Knockout. Erica Orloff
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Название: Knockout

Автор: Erica Orloff

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Зарубежные любовные романы

Серия: Mills & Boon Silhouette

isbn: 9781472092144

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ by the name of Rock Morrison. Deacon had his arms folded, his face stony as he studied our two boxers. Deacon wasn’t a screamer. I was. I would yell from the corner or scream “fake left,” “jab right” or even a desperate “just fucking hit him!” Deacon, as befitted his nickname, which implied a near-biblical wisdom in the ring, studied fighters and videos of matches, and taped sparring sessions, poring over them time and time again until it became clear what our boxer was doing wrong. Then he made a pronouncement, like Moses coming down off the mount with two tablets of stone.

      “All right, guys,” I shouted at the fighters. “Break it up. Catch your breath.”

      Deacon finally spoke. “Son…” He motioned to Terry Keenan, wanting him to come closer to the ropes.

      “Mmph,” our fighter responded, his mouth guard still in place. He walked to us and leaned over the ropes, sweat dripping down his face.

      “The good Lord gave you two legs, Terry. Both of them work just fine. But you’re always relying on just one. Change up your footwork.” End of pronouncement. Deacon was done for the afternoon.

      “Terry, you heard him,” I said. “Work out with the jump rope and then shower up. We’ll look over some tapes tonight before dinner.”

      Terry nodded at me. That pretty face was unusual for a boxer, and his upcoming opponent, Gentleman Jake Johnson—whose face was decidedly less pretty—had offered to permanently make Terry’s face ugly in all the prefight trash talking. Now Deacon and I both, privately, wondered if Keenan had also gotten another kind of offer—to take a dive. Benny Bonita couldn’t be trusted, and though we believed in Terry, he had an enormous family. His seven brothers—and one sister—all seemed to think Terry was the ticket to the big time. We wondered if that meant that an even bigger paycheck, courtesy of a bribe from Bonita, was awfully enticing.

      Deacon and I headed out of the gym and over to the ranch house, walking over sand and passing small cacti and scrubby-looking bushes. The ranch house was a rambling building with ten bedrooms. It had been a brothel once, and after that, it had been an actual ranch of some sort. I think the former owner had gone from hustling hookers to rustling ostriches.

      I opened the front door and went into the large den, where Destiny sat watching a show with a bright purple dinosaur.

      “Hi, Destiny,” I said, sitting next to her and reaching out to brush a stray hair from her face.

      “Hi, Auntie Jack.”

      “How are you doing, kiddo?” Dumb question. How was she supposed to be doing? Her mother was dead, and she was stuck with me and Deacon at a boxing camp while we figured out what to do.

      “Okay. Uncle Deacon says Mommy went up to heaven.” She said it very matter-of-fact. Deacon said children didn’t grasp the permanence of death until ten or eleven.

      “Yeah…Mommy is in heaven, sweetie pie, which is really sad. But you know what?”

      “What?”

      “You get to have a guardian angel. Honey, she is going to watch over you.”

      Destiny leaned into me, burying her face near my belly. I’d never spent much time with kids. In fact, though I felt badly for her, inside I was realizing the enormity of hiding her. I expected at any moment a phalanx of cops and FBI agents to come swooping down to grab her—and I would get a nice cell to match my father’s.

      “Destiny, honey…do you miss Tony?”

      “Uncle Tony? Kinda. Did he go up to heaven, too?”

      “No.” Though I suppose to some people, Vegas is kind of like heaven. “He’s back at your house.”

      “Did you know I have a pet tiger at our house? I couldn’t pet him, but Uncle Tony let me name him.”

      “What’d you name him?”

      “Tigger.”

      “Cute.”

      “He’s huge. As big as one in the jungle. Uncle Tony told me he could eat me in one big gulp.”

      “Probably could. Did you spend a lot of time with Uncle Tony?”

      She shrugged her tiny shoulders and shook her head. “Uh-uh. He was always very busy, Mommy said. I wasn’t s’posed to bother him. But sometimes the three of us did stuff together. Or Mommy would take me to his work to visit him.”

      “Did you like visiting him at work?”

      “Kinda. I drew pictures on paper in his office, and then the three of us would go out for dinner.”

      “What’s your favorite dinner?”

      “Chicken nuggets.”

      “I think I know how to make them,” I said without enthusiasm. “But Big Jimmy does the cooking out here. I’ll ask him if he can make you some.”

      “Big Jimmy and I made cookies.”

      “Really?” I knew he was a softie.

      “Uh-huh. He used to be Mommy’s boyfriend. She always talked about him.”

      “She talked about him? I didn’t know that.” I thought about how Crystal left Big Jimmy. She wanted the lights of Vegas to shine on her, and Big Jimmy wasn’t part of that scene. If she hadn’t left Big Jimmy, she’d be alive and holding Destiny instead of me.

      The phone rang. I leaned over to the end table and picked it up.

      “Hello?”

      “Jack, it’s me.”

      “Hi, Rob.”

      “Listen…Babe, what I’m hearing…the syringe…it had a fingerprint on it. Not Crystal’s.”

      “How long can I keep hiding you know what?” I looked down at Destiny.

      “I’m not sure. Not long. But for now, keep that kid safe, while I figure it out.”

      I stroked Destiny’s cheek. “Like I said, you’d have to kill me first, Rob.”

      “That’s exactly what I’m afraid of.”

      Chapter 4

      Benny Bonita made Don King look modest. And, quite frankly, he made Don King look like he had a better hairdresser.

      However, expensive, flashy suits and ugly pompadour aside, the reason I hated Benny Bonita was he had worn a wire two years ago in a sting that made it appear as if my father was taking a bribe to have one of his fighters throw a match. But my father wasn’t doing anything of the sort. My father was trying to catch Bonita in his little scheme. It was just Dad’s unfortunate luck that he had a cop named Conrad Spiller on his side—a drunken oaf he played poker with who screwed up the entire matter. And Benny Bonita had the chief of police on his side—a slick son of a bitch named Lawrence Dillard. Which meant Dad got busted and Conrad got a desk assignment prior to early retirement, and I got broke hiring attorneys. It also meant I hated Benny Bonita with every fiber СКАЧАТЬ