When it Raynes: Chapter 1
When it Raynes: A Dark Mafia Romance (Frost Industries Book 1)
FINAL NOTICE
Itâs the third one Iâve received this week, and I do the same thing with this one that Iâve done with all the others. I shove it into the bottom of my bag.
Of course I know pretending it doesnât exist isnât going to make things any better, but I canât pull money that doesnât exist out of nowhere, and so for right now, itâs easier to stick my head in the sand.
With each final notice I receive, I lose a little bit of hope. It hasnât made a difference how many jobs Iâve taken, or how many hours Iâve done. It hasnât mattered how shitty my apartment is or how much I scrimp. I canât get my head above water.
Iâve done the math, of course. There is no way out of the hole Brad dug for me, and yet every morning I get up, I put on a brave face, and I keep on keeping on.
What choice do I have?
I rub at my tired eyes and curse. âFuck.â
Carefully I drag my fingertips under my eyes to remove any smudges. I canât remember the last time I slept more than a few hours at a time. Between being too stubborn to admit defeat and defer my studies and working three jobs, sleep just isnât a luxury I can afford. I mean, I can barely afford to eat. Sleep seems kind of irrelevant at this point.
Stifling a yawn, I push through the doors of the gym. The Chicago Center for Youth has been in my family my whole life. The Center started with my grandfather. He had a hard upbringing, saw children in his neighborhood go down dark paths, almost went down a few himself. He worked tirelessly to get it up and running, and itâs been a Chicago institution ever since.
I work part time in the office, but Iâm studying to do more. This place is why I refuse to admit defeat and defer. I want to be a counselor, to make a difference in the lives of the kids that come through. I donât ever want them to feel alone, or like they donât have someone they can speak to. I want to be their safe place.
Itâs a cold Chicago morning, so the old building is still warming up. I say a quick hello to Julie, the cleaner, before heading into the office. Thereâs a mountain of work waiting for me, and I groan at the sight. Iâve been falling further and further behind in all aspects of my life, certainly not excluding the youth center. We have a fundraiser next weekend that I still have to confirm the menu for, chase up the guest list, write my fatherâs speech, as well as find something to wear. It will have to be something I already have. If my budget barely extends to include food, it definitely wonât cover a ball gown.
I sit at my desk and sigh. âWhere do I even start?â I ask myself quietly.
It isnât long before kids start arriving, all filtering through the office to see me before heading into the kitchen. We recently started providing breakfast and Iâm still kept up at night at how many of our kids arenât provided with three meals a day at home.
Our breakfast service is a trial. We donât have the funding long-term, not unless a miracle hits us. Just keeping the doors open is a struggle most months as the city withdraws more and more funding. Itâs why weâve invited all the cityâs socialites, businesspeople, and any Fortune 500 member I could find an address for. We need the donations if we want to keep operating.
Dad wanders into the office and I brace myself for the defeated look Iâve grown accustomed to over the last few months, but instead he greets me with a grin.
âYou look tired,â he notes as he takes the seat opposite my desk.
âGee thanks.â I roll my eyes.
âYouâre working too much. Can you cut back at the club?â Worry fills his green eyes so similar to my own.
He doesnât know about the debt. He has enough to worry about with this place, and he wouldnât be able to handle not being able to dig me out of the hole that idiot dropped me in.
âIâm fine, Dad.â I force a smile to my lips, hoping itâs enough to ease his concern.
He eyes me for another moment before he starts to speak again. âI have great news! We have a new community service participant coming in this afternoon!â
I groan internally. Every few months some ex-con comes in and I lose more sleep over the possibility of them leading the kids down a path we try so desperately to keep them away from. Iâve wanted to cut the program for years, but Dadâs right in some regards, we do need the help.
âDonât look at me like that. You know I like to give them a shot just like your grandpa did, and besides, this one is different.â It has been a long time since Iâve seen him look so worry-free, and that piques my interest. âItâs Rayne Saint James⦠brother of Storm Saint James, CEO of Frost Industries.â
I stare at him blankly. Iâm clearly missing something, because to me, an ex-con is an ex-con, regardless of who theyâre related to.
