
Baseball tales of romance
For these three players, it's all about scoring… In high
school, Elizabeth Smith had a serious crush on shortstop
Dylan Andrews. Now she has to interview him for an article.
Can she stay professional…or will she end up pulling him
behind the bleachers? Pitcher Rob Perry wants to prove
that he's ready for the Show. But his second chance could
turn into a double–play when Tori Gallagher—whose father
owns a Major League team—makes one pitch that Rob can't
refuse… First baseman Eric Lessing's game has never
been consistent until Tess Meyers ignited a winning streak.
Now—with Major League dreams on the line—will getting lucky
with his charm result in foul play?
Excerpt Dylan Andrews skimmed the blog. Inhaling deeply, he turned
off his laptop. He didn't know why he bothered reading that
crap. The last thing the Milwaukee Mavericks cared about was
how "hot" he was. The only way he was going to get called up
to the Major League franchise was by being the best
shortstop playing today.
Listening to outside opinions—whether they were from
baseball groupies or seasoned sports
journalists—accomplished nothing except to make him more
anxious. He got up from the wobbly hotel desk to get more coffee,
decided against it, and instead hit the floor and did
another thirty push–ups. If they'd been playing at home he
would've gone to the gym for a workout after his run, but
the Carolina Crusaders, his Minor League team, had three
more games here in Tulsa before they made the trek to Milwaukee. Man, he did not want to spend another season playing
Double–A ball. If he had to, he'd suck it up and bide his
time, but he belonged in the Majors. Trouble was, so did
four other shortstops in the Southeast League. And none of
them had defected to Japan to play their first three years
as pros. Of course at the end of the day it didn't matter if
the fans considered him a sellout, or whether his manager
liked him. The only thing that did was how much he was worth
to the franchise. It was always about money. His cell rang and he sprang to his feet to grab his phone.
It was Arnie, his agent. Dylan smiled. Talk about money
being the bottom line. Arnie thought Dylan was nuts for
leaving Japan. He'd been a star there and made a small fortune. "What's up?" Dylan anchored the phone between his jaw and
shoulder while he got a bottle of water out of the motel's
mini fridge. "You ever heard of the North Star News?" "Yeah," he said slowly. It was a daily paper put out by a
town next to where he'd grown up. He had a bad feeling about
this conversation. "why?" "They want to do an interview with you. One of those
smalltown–boy–makes–good pieces." "No." Papers rustled and Arnie's assistant was saying something in
the background. "Tell him I'll call him back," Arnie
murmured, his voice muffled and distant, before he said more
clearly, "what do you mean, no?" "Do an interview now? Before I know if I'm getting called
up? Are you kidding?" He didn't like doing interviews,
period, and Arnie knew that. Giving a sound bite now and
then, that was different. But answering personal questions?
No way. "Look, Dylan, you need to get the fans pulling for you, not
pissed that Japan was your first choice. Show them you were
just a kid who wanted to play ball—" Dylan sighed. That's exactly who he'd been… just a kid who
wanted to play ball. Except fear and ego had gotten in the
way and he'd refused to go from college baseball star to
Double–A nobody for the American League. "The fans won't
determine whether I get called up. we both know that." "But it wouldn't hurt if you were more likable." "Thanks." "Don't get thin–skinned on me now, kid. Wait." Arnie held
the phone away and yelled something at his assistant. "Hey,
I gotta go, but I wanted you to expect the phone call." "What phone call?" "From the North Star News." "Shit, Arnie. I didn't agree to the interview." "Yeah, you did. Five minutes ago." "Dammit, Arnie—" The call had already been disconnected. Muttering a curse, Dylan flipped the phone closed, tossed it
on the bed and uncapped the bottle. He could be a jerk and
not take the reporter's call. Or go ahead with the interview
and give the guy a string of two–syllable answers. Wasn't it
enough to play his damn heart out every single game?
Evidently not. Dylan took a big gulp of water. He'd have to think about this. Elizabeth Smith doubted she was about to be fired. She'd
kept her nose clean, her attitude in check, even though
she'd detested every single ridiculous social function she'd
had to cover for the North Star News in the past ten
months. Not once had she so much as lifted a brow, or gagged
at an assignment. At least not in public. She checked her teeth in the mirror she kept in her desk. No
pink lipstick, no remaining romaine lettuce from the chicken
Caesar salad she'd just had for lunch. With her fingers, she
combed back the spiky bangs that made her look too young.
