Read Secrets of the Prairie Online

Authors: Joyce Carroll

Tags: #Romance, #Historical, #Regency, #Western, #Historical Romance, #Westerns

Secrets of the Prairie (15 page)

BOOK: Secrets of the Prairie
11.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

 

I stood there. “Lord Augustus, our love is true,” I said. Now I was the one trying to seduce him. “You won’t find a love like mine. I will give you love that she can’t.”

 

“Goodbye, Lady Annabelle.”

 

“Just meet me one more time to say goodbye,” I said, sounding desperate. Just one time would not hurt. “At our spot in the Vauxhall Gardens by the bridge.”

 

“Okay, Annabelle. I will do this for you. I will meet you there tomorrow morning.”

 

He turned to leave. I stood there watching him walk away. His voice was serious today and he did not read me lines of poetry. I wanted to cry, but found I couldn’t. When I turned around, my father was there. He had his arms crossed.

 

“You will not see that man again,” he said sternly. I was surprised by the bitter tone in the voice. He was angry with me. He must have heard of our affair.

 

“Please, father. You do not know how it is.”

 

“I absolutely forbid you from seeing him,” he said. “You are upset over the wedding and you will not see a married man.”

 

I started to get angry. “I feel true love for him. He reads me poetry and we go to the gardens. He is a true romantic. Love overrules all.”

 

“If you see him again, you cannot come in this house again.”

 

I said nothing at that. At first, I thought of obeying my father. But the words came out. “If that is the way it is going to be, that is the way it is going to be. But I will be seeing him once again tomorrow. It is my life and I will do what I want.” I went upstairs, marching up the stairs loudly.

 

***

 

I met Lord Augustus at the Vauxhall Gardens like we agreed to. As I met him at the bridge, I smiled as I saw him. His face was a bit softer today, but he still looked worried.

 

“How are you today, Augustus?”

 

“I am not too well, love. Things seemed to have taken an even rougher turn.” He paused. “She tried to kill me. She picked up a knife and brought it into our bedroom. She tried to stab me several times. It was out of nowhere. I think she was upset over the whole thing. But I cannot stay in that house and leave my children there.”

 

I said nothing for a moment. I then thought of my father and how we both had broken families now. I thought of how the people in the town would turn on me again and how they would think I am nothing but a whore. “Come away with me. Let us runaway together. I never want to see this town again.”

 

“It is certain that is the only choice we have,” he said. “But the bitterness is not so bad as we will be able to be together without disturbance.”

 

“Yes, it is what we wanted isn’t it?” I said.

 

“We will be together, love,” he said. “But I cannot leave my children.”

 

“They will come with us,” I said. “If they are your children, they are my children.”

 

“So, that is the way it will be,” he said. “We will start a new life together in another town away from all our troubles. Nobody will tell us we can’t be together.”

 

“You will write me poetry whenever you want,” I said.

 

***

 

Early the next morning, we met at the gardens again. The sun was a golden color and it lightly misted through gray clouds. This time, a carriage awaited for us and Lord William was there with his four children.

 

As we rode off, he whispered me a poem:

 


And here we runaway

From our problems and old fortune

But we will be together no matter what they say

As this carriage gets in to motion.”

 

I smiled and said my own poem:

 


Despite secrets, lies and scandal

Trouble and secret disguises were not too much to handle

Our romance is a true treasure

It is a love that will last forever.”

 

 

THE END
 

As promised here is your third free romance story:
 


Perfect Knockout

NOTICE:
This is a
Contemporary Sports Romance
story.
If you don’t like this type of romance you can scroll to the
end to get your free
Scottish Romance
eBook (sold on Amazon for 2.99 USD) which you can download at the very
end of this book –  completely free.
Enjoy!

 

 

Chapter 1

Get your head in the game.  In the zone.  Get with the program.  Come on, Cam, you can do it.  This is all you.

