Read Escorting the Player (The Escort Collection Book 3) Online
Authors: Leigh James
A
VERY
"I think I have a second wind," Chase said. "Let's get dressed."
"Do I have to?" I whined. We'd been doing it
again.
This time in the pantry. Chase had said something about christening it, and wanting a snack…he'd also mentioned the word 'multi-tasking'.
That was my man. Three things always on his mind: me, football and food.
But I knew now that I came first.
"Would you do it for Chase?"
I laughed. "I'd do anything for Chase." Warm happiness erupted in my chest after I said it, because it was true and it felt good.
"Okay. Get dressed."
We left the house and he headed in the direction of the park. Then we walked through it, past Newbury Street onto Boylston. "Are we going out to eat?"
This is Chase—of course we're going out to eat.
"No. We're going shopping."
"Do you have a store in mind?" I asked.
"I do." He said nothing further until we stopped outside of Shreve, Crump & Low.
I looked in the window and wrinkled my nose. "Are you buying a crystal swan?" I asked.
He just stood there, looking at the window and gripping my hand. "Only if you want to buy a crystal swan."
I shot him a funny look. "I think that's a little fancy for me. With my luck, I'd break its neck." I peered at the swan. "I might even do it on purpose."
"Let's go inside." He didn't wait for me to answer. He dragged me straight to the case that held the engagement rings.
"Babe? What're you doing?"
"I'm ring shopping." He examined the rows of sparkling, elegant diamonds in different settings. "Is there one you like?" He pointed to a rectangular cut diamond with a slim, elegant diamond band. "I think that one's beautiful."
"Of course that one's beautiful," I said. "They're all beautiful."
He searched my face. "Is there one you like better than the others?"
I shrugged. I was afraid my voice would wobble if I attempted to speak.
"You like the one that I picked out?" His voice was very gentle.
I nodded.
A sales person came over, recognizing us instantly. He beamed at us. "You see something you like, Mr. Layne?" His voice was eager, but tasteful. This was Shreve, Crump & Low after all. They sold crystal swans with a straight face.
"Yes I do. We'll take it to go."
Chase worked his magic, having the ring sized on the spot. We were quiet as we waited. My mind was racing and I felt as though I was too nervous to talk. After he'd paid, he put the box in his pocket and held my hand, leading me back toward the park. I still didn't say anything—I was worried if I opened my mouth, I'd just start bawling.
"Speaking of swans…" Chase stopped in front of the swan boats. It was late afternoon and they were closed. He looked at his watch and laughed. "I messed up. We can't go for a ride, babe."
"S'okay." My voice was gravelly.
He patted his pocket. "I want to give you this ring right now. But I'm going to wait. Until things are finalized with Jess and you and I have some time to settle in. Because I want to do this the right way. But I
also
want you to know what my intentions are."
He squeezed my hands. "They are to love, honor and protect you for the rest of your life."
I felt that nervous little bird of hope in my chest glow. It was a phoenix now, a symbol of rebirth, rising from the ashes of my past.
I blinked back tears.
"Does that sound okay to you?" he asked, his blue eyes searching mine.
"It's more than okay." My voice sounded stronger. "It sounds perfect."
He held out his arms and motioned to me. "Come to Chase, babe." And then he wrapped me in a massive hug, making me feel safe and protected. "I love you."
I smiled against his chest. "I love you, too."
We got back to the house and he swooped me into his arms, carrying me up the stairs and putting me on the bed.
He smiled at me. "Are you in the mood? How much do you think you can take?"
"I can go all night, baby," I said.
He snuggled down next to me, happily grabbed the remote control, and scrolled through the channels until he found HBO.
Then I sighed contentedly as the new season of
Game of Thrones
started, and I held on to the man I loved for dear life.
C
HASE
"What do you mean, you booked another trip to Disney? You just took the boys last month!"
I sighed as my mother explained patiently that her grandchildren had made her promise to take them back to see something called The Electric Light Parade. It involved an octopus and took place outside at night. Or something. I stopped listening.
"Fine," I said, cutting her off. I knew she just really wanted to go again. "Just work it out with Ave."
"I will, honey. See you this weekend for family dinner! Reggie and his wife are coming, right?"
"Right. And Cole and Jenny."
"Looking forward to it!" Martha sounded positively gleeful. She'd been on cloud nine ever since Avery and I had gotten married and had kids. She said grandkids were her happy ending.