She'd started growing them out, but it seemed to take forever. "Hey, Smith," Kevin called out on his way into the break
room. "The old man wants to see you." "Got the message already." She waved an acknowledgment,
wishing the nosy weather guy would mind his own business,
and then ignored the group of heads that sprouted up from
the other cubicles around her. As soon as she left the boss's office, everyone would want
to know why Ed Singleton had wanted to see her. The owner
rarely spoke directly to the peons, especially a newbie like
her. No one cared that she had more experience and ambition
than any of the local desk jockeys, or that half of the
staff were only hanging around for their pension. Elizabeth wasn't complaining though. She was lucky to have a
job with the daily paper. It might not be stimulating, but
for now, it paid her rent, her car loan and kept her in
enough takeout that she never had to cook—not a bad place to
be while she licked her wounds and climbed her way back up
the ladder. At Singleton's closed door, she paused, tugging at the cuffs
of the jacket she insisted on wearing, even though no one
else in the office wore suits besides her and the old man.
Not that she was trying to prove anything. But she'd spent a
small fortune on her wardrobe the first week she'd arrived
in Chicago. The move had been a disaster. The fabulous job as an
investigative reporter at the Sun–Times had never
materialized and the love of her life she'd followed to the
city had vanished with a paralegal and Elizabeth's pride.
She'd come slinking back to Lester, Wisconsin, and
temporarily moved in with her parents until she'd gotten
back on her feet, but damned if she'd let her pricey new
clothes go to waste. She knocked, heard him answer and then
let herself in. He sat behind his oversize gray metal desk, his bushy white
eyebrows drawn in their usual frown. "Have a seat, Elizabeth." She glanced at the pair of ugly brown vinyl chairs facing
him and chose the one without the tear in the corner. The
man's frugality was crazy. He was loaded, probably the
richest guy in the county. But he seemed to hang on to his
possessions until they fell apart. Oh, God. A horrible thought occurred to her. Maybe he'd called her in here to tell her to dial it down a
notch with the designer suits. Or that she wasn't a good fit
here at the laid–back publication. She swallowed, then gave him a smile. "What can I do for
you, Mr. Singleton?" "How do you like working here, Elizabeth?" "I'm happy here, sir. I'm very grateful for the opportunity." "You're overqualified." She blinked, surprised that he knew anything about her. When
he wasn't golfing, or attending sports events, he was here,
but he generally left the daily operations to his slacker
son–in–law. "Frankly, I'm not sure what to say to that.
Except I hope I'm not getting fired." His mouth twitched in a thin smile. "You're not getting
fired. In fact, I wanted to offer you a more challenging
assignment." "Really?" She straightened. "Great. I'm honored. What did
you have in mind?" Mr. Singleton leaned back, his worn leather chair creaking
under his weight, and studied her for a moment. "Do you know
Dylan Andrews?" Dylan Andrews? The focal point of the biggest
humiliation of her young life? The guy who'd starred in her
dreams all through high school? The jock who hadn't given
her a second thought except as some random nerd? She managed
to keep her expression blank, her voice calm. "Sure. I know
who heis." "There's a good chance the kid will be called up to the
Majors in a couple of weeks." She nodded, only because it seemed the appropriate thing to
do, and not because she knew a thing about baseball, or
understood how this conversation related to her. "I want you to interview him." Every muscle in her body tensed as she struggled to stay
seated and not bolt for the door. "Me?" she asked, her voice
an octave too high. "I don't want one of those generic sit–downs for an hour,
either. I want you to shadow him for a couple of days, show
us a day in the life, find out why he played for Japan first—" "Wait." She shook her head and ignored the disapproving
frown that said Singleton didn't like being interrupted. She
couldn't sit face–to–face with Dylan. She absolutely
couldn't. "I'm not a sports reporter. Stan is the person you
want." "You think I don't know my own staff?" "What?" Her mind was still on Dylan and she had to steer her
thoughts back to the conversation. "No, of course not. I
mean, naturally you know everyone here. But Stan covers
sports and is eminently more qualified than myself to
interview—" She cut herself off when his bushy brows raised
toward his receding hairline. "Stan is leaving for vacation tomorrow," Mr. Singleton said,
his patience obviously wearing thin. "And I figured you
might appreciate a chance to strut your stuff." By interviewing a baseball player? This particular
baseball player? Seriously? "Thank you for thinking of
me." She paused, wanting to say, "Please, no, not him, not
now. Anything else, I swear I'll do the obituaries for a
year, ten…" but she didn't want to commit career suicide
before she even had a career. She forced a smile.