Cameron’s inner mantra continued as such.  This was only an important competition.  No big deal.  He had this.  He had been practicing and training for this for years.  He had been building himself up to this particular competition for months. 

He looked his opponent in the eye.  His opponent showed the focus and the drive that Cameron also hoped he was showing.  He wanted to be intimidating, and he wanted to be feared. 

His opponent aimed a few strikes at Cameron’s chest.  Cameron rolled himself out of the way.  When he came back up, he aimed a knee-jab at his opponent’s left leg.  His opponent came down.  However, he rolled out of the fall and sprang back up, rearing for more of the fight.  But of course, it would not be that easy. 

Cameron aimed a kick at his opponent’s chest, but his opponent grabbed his ankle and tried to yank him down.  Cameron used his own momentum to stomp down, bringing his opponent’s arm with him.  His opponent let go and Cameron was freed. 

Cameron smirked. 

The two of them feinted punches at each other for a few blows.  Then Cameron dove in for a grapple.  He wrapped his arms around his opponent’s legs and tried to bring him down that way.  His opponent banged on his head a few times.  The first couple of blows didn’t faze Cameron, but the subsequent ones started to get annoying.

Cameron shoved his opponent into the ropes.  His opponent kept wailing on him.  Cameron continued to try to get the feet out from under his opponent and he didn’t let go. 

Unfortunately for Cameron, his opponent managed to get him in a headlock.  He brought Cameron up so that they were both standing again.  Cameron was still in the headlock.  They grappled for a bit, Cameron trying to get out of the headlock and his opponent doing everything he could to keep him there.  Including, but not limited to, a knee-jab to Cameron’s solar plexus in order to wind him. 

Thankfully, Cameron was only slightly winded.  This wasn’t the first (or the last) time he had been hit in the solar plexus.  Cameron shoved himself upwards and was pleased to hear the satisfying click of his opponent’s jaw being snapped together.  It would not down his opponent, but it was a small victory and payback for the strike he had received. 

Cameron kept trying to get himself out of the headlock, but he was at an awkward angle to punch.  (Or kick, really).  His opponent kicked him in the solar plexus again, and landed a good punch in Cameron’s side.  But Cameron didn’t go down.  Cameron would not be knocked out.  He would hold out until the end, or knock his opponent out.  He would win.  He also needed to get an advantage.

Cameron backed them up against the ropes again.  It was probably a different set of ropes.  But it was all a bit disorienting when all he was doing was looking at the ground.  He needed to get out of this.  His opponent would win purely by getting him into submission. 

Cameron finally managed to wiggle out of the headlock.  He came out of it and went straight for a double box to his opponents ears.  Cameron needed to get himself ahead on the score cards.  His opponent buckled after the ear-boxing.  Cameron struck him again.  His opponent went down.

Cameron held up, keeping his distance.  He could not keep beating on his opponent while his opponent was down.  There were too many risks of making an illegal move.  He stayed just out of his opponent’s reach, so that way he could not be brought to the ground easily for more grappling.

His opponent got up.  Cameron grinned.  Now was his chance.  Another box to the ear.  A knee strike to the gut.  He ducked out of the way of his opponent’s strike and got in another knee strike.  Cuff to the ear.  Wrist lock.  Box. 

In Cameron’s mind, this opponent was every single bully who had gone after Cameron during his childhood.  This opponent embodied every one of them, and this was Cameron’s revenge.  He wasn’t the little one any longer.  He was one of the big boys now.  He fought with them.  And he would destroy them. 

His opponent went down again. 

The timer went off.

It was an agonizing thirty seconds as the judges put their heads together and determined the final score.  Then, it was announced: Cameron had won the match! He would place first overall for the tournament. 

Everything he had worked for up until this point had brought him to this moment.  And he was victorious.  He had gotten a little worried being in the headlock for so long, but it had worked out in the end. Grinning, he was truly pleased.  

