
Season Opening time for baseball romance
She thinks she knows this player—but he has a few surprise
moves. For Alicia Riley, her job as a sports therapist for the St.
Louis Rivers baseball team is a home run—until she becomes
the primary therapist for star pitcher, Garrett Scott. Out
of the lineup with an injury, he’s short-tempered, hard to
handle, and every solid inch, a man. Right now, the only demand he’s making on Alicia is that she
get him ready to pitch in time for opening day. Except the
sexual chemistry between them is so charged, Alicia’s
tempted to oblige Garrett just about anything. But both
their careers are at stake—one bad move and it’s game over
for both of them. Garrett also feels the hot sparks between them, and the way
he figures it, what better therapy is there than sex? Now
all he has to do is convince the woman with the power to
make the call.
Excerpt Chapter One
Garrett Scott sat in the St. Louis Rivers therapy room
facing an entire team of sports medicine specialists, all
wearing looks of doom on their faces.
From the team doctor to the therapists who'd been
working on his shoulder for the past six months, their
faces said it all—he wasn't ready to pitch yet.
He was tired of it. Tired of being molded and
manipulated and poked and prodded like some kind of
experiment. His shoulder wasn't getting any better, and he
still couldn't throw a pitch. He was done. His career was
over, and no amount of fake hopeful expressions would make
him believe any differently.
"Let's go over to the pulley's," Max said. "If we
increase the weight . . ."
"No. It's not going to help. I don't have my full range
of motion, and no pulleys, no weighted balls, no water
therapy, and no amount of stretching is going to get it
back."
"You don't know that, Garrett," Max said. As head of the
sports medicine team, when Max had a plan, everyone
listened. "We haven't finished your therapy, and the season
hasn't started yet. There's plenty of time."
Phil, the team doctor, nodded. "Max is right. You
haven't given it enough time."
Garrett glared at them both. "I said no. This has been
going nowhere, and we all know it."
Everyone started talking at once, but it was all white
noise to him. They were blowing smoke up his ass about how
he was going to pitch come April.
He'd heard it before, all the pats on the back and the
encouragement that didn't mean anything if you couldn't get
a ball across the plate. They were just words. Empty
promises.
The only one who didn't say anything was the woman
hovering in the background. Dark hair pulled back into a
ponytail, she wore the same team–color polo shirt and
khaki pants as the men, and held a digital notebook. And
she was giving him a look. A pissed–off one.
"You haven't said anything," he said, focusing his gaze
on her. "What do you think?"
She blinked and held her notebook close to her
chest. "Me?"
"Yeah."
"I'm not in charge of your recovery. There are people
here with much more experience than me."
"You've watched my therapy, haven't you?"
"Yes."
"Then what do you think?"
They all turned to her, watching and waiting. She
finally shrugged. "I think your team is right. You'll
pitch."
She moved forward, and he got a good look at her.
Despite the ugly uniforms they all wore, she was pretty,
one of the two women on the sports therapy team. He'd
thought them interchangeable and hadn't paid much
attention, because they were both brunettes, just blurs
passing by while he was doing therapy with Max and some of
the other senior members of the team. Now that she was
closer, he really noticed this one. She had dark hair,
stunning blue eyes, and a pretty mouth; he was definitely
paying attention now that she'd spoken.
"My arm is stiff."
"Because you're babying it, because you won't give it
your all. Your therapists know what they're doing, but you
fight them."
As soon as she said it, her eyes widened. Max crossed
his arms, and Garrett could tell he was pissed.
Garrett wasn't. His lips quirked. "Go on."
"Look, I didn't mean to insult you."
"Yeah, you did. You've sat back quietly for all these
months, and you obviously have something on your mind.
Spill it."
She looked up at Max, who shook his head.
"Don't look at him," Garrett said. "Tell me what I'm
doing wrong."
She sat next to him on the bench and laid her notebook
down, her gaze lifting to his.
"Fine. You're argumentative, confrontational, and a
general pain in the ass to deal with. Honestly, no one
wants to work with you because you fight your recovery.
Half of healing is mental, and your head is the biggest
obstacle to getting you back on the mound."
Huh. He glanced up at the others, who did their best to
look away. "I see."
But when he turned back to—he had no idea what her
name was. "What's your name?"
"Alicia."
"Okay, Alicia. You think you can make me a pitcher
again?"
