Read Fighting Love (Love to the Extreme) Online
Authors: Abby Niles
Tags: #romance, #romance series, #Abby Niles, #Love to the Extreme, #Entangled publishing
“Lucy?”
Nothing.
“Warrior?”
Silence.
“Tommy?” she finally said.
Crickets.
What the hell?
She hurried into the kitchen and opened the back door, then stumbled to a stop. Tommy was
rolling around on the ground, Warrior and Lucy hopping around him. Paws landed on his stomach,
shoulders, and head as he laughed out loud. He jumped to his feet, crouching low. The dogs
immediately lowered their front legs, barking, and when they sprang forward, Tommy lunged at
them, which sent both dogs sprinting into a circle around the yard.
Tommy stood straight, hands on his hips, a grin making his already handsome face even more
attractive. Mischief and humor brightened his green eyes. Head high, gaze meeting the world, he
looked invincible. Dominating. And so incredibly sexy her heart crashed against her breast.
So, why did she have a sudden sense of doom?
Because no other man made her feel like this. Because no matter what damn road she took,
her heart always led back to a man who called her sister. Because she was seriously beginning to
fear that she really would end up a spinster.
No!
Did she not get any say in this at all? Why did her heart get all the control?
She didn’t want Tommy.
When he spotted her, he jogged to her side and kissed her cheek. Unlike the kiss Brody had
given her, this light peck scorched her skin. She did everything she could not to flinch away.
Thankfully, she succeeded.
“How was your date?” There was an edge to his voice that confused her.
She frowned. “What is your problem with Brody?”
“I don’t like him.”
“You don’t— Jeez, Tommy, you don’t even know him. How can you not like him?”
He took another step forward, crowding her personal space. As his body came within inches,
where just a slight lean forward and their chests would touch, her throat tightened. The scent of
his musky cologne enveloped her, and she inhaled, ensnared by the spell of Tommy Sparks—the
spell she’d been under since she was ten.
He brought his face closer. “I know enough that I don’t like him with you, and I want you to
stay the hell away from him.”
A thrill shot through her. Before she could stop herself, she said, “Why? Are you jealous?”
Something flashed in his eyes as a muscle jumped in his jaw. “I don’t do jealousy, Julie. You’re
my best friend. It’s my job to look out for you, and that man has ulterior motives. You need to stay
away from him.”
She jerked back, stung by the insult. “Did you seriously just say the only way Brody would be
interested in me is because he has a secret agenda? What the hell, Tommy?”
“Don’t make it sound worse than I meant it. That man is up to something, and I don’t trust
him. I especially don’t trust him with you.”
Anger buzzed inside her. She was no longer the crying ten-year-old maiden he’d swept in and
saved with his wooden sword. She was a grown woman who could take care of herself, and it was
about damn time he saw it. “You don’t get to make demands on me. If I want to see Brody
Minton, I’m going to see Brody Minton.” She poked him hard in the chest. “I’m done with your big
brother shit. So drop it already.”
As she whirled to leave, a feral growl erupted from behind her. Strong fingers latched onto her
wrist and spun her back around. His other hand snaked around the back of her head, and then his
mouth was on hers. His fury was evident in the biting crush of his lips against hers, and all she
could do was stand there, absolutely stunned. He kissed her hard, the taste of him searing through
her senses as his tongue sliced between her lips to sweep hotly through her mouth. Once. Then he
froze. And it was over.
He stumbled back, staring at her with wide eyes.
“Fuck!” He shoved a hand through his hair, then stormed off toward the house, muttering
curses the entire way.
Pressing her fingers against her punished lips, she stared after him, just as horrified as he was
about the kiss. Because that hadn’t been a kiss from a man who’d wanted to kiss her. That had
been a branding of ownership.
And Julie Rogers was owned by no man.
…
What the hell had he just done?
Tommy slammed the back door behind him as he stalked into the kitchen. Fucking hell. Julie’d
said the word “brother” again, and he’d simply lost it.
Next thing he knew he was grinding his mouth against hers. He never kissed like that. Out of
outright jealousy…out of an anger-induced bitterness. That kiss had been the equivalent of his
performance the night he defended his title—mind-numbingly pathetic.
Jealousy was not something he’d ever dealt with, and if it made him do stupid shit like this,
then he’d rather do without.
Julie slammed into the house behind him. “What the hell was that, Tommy?”
He scrubbed a hand over his face. “A mistake.”
“No freaking joke.”
Yeah, she was pissed. She had every right to be, too. For more than two decades he’d done
nothing but tell the woman she was his sister, and just when she started getting close to some
guy, he pulls a chest-pounding me-Tarzan-you-Jane stunt like that. And for what?
Nothing. There wasn’t anything he could offer her instead.
Except, maybe, a damn good time in bed. But as much as his libido was all for that option, his
heart wasn’t in it. He’d rather have his friendship intact. Which it wouldn’t be if he was his
mother’s son—and so far he was.
Her hands jammed onto her hips. “I’m waiting for an explanation, Tommy.”
“I don’t have one,” he ground out.
“That’s it? That’s all you have to say?”
He clamped his jaw. What did she want him to say? That he wanted to fuck her? Lay her down
right there on the floor and pound into her hard? Have his way with her, as he’d had so many
women in the past?
With a growl of anger, she shook her head. “This living situation isn’t working. I really think it
would be best if you found somewhere else to go.”
Stunned, his mouth dropped open. “Julie—”
“I do not like being kissed like I am owned, especially by a man who has never once looked at
me like I’m a woman. I don’t know what it is about Brody that has you all worked up, but you need
to get over it. Do you understand?”
