Southern Love

Home > Other > Southern Love > Page 74
Southern Love Page 74

by Synithia Williams


  He pulled her close. His full lips brushed against hers. “As if you’d let me. You’ll keep me on my toes until we’re ninety. Trust me. I want to marry you.” He cleared his throat, uncertainty clouding his eyes. “Do you think you could marry me?”

  She took a deep breath and met his gaze. Even in the dim light, the fierceness of his love blazed. She looked for any signs of doubt. Any indication that he was unsure of what he was saying or may regret it in the morning. All she saw was love … and honesty, the same honesty that was the cement of their relationship.

  “Yes. I want to marry you.”

  He grinned. When he pulled her in for another kiss, she wrapped her arms tightly around his neck. She wanted to hold him forever. Let him know that there was no other man for her. Her past was filled with mistakes as she tried to find a guy who made her feel a smidgeon of the way Devin did. It took coming home and facing her demons to learn that no man would ever come close to comparing to him.

  When they broke she couldn’t help but laugh and smile. “You’ve asked me, so you can’t get rid of me. I’ve wanted you since I was fifteen. I’m not letting you go.”

  “Is that a threat?” he said with a sexy lift of his lips.

  Her heart flipped in her chest. It was bruised, had gone through a fair share of heartbreaks, but something told her she was on the road to healing. With a smile, she sank her fingers in his hair and pulled him close. “It’s a promise.”

  About the Author

  Synithia Williams has loved romance novels since reading her first one at the age of thirteen. It was only natural that she would begin penning her own romances soon after. It wasn’t until 2010 that she began to actively pursue her dream of becoming a published author. Her first novel, You Can’t Plan Love, was published by Crimson Romance in August 2012. When she isn’t writing, this Green Queen, as dubbed by the State Newspaper, works to improve air and water quality, while balancing the needs of her husband and two sons. You can find Synithia, online at www.synithiawilliams.com, on Facebook (www.facebook.com/synithiarwilliams), or Twitter (www.twitter.com/SynithiaW).

  A Sneak Peek From Crimson Romance

  Running Interference by Elley Arden

  Mmm. Mmm. Mmm. There was something about a sunny Sunday morning that put extra spring in Tanya Martin’s already speedy steps. No dealing with ornery high school students and excuses about forgotten gym clothes. No football practice. Just hours to spend however she liked at her father’s boxing gym.

  She lifted her face to the unseasonably warm rays and wished late February in Cleveland, Ohio, always looked like this. But the heaping mounds of filthy snow lining the sidewalk reminded her winter wasn’t done with them yet. She didn’t care. Today was going to be a great day.

  A glass door opened up ahead, and a man backed onto the sidewalk. He was so big his body loomed around the stainless steel framing, and his voice boomed when he laughed at someone inside the coffee shop. Her pace slowed as she took in his profile. Black, fitted ski jacket. Dark denim jeans that clung to his tree-trunk thighs. And a pair of designer work boots that had never set foot on a jobsite. Not from around. These new businesses brought in all kinds, sellouts who couldn’t get through their Sundays without a double shot of something she couldn’t even pronounce let alone swallow.

  She put her head down and picked up her pace, wanting to pass before she was forced to say hello. She didn’t want her South City neighborhood to change, and she didn’t want these people getting comfortable. They weren’t wanted. They weren’t needed. What this place needed was people with a sense of loyalty and conviction—people like her parents, who both owned mom-and-pop businesses on this stretch of street. For even longer than her mother had been cooking her “almost famous” pulled-pork and holding twice-monthly Free Soup Fridays at her restaurant, Mama Mary’s, her father had been taking kids off the streets and teaching them life skills with the help of boxing and martial arts at his gym. Those things were so much more important than overpriced warehouse condos and a chain coffee shop.

  “Oh crap!”

  The rich rumble of words came first, followed by a splash of something hot along her neck, and then an impact that had her careening toward the icy snowdrift. Her hands jutted out to break her fall, but she never hit. Instead, a crushing grip circled her right elbow and a jolt set her upright. Somehow her shoulder remained attached to its socket.