He cooled off in the dressing room with his favorite sports drink.  As he toweled off, he readied himself to see his fans.  They would want to see a tough exterior.  They wanted to see the angry fighter that Cameron was.  So that was what he would give to them. 

The paparazzi came after him as soon as he was out of the dressing room.  The paparazzi was awful, with their stupid flashing cameras, and voice recorders to get words from him so that they could spin and twist them into things he never actually said. 

“Fuck off,” he told them.  He raised both of his middle fingers so that they couldn’t publish the photos either.  It was a trick he had learned from actors.  When they didn’t want to be hounded by the paparazzi, they would just say and do crude things so that the paparazzi had no material to twist and publish.  They couldn’t spin “fuck off” in any other way, nor could they publish it.

His handlers brought him safely through the paparazzi and to fans beyond.  His fans crowded at the barricades as much as the paparazzi had, but with less flashy cameras.  There were no voice recorders or pens and paper, trying to catch words he said. 

“We love you, Cam the Crusher!” the fan girls screamed.

“We want to be you!” the fan boys screamed.

Cameron posed in gruff and menacing poses so they could take the pictures on their phones and upload them to social media sites.  It was publicity, and he didn’t mind.  He knew the paparazzi were pissed off that they could not get the attention that Cameron gave his real fans.  But the paparazzi deserved to be pissed and they didn’t deserve the attention. 

Cameron kept his distance from his fans.  He truly wanted to connect with them, but he didn’t know how.  Cameron only knew how to fight.  This was his job, his life-long career as long as he was fit enough for it. This was his life, his very being, and he knew nothing else.

He went up to the stage and accepted his trophy.  The paparazzi got pictures of that, but there was no stopping them there.  They couldn’t stop every one of the bastards at every single point.

“You need to do this one interview tonight,” his manager told him when he was off the stage again. 

“Okay,” Cameron replied gruffly.  One interview.  He could do one interview. 

The fanfare ended, people began leaving.  Cameron found himself faced with one reporter. It was a balding man in his fifties.  He looked like he may have once been in the sport, but physical limitations kept him from continuing.  Or perhaps that was a mistaken assumption on Cameron’s part. 

“What can I answer for you?” Cameron asked.

“Tell me,” the interviewer said, turning his voice recorder on.  “What is it that drives you in the fight?”

“The desire to win,” Cameron said simply.  This was always his answer to this question. 

He could never hope to explain that in the heat of the moment, what drove him was revenge against bullies that he no longer saw.  He fought against the bullies of the world in his mind.  On the outside, of course, he wasn’t fighting a bully.  He was simply fighting his opponent.  He never went too far that he greatly injured whomever he was fighting.  Sure, there had been some illegal blows in the past, but that happened to nearly everyone.  His opponents never truly suffered in the way that Cameron wished the bullies did.  Cameron didn’t necessarily want them to, anyways.

What mattered at that point, was that he won.

“Fans are saying that you’ve got a soft heart in there,” the interviewer said.  “Can you shed some light on that?”

Heat rose in Cameron’s cheeks.  “I confess, I don’t know what you’re talking about,” he said slowly.  “They can think that all they want, I suppose.  I don’t feel like I have a soft heart on the inside.  I just enjoy the fighting. Its good exercise, and a good way to get out stress and aggression.”

“Would you call yourself an aggressive person?” the interviewer said. 

Cameron shook his head.  “No.  But everyone gets aggressive sometimes.  Or they get the feelings behind it.  What matters is how they let it out.  I think I’m being very productive with my aggression by being an MMA fighter.”

The interviewer nodded.  “Thank you.”

“That may backfire,” Cameron’s manager told him when they walked away.

Cameron nodded.  He already knew.  He had messed up the minute he had said the word aggression.  But there was no changing that now.  He would have to ride this one out, there was no other option.

There was another small wave of paparazzi as they left the building.  More crude gestures and words rendered anything they captured unusable.  Cameron ducked his head to get into the car and allowed himself to be whisked away.  It was time to eat a recovery meal, stretch, and then sleep.

