Sweet Spot: A Bad Boy Sports Romance (Bad Boys of Summer Book 2) (18 page)

Read Sweet Spot: A Bad Boy Sports Romance (Bad Boys of Summer Book 2) Online

Authors: Winters,KB

Tags: #Baseball romance, #Bad Boy Sports Romance

BOOK: Sweet Spot: A Bad Boy Sports Romance (Bad Boys of Summer Book 2)
12.44Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“You two are one stooge short of a good time,” I commented, my voice dry and humorless. “I don’t need Dr. Phil, all right? Just leave me alone.”

I started to turn away and was surprised when a strong hand wrapped around my arm. I craned around and saw Cody had stood up in time to nab me. “What the fuck, man?” I growled, shaking him off.

His eyes went wide. “Come on, dude. We’re friends, aren’t we? Why can’t you tell us what’s eating you? You’re fucking up the game.”

“Dude, we’re not gonna sell you out to Coach or the media or whatever the fuck it is you’re worried about. Hell, I won’t even tell Paris if you’re that worried about it going viral.”

Cody waited a beat until I sighed and turned back to face them, then he sank back down beside Robby. “We’re serious, man, what the fuck’s going on?” he added.

I heaved another sigh and scrubbed a hand over my face. “It’s all this shit with the she-devil.”

“She-devil?”

“Yeah, Kimberly, she’s the devil. Like, for real. She’s this crazy bitch who claims that she had my baby.”

“Huh?” They both said in unison. I figured they’d heard the gossip online or through the Warriors wives and girlfriends’ grapevine. Apparently they hadn’t.

“Some dumb bitch who claims she had my baby. She’s got my lawyers running in circles, constantly having to shut shit down. She’s spreading lies all over the internet about me. Basically any news channel that’ll give her ten seconds of fame, she’s there. It’s fuckin’ exhausting.”

“And the kid isn’t yours?” Cody asked, cringing slightly, as though he hated to even ask.

I shrugged. “Hell, I guess he could be, but we used protection both times. She’d fucked her way through half of my old team before I even knew she was knocked up. I don’t know why the hell she’s targeting me. She’s fuckin’ evil. She’s blocked attempts to get a DNA test, says it will hurt the baby or some shit.” I paused and shook my head. It was all so stupid. “She just wants my money. I think she’s hoping if she makes enough noise, I’ll just sign over my rights, agree to a settlement and child support, and agree to whatever she says just to get her to go away.”

Robby scoffed. “Gold digging bitch.”

“Yeah. Like she could teach classes to all the other hoes. I don’t get it…fuckin’ pointless.”

“So, just forget about it, man.” Cody shook his head, glancing from Robby to me and back again. “I mean, she’s just fuckin’ with your head. You can’t let her screw up your performance and get you down.”

I flexed my jaw but gave a short nod. “I know. I mean, it’s not just that, but yeah. I just got a call from my lawyer and my agent before practice and it wasn’t good news. That’s why I was shit today.”

Cody and Robby each glanced down at their hands. Another beat later, Cody hopped up and slapped me on the shoulder. “Come on, let’s go BBQ or something. Chelsea has some steaks at the house. We can grill, drink some beer, watch some football and just chill the fuck out.”

“Oh! I have some Cubans, my cousin’s friends—” he paused and waved it off. “Nevermind. Point is, I got the good shit! I’m down. Paris and Chelsea can go shop or whatever the hell they wanna do.”

Cody chuckled. “Yeah. Good luck, Paris. Chelsea’s back to being locked in her office twelve hours a day.”

Robby pulled a face and Cody laughed. I had no idea what they were talking about but it didn’t matter. They were probably right. A night out would do me some good and if we were at Cody and Chelsea’s place, I couldn’t get all screwed up, thinking I’d seen Josie when there wasn’t anyone there.

“You in?” Robby asked, stripping off his towel.

Cody and I groaned as he waved his fuckin’ junk around, and Cody snapped him with his own discarded towel. I chuckled. “Yeah, I’m in. I’ll meet you guys there in half an hour.”

“Sounds good, man. I’ll text you the directions.”

“Got it!” I waved and headed out of the locker room.

* * * *

As soon as I got into my rental car, my phone rang through the Bluetooth on the dashboard. I’d had it turned off during practice, after the nasty calls from my lawyer and Mason, and hadn’t turned the sound back up again. I tugged it free from the pocket of my duffel bag and groaned. “Speak of the fuckin’ devil…”

She’d been calling me all day. Each time from a different number. She went through burner phones like most people went through underwear. It was annoying as all hell. I didn’t want to talk to her. I’d made that fact implicitly known several times over the last year since this nightmare ended. I rubbed a hand through my hair, tugging at it slightly. Fuck. It was never gonna end. She was never going to leave me alone.