Speaking of the kids, I heard a crash from the living room. "Watch out!" one of the boys yelled. I heard another crash.
"Did you guys knock over the crystal swan again? Knock it off! That has sentimental value!" I hollered.
"I kind of hope they knock it over," Avery said, coming up and wrapping her arms around me from behind. "Since you bought it for me as an April Fool's joke."
"Babe. I watched you pine for it. It was the least I could do."
Our oldest son, Finn, whizzed by us wielding a Nerf gun. "Onward, soldiers!" he cried. His two younger brothers, Brodie and little Eric, followed him. There were more crashes.
"That swan's not gonna make it," I said.
"Probably not." Avery leaned up and kissed me.
"Mom! Can we have lunch?" Brodie cried, interrupting us. "I'm
starving
!"
I rubbed my stomach and looked at my wife hopefully. "Chase's kind of hungry, too."
She laughed and rolled her eyes. "I know—because you're
always
hungry. You're all always hungry!" She headed back to the kitchen. She spent a
lot
of time in the kitchen. Good thing she seemed to like it.
Things had worked out better than I could have ever asked for. We hadn't won that last super bowl title, but I did get Player of the Year. Which was a nice touch. Since I'd retired from the NFL, I was now a consultant for
WRX
. I got to go to all the Warriors games and then they paid me to dissect them on TV. It was a pretty sweet gig. I never had to miss my kids' practices. I got to coach their Little League teams. And I got to spend all the time I wanted with Ave.
She made me lunch every day. And breakfast, and dinner. God I loved that woman.
Jessica and Pax had gotten married and had, remarkably, stayed that way. Probably because Pax had smartened up and insisted on a pre-nup. Their series got cancelled after one season. They'd been on the reality-series juggernaut ever since, appearing on such gems as
Survivor: The Celebrity Edition
,
The Amazing Race
, and several celebrity cooking competitions. They were fierce competitors. The other contestants often seemed afraid of Jessica, which was smart.
Lila was still living in Boston. Avery had made peace with her, but Avery always seemed to make the best of everything. I still wasn't happy with Lila. But after she'd successfully completed a rehab program, we'd bought her an apartment. And a car. And paid for her to go back to school. And yet, she still managed to be pissy about it. She wanted a Lexus, but I'd bought her a Honda. But that was as close as I'd gotten to justice.
So far.
Eric was thrilled that we'd named one of the boys after him. He flew up from California all the time, happy to play the doting uncle.
He was still single. He told me that he was considering going the escort route.
I smelled something yummy coming from the kitchen, so I headed in. Avery had plates out and she was filling them with enchiladas and rice.
"Babe. You are seriously the best thing that ever happened to Chase Layne." I grabbed a plate and then reached for the bowl of shredded cheese.
"You can't have that." She slapped my hand.
"Why not?" I asked, crestfallen.
"Because it's
nacho
cheese." She said, snorting with laughter. "Get it? It's a
joke
! 'Nacho' cheese. 'Not your' cheese. Hey, why aren't you laughing?"
"Wow. Just…wow." I shook my head. "You tell seriously bad jokes."
She kept giggling. "At least I don't talk about myself in the third person."
"They warned you—they
said
this was for better or for worse. This is what they meant."
"I'll take it." Avery was still laughing. It was good that she at least amused herself.
We heard another crash and I ignored it, stuffing some enchilada in my mouth.
Oh my God, it was so good.
"I will, too babe. I will too."
I
f you enjoyed
Chase and Avery's story, make sure to check out the next book in the series,
Escorting the Assassin
! It features Kylie, Avery's friend from the
Sizzling Ranch.
It's available as part of the awesome Romancing the Alpha 2 set!
T
hank you to my readers
! Every single one of you lights up my days. I love hearing from you! If you’d like to be notified about new releases and special sales, please join my
Mailing List
.
I could not write without the love and enduring support of my husband and my three beautiful, patient, kind children. I am thankful for you every day, even when you are subjecting me to (endless) hours of playoff football and bugging me for snacks. You guys make every day worth it.
Thanks to my amazing beta readers, Wendy Myler, Amy Warren, and Cheryl Buchanan. You are my special little snowflakes!
Special thanks to Theresa Cole at
theresamcole.com
for your amazing editorial prowess and for helping me with Chase and Avery's story. You rule!
Special thanks to Dana Waganer at www.danaproofwrite.com for your eagle eye and special touch. I always feel like my books are "red-carpet ready" once you've finished with them!
