Book Read Free

Beauty and her Billionaire Beast

Page 12

by Bella Love-Wins


  I’m so sorry. You’re right. The past is in the past. I want you in my future.

  I feel awful. Please call me.

  Knox. Please. Don’t close me off again. I was wrong, okay?

  Knox?

  You’re doing it again and it’s breaking my heart.

  Okay fine. I’m done. Bye.

  I should feel bad about not replying to her, but I’m done playing games. This is why I call myself an animal. A beast. I can flip a switch in my head and shut out all this emotional shit. I have no fucking problem being as cold as ice. Plus, I don’t want to be reminded over and over again about how shitty I was as a friend. The ten years passed, and no one can go back and fix what I did.

  As I’m about to lock the phone screen another text come in. It’s from Foster.

  Foster: You sure you’re gonna cancel tonight?

  Me: Nah. I’ll be there.

  I stalk through the rowdy crowd followed by my best friend, Foster, who nominated himself to the role of my de facto trainer and coach. He raises his voice over the chants of the crowd to continue doling out advice about how to handle my amateur kickboxing opponent tonight, but I don’t register a thing. As I step through the open gate of the makeshift wrap around chain-link fence they call the ring, even the shouts from the crowd are already muted.

  I’m in the zone.

  All my senses are heightened to the extreme.

  Nothing matters except for what happens after that bell rings.

  That’s why I got into this sport during my early teens and stuck with it all the way through college and my twenties. I live for the intensity of my time in the ring, where minutes feel like years, and seconds like days. One wrong move can get you injured or worse. The fucked-up reality of my life ceases to exist. I can forget the dull ache in my chest in favor of the sharp pain that pummels the surface of my skin from each blow or kick my opponent manages to deliver. If he’s lucky enough to get one in at all. I can block out the world, everyone and everything. Usually everyone, but from time to time, there are exceptions. Everyone but her.

  “Knox.” Foster’s firm grip on my shoulder is what helps his voice pierce through my laser-focused single-mindedness.

  With my head still bent and my gaze fixed on my hands wrapped in fighter’s tape, I grunt out a nonverbal acknowledgment to let him know I’m listening, more or less. Foster knows better than to expect me to speak at a time like this, but sometimes the man can’t fucking help himself.

  “Keep your chin down,” he tells me. “McCready favors his right, so be ready to attack him on the left when he’s open. Remember, the man’s fucking huge. He’s got half a foot and fifty pounds on you, but you can use his size to your advantage. Let him set the pace, conserve energy, and wear the fucker out. Then, when he’s got nothing left, take your shot.” I lift my gaze just in time to see his light gray eyes light up as he raises his left eyebrow for his usual one-sided smirk. “That’s when you take the bastard to the brink of death.”

  As usual, I ignore his flair for the dramatic. The referee steps through the gate and nods over at us, signaling for Foster to leave the ring. The time for pre-game strategy is long past. Time to unleash the darkest, most primal part of my soul. Time to fight until it hurts so fucking good.

  The adrenaline shoots through my veins as the referee makes some initial greetings and announcements to get the crowd excited. He then barks out the only rule of this underground fight club.

  “No hits or kicks to the face. Everywhere else is fair game.”

  The fingers on my right hand rolls into a tight, balled-up fist. Every time I hear that rule I want to punch the referee in his fucking face. It used to be ‘everything is fair game’. Until they changed it to this crap about a month after some pompous political staffer prick joined our club. The shithead must have a fuck ton of pull with the guys who run the place, to get them to agree. It’s an underground fight club, for fuck’s sake. We’re supposed to be able to fight as fucking hard as we want. A few of us longstanding members even offered to double up on our membership fees to convince the owners to go back to how it’s been for umpteen years before this pretty boy douchebag showed up and fucked things up for the rest of us. No dice.

  “Introducing tonight’s first round fighters. On my left in the green shorts, weighing in at two hundred and sixty-eight pounds, here he is... Colin ‘Big Baby’ McCready.”

