Tackled: A Sports Romance

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Tackled: A Sports Romance Page 10

by Sabrina Paige


  Cassie puts a hand over her mouth to hide a giggle.

  I pull my t-shirt over my head. "Don't laugh," I say. "You don't have to deal with her."

  Cassie snorts. "Whatever you say, honeybun."

  "That's nothing," I grumble. "When Drew and I were growing up she used to call us honeybun and honey-two."

  "You have a brother?" Cassie asks. She bends over to pick up her messenger bag and puts the strap on her shoulder.

  "He's my twin," I tell her. "He's in South Carolina."

  "Playing football?" she asks.

  "Baseball."

  She slides her palms over the fabric of her skirt. "Do I look…?"

  "Like you just came?" I finish for her.

  Cassie drops her bag on the floor. "Oh my God, I need to wash my hands," she blurts out, running into the bathroom. When she comes out, she gives me a sheepish look. "Are you sure we don't look like anything happened?"

  "You look as pure as the driven snow," I say.

  "Funny," she shoots back. "You're a real comedian."

  Stepping outside of my room, I look over the staircase to see my mother directing my roommates to help with unloading bags of groceries.

  "Spaghetti okay with you boys?" I hear her ask, as she carries two loaves of bread through the living room.

  "Hell yeah, Mrs. K," Emmett calls back. "Are there cookies in one of these containers?"

  My mom catches sight of me coming down the stairs and immediately pushes the loaves of bread onto Jack-off as he passes by her. She squeals. "Oh, my little baby Colton!" she sings in her thick southern accent, her arms wide open.

  From behind me, I hear Cassie giggle.

  Yeah, it’s totally not embarrassing at all to have your mother show up when you're in the middle of feeling up your tutor and then have her call you her “little baby” right in front of her.

  "Hey, mom," I call as I walk down the stairs. "I thought you weren't coming until later?"

  "Oh, please, I left early. I couldn’t wait to see you, and I wanted to miss traffic.”

  My mom reaches to hug me, but as soon as she sees Cassie, she shoves me aside. "Now, who is this?" she asks. "I'm Colton’s mama, but you can call me Mrs. K like the boys do. Or Doreen."

  "Cassandra," Cassie says. "It's nice to meet you. I was actually just on my way –"

  But my mom already has Cassie by the arm and is guiding her down the stairs. "Ma," I say. "Do not overwhelm her."

  "Hush, you." My mother slides her arm around Cassie. "Colton didn't tell me he was seeing someone. Especially someone as pretty as you."

  "Oh, he's not seeing me," Cassie explains quickly. "Or, he is seeing me. But not in that way. Definitely not. I mean, I’m not his girlfriend."

  Cassie laughs uncomfortably and looks at me with a panicked expression.

  "She's my tutor, mom," I clarify. "Not my girlfriend. I’m not seeing her. And you can stop manhandling her now."

  My mother lets go of Cassie and takes a step backward. "You should be his girlfriend," she says. Then she looks at me. "This is the kind of girl you should be dating. She's classy. Obviously she's smart if she's a tutor."

  "Ma," I interrupt, my voice firm. "We're not dating. She's not my girlfriend. This is purely a business arrangement."

  Now it's time for my face to burn as I look at Cassie. It is a business relationship.

  A business relationship that involves nudity. And orgasms.

  "Yes," Cassie agrees, clearing her throat. "Business only. I'm his tutor. The athletic department hired me."

  "My son would be an idiot not to date you you," my mom goes on, gesturing toward me. "An idiot, Colton. I can already tell she's not like the girls you usually…date. My son's taste in women leaves much to be desired."

  And, we're finished here.

  In about two seconds, my mother is going to mention how she wants grandchildren someday, and how that day can’t come soon enough.

  "All right, mom," I say, interrupting my mother's meddlesome antics. "Cassie is going now."

  "Yes," Cassie agrees. "I'm just going. I was only here to help him with some schoolwork."

  "On a Friday afternoon?" my mother asks, raising her eyebrow.

  "Yep. It was important schoolwork.”

  "In his room?" my mother presses.

  Cassie's cheeks turn pink. "I was in the neighborhood," she explains, her voice wavering, "and I stopped by to see if he needed any help with –"

  "An English paper," I interrupt. "She was giving me some advice on a paper."

  "Yes. A paper," Cassie confirms emphatically. "It was so nice to meet you but I really have to go now."

  My mother slides her arm back around Cassie's shoulder. Oh shit. She’s moving in for the kill.

  "Nonsense," she says. "You need to stay for dinner. How long has it been since you had a home-cooked meal? Are you a college student too? I don't know how you kids survive on ramen and macaroni and cheese, although that's pretty much the only thing Colton would eat when he was a toddler —"

  "Mom," I warn before she breaks out stories of potty training me.

