Table of Contents
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
QUID PRO QUO EXCERPT
ROXIE'S BACKLIST
ABOUT ROXIE
Seduced by the Loan Shark
Copyright © 2012 by Roxie Rivera
This book is a work of fiction. The names,
characters, places, and incidents are
products of the writer's imagination or
have been used fictitiously and are not to
be construed as real. Any resemblance to
persons, living or dead, actual events,
locales or organizations is entirely
coincidental.
All rights reserved. No part of this book
may
be
reproduced,
scanned,
or
distributed in any manner whatsoever
without written permission from the author
except in the case of brief quotation
embodied in critical articles and reviews.
CHAPTER ONE
"Mr. Hagen will see you now."
My stomach churned as the words I'd
been dreading were spoken by the hulking
goon looming in the open doorway. I
reluctantly slid off the leather stool and
crossed the mostly empty bar. I didn't miss
the curious looks from the handful of
patrons bellied up to the bar this early in
the afternoon.
I swallowed hard as I neared the goon.
He glanced down at me and offered a
pitying smile. I figured that didn't bode
well for me. With a jerk of his head, he
indicated that I should head through the
door at the end of the long, narrow and
dimly-lit hallway. I forced my feet to
move, the thin soles of my red ballet flats
silent on the tiled floor. In my head, a
dreadful tune played. No doubt I would
soon regret sticking my neck out for my
loser brother.
But he was family and he hadn't always
been this pathetic or irresponsible. He'd
been a great brother to me once. I had to
try to help him out of this jam.
I nervously smoothed the front of my
skirt and stepped into the office. I shut the
door behind me with shaking hands. My
eyes adjusted to the soft, natural lighting
streaming through a small, frosted
window. Unlike the smoky bar, the office
had a clean, fresh scent. It looked
immaculately neat and tidy.
The man behind the desk was no
different. He exuded control. Perfectly
pressed charcoal grey suit, snappy white
shirt, clean-shaven face—he looked more
like a banker than the mobbed-up loan
shark I knew him to be.
Hagen rose from his seat and shocked
me with his height. I'd heard that he was a
big guy but he made the super-sized goon
out front look like a toddler. Hagen
gestured to the chair in front of his desk.
"Have a seat."
His gentle voice caught me off-guard.
Instead of falling under the spell of his
gentlemanly display of manners, I recalled
just how ruthless this man could be. I'd
learned enough over the last week of
helping my brother dodge the heat on his
ass to know exactly what Hagen was
capable of doing with those big hands.
I settled into the chair, my butt right on
the edge of the hard seat and my back
ramrod straight. Hagen sank into his and
looked me over. "So you're Ronnie's
sister?"
I didn't miss the disbelief in his voice.
"Yes. I'm Cassie."
"Cassie." He repeated my name.
"You're the little sister studying to be a
rocket scientist, right?"
"Sort of," I replied while wondering
how the hell he knew anything about me.
He frowned. "You're not in college? Or
you're not a rocket scientist wannabe?"
"I'm studying astrophysics. It's not
exactly the same thing as a rocket
scientist.
They're
usually
aerospace
engineers."
Hagen's lips twitched with amusement.
"I see."
"I doubt it."
The briefest flash of annoyance crossed
his face at my sarcastic come-back. "Why
are you here?"
"You know why."
"Because your weasely bastard of a
brother owes me thirty large?"
I gasped. "Th-thirty? But I thought—"
He laughed, the sound harsh and cruel.
"Let me guess. He lied about how much he
owes, right?"
I reluctantly confirmed his guess. "He
said five."
"That was the initial loan but then he
rolled it into another one and another one.
He's been light for the last six pick-ups in
a row."
"Light?" I felt completely lost by the
gambling and loan lingo he tossed around
so easily.
"He was short thousands of dollars
each time I sent my pick-up man around
for the payments," Hagen explained. "Add
in the interest and we're sitting at thirty
thousand owed."
"Thirty thousand," I echoed softly. I
couldn't even wrap my head around that
number. I lived on less than half that in an
entire year. How the hell had Ronnie
managed to piss that huge amount away in
just a few short weeks?
As if he could read my mind, Hagan
said, "Poker. Your brother had a hot
streak a few months back and then went
cold. He just keeps digging that hole
deeper and deeper. Frankly, you're lucky
he hasn't had his fingers broken for those
card counting tricks of his."
