SINGLE MAMA’S GOT MORE DRAMA
Usa Today Bestselling Author
Kayla Perrin
Single Mama’s Got More Drama
For Leslie Gray, a longtime friend
and newly single mother.
You’re beautiful, funny and talented,
and you deserve nothing but the best.
Here’s to never settling and to hoping
that your true Mr. Right comes along.
I love you!
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
“Ms. Cain?”
“Hello,” I said, sitting up straight when I heard the voice on the other end of my line. It was Tassie Johnson’s lawyer. My heart filled with hope after the message I’d left for him. I finally had a way to come up with the cash necessary to buy out Tassie’s estranged husband’s share of my condo, and hoped that her lawyer was calling to tell me that we had a deal.
I give Tassie Johnson a nice sum of cash. She leaves me the heck alone forever.
“I’ve spoken with my client,” Bradley Harris said.
I crossed my fingers. This was it. The moment I’d been waiting for. My headache with Tassie was about to be over.
“However, Tassie asked me to tell you that she is rejecting your offer.”
“What?” For a few seconds, I couldn’t even think. Couldn’t understand. Then I saw red. “How can she reject my offer? Those were her terms. If I bought her out, I could keep the condo.”
“Yes, but she’s had a change of heart. She feels, having had time to fully consider the matter, that she would like to relocate to South Beach.”
“And my apartment,” I remarked sourly. That evil, evil—
“Your shared property.”
Shared property, my ass. “So in other words,” I began, anger brewing inside me like hot water in a kettle, “Tassie Johnson’s only interest is in screwing me over. Do me a favor—tell her to stick it where the sun don’t shine. Oh—and tell her I want my hat back.”
And then I hung up.
If Tassie Johnson wanted a fight, it was on.
It was while I was gazing at the engagement ring Lewis had given me that I thought of something. Rather, made sense of something.
The day Alaina and I had gone to Atlanta, we’d seen Tassie near Eli’s casket in the funeral home. I remembered that I’d seen a man beside her, offering comfort—an attractive man.
Tassie had tried to smear me in the media, making me out to be a manipulative slut while she’d been the doting wife, but it was unlikely that she had been sitting around waiting for Eli’s return for seven years. She was an extremely attractive woman, one who could have her pick of men.
She could have cheated on Eli for all I knew. What if she had some skeletons in her closet that she didn’t want exposed?
There was one way to find out.
I searched for the Miami Herald reporter’s card and dialed her number.
“Cynthia? This is Vanessa Cain,” I said without preamble when she picked up.
“Hello, Vanessa.”
“You said that you’d help me out if I ever needed anything. Well, I need something.”
When I replaced the receiver five minutes later, I was smiling.
If anyone could help me bring Tassie Johnson down, it was Cynthia.
It was high time I played dirty.
Ten days later
I was locking the door to my condo when I sensed them. Sensed them and knew they meant trouble.
Securing my keys in the palm of my hand, I immediately reached down and scooped up my two-and-a-half-year-old daughter, Rayna, who was standing to my left. It was an instinctive, protective gesture—because I knew this was going to be bad.
Then, fearing the worst, I slowly turned.
My stomach lurched. Standing behind me were two very large men. One African-American, one Caucasian. Both looking like they abused steroids and had just escaped from prison.
“Vanessa Cain?” the white man asked, his voice raspy. Harsh.
I swallowed. Stalled for time.
“You are Vanessa Cain, right?” the man continued. Tattoos covered both of his forearms, which didn’t exactly give me a warm and fuzzy feeling about him.
Nerves had me shifting my weight from one foot to the other. “Who wants to know?”
“We’re here to help you vacate Tassie Johnson’s condo,” the black man said, his words sounding like a threat.
I chuckled nervously as I met his stern gaze. “Excuse me?”
“It’s time you leave,” he told me. “And never come back.”
“This is my home.” I pressed my face to my daughter’s. “Our home. You wouldn’t take a mother and child from their home, would you?”
“I’m sorry, Ms. Cain,” the white man said. “We’re simply following orders.”
“Whose orders? The court’s—or Tassie’s?”
“It’s time,” the black man began, “for you to leave. Tassie will send you your things.”
“Oh, isn’t that sweet of her?” I retorted sarcastically. “You want me out of here? You show me a court order. This is America. You can’t just kick me out of my own home.”
Neither man seemed swayed by what I said. In fact, they both took a menacing step toward me.
“Wait!” I cried. “Don’t do this.”
“It’s time for you to leave,” the black man said again.
Was that the extent of his vocabulary? Was he a robot programmed to say only six words?
The men took another step in unison, now invading my personal space. “But—but you can’t,” I sputtered, clutching Rayna to my chest while trying to block the men from getting to my condo door. They weren’t just big—they could easily compete in sumo wrestling.
The big, bald, white guy wrapped his fingers around my upper arm. “Hey!” I protested. “You can’t touch me! That’s assault!”
“Then move out of the way,” the man said.
Rayna began to cry. Tears filled my own eyes.
“But this is our home. Don’t you have a heart? How—how can you be so cold?” I cradled Rayna’s head to my shoulder to comfort her as she cried. Neither man batted an eye. I wondered if Tassie had hired them from Rent-A-Thug.
“I have a baby,” I went on. “You can actually kick me out of my home with no concern at all for my child?”
“We have our orders,” the men said in unison.
“Please,” I begged, as Rayna cried louder. “Please, have a heart.” One man took hold of my left arm, the other my right arm, which was secured around Rayna. “No,” I said defiantly. “Nooo!”
I backed up until my body was against the door. I wriggled around, fighting to free myself. And then my eyes popped open. It took me a good couple of seconds to realize that I was in my bed, and that a pair of over-steroided thugs weren’t in the room with me. I was sitting up, my body tangled in my sheets.
I’d been dreaming. Thank God.
I let out a relieved chuckle.
But my relief was short-lived. Because reality came crashing down on my shoulders, knocking me backward onto the pillow. Tassie Johnson, my late fiancé’s estranged wife, wanted me out of the home I’d shared with her husband. Yes, it’s a crazy and convoluted story, but I didn’t know that Eli Johnson, my fiancé, was still legally married at the time I was involved with him. He’d romanced me, seduced me, then proposed. We’d moved in together and had been planning a life together. How was I to know that he had an estranged wife and a couple kids somewhere? But Tassie didn’t believe me—or maybe she did, and she just didn’t care. All I knew was that as his official widow, she was making my life hell regarding the property I’d shared with Eli.
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