Heather, now frustrated, punched at the punching bag to harden her strikes.  She alternated punches one right, one left, one right, one left.  Then two right, three left, one right, two left, and four right.  She stays light on her feet, bouncing with movement.  She lets out little yells with some of the punches. 

She should have been enjoying herself.  At the very least, she should feel better about herself when she left the gym.  Or leave with a sense of self-improvement or desire for it.

But Heather didn’t feel any of these things when she left the gym.  She just felt inadequate and useless. 

She wasn’t a bad fighter, by any account.  She was actually moderately good.  She placed frequently, and gave other women in her weight class a run for their money.  But Heather found no enjoyment in mixed martial art fighting.  She never had and she probably never would.

It was at those times, when she was fighting, that she wasn’t clumsy.  She was clumsy the rest of the time, though.  So, with that vein of thought, she should enjoy fighting more.  But as the months turned into years and she continued to not like what she was doing, she began to think that dropping plates, bowls, and running into doors was perhaps preferable.  Granted, she did that anyway.

At least MMA covered up the bruises she got from running into things.  At least that is when she even did bruise anymore.  Body conditioning and bone hardening had lessened those instances.

For the life of her, she could not remember why she was still doing this.  Her father had encouraged it.  He had even paid for her to get into it.  She even made money doing it…

That was why she was still doing it.  She was making money.  She hadn’t gone to college.  Her father had pushed her into this and her naivety about life had allowed her to follow in the direction he led her.  Now, when her father did little more than manage a few things and encourage her, it was Heather who still went to the gym every day to train, regardless of any reminder her father might give her. 

She found herself trying to get to the gym before her father’s reminders came in.  Out of spite and pride.

But she still hated fighting.  She hated everything about it.  She no longer saw the point in it.  She just beat on people for sport.  Other people beat on her for sport.  It was just people beating other people up, but because there were rules and regulations, it was sport and not madness.

It was still madness.

She wished she had time to pursue something else.  But what else was there for her to pursue? She had a high school diploma and a resume that consisted only of martial arts and some community service.  Oh, and a tabletop gaming campaign or two.  But no employer would look seriously at that last one.

Then, there was the part of Heather that enjoyed the fact that she could just go home and play video games when she wasn’t training or competing.  Her meals were planned out for her—everything about them from the time she ate to the food she ate.  She had a normal sleep schedule and knew exactly how many calories she consumed and used up.  She could not imagine being healthier.

But it still boiled down to the fact that she still hated the fighting and the culture.  But she didn’t resent it or the money enough to leave the business.  Yet.

 

Heather watched as Cameron—Cam the Crusher—came into the gym.  She wondered if he liked being here because hardly anyone fawned over him at the gym.  They were all body builders and martial arts fighters, you have to prove it just to get a membership to the gym.  That was certainly a perk Heather enjoyed.  There were no whiny teenagers hogging pieces of equipment because of their perceived ease of use.  No one sat there on their phone not working out.  The only time Heather looked at her phone was if someone texted her, or if she needed to change the song. 

Cam started his workout by going over to one of the mats and limbering up.  Heather continued to watch him as she pretended to beat the stuffing out of the bag.  She added a few kicks in between her punches to shake things up a little.

She wondered what went through his head.  He was so aloof.  He had a brutal exterior that was for sure.  But Heather hadn’t missed the article released all over the place that morning saying that Cam thought everyone was aggressive on the inside and mixed martial arts was a productive way to release the aggression.

BOOK: Secrets of the Prairie
11.05Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Dead Pigeon by William Campbell Gault
Sophie the Chatterbox by Lara Bergen
Death on the Installment Plan by Louis-Ferdinand Celine
Woman On the Run by Lisa Marie Rice
The Retreat by Patrick Rambaud
Abandon by Carla Neggers