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A Dragon's Heart: (Dragons of Paragon - Book 1) by Jan Dockter, Lucy Lyons, K.T Stryker (37)

 

stared at the lackluster poker hand he held in the backroom of a low rent bar on the Jersey Shore. Harry told him there was money to be made here but so far, the stakes were far smaller than if he played a casino room. Still the criminal ambience of the place was an interesting change of pace. But he was distinctly out of place wearing an Armani suit and a vintage Rolex watch. Still the dealer had converted his cash to chips without an arch of an eyebrow and Ryan got into the game.

This hand was less than impressive and doubts as to the integrity of the dealer formed in Ryan’s mind. Two pair was better than one pair but not much else. The only thing working in his favor was that the probability any of these jokers he played against held a better combination was extremely small. So now the game hinged on how well Ryan could read his opponents. Fortunately, he did this very well.

To his right was Pretend-Pro-Player. PPP wore sunglasses to hide his eyes, but his cheek twitched whenever he had a shit hand. The guy’s cheek twitched now. One down. To his right was Above-Average-Amateur who took a few pots, but who tended to fold when he wasn’t confident about his cards. This guy was harder to read, but Ryan caught what he could only describe as fear wafting off him. Maybe he had a similar hand but wasn’t sure how his two pair would stack up. No, the only guy who was a real threat was the one who sat directly opposite him. His expression never changed, and Ryan didn’t detect any noticeable tells.

“Well, Kaur,” rumbled his opponent. “Your call.”

Ryan hadn’t telegraphed his name when he entered but he wasn’t surprised that the man, who Ryan called Mr. Bluff in his mind, knew his name. Ryan’s face was splayed on one too many celebrity magazines and newspaper society pages for him to be anonymous.

The man sounded supremely confident as if he knew he had a winning hand, but Ryan folded previous hands on this information only to find he was bluffing.

Was he bluffing now?”

Ryan smiled his most charming grin.

“I tell you what, let’s make this really interesting,” said Ryan. He pushed his considerable stack of chips to the center of the table.

“You sure you want to do that?” said Mr. Bluff with an ominous tone in his voice.

The hairs on the back of Ryan’s neck rose at the warning in the man’s voice. Ryan became hyper; aware that this back-room game room was not a place he was supposed to be, and that the surrounding men weren’t the law-abiding types. But Ryan made a habit of not backing away from a challenge.

“There’s no take backs in poker,” said Ryan. “My bet’s on the table. Anti-up or fold.”

Mr. Bluff pushed his chips to the table and then drew out two banded stacks that marked the bundles as worth a thousand dollars each.

“I see your bet and raise it by two grand.”

The other two players threw down their cards in disgust. Mr. Bluff just tuned up the game by trying to buy the pot. He suspected Ryan didn’t have much of a hand and thought he could scare Ryan away.

He didn’t know Ryan.

“You know what? I don’t have that much cash on me. But what about my Rolex?” He pulled his grandfather’s watch from his wrist and put it on the table. A pinch of regret nipped at him. It was gold, of which Ryan was especially fond, and it was his grandfather’s watch.

“How do I know it is real?” said Mr. Bluff.

“When does a Kaur wear knock-offs? That watch is a vintage 1956 Rolex Datejust 6605 YG 18 karat President Bracelet. It’s worth is over seventeen thousand dollars. You can look it up online if you want. I’ll wait.”

Mr. Bluff gave him the nastiest look Ryan ever saw from a poker player. Ryan stared at the man, noted his tobacco-stained teeth, his whiskey-soaked breath and the red in his eyes. It was at that moment he knew that Bluff didn’t have the goods to match the bet. Bluff just lost about three thousand in this hand, plus the rest of the pot. But it was Bluff that drew out hidden money and put in on the table which was against the rules in any poker game. At that point, Ryan had every right to toss in his watch. 

The first rule of poker was to size up the assets of the people you played. Bluff failed to do this. And Ryan saw the man’s face twist into anger as Bluff realized his fatal error.

All of a sudden Bluff stood and with a shout launched himself over to grab Ryan. Bluff bunched the lapels of Ryan’s gray Armani suit in his hands, scattering both the cash and the chips. Ryan stared at the man. If Bluff thought that Ryan would be intimidated by this show of force, he was wrong.

