Authors: Susan Elizabeth Phillips
Ron did his best, but Dan was nearly a foot taller and forty pounds heavier, as well as being a professional athlete instead of a born klutz.
“Move in closer! Use your elbows, for chrissake! Do what you friggin’ have to to get the friggin’ ball!”
“Uh— Elbows are illegal, Dan, and I—”
Dan stuck out his foot and deliberately tripped him.
As Ron sprawled to the concrete, he heard the knee of his new navy trousers rip. He felt the sting in the heels of his hands and looked up in outrage. “You did that on purpose!”
Dan’s lip curled. “So what are you going to do about it, pussy?”
Furious, Ron scrambled to his feet and threw off his suit coat. “I’m going to shove that ball down your throat, you smug son of a bitch.”
“Not if you play by the rules.” Dan held the ball out, deliberately taunting him.
Ron went after him. He slammed his elbow into Dan’s gut and punched the ball free with his opposite fist. It shot across the court. He raced after it, but Dan beat him there and snatched it up. As the coach spun toward him with the ball, Ron punched him hard in the ribs then kicked at the back of his bad knee, knocking him off-balance. Before Dan could recover, Ron had the ball and drove to the basket, making a perfect shot.
“Now you’re getting the idea.” Dan grabbed the ball.
Ron moved in. Unfortunately, his violent bump didn’t keep Dan from making his next shot. Ron took the ball, butted Dan with his head, and dribbled to the edge of the court, where he just missed.
The ensuing battle was vicious, fought with flying fists, jabbing elbows, illegal trips, and teeth. Dan, however, played clean.
When it was over, Ron examined the damage. He had destroyed his suit, bruised his hand, and only lost by three baskets. It was the proudest moment of his life.
The watery autumn sun came out from behind a cloud as the two of them collapsed on the grass next to the court to catch their breath. Ron propped his forearms on his bent knees, sucked in air, and gazed with deep satisfaction at the goose egg puffing up Dan’s left eyebrow.
“I’m afraid you’re going to have quite a shiner there.” He tried, but couldn’t quite hold back his glee.
Dan laughed and swiped at his dripping forehead with the sleeve of his knit shirt. “Once you stopped playing like a debutante, you came on strong. We’ll have to do it again.”
Yes!
Ron wanted to throw his arms in the air like Rocky on the museum steps but contented himself with a macho grunt.
Dan stretched out his legs, crossing them at the ankles as he leaned back on the heels of his hands. “Tell me something, Ron. Do you think I’ve been pushing the men too hard?”
Ron pulled off his ruined necktie. “Physically, no.”
“That’s not what I’m asking.”
“If you want to know whether or not I approve of what Phoebe did in the locker room, I don’t. She should have talked to you about her concerns first.”
“She says I can’t handle criticism.”
He looked so outraged that Ron laughed.
“I don’t see what’s so damned funny.”
“You
can’t
handle criticism, and the fact is, you deserved some. Phoebe’s right. You have been driving the men too hard, and it was affecting their mental attitude.”
Ron probably wouldn’t have been so blunt if he still weren’t on an adrenaline high. To his amazement, Dan didn’t explode. Instead, he managed to look injured.
“It seems to me that as the Stars’ general manager, you might have worked up enough gumption to talk to me about the problem yourself instead of sending a woman who doesn’t know a thing about football to do the job.”
“That’s exactly what she said to me this morning.”
“She go after you, too, huh?”
“I don’t think she’s too crazy about either one of us right now.”
The men stared at the empty basketball court. Dan shifted his weight and the dry leaves rustled beneath him. “That was some sweet win last night.”
“It really was.”
“Her locker room speech is gonna go down in football history.”
“I’ll never forget it.”
“She sure doesn’t know much about football.”
“In the third quarter she cheered when we went offside.”
Dan chuckled, then gave a long contented sigh. “I guess, all in all, Phoebe’s working out better than either of us could’ve expected.”
“Dan!” After their argument that afternoon, Phoebe was stunned to see the Stars’ coach standing on her doorstep holding a deep-dish pizza box. It was nearly ten o’clock, and her makeup had long ago worn off. She was dressed for comfort in a faded pair of fake-Pucci leggings with a baggy purple sweater that barely covered her rear.
