Beauty and the Billionaire - Page 397

Kya

"Have you heard of the Ling Pho Lounge?" I asked the driver, as I jumped in to the waiting yellow taxi.

"I've heard enough to tell you I'm not taking you there, young lady," the driver said.

"Hey, I recognize you," I said. "You took me to the strip club the other night."

"And I'd rather take you back there than to the Ling Pho Lounge," he said. He pulled the cab out into traffic and drifted along, not committing to going in the direction I requested.

"A girl can't have a late night craving for Chinese food?" I clutched my purse with both hands and tried to sit still in the back of the cab.

"If that's the case, then I'll take you to my favorite place. Well-lit, crowded, full of locals, but the nice kind," he said. "It's just up the street, be there in five minutes."

"Thanks for the recommendation, but I would like you to take me to the Ling Pho Lounge."

"I gotta say it, I know it's not my place but I gotta say it." The cab driver gripped the steering wheel harder. "I don't like the company you're keeping. I saw you with that fighter the other day, the mixed martial one. He's got a bad reputation. You should hear the things I hear about him in this cab. What's a lady like you doing chasing around after him?"

I slumped back in the seat. "It's for work. I'm an endorsement agent and clients of ours want him for their next campaign."

"Plenty of other sports guys around town. There's a golf tournament going on next weekend. Lots of nice gentlemen, no tattoos."

I slumped even further. What was it about me that needed to be surrounded by nice men? I was not tough enough, independent enough, to stand up to the challenges Fenton threw at me. Everyone thought I was just a pretty face better off ensconced in a safe corner of the world.

Neon lights, crowds, and thousands of chances rushed by the window. This was Las Vegas. Every kind of person from ultra rich playboy to the openmouthed tourist to the calculating card shark was here – and so was I. I had had enough of well-to-do families from decent backgrounds and athletes that had talent, but no real fire.

Fenton was different. He had the talent, but it was fueled by an explosive need to succeed on his own. His background was rough, lonely, and hounding him at every turn. It was no wonder he had built up the reputation he did. It was one-half truth and one-half protection. No one looked too much farther than his wins and his wild behavior.

"Miss, I'm serious. This isn't the place you want to be. Just grab some Kung Pao to go. I'll wait," the cab driver said.

I got out and paid him through the window. "Thanks, but I might be a while."

Inside, the Ling Pho Lounge looked just as I had worried it would. The lighting was dim, not by design, but by neglect. Red walls and black, lacquered screens divided the round empty tables. The sounds of horseracing blared from a television in the kitchen and I could hear two people yelling at it in Mandarin. A half empty, neglected buffet glowed under heat lamps in the corner.

I pretended to peruse the menu on the wall and check my watch as if I was meeting someone. No one came to seat me. A pair of men came in and went down the back staircase without even looking around. I glanced back at the door. No, Fenton was being threatened and he did not need to face it alone. His whole career was at stake.

A wide man and a rail thin woman in a white fur coat came in next. They also headed down the back staircase, so I followed them. The man muttered something to the two big bouncers and they let the couple push through the heavy red vinyl doors. I stopped on the stairs, but it was too late, the bouncers had already seen me.

"Password?" the one on the left asked.

"You're kidding, my, ah, friend was supposed to meet me upstairs and he didn't say anything about a password," I said. I walked down the rest of the stairs and gave the imposing bouncers my best smile.

They both returned to staring halfway up the stairs, over my head. Muffled cheers broke out behind the heavy doors. What was Fenton into now? If the bouncers were ignoring me, then I would just wait for the next person to come by and listen for the password. I had to get to Fenton and tell him how to deal with the fight fixers. We could not go to the police, but I had a plan.

The next footsteps on the stairs turned out to be an ugly pockmarked man in an expensive suit surrounded by a harem of women. I watched his

eyes slither down my legs and back up to the neckline of my dress.

I threw myself against his chest, smiled brightly, and ran a hand around the back of his collar. "There you are. I've been waiting for you."

The pockmarks deepened as the man laughed. "Sure, honey, whatever you say. She's with us. Stratosphere."

The bouncers shrugged, accepted the password, and let us all inside. The harem of women quickly spun me to the side and the ugly man continued without me. The basement room was cleared out except for a raised boxing ring, a long metallic bar, and a few rows of folding chairs. Most people were standing, hands up in fists, as they watched the fight.

I was glad I did not see the two men who had threatened him. I moved around the room, but did not see Fenton. Had he come down here to meet someone?

"Get him, knock another tooth out!" a fan yelled.

I pushed my way into the crowd to get a better view of the boxing ring. Fenton was inside, barefoot and bare-knuckled, with a smear of red down the side of his naked chest where he had wiped off the other man's blood. His opponent stood at Fenton's eye level, bald as a cue ball, but wider and barrel-chested. He was slow, but his punches had a heavy sound that made my heart clutch.

Tags: Claire Adams Billionaire Romance
Source: readsnovelonline.net
readsnovelonline.net Copyright 2016 - 2024