  “Um…I'm in grad school," Cassie says. "But I really do need to –"

  "Oh, grad school!" my mother exclaims, looking over Cassie’s shoulder at me. "I knew you were brilliant. And you're the one who helped my son get an A on his exam. You have to stay for dinner. I insist."

  "Yo, Mrs. K!" Tank shouts, passing through the living room. My mother drops her arm from Cassie's shoulder as Tank gives her a bear hug, picking her up off the floor. My mother is all of five-foot-nothing and maybe a hundred and twenty pounds, and Tank is six-foot-three and over three hundred pounds.

  When he sets her down, she pulls back and appraises him. "You're looking thin, Jonathan," she says.

  Tank giggles like a schoolgirl. "I have to keep my figure. I've been missing your cooking," he says. "Did you bring those cinnamon rolls?"

  "I'll make a pan up just for you."

  “Score.”

  I nod my head at Cassie while my mother is distracted, and she walks quietly toward me. "Escape while you can," I whisper. "It's too late for me. Save yourself."

  Cassie laughs quietly as she tries to do that.

  "Oh, I do hope you're not leaving," my mother calls at once. Nothing escapes her attention. "I want to hear all about how you're helping my son."

  How Cassie is helping me is one thing my mother does not need to know.

  18

  Cassie

  "You know, my roommate is probably expecting me," I say, my flimsy little excuse totally flimsy. "It's almost time for dinner and I think we're going out to eat, and —"

  "She can come to dinner with us!" Doreen proclaims. She's like a tiny dictator, except sweet as pie, ordering around these massive football players like they're children. She makes you feel like you can't say no.

  I have to say no.

  "I'm not sure she's home —"

  "Go ahead and call her up," Colton’s mother says brightly. "I'm sure she has her cell phone on her. You kids are attached to your phones like you need them to breathe. You're all too young to remember the days of rotary phones."

  "Yeah, call her up," Colton says.

  I glare at him. A minute ago, he was all about ushering me out of here, and now I'm standing here in the middle of the living room with his mother and a whole bunch of guys from his football team talking about my dinner plans.

  "Is your roommate hot?" A large guy asks, his mouth full of cookie. He's holding two more in his hands, double-fisting dessert. "Cause if she's hot, she should totally come for dinner."

  "This girl is hot," another one points out. "Of course her roommate's hot. Hot girls have hot roommates."

  "Enough," Colton barks, his voice hard. That silences the roommates.

  Now everyone is standing here quietly, staring at me expectantly.

  Fuck me.

  I dial the phone, saying a silent prayer that Sable doesn't answer. She's probably out. Maybe she's on a date.


  "Where are you?" Sable asks. "You don't have class on Friday afternoons. It's happy hour. That means tacos and margaritas."

  "Oh, you're already at happy hour?" I ask, making a pouty face and a thumbs-down gesture for the benefit of the crowd. "By yourself? And you're waiting for me to join you?"

  "Why are you talking to me in that voice?" Sable asks. "Are you drunk?"

  "Of course," I say. "I don't want you to be sitting in the restaurant all by yourself. I'll be there in a few minutes."

  "Are you being held hostage?" Sable asks.

  "In a manner of speaking, yes."

  "Cassandra’s roommate!" Colton's mother yells loudly. "Ditch the restaurant and join us for dinner."

  "What about dinner?" Sable asks. "Who is that? Where the hell are you?"

  I clear my throat. "I'm at Colton King's house."

  Sable whoops so loudly that everyone in the room has to be able to hear it, and I quickly press the phone against my chest, trying to muffle the sound.

  Colton's mother gestures for the phone and I reluctantly hand it over. "This is Colton's mother," she says. "Cassandra says you're at a restaurant by yourself, but I'm trying to convince her to invite you for dinner. Oh, well, that’s perfect! We'll set out another plate."

  She hands the phone back to me and smiles sweetly.

  Definitely a despot.

  I put the phone back to my ear. "I'm so happy you agreed to come over here," I say, my voice falsely cheerful.

  "I wouldn't miss this for the world," says Sable. "Colton's mother, huh? You guys are moving pretty quickly. When will your wedding be?"

  "Shut up," I hiss. "I'll text you the address."

  "Can't wait," Sable says, her voice overly cheerful.

  "Well, that's that," Colton's mother chirps after I hang up. "Now, I need to get in the kitchen. Cassandra, can you handle a knife?"

  I look at Colton with narrowed eyes. "Definitely," I say.

  "Well come on into the kitchen with me and chop veggies for a salad," she says.

