Home Run Baby: A Sports Romance

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Home Run Baby: A Sports Romance Page 21

by Tabatha Kiss


  Ty hops out in front of me. “I fucking told you, man!” he shouts, throwing his arm around my shoulders. “This is going to be the best year of our lives.”

  I laugh. “Looks like it might be.”

  We walk out onto the lawn where Cary Pierce’s booming voice fills the air again. I hang on every word that falls from his mouth, soaking it all up, because Ty is right.

  If Coach does what he says he can do and we go all the way to the top then nothing can stop all of our dreams from coming true.

  Hairs stick up on my neck and I glance up at the house. Curtains move in a window on the third floor and I catch sight of that feminine shape again.

  Eliza Pierce stares down at the lawn, looking right at me from behind the glass, sitting next to… some guy?

  Figures.

  I look forward at Cary Pierce and focus on him instead.

  Chapter 2

  Eliza

  “Tell me everything.”

  I chuckle and kick my bedroom door closed. “Well, I went downstairs, grabbed two bottles of water, and came back.”

  Grant narrows his thin eyelids. “You left out the chapter about Junior Morgan walking inside just as you happened to make it to the kitchen.”

  I shake my head. Of course, he was watching from the window. “He walked in and introduced himself.”

  “And?”

  “And then my dad interrupted us and yanked him back outside with the rest of the good dogs.”

  Grant sighs, relinquishing his love for decent gossip. “Damn.”

  “What do you know about him?”

  He pauses, blinking quickly. “Oh, honey. He’s Junior Morgan.”

  I hold out his bottle of water and he takes it from me. “And?”

  “I keep forgetting you’re new around here,” he mutters, leaning back to peek out the window again.

  When he heard there would be several dozen young footballers gathered in my backyard tonight, he basically invited himself over to watch. Not that I mind the company. It gets lonely up here on the third floor.

  “Junior’s a player, in every sense of the word. Throw a rock in the quad and you’ll probably smack a girl he’s hit and quit.”

  “I’ll keep that in mind,” I say, collapsing onto my floor cushion and reaching for my script. “We should keep running lines—”

  “Shush,” he snaps, his eyes still focused outside. “Ty Fisher just bent over to tie his shoelaces.”

  I push off my cushion to join him by the window. He scoots a bit to the left to give me room and we stare down at the lawn below. My father stands tall above them with a pressed suit; his big, thick hands waving around as he spews out more words to them than he’s ever said to me in my entire life.

  “Your dad seems cool,” Grant murmurs.

  I shrug. “I suppose.”

  My eyes fall on the only familiar face in the crowd other than my old man: Junior Morgan. A player, in every sense of the word. No wonder he practically broke his chain to nip at my heels.

  Grant sighs. “Ty is gorgeous.”

  I laugh. “Something tells me you might not be his type…”

  He raises his thin eyebrows at me. “I beg to differ.”

  “Really? How so?”

  “A gentleman never kisses and tells…” he jokes, “but I have a friend who does and let’s just say Ty is going through the experimental phase of his college social experience.”

  I look down at the lawn again, zeroing in on Ty and his perfectly-styled black hair, not unlike Grant’s neatly-trimmed blond locks. “I can see that.”

  Grant lets out another sigh and spins away from the window, lost and lovelorn. “All right, let’s do this.”

  I shift back down onto my cushion with my script in hand, ready to dive into this scene. Auditions for the fall show are this Friday and I’m eager to make a good impression on the theatre director, Mr. Young. I would never have gotten into the program at all if it weren’t for my father’s influence and Young made it pretty clear that I’d have to impress him right out the gate or he’d boot my ass to the curb.

  “Okay…” I clear my throat. “Page twenty-nine. You read Danny, I’ll read Nora.”

  Grant puffs out his chest and flips to the page before reading his first line. “Don’t you see what you did, eh?! You made a fool outta me.”

  I chuckle. “Maybe drop the De Niro accent and try again?”

  “Too much?”

