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Touchdowns and Tiaras: The Complete Boxed Set

Page 24

by Frost, Sosie


  The room buzzed. Jack didn’t care.

  “I might not be a quarterback anymore, but at least I know I’ll be a damned good husband and father. There’s no apologizing for that.”

  The press silenced. My eyes blurred with tears, absolutely moved by the man I loved. It wasn’t the apology I wanted him to give, and it wasn’t anything the league would ever tolerate. It didn’t matter. He made a mistake, got into trouble, but this time…it wasn’t something selfish and inconsiderate.

  He sacrificed everything for me.

  Jack wrapped it up with a nod. “Now, I am sorry for the legal problems this is causing. My driving was reckless, and I did punch a guy out.” He paused. “I know how my behavior reflects on the league and the team. Hell, I know it’s making Leah squirm because I’m going off script. Just let me say, I’ll take a punishment. Whatever the league wants. And I won’t complain because it’s deserved. But I won’t apologize for defending my family. I love her. I love my baby. And I’ll do whatever it takes to keep them protected and safe.”

  Jack tucked the crumpled speech in his pocket. The media stood, shouting questions and calling his name. He ignored them, holding out a hand for me to take. He pulled me from the zoo and led me away until we tucked in a quiet, dim corner office. I was lost to his arms.

  His kiss stole my breath.

  “Marry me now,” he said. “If my career is ending, at least I’ll know I’ll have you, Kiss. Let’s get married now and just be happy.”

  I stared into those bandit blue eyes. “You really are bad, aren’t you?”

  “Willing to do something reckless?”

  “Loving you isn’t reckless.”

  “You sure?”

  “It’s a testament to my patience, but it’s not reckless. It’s easy.”

  Jack smiled. “Is that a yes?”

  I kissed him again, easing the worry from his body with a simple brush of my lips.

  “I love you,” I whispered. “Let’s get married.”

  Epilogue

  His crib was warm and comfortable. Sam stared at me with big, mocha eyes, just as expressive as his mother’s. He liked it when I hung around, cooing and kicking his legs so hard I hoped he wanted to play soccer and not become a punter.

  I wasn’t sure how many nights I spent watching the little guy. Leah gave me a hard time. She said Sam couldn’t stop looking at me when I was around, and that I wound him up when he was supposed to be sleeping.

  Likewise, kiddo.

  I couldn’t follow all the rules, all the time. My son was worth breaking them all.

  I tucked the little stuffed football under his chin. He smiled. He had my smile. Now Leah had both of us to deal with.

  “So.” I set the ball at the bottom of his crib. “You missed the championship game, bud. I mean, you were there, in your mom, but you didn’t have a good seat in there. It was a good game too. I told your momma I’d play for her, and I earned the MVP.”

  Sam blew a spit bubble. I took it as a compliment.

  “This is your first lesson.” I poked at his chubby tummy. “When you win, you act like you’ve been there before. You hear me, Sam? Always.”

  He gurgled and made a little squeal. His toes wiggled, and they were pretty much the most amazing things I had ever seen in my life. I rested my hand over him, amazed how I created something so little and yet absolutely cripplingly frightening and awesome and perfect.

  “Last year was for your momma,” I said. “I had something to prove to her. This year? It’s all for you, Sam. Every play, every drive, every win. It’s because of you. You’re my reason.”

  I could tell he was my kid because he didn’t have an ounce of humility in those rosy cheeks. I grinned.

  “You know, it wouldn’t hurt if you told your mom that…I think hearing it from you would score me some points…”

  Leah giggled from the doorway. I winked at her as she waited for me. Her arms crossed.

  “He’s supposed to be sleeping.”

  Busted. “He’s getting there.”

  “Telling him a story?”

  “Just making promises.” I brushed my hand over his cheek and smirked. “He’s bathed and ready for bed.”

  “I could have helped.”

  The little guy wasn’t sleeping yet, but he would be soon. I edged from the crib and took Leah’s hand, pulling her from the nursery and into our bedroom.

