Page 23 of The Fight for Forever

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“Eduardo? He’s fucking crazy. You know he only takes payment in cash up front, and we’re not exactly rolling in it ... which brings me to another question. If your plan is to bet on yourself for the fight and win big, where the fuck are you going to getthatmoney, man? I assume you’re not asking Scarlett for that either.”

It’s a question that’s run through my mind more than once since I came up with this plan to pay off the investors after I win.

I lean back in the chair and cross my arms, ready to put it out there. “I’ve only got one idea right now, and you’re really not going to like it.”

“Tell me.”

“Putting the club up as collateral with a loan shark.”

Q bursts out of his chair so fast, it tips over backward. “Are you fucking shitting me? Gabe, what in the actual fuck? If you lose, then we’re fucked on every goddamn level. Not to mention, Cannon Freeman and Creighton Karas will probably have you offed by the fucking mob if you do that. And guess who most of those loan sharks are in bed with? That won’t work.”

“What other option do I have?”

He jams his hands into his hair. “Fuck. Me. This isn’t the conversation I wanted to be having right now. Goddammit, Gabe. Swallow your pride. Ask your girlfriend. She’s got the money, and she’s a hell of a lot safer than a New York City loan shark.”

I know he’s right, but everything in me is screamingno fucking way am I asking Scarlett for the money, even though I just promised her I would swallow my pride and ask if I really needed the help. I might have to, but I’m not ready to go there yet.

“Let’s table this for now and deal with it later, okay? We’ll come up with something. I just need to let it simmer for a few more days.”

Q shakes his head. “This shit is going to age me before my fucking time. Whatever you do, please swear to me that you’ll tell me first, before it happens, so I can be prepared for the fallout.”

“I fucking swear.”

* * *

After scanning a few hours of video, I spot Moses. Bold as brass, he walked right into my fucking club and ordered a drink before he left ... only to show up again in my office and hold Bump at gunpoint.

I have to take him out. That’s my only option. But I’ve got no fucking clue where to find him.

As I’m leaving the club, Q sends a second text to Eduardo, the crazy PI, and I pray he’ll help us on good faith alone. It’s the only chance we have, because I can’t lose this fight. It’s not in me to take a dive.

After I’m forced to park a few blocks away from the gym, I sit in the truck for a few minutes to get my head right. This workout might not be with my fancy new coach, but it’s the first one where battle needs to be at the forefront of my mind. I’m preparing for the fight of my life, the odds are stacked against me, and I have no choice but to win—despite Moses’s threats or the fact that I don’t have a signed contract in hand making the event official.

The fight will happen.

I close my eyes and picture the signed contracts on my desk and Q nodding in approval.The fight is happening, and I’m going to win.

I have no fucking clue how I’m going to pull all of this off, but I have to believe I can. If I don’t, there’s no reason to walk into the gym.

“I got this. All of it. I can do this.” I say the words out loud to myself, psyching myself up until I can speak it with such confidence that I believe it.

It’s a trick I picked up early in my fighting career, the first time I was going up against a nasty opponent who’d killed a guy in the ring earlier in the year. I pictured myself standing over his body as the ref raised my hand in victory. I lived that vision over and over and over until I was certain of exactly how the fight would end.

I took him out with a brutal TKO from a ground-and-pound finish, and he was still on the canvas when the ref raised my hand in victory.

This is how winners think, I realized.

Two years later, I’d earned enough to start Urban Legend. From the goddamned day I was born, the odds have been stacked against me. It’s nothing new. I haven’t let it stop me yet, and I’m sure as hell not starting now.

“Let’s do this.” I hop out of the Bronco, shoulder my bag, and head inside. I walk differently, with more purpose.

I barely see the other people in the gym as I go to the lockers and get ready to train. It’s like tunnel vision, but different and hard to explain. Regardless, when I finish my warm-up and start working the bag, I’m in the zone. My muscles remember every damn move and combination that’s been drilled into my head since the first time I put on gloves. I savage the bag, switch to jumping rope until I can barely breathe, and chug some water before doing it all over again and again and again.

It’s as familiar to me as breathing. Hell, sometimes I think this is what I was meant to do with my life. Train, fight, and overcome battle after battle. I understand this world. I know how to win. But for so many years, I’ve had Jorie’s dreams in my head, and those are what drove me to open my underground club, and then Legend.

Is that really what I want?I push the question away and return my focus to the bag.

I’m drenched with sweat and grinding out one last combination when I sense someone behind me. I finish and grab the bag to steady it and myself.