  “Just a smidgen too much,” I say. “Good impression, though.”

  ***

  “Move, move, move!”

  I hear my father’s voice before I even step out onto the football field. He’s got the team running drills with a third of them running to catch a pass, another third throwing the ball, and the last third racing to tackle to thrower before he gets the chance to throw the ball. A few seconds of watching it and I start to feel dizzy. If I can say one thing about athletes, it’s that they’re coordinated as hell.

  “Hey, Dad!”

  “Come on, guys!” he spits at the field. “Pick up that speed!”

  I linger next to his shoulder, my eyes flicking back and forth at the nameless faces behind helmets. They react to my dad’s voice as if their lives depended on it. I suppose they think it does. He’s Cary Pierce, after all. I wish I could admire him the way they do. To me, he’s just my father.

  I clear my throat. “Hey, Dad.”

  He looks over this time. “Eliza… what are you doing out here?”

  I can’t tell whether he’s annoyed I’m here or if he’s happy to see me. Story of my life. “I just wanted to come say hi and see if you wanted to get some lunch later.”

  “Not today,” he says, shifting his focus back to the field.

  It’s the answer I expected. Bring an idea to my father within twenty-four hours of it needing to happen and he’ll reject it outright. “Okay,” I say. “How about tomorrow?” Once you set the time, you have to bring the incentive. What’s in it for him? “We can go to the student union during the lunch rush. Loads of people will see us hanging out and you’ll gain a rep for being the charming dad on campus…”

  He pauses and looks down at me. “That’s not a bad idea, Eliza.”

  “I’ll meet you at the athletic center and—”

  The sound of colliding bodies brings my attention to the field. A player is on the ground, pinned down by another one nearly twice his size. He must not have gotten his toss off in time before getting tackled.

  “Get up, Junior!” Dad shouts at him. “Walk it off.”

  I stare at just Junior as he pulls himself off the grass. His shoulder padding is somewhat askew and there’s a brand new grass stain trailing down his tights but he doesn’t seem to care.

  He’s looking at me instead.

  “What were you saying, Eliza?”

  “Um…” I pull my eyes away from the field. “I’ll meet you at the athletic center and we can walk to the student union together.”

  “Sounds good.” He pats my shoulder. “Now get going, you’re distracting my boys.”

  A quick glance at the field again tells me that he’s right — Junior Morgan is still staring at me but he’s doing a good job at making it look like he’s not. I add a little flair to my hips, giving my skirt a sway as I leave. Might as well make the view worth taking another tackle for.

  “Come on, Junior! Get your head in the game!”

  I chuckle and step off the field.

  Chapter 3

  Junior

  It’s way too early in the morning for geometry. I’m not sure what I was thinking when my academic adviser talked me into a math class at nine-thirty in the morning but here I am. At least there’s a coffee cart stationed between me and the lecture hall.

  “I need coffee,” I mutter at the barista. “With a shit-ton of sugar.”

  He nods and snatches an empty cup to fill up. I glance over my shoulder at the quad and flinch at the dull pain firing through my back.

  That tackle at practice
yesterday never should have happened. It wouldn’t have if Eliza Pierce wasn’t standing on the sidelines. One look at her and the next thing I knew, I was on the damn ground and the coach was shouting at me.

  I scan the quad while I wait and my eyes land on her, Eliza Pierce, like fate itself dropped her in front of me again. She’s sitting alone on a bench with a paperback book in one hand and a pen in the other, scribbling down notes on a pad balanced on her crisscrossed legs. Her lips move as if she’s reading aloud to herself as her eyes pass back and forth on the page.

  Cary Pierce’s little, darling daughter. Untouchable Eliza. His voice echoes in my head; that phrase of warning daddies just love to throw at unsuspecting prom dates to scare the piss out of them.

  Stay away from my daughter.

  But I’m not scared. Hell, I’m more curious than anything.

  The disposable coffee cup beside her topples to the ground and she bends down to pick it up, exposing the gentle upper curve of her breast for one single, wonderful moment before throwing the empty cup into the trash can by her bench.

