Dropkick My Heart: Powerhouse M.A. Series

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Dropkick My Heart: Powerhouse M.A. Series Page 1

by Winter Travers




  Dropkick My Heart

  Powerhouse M.A.

  Book 1

  Winter Travers

  Copyright © 2017 Winter Travers

  All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduction, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) utilization of this work without written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.

  For questions or comments about this book, please contact the author at [email protected]

  Also by Winter Travers

  Devil’s Knights Series:

  Loving Lo

  Finding Cyn

  Gravel’s Road

  Battling Troy

  Gambler’s Longshot

  Keeping Meg

  Fighting Demon

  Unraveling Fayth

  Skid Row Kings Series:

  DownShift

  PowerShift

  BangShift

  Table of Contents

  Acknowledgements

  Dedication

  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

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Coming Next

  About the Author

  1st Chapter of Loving Lo

  1st Chapter of Downshift

  Acknowledgments

  My boys and family. I wouldn’t be able to do any of this without you.

  Lizette. #RideOrDie Did you just pee a little? LMAO

  Nikki Horn. Best Street Team Captain ever! Thank you for all you do!

  The amazing group of ladies who let me sprint with them, and who are some of the most encouraging people I’ve ever met. Mayra Statham. Sarah O’Rourke, S Van Horne, Trinity Rose, Layla Frost, and Brynne Asher. You ladies Rock!

  All my readers, and fans. You humble me every day.

  Dedication

  All you need is love, and cookies.

  I never imagined when my son started taking karate lessons that it would lead to my mind going crazy with an all new series that bumped everything out of the way, and demanded to be written. It’s true that inspiration can come from anywhere.

  A huge thank you needs to go out to my son’s karate teacher. The man managed to keep his cool, and answer every one of my annoying questions at any time of the day. Thank you, Jefe San!

  Kellan

  “Left, Ryan.” I shook my head and watched Ryan punch to the right. “Your other left, Ryan.” In my fifteen years of teaching martial arts, I discovered left and right was a concept that was hard learned by anyone under the age of ten, especially when they were just excited to be punching and kicking the shit out stuff.

  “Okay! Lock it up.” I stood in front of my class of twenty-five under belts and watched them all fall to the floor, eagerly looking up at me. I waited for all eyes to fall on me. “Good job today, guys. We need to work a bit longer on delta, but for only working on it one day, you guys are killing it.” Clinton raised his hand eagerly, and I tipped my chin at him. “Go ahead, Clinton.”

  “Mr. Wright, when are we going to get to put all of the combos together?” he asked meekly.

  “As soon as we learn them all,” I assured him. Clinton asked the same question every class. The kid was the most eager to learn, but he had the attention span of a squirrel. I surveyed the class, then looked over the crowd of parents waiting to pick up their kids. “Now, remember that belt graduation is in three weeks, and you need to have your homework turned in before. Otherwise, you don’t graduate.” Everyone groaned at the word homework, and I couldn’t help but smirk. They didn’t have any clue how much homework I had done to reach sixth-degree black belt. “Everyone up,” I said, motioning up with my hands. “And bow,” I ordered, placing my hands at my sides and bowing.

  All the kids started running up to me, giving me high fives and then scurrying off to their parents.

  “Is Mr. Roman going to be here next time?” Carrie asked me as she high-fived me.

  “He should be. He had a couple of things to do today and couldn’t make it to class.” Like sleeping until noon and screwing me over completely. Thankfully, it was the last class of the day, and I could hopefully find some time to sit down for five minutes.

  Finally, the last parents left with their kids, and I locked the door behind them. I loved classes on Saturday, but they were exhausting when I was the only instructor.

  The phone rang on the desk, and I knew it was Roman with some lame-ass excuse for why he didn’t make it in today. Roman and I were business partners with Dante and Tate, but most of the time, it was all on me to make the school a success.

  Roman’s name flashed on the caller ID, and I picked up the phone. “So, what’s your excuse this time?”

  “Ugh, I’m fucking sick, man.”

  I shook my head and sat down behind the front counter. “That’s called a hangover, Roman. Drink some fucking coffee, and get out of bed.”

  “Nah, man. This is worse than a hangover. I think I got food poisoning from the burger I ate last night at Tig’s.” Roman moaned into the phone, and I sighed.

  Food poisoning from Tig’s was a definite possibility. “I guess you should stop eating nasty shit while you’re getting shit-faced every night.”

  “It’s not every night,” Roman grumbled.

  “Sure, keep fucking telling yourself that.”

  Roman sighed. “Look, I was just calling to tell you sorry about not coming in today. If you wanna take off next Saturday, you can. I’ll take care of the monsters all by myself.”