  Deafening applause and cheers reverberate around the packed room and bounce off the walls. He’s got the crowd favored odds, so they’ve got to throw their support behind the guy who has the potential to double the cash they put down. I, on the other hand, have the outside odds, but anyone betting on me gets the shot at making seven times their money. High risk, high fucking reward. And I won’t let down anyone who took a chance on me. McCready’s backers are the sorry suckers who’ll flush all those wads of cash down the crapper.

  “And on my right in the red shorts, tipping the scales at two hundred and twelve pounds of pure pain-inflicting muscle... Knox ‘The Beast Prince’ Steele.”

  There’s not much difference in the roar of the blood-thirsty audience, but that has less to do with me and more to do with the fact that the fight’s about to start.

  I’m a fighter. I may go down, but inside this ring, no matter how hard they hit me, I get back on my feet. Every. Single. Time.

  The first-round gong rings out and I move in for the long game kill. A few bounces on my feet keep me moving just enough to avoid McCready as he charges toward me like a caged animal. Foster is dead right about this guy. At the rate he’s going, he’ll burn out before the bell sounds to signal the end of round one. Two minutes. If that’s all it’ll take to wear this fucker down, I can handle it.

  With my strategy in place, I take a few hits to let this big motherfucker think he’s coming in ahead. Two minutes come and go, and after the short rest break, the round two bell blares out.

  He’s got his second wind, so I give him another couple of minutes at me. Maybe I’m enjoying it a little too much. With his size, every punch is sweet torture. Every kick is like I’m being mauled. But I take it, relishing the sting of aching, burning, bleeding solace from the shit I’d like to forget but never can.

  After another break, McCready steps to the center of the ring for round three. He’s heavier on his feet, barely bouncing around. Probably because he’s expecting more of the same from me. This time, I’ve got him. He takes a glimpse over his shoulder to nod back at his coach, and in that distracted sliver of time, I do what I came here to do. Win. Saving my hands from this guy’s hard as fuck face, I whip around, tuck my body down and to the right, and smash the ball of my left foot into McCready’s right shoulder. The crunch of bone on bone makes its own special vibration that travels through my nervous system.

  I hit the fucker hard, so I’m not surprised when he staggers, momentarily losing his balance. Taking advantage of his disorientation, I pivot around to his side that’s close to the chain-link ring, gain some height by taking a swift, sharp run at the fencing, pushing off of it for extra torque. Then I crash down on his left shoulder with my elbow and the force of my entire weight.

  McCready goes down, triggering the eight second count by the referee. I can tell McCready has some fight left in him, but the fucker stumbles to get back on his feet and narrowly misses the count, ending the fight in what the crowd no doubt thinks is anti-fucking-climactic.

  As the cheers turn to boos, I let the referee call the fight in my favor. I start to walk out of the ring, squeezing through the tide of the crowd. A sudden tightness grips me deep in my chest and I almost stop, but the push of people and the noise keeps me moving. Was it her? Did she show up to watch me in secret? She’d never come before, and that was okay with me, considering she detests violence in sports and hates the sight of blood. But why now? The last time I saw her she said she couldn’t stand to look at me, let alone talk. I try to look around, to see if I can catch a glimpse of her, but it’s hopeless. There are
too many faces to decipher. I have crowds too, so the feel of fans putting their hands all over my shoulders to congratulate me is enough to compel me to keep moving. I ignore the intermittent praise from Foster at my side and a few people from the team behind him while we make our way to the lockers.

  Foster doesn’t pull out of his excited thrill-filled verbal recap of my victory until I’m back in my street clothes and headed for his yellow Maserati GranTurismo convertible parked outside.

  “I wonder if that was her,” I muse to myself out loud, and he stops with his mouth ajar. It’s not my intention to direct the question at Foster, but now that he’s shut up about my win, I figure it can’t hurt to ask. “Did you see her?”

  “What?” he asks. “See who?”

  “Isabelle.”

  “See her where?”

  “In the crowd just now.”

