The Revenge Game (The Player's Pact)
Table of Contents
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Epilogue
About the Author
Discover more category romance titles from Entangled Indulgence… Pushing His Luck
The Millionaire’s Revenge Contract
Giving Up the Boss
The Millionaire’s Gamble
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2019 by Alice Gaines. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.
Entangled Publishing, LLC
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rights@entangledpublishing.com
Indulgence is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.
Edited by Brenda Chin
Cover design by Bree Archer
Cover photography by RgStudio/Getty Images
ISBN 978-1-64063-801-3
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Edition September 2019
Dear Reader,
Thank you for supporting a small publisher! Entangled prides itself on bringing you the highest quality romance you’ve come to expect, and we couldn’t do it without your continued support. We love romance, and we hope this book leaves you with a smile on your face and joy in your heart.
xoxo
Liz Pelletier, Publisher
For my editor, Brenda Chin. I’m so blessed to have you.
Prologue
Two years ago
Testosterone hung like a cloud in the basketball court at the insanely expensive gym in uptown Manhattan. Tuesday afternoon meant a game of two-on-two hoops for Adam Morrow and his friends. Adam’s background in college boxing qualified him as an athlete. Grant Howard played quarterback in the NFL, and Ryan Stewart made his fortune off sports medicine.
True friends through good times and bad. These guys were worth their weight in gold.
Of course, they needed a fourth for their game, or two of them would have ganged up on the third for a friendly pummeling. Only the club manager, Roger—who’d played college ball—could measure up. All three men were competitive to the core. Otherwise, they never would have achieved the level of success they had.
Though only in his thirties, Adam had founded a series of world-class resorts. His first, Finesse, had taken the industry by storm. His most recent, Lit, was breaking records for profits, making him not only one of the youngest CEOs in the hospitality business but also one of the richest. His properties brought in obscene amounts of money, giving him success in everything he’d ever wanted, except for one thing—getting revenge for how Nicole and Maurice Westmore had humiliated him by dumping him for not being good enough. And he’d have that, too, soon enough.
Adam elbowed Grant as he drove around him to the basket. A quick layup gave his side two points.
“You fouled me,” Grant shouted. The smile on his face belied the anger in his words.
“I don’t see a ref. Do you?” Adam answered. An NFL pro, Grant had taught Adam how to get away with stuff when the officials weren’t looking. Payback was a bitch, but Grant was probably prouder of Adam for learning the lesson than anything else.
“Are you two going to keep jawing, or are we going to play?” Ryan asked.
Roger stood bent over with his hands on his knees, breathing heavily. He needed to spend less time in the office and more on the court.
Ryan slapped Roger on the back. “Come on, guy, catch your second wind.”
Adam couldn’t help but fill with pride, studying his friends. Adam could hold his own with both of them. He did it the way he’d fought his way through life and his college boxing career—by scrapping. And he had the scars to show for it—even a broken nose from a back-alley fight before he’d learned discipline.
Beside the court, Roger’s phone went off, and the man appeared truly relieved for the interruption. He trotted over, answered, and listened for a moment, then grabbed his towel. “Trouble at the front desk.”
“You told them to call you if we were kicking your ass,” Ryan said. “Didn’t you?”
Grant held his arms out. “What am I going to do for a partner?”
“Play with yourselves,” Roger said on his way out of the court.
“Very funny,” Adam called after him.
“I don’t know why he puts up with us,” Ryan said. “We always run his butt ragged.”
“Because we’re his best customers,” Adam said. Which was true. Not only were they the three richest men in the club, but they drew in clientele—a lot of it female, in hopes of hooking up with one of them. “Eligible bachelors,” or so a lot of women thought. Thanks to Nicole Westmore and her father, Adam had given up on love years earlier. Grant’s divorce had accomplished the same thing for him. Only Ryan remained the innocent, and he was currently involved with someone.
“Free throws,” Grant said as he went to the line and sent the ball arcing toward the basket. It swished through—nothing but net. Of course, a quarterback would have a great arm. “Loser buys dinner.”
“You’re on,” Ryan said as he snatched the ball from under the basket and approached the free throw line. Ryan shot and missed—something he almost never did.
Grant laughed as he caught the ball and heaved it back at Ryan. Totally off guard, Ryan let the pass smack him in the middle of his chest. Ryan let out a loud “oof,” which made Grant laugh all the harder.
“What’s up with you today, man?” Grant asked.
Ryan retrieved the ball and threw it to Adam with as much force as Grant had used. “Just waiting for you two to stop clowning around.”
Requiring more finesse than bravado, free throws weren’t Adam’s strong suit, and he’d probably lose again. The winner would choose one of Manhattan’s most expensive restaurants, and they’d have drinks before dinner. He could afford it.
