Unbroken Promises: a friends to lovers romance
Page 24
My wet mouth glides up and down his shaft, my hand cupping his balls while massaging them gently. I know it won’t be long until he’s shooting his load down my throat. It never takes long after he’s been on the road. I take him all the way down until the tip of his dick hits my throat, and his hips buck as he lets out a guttural groan, telling me he’s about to come. I take him deep one more time and then, just as I expected, he’s coming all over my tongue. Once I’ve licked him clean, I release him from my mouth.
“Welcome home,” I joke, and he chuckles.
“Two more months, and I’ll be home for good,” he says just as there’s a knock on the door.
“Dad! I’m awake. I know Pops is home,” she shouts through the door, and I laugh at her new nickname for Xander. Since she was old enough to speak, she’s called us both Dad. It just happened, and we were both completely okay with that. We’re both her fathers. We’ve always been honest with her about the fact that I’m biologically her father and Delilah is her mother. A few months ago, though, while watching a movie, she heard the little girl call her dad ‘Pops’ and ever since, she’s dubbed that name for Xander. It drives him insane, but he wouldn’t dare tell her that.
“We really need to think of a new name for me,” Xander says, heading to the bathroom to shower. “I’m only thirty-five years old, not sixty-five!”
Throwing on a pair of pants and a shirt, I head out to the kitchen to start breakfast. “Morning, sunshine.” I give my daughter a kiss on her forehead before I pull the mixing bowl out of the cabinet.
“Morning.” She jumps up onto the barstool and bounces in her seat, excitedly. “What time are we leaving?”
“Eleven,” I say, heating up the skillet and mixing the pancake batter in a bowl. “Chocolate chips or blueberries?” I ask.
“Neither. Bananas, please.”
“You got it.” I grab a banana and start slicing. “Have you decided which dress you’re going to wear today?” I ask, making conversation.
“Yep! The one grandma got me while she was in Hawaii with grandpa.”
“That’s a beautiful dress.” I pour the batter onto the hot surface.
“Morning, sweet girl,” I hear Xander say.
“Morning, Pops!” Zoey squeals, and out of the corner of my eye, I see her jump into his arms. He plants a kiss on her cheek and carries her over with him. I laugh at how tall she’s gotten, her long legs wrapping around his torso—too tall to be carried, but Xander doesn’t care. He leans in and gives me a quick kiss, then snags a couple slices of bananas and throws them into his mouth.
“Pops, want to see my dress?” Zoey wiggles her body to be let down, and Xander drops her to the ground.
“Yes, but let’s eat first. We don’t want to get any food on it.” He hands her three plates for her to carry to the table.
“Fine.” She huffs. “We’re leaving at eleven.”
“Sounds good.”
After we eat breakfast, I jump in the shower and get dressed while Zoey does the same. Once she’s dressed and Xander has taken no less than fifty photos of her in her new dress, we head out. It’s a two-and-a-half hour drive, but Zoey makes it go by quick, telling Xander everything that he’s missed while being gone. He listens and responds like it’s the first time he’s hearing everything, even though he video chats with us nightly.
When we get to the hospital, we immediately spot Joanne and John. Zoey runs over to them to give them a hug and show them her dress.
“Thank you for coming,” Dr. Morton says, shaking our hands. “What you’re doing here is amazing.” He walks us over to the main area where they will be doing the ribbon-cutting ceremony.
“It’s the least we can do,” Xander says. Everybody gathers around, and Zoey comes running up to join us in the front along with Joanne and John.
“Thank you everyone for being here today as we officially open a new wing in Texas General Hospital,” Dr. Morton begins. “This wing has been made possible by two men who I have had the privilege of getting to know over the years while I was treating their friend, Delilah Cross. Delilah was a fighter, and while she unfortunately lost her battle to cancer, I am so proud to announce the brand new children’s oncology wing, which has been built in her memory and funded by the Delilah Cross Wish Upon a Star Organization. Not only will this mean the children who are treated here will get the best care possible and be more comfortable, but many families who may not have been able to otherwise seek treatment will now be able to. Without further ado, Zoey, cut the ribbon.”