  “Nah, don’t worry about.” I made the mistake once of trying to take off a Saturday. Roman had called me halfway through the day, and I could barely hear him over yelling parents and screaming kids. I ended up coming in and spending most of the day putting out fires he had started between yelling at the kids and telling the parents to shut it while he was teaching. “Just get better, and I’ll see you Monday night.”

  “What time do classes start?”

  I closed my eyes and counted to ten. “Four. Same as every Monday,” I reminded him.

  “Got it. I’ll be there.”

  I hung up the phone and sighed. Roman was one of the most talented guys I knew when it came to karate, but his adulting skills were severely lacking. At the age of twenty-eight, he should have his shit figured out.

  When Roman, Tate, Dante, and I opened Powerh
ouse, we expected to help kids the way we were taught when we were young and just starting karate. Roman, Tate, and I began karate at the same time and worked our way through the belts together. Dante was a red belt when we were white belts, but he took us under his wing, and we all became close friends.

  While Dante was almost ten years older than most of us, I was the highest black belt. Dante was a second-degree black belt, while Roman and Tate were fourth-degree. I was going for my sixth degree this year.

  We all came together to start the school, because we all had our own specialties that, when put together, created a karate studio unlike any around. Dante was an international sparring champion six times over, while Roman and Tate were geniuses when it came to kamas and bo staff. I rounded us out with my expertise in forms and people skills the three others lacked at times.

  The school had only been open for six months, but Dante and Tate already thought we needed to open another location. Not only had Roman bailed on me today, but so had Tate and Dante to go look at a space two towns over for a new studio.

  I was in the minority when I said we should just focus on the Falls City school. Dante and Tate had decided between themselves that if we were doing so well here, another studio would be a goldmine. I didn’t think they were wrong, I just wanted them to slow down, and wait for all of us to agree.

  I threw my phone on top of a pile of new student paperwork and propped my arms on my head. I pushed off on the floor and spun around in the chair. Most days, it was hard to believe this was my life, and today was another one of those days. Dante, Tate, and Roman were my closest friends, but sometimes it felt like everything rested on my shoulders, while they were off somewhere enjoying life, and spending all the money we were making.

  The days we didn’t have classes, I was giving private lessons, or working on lesson plans for each class. Most of the time, the Kinder-kicker class was like herding a pack of cats that were all hyped up on catnip, and the Little Ninja class wasn’t much better. Although, I still tried to teach them forms and basic karate to help them get to white belt. Once the kids hit white belt, things became more serious, and I buckled down on the curriculum.

  The highest belt level we had right now was an orange belt, but in the stack of paper on the desk, there were three kids wanting to transfer over to Powerhouse. One of them was a purple belt, and the other two were red belts. I was rather shocked the two red belts wanted to transfer schools when they were close to being black belts, but I knew it was because in the short time we had been open, we already had a reputation of being the best.

  If you were even a little bit into karate, you would have at least heard of one of us. We were the best, and we had the trophies and medals to prove it. That reputation was bringing in students left and right, but I couldn’t keep doing this on my own anymore.

  But, I wasn’t going to stress about that right now, because a knock on the front door made me jump, and I turned to see my next private lesson through the glass.

  My five-minute break was up, and it was back to the grind.

  Someone had to make Powerhouse a success, and that someone was going to be me.

  **********

  Molly

  “Three vanilla lattes, skim, and one Americano.”

  I grabbed the cups Sage set down on the counter and set them next to the grinder. I could make these drinks in my sleep. Some mornings, it felt like I was still sleeping after staying up all night trying to figure out whatever new drink had popped into my head.

  “Here, or to go?” I asked while I started the espresso.

  “Here. They are for the Moaners,” Sage said over her shoulder as she grabbed the pot of dark roast before making her way around the cafe doling out refills.

  Ah, my Monday Moaners. Every Monday like clockwork, the Moaners showed up and sat in the same corner and discussed the latest romance novels they had read. When the Moaners first started coming in, they were just a book club, but Sage and I had dubbed them the Monday Moaners after we had heard all the things they discussed. The name fits them perfectly, and it seemed to stick.

  “Molly.”

  “Yes, Frank?” I called as I poured milk into a small metal pitcher.

  “When are you going to agree to go on a date with my son?”

  And that was how I absolutely knew it was Monday. Frank was here, bugging me about dating his son who, according to Frank, was the right man for me. “I’m kind of busy this week, Frank. Why don’t we try next month?”

  “It’s April first, Molly,” he grumbled.

  I shoved the pitcher of milk under the steamer. “What was that, Frank?” I yelled over the howling of the machine.