  He shakes his head and slaps my shoulder. “Are you outta your mind? Actually, don’t answer that. I’ll chalk up the question to winner’s blur. Isabelle? Hell no. You’d never find a woman like that in a place like this.”

  “I thought I saw her.”

  “Take my advice, dude. Forget about her. You’re better off without the drama.”

  “What?” I look across the top of the car as he throws my gear in the trunk.

  “Never mind. I’m not getting into your woman problems after a win like that. Anyway, did you see Big Baby drop to the ground like a fucking felled tree? Jesus, man! I don’t know where you found all that fucking power. It was a fucking honor to witness.”

  “Drive me back to the Hamptons.”

  Without another word, Foster runs a satisfied hand through his wavy black hair, turns the engine and gets moving. I decide I’m not interested in changing the subject back to Isabelle. Not with him. How Isabelle and I fell apart so fast is the last thing I want to think about right after winning a fight against such a vicious opponent.

  Foster goes quiet as well, and after a ninety-minute drive in perfect reverent silence, he drops me off outside the main house in the Hamptons.

  “Later,” he says as I open the car door.

  “Yeah.” I head across the driveway, giving a polite nod to one of the cleaners leaving through the front door. As I walk to the pool house, all I want is for this throbbing ache to last as long as it takes for my head to hit the pillow and sleep to come. I don’t want my last coherent thought to be of her, or the fact that the last time I was here, in my bedroom, under the sheets, it was with her, and now, she’s never coming back.

  19

  Isabelle

  I sit at JFK airport waiting for my Denver flight to be announced. It’s a last-minute flight, but I didn’t pay for it. All those months taking short haul flights upstate on Dad’s campaign trail are paying off now. I used all my points to buy a first-class ticket to see my sister, Bethany.

  I’m so done with this concrete jungle. Dreams aren’t made here, they’re broken.

  They shouldn’t call this city the Big Apple.

  They should call it the Poison Apple.

  I’m getting the hell away from this place.

  Last night, I saw Knox fight. It was stupid going there, but because he blocked me out after our argument, I wanted to see him face to face and give him a piece of my mind. But the place was a crowded mess, and after Knox won, I ended up waiting beside the wrong car, thinking I’d see him. But he left with Foster and didn’t see me.

  I went home angry and didn’t sleep for the entire night. My bed was cold and felt hollow after just one night with Knox’s warm body beside me. That thought made me so upset, I spent the rest of the night rolling around on the damn couch in my living room.

  Then, today, after waking up feeling like shit and still dragging my ass into work, I had the worst argument with my mother about all their meddling and interference. When I grabbed my purse to walk out for some fresh air, she had the nerve to tell me that as her boss, she forbade me from leaving. That’s when I quit.

  But I made the worst mistake leaving through the front doors of this office building. The paps were waiting for me. It was only two of them, from some unknown online political paper. Those vultures had the nerve to ask about me and Knox, hurtling questions my way as they snapped their cameras in my face.

  * * *

  When’s the big wedding?

  Who’ll be at the engagement party?

  Where will you live together?

  Does Senator Harrison approve of Knox Steele?

  What is Knox Steele’s real political affiliation?

  Are you thinking of starting a family soon?

  * * *

  I ducked into another office building with a bunch of security guards in the entrance, and they left me alone.

  So yeah. I’m friendless, unemployed, and about to be the subject of more media attention. I figure I may as well take a vacation out west.

  A couple of hours later, on the plane, I lean back in my seat in first class, stuffed after eating every bit of food they offered me. Chicken l’orange, two dinner rolls, a decadent-tasting chocolate éclair, and three packs of those little mixed nuts. I have drinks too, but not alcohol. With the mood I’m in, I would get shit-faced, but I got a whiff of the alcohol on the breath of this guy in the seat across the aisle, and the smell caused my stomach to turn. Like a double flip. So, I’m playing it safe with alcohol-free virgin cocktails. Virgin daiquiris, virgin Pina coladas, even a virgin sex on the beach, which I honestly didn’t know existed. Every drink is so sugary and sweet they feel like another helping of dessert. There’s two hours left of the flight. Pushing my seat back all the way, I pull the blanket over my face and close my eyes.