She gave him a confident smirk. "I know I can, if you
pull your head out of your ass and work with me."
He liked her confidence. He liked her. She sure as hell
was better looking than the rest of the sports medicine
group he'd worked with all these months. And she smelled
good.
"Alicia," Max warned. "Why don't you head up to the
office, and I'll finish up here with Garrett?"
Alicia nodded then stood and left the room.
Garrett laughed, the first time he'd laughed in a long
damn time. "It's okay, Max. I like her. She's honest."
As soon as the door closed, he turned to Max.
"I want her in charge of my therapy."
"Absolutely not," Phil said, interjecting himself into
the conversation. "As your doctor, I'm advising against it.
Max is the head of sports medicine for the team. He's the
best. Alicia doesn't have the experience he has."
"I don't give a shit if she's the water girl. She's
confident. She's a sports medicine specialist, certified to
do therapy like the rest of you, isn't she?"
"Well, yes," Max said.
"Then I want to work with her."
"You have a multimillion dollar arm, Garrett," Max
said. "I'm not entrusting it to her."
Garrett stood and stretched, then looked at Manny Magee,
the St. Louis Rivers coach, who'd been sitting in the
corner of the room, silently taking it all in. "These guys
have all been working on me for months, and I haven't seen
the results needed to throw a single goddamn pitch. I want
Alicia to give it a try."
Manny stood and ambled over. He was tough and always
honest, so Garrett knew Manny would give it to him
straight. "That's because she's right. Physically, you're
healing fine from the injury. A lot of your problem is
you're resisting the treatment."
Maybe Manny was right, but Garrett doubted it. What he
needed was a new therapist. If Alicia and her smart mouth
could get the job done, then maybe his career wasn't over.
He looked at Manny—at all of them.
"I need a change. What we're doing isn't working. And
maybe someone new can help with that."
"I don't give a damn if a circus clown does your
therapy, as long as you're on the mound opening day," Manny
said. "Just be ready for the season. We need your arm."
Shit. Shit. Shit. Alicia massaged the giant headache
that had taken refuge between her eyes and counted down the
minutes until her boss entered the office and fired her.
She'd always had a smart mouth, always spoke first and
thought later. But to insult the entire St. Louis Rivers
sports medicine team in one sentence had been a serious,
colossal fuckup. She'd had some major success as a
therapist and had been getting great feedback from her boss
in the time she'd been here. This was the job of her
dreams, and to make matters worse, her cousin played for
this team. Gavin was going to kill her.
The frustrating part was, she knew she was right.
Garrett Scott was a seriously amazing pitcher. His injury
had been bad, but there was no reason to think he wouldn't
come back and be a great pitcher again, providing he
cooperated with his rehabilitation. The problem was, he was
the worst patient she'd ever seen in terms of cooperation.
He resisted therapy, he argued with the treatment plan, and
she knew damn well he wasn't doing his at home exercises.
He was one of those athletes who thought of himself as some
kind of superhero. Get injured, do rehab, and be fine in a
few weeks.
Unfortunately, serious injuries didn't work that way, no
matter how young or virile you were. You had to work at
your own recovery. The team had done a good job on their
part. Garrett just hadn't done any of his part. He blew off
his therapists with jokes and promises to do better the
next time. And they all liked him, so they placated him.
Ugh.
He wasn't responding to traditional treatment. Which
meant he needed a new plan, something she'd been working on
during her off days. She'd wanted to present it to Max and
Phil, but her methods were a little beyond the norm, and
she knew they'd never go for it, especially not for Garrett.
Now, it didn't matter since she wasn't going to be
treating any of the Rivers players any longer.
Idiot. She should have just kept her mouth shut and told
Garrett that he should listen to whatever Max told him.
This was going to be her penance for having a mind of her
own. And a big mouth.
She lifted her head as Phil and Max came through the
door, along with the Rivers coach, Manny Magee.
Great. They brought the coach with them. She was
definitely fired. Manny had a reputation for being fiery
and loud. She might even get yelled at before they canned
her ass.
She sat up straight and lifted her chin, determined to
take it like the professional she was.
Correction. If she was a professional, she probably
wouldn't have told the Rivers star pitcher to pull his head
out of his ass.
"Alicia," Phil said. "What you said to Garrett
downstairs . . ."
"Yes, sir. I know. I was out of line. I'm sorry."