  Frank swatted his hand at me and headed back over to his group of retired friends who came in every day.

  “Moll!” Sage shouted. “I’m almost out of dark roast. Start me another pot?”

  Four drinks and one full pot of dark roast later, I was ready to sit down for five minutes. I had been going since four o’clock that morning, and my feet were killing me.

  Sage hopped up on the counter and pointed at the ceiling. “You start a new playlist?”

  I slipped off my shoe and flexed my foot. “Yeah, I was getting sick of the same songs playing over and over.”

  “That playlist had over two hundred songs on it. I don’t think I heard the same song more than twice.”

  “The fact that I’m here every waking second might have something to do with that.” I laughed and grabbed my huge coffee cup off the counter. “Did you try the salted caramel truffle latte I made?”

  “Yeah, it was delicious like everything you make. You think you could make them skinny though, so they don’t go straight to my ass.” Sage grabbed her cup and turned it upside down. “You filled my cup up three times today with it. It’s a miracle I’m not bouncing off that walls.”

  I smirked. “That might have to do with the triple shot of espresso I put in them.”

  Sage laughed and pushed her cup towards me. “Ya think?”

  “Refill?”

  Sage rolled her eyes. “Yes, but this time, make it two shots less.”

  “Wuss,” I mumbled.

  Sage shook her head and glanced at the tables out front that were more than half-empty. “Pretty slow today, huh?”

  I started working on her drink. “Yeah, but it is Monday and almost closing time.”

  Sage smiled. “True, true.”

  Afternoons normally were slow, but it was also the time I was able to take a breath and just relax for a bit. I’ve been working my ass off for the past five years to make Java Spot Coffee House a success, and it was finally starting to pay off. I had loyal customers who came in daily and numerous weekly book clubs that were my bread and butter to pay the bills.

  Java Spot was the first business to enter the new shopping center, and with each new business that rented space, the more customers I got. The yoga place three doors down brought in the hipster crowd who were always looking for a healthy drink or a crazy tea fad. There was an accountant at the other end who brought in the straight-laced, suit and tie black coffee drinkers with the occasional latte, and the laundromat that brought in an array of strange and weird customers who typically paid with quarters. Those were not Sage’s favorite.

  The latest addition to the shopping center was the karate place that had taken up residence right next door. On Saturday, I typically saw an upswing in customers from the karate moms and dads dropping their kids off to practice and then dropping in for their daily dose of caffeine. Although, I had yet to meet the new owners of Powerhouse Martial Arts. I’ve seen them in passing, but they haven’t come over to introduce themselves. However, I haven’t made an effort to go over to them either, so I really can’t call them out on it.

  From the flow of traffic going in and out of the place, I could tell business was positively booming for them. And from the looks of the karate moms and dads coming in, I knew karate lessons were not cheap.

  “I’m gonna do one mo
re round with the coffee pot before we close.” Sage grabbed the pot and meandered around from table to table.

  It was almost three—close to locking the doors and cleaning up. I poured Sage’s drink into her cup and watched Bess approaching the counter.

  “Can I get a to-go cup for my latte?” She set her cup on the counter and smiled up at me. Bess was the head Moaner and one of my first customers.

  “You sure can. How’s the meeting going today?”

  “You know, discussing the mechanics of whether you can actually have sex on a bike while it’s moving, and if there really are twenty-something billionaire bachelors out there.”

  I poured her latte into a to-go cup and snapped the lid on. “You in the market to trade in Joe?”

  Bess threw her head back and laughed. “Only if you can promise the new one will be trained already. It took me twenty-nine years for Joe to finally learn how to put the toilet seat down. I couldn’t start over from scratch.”

  I handed her the cup. “Well, I’m sure Joe appreciates the fact that he’s not easily replaced.”

  “Pfft. Half the time, the man doesn’t even realize I’m there or gone. Damn model trains consume him since he retired.”

  “Then, I guess that gives you more time to read, right?”

  “I guess you can look at it that way.” Bess pointed over her shoulder. “That kung fu place sure is loud today. Sounds like they’re actually beating the hell out of each other.”

  “Really?” Over the banging and clanging I did making drinks, I didn’t hear much.

  “Oh yeah. It’s not as bad as Saturdays, but we could definitely hear them today.”

  “Maybe I’ll have to pay a visit to my new neighbors and have a little chat with them.”

  Bess waved her hand at me. “Don’t worry about it, hon. Like I said, Saturdays are much worse. It just made Regina turn up her hearing aid a bit, and Rach talk a bit louder. No harm, no foul.” She winked and headed back to her table.

 

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