  I open my eyes to the sound of my own voice, groaning as though I’m in pain. I don’t think I was dreaming. But then I feel the fingers taping on my shoulder and look up to see the middle-aged blonde flight attendant who served me all that food and virgin cocktails.

  “Yes?” I groan out the question.

  “Ma’am, are you all right? You sound like you’re in a lot of pain.”

  “I’m… I think I’m fine,” I tell her, still groggy.

  But the loud roar from my stomach seems to disagree. A second later, the severe pain I must have been experiencing during my sleep hits me hard, and I double over.

  “Ma’am?” she calls to me.

  “I don’t think I’m fine,” I say, wincing in pain. I wrap my arms over my belly, hoping it will subside, but I hear a deep rumble.

  Moving in a panic, I unbuckle my seat belt. “Bathroom!” I shout, and she steps aside, pointing toward the front of the plane.

  I slip past her and hurry to the front. I’m so weak from the debilitating pain, that I have to hold onto each and every seat along the way. I finally get to the front. Thank goodness the restroom is empty. Closing the door behind me, I hustle to put down one of those seat protector paper towels. I sit, thinking I’m about to have the worst case of diarrhea in my life.

  But I’m oh so very wrong.

  It’s much, much worse.

  I unlock the door from my seat and push it open so I can see a sliver of the hallway. This flight attendant must be a mind reader. She’s standing there with a stack of three or four vomit bags in her hand, just inches from the restroom door.

  “Thanks,” I say, grabbing it and shutting the door just as fast.

  I want to feel embarrassed but I can’t. I’m too sick to feel remorse as everything I’ve eaten is hurled into the bag at the exact same time that my bowels violently empty themselves.

  Oh God. Please kill me now.

  The flight attendant knocks feverishly on the restroom door a minute after the pilot came onto the intercom to announce that he and the copilot are preparing for landing.

  “Ma’am?” she calls, her voice laced with urgency.

  “Yes,” I groan. I’m not just weak. I’m exhausted and I feel like if I stand up, I’ll faint.

  “Ma’am, I’ll need you to finish up in there and return to your s
eat for the landing.”

  “I can’t,” I say, pleading for an exception to that rule.

  “I’m so sorry, Ma’am, but you’ll have to try.”

  “I swear to God, I feel so faint, and my bum is so raw, but there’s more coming out from...everywhere. Please let me stay in here. I promise I’ll hold on really tight. I’ll sign a waiver or whatever you need me to. I just can’t.”

  “Open the door, Ma’am. I can give you something for that.” I unlock the door and open it a crack. She shows me an adult diaper. “It’s for our first-class passengers,” she informs me.

  “Out of curiosity, what do you give the passengers in economy?” I ask with the last bit of energy I have. But I need to know.

  “They have to go in their pants...or skirts,” she says flatly.

  Grabbing the diaper, I slam the door shut and do my best to neaten up. I also slip the diaper on, because going in my pants is not an option. I wash my hands with loads of soap a few times, then my face, and try not to seem too embarrassed for hogging the restroom for so long. All the passengers in first class avert their eyes as I walk by, but I’m grateful I don’t have to make eye contact with anyone. I take my seat, snap on my seatbelt, and sit as still as possible to avoid an accident.

  The plane lands, but not soon enough. I do manage to avoid soiling myself, and rush off the plane, sending a text to my sister to let her know I landed.

  * * *

  Me: I’m here. Hurry.

  Bethany: Welcome to Denver!

  Me: Just get here! I only have carry-on luggage.

  Bethany: Chillax, I’m parking.

  Me: Thank God. I’ll be out in a second.

  Bethany: Great! So glad you’re here!

  Me: You may not feel that way in a minute.

  Bethany: Why? What’s wrong?

  Me: Long story. Btw I’m dehydrated.

 

‹ Prev