The Rider's Dangerous Embrace (An Interracial Bad Boy Romance Story) (13 page)

BOOK: The Rider's Dangerous Embrace (An Interracial Bad Boy Romance Story)
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“Took you long enough,” Mary sighed, “your coffee is cold, get in here.”

Mary held a stack of papers and a coffee as she stood to greet Jayda. Her office was a mess, papers everywhere, a laptop on top of them all, and Mary who looked like she hadn’t slept all night.

“Sorry, had to drive from Loredo. What time did you come in?” She pulled her coat off and hung it up, looking over at Mary. It was the first time she had ever seen the woman without a smile on her face.

“Loredo?” Mary dodged a question with a question and handed her the cool coffee. She took a sip anyway. “I thought you had a house here.”

“Hotel room,” She felt herself blush as she remembered last night’s events. Remembered Luke touching her body. She tried to hide her face but it was too late.

“You were with somebody! Who? Dustin? Not Samson?” She sucked in a breath, her eyes ultra wide.

“No, not Samson,” Jayda assured, and Mary’s eyes returned to their normal, wide-eyed look. Hell, might as well tell her. If her dad trusted Mary, so could she. Jayda swallowed, “Luke Daniels.”

“Ah, the partner in the making. The one you wanted to find out about. Who pissed you the hell off the other day.” Mary nodded like it made sense. “Can’t deny that the way he infuriates you made me suspicious. Plus, he’s hot.”

“You know him?”

“Everyone knows him, your father was trying to persuade him to sign with the agency, so he was in and out a dozen times. I should have put two and two together about the names, same as one of your partner’s. I just, I didn’t think about it because John never talked about it.” It was the first time she said his name, since Jayda started working there. It shocked her to see the sadness fill Mary after she said it. But the young woman cleared her throat and carried on. “I wrote countless emails to him for your father. When your dad saw something special in a person, he just didn’t let that go. He really valued talent.”

Jayda knew her father was invested in his business, and she shouldn’t have been surprised but all it did was remind her of how she was less important than the company. She tried to bite back the irritation, the vulnerability that lingered there. Not the easiest thing to accomplish. In fact there were so many things she didn’t know about him. He came home every day and was the father she knew him to be. Sure, she knew he worked hard but she just didn’t realize how much effort he put into his business.

“Anyway, I didn’t call you in on a Saturday to chat. I found what you were asking about. Here, look at these.” Mary pushed a stack of papers towards Jayda.

She studied the reports. Printouts of phone records.

“Company cell phone records. They use them for business. We get a copy. Look.” She pointed to the papers. “Samson keeps calling this number. Even at 2 A M.”

Jayda looked at it and then up again at Mary. So what? It was just a number.

“Don’t you know whose number that is? It’s Alice Wheaton’s.”

Still nothing.

“Thomas’s secretary, Alice. The person who would directly link you to Samson, who delivers your documents to him. Documents like cuts in pay, salary increases for individuals? The perfect contact. And at 2 A.M. through company phones? Something has to be fishy there. So I dug a little deeper into the records, using administrative privilege, and look at this.” Mary presented another set of documents.

Damn, this girl has really done her homework
.

Emails. Jayda read the top one on the stack.

From: [email protected]

Subject: Work Meeting

Are you all set for tonight? I reserved a space where we could discuss… details. Gilmore at 7?

I’ll be waiting,

Samson

The Gilmore Inn was a local landmark that would be the perfect place for meeting to talk about untoward things. It was known as the meeting place for those who wanted a little extramarital action, but it was certainly someplace where a couple of people could get together and scheme. And no one would notice, just think they were like everyone else. Looking for some discretion as they broke their vows. She knew, because her mother had ranted and raved about that place more than once. John Rivers was no saint.

Mary smiled at herself and grabbed her own cup of coffee, taking a deep sip and sighing.

“You are a genius!” She gathered up the records and turned away from Mary. She was just about to go for her coat when Mary grabbed her by the shoulder.

“Wait, what are you doing?”

“It is Saturday, Samson works Saturdays,” She checked her watch. 8:45 A.M. “He should be there by now. It is one the biggest training days. I’m going to confront him.”

“Do you really think that is a good idea? I mean, in front of all the men? It isn’t what your father would do.” Mary bit her lip and looked at Jayda. She was concerned for her. In that very moment Jayda knew she had done the right thing by placing her trust in Mary.

But she also knew what she had to do. And it wasn’t sit in the office and present the material to someone else. She was in charge of her father’s business, and she needed to run it like the strong woman she knew she was.

She turned and looked Mary directly in the eye.

“Well, it’s a good thing I am not my father.”

***

The office building was an exact replica of the one built at the Bull Riding facility, just as new. With the same exact landscaping. She had expected the Bronco Riding facility to have a smaller office. Or maybe an older setup. But when her father did something, he did it right, and everyone was treated equally. Jayda approached the building, her nerves on edge.

This is my company. I write the checks for these workers. Me.

She opened the door and walked into the office to find Samson sitting at his desk, filling out paperwork. He looked up sourly, his mood only darkening when he recognized her grimace.

“To what do I owe this pleasure?” He asked, grabbing his mug and taking a sip of what she guessed was coffee.