I have to also thank my mom and dad, who have always supported me. I love you guys. You are special people.
And a special shout-out to my mom, who is always ready with a pep talk, and who always told me to never give up.
I
f you enjoyed this book
, you might also enjoy
The Liberty Series
, my sexy, action-adventure romance series. Here’s a preview! Enjoy!
I
didn’t know
how long I had been lying on the floor, looking up at the man who had ripped my family apart. In that moment, staring into each other’s eyes, I remembered everything, every lie he’d ever told me. His eyes told me he was afraid.
He should be. It was his turn.
“Liberty, you can do this,” a voice said, squeezing my shoulder. That voice filled my body with warmth, with hope. “You’re not alone.”
I thought about everything that had brought me here, to this dirty floor in this dirty building. I had finally found a home, far away from here. But I needed to let my enemy know that I hadn’t forgotten about him, about what he did. He didn’t deserve to sleep at night, to enjoy a hot meal, to watch baseball. He didn’t deserve normal.
He deserved justice.
“Let’s finish this. It’s okay,” that loving voice whispered in my ear, and I knew he was right.
I closed my eyes and fired.
T
here was only
one thing that had ever made me more nervous than going to work at that club. That was being alone with my mother’s boyfriend, Ray. There were at least some parts of my job that were redeemable. I couldn’t say the same thing for Ray
.
But I didn’t have time to think about that now, which was good, because I never really could stand to think about him. Right now I had to go to work. And at work, I had to stay alert.
It was Thursday, our busy night, when the convention-goers were out for their last hurrah and the weekend tourists were just starting out. At The Treasure Chest, we always made our best money on Thursdays. They didn’t have as many girls on as Friday and Saturday, and we all have a lot more opportunity for attention. Not that I wanted it. I knew that didn’t make sense to anybody, but it was the truth. I got to the club at nine and in the locker room the girls were talking, trying on their crazy, tiny outfits, teasing each other. I always listened to them before we went out on the floor; it soothed me to be around the hum of other people after being in my quiet apartment all day. They talked about the crazy things their kids had done that day, the fights they’d had with their boyfriends, how they’d waxed their own bikini lines and how bad it hurt — but how aerodynamic it would make them. I did my own waxing, too, but I couldn’t make up funny stories about it like Adriana or Keisha could, so I just kept quiet. I pretty much always kept quiet. All the other girls had plenty of things to say, to fill up the space.
The Treasure Chest was considered upscale for Vegas, and we had some of the prettiest girls. There were about thirty of us in total, mostly young with a couple of lifers thrown in. In stripping, you’re considered a lifer if you’ve done it for ten years or more. Most of us, myself included, start at twenty one. So even though the lifers are still relatively young, they’re getting old for this place and they know it. They make jokes about getting traded down to the Gulch, which was a grimier club a few blocks over, where the women were older and the drinks came in plastic cups. “At least the liquor over there is cheap!” Tracy said sometimes, after a shift where she couldn’t get anyone to go to the Champagne Room with her. Tracy is good humored and she always laughs when she says it, but her eyes look hooded. I think she might be scared. You don’t make good money at the Gulch, and from what I hear the management encourages mileage.
Mileage was something bad when you were a stripper. It meant something like you had to do as much as you could, go as far as you could go, without actually having sex during a lap dance. I’d heard that a lot of the guys still came that way.
I didn’t want to end up at The Gulch. I didn’t want poor Tracy to, either.
I was always nervous before I went out, and I didn’t like putting on my outfit, but I did enjoy the makeup. For those few precious minutes in front of the mirror before it was time, it was like I was a little girl again, digging through my mother’s overstuffed makeup bag. I had better makeup at work, more expensive stuff, but I remember the distinct smell of her inexpensive, sparkly eyes shadows and blush. If hopefulness had a scent, that’s what it smelled like, even though her compacts were cracked and plastic. My mother’s makeup promised transformation, something better than what was already there. I would lock myself in the bathroom and rummage through her bag whenever she was napping on the couch, holding my breath so she wouldn’t wake up and catch me. And after, as I looked up at myself in the mirror, all of ten with bright blue eyeshadow on, I thought I looked pretty. Not as pretty as my mom, of course. No one was as pretty as my mom.
