Forward Passes (Seattle Lumberjacks)
Page 7
His? What the fuck. She wasn’t his. In fact, they didn’t even like each other. Of course, those two little details didn’t stop Tyler. He locked eyes with the interloper and pinned him to the wall with a threatening glare. No one lusted after the object of Tyler’s current lust. No one. The chickenshit paled and swallowed nervously. Gulping down the last of his beer, the idiot slapped some change on the table, and quickly hustled out the door. Smug with satisfaction, Tyler did another survey of the room. Good, all was as it should be. He settled back and focused his energy on Lavender fantasies.
Tyler’s cell vibrated. He frowned, irritated at being interrupted and checked out the caller id, his cousin and best buddy Derek Ramsey. This better be good. He pressed the answer button. “What’s up, asshole?”
“I could say the same of you.”
“I’m fine. What the fu—fudge are you harassing me for?” Tyler shot a quick glance in Lavender’s direction. She stood too far away to catch his almost slip.
Derek cleared his throat, followed by silence on the line. Not a good sign. Tyler’s instincts went on red alert. He drummed his fingers on the counter. His cousin remained silent.
Tyler hated waiting. “Aw, shit. Put on your big boy pants and spit it out. Or did Rachel burn them all?”
Derek made an odd noise then finally spoke. “I thought you’d rather hear this from me than from the media.”
Tyler sucked in a deep breath and let it out. He shoved his fingers through his unruly hair. He needed to get it cut, but very likely that was the least of his problems. “Oh, crap, what now?”
“There’s no easy way to say this, buddy. Brace yourself.” He heard Derek inhale then exhale.
Tyler’s mind raced through a hundred possibilities. Somehow they did charge him with a DUI. Maybe some woman came forward and insisted he fathered her kid. Or he’d been cut from the team. Or his sisters ran off to South America with what was left of his money. He shouldn’t have ignored his agent’s many calls. “Dang it. Tell me. What is it?”
“The Jacks signed Zach Murphy to a one-year contract.”
Tyler went still inside, rendered completely speechless. He bit the side of his mouth just to make sure he hadn’t died from shock. The taste of his blood mingled with disbelief. “Zach Murphy? Are you frigging kidding me?” Across the counter, Lavender raised a brow. He raised a brow right back at her.
“Yeah. I guess Zach took a big pay cut to play for us. He wants to go out with a bang his last year in the league. The poor bastard’s played with piece of crap teams his entire pro career. He wants a ring.”
Tyler clenched his jaw and ground his teeth together. He wanted to hit something. How could the Lumberjacks do this to him?
He dropped a five in the jar before opening his mouth. He knew this wasn’t going to be good. Even if he couldn’t use the “F” word, he had others. “Damn it. Everyone knows I can’t stand that idiot dickwad, and he feels the same. The asshole is a dirty player. Mother effing dirty. He’s tried to take me out more than once.”
“Yeah, and he’s laid you flat on your back more than any other linebacker in the league. The guy’s good.” His fuckhead cousin almost sounded amused, which didn’t improve Tyler’s temper one bit.
“He’s old, washed up. There isn’t room on the team for both of us.”
“Tell that to the Jacks. If you haven’t noticed, you didn’t get a vote. This is your wakeup call, dumbshit. I’m not the only teammate who noticed your attitude this past season, or should I say lack of?”
Tyler tightened his grip on the cell phone, wanting to crush the life out of this electronic bearer of fucking bad news. He thought he’d been so clever, fooled them all, but his teammates and coaches had seen through his not-so-incredible acting job.
“HughJack loves Murphy’s fire. Says the team could use a little of it these days.”
“What the hell is that supposed to mean?” Like he didn’t know? Maybe they’d disrespected him with this obvious vote of no confidence, but he was also guilty as charged.
“They’re doubting your team leadership.”
His cousin’s words cut right to the heart of the matter.