  “Training camp starts tomorrow.” I towered over her, but she was ready for me. Knew what I wanted. She smirked as she let her husband lead her to the bed. “I won’t be around as much.”

  “Like I can drag you away from that kid.”

  I launched at her, tossing her onto the bed and attacking her neck, her lips, her chin in ravenous kisses.

  “Speak for yourself…” I tucked my fingers into her skirt. “What are you going to do tomorrow when all the news crews and press come to camp?”

  “The perk of working from home. I have everything coordinated from inside the nursery.”

  “Oh, yeah?”

  She rose up, letting me tug her blouse off her shoulders. “You have an interview with Sports Nation at ten about your new, five-year contract. Then there’s a photo-op at the hospital in the pediatric ward after practice. You’re only supposed to bring the kids one jersey this time.”

  “But they need home and away colors.”

  “You do have a big heart, you know that?”

  I smirked. “A lot of things on me are big.”

  “That so?”

  “Need a demonstration?”

  She giggled. “Your last demonstration ended with that little baby in nursery.”

  “And you saw how fun that was…”

  Her body was soft, warm, and absolutely perfect. I pinned her hands over her head as I nestled between her legs.

  “You know I love you, right?” I whispered.

  “You already married me and got a baby, Jack Carson.” Leah teased with a bump of her hips. “No need to flatter me anymore.”

  “I’m serious.” I leaned over her, kissing her, tasting her, amazed by her. “I would do anything for you. Anything. Name it.”

  “Make love to me?”

  “I was already gonna do that.”

  “Then I’m an easy woman to please.”

  “And you know I love to watch you be pleased.” I kissed her again. “Are you happy?”

  “Very.”

  “How’s that grand plan working out for you?”

  Leah’s hands found mine, fiddling with my zipper. She tugged on my cock, watching as I shuddered with every perfect stroke of her hand.

  “Married. Baby. Job…” Her expression flickered as I adjusted her legs, pressing at her entrance, teasing her wetness. I pushed inside just to hear the catch in her voice. “Passion.”

  Hell yeah. I groaned as I pierced inside her completely. “Love.”

  “Love.”

  “You know you’re nothing like what I imagined for me,” I whispered.

  “Really?”

  I savored her tightness, withdrawing and earning her squeal. “I don’t mind being wrong.”

  “Good.” Her hands tightened over my arms. “Cause I’m always right.”

  “You’re everything I want.”

  Leah’s beautiful smile only got me harder. “Me too.”

  “Prove it.” I grabbed her and rolled onto my back. Leah’s steadied herself on my pecs, but she knew what I wanted. Her hips ground against mine as she rode me just the way I liked. “Tonight, we prove it to each other.”

  “All night?”

  I fucked the most beautiful woman in the world—the love of my life and the mother of my child. What better way to prove how much we needed the other?

  “All night long.” I held her hips firm against mine. “That’s my favorite way to party, Kiss.”

  The End

  Beauty and the Blitz

  Book 2

  To L.G.

  I’m getting tired of dedicating books to
you.

  Why don’t you dedicate one to me?

  1

  Piper

  Cole Hawthorne lived alone in a massive fortress of gray stone, climbing roses, and rooftop gargoyles.

  And his front door had better manners than he did.

  Cole didn’t answer his door when I knocked.

  He ignored me when I rang the bell.

  He didn’t respond to my texts, emails, or the dozen unsavory curses I spat at his home.

  The skies opened, and the rain poured. I crowded under the stone portico and sought shelter behind the marble columns. Unfortunately, the wind kicked up. Fat rain drops sprayed sideways and soaked me as I beat his door.

  This was not how I planned the meeting, but we had no choice. After so many unanswered calls and emails, someone had to deal with him face-to-face. Dad sent me, but I didn’t have better luck getting inside Cole’s sprawling mansion.

  Castle?

  I couldn’t tell the difference.