"I'll get right on it." "Be sure that you do." The older man's gaze narrowed on her
as if he saw right through her phony enthusiasm. "I'm giving
you two full pages in next Sunday's edition." "Wow. Two pages?" Holy mother of God, how was she going to
manage that? "Is this guy really that interesting?" "It's your job to make sure that he is." "Yes, sir. And thank you." She left his office, closing the
door behind her, but she couldn't move her feet any farther.
Not yet. All she'd ever wanted was to be a reporter. A journalist who
covered hard news with insight and integrity. She'd been on
her way before Chicago, and even though that had gone to
hell, she'd picked herself up and started again. It didn't
matter that she now had to cover births and PTA meetings and
garden parties—she was prepared to do whatever it took to
become the professional she knew she could be. If it had been anyone but Dylan Andrews, she'd have leaped
on this opportunity with all engines firing. She'd have made
baseball her passion by the time she knocked on the player's
door. She'd have shown her boss and everyone who'd ever
turned her down for a job that she was a force to be
reckoned with. No, wait—full stop. Dylan Andrews was the hand she'd been
dealt, and she'd be damned if she was going to fold before
she'd even begun. From this moment forward, high school
hadn't happened, she'd never met Andrews, never thought
about him a day in her life. From this moment forward, she
was Elizabeth Smith, Baseball Expert and Ace Interviewer.
Period. Even if he got one look at her and burst out laughing just
before he slammed the door in her face. Dylan got out of the shower and wrapped the flimsy hotel
towel around his hips, then used another to dry his hair as
he walked to the window. Damn, it was still raining. It
would really suck if the game got canceled tonight. Not just
because he wanted every opportunity to show that he was
ready to be called up, but because the reporter would be
flying in this afternoon. He'd tried to put her off, even suggested that they could
conduct the entire interview over the phone, but E. J. Smith
had been persistent. She'd sidestepped every roadblock he'd
thrown in front of her, and promised to work around his
schedule. She'd been quick and sharp, not the slightest bit
flirty to get his attention, and a small part of him looked
forward to meeting her. But if the game were rained
out…well, he didn't want that much time available for her to
get her hooks into him. On his way back to the bathroom he checked his phone to see
if the team manager had texted about the weather forecast or
the game being called. So far, so good. But the reporter had
called. Again. He didn't bother listening to her messages
since he had no intention of returning her call until
tomorrow. He was using the towel to dry the back of his damp
hair when he heard a knock. Had to be Chip. Stir–crazy from
being cooped up, the kid had shown up twice to pace Dylan's
room after he got tired of pacing his own. Hell, starting to
think of nineteen–year–old outfielders as kids? Bad sign. Dylan opened the door. "Man, you really need to find a pool
game or—" He stopped and frowned at the woman in front of
him. Medium–brown shoulder–length hair, minimal makeup,
well–shaped pink lips. She was slim, on the petite side
under the no–nonsense navy blazer and white skirt. She
didn't seem like a groupie. "I think you have the wrong room." Her gaze hadn't budged from his chest, and he realized he
was wearing nothing but a damn towel. She looked up, and he
saw that her eyes were blue. "I'm sorry," she murmured. "I tried calling." Abruptly she
extended her hand, glanced down at him again, then pulled
her hand back and picked up a brown leather travel bag
sitting at her feet. "I'll come back. We can set up an
appointment for later." "Hey." He had to step out into the hall because she'd taken
off that fast. "Wait." He watched her slow down, though she
kept her back to him. "Are you the reporter?" Her shoulders squared and then she turned to face him. "Yes,
we spoke yesterday." "I didn't think I'd see you until tomorrow." "Your agent felt we wouldn't have enough time before you
left Tulsa. He told me—" She gave her head a slight shake
and the overhead light caught the subtle gold streaks in her
hair. "You really should go inside." The way she'd moved her head, her sudden preoccupation with
the ceiling, made her seem vaguely familiar. Which wouldn't
be odd. He'd crossed paths with a number of sports reporters
over the years. But he couldn't imagine, having met her,
that he'd forget her. He wished she'd quit staring at the
ceiling so he could. He looked down. Shit. The towel was damp and thin and his cock was doing something
it had no damn business doing. He casually draped the other
towel over his arm, holding it in front, tempted to dash
back into the room. Yeah, that wouldn't make things worse.
"Are you staying here?" "I'm checking in as soon as my room is ready." She
tentatively swung her gaze his way, and he could all but
hear her sigh of relief. "So where are you gonna be?" "I don't know. Just call my cell. You have the number." For a crazy second he thought about offering to let her wait
inside while he dressed. But then he woke up and remembered
that he wanted to get rid of her, not make things easy.
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