I sighed heavily. It wasn't the first time
he'd tried his stupid card tricks. Like me,
he had a mind for numbers. He simply
didn't use his gift wisely. It was always
about the next get-rich-quick scheme.
"So let me guess," Hagen said, a
patronizing smile on his face. "Ronnie
gave you some sad, weepy fucking story
about being down a couple grand, right?
You thought you'd come in here and shake
that tight little ass of yours to get me to
wipe the debt clean?"
"What? No!" I vehemently shook my
head. Reaching into my purse, I withdrew
the fat envelope of cash and placed it on
his desk. "I brought this."
He eyed the envelope. "Four thousand?"
Surprise rippled through me. "You can
tell just by looking at it?"
Hagen nodded. "When you've been in
this business as long as I have, you pick
up all sorts of useful tricks." He sat
forward and snatched up the envelope.
"That still leaves him twenty-six short."
I bit my lower lip. "I thought he owed
five grand. I brought what I could scrape
together and hoped you'd let me pay the
balance of one thousand over the next
month or two but twenty-six thousand? I—
I just—I can't."
He tossed the envelope back at me. I
barely caught it. "You shouldn't. He's a big
boy. Let him dig himself out of this mess.
Besides," he sat back in his chair and
lifted his hands behind his head, "I don't
do payment plans."
I shivered as his searing gaze roamed
my body. When he spoke again, his tone
had changed. "Although…I might be
willing to make an exception—just this
once. It's not every day a brilliant,
beautiful college girl walks through my
door."
I bristled with indignation and shot to
my feet. "I'm not a whore."
"I didn't say you were," he replied
calmly.
I dropped the envelope on his desk.
"Here's the four grand. You can take it or
leave it but that's all I've got."
Pivoting on my heel, I gripped the
handle of my purse, strode to the door and
jerked it open.
Fuck you
.
"Do you know if your brother has good
health insurance?"
Hagen's warning remark froze me in
place. My eyes closed and I tried to slow
my racing heart. His threat hit home. I
knew what happened to men who owed
Hagen money. They ended up in the
hospital with smashed faces and broken
ribs. Sometimes even worse than that.
Sure, Ronnie had gotten himself into
this mess but he'd never been the same
since the car accident that took our
parents. He'd been driving that night and
so proud of his new car, a graduation
present. Wet roads and a deer in the
middle of the highway had taken away the
two people we'd loved most. The guilt of
the accident had changed him forever.
Gambling seemed to be the escape from
reality he'd chosen.
Gulping down the painful ball of nerves
clogging my throat, I stepped back into the
office and closed the door. On shaky
limbs, I turned slowly and leaned back
against the wooden surface. I met Hagen's
triumphant gaze. Defeated, I asked, "What
do you want from me?"
He eyed me carefully. "You love your
brother this much?"
"He's all I have left."
Hagen studied me for a long moment.
Finally, he held out his hand. "Come
here."
I hesitated before complying with his
request. I placed my purse in the chair in
front of his desk and walked around the
edge of it to stand next to him. He grasped
my small hand in his huge paw and
dragged me between his knees and the
desk. The sturdy piece of furniture bit into
my bottom.
Only an inch over five feet, I was so
short we were practically eye to eye as he
sat in his office chair. He dwarfed me like
some kind of giant. At least he smelled
nice. I picked up on the faint cedar note in
his cologne. He had nice eyes, I
grudgingly admitted to myself, the brown
irises a rich coffee color. There was
something handsome about him. Not in the
classical way, of course, but in a rugged,
tough guy sense.
"You're shaking," he commented gently.
"You scare me," I answered honestly.
"Don't be afraid of me, Cassie. I'd
never hurt you."
"Your reputation tells me otherwise."
"Don't believe everything you hear." He
grasped my waist and effortlessly lifted
me up onto the desk. My eyes widened at
how easily he manhandled me. "Lift up
your skirt."
My fingers trembled as I pinched the
hem of my dress and lifted the fabric up
around my thighs. My stomach wobbled
and dipped as panic took hold. I muscled
down the fear creeping through me.
You
can do this
.
"Higher."
My gaze jumped to his. He wore a no-
nonsense expression and I didn't dare