  His château loomed over the countryside. Coiling ivy stretched over the intimidating mansion, and leering windows darkened the dreary gray exterior. Decorative carvings and sculptures spiraled along the facade of the intricate, gothic architecture.

  I had no idea something so ornate could be so foreboding. His home was one briar patch short of a fairy tale villain’s lair. No Happily Ever Afters here. If anything, his fortress was the castle the princess escaped at the beginning of her Once Upon A Time.

  And I was the village fool, pounding on the door to get inside.

  What did a linebacker need with such a huge, protected estate anyway? No one in their right mind would harass Cole Hawthorne, defensive captain for the Atwood Monarchs.

  But that didn’t excuse him. I rang the bell again. Twice. Three times. I hopped onto my tip-toes, but I couldn’t reach the windows on the top of his door.

  I was not conducting this meeting outside, shouting in the middle of a thunderstorm.

  I should have known. Cole didn’t have the best reputation with the league or his agents. But the power to change his life was clutched in my hands. The folder got a little damp, but I’d hidden the contract waiver inside.

  All I needed was a signed consent form that stated he agreed to be traded. One quick signature, and I could be gone, back home, wringing the water out of my only nice outfit.

  Instead, he lurked inside the shadows of a mansion more cursed than enchanted. He didn’t give me a chance to explain why I was there.

  Well, I wasn’t putting up with it. No, sir. Not me. I’d guarantee it.

  He wasn’t even my client. Dad was the one hell-bent on getting Cole to agree to the trade.

  It didn’t feel right leaving without a fight, but I wasn’t the type to toss a brick through a window. Instead, I rang the doorbell one last time extra hard. Maybe I imagined it, but that annoying ding-dong chimed a little louder than the ones before.

  I stormed to my car, slogging through in every puddle along the way. The rain poured, and I leapt into the driver’s seat to escape the deluge.

  I tended to look for the little blessings. At least the rain rinsed out Rose’s gift on my skirt. Mornings were usually frantic while I tried to get her situated with the nanny, so Rose helped me however she could. This morning, my sixteen-month old combined her opinion of breakfast with her hug goodbye. Her verdict of my cheesy eggs left a splotchy pattern all over my skirt.

  Of course, I hadn’t noticed the stain until I stepped into the office. Given the other types of stains Rose could leave on me, I preferred a bit of breakfast. Especially in comparison to the unexpected, milk-related surprises from before I weaned her. After one awkward meeting with my father, his biggest client, and a good dose of postpartum hormones, I decided to keep a spare bra and shirt in the office. Unfortunately, I hadn’t thought to pack a fresh skirt.

  At least my day was almost over…or it should have been. If Cole had been amenable, the trade waiver might have been signed and I could have picked up Rose before dinner. So much for saving an hour’s worth of baby-sitting charges. Mrs. Potter was an excellent nanny, but she didn’t come cheap.

  I brushed my fingers through my hair. Nope. The rain created an instant frizz. That just wasn’t fair. The downpour destroyed a modern day miracle—this morning I actually straight-ironed in peace while Rose distracted herself with her toys. A whole four minutes of frantic heat that only burned me twice while I smoothed both sides of my hair before Rose tossed out the binkie and gnawed on a shoe.

  Now my curls re-inflated and ballooned. They were natural. They were angry. And they were…expanding. If I let it get bad, the rain shower would have transported me back to the 70s.

  All the more reason to peel out of Rude McDouchey’s mile long driveway and head home.

  But the folder containing his paperwork rested next to me, and the rain turned sleety as soon as the key hit the ignition. Not a safe drive. And at least Rose was still with the nanny…

  If nothing else, Dad had ordered me to force Cole to sign the waiver at any cost. Of course, he’d also wished me good luck with an amused snort when I took the case.

  I stared at the imposing mansion. It wasn’t like Dad had any faith in me. Half of a master’s degree in French Literature didn’t give me much of an edge in…anything. But after the baby was born, Dad found me a place at his office. If I could get Cole to play nice, I’d make a name for myself in the agency.