  “I’m so sorry,” said the deep voice again. “I … ”

  She looked from the work boots to the face of the trendily dressed, mammoth man, and her jaw dropped. Cam Simmons.

  “Tanya Martin?” he asked. “Holy shit!”

  Stunned into silence, she reached a hand to her neck and wiped at the droplets.

  He pulled a napkin bearing the Coffee Bean logo from his pocket. “Are you okay?” He dabbed the napkin at her neck, then her chest. A little too rough. But the swipes that followed were a little too friendly.

  She nodded and brushed his hand away.

  How long had it been? Five years. Not that she’d been counting … lately. Their friendship had cooled on a barrage of texts and calls that tapered off as he got used to life away from Cleveland. Eventually the distance between them proved too great to cross. Who needed old friends when you had a shiny new multi-million-dollar NFL contract?

  And that contract looked good on him, too. It had turned him into an entirely different person from the anxious, overachieving high school boy she’d spent hours with at Pop’s gym. Taller and bigger, naturally, but there was also a relaxed confidence gleaming in those deep brown eyes. He didn’t just want to be good; he knew he was good.

  “What happened to your hair?” she blurted.

  He’d had curls that rivaled hers in high school.

  He palmed his nearly bald head and smiled. Somewhere angels sang. He’d always been too talented and handsome for his own good.

  “I like my helmet to have a snug fit,” he said. “And I was tired of messing around with skull caps. Does it look bad?”

  Sly dog. Always digging for compliments, but he didn’t need the ego boost. “Do you really care what I think?” Again, the last five years weighed heavy on her mind. There hadn’t been so much as a Facebook like or a forwarded chain email between them. “I mean, come on. You’re the Super Bowl MVP. You hardly need approval from me.”

  “But it would be nice.” He flashed that smile again and her heart spontaneously warmed.

  Disturbing. She did not want to have feelings for him after all these years. Their one night together senior year had muddied the innocent friendship, and it had taken years for her to find a neutral place, where she could hear his name, see his face, watch his games without feeling some sense of loss and hurt.

  “I can’t believe you’re here,” she said.

  “I owed my mama the trip. Been promising for years. Got nothing going on until optional team activities in April, so I figured why not.”

  That was at least a month away. A month of running into him like this.

  Shit. She backed up. “Well, it was good seeing you.”

  “Wait a minute.” He grabbed her arm. Softer than the last time. Even through the layers of her hooded sweatshirt and long-sleeved T-shirt, she felt an unsettling tingle. “Where you running off to so fast? I’ll buy you a coffee.”

  She glanced behind him at the gleaming monstrosity that required the leveling of two locally owned businesses to create. “No thanks. I’m not a coffee drinker. Besides, I have some ring time waiting for me.”

  “That’s right! Pop’s Gym & Ring.” Deep, loud, and somehow flashy, he sounded like he’d already signed his name on a lucrative sports network announcing career. “I’m going to tag along. Say hey. Do you mind?”

  She did, but if she made a big deal out of it, then she wouldn’t be neutral. “Come on.”

  They walked the next two blocks with a safe distance between them, talking about the obvious: his Super Bowl win. It seemed safer than d
elving into their overly personal past. She’d never been so happy to push open the doors to the gym. Her sanctuary. She breathed in the musty smell of hard work and dedication, and exhaled her restlessness over seeing Cam.

  “I’ll catch ya later,” she said, waving a hand at him and eyeing up the hallway that led to the locker rooms. With any luck, he’d be gone by the time she came out, and if he wasn’t, maybe she’d throw on some gloves, challenge him to a few rounds, and teach him a couple things. He might be bigger and stronger, but she wasn’t above hitting below the belt if need be. Hell, he deserved it.

  It was always good to have a backup plan.

  She ducked around a support beam and dragged her hand along the red ring ropes as she passed, smiling at a couple guys who were lifting free weights. This was still going to be a good day. Literally running into Cam Simmons was not going to change that.

