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Brody: The Betting Billionaire (The Billionaire Cowboys of Clearwater County Book 3)

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by Bonnie R. Paulson




  Brody

  The Betting Billionaire

  Book 3 of the Billionaire Cowboys of Clearwater County

  Brody

  Gambling billionaire Brody Hart bets Kate Mattese she can't live on his ranch for two months - with him! - without falling in love.

  He’s willing to put it all on the line to prove to Kate she’s worth waiting for.

  Every woman falls for him. Every. Single. One.

  The bet is a sure thing and Brody congratulates himself before she even moves in.

  But Brody doesn't know Kate needs the money more than her heart needs to lose. Kate's loyalty to her family is bigger than her loyalty to herself.

  When the bet goes awry and Brody really might lose everything, he's got to decide between the ease of billions or the sweet joy of love.

  Chapter 1

  Kate

  Glancing over her shoulder to the fifth-wheel, Kate hoisted her bag up higher on her shoulder. The bottles and toothbrush clinked inside. Her mom slept through Kate stumbling from the trailer, but would she sleep through the effort associated with trying to get the car started?

  The starter had been giving them issues since Kate came back from school. Every mechanic they’d taken it to had listed a number of other problems which just hiked the estimate for repair even higher. A new starter was the most pressing.

  No, no money was the most pressing. Barely enough money for food. Hardly enough money for their trailer space. Thank goodness, they hadn’t needed medications or anything else to continue living.

  Kate sighed just thinking about the trials they’d been through. If only her dad could come back. That would fix everything.

  Shrugging off the pitiful thoughts, Kate narrowed her eyes. No big deal. The gravel crunched under the soles of her shoes as she crossed the parking lot of the rest area. She needed to clean up and the rest area was the only consistent running water they had access to, even if it wasn’t warm.

  Opening the heavy metal door, Kate stood there and listened. If someone else were inside, it could be anyone. Rest area bathrooms scared her but she’d had to suck it up and get over it for years. She could do it again and again. She didn’t have any other choice.

  At least, she and her mom had been able to move up from living in the car. Dad had sent some money from his North Dakota oil field work and they’d been able to pay off some debt and get a trailer for about eight-hundred dollars. But that wasn’t enough. They needed more. After what everyone said about so much money to be made in North Dakota, the longer he was there, the less and less money came to Kate and her mother. Kate hoped the economy wasn’t dipping again. What would happen to their small family then? Was there such a thing as not enough money for a family to stay together? Was that what would happen? Would they be torn apart more than they were already? They needed more money before Kate found that out.

  More. That was the four letter word of her life. More. It was always more and never enough.

  Inside the silent, empty bathroom, Kate stared at herself in the polished metal sheet that passed as a blurry mirror. Hopefully she could get herself presentable enough to go for the job application at the reservation. She needed the dealer job, like nothing else. She was willing to work her tail off, she just needed a chance. Just one!

  Splashing water on her face after scrubbing her hair in the sink with cold water, Kate gasped. The water was frigid.

  Teeth chattering, she used a threadbare towel and roughed up her skin until it was pink and tingling. She’d have to apply mascara and eyeliner in the car’s rearview mirror where she could see clearer. Finished, she went back to the car, dragging her feet.

  She wanted to get inside the casino before the rush of other applicants. But she didn’t want to deal with the car. Kate needed this job. She needed to make something more of herself. She’d given up finishing her degree and seeking out happiness on her own terms to help her family.

  This job would help her family as well as herself to get things back on track. No, going for the job interview wasn’t what she was so sluggish about, it was the car. Another bleak reminder that they didn’t have enough.

  All of the camp sites were quiet, as if they too suspected a battle with the car was coming. Glancing toward the fifth-wheeler, Kate opened the front door and tossed her bag into the passenger seat. Climbing into the driver’s seat, she leaned her head back and took a deep breath. Here it goes. She turned the key in the ignition and the engine turned over immediately. Immediately!

  Kate’s jaw dropped and her worry pulled off her shoulders. Today was going to be a very lucky day indeed.

  The engine still ran rough, but Kate didn’t care. If she could get the job, she’d get transmission fluid and top it off. That would help with some of the shuddering. The drive to the casino wouldn’t take very long and she could do her makeup there.

  Glancing up at the window on the trailer, she smiled at the sight of her mom waving and thumbs upping to Kate. Mom knew how great it was that the car ran.

  Kate could feel it. Things were going to change. She only had a short twenty-minute drive to the reservation. She could get there with even more time at this rate. She couldn’t contain her grin as she pulled from the trailer.

  At the casino, Kate checked her makeup one more time in the rearview mirror and hesitated before turning the key off. She didn’t want to lose the luck of the started engine. She’d kept it running while she’d applied her makeup. The odds weren’t in her favor that it would start again so easily when she came back out.

  That would be okay. She would hopefully have a job and it wouldn’t ruin her mood. She’d bank on that. She had to. She had nothing else to bank on.

  Tugging on the hem of her dark blue button-up shirt, Kate grabbed her pocketbook and strode inside.