Using both hands, Zoey holds the big scissors and cuts the ribbon in half. Everyone claps and comes over, hugging and thanking us. When Xander mentioned wanting to start a charity in Delilah’s honor, we both agreed the only one that would be fitting is one that raises money to help families who need financial help so their children can be treated. Delilah was fortunate that her parents could afford her treatment all those years, which is why she was able to live as long as she did. But what many people don’t know is that one-quarter of cancer patients can’t afford treatment.
“You did good, Mr. Thompson.” I pull my husband into a hug and give him a quick kiss.
“We did good.” He kisses me back. “I was thinking since we’re in town, tonight we could take Zoey to the barn to watch for shooting stars.” And that right there is why I love this man.
The End
Excerpt From
Tapping Out: A Fighting Love novel
One
Bella
Present day...
Two lines mean pregnant. One line means not.
Two lines. Pregnant.
One line. Not.
I sit on the edge of the tub in the bathroom with the door locked. My head is down as I stare at the tiled floor. There are thirty-four tiles. One is cracked. The grout is dirty. I should buy better cleaning supplies. The test said three minutes. It’s probably been closer to ten but I can’t look. Will the test still be accurate if I don’t look right away? Maybe I should take another one just in case.
Two lines and my life changes.
One line and nothing changes.
“Bella! You have been in there forever. Are we still going to dinner? The shower isn’t even running. Gina is going to be here any minute.” When I don’t respond, Tristan knocks on the door, again. “Bella!”
“I’ll be out in a minute,” I yell through the door praying he can’t hear the tremble in my voice. If he knows I’m freaking out, he will without a doubt force his way in here to find out what’s going on, and right now, Tristan is probably the last person I want knowing what’s going on.
Taking a deep breath, I stand up and walk slowly toward the counter silently praying for one line, like praying now is going to make a difference, like if I pray right this second, the results will miraculously change in my favor. The second line will just disappear and all will be right with the world. Maybe I don’t need a miracle. Maybe there’s only one line. Maybe I am freaking out over nothing. I swear to God if there’s only one line, I am getting on birth control today! Not that I’ll need it, because if I’m not pregnant, I’m never having sex again! Ok, maybe not never again but not anytime in the near future.
Closing my eyes, I take a deep breath to calm my nerves. After holding it in for a few seconds, I let out a slow exhale. Nope, doesn’t work, I’m still freaking out. I open my eyes and stare at the test.
Two
Bella
Five years ago...
I’m sitting in my bedroom staring outside at the beautiful weather. After five days straight of rain, I am sick of being indoors. The sun is shining and there isn’t a cloud in sight. I’m dying to go for a run but I am not in the mood for another run on the treadmill indoors, so I text message my two best friends: Marco and Tristan. Surely, one of them will want to join me for a run.
Group text: (Marco, Tristan, Bella)
Me: What are you guys doing? I’m bored.
Tristan: Mom is making me help clean the house
. You?
Me: That sucks. Watching Something About Mary.
Marco: Of course you are...
Me: Oh hush! Wanna go for a run?
Tristan: Can’t...cleaning!
Marco: Where?
Me: Red Rock.
Marco: Ok. Pick you up in twenty.
Me: Ok.
Tristan: Have fun!
I pause my favorite movie and throw on my athletic shorts, a sports bra, and a tank top. Then I grab my favorite hoodie from over the back of my chair and throw it on over my head. Even though it’s April in Vegas, the weather is cooler along the trails. I put on my socks and running shoes then grab my water bottle from my nightstand to fill it up in the kitchen. Once I am dressed and ready to go, I grab the hair tie from around my wrist and throw my thick mane up into a pony tail.
As I am leaving my room, I get a text, so I stop and check it.
Lucas: Wanna hang out?
Me: Can’t.