“You’ve just made my day,” said Ryan with a smile. Ryan had a wiry physique, but he was stronger than he looked. Ryan slid his hands under the man’s armpits and slung him sideways into the right-hand wall.

“Get him!” called Bluff.

Ryan sized up the toughs watched the game closely and thought he was going to have a difficult time getting out of this one. That didn’t mean he wouldn’t try.

“Police!” called a voice from behind the door that led to the bar. “Get on the floor and put your hands over your heads.”

 

***

 

Several hours later Ryan found himself in his father’s study where he waited for the elder Kaur. Ivan Kaur was a stern taskmaster at any time, but never more so when it came to Ryan. If the younger Kaur stepped on the boundaries of Ivan’s sense of proprieties, Ryan was due for a stern lecture and some sort of punishment. In the past those proved to be a restriction in his allowance, or some extra work at the family business, or in the most extreme cases, not allowing Ryan to use any of the family cars. Ryan worked out what form his punishment would be this time, though he had to admit that being hauled out of an organized crime stronghold was the furthest he gone outside his father’s rule book.  He couldn’t count on what would happen to him now.

The doors to the library swung open and Ivan Kaur entered. Even for a man in his late fifties he was imposing and impressive. On this day, however, his face was drawn up in fury. He didn’t waste any time in preliminaries.

“What the hell were you thinking?” shouted his father.

Ryan sat in one of the leather high backed chairs in his father’s study and stared at his hands. He knew better than to answer his father’s rhetorical questions.

“That game was in a bar owned by organized crime! Mobsters, Ryan! How do you think that will look when it hits the papers that Ryan Kaur was hanging out with mobsters?”

Ryan agreed in retrospect it wasn’t his wisest move, but he wasn’t about to tell his father that.

“And you bet your grandfather’s watch? Ryan, my father’s watch? He gave you that watch to show you the legacy you would inherit. What were you thinking?”

His father had a point there. Ryan only thought about winning, not the priceless sentimental value of that Rolex.

It’s bad enough that you crash every car we give you, or that you make a spectacle of yourself at your friends’ parties. But we had an agreement after that incident with that reality star—”

“Jenna, her name was Jenna.”

“Whatever. Thank God the paternity test came back that you weren’t the father. The point is,” and now his father was shaking his finger at him. “You agreed to clean up your act. This, this,” he said as his face became a frightening shade of red, “is beyond the pale. It is time you grew up.”

“I’m sorry,” said Ryan. He was almost contrite, but right now he just wanted his father to stop screaming.

“Sorry is not enough, Ryan. Do you not realize that we are up for a big defense contract to build weapons to defend against dragons? This is huge, Ryan. We would get information on dragons no one else has for us to develop these weapons. We would be the contractor for this kind of ordinance around the world. But we can’t get that contract if the government thinks any of us, and that includes you, are a security risk. And I’d say hanging out with mobsters qualifies as that.”

Hearing his father’s words Ryan regretted his actions. He didn’t mean to put his family’s business in jeopardy. He only wanted a little fun but perhaps this time he went too far. Still that didn’t justify his father treating him like he was twelve years old.

“Okay, I get the point, Dad. I’ll keep my profile low.”

“Oh, you’ll do more than that.”

“What do you mean?” said Ryan. Immediately he sat straighter and was on alert.

“Ms. Brooks, you can come in now.”

His father’s voice softened and he waved his hand to beckon in the said Ms. Brooks into the room.

“Ryan, this is Stephanie Brooks, an associate at Peters, Watins and Roe. She’s going to be your advisor for the foreseeable future.”

At first Ryan didn’t focus on his father’s words. Stephanie Brooks was quite simply one of the most stunning women he had ever seen. She was tall with an athletic frame, but it was her green eyes and red hair that were absolutely glorious.

She gave him a contemptuous glance as Ryan stared at her. And then his father’s words sunk into his brain.

“Advisor?” said Ryan cautiously.

“Yes. She’ll shadow your movements and make sure that you act in the best interest of the company.”

“Shadow my movements? You’re giving me a babysitter?”

The elder Kaur folded his arms across his chest. “You can call it what you want.”

“Oh, no,” said Ryan standing. Anger flared in his chest. “You have absolutely gone too far. I agree I went overboard and I won’t do it again, but I’m not, read me, not going to have anyone shadow my movements.”

With that Ryan stormed out of the room.