  Lights on the outside glowed, competing with the early morning sun. Dark red carpet and brass window frames dimmed down the daylight shining through the front glass. By the time she’d made it past the front doors and the double-layer of windows and foyer, daylight was almost completely obsolete. It could have been any time of day and the people inside looked like they had no concept of time.

  Ignoring the gaming machines and the gambling tables on the far end, Kate stuck to the periphery of the wall and made her way to the Human Resources department tucked in the back by the restrooms.

  Kate knocked on the door and peeked through the glass panel, hesitant to just barge into someone’s office. A raven-haired woman motioned her inside, a pleasant smile on her lips. “How can I help you?”

  Swallowing, Kate didn’t want to admit to the nerves she had at actually being there. She twisted her hands at her waist. “I wanted to apply for the position that’s open?” She tried smiling but her nerves kept her lips tight.

  The woman nodded, but then tilted her head to the side. “The position that was advertised in the paper has been filled internally. I do know we have more openings coming up. If you want to fill out an application, we can contact you as soon as one becomes available that you fit.” She slid a packet of white paper across the counter to Kate. “Pens are right there, if you want to fill it out here.”

  Kate nodded, finally able to crack a smile. She tried to smother her disappointment. “Thank you. When are the jobs supposed to be available?” Please, say next week. We can’t go much longer than that.

  “The end of the month. A couple of people are retiring and we have a woman leaving for maternity leave in the hotel side of the casino.” The phone rang and t
he woman tapped the counter. “Excuse me.”

  Kate nodded as the woman turned away. She reached out with a shaky hand and grabbed the application. Almost a complete month.

  They didn’t have enough money for food, to pay for the spot their trailer was in, or much anything else. Gas. They didn’t have enough for gas to get anywhere. They were basically living on saltine crackers and ketchup and the water from the rest area. As if agreeing with her thoughts, Kate’s stomach growled. She inhaled long and deep.

  What was she supposed to tell her mom? They had to wait for more money from Dad? He wasn’t sending much and Kate had a feeling it was because he was gambling it away in North Dakota as well. She didn’t want to think that way about her dad, but from what she understood, there wasn’t much to do over there. He had to entertain himself somehow and gambling was anything but boring.

  She left the office with the papers in her hand, but she left the pen on the counter. She wasn’t going to turn in her application. They might not get to stay in the area. She wasn’t sure how they were going to be able to move the trailer without a truck, but if they were evicted from the site, they’d have to do something. Maybe they should go back to living in the car. It wouldn’t be the first time. They could sell the trailer and go from there.

  Unwilling to face reality just yet, Kate wandered the insides of the gambling hall, blinking back continual tears and trying to ignore the desperation that swirled around her like smoke in the air. If she walked by the buffet restaurant one more time, maybe some calories would soak into her through the air.

  “Do you have any mimosas?” A tall, blond man reached out and snagged Kate’s shirt sleeve. He handed her a glass with just ice in it and pointed toward his table. “I need one. Also, ask the cook to send out some French toast and bacon. I’m not going to last losing all my money, if I can’t eat something.” He winked impossibly blue eyes at Kate and she just stood there. He looked past her and arched an eyebrow. “You new or something? Still sleeping?” He grinned and motioned toward himself. “In awe of my magnetism?”

  Kate snorted. “Hardly. I don’t work here.” Bitterly, she reached out and handed the man his glass back. She turned to the side, ducking her head.

  Where had the crowd come from? Only a few more feet and she was surrounded by about ten people, staring in wonder at the table the man had pointed at.

  She turned back and joined them, curious about what was so interesting. The blond man claimed the center seat and rolled his shoulders. He said something and lifted his empty glass and the dealer motioned toward a woman with a dark blue top and a black skirt, similar to the clothing Kate wore. Kate had looked like she worked there. That made sense.

  The waitress whisked away the man’s glass and he rubbed his hands together, readjusting himself in the seat. He glanced up, catching Kate’s gaze. For a second they held the connection until he grinned and winked.

  As if challenged, Kate lifted her chin and crossed her arms. The man was ballsy and something about him grated on her awareness. Not what she wanted to feel when she was already feeling down and out. Rubbing her lack of a love-life in her face wasn’t what she had considered when she’d felt lucky driving that morning.

  In front of Kate, a man leaned over to the lady next to him and nodded toward the blond player. “He’s been here all night. Last I heard he’s won a hundred-thousand and lost fifty. I’m not sure if he’s still up or not.” The man shook his head, straightening up and watching the table. The woman murmured something, but Kate wasn’t listening.

  She stared at the man in the gambling seat. A tuxedo clung to the lines of his body with an almost irreverent tenacity. Obviously, it was tailored for him.

  The blond man didn’t flinch or seem to care about the group of people watching him. He grabbed up the dice the dealer pushed toward him and shook them in his hand. He stared at the table and then glanced up at Kate again. He paused, holding his hand aloft. “I need luck. Care to blow on these for me?” A smile slid across his masculine lips, taunting her, as if he didn’t think she would.