Tyler jabbed the End button on the phone, cutting off his cousin. Without even a backward glance, he stomped out of the bar into the dark, rainy evening, which matched his mood just fucking fine.
* * * * *
Lavender grappled with the large roll of welded wire fencing. It took on a mind of its own and wrestled her to the ground. She was losing the battle when her neighbor decided to be neighborly and lifted the recalcitrant roll off her pinned body as if the heavy wire was a roll of toilet paper. Sometimes brute strength did have its advantages.
She ignored his outstretched hand and struggled to her feet. “Good to see you know how to use those muscles.”
“That’s how I make my money, babe.” A cocky grin spread across his strong, square jaw. His Caribbean blue eyes twinkled with pure devilment, even though she sensed an edge to him.
“Don’t call me that.”
“Whatever you say, Vinnie.” He was deliberately attempting to provoke her.
“Don’t call me that either.”
“Lilac? Violet?”
She shook her head violently and tried like hell not to laugh, which would only encourage the insufferably obnoxious man. “How about not. Perhaps, I’ll come up with something equally annoying to call you.”
“Call me anything you want, baby.” He reached up and brushed a smear of dirt from her cheek with the pad of his thumb. Her body responded with a revealing shudder. His eyes turned the color of an ocean in a storm, a sexual storm. “Damn, I love it when you get down and dirty.”
Lavender sighed and brushed off her clothes, suddenly aware of her innate scruffiness in comparison to his innate gorgeousness. “Did you come over here to exercise your vast wit or do you need something?”
“No, but you do. I couldn’t stand watching you fight with the fencing. It was about to deliver the knockout punch.” He leaned down, his mouth way too close to her ear. “Besides, if anyone’s going to wrestle you to the ground, it’ll be me.”
“Why don’t you exercise your feet and leave?” Before her body exercised its fantasies.
“Seems someone called the phone company and cancelled my request for service. You wouldn’t know anything about that, would you?” He propped one foot on the bumper of her pickup truck, more amused than pissed off, which irritated her.
She wiped her face of all emotion, but she was pretty damn sure guilt still came through. “No, not a thing.”
“I figured as much. Now I have to wait another few weeks. My ninety days will be up before I get service on this island. Guess what? Maybe I’d just as soon be unreachable.”
“Then you don’t have a problem. Someone—I’m not saying it’s me—did you a favor.”
“Perhaps. Being incommunicado does have its merits. But as attractive as it is, I have business to attend to.”
“If you leave the island now, you can attend to all the business you want.”
He shook his head, not the least bit put off. “Now that’s no way to treat a man with a hammer, especially when he knows how to use it.” Tyler held up a good-sized hammer for her inspection. For once he smiled a genuine smile, a nice-guy smile oddly out of place on his sinfully bad-boy face.
“Are you offering to help me with my fencing?”
“Yup, just to get a little peace. You’re making a fu—, frigging racket.” He smirked at his quick catch. The man wanted his kiss. Of course, he’d most likely pegged her right and knew a kiss would only be foreplay to the foreplay.
“Something has me curious.” Tyler looked at her so long and hard she started to squirm under his dissecting gaze. “You don’t have any animals? What’s up with that? Don’t you like animals?”
“I love animals.” Lavender felt a twinge of jealousy toward her neighbor, not because of his fame or money, but because he was living with the cat, and she
had no animals to comfort her or stave off the loneliness. She’d never planned to live in her grandparents’ house for this long, but the bad economy and life conspired to keep her under their thumb.
“You could’ve fooled me.”
“My landlady, who happens to be my grandmother, is highly allergic to animal fur. She won’t allow any on the property.”
“She doesn’t live here. You do.”
Lavender shrugged. She didn’t want to get into details regarding her controlling grandmother and grandfather and all the dysfunctional reasons why she allowed them to run her life.
“So what’s the fence for?”
“To keep the deer out of the vegetables.”
Tyler gazed pointedly at her woebegone vegetable garden. “I think it’s too late.”