I stuff my phone into the front pocket of my hoodie then pull it back out.
Me: Sorry. Another time?
Ever since starting high school this year, it feels like everything is changing. For so long, I was just Bella, the MMA fighter. Guys always saw me as one of them. But this year, something shifted.
I look at myself in the mirror to see if anything significant has changed but I’m still just...me. I have chocolate brown hair that has a natural curl to it and matching brown eyes just like my dad. I am on the skinnier side from years of working out but was blessed with decent cleavage. I take a closer look in the mirror. My lips are naturally full like my mom’s and my skin tone is an olive color like my dad’s. Most people say I am the perfect mixture of both my parents.
While I don’t think I’m ugly, I don’t think I’ve suddenly morphed into some hot chick. I don’t wear makeup, my hair is almost always up in a ponytail out of my face, and I can usually be found wearing nothing but athletic attire when I’m not in my school uniform since I pretty much live and breathe fighting.
My phone dings again.
Lucas: Sure. Maybe we can go to the movies?
Not having any idea how I want to respond to his question, I close out the text and put my phone away. I don’t think I look any different than I did last year but for some reason the guys are acting like I’m the new girl in town. I was born in Las Vegas and have lived here my entire life, so I don’t get it. I take one last look at myself in the mirror then turn my light off and head downstairs.
“Mom! Dad!” I yell as I walk through the living room. “I’m going running with Marco.”
No answer.
I get to the kitchen and see my younger siblings—Nathan and Lilly—sitting at the bar eating a bowl of cereal. Nathan is five years younger than me and Lilly is seven years younger. Long story short, my parents met when they were young, real young. My mom was eighteen and fresh out of high school and my dad was twenty-two. They fell for each other instantly but were both heading in different directions in life. My mom had no idea she was pregnant when they parted ways, and once she knew, she had no way to get ahold of my dad. Five years later, they found each other and surprise! I was in tow. Once they fell back in love, they got married and then came my brother and sister.
“Hey, where are Mom and Dad?” I grab an apple from the fridge, my go-to fruit in the morning, and take a bite, then fill up my bottle with cold water and ice.
“In their room,” Nathan says through a mouthful of cereal. I look at the clock. It reads 8:00. There’s only one reason my parents would still be in their room this late and I don’t even want to think about that reason. Sure, I’m aware that’s how my siblings and I were brought into this world but still...
“Okay, well, let them know I went running with Marco.”
“Ugh. Running.” Lilly scrunches her little nose in disgust. She clearly takes after our mom when it comes to exercise, which means it doesn’t happen. Like at all. Give my mom a book and a comfy couch and she’s good to go. My dad, on the other hand, is a retired UFC fighter and owns a UFC training facility here in Las Vegas called Cooper’s Fight Club. While I enjoy curling up with a good book on a rainy day, I have grown up in the gym and will choose anything athletic over lounging around like a couch potato.
“Can I go?” Nathan asks. Like me, Nathan enjoys the more physical activities. He’s not really into fighting but he loves to sweat. He usually spends his days at the recreational center my dad and his friends started years ago. It’s a sport’s complex for kids and teens to spend their time at as opposed to running the streets. Nathan is really into football and for only being ten years old, he’s actually really good at it.
“Not today. I’m hoping to get in at least seven miles. How about we go for a run together around the neighborhood tomorrow after school?”
“Okay, cool,” Nathan says, shoving more cereal into his mouth. I finish eating my apple and throw the core in the garbage. I grab a cereal bar and my bottle of water and head toward the front door to wait for Marco as my parents come down the stairs.
“Morning. Just getting up?” I give them a knowing look.
“Actually, we have been up for a couple hours. We just had to go upstairs to...” My mom blushes at the realization she’s about to be busted.
So, of course, my dad saves her. “Find something. Where are you going?” Good change of subject, Dad.
“I’m going jogging over at Red Rock with Marco.”
“Have a good run, honey.” My mom gives me a quick kiss on my cheek before going to the kitchen.