The kid who could barely remember his bastard of a father and had gone through college on scholarships and gotten an MBA from Princeton? The kid who’d worked on Westmore’s cars and driven the old man around like the royalty he thought he was? The kid who was part of the help but uppity enough to think Westmore’s princess of a daughter was in love with him? Well, that kid had grown up to be richer than the old man. And he’d been plotting his revenge for years.
It hadn’t been too complicated, really. All he had to do was spread rumors that Westmore Hotels was floundering, then buy up stock from nervous investors. Use the “no confidence” clause from Westmore’s bylaws to remove the CEO—now Nicole, since her father’s death. Then merge their companies under his own name. Everything Maurice Westmore had built, now part of Morrow Properties. Sweet.
Adam smiled as he toed the free throw line. He made his first shot. The competition might go on for a while.
“Nice going,” Ryan said. “You must be getting some regularly.”
“Nah,” Adam answered. “Kristen’s job took her back to Australia.”
“Too bad,” Ryan said. “She was good for you.”
Maybe too good. Neither of them had wanted a relationship. Kristen
because her career never let her settle down. Adam because he’d never trust another woman with his heart. They’d genuinely liked each other—best to break it off before liking grew into anything else.
“How about you?” Adam asked.
Ryan stared down at the floor. “Well, uh, not so much.”
Okay, trouble. Adam’s sixth sense plus Ryan’s sloppy play had told him as much. He and Grant shared a glance over Ryan’s head.
“Want to tell us about it?” Grant said.
“Not much to say.” Ryan walked to the bench where they’d left their gear. He grabbed a bottle of water and twisted the top off. “Melissa and I called a truce and walked away.”
Grant also went to the bench and picked up a towel to wipe the sweat from his face. “Truce? Sounds like war.”
“I guess it was,” Ryan said.
Adam had been there and done that—in spades—when the only woman he’d ever loved had given up on him before he’d had a chance to prove he was good enough for her.
Grant, on the other hand, had been through a divorce and understood betrayal. Seemed like this would be Ryan’s turn to learn about how everything turned to shit when you allowed yourself to fall in love.
When Ryan sat, Adam joined him and put his hand on Ryan’s shoulder. “You guys seemed pretty happy.”
“I thought we were. We started joking about marriage,” Ryan said. “You know how that goes.”
Grant sat on Ryan’s other side. “Oh, man, do I ever.”
“Then I mentioned the prenup,” Ryan said. “She turned into someone I didn’t recognize.”
Grant looked from Adam to Ryan. “Yeah?”
“She pitched a fit as if it was a personal insult. Claimed I didn’t trust her,” Ryan said. “It got ugly pretty fast. I’m afraid I didn’t react well.”
“Do you trust her?” Adam asked.
Ryan thought for a moment, rolling his water bottle between his palms. “I don’t know. Maybe I didn’t. Or maybe not enough.”
“Trust…that’s the big one,” Grant said. “You can’t know if a lover’s on the level until she’s already gotten too close.”
“A prenup isn’t too much to ask,” Ryan said. “Otherwise, how do I know if she really wants me and not my money?”
“Sorry that happened to you,” Grant said. “A guy in your position has to know lots of women are going to want you for all the wrong reasons.”
“Well, I don’t have to worry about Melissa any longer.” Ryan sighed. “I must have misjudged her, big time.”
“Easy to do.” Adam gave Ryan’s shoulder a shake. “At least you found out about her before you made a big mistake.”
“I can’t marry someone who only sees dollar signs when she looks at me,” Ryan said.
“No shit, Sherlock,” Grant said.
Ryan glanced at Grant. “Is that what broke you and your wife up?”
“Nah.” Grant rubbed the back of his neck. “It was a lot of other crap.”
“Well, whatever. It hurts like hell,” Ryan said.
Adam’s stomach clenched. The pain of Nicole’s betrayal still snuck up on him from time to time. He and Ryan had gotten Grant through his divorce more or less unscathed. Now Ryan’s turn for a little friendship therapy had come.
“I should be like you two,” Ryan was saying. “Lots of friends with benefits. Nothing deeper.”
Grant raised his hands toward the heavens. “Praise the Lord, he has seen the light.”
“You won’t regret it, my friend,” Adam said. “Work hard, play hard, and let the rest of it go.”
“I got the work-hard part covered,” Ryan said. “I guess it’s time to play.”
“This calls for a celebration,” Grant said.
Ryan perked up, his shoulders lifting from their slump. “We should have our own club or something.”
“The Love ’em and Leave ’em club,” Grant said.
“Not that,” Adam said. “Love” wouldn’t ever enter the equation, if he could help it, and “leave them” sounded too harsh. “It needs to be simpler. We have a good time getting laid and make sure our lovers do, too. That’s it.”
“Sex with no complications,” Grant said. “I like it.”
“Pure physical pleasure,” Ryan said. “Nothing wrong with that.”
“From now on, let’s make a pact—a players pact,” Adam said. It sounded good. “In it for the fun, with no strings to tie us down.”