  “Hey—” I nod to the barista and point at Eliza. “Do you remember what she ordered?”

  He follows my gesture into the quad. “Black coffee.”

  “Really?”

  “Yep,” he confirms.

  “Her?”

  “I thought it was weird, too.”

  “Give me one of those, too,” I say, passing my debit card to him. He steps back to fill another cup with piping hot brew and slides them both to me. “Thanks.”

  I walk across the grass towards her and with each step, her voice gets louder and louder. She is reading aloud to herself, repeating the same phrase over and over again, sometimes with closed eyes to recite it from memory.

  I clear my throat to get her attention. “Looks like you could use a refill, Eliza Pierce.”

  She turns up and recognition instantly crosses her face. Her eyes bounce between mine and the coffee in front of her. They’re soft and blue, like digitally-altered photos of the ocean beside a tropical island paradise. She takes the cup from me and holds it to her nose to smell inside.

  “It’s black coffee,” I explain.

  Eliza nods slowly and takes a quick sip. “How did you know?”

  I stand up taller. “A magician never reveals—”

  “You asked the barista?” she quips.

  “I asked the barista,” I nod.

  “Well, thank you, just Junior Morgan.” She slides the cup between her crisscrossed legs, nestling it against her inner thigh. I force my eyes upward so she doesn’t notice me trying to glance up her skirt.

  “Do you mind if I sit?” I ask.

  It takes a moment but she nods, reaching for her messenger bag and sliding it onto the grass beneath the bench. I sit down beside her and take a quick drink from my own coffee, cool and relaxed. My nose detects her perfume; something faint but flower-scented. “So, why are you over here talking to yourself?” I ask her.

  Eliza flips her hand to expose the front of her book. “Trying to choose a monologue.”

  “The Bigger Book of Comedic and Dramatic Monologues,” I read the title and quickly look at her. “You act?”

  “Occasionally. It’s for a class.”

  “What class?”

  “Theatre 375.”

  “375? Okay, so when you say you act occasionally, what you really mean is…”

  “It’s my life,” she smiles.

  “Gotcha,” I laugh. “You’re a theatre nerd. That’s cool.”

  “Oh, thank heavens,” she says with sarcasm. “I have the approval of the quarterback. My undergraduate life is complete.”

  “No, really. I think it’s cool.”

  “I highly doubt that.” She side-eyes me. “How about you cut right to it already? I have some memorizing to do.”

  I blink. “Cut right to what?”

  “You know what.” She reaches between her legs and grabs the coffee cup, dangling it in front of me like an obvious sign.

  “Well, I am offended, Eliza,” I say, placing my palm on my chest. “I was just being nice.”

  “We have coffee, we have compliments,” she chuckles. “All we need now is condoms.”

  I snap to attention, completely buzzed by the fierce crack of her words. She doesn’t blink, calling me out before I even raise my hand. “Well… since you brought it up…”

  “No,” she says, taking a sip of her coffee and flipping her book open again. “Not gonna happen.”

  “Worth a shot.” I sit back and take a deep breath to recharge. “So, who was that guy?”

  “What guy?”

  “The guy in your window the other night,” I say. “He your boyfriend?”

  She reluctantly smiles. “No.”

  “So… does your dad not let you date? What’s going on there?”

  “No, I can date. I’m an adult,” she says, chewing on her lip. “He just doesn’t like me dating footballers.”

  “Why not?”

  There’s a flair of impatience in her cheeks. “Because he knows what you’re all like.”

  I tilt my head. “What are we like?”

  She inhales a quick breath and slides a bookmark in place before setting it down. “Well, if you’re anything like him — you’re all dirty, cheating, lying scoundrels.”

  I feign offense again. “Well, I must say, that’s quite insulting, Eliza.”

  “Insulting…” she agrees, leaning in, “but accurate.”

  I realize she’s talking about me. “Says who?”

  “Your reputation proceeds you, Junior Morgan.”

  “Who have you been talking to?”