“I wasn’t expecting you.” She pushed her reading glasses to the top of her head and stepped aside to let him in.
“I can’t imagine why not. I told you I’d be here.”
“That was before our altercation.”
“Altercation?” He looked annoyed. “That was nothing more than a business discussion, is what it was. You get riled about the strangest things.” He shut the door.
Phoebe was spared a response by Pooh, who scampered into the foyer, yapping and shivering with bliss when she saw who had come to call. Phoebe took the pizza box and watched with amusement as the dog circled Dan’s legs so rapidly that she skidded on the floor.
He regarded the poodle warily. “She’s not going to pee, is she?”
“Not if you kiss her and call her ‘sugar pie’.”
He chuckled and leaned down to give the dog a macho knuckle rub on her topknot. Pooh immediately flopped to her back so he could get to her tummy.
“Don’t push it, dawg.”
The poodle took his rejection good-naturedly and followed them through the living room to the kitchen.
“What happened to your eye?”
“What eye? Oh, this? Basketball game. Your GM plays dirty ball.”
She stopped in her tracks. “Ron did that to you?”
“That boy’s got a mean streak a mile wide. I’d advise you to stay clear of him when he gets riled.”
She didn’t believe for a minute that Ron had done that to him, but she knew from the glimmer in his eye that she wouldn’t get any more out of him.
Molly’s face lit up as they came into the kitchen, and she rose from the table where she had just been gathering up her homework. “Dan! Phoebe said you weren’t coming.”
“Well now, Phoebe doesn’t know everything, does she? Sorry for arriving so late, but Mondays are long days for coaches.”
Phoebe knew that Dan and his assistants generally worked till midnight on Mondays and she suspected that he would return to the Stars Complex as soon as he left here. She appreciated the fact that he was keeping his promise to Molly.
As she set plates and napkins on the table, he said, “I hope you ladies didn’t eat so much dinner that you don’t have room for a little bedtime snack.”
“I do,” Molly said.
“Me, too.” Phoebe had already blown her fat intake for the day with a chocolate eclair, so what difference did a few hundred more grams make?
Dan took a seat at one end of the kitchen table, and as they all helped themselves to a gooey slab of the thick pie, he asked Molly about school. Without any more encouragement than that, she chattered on about her new best friend, Lizzie, her classes, and her teachers, effortlessly presenting him with all the information Phoebe had been trying to drag out of her for days.
Molly reached for her second piece of pizza. “And guess what else? Mrs. Genovese, our neighbor next door, hired me to baby-sit her twin boys for a few hours after school on Tuesdays and Fridays. They’re three and a half years old, and they’re so cute, but she says she needs a break sometimes because they wear her out. She’s paying me three dollars an hour.”
Phoebe set down her fork. “You didn’t say anything to me about this.”
Molly’s expression grew mulish. “Peg said I could. Now I suppose you’re going to tell me I can’t.”
“No. I think it will be a good experience for you. I just wish you’d talked to me about it.”
Dan observed the exchange between the two of them, but didn’t comment.
Half an hour later, Phoebe thanked him as she walked with him to the door. As she had suspected, he was returning to the Stars Complex for a late-night session to finalize the week’s game plan against their crosstown rivals, the Bears.
He reached for the knob, but hesitated before he turned it. “Phoebe, I’m not saying you were right about what we discussed today, and I definitely don’t like the way you went about handling the problem, but I’m going to keep an open mind about what you said.”
“Fair enough.”
“In return, I want you to promise me that you’ll tell me right out if you’ve got a problem with my coaching.”
“Should I bring along a bodyguard, or do you think a loaded gun will be enough.”
He sighed and dropped his hand from the knob. “You’re really startin’ to exasperate me. I don’t know where you get this notion that I’m difficult. I’m about the most reasonable man in the world.”
“I’m glad to hear that because there is something else I wanted to discuss with you. I’d like you to put Jim Biederot on the bench next week so his backup can get some playing time.”
He exploded. “
What!
Of all the
stupid, asinine
. . .” The expression on Phoebe’s face stopped him.
She lifted an eyebrow and grinned. “Just testing.”