“I’ve had enough strings to last a lifetime.” Ryan held his hand out, and when Grant took it, Adam added his own hand in the shake. None of them would ever let a woman get close enough to cause pain. They’d take their fun where they found it, with no entanglements and no regrets. Life could be a whole lot worse.
“Let’s have an initiation into the new club,” Grant declared.
“I could use a few fingers of some really great Scotch,” Adam said.
“I could use a few more than you’re having,” Ryan said.
“And a huge slab of beef,” Grant said. “Bloodred rare.”
“I’m hearing The Tap Room,” Adam said. A place where the steaks were aged as well as the Scotch and the bill could make some guys’ mortgage payments. Their favorite haunt.
“I’m going to have lobster with my T-bone,” Ryan said.
They all laughed. Each of them could afford to buy the restaurant out of lobster if they wanted.
“And if we should run into a few women looking for fun, that wouldn’t hurt, either,” Grant said.
“To sex without strings.” Ryan raised his water bottle in imitation of a toast.
“And to the Players Pact,” Adam and Grant said in unison.
Chapter One
Present day
Nicole Westmore would never have believed she’d have to do what she was planning—face down her past to secure her future. Tonight, she had every intention of confronting her company’s main competitor and the man who most likely was trying to do the business her father had built, Westmore Hotels, in. He was also the only man she’d ever truly loved, until he’d abandoned her.
It was simple, really. After her father’s death, she’d been left in charge of Westmore Hotels. The chain was all she had left of anyone who’d ever loved her. But it was in trouble. And she’d bet everything that it was Adam Morrow who was trying to sabotage the company. So she had to stop him. Her plan? To put herself on the line. He’d loved her once. Surely, he couldn’t hate her enough after all this time to break her heart all over again.
So here she was, at a wedding she knew he’d be attending. All she had to do was find him and confront him. She’d search for the decency that still had to be inside him somewhere. If she couldn’t find it, she’d puzzle out some other way to protect the company. But, God, she hoped this worked.
If only she had a little more self-confidence. If only huge crowds didn’t make her feel as if the walls were closing in on her. If only the emptiness that had surrounded her after her father’s death, that had leached every bit of beauty out of the world, would lift so she could breathe easily again. If only she didn’t have that damned no-confidence clause hanging over her head. She’d worked so hard, made so many positive changes in the business. And yet, everything she’d accomplished could be snatched away in one meeting of the investors.
She’d worry about that later. Tonight, she had a different mission.
Everything sparkled in the ballroom of the Heritage Country Club in Charleston—the chandeliers, the crystal champagne flutes, the jewels around the necks of the female wedding guests. Nicole had chosen simple but elegant clothing and a single string of pearls and matching earrings. On the surface, she projected calm and self-assuredness. She ought to. She’d spent hours practicing before a full-length mirror. No one would guess the churning of her stomach and fraying of her last nerve.
A waiter passed with a tray of champagne. Nicole almost reached for one but then drew her hand back. She’d need her wits in the next few hours. Besides, throwing
alcohol into her uncertain stomach wouldn’t help matters. So she stood with her hands by her sides, projecting serenity as best she could, and scanned the crowd for the distinct profile of Adam Morrow.
Cissy Hartman, Nicole’s personal assistant, appeared at Nicole’s elbow as if out of nowhere. Nicole jumped before quickly regaining her composure. Cissy laughed and held out a tall glass. “The sparkling water you wanted.”
“Thanks.” Nicole took the glass and drank. This would settle her stomach better than anything…except beating a retreat to her yacht in the harbor and forgetting her mission altogether. Too bad that wasn’t an option.
“Any sighting?” Cissy asked.
“Hm?”
“Found your multi-millionaire yet?”
“Not yet. But he’s here.”
“He accepted the wedding invitation,” Cissy said. “That doesn’t mean he attended.”
“He’s here,” Nicole said. The atmosphere held a charge whenever Adam Morrow was around. It had even been true years ago, when he’d been a poor student between college and business school. He infused the air with it, creating the impression something meaningful was about to happen. Something certainly had back then, and if Nicole had managed to recover from it after all these years, her stomach wouldn’t feel twisted.
God, how she’d worshiped him once. Her very first love. She’d dreamed about him at night and counted the hours until she could escape to the garage for a few moments alone with him. She’d given him her heart and her body. Her first sexual experience, in the back of her father’s car, shouldn’t have been good, but even now, she’d never had anything to match it.
He’d claimed to love her, but then he’d left and apparently forgotten all about her. They’d managed a few letters and phone calls during his first year in business school at Princeton. But after a while, the time between each one became longer than the last, with her mostly crying and begging for him to do something. She’d begged, for heaven’s sake.
How naive she’d been to believe him. A sense of emptiness had taken hold inside her at losing him, and it had only worsened at her father’s funeral. She’d done her best to move on. But now, she had to face Adam again.