Fusing his teeth together, he remained silent. He had kissed her like he owned her, and he
regretted that. But she was so wrong about the woman part, and for the first time, it bothered him
that she had no idea how fucking hot he found her. Okay, maybe he had spent years only seeing
her as a sibling, but he didn’t anymore. Never would again. That was the damn problem.
“I’ll start looking tomorrow,” he bit out.
She gave a curt nod. “I don’t think we should go to the wedding together, either. In fact, I
want to go with Brody.”
First she refused a ride from him at the park, and now she wanted to go to a fighter’s wedding
with a fighter who wasn’t him? Another wave of jealousy punched him right in the sweet spot,
making him see stars. That violent urge to brand her as his almost crippled him.
“You would rather take him to the wedding?”
She nodded.
He felt his nostrils flare. “Fine. Go with him. I don’t care.”
Oh, he fucking cared. He cared so fucking much that if he didn’t leave this room right this
second, he was liable to punch a fist through a wall.
He stormed past her down the hallway and slammed his bedroom door.
Inhaling deep breaths, he stalked around the room. The kiss played over and over in his mind.
Did Brody kiss her differently? Better than he did?
The question made his body quake with anger. Images of her in Brody’s arms tormented him,
making Tommy fist his hands and want to pummel something.
No, he did not want her with that man.
He didn’t want her with any man.
He wanted her for himself.
Considering his certainty that he took after his mother, that had to be the most selfish thing
he’d ever wanted. But, God help him, he couldn’t sit back and let another man steal her away. He
could only hope there was some romantic tenderness inside him somewhere. Julie deserved a man
who was insanely attracted to her but who could still sit on the couch with her, hold her, kiss her,
without pouncing on her in blind lust.
Maybe if he could do that much, the urge to flee from her in the morning wouldn’t set in and
ruin their friendship completely. Maybe with her, he could stick around.
And he planned to prove he could do just that.
To her…and to himself.
…
Julie slipped into the house, giving the dogs a good ruffling as they trotted up to greet her. She
glanced but everything was quite. Tommy’s rental car was outside, so he had to be here. Today
would be the first time she’d seen him in a week. Somehow she’d been able to avoid him, ever
since she told him she wanted to take Brody to the wedding. God knew she’d had to stay away.
Once the anger had worn off, the realization had set in.
Tommy Sparks, the man she’d spent more of her life in love with than not, had finally kissed
her.
Without one ounce of passion.
On the surface, she’d known that. It was why the kiss had made her so furious. The meaning,
however, had taken a little longer to sink in.
Even though he’d kissed her, he still wasn’t attracted to her. How could he be, and be so cold
as he touched her?
Mortification set in, so ugly its shame had burrowed deep in her chest and, for the second time
in a week, she had cried over Tommy. Mostly she’d cried for the teenage girl who’d always believed
that one day a wonderful kiss would change the way Tommy looked at her.
Because that girl had just been proven wrong.
It hadn’t been wonderful, and it hadn’t changed him. If anything, it had made things a whole
lot worse.
In her teenage fantasies, some other boy’s interest in her would always spark a fit of jealousy
that had Tommy yanking her to him and kissing her. But unlike what had happened in reality, in
her fantasy as soon as his lips touched her, his jealousy fled. He would groan against her mouth in
passionate desire, gather her close to his chest, and thoroughly kiss her in a way that made every
fantasy she’d ever had seem like child’s play to the real thing.
It was supposed to be awe-inspiring, mind-blowing…life-altering.
Okay, yeah. It had been life-altering—just not in the way she’d fantasized. She’d had to face
the fact that Tommy had finally kissed her…and hadn’t felt anything. That had been a hard truth
to swallow, and she’d spent the entire week coping with her turbulent feelings. She’d slip out of
the house before he got up, remaining at the clinic for lunch, then staying out with Brody or
Melody until late. When she got home for the night, she’d pass Tommy with a quick good night
and go straight to her room. One thing was clear, though—he hadn’t found a place to live yet. And
she couldn’t continue avoiding him in her own home.
It was time to let it go and move on.
The kiss had been a mistake. Nothing had changed between them. Their relationship was the
same as it ever was.
So tonight, instead of going out, she’d decided to stay and face the music. Just her luck he
wasn’t anywhere in sight. She went into the kitchen and poured herself a glass of Merlot. Now she
just wanted to slip into a pair of yoga pants and a T-shirt and enjoy a glass of wine before she took
a long bath and enjoyed a second glass of wine. God, that sounded heavenly. She really missed
her quiet evenings at home.
After she changed, she wandered into the living room. Still no Tommy. She went to the back
door and opened it. Grunts and oofs immediately assailed her.
What in the world?
Tommy and Mac were wrestling on a blue mat they’d laid down on the grass. All kinds of
equipment was scattered around, as well. Grappling dummies, pads, gloves, even a freestanding
bag with one of those sand-filled bases. So Tommy was trying to get back in the cage.
Good for him.
She stepped out on the patio and waited until they broke apart. “How’s it going?”
Tommy’s head snapped over in her direction, and the smile that came to his lips made her
heart stutter.
“Hey, stranger,” he said. “Good to see you.”
“Seems you’ve got quite the operation going on.”
Chuckling, he jogged over and dropped a kiss on her cheek, as he always had, as if they hadn’t
had a huge argument a few days before. “Yeah, been doing this every day since the park.”
“Here?”
“Yep.”
Wow. She really had been MIA.
Mac walked over with a duffel bag full of gear and slapped hands with Tommy. “Okay, I’m out
of here.”
“All right man, see ya tomorrow.”
Mac disappeared through the back door.
“Can I get you to help me with something?” he asked her as he used a towel to wipe the sweat
off his face and neck. “I’m rusty on some of the grappling moves and could use the practice.”
She hesitated. Not that she hadn’t done this in the past. But she wasn’t sure if she wanted