Something inside of me snapped. All my resolve and self-control vanished in a flash. I grabbed my phone, slammed the tip of my finger against the damn button, and growled, “What the fuck do you want?”

“Some way to answer your phone…” she drawled, her tone oh-so-innocent.

That was another infuriating thing about Kimberly. She always had this wide-eyed kitten look on her face which made me look like a crazy asshole anytime I raised my voice at her in public. Over the past year she’d popped up at baseball games, outside the locker rooms, the mall, my front porch, my favorite coffee shop back in LA. She didn’t work and apparently had nothing better to do with her time than stalk me all over California. I hadn’t seen her since moving to Oklahoma City—one of the
only
good things about leaving my home—but her shadow followed me wherever I went. I was always aware of the fact that she could pop out from nowhere. Or, worry that she would call me. On top of all that shit, I also had to see her friggin’ face plastered all over the tabloids at airport shops, grocery stores, kiosks at the mall. Whatever. She’d sold her sad little tale of the poor, used woman, and claimed all manner of crazy things about me and her and our alleged
relationship
. And those damn kitten eyes sold it to perfection.

No one ever gave me a chance to explain who she really was.

Not that they’d probably believe me even if I got someone to listen for more than a sound bite.

“Kimberly, I swear to—”

“Okay! Okay! Trey…” She made a clucking sound with her tongue, like an impatient mother dealing with a tantrum. “I want to talk. That’s it.”

I scowled out the windshield. She wanted to talk. Yeah. Sure. My
ass
that’s all she wanted. Nailed to a post outside her house for all the world to see and throw rocks at. “Talk.”

“When are you going to come meet Trey Jr?” she asked, her voice too sweet.

I scoffed. “You know that’s never happening. What do you really want to talk about? You have two minutes.”

“That’s all you have time for, huh? Big, important baseball man can’t give the mother of his
child
more than two fucking minutes?”

I tossed my head back. Yup, there she was. Ladies and gents, the real Kimberly.

“I keep forgetting that you’re a heartless monster who doesn’t care about anything, or anyone, but himself,” she raged, her voice angry and raw.

“Kimberly, I never gave two shits about you and I certainly don’t give two shits about your kid. He’s not mine. You know it just as well as I do. That’s why you won’t take the fucking test. You know it will come back negative and all those fucking people who love you right now, they’ll all turn their backs on you, and then you’ll be the heartless monster for dragging me and said child through this shit for over a fuckin’ year!”

She let out a cold laugh. “Is that what you think? Wow…Trey…baby…I knew you weren’t in genius territory, but that’s sad, even for you. The media loves me. My phone rings off the hook, all day, every day, begging for interviews and pictures of me and your son.”

“He’s
not
my son,” I argued through gritted teeth. My hand wrapped around the steering wheel to keep from punching it. “Let’s go back to my original question, what do you want?”

Kimberly sighed. “I need a new car. Something sporty but safe for Trey Jr.”

“Stop calling him that.”

“I was thinking of the new Mercedes crossover…” she prattled on, debating different cars, each one with a higher price tag than the last.

“Then use your money from selling your soul to the media. Surely you didn’t walk away empty handed. Or, are you really just so desperate for your fifteen minutes of fame, that you did all those press things for free?”

She was quiet for a long moment. “Well…I got paid…but…”

“But, what? You already fuckin’ spent it?”

“I need a car! That’s all that matters, Trey. You should give a shit that your son is going around in something safe!”

To stop the madness, I sat up straight and interrupted her, “I’ll happily buy you a car, Kimberly.”

“You will?”

I laughed. “Uh huh. Sure will. As soon as the damn test comes back that says he’s my son. Then I’ll buy him a mansion by the ocean, a life size giraffe stuffed animal, a whole closet full of Nike baby shoes, whatever the fuck he wants. But…not a minute before I have that damned test in my hands!”

Kimberly scoffed. “You shouldn’t need a test.”

I rolled my eyes. “Yeah? Well, I do. Deal with it.”

“My lawyer is advising me to not have the test done.”

I laughed, a true, deep down, belly laugh. “Well, of course not, you dumb ass!”

“What?” she sneered. “You’re cocky because you paid off the lab tech or somethin’?”

