Scoring. Kristin Hardy
Gimme five minutes.” He swung out of the room, still grinning. Oddly, the space seemed smaller with just her and Mace, Becka thought, struggling to banish the uneasiness. Maybe it had to do with those mocking eyes. Maybe it had to do with the unexpected edge of desire that suddenly sliced through her.
She struggled to breathe deeply and slow her system down. So she was attracted to him. Big deal. She’d been attracted to plenty of guys in her life. No way was she going to pat his ego and fall at his feet like every other woman he met. This was her territory and her job. She wasn’t about to let some pretty boy make her uncomfortable.
His mouth curved up in a slow smile as though he knew what she was thinking. It brought out the temper in her.
You’re a professional, Becka reminded herself. Act like it. “I take it you’re the infamous Mace Duvall.” She stuck her hand out. “I’m Becka Landon, the infamous trainer.”
“SO WAS THAT your version of bedside manner?” Mace asked, shaking her hand, intrigued to feel her pulse jump unsteadily under his fingers. He’d always been partial to redheads, and this one had the glowing, luminous skin that was a combination of good fortune and complete, utter fitness. Deep, dark red without a hint of orange, her hair feathered down to end just above her shoulders, framing exotic cheekbones and slanted green cat eyes that stared out at him from under a fringe of bangs. Her lush mouth looked soft and sulky.
He didn’t blame the player for trying to grope her or whatever had been going on. She obviously took her own medicine when it came to working out. Even camouflaged in a polo shirt and long walking shorts, her taut, curvy body made him wonder just what kind of things she could get up to in bed.
Becka raised her chin belligerently. “He was hurt, I was doing my job. You have a problem with that?”
He might just have a problem with her, he thought, wondering how those full lips tasted. “Only when it means distracting players in the clubhouse.”
“Oh, get over it,” she said impatiently, turning to jerk the cover off the table. “His foot wouldn’t hold his weight and it was either catch him or scrape him up off the floor.”
Something about the way her eyes snapped at him tempted him to push her a bit, just to see how she’d react. “Happens a lot that way?”
She flushed. “Now you’re being insulting. These kids like to play tough guy when they’re hurt. I was just trying to keep him from making things worse.”
“Looks like you distracted him from his pain just fine.”
Her cat eyes narrowed. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
“I don’t usually see trainers in a clinch with players.”
She laughed then. “Are you kidding? To these kids I’m like their old Aunt Edna. Sal’s thinking about the games he’s going to miss, not me. His mind doesn’t work that way.”
Just for a heartbeat, his gaze flicked down to the buttons on her polo shirt. “Sugar, every eighteen-year-old’s mind works that way.”
She wanted to be annoyed. She wanted to be offended. She didn’t want to feel this flush of heat. Then she saw amusement flicker in his eyes and irritation rescued her.
“Gee, Duvall, are you always such a charmer or did you cook up the sexist routine just for me?”
Oh, belligerence suited her, he thought. She had herself a temper, Miss Becka Landon did, and she wore it well. And if she looked this good in shorts and a polo shirt and mad, he couldn’t help wondering what she looked like in nothing at all. “No offense intended, just a friendly warning. You don’t want to underestimate these boys. Half of them just got out of high school two months ago. Their hormones are still kicking in. Something you think is harmless might have them daydreaming about you when they’re on the field.”
“Oh stop, Duvall, you’re flattering me.”
He stepped closer to her, and her heart jumped in response.
“You don’t want to underestimate me, either,” he said softly, staring at her throat where the pulse beat madly under translucent skin. Flattery didn’t even come close to what he wanted to do with her.
She should haul off and put him in his place, Becka thought, but her mind kept focusing on the flecks of copper in his golden eyes, and the heat she could feel radiating from him. Seconds stretched out, until she heard Sal’s voice as he crutched back toward the training room.
“I’m ready, Florence.”
Becka turned and got her keys and purse. She glanced at Mace.
“Well, this has been fun, Duvall, but I’ve got to run. Guess I’ll see you tonight when the game starts.”
The corners of his mouth curved in a slow grin and his eyes flickered with a heat she felt down to the pit of her stomach. “Funny, I thought it had started already.”
3
EARLY-MORNING SUN SLANTED across Becka as she helped Joe tie the last of her kitchen chairs onto his pickup. The final amalgamation looked a lot like something out of the Beverly Hillbillies, but it all fit, even the bed picked up that morning from her girlfriend Ryan’s house.
“We’re ready to roll,” Joe called, dusting off his hands as he walked over to stand with his wife. “Everybody in.” Blunt-featured and stocky, he seemed to adore Nellie beyond reason. And like Becka’s father, he was endlessly patient. Maybe patient enough to be in a relationship in which his sweetheart always knew best—or at least thought she did.
As for Becka, she’d go down kicking and screaming before she’d let someone control her, particularly a lover, she thought, squeezing next to Nellie in the cab. She wasn’t, however, always as quick to notice if they were so self-absorbed like her ex-boyfriend Scott had been. Having a boyfriend was a relatively small part of her life, all things considered. Except for the sex, of course. Still, no one she knew had died from doing without, she thought, trying not to count how long it had been. The image of Mace Duvall popped into her head and she pushed it away with baffled irritation. One thing was for sure, next time she had a lover, he wasn’t going to be a playboy.
“So how’s the new job going?” Nellie asked, her hand on Joe’s knee. “It’s sort of like what you used to do for Dad’s team, right? I always envied you, running off with Dad to the big games all the time.”
Becka smiled as she thought about all the Saturday evenings she’d spent volunteering for the college basketball team her father coached. And getting up at the crack of dawn even on the weekends. “It wasn’t all fun and games,” she said. “Those weight rooms and locker rooms smell like something died in them.”
“Couldn’t bother you too much if you’re back in one.” Nellie winked at Becka. “So, have you walked in on any of the players in the buff yet?”
“Hey,” Joe protested good-naturedly. “You’re a married woman, you shouldn’t be thinking about guys in the buff.”
“No guys in the buff at all?” Nellie asked coyly, running her fingertips up the inside of his leg.
Joe shifted in his seat. “You’re gonna feel real funny if you make me run off the road,” he said gruffly.
With a delighted giggle, Nellie bussed him on the cheek until a flush bloomed up his neck and across his face.
They were good together, Becka thought suddenly, looking at them. In some indefinable way they’d melded since she’d last seen them. The thought warmed her. Okay, so maybe their type of marriage would send her to the nut-house within five minutes, but the important thing was that it worked for them.
“So, your team any good?” Joe asked, cheeks still stained a faint pink.
“Oh, so-so,” Becka admitted. “These guys aren’t going to be in the majors any time soon. They’re just a step up from high school.”