Jayda threw the paperwork down on his desk and looked him in the eyes.

“I want the truth. And I want it now.”

He looked through the stack of papers and then back up to her. “I was engaged in several business meetings with Ms. Wheaton at the bequest of Thomas. Why?” He cleared his throat, his words catching a Ms. Wheaton. He was obviously lying, even he knew he was caught. But there was nothing he could do about is so he looked back down at the papers.

“I want the truth, Samson. I think we all deserve to know why you did it.”

“It’s personal.”

If he had hackles she would have seen them ruffle. He was finished answering questions. But she just couldn’t help herself. She had to know why he betrayed the company. Why he had betrayed her father.

“Not when you do it to my company. To my father’s legacy.”

“Look, what I do on my own time is none of the company’s damn business. If I want to screw the whole world, I have the right to.” He stood, his jaw clenched and his nostrils flared. “I don’t see what fuckin’ Alice has to do with the company.”

She assessed him for the first time. He clearly had no idea what she was talking about. She backed down a bit. Whatever scheme he ran wasn’t meant to screw the company. Just one of the employees.

Damn it
.

“You used company phones and company email inappropriately. Are you sure all you are hiding is an affair?”

“This isn’t about the affair? What is it about? What did you think I did?” “It’s a company matter.”

He was having none of her tight lipped answer. “If this concerns something about my boys I need to know, Jayda. I might think you are a bit too green to be doing this job, but I have to protect my men. Just the same as you have to protect your company.” His tone changed, and his face softened.

She sighed. So much for keeping it quiet.

“Someone is passing through mandates. Company policy on my behalf. But it isn’t me,” she admitted. “y'all hate me for stuff I’m not doing, and I can’t find who is.”

“This is about the pay cuts, isn’t it? And the lack of repairs?”

“What do you know about it?” She didn’t want to ask for help, but he knew the issues. If he wasn’t the one responsible—and his bristled voice wasn’t the mark of a guilty man—then she needed any information she could get.

“Alice told me they came straight from your desk. But Thomas seemed confused about it all. He told me about the cuts, but that he was sure you would get your head on straight. Except it hasn’t been you. This whole time.” She fought the urge to run, Samson’s clenched eyebrows and read face making her fear his response.

The man was like a caged bull, ready to get out of the pen and do some damage.

“I’m sorry. I really thought you were a bitch. Now I’m pissed that someone is fuckin’ around with my employees.” He seethed. Actually seethed. “I knew he was low, but I never thought it would stoop to his.”

“Who?”

“Isn’t it obvious? Luke Daniels. He has always tried to sabotage this company. Refused to ride for them, even when his mom was a partner. Never really cared about us. Just another asshole who will run something he can’t have into the ground.”

His ramblings made almost no sense.

“Wait, slow down. What do you mean Luke Daniels was behind this?”

“His mom doesn’t own the whole company, only a partial share. And now, with John gone, if it can lose momentum and credibility, he can scoop it up. Bring it back to what a “real” rodeo facility should look like. Your dad was soft, you are soft. Things are not like they used to be. Not the way that I remember them. Not that way that Luke remembers them. This all makes perfect sense.” Vitriol fueled his accusations as he hissed them out, angry.

It seemed like a leap. “Why do you think that?”

“He has always been out for the win. You’ve seen him ride, haven’t you? Doesn’t care about anyone else. Just wants to get his.”

Pieces started to connect. Jayda’s stomach turned.

How else would he know about these problems before anyone else?

Why would he bring them to her attention?

Maybe he wanted to demoralize her, get her to realize that she was a part of the problem.

What kind of twisted game was he playing
?

If it was true, it would change everything. “How sure are you about this?” She asked as she looked into Samson’s eyes. “I would bet my boots on it.”

***

She was tired of suspecting everyone. Tired of suspecting the people she most cared about. But she had to know who was behind this. She took it personally. Jayda gripped the steering wheel a little bit harder as she pushed her foot down on the gas. Her little car tore up the gravel on the road as she barreled down it. She was tired. And she missed her father. He would never have had these kinds of problems. He would have known what to do. He would have fixed it.

Instead she was alone.

The tears started falling before she even felt them build up, clouding her vision and leaving her to navigate the roads with blurry eyes. She blinked, trying to get them out of the way but they just kept coming, in heaving sobs. There was no way she could keep driving like this. She pulled off the road abruptly and parked. Someone honked at her, but Jayda didn’t care. At least she wasn’t in a position to run into anyone.

The tears flowed, uninhibited, followed by screams of pain as she let it consume her. They weren’t little yells, they were the kind that made any passerby think she was dying or in severe pain. The wails of a broken woman. Around her 9th or 10th scream she was startled by a knock on her window. She flicked the button down and cracked the window.

“Mrs. Rivers? That you?” Dustin was staring back at her, concern fresh on his face.

She looked around.
Dammit, I’m not even off the facility road
.

She wiped her tears away quickly, looking up at him. “I’m sorry. Just a little cathartic grief. I’m fine now. Really.” Her weak smile wasn’t going to convince anyone.

If anything he looked more concerned. “I’m going to call Luke, just give me a minute.”

“No, really. I don’t need anyone.” She bit her lip and looked at him, but he was already walking away, phone to his ear.

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