“So do I, but I promised I’d fence off the garden.” Her grandmother expected fresh vegetables, one of the things Lavender of the brown thumb did to earn her keep on this little plot of land.
“Give me the hammer.”
“Pound away, jock boy.”
Tyler slanted her a sideways look.
“Drag your sorry ass out of the gutter. I meant with a hammer.” Lavender stood back with anticipation and waited for him to make an ass of himself demonstrating his hammer-pounding talents. Tyler grinned. Perfect white teeth stood out against his dark tan. No one had a tan in the islands this time of year, but Tyler did.
“Go for it. I’d like to see you wield that hammer.” Would she ever.
He opened his mouth to speak then seemed to think better of it. He turned to the task at hand and assessed the damage.
Lavender flipped a bucket upside down and took a seat. They were getting along almost too well, so she scrambled to find a subject to ruin his mood. “What’s the deal with Zach Murphy?”
Immediately, the shutters slammed shut over his eyes, and he regarded her warily. “You were eavesdropping on my conversation last night.”
“I, uh, I just happened to, uh, overhear a bit of it. That’s all.”
“Then you already know what the deal is.”
“Not really, I could only hear one side of it.”
“We hate each other’s fu—frigging guts. That’s the deal.”
“So I hear.”
“You did? I thought you hated football?”
“Just because I hate football doesn’t mean I don’t know stuff about it. Why would the Jacks sign someone who has a very public feud with the heart and soul of their team?”
“Maybe they’re looking for a new heart and soul.” He frowned, as if he hadn’t meant to say the words out loud.
“You’ve done some stupid things lately, like driving drunk.”
He glared down at her with a ferocity she’d never witnessed from him. “Have you ever seen me drink too much to drive home?”
Lavender searched her memory. “No, I haven’t, but that doesn’t mean anything.”
“If that’s what you think.” Rubbing the back of his neck, he looked at an unseen spot in the distance. His expression hardened with determination. “It’s my team. He’ll learn that soon enough. I can handle the jerk. No big deal.”
But it was a big deal, as illustrated by the restlessness she’d sensed in him earlier. It went deeper than the team signing a player Tyler didn’t like and rumors of pending DUI charges. Beneath his unease lingered a hint of something, almost like insecurity, or fear, even vulnerability. She shook her head, denying the quarterback possessed a heart with real emotions. The second she acknowledged he might be human would be the beginning of the end of her ability to resist him.
“I’m sure it’ll all work out just fine.”
“I’m sure it will.” He didn’t look one damn bit convinced.
Turning his back to her, Tyler picked up a hammer and fence staples. Giving each staple a few solid whacks, he attached one end of the fence to the post. Then he rolled the rest out on the ground.
Lavender stayed out of his way. The man worked like a hummingbird on crack. His hammer strokes were efficient and clean, no wasted movement. He showed her how to stretch the fence tight with a come-along. What would have taken her hours and looked like crap, took him a little over an hour and looked better than most professional fencing jobs she’d seen.
She hated to be impressed, but she was.
* * * * *
Tyler drove in the last fence staple then stood back to admire his handiwork, the most satisfying chore he’d done in the past twenty-four hours. Pushing his baseball cap off his brow, he wiped off the sweat with the bottom of his T-shirt.
He’d walked over here with every intention of starting an argument with her, anything to assuage his bad temper, yet the second he’d seen her down for the count with the fence winning the match, he couldn’t suppress his amusement.
“Does that cat always follow you around?” Lavender stood close behind him, too close. Her curvy body enticed his cock. Just the sight of her fueled a lifetime of wet dreams.
“He’s not following me.” Tyler almost smiled as he caught sight of Cougar sitting on a fence post, casually licking his non-existent balls and faking disinterest in what the humans were doing. Truth be told, the cat followed him everywhere, to the bathroom in the morning, out to the barn, to the garage, anywhere Tyler went the cat showed up. He even followed him to the kitchen every morning and bitched until Tyler put fresh food in his dish. Every time he caught the cat following him, the little orange bastard would sit down and preen as if he wasn’t following Tyler at all. Tyler knew better.