  Clenching her jaw, Kate held her breath as she tried to ignore all of the people turning to study her. She inclined her head and moved to his side. She blew on the dice and stepped back, embarrassed that she’d actually done it and berating herself not to do it again. Morbid curiosity held her in place when she wanted to turn and run. The juxtaposition stark between her black slacks and blue shirt and the man’s disheveled tuxedo with his black untied bow tie draping from both sides of his open collar, revealing his strong neck and the hollow between his collar bones.

  His hands were well-cared for and his slicked back blond hair had lost control of a few stray locks falling forward onto his strong brow. Was it legal for a man who looked like he did to also smell so good? Kate caught a whiff of an expensive cologne that mixed money with nature. She shifted on her feet, crossing her arms.

  He rolled the dice and the crowd gasped. Turning over his shoulder, he smirked. “You’re my good luck charm. Here. I’ll pay you fifty bucks each time you blow on my dice and I win.” He handed her a blue poker chip with a bold 50 on the front.

  Fifty dollars just to blow on some coins? Was he joking? Did Kate care? She half-shrugged even as she reached out to snatch the chip. “Sounds good.”

  “I’ve used up all the luck in this place, but I’m not ready to quit yet.” He grabbed up the dice again and held them out for her.

  She leaned in close, inhaling the rich scent of his cologne and skin before blowing on the dice. If she could get a few of them, she’d be able to get ahead for a few weeks. Just a little bit of a reprieve.

  That’s all she needed. Just a break. She’d blow on all the dice he handed her.

  Chapter 2

  Brody

  Down a hundred-thousand dollars at craps and Brody couldn’t get his luck to change. Add to that the texts his mother kept sending and he was past irritated. He tucked his cell away again after just another of her annoying messages.

  “Who cares that Trevor is getting married?” Brody grumbled, startled at the bitterness in his voice.

  “I’m sorry?” The woman next to him studied him, arrogance rich in the arch to her eyebrows and the elegance in her features. She intrigued Brody and he hated when that happened. He wasn’t on the market for anyone. He just wanted to win the next game, win the next bet. Nothing else seemed to matter.

  He held out the dice for the woman to blow on. “Nothing. I’m just muttering to myself.” She leaned forward and Brody was entranced at how she could make blowing on dice look so sensual while harboring an innocence in her eyes. The longer she stood beside him, the more he wanted to know her.

  He tossed the dice, more interested in the woman beside him than the game in front of him. “So, what’s your name?” He held up his hand. “Actually, hold that thought. I don’t want anything to change. I don’t want to lose for a while.” He grinned at her over his shoulder and watched as his dice danced into line.

  Another ten-thousand-dollar win. Nice. He could definitely get used to that kind of luck.

  He held out another fifty-dollar chip to the girl. He opened his mouth to ask another question but his phone buzzed again in his pocket. This time the buzz was insistent and repetitive. He held up his hand to the dealer. “Just a moment, don’t give my seat away. I need to take this.” He smiled charmingly at the dealer and the crowd around his table.

  Stepping to the side, by the bank of slot machines, Brody swiped the screen over the image of his brother’s face. “Trevor. I’m busy. What do you need?” Trevor was the golden child and Brody was sick of being known as the mess up, the drunk. Ignore the fact that he hadn’t left the casino since yesterday and he’d been subsisting on alcoholic beverages and casino food.

  “I need you to come home and help me with the wedding plans. Also, the takeover with the Stabler branch… I don’t think I’m going to sign off on it. It’s too risky. It feels like one of your gambling games. I’m not interes
ted in high risk.” Trevor wasn’t rushed, but he was firm.

  Brody sighed, running his fingers through his hair. Of course, Trevor wouldn’t be on board with it. The whole plan was Brody’s design. Everything about it was his. Trevor couldn’t stand it. “What’s the big deal about all this?” He needed Trevor to sign off on the paperwork, so Brody could do something with himself. He hated that he needed Trevor’s permission to do anything. Hart Industries was his, too.

  “About what?” Trevor sighed, like Brody and his questions were one more thing to confuse him with their unclarity.

  “About your wedding. I don’t get it. Walk down the aisle and give her a ring. Come on, man. It’s just a wedding.” Brody had been to multiple receptions before. He hadn’t been impressed.

  “I’m in love. That’s the big deal.” Trevor’s confusion rolled into irritation.

  “It’s not hard to fall in love, man. It’s not like you’re doing something special. Getting someone to love you isn’t difficult either. Well, it might be for you, but it isn’t for me.” Brody glanced back at the people waiting, the woman studied the chips in her hand with intriguing intensity.

  “Really, hotshot? I bet you couldn’t bring someone to my wedding in two months – in love with you. Just you. Not your money.” Trevor’s voice dipped and then came back strong. “If you do that, I’ll approve the Stabler deal. Dang, I’ll even give you full control.”

  A bet. Brody stilled, holding his breath. It wasn’t for something as trivial as money, either. It was a chance to show what he could do with a business deal. He was never given that chance. He cleared his throat. There had to be a catch. “What if I lose?”

  Trevor paused. “You give me your half of Hart Industries.”

  His half? Their mother had handed them divided control over the family company while she still had “consulting” privileges, meaning they did what she wanted until she felt they were doing well without her.

 

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