“Make sure you warm up good, first,” my dad says. Always in trainer mode.
“You got it!”
Marco pulls up in his black Audi A5, a birthday present from his parents for his eighteenth birthday. I yell bye to my parents and run out the door toward his car. I still have ten months until I turn sixteen but I am hoping I get something half as hot as his car.
“Hey!” I say getting in and putting on my seatbelt.
“Morning Belles,” he replies. Just like I do every time I get in his car, I begin to mess with the music. I grab the auxiliary cord and plug my phone in, clicking play on my playlist.
“Damn, Bella. It’s too early in the morning for your girly shit.”
“Don’t talk trash about Avril. She’s badass.” I stick my tongue out and Marco rolls his eyes at me but still lets me turn it up.
The ride to Red Rock is about twenty-five minutes and the entire way I sing the lyrics to the songs obnoxiously. Marco shakes his head but I can see him smiling. Our friendship has always been easy. Even when he hit high school, and I was much younger, things pretty much stayed the same between us. Sure, he made new friends and would hang out with them occasionally, but he still made fighting and training his number one priority which meant I still saw him daily at my dad’s gym. He didn’t care that I’m six years younger than him. He has always treated me like his equal.
Then, when he turned eighteen and started fighting professionally, I was a little older, and in the back of my mind I thought for sure he would forget about me and our friendship, but here we are almost three years later and still hanging out like we always have. Marco knows what fighting means to me and he is amazing about encouraging and supporting me.
The only person I am closer to than Marco is Tristan. Tristan and I have been friends since we were born (OK, not really, but pretty much). But while Tristan loves to fight and enjoys it as a hobby, he doesn’t really plan to go professional with it. He has mentioned taking the training route like his dad or even possibly becoming a sports agent one day. Who knows.
Fighting, in some shape or form, has been a part of our lives for as far back as I can remember. Marco’s dad, Caleb, is a retired fighter from the UFC just like my dad, and Marco’s mom is a doctor who runs a sports medicine clinic. My mom does the accounting at the rec center and at my dad’s gym. Tristan’s dad, Kaden, is a trainer at the gym and his mom, Ashley, runs the rec center. My dad’s best friend Bentley used t
o be a UFC fighter but quit to become a stay-at-home dad years ago, and his wife, my Aunt Kayla, who pretty much helped raise me for the first four years of my life, works with Marco’s mom at the sports clinic as a physical therapist.
See what I mean? Fighting is my life. My dream is to one day become a UFC women’s champion. Marco understands where I’m coming from because his goal is just like mine. Since he started fighting, he has been in several fights in the last couple years and he is undefeated in his weight class. His most recent fight was a few weeks ago and he was the main card event on Pay-Per-View. It’s the first fight he made seriously good money on, especially since he won, but more importantly he has become a household name. He has women showing up to the gym wanting to go out with him, they are stalking his social media, and guys will ask him for his autograph while we are out somewhere.
Watching him fight and win is amazing. If Marco can do it then I know I can as well. He might be older but I’ve been fighting longer. I can’t wait to turn eighteen and join the UFC, and I will join the UFC because I am determined.
“You ready to do this?” Marco parks his car in the parking lot and turns to me, his smile making my heart beat just a little out of rhythm. With black eyes the color of onyx, dark black hair shaved short, and caramel colored skin courtesy of his Hispanic roots, Marco Michaels is a damn good-looking guy. Then you add his carefree attitude and his fit body, and it’s no wonder girls swoon over him on a regular basis.
I ignore the way his smile makes me feel and answer him. “Yep!”
We get out of the car and walk to the trail. After warming up and stretching, we start on our run. While Marco could easily outrun me, he always runs next to me, keeping at the same pace. We run side by side in comfortable silence. The only noise is my app letting us know when we hit each mile. After the third mile, Marco slows down.
“Holy shit! I feel like I haven’t run in years.” Marco comes to a standstill, sitting down on a rock on the side of the dirt trail.