He paid her back by looking her over from head to toe and then speaking in a silky whisper that sent her shivering all the way to her toes. “Little girls who walk too close to the danger zone can find themselves in some real bad trouble.”
He brushed her lips with a quick kiss, opened the door, and disappeared down the sidewalk.
As he climbed into his car and settled behind the wheel, he was already regretting both the kiss and his suggestive words.
No more,
he promised. He’d finally made up his mind how he was going to handle this relationship, and flirting wasn’t part of it.
He’d spent the final leg of the plane trip home last night trying to figure out how he could have Phoebe in his bed while he was courting Sharon Anderson. He wanted Phoebe so much that he’d tried all kinds of arguments to convince himself it would be possible for them to have a brief affair, but even before they’d landed, he’d known he couldn’t do it. His future with Sharon was too important for him to jeopardize just because he couldn’t get his lust for Phoebe under control.
During a hasty dinner with Sharon last week, he’d become even more convinced that she was the woman he wanted to marry. She’d been a little skittish around him, but that was to be expected, and she’d relaxed some by the time he’d taken her home. He’d given her a quick good-night kiss at the door, but that was all. Somewhere along the line, he’d gotten this old-fashioned notion that he and Sharon wouldn’t make love until their wedding night.
As for Phoebe— He wanted her so much he ached, but he’d dealt with lust before, and he figured time would take care of that. He knew the safest thing for him to do would be to keep their relationship strictly professional, but the idea depressed the hell out of him. He’d grown to like her, dammit! If she’d been a man, she might very well have ended up in his inner circle of friends. Why should he cut her out of his personal life now, he asked himself, when she’d be going back to Manhattan at the end of the year and he’d probably never see her again?
It wasn’t as if he planned to keep leading her on. All he had to do was treat her like a friend. There’d be no more slipups like that little kiss he’d given her tonight, no more sexual challenges issued in airplane johns. Right now, she might be interested in continuing the physical part of their relationship, but in his experience, women like Phoebe were philosophical about things like that. Once he showed her he was changing the rules between them, she’d follow along. She knew that sometimes things worked out and sometimes they didn’t. Nobody’d have to spell it out for her.
He smiled to himself as he turned the key in the ignition. Phoebe was a crackerjack, all right. Without quite knowing how it had happened, she had managed to earn his respect. He’d never expected her to work so hard at her responsibilities as the Stars’ owner, and her dedication was even more impressive because she was so far out of her element. She also had a way of standing up to him that he admired. Somehow she managed to hold her ground around him without being a bitch about it, in contrast to Valerie, who tore into him just for the pleasure of the kill.
His relationship with Phoebe had become important to him, and as long as he didn’t give in to the powerful, but inconvenient, physical attraction between them, he didn’t see what the harm was in enjoying each other as friends. Not that keeping his hands off her would be easy. It was a good thing he’d been sitting down most of the time he was with her tonight because watching her sashay around in those fancy tights with that sweater that barely made it over her rear had kept him in a constant state of arousal.
He grinned as he pulled away from the curb. If the Russians had been smart, they’d have taken Phoebe’s radioactive body into account before they’d signed off on that nuclear proliferation agreement with the United States.
Which was all the more reason he needed to marry Sharon. He knew from painful experience that long-term relationships weren’t built on lust. They were built on mutual values, and that was what he and Sharon had in common.
So by the time the plane had landed, he had made up his mind. When Phoebe left town at the end of the year, he would pop the question to Sharon, but for the present, he was going to enjoy being with both women. As long as he kept his pants zipped, he wouldn’t have a bit of trouble living with himself, and the fact that never again making love with Phoebe depressed the hell out of him was all the more reason to keep their relationship platonic. No matter what, he wasn’t going to repeat the mistakes of his first marriage.
His thoughts were interrupted by a glimpse of a gray van parked on a narrow side street not three blocks from Phoebe’s condo. Cursing, he shifted the Ferrari into reverse. The tires squealed as the car fishtailed. He shifted again. The powerful motor responded instantly and the car shot down the side street, reaching the van just as the driver began to pull forward. Dan spun the wheel so the van was trapped between the Ferrari and the parked car behind it.