  She flicks out her fingers as she lists them off. “Maddy Bryant, Stephanie Gomez, Lisa Lawrence, Tanya Mars, Rebecca—”

  “Okay, you can stop.” I shake away the quick flashes of faces from my mind. “You’ve proved your point… and done your homework.”

  Eliza chuckles softly as she takes a victory sip from her coffee before sliding it back into place between her thighs.

  “You make friends very quickly,” I note.

  “And you break hearts just as fast.”

  I flex my jaw. I crashed and burned before I even sat down. Might as well throw a Hail Mary. I lean closer and soften my voice. “Okay, I’ve broken a few hearts here and there but with those eyes, I’m willing to guess you have, too.”

  “Oh, my god,” she laughs, twisting towards me. “You did not just try that.”

  “Yes, I did,” I nod, owning it.

  “Does that line ever work?”

  “I’ll let you know.”

  She leans over to grab her bag and tosses her books inside. “Thanks for the coffee.”

  I watch her stand up, not even hiding the fact that I’m staring at her ass. “We should do it again sometime.”

  “Nah,” she says, spinning around and looking down at me.

  “Why not?”

  “Because I’m not interested.”

  “You’re stone cold now, Eliza Pierce.” I raise a brow. “But later, you’re going to think of this moment, and you’re going to blush.”

  She pulls a pair of black sunglasses from her bag and slides them onto her nose. “I doubt it.”

  “I don’t.”

  “Bye, Junior.”

  “Bye, Ellie.”

  She twitches at the nickname but doesn’t stop her long stride across the grass towards Talon Hall. Her hips give an unnatural sway, almost as if she’s making the view worth my while but I might just be seeing things.

  She tosses her coffee cup into the trash can outside and gives the front doors a hard yank, not even offering me a glance back as she disappears inside.

  Shit. I’m officially late for geometry.

  It was worth it.

  Chapter 4

  Eliza

  I take one step into Talon Hall and Grant juts out in front of me.

  “What’d he say?”

  I gasp. “Jeez, Grant — you’
re like a damn pop-up book.”

  “Junior Morgan just bought you coffee and sat down beside you for ninety-seven seconds.”

  “You counted?”

  “Yup,” he nods. “What’d he say? Tell me now.”

  I roll my eyes and move around him to head towards the classrooms. “I think you can probably guess.”

  Grant follows so closely our elbows bump together with each step. “Did he ask you out?”

  “I slammed on the brakes before he got the chance.”

  “What?” His face contorts like I just smacked him. “Why would you do that?”

  I pause, furrowing my brow. “You’re the one who said he was a player…”

  “You say that like it’s a bad thing,” he chuckles. “It’s Junior Morgan, Eliza. He plays to win — if you know what I mean.”

  “I don’t think I do…”

  He sighs. “Junior doesn’t take no for an answer. Once a girl is in his sights, he doesn’t stop until she’s screaming yes and, trust me, you want to be that girl.”

  I laugh. “Sounds too good to be true.”

  He points over my shoulder. “Go back out there and tell him you’ll go out with him.”

  “No.”

  “Why not?”

  I continue moving across the lobby. “Because, even if I wanted to go out with him, I can’t. He’s on the football team. My dad would flip his shit if he found out.”

  Grant deflates, his vicarious dreams dashed upon the rocks. “I forgot about that. You’re supposed to be playing daddy’s perfect, little princess…”

  “Yeah,” I remind him. “Sorry, Grant. I won’t be screaming yes for Junior Morgan anytime soon.”

  “But you want to, right?” he teases, nudging my ribs.

  I blush. I fucking blush. Just like Junior said I would. “No.”

  “Liar.”

  “I’m sure there are worse ways to spend an evening,” I admit. “But it doesn’t really matter anyway.”

  “Find a monologue for the fall semester showcase yet?” he asks me, shrugging as he changes the subject.

  I reach into my messenger bag for his book. “Not quite. Need your book back?”

  “Keep it. I have like three copies of that thing.”

 

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