  Her father’s office door opened and out stepped a man in a suit. Business on a Sunday? Or maybe church. That made more sense. She smiled at the man and then at her father, but her father didn’t smile back. He looked stricken and pale.

  “You okay, Pop?” She went to him, now highly suspicious of the well-dressed man. With all the real estate bullying that had gone on in this “up-and-coming neighborhood” over the past year, she couldn’t be too careful.

  “I’m fine,” he said, and then he flashed an uneasy look at the man and made a gesture toward the door. “He was just leaving.”

  “Who is he?” She directed the question at the suit, who looked down his nose at her.

  “Foreman Keller, from Great Lakes Savings and Loan, and you are?”

  A banker. She lifted her chin and looked down her nose at him. “Tanya Martin, Pop’s daughter.” She looked at her father who was shaking his head like he wanted this conversation to end.

  “Well, Tanya Martin, you might want to tell your father to pay his bills. It would save all of us time and money.”

  “Excuse me?” She puffed out her chest. Habit. Two older brothers, four hundred high school students, and a roster spot as a women’s professional football linewoman taught her the bigger you looked the more seriously people took you.

  “Stop,” her father said. “It’s not her concern.”

  “What do you mean it’s not my concern?” She set her sights on the suit again. “Why are you here?”

  “Just doing my job. And as long as he does his, I won’t be back.” He pointed at Pop. “You hear me?”

  Smug and threatening? Not on her watch. She sort of snapped. The heels of her palms hit his lapels and knocked him back a couple feet.

  “Stop!” her father said again.

  “You’re crazy!” The man scrambled for the door, but she followed.

  “Get out and don’t come back.” She raised her hand for emphasis—not to hit him again—but still he flinched.

  A pair of strong arms rounded her waist and halted her forward progress. A second later her back hit something hard and unforgiving, and the banker fled through the double doors.

  When the arms released her, she spun around and came face-to-face with Cam. Again.

  “What the hell do you think you’re doing?” she spit out.

  Cam’s eyebrows rose. “Stopping you from getting arrested for assault.”

  “Please. I just pushed the guy. And you didn’t hear how he was talking to my father.” She looked around him in time to see the office door close.

  What was going on? There was only one way to find out.

  She raised a dismissive hand to Cam, warning him to stay away, and stalked back to the office. Her father was sitting at his desk, face in his hands. “Pop?”

  He looked up, and his expression crumbled. “I’m sorry.”

  “For what?”

  “Messin’ up.”

  “How?” She fell to her knees and patted his thigh. “Start at the beginning.”

  When he exhaled, he shuddered, and her already rattled mood plummeted. Whatever it was, it was bad.

  “I borrowed money to help someone out. I put the gym up as collateral, and now I’m behind on payments. I have ninety days to pay in full or they’re gonna take it.”

  Fuck. Tanya swallowed against the lump in her throat. How the hell had this happened? She was in the gym whenever she wasn’t teaching or playing football, and her brothers Terrell and Tyler were in and out too. None of them had intimate knowledge of the gym’s finances, because that was Pop’s thing, but somebody should’ve seen or sensed trouble.

  He rubbed the back of her hand. “I failed everyone.”

  “No!” Those words didn’t belong on her father’s lips. He was South City’s big-hearted hero. “We can fix this. We can talk to everybody in the family, and whatever you owe, we’ll pull together and pay it back. It’s the least we can do for everything you’ve done for us. How much do you owe?”

  His voice muffled in his throat as he said, “Thirty thousand.”

  Damn it. She didn’t have anywhere near that much. Neither did any of her brothers or sisters. Terrell was unemployed. Tyler’s money was tied up in a messy divorce and custody battle. Tori was raising three kids on her own. And Teresa had just gone back to graduate school.

  “Who’d you loan the money to?” she asked. “We’ll just have to make them pay you back sooner than they expected. Then we can settle the debt.”