“I really do appreciate your help.” Her words sounded forced, like thanking him didn’t come easily.
“Does this mean you don’t hate me anymore?”
“Of course, it doesn’t.” She lifted her chin, a defiant tilt to her head. One curly strand of red hair fell over her cheek. He wanted to touch it, roll it between his fingers.
“Good, I wouldn’t want to end an enjoyable neighborly feud.” He moved into her space. His nostrils filled with the scent of lavender and aroused woman.
“Never happen.”
“I’m counting on it.” He leaned closer and ran the pad of his calloused thumb down her cheek and tucked the rebellious strand behind her ear. “Conflict makes sex even better.”
“Too bad you won’t find out how good.”
“I will, Purple Lady. I promise. One kiss from me, and you’ll be putty in my hands.”
“You have to win first.”
“Honey, I never lose. Winning is encoded into my DNA.” He noticed she didn’t say she’d stop after one kiss, just that he had to win. He suspected his red-headed tigress would be a wild, untamed animal in bed, the best kind. He was a physical guy with physical needs and a healthy imagination when it came to sex. An imagination he didn’t mind indulging. Lavender might not be his usual type, but the chemistry between them snapped and sizzled.
She opened her mouth to respond when an irritated voice from the front of her house interrupted them. Lavender jerked around and tensed immediately.
“Lavender!” A short powerhouse of a woman marched into view from the corner of Lavender’s little house, followed by an equally short, fat peacock of a man. She was short, like her granddaughter but had packed on the pounds over the years. Her clothes fit a little too tight, not to be sexy, but like she refused to go up a size or two. Her red hair was a little too red to be natural, and she had this eighties big-hair thing going on.
Panic crossed Lavender’s face. She turned to Tyler. “You need to go now.”
The ranting woman hadn’t noticed them yet. She was too busy bitching to the short guy about the state of the place. Stopping at the side of the house, with her back to them, she inspected the overgrown flowerbeds, never letting up on the steady stream of complaints. Tyler recognized the signs of a nosy, controlling female relative. After all, he’d grown up with more than his share. “Is that your grandmother?”
Lavender nodded and fidgeted with wire cutters. “She owns this place and r
ents it to me. You really need to go.”
“She sounds pissed.”
“She’s always pissed.”
“Oh, shit.” Tyler considered his options—stick around and needle Lavender or get the hell out of Dodge. As much fun as it might be to stay, he wasn’t interested in getting in the middle of a family altercation, especially when he didn’t want to get involved with Lavender on anything but a sexual level.
He grabbed his tools and slipped through the gate in their mutual fence.
Cougar leapt off the fence post and raced ahead, not wanting any part of the crazed woman either. Smart cat.
* * * * *
For the next hour, Doris Mead ranted about how her granddaughter wasn’t keeping the shack pristine enough. Lavender learned after her rebellious teenage years to nod and say nothing. It made her life much easier. Thank goodness her grandparents lived on the mainland and didn’t make the ferry trip to San Juan Island too often.
Doris paused in mid-rant and stared out the back window. “You repaired your fence. It looks good.” She motioned to her ever-present husband. “Larry, look at this.”
Larry Mead strutted over and peered out the window pane. “That fence looks better than this house.”
Lavender held her breath and braced for impact.
“How much did the fence cost?” Her grandmother rounded on her, both barrels blazing. Lavender immediately went on defense, a familiar neighborhood.
“Nothing. I did it myself.”
“Don’t lie to me.” Her grandmother’s face looked ten years older when she frowned like that.
“Dishonesty is the work of the devil.” Her grandfather, a retired real estate broker and part-time preacher, played the fire-and-brimstone card. Boring but nice, just the type of man her grandmother loved to control. Nothing like her father had been, one more reason why Grandma always disliked Lavender’s dad.