and all its ghosts behind forever.
I was a few minutes from home now. I’d intended to stop and grab a small bite to eat, but Ava’s phone call had distracted me. Now I was hoping I had something left in the kitchen, otherwise, I’d have to run out tomorrow.
I waited at a red light, debating whether to turn left toward the all-night supermarket in a pre-emptive move, or turn right toward home. My stomach growled, loudly, making an argument of its own. It was after ten, but I knew I’d never get to sleep if my rumbling belly kept me awake. So when the light turned green, I stepped on the accelerator and turned left.
I never saw it coming.
There was no screech of tires, no honking horn. There weren’t even any headlights to indicate that another car was approaching. I barely had time to look up before I felt a massive, jarring impact. A boom, and a sound similar to nails on a chalkboard invaded my senses as the car jerked, then spun towards a wooden pole.
Chapter 2
Preslee
I was underwater, sinking. Something was pulling me down, something around my waist. No matter how hard I struggled against it, it kept dragging me further and further beneath the surface. I felt like my lungs were about to burst.
Then, all of the sudden, I wasn’t in the water at all. I was floating. It was night, and freezing outside. I was flying over a dark, unlit road. I saw a familiar silver car below me. It stopped at a light, then started to turn when, out of nowhere, another car sprang from the darkness and hit it violently, sending it spinning. The crunch of the metal made me flinch and put my hands over my ears.
A little girl in sky blue footed pajamas was flying beside me. “Come on, Pres,” she giggled. “Let’s have a sleepover.” She got into a floating twin bed and pulled a set of Barbie sheets up over her head. “Let’s pretend we’re camping!” she squealed. I got in beside her and she turned on a flashlight. I could hear yelling close by. The little girl put her hands over her ears and shut her eyes.
“It’s okay, Ava,” I said, trying to comfort her. “You can always come here when you’re afraid.”
Somebody pulled the sheets away from us. It was a lady, and she was crying. “All your fault!” she screamed, pointing at me.
I didn’t know who she was or why she was yelling. What was my fault? I reached for the girl, hoping she would protect me, but found she’d disappeared.
“You were a bad girl, and he left!” the woman repeated over and over again like a sick mantra.
I could hardly understand the words she was yelling at me, they were so jumbled together. She swayed back and forth in the dark bedroom, rocking with each word in a bizarre dance.
“He didn’t want a kid, but then you showed up and he left. Because of you! He left and my life turned to shit because of you.”
The woman went to a door in the room and pulled it open. She tore clothes and toys from the closet with a rabid, hungry force that shook me to my bones. Tears streaked down my cheeks, I couldn’t stop, I couldn’t look away from the
madness. I held my pillow to my chest and sobbed. “Please, Mommy, I swear, I didn’t do it. I didn’t make him go. I miss Daddy too. Not my things, Mommy! Please… please,” I whispered so softly that I could barely hear myself.
Suddenly, I was sitting on Daddy’s lap and we were watching a baseball game. It was daytime now, and Daddy was drinking a beer. Daddy was almost as tall as the ceiling and could barely fit through our small doors. His rich brown hair was so different than my own ash blonde curls that I felt the need to pet it to make sure it was real. My eyes were glued to the screen, taking in the tight white pants stained with red clay and the speed with which the ball flew from mitt to mitt. I was asking him questions about the players, what their purpose was, how to score, why the silly man with the cage on his face was making weird hand gestures. Mommy was laying on the couch, an arm over her eyes.
“Will you shut up and watch the game already?” she said.
“Leave the kid alone,” Daddy answered, still focused on the game and taking a swig from the icy blue can at his side. “She wants to learn.”
“Well, maybe if she’d shut up and watch, she would,” Mommy whipped, oozing disdain. Mommy was sick again. She got sick a lot and would need to lay down and cover her eyes.
“Why don’t you go somewhere else?” Daddy said to Mommy. “Get the hell out of here if you’re going to be nasty. Just because you’re hungover doesn’t mean you get to talk to her that way.”
His huge, tan arm tightened protectively around me. I felt safe when Daddy was home, he’d never let Mommy be mean to me.
I strained to open my eyes. They felt weighed down, glued shut with cement. A steady beeping came from somewhere above me. I couldn’t move my arms. They felt stiff and heavy, like concrete blocks. My head felt the same way. I tried to turn my head to the side, and the effort was enough to nearly exhaust me. My energy felt like it was being syphoned from my body, and I didn’t know why.
Where the hell was I?
I was in bed. There was a window next to me. It looked bright and sunny outside. Next to the bed was a chair, but it was empty.