  Pop crossed his arms and hardened his expression. “Nope.”

  She squeezed her father’s hand in an expression of sympathy and strength. “I know you don’t want to call in a debt, but no friendship is worth losing the gym. Who is it?”

  He looked at her, and his eyes fluttered as they rolled toward the back of his head. “I gave the money to your mother.”

  Tanya sat back on her heels and let his words sink in. Talk about worst-case scenario.

  After a few calming breaths, she asked, “Why would Mom take $30,000 dollars from you? You haven’t owed child support payments in years, and it can’t be the restaurant. I live right above it, remember? It’s freaking packed on weekdays.”

  Pop sighed. “The Diazes got an offer to sell the building to developers, so they told your mother they wouldn’t be renewing her lease. She came to me panicked, and we put together an offer to buy the building ourselves.”

  What an unbelievable mess with her mother at the heart of it. Tanya bit back a growl. She’d been so proud of that purchase, thinking her mother had done it while standing on her own two feet. A strong, capable, independent woman. When in reality, her father had helped his ex-wife. Of course he had. His sense of obligation didn’t quit. Pop Martin swooped in to save the day with no care for the trouble it would cause him.

  Tanya didn’t want to take sides. She’d thought she was beyond that. But in times like these, it was hard not to. The anger tossed her back seventeen years to the day he moved out of the family home. She’d been eleven, and convinced her mother was to blame.

  Damn it. It just proved her theory on love and marriage. Once you loved someone enough to promise them forever, you were tied to them and their freaking problems even after forever fell apart. That’s why she stayed far away from relationship strings.

  “What’s done is done,” she said, grasping desperately at words that would help her remain neutral. “We just have to figure out a way to fix it.”

  There had to be an idea that would let both her parents hold onto their dreams.

  She looked around, hoping for inspiration. Photographs lined the office walls, chronicling the accomplishments of the kids that had worked out in this gym. Some of them actually made it onto the few remaining college boxing teams. Her heart squeezed. This gym was so many things to so many people. Her father had even managed to bring low- and no-cost healthcare to the neighborhood in this very space by partnering with her best friend MJ’s fiancé, sports medicine guru Tag Howard.

  Wait! Maybe that was the answer. “What about Doc?” She jumped to her feet and pointed at the medical equipment in the partitioned corner
of the office. “He’s pumped a ton of cash into this place to create the training room. I bet he’d lend us more.”

  “No.” Pop’s face wrinkled. “I won’t borrow any more money I can’t pay back.” He slapped his hands on his thighs like he’d done her whole life whenever the situation was non-negotiable. “Enough is enough. I’ve had a lot of time to think about this. And without any savings, my pension alone can’t cover all the payments I already have. Borrowing more money would be irresponsible.”

  “What happened to your savings?”

  Pop shrugged. “The house needed a new roof last summer.”

  The house where her mother lived. Tanya threw up her hands. “Unbelievable.” Her father hadn’t lived in that house since her parents had separated and he moved into the apartment above the gym. Sure, Tori and her kids had been living there for years, upping the responsibility Pop must’ve felt, but still…

  How about a little independence, people? Take care of your own problems. There was a novel idea.

  More deep breaths. More head shakes. “Okay,” she said. “There’s gotta be a way to stop this.” There had to be.

  Think, Tanya. Think. Something would come to her, because nobody threw a block like she did. Protection was the name of the game. They’d be prying this gym from her cold, dead hands.

  A knock sounded, and she turned in time to see the door she’d forgotten to close completely swing open.

  “Cam!” her father said.

  “Hey,” Cam said.

  Great. For five years, he hadn’t been anywhere to be found. Today, he was every-damn-where.

  • • •

  “How can I help?” Cam stepped into the office and closed the door behind him. “I couldn’t help but overhear.”

  Pop stood. “Whatever you heard, forget about it, and get over here and give me a hug, Mr. Cam Damn Simmons.” He whistled. “Super Bowl champeen.”

 

‹ Prev