So now, it always comforted me, the sparkly eyeshadow, the black mascara, the hot pink blush, the process of transforming my face into something that made people stare. My beautiful mask. Playing dress-up with my face was so much more fun than playing dress-up with my body; because if you looked at just my done-up face, I could be anybody. I was almost perfect. I could be one of those girls in town for the weekend, out to dinner with my fiancé, having a two-hundred-dollar bottle of wine and not even blinking when the bill came. I could be any one of those girls at a club, from a
suburb across the country, who just came in for the weekend. With a face like this, I could be waiting for my boyfriend to bring me a twenty-dollar drink that I might not even finish. I could be wearing a beautiful dress and a thousand-dollar watch, have a decent apartment and good job to go back to, parents and siblings somewhere, all hoping I’m being safe and waiting to hear about my crazy weekend in Vegas.
But I don’t actually have any girlfriends, and my watch is a cheap plastic glow-in-the-dark one I bought at Walmart. I’m not from the suburbs, and I’ve never had one of those nice, ridiculously expensive dinners at a five-star restaurant with anyone. I don’t know who my father is and my mother, rest her soul, is dead. My sister’s gone. No one cares if I’m safe. The only place I’m going after work is to my cheap apartment in the scary part of town, with my mask off before I even leave the building. I will eat macaroni and cheese that came from a box and go to bed, alone. So no, I’m not wearing a nice dress tonight. In fact, underneath my white button-down shirt and short plaid skirt that resembles a schoolgirl’s uniform—a slutty schoolgirl’s uniform—I’m wearing a leather thong and a black bra that has cut-outs for my nipples. And hot pink fake-suede sky-high spike heels.
Maybe I’m a little bitter. But I know I shouldn’t complain, because a lot of people have it so much worse.
I tried to concentrate on my sparkly eyeshadow in the mirror until Alex tells me it’s time to go out. I was first tonight and being first on a shift meant you were a warm-up act; the girls that came on later were usually the prettiest and got the biggest tips from the late-night, liquored up crowd. The Treasure Chest was different from most other Vegas clubs this way — girls actually wanted to dance onstage here. At some of the other, bigger clubs there were over a hundred, sometimes two hundred, girls who worked there. A lot of the dancers didn’t want to bother going out on stage when they could let the newbies do it and they could go into the crowd and do lap dances, where if they hustled they could make a lot more.
All of the other girls at the Chest were big on going out into the crowd, too, but because there were less of us and it was a smaller club, we all wanted to dance onstage. It’s what we were known for. The other girls used that stage time to leverage the crowd, to give them a little taste so they’d want to buy an appetizer, an entree, and dessert. Of them.
Going out first, before the club was really crowded, meant that you were either in trouble with management, the crowd didn’t like you, or both. Usually it was both.
Tonight, for me, I was going first because I was in trouble. Alex was punishing me by making me dance for the college boys who only drank light beer and could only afford happy hour. There were enough girls tonight that I wouldn’t be on stage when the conventioneers and post-steakhouse crowd showed up. Those guys got bottle service and tipped in tens, not ones. If you didn’t get that stage time you wouldn’t be able to get them interested, thinking about you, and clamoring for individual dances.
When I was first hired, six months ago, I got all the best shifts, all the best slots. When Alex interviewed me he asked if I had any experience. “No,” I said, looking at the floor, hoping it was dark enough inside that he didn’t see the blush creeping up my neck to my face; strippers couldn’t blush.
“Who needs experience?” he asked, and laughed. “You’re a perfect ten.”
People had always told me I was pretty. I got stared at a lot. I had long, thick, dirty-blond hair, big blue eyes, and perfectly smooth skin. My sister Sasha, especially, used to get so mad that people were always nice to me. She said it was just because of the way I looked. She was pretty herself, and very smart, but she said none of it mattered when she was next to me.
“But look at Mom,” I would say. Mom was more beautiful than me and Sasha and every supermodel ever put together. She was tall and thin, with alabaster skin, long raven hair and beautiful, thick, naturally long black eyelashes. It was like living with Snow White. Wherever we went, complete strangers, male and female, would gape at her. Men would trip over themselves to open doors for her. Sasha and I used to joke that small birds and butterflies would follow her around. None of it mattered, though. Sometimes I think her looks made it worse. It made it too easy for her to get what she wanted, and what she wanted never seemed to be good for her.
“Look where it got
her
,” I would say, and Sasha would look over at Mom, passed out on the couch, and she would just shrug.
“You won’t make the same mistakes,” she’d said, and she was right about that. But just because I wasn’t strung out it still wasn’t easy, like she seemed to think it was going to be. Being pretty didn’t mean you’d never be lonely.
