Название: Born to be Bad
Автор: Crystal Green
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Современные любовные романы
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At the moment, a few of Damien’s employees were loitering behind O’Shea at the poker table, signaling the dealer as to what cards he held. The other table players also worked for Damien, and a hostess was keeping him up-to-date on O’Shea’s incredible run of good luck.
Incredible. Not really. Damien just wanted him to get cocky before the big fall.
Before he gave the signal to start bleeding the ex-CEO, he took a minute to remember his papa.
Damien’s boyhood hero lived on the back of his eyelids. At night, he’d only have to attempt sleep to see him again. Now, he pictured Papa—a kindly, sideburn-wearing man who’d taught him how to fish and play Hearts—standing on the opposite side of the table from O’Shea, dealing the cards that would ruin him.
With the slight lift of Damien’s index finger, an employee caught the signal. O’Shea’s luck was about to change.
Settling against the railing to watch, Damien’s jaw tightened, his hands fisted.
Someone came to stand next to him, waiting patiently to be noticed.
Damn it all. “Yes?”
When Damien looked over, he saw it was Kumbar, his stocky, dusky-skinned security pro. Next to him stood another security expert—a new guy who looked quite nervous to be in the presence of the big boss. As usual, Kumbar allowed someone else to do all the talking.
“Mr. Rollins is back,” the other man said. “Blackjack. He’s losing pretty big.”
Rollins. A neighborhood antique-store owner who’d been having financial problems lately. An honest man.
“How’d he get a marker?” Damien asked.
“I’ll check it out, sir.”
In order to emphasize his underling’s promise, Kumbar allowed himself the expansive luxury of a lethargic nod.
Damien shook his head. “People like Rollins aren’t supposed to be in here.”
But they always found their way somehow.
Thudding a fist against the railing while glaring at O’Shea’s table, Damien saw tonight’s victim frown as he surrendered his first pile of chips.
With a spark of satisfaction, Damien dismissed the security worker to check on Rollins. That left Kumbar.
“It’s things like this that bring a business down,” Damien said.
Kumbar gave a firm nod.
“Last night’s mark—you recall Lamont?—threatened to go to the press.”
Kumbar jerked a thumb toward Jean, who was saying his farewells to an attractive cocktail server on the floor. Damien knew what his right-hand man was asking: had he told his best friend—the mob boss’s son—about Lamont’s threat?
“The last thing I want to do is get a bird killed, Kumbar. I hesitate to even tell you. I’m certain Lamont won’t say a word. When I left him, he looked scared as a rabbit. No, I think more about what could happen if someone braver did tell the media about how this place really works. Where the money goes.”
Another Kumbar nod.
Damien didn’t want to say it out loud. He cherished his dark reputation; it kept him from being touched, destroyed by the competition. It was the more critical dealings Lamont had referred to that would get Damien into trouble.
It was what he did with most of the profits after the cash was shuttled out of the casino, taken to a counting house, then laundered through one of his souvenir shops.
“My image is what protects me,” Damien said instead. “I’d like it to stay as poisonous as possible.”
Kumbar glanced at the blackjack tables, and Damien’s gaze followed. There sat Mike Rollins, sweating, arms protecting a few scattered chips.
He shouldn’t go soft on him. That wasn’t how to run a gaming operation. Still, the way the older man slumped in his seat….
His father used to wear the same expression after he’d lost all his money, too.
“Go to him,” Damien said. “Get him out of here and find a way to give him back what he lost. Quietly, without him suspecting. Maybe someone shows up in his store tomorrow and buys that expensive white elephant he can’t sell. Make sure he knows he’s not welcome back.”
Kumbar took off to do his duty.
God, Damien thought, I’m an easy sell.
He couldn’t revive the interest in watching O’Shea get fleeced. Not now. But there’d be other crooked men, so the lack of entertainment didn’t bother Damien so much.
Instead, he decided to go back to Cuffs, because now that he thought about it, there was a certain new waitress there who might be able to take his mind off his troubles.
His body steamed up just picturing Gem James, with her pinned-up Brigitte Bardot hair, her wide blue eyes.
If he couldn’t watch O’Shea fall on his back tonight, he’d settle for a woman instead.
3
GEMMA HADN’T FORGOTTEN how exhausting being a waitress was.
Roxy had told her that the help wore high, strappy black pumps, short black skirts and the tightest tank tops in creation. No stranger to a nightlife wardrobe, Gemma had pieced together a decent serving ensemble, complete with a small apron and a black top decorated with silver studs and a skull and crossbones.
So, she had a thing for pirates.
Now, as Aerosmith played on a corner jukebox, she served drinks to a mellow crowd of cops, local blue-collar men and a contingent of hip, artsy types who sat in the corner booths. She was counting the minutes until her first break. Then she could rest her aching tootsies as well as her tray arm.
Past midnight, Roxy finally caught Gemma after she’d delivered a round of Hurricanes to a table of slumming lawyers.
“Those fellows aren’t our usual crowd,” Roxy said, sliding her words together lazily. It gave the older woman the air of a sophisticated nineteenth-century madame fanning herself in a fancy parlor.
Or maybe that was just Gemma’s overactive imagination.
She set her tray on the bar counter, rolling her head to work the kinks out of her neck, feeling the night’s humidity cling to her chest like a veil of moisture. “This does seem more like a local watering joint, but that’s the fun in a place like this—getting to know the customers.”
And picking their brains about Theroux. Not that she’d found out much tonight. When she’d had time to ease any questions into a conversation, the answers had been limited to, “Damien’s not much for socializin’ with the likes of his neighbors anymore,” or, “Damien’s done right by himself.”
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