I turned the key in the ignition. “How could I do that when I don’t know what clinic the lawyer would even send your sorry ass to? Fuck, Kimberly. You wanna claim I’m such a damned idiot, have you looked in a fuckin’ mirror lately? Take the test, if he’s mine, I’ll get you whatever the fuck you want.”

I clicked off the call and chucked my phone at the passenger seat so hard that it bounced off the seat and flew down to the floor.

I knew my words were probably already out the other ear by now, but I’d had to try. I was so ready for the never ending nightmare to finally be over. Maybe then I could really settle into my new life in Oklahoma and see what the future might bring.

Chapter Twenty-Two

Josie

A few days passed and I spent them lost in my own world, trying to find a way to get more information on Michael Arlington and Senator McNary. I worked from home for two days before returning to the station to work in my cramped little corner desk. Hallie’s assurances that the whole kissing scandal had blown over were enough to convince me that the whispers and gossip weren’t about me and Trey anymore. At least, that’s what I kept telling myself.

“Hey, hey, cowgirl,” Danny dropped into the chair beside mine and I jolted, my concentration shattered by his abrupt entrance. “Oops. Sorry, didn’t mean to scare you. It’s just been a long time, no see.”

I dropped my pen to my legal pad and shifted around my notes so that he couldn’t see the large amount of doodles covering the last page I’d been working on. “Yeah, well, I’m pretty busy these days.” I sighed and pushed my hair over my shoulders, letting it drape over the back of my chair as I sagged down. “What has Mr. Jones got you working on these days?”

Danny shrugged. “This and that. Nothing specific. I’ve mostly been filling in for sick leave as needed.”

I nodded. “Gotcha.” There was some kind of flu bug running rampant through the office and was taking people down one at a time. So far, I’d managed to avoid it, but that was likely because I didn’t spend much time at the office and was away when the epidemic started.

“You wanna go get a coffee? You still owe me for the tip off about Trey at the airport,” he said, leaning to brace himself against my desk.

I glanced at his smile and tried to return it. “What about all the rumors? You know, about Trey and me. That doesn’t bug you?”

Danny shrugged. “Should it? I mean, it’s over, isn’t it?”

“Why would you assume that?” I asked, having no idea where the frantic and overly defensive tone came from. I sucked in a deep breath.

Danny held up his hands, realizing he’d overstepped. “I just figured you would have led with that if you two were still together…or a thing…or whatever.”

“Oh.” I pursed my lips, wishing I hadn’t said anything at all. “Well, we’re not
together
. We never were. It was just a—”

“Hey, Jo, you don’t have to explain it to me, okay?” Danny said, his voice soft and soothing. “It’s just an invite to coffee. Don’t overthink it.”

“Right.” I nodded and caught a glance at an uncovered corner of my notes. Inky doodles covered the page and as an afterthought, I realized that one of the patterns I’d drawn was a design from Trey’s large, back tattoo. I bit back a groan, shoved the pages into a messy stack and stuffed them into my messenger bag.

Danny chuckled as he watched me. “Is that a yes? Or you getting packed up so you can run away?”

My cheeks warmed and I tucked the bag under my desk. “Coffee sounds good.”

“Okay, perfect.” He jumped to his feet and started out through the main newsroom. I followed a half step behind, surveying the hustle of everyone in the room. Everyone was preparing for the nightly news. A surge of envy bubbled up in my stomach and I swallowed it down with a bittersweet smile. Mr. Jones was leaving me alone, and his offer to get on the nightly news still stood. I just had to figure out my story. But as each day passed without a crack, I was becoming more doubtful that I’d find it. But hey, it was better than being fired as soon as I returned from the disastrous road trip with the Warriors.

TV monitors hung over the desks. The crew used them to watch different news feeds and they were constantly on, the volume low, and available for anyone to stop and watch. Right now, they were lit up with two competing stations’ five o’clock broadcast. The goal for our team was to spin their stories and get them ready for our six o’clock broadcast. The anchors would be getting camera ready. The teleprompters loaded. Everything ready for a smooth night of news.

Danny turned toward me as we walked, a carefree smile on his face, and he opened his mouth to say something, when all at once, loud beeping sounds rang out over the bank of computers. I froze in place. I knew that sound. A big story was coming in. Danny stopped too. “What the hell—”

Other books

Wasteland King by Lilith Saintcrow
His Hometown Cowgirl by Anne Marie Novark
Fire on Dark Water by Perriman, Wendy
The Murder Exchange by Simon Kernick
Pleasure Party by DeRosa, Nina
The Devil You Know by Jenna Black
The Paid Companion by Amanda Quick
Greenmantle by Charles de Lint
The Survival Game by Stavro Yianni