I would tell her that now….if I knew where she was.
Stripping wasn’t easy for me, but I needed the money. Waitressing was not an option. I couldn’t handle talking to people that much. So dancing was it. I had no clothes on, but at least I didn’t have to chat. At first Alex took care of me and gave me the good shifts because he’d thought he had a chance with me. I had since heard that he did this with all the new girls, and that made me feel better. I didn’t want to be singled out. But Alex was getting enough play that he was okay — most of the time. You had to be firm. He was just looking for something beautiful for free in a town where nothing was free, not even the free drinks. But I wasn’t giving anything away. Some of the girls who weren’t the best looking managed to hang onto the best shifts; I didn’t like to think about how.
Next to me Adriana was adjusting her long, fake black ponytail and examining her eyeliner. “Are you up first?” she asked. I squared my shoulders.
“Yup, he moved me,” I said, and managed a smile. “He wants me out on the floor. Alex is trying to make a point.”
“Always,” she said. “Tell him to keep his little point to himself.” She laughed. Adriana’s aunt was married to one of the owners, so Alex left her alone. She had a boyfriend and two little girls and kept her coveted place in the lineup because she was absolutely beautiful and could sell Champagne time better than anyone. At twenty-five, she was a legend at our club. All the new hires had to train with her, myself included. She gave me exactly twenty minutes on my first day. That was it. She taught me how to maintain eye contact while I was on stage, to make each customer feel like he was the only guy in the room, even when I was looking at every guy in the room. She gave me pointers about how to get them to tip well and request private time with me.
Adriana gave me all the basics in those twenty minutes, but I would never come close to her. I could memorize my lines, but I would never be an actress. Adriana, however, was a natural. She was born to do sales. She made it look so easy and night after night, guys paid thousands of dollars to have an hour with her. Men flew across the country to see her on a regular basis. One older guy, who was rumored to be a millionaire, had even proposed.
I didn’t have her gift. I couldn’t look at someone like she did — like she knew who they were, and they didn’t disgust her. Like she still wanted them and liked being with them. All while managing to get paid a large sum of money. It was a business transaction, and Adriana got that. I knew what it was supposed to be, but I couldn’t get over feeling like it was some sort of messy emotional exchange that I wasn’t at all capable of.
“You’re up,” she said and pointed with her chin to where Alex had appeared at the door. He looked like he had spent too much time in a tanning booth, which in fact he probably had. Like so many other men in Vegas, he used too much hair product and had too many sparkly details on his too-expensive jeans. But this was his perpetual look, like he had no choice in the matter; I couldn’t picture him any other way.
Alex was chewing spearmint gum loudly, and it seemed like I could have smelled it from halfway across the room, mingling with his cologne. My stomach suddenly hurt. I couldn’t tell if it was the smell of him that was making me nauseous or if it was my regular jitters. “Gonna go out on the floor tonight?” he asked, snapping his gum, smiling at me. He always smiled, even when there was no reason to.
I returned the smile from under the protection of my makeup. “Probably not,” I said, shrugging. I couldn’t go out on the floor. Not yet. He knew that.
“I don’t know how you’re paying your bills,” he said, returning my shrug, “but it’s your talent you’re wasting.”
I kept my smile plastered on and managed to laugh a little. “Talent? That’s a fancy word for what I’ve got.” Then I heard the music that I danced to. I touched his arm. “I gotta go,” I said, keeping my voice light. I had to play nice if I wanted to make rent this month. I needed all my shifts and probably some extra.
He smiled at me while snapping his gum. And then slapped me on the ass on my way to the stage.
I made myself keep my shoulders straight; I said he was
usually
okay
.
I told myself that I probably deserved it, just for being here.
As for talent, Alex and I both knew I had none. Adriana had the brains, Keisha had this ethnic-goddess thing going on that drove the customers wild, as well as absolutely no problem telling them to knock it off if they started grabbing her body parts, and Tracy was just plain aggressive. So were many of the other girls. They just kept grinding it out every night, literally, moving from guy to guy, dollar to dollar.
My “talent,” if you could call it that, was my looks, and the fact that I seemed innocent. Alex told me that. He told me none of the bartenders or the other girls could figure out why I was stripping, when I didn’t drink, didn’t smoke, didn’t swear, and wouldn’t give lap dances. In reality, I swore often and drank occasionally — I just didn’t do these things in front of other people. That bad girl behavior was not to be seen by others; it was my private self.