âIf we can get a family like the Saint Jamesâ involved in this place, it could mean we can make the breakfast program permanent. We could open another center like we planned before the recession. It could be huge for us, Emerson.â
Heâs right. The Saint James family are rich, like really fucking wealthy. The word on the street is that Frost Industries walks on both sides of the law, not that anyone has ever been able to prove it.
This could be huge for us. My eyes fall to the filing cabinet of initiatives weâve dreamed up over the years but have never had the funding to get off the ground. We could really help our kids, scholarships, field trips, things we only dared to dream of in the past could become a reality with the right benefactors.
âI know you have reservations about the community service program, but you, more than anyone, know how much we need the help. And from my source inside the CPD, it sounds like the charges they had on him had to be dropped because there was no proof, and his community service isnât court-mandated, it was something he offered up to prove his connection to the community,â Dad told me matter-of-factly.
I nod. âOkay, Dad. Iâll give the guy the benefit of the doubt, but I get even a whiff of him being a bad influence on the kids and heâs out.â
Dad runs this place, but I manage these kinds of things so he can focus on the kids. Itâs where his passion is, and itâs what heâs good at.
âThis is going to be a good thing, honey, youâll see.â Heâs gone before he can see me shake my head.
âI doubt it.â Itâs too good to be true having a Saint James fall in our laps like this, and if thereâs one thing this mess Brad has me in has taught me, itâs if it seems too good to be true, it abso-fucking-lutely is.
I bury my head into the mountain of work I have for the gala. No matter how much I tick off my list, more just seems to appear at the bottom. Before I know it, itâs lunchtime and I am no closer to getting anything finalized. Itâs quiet for the most part around this time, only some of the older kids are here as the others are at school.
I groan as I count the hours before I can go to bed tonight. I still have four hours of work here, three at the diner under my apartment, and six hours at the club, and thatâs without considering the assignment I have due tomorrow that is still a blank document open on my laptop at home. In other words, I probably wonât be sleeping tonight⦠again. Not that I sleep well anymore anyway. I usually spend the night tossing and turning, trying to figure out how to get out of the mess Iâve found myself in.
I round the corner into the gym and stop dead in my tracks. Dad is speaking to someone I donât recognize, a man who is towering over Dadâs very respectable six-foot.
Instinctively, I reach for the baseball bat we keep at the door of the office. Weâve had our fair share of problems here, and the cops donât have much motivation to respond in this neighborhood.
Before I can think about my next move, the man turns around, and Iâm stuck in place for a whole other reason.
The man would have to be the single most attractive human being Iâve ever laid eyes on. Eyes so dark theyâre almost black, and perfectly messy black hair my fingers twitch to tug on. His jaw and cheekbones are perfectly chiseled, as if God himself had spent hours molding this man into the piece of art standing in front of me. I canât remember a single time my body has reacted like this to a man, and I met Ryan Reynolds at a charity event last year. My mouth is dry, body warm as my mind wanders to the dirty things Iâd like this man to do to me. Our eyes meet and my heart skips a beat.
âThere she is.â My fatherâs voice pulls me back into the land of the living and drags my attention from the specimen of a man heâs standing with. âRayne. This is my daughter, Emerson. Em, this is Rayne Saint James.â My cheeks flame red as Iâm reminded of the bat in my hand.
I donât know how I didnât recognize him. He and his brother Storm look so similar, and Storm is in the tabloids most days as Chicagoâs most eligible bachelor. Rayne seems to stay out of the limelight a bit more, but Iâve definitely seen him in the gossip pages a time or two.
Great first impression, Em. I internally roll my eyes at myself. Sleep deprivation and stress have officially started melting my brain, thereâs no other explanation.
Iâm not sure how long I stand there, but it feels like a really fucking long time. The spell Iâm under breaks when a smirk tugs at Rayneâs perfectly sculpted lips. Where does this guy get off looking like he just stepped out of a fashion magazine when he comes to do community service with underprivileged children?
I drop the bat at the door of the office and force one foot in front of the other. The air around Rayne is thick as I close the distance, trying my best not to look as on edge as I feel.
âItâs nice to meet you, Emerson.â The sound of my name on his lips should be a criminal offense it sounds so damn sinful. Rayneâs voice is deep but velvet in a way that seems almost familiar. His hand juts out in front of him and I drag my eyes from his, down the wall of muscle I can make out even through his perfectly tailored suit, and to his outstretched hand.