"Actually," Manny said, "It was exactly what he needed
to hear."
She frowned and shifted her gaze to the coach. "Excuse
me?"
"Garrett has been the perfect specimen of a pitcher for
five seasons," Manny said. "We plucked him out of college
ball, he spent six months in AAA before we brought him up,
and he's been in our starting rotation ever since, with one
of the lowest ERAs of any pitcher in the league. He's won
the Cy Young Award twice, pitched a near perfect game last
year, and held the strikeout record the past two seasons.
He's the golden boy."
She'd reviewed his file. She knew his record. But
hearing it from Manny gave her an understanding. "He's
never failed."
Manny nodded. "At anything. He doesn't know how. So this
injury threw him for a loop, ya know? The kid is one of the
nicest people I've ever worked with, so don't take his
black moods to heart. He'll get that kindness back once he
finds his footing."
She looked from Manny to Phil to Max. "Wait. I'm not
fired?"
Max didn't smile at her. She could tell he was still
angry about what went down in the treatment room. "No,
Alicia. You're not fired. Instead, we're putting you in
charge of Garrett Scott's rehab."
Again—oh, shit. That's what she got for opening
her mouth.
Phil and Max went over her new assignment.
"I want to try some unconventional treatment methods
with him," she said to Max.
Max balked, but she figured if she didn't suggest it
now, she might as well hand Garrett right back to him.
"Look. He's resisting. And yes, a lot of it is in his
head. But some of his problem is boredom. His treatment is
rote. He's used to the plan you've run him through, and so
is his body. Let me try this. If it doesn't work, we'll
alter the plan."
Max looked to Phil, who shrugged. "I agree it's not a
standard plan, but alternative therapies do have a high
success rate with some athletes. It could work."
Max shrugged then turned to Alicia. "Give it a try. I
want weekly reports."
Excited, she nodded. "Yes, sir."
When Garrett came in a few minutes after they left, she
stood, suddenly nervous. She'd always been a fan. The
Rivers were, after all, her hometown team. And Garrett was
nothing short of the most gorgeous man she'd ever laid eyes
on. Six feet four inches of dark–haired,
dark–eyed intensity, with a leanly honed body that
was a work of art.
She'd spent her adult life studying body mechanics. She
loved sports and sports players, and Garrett was one of the
best. She'd watched him in the workout room, day in and day
out, sweating through his therapy. From day one of his
injury, when he could barely move his shoulder, she'd ached
for him, wished she could be in there helping him.
And now he was all hers. Talk about a huge
responsibility.
"They told you?"
She swallowed. "Yes. My question is . . . why me?"
He shrugged. "Because you stood up to me. I need to work
with someone who isn't going to take shit from me. The rest
of them tell me what they think I want to hear. They pacify
me. I don't think you'll do that."
She needed to relax. Think of him as a patient, not a
hot man standing only inches away.
"No, I definitely won't do that. I'm not going to take
shit from you. But I am going to help you. You have to
believe that. And believe in yourself. That's the first
step."
He studied her then nodded. "Sure. I cleared your
schedule, so you're only going to work with me."
She arched a brow. "You know, I can work with more than
one player."
"Probably. But I need you concentrating on my recovery."
A little ego there. Understandable. She'd deal with
it. "Okay."
"Then let's get started."
"We will. On Monday. I'll need a few days to develop
your treatment plan. Since today's Friday, the weekend will
give me the time I need."
"Fine." He whipped out his phone. "What's your number?"
She gave it to him.
"Okay, good. I'll call you on Sunday, and we can get
stuff set up. Does that work for you?"
"Sure." He gave her his number, and she pulled her phone
out of her pocket to add it in.
He punched the info into his phone then lifted his gaze
to hers. "What's your last name?"
"Riley."
His lips lifted. "Any relation to Gavin?"
"Actually, he's my cousin."
He looked up. "No shit. Is that how you got this job?"
He wasn't the first person to ask that question, and it
always annoyed her. "No. I got this job because I'm good at
sports medicine. I'm so good at sports medicine that you'll
be pitching come April, Garrett. Which has nothing to do
with my cousin and everything to do with me."
He laughed. "Man, have you got some attitude. I like
you, Alicia."
She wasn't sure how she felt about him. Jury was still
out. She headed to the door. "You won't like me when I
start kicking your ass, Garrett."
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