  Who better to prove that brains could prevail over brawn, even in professional football?

  How tough could this one man be?

  I bundled my curls into a pony tail and bolted to his front door. Cole Hawthorne couldn’t hide from his future in the league forever.

  I punched the doorbell again, but, this time, I didn’t take my finger from the button. The chimes dinged, donged, and dinged again. The ringing buzzed louder.

  “Ignore that, Mr. Hawthorne,” I said.

  But I jammed the button a little too hard. It depressed completely, cracking in two and falling inside the casing. I yanked my hand back as the components sizzled and shorted out.

  Uh-oh.

  The ding didn’t dong anymore. Instead…it wailed. A high-pitched, murderous note that screamed like an insomniac, teething baby with a fever and no binkie.

  Somehow, I doubted the house would calm down with a nice juice box and rendition of You Are My Sunshine.

  The screeching crackled, and the sound cut out.

  I breathed a premature sigh of relief just before the doorbell also shorted out the alarm system. The ding-dong and whooping wail of a security siren and the ear-piercing buzz of a fire alarm roared through the house. The ungodly melody shook the mansion’s hundreds of windows.

  Oh, I really hoped this castle didn’t come with a dungeon.

  Time to bolt.

  I kicked off my heels and prepared to run.

  Too late. The scratch of the door ground against the stone frame. That whine wasn’t the scrape of a door that opened very often. Probably for good reason.

  I clutched the folder with his papers and dropped my shoes.

  Why the hell hadn’t I run when I had the chance? Then again, I had visions of the linebacker chasing down my car and ripping it apart with his bare hands—ala Tyrannosaurs Rex style. If I was lucky, he wouldn’t tear me to shreds. If I was unlucky…

  He’d answer the door without a shirt.

  I stared at the god-like man looming in the doorway.

  Cole Hawthorne was a beast.

  A monster.

  A huge, lumbering slab of muscle and rage.

  And he was the most gorgeous man I’d ever seen in my life.

  He gripped the door, and every muscle in his upper body rippled as if he debated on whether he should slam it or wood-chip the slab into splinters with his fists. A still moment passed, and he wiped his face with a towel. He left the beads of sweat trickling over his broad shoulders and pecs.

  I didn’t think men like this really existed. A modern day Golia
th sneered at me from his isolated castle outside of the city. He was more animal than man, especially surrounded by acres and acres of forested hills separating him from civilization.

  Every perfectly tanned muscle in his body popped and tensed. The tattoo swirling on his arm streaked him with angry reds, blues, and greens. His thick, defined abs clenched as the waistband of his sweat pants hung low.

  A little too low.

  I forced my gaze up and not on the sleeping beast bulging against his sweatpants.

  I shouldn’t have made eye contact with him.

  Not because he was fierce. Not because his thick jaw tightened in a scowl. Not because the mane of his wild, blonde hair cascaded over his shoulders and obscured his violent ink.

  I met his stare and lost myself. His eyes shimmered unbelievably blue…and achingly intense. What might have been icy and frightening was brightened in a storybook blue, something charming and knee-shakingly intimidating.

  “I…”

  I couldn’t even hear myself talk. The doorbell, fire alarm, and security system blasted a deafening cacophony that echoed through his house and scattered the doves in his rose garden.

  And he stared at me as the culprit, his eyebrow rising.

  Oh God. I was soaked in a white blouse.

  The thin material plastered to my dark skin, and the dress shirt clung to my curves. My bra contained the girls, but even after weaning Rose, they were still…ample. I crossed my arms. We weren’t that desperate for his signature yet.

  Cole pulled out his phone and silenced the fire alarm and security system with an entered key code. Unfortunately, the chiming doorbell was the most obnoxious of the three.

  I swallowed and braved a professional nod. “Hello. I’m Piper Madi—”

  Cole extended his hand, but not to shake mine. He slammed his palm against the doorbell and clawed the box from the stone. The wires snapped. The estate fell into silence.

  This…wasn’t going well.

 

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