  Alone time with Colton's mother? I think I might be having a heart attack. Heart palpitations, at the very least.

  "I'll go too," Colton offers, following us into the kitchen. "I mean, it's kind of sexist if you two are in the kitchen cooking."

  "Since when did you get concerned about being sexist?" Doreen asks, her voice teasing.

  I give Colton another look. Obviously, he just doesn’t want his mother in the same room alone with me. I’m not sure whether I should be offended or relieved.

  Right now, I pick relieved.

  Doreen digs around in grocery bags, pulling out vegetables and setting them on the counter. Or, what is left of the counter space. Groceries cover nearly every available surface of the kitchen, their contents spilling out onto the countertops.

  She catches my look. "It's enough to feed a small army, isn't it? These boys can put away enough food to feed an army." She hands me a bag of onions. "Colt and his brother practically ate me out of house and home when they were teenagers. Two gallons of milk a day between the both of them. It was a good thing we had cows on the farm, that’s for sure. Loaf after loaf of bread. I swear those children would eat five sandwiches for lunch and two hours later they'd be ready to eat again."

  "Yeah, and look at me now," Colton says, flexing his biceps. "Now I'm a god among men."

  I snort and roll my eyes. His mother sees it.

  "Colt never had a problem with self-esteem," Mrs. K points out, chuckling as she shakes her head.

  "It’s hard to have a problem with self-esteem when you're this awesome," Colton says. "You want me to unpack all of this, ma?"

  "Thank you, darlin'. Pull that basil out of the bag for me and give it to Cassandra to chop. I'm going to get a sauce going here. Cassandra, now how is it tutoring my son? Don't lie to me now. I know he can be a handful."

  A handful.

  My thoughts go straight to what Colton's hand was full of earlier when he sat on the chair stroking his cock for me. Colton catches my gaze and I know he knows exactly what I'm thinking by the way the corners of his mouth turn up.

  I clear my throat. "It's been a pleasure working with Colton."

  Oh God. Did I just say that?

  "He's a really hard worker," I add quickly. Crap. I can't stop blurting out words that sound sexual. Colton was definitely hard. Don't talk about pleasure. Or hands being full. Or anything that might remotely remind you of Colton King naked.

  Colton coughs. I think he's laughing but I don't turn around to confirm. I focus instead on intently chopping the pile of green peppers in front of me.

  Yes. Focus on the peppers, not on the penises.

  "I'm going to cook up some sausage too," his mother says, and I nearly choke. I look up and Colton's eyes meet mine. He covers his mouth with his hand and tries to hide his laughter, but it's unmistakable. "Italian. For the meat sauce. Why are you both staring at me? Are you allergic to sausage, Cassandra?"

  The image of Colton stroking his cock flashes into my head and I clear my throat. "Nope," I say, my voice cracking. "Not allergic."

  Colton snorts loudly and turns around. I can't hear him laughing, but I can see his shoulders shaking.

  "Cassandra, what are you studying?" Doreen asks.

  "Sociology," I answer.

  "Oh!" Doreen cries out. "You're like the woman who went and lived with the gorillas!"

  I laugh. "She was an anthropologist, but lots of sociologists do embedded research, yes."

  Doreen clucks her tongue. "You're basically doing that with the football team right now."

  “Pardon me?” I ask, my heart racing.

  "Are you comparing me and my friends to a pack of gorillas?" Colton interrupts.

  Out in the living room, one of the guys whoops loudly, the sound echoing through the house. Then there’s a loud thud. The sound of furniture being moved – or broken – drifts into the kitchen.

  “I would never,” Doreen says. “That’s downright insulting… to the gorillas. You’ve got enough material for a case study right in this one.” She points toward Colton with a wooden spatula.

  "Aren't you the one who was just trying to sell Cassie on being my girlfriend?" Colton asks, laughing. "Now you’re telling her she should do a case study on me."

  I get that nagging pang of guilt again. Colton doesn’t know what my thesis is about, and I should tell him. I remind myself that it’s nowhere near the same thing as a case study. It’s definitely not embedded research. I’m doing nothing wrong.

  "Now, where do your people come from, Cassandra?" Doreen's voice breaks through my thoughts.

  My people?

  "She means your family," Colton clarifies.

  "Oh. My parents live in Massachusetts," I say, passing her a cutting board filled with diced up peppers and onions and mushrooms. She gestures toward a bowl, so I slide them in. "Outside of Boston."

  "Is that where you grew up?" she asks. "You don’t have even have a lick of an accent. What's that they say? Pahk the cahh?"

  I giggle at her Texan imitation of a Boston accent and slip right back into my old one. "It's more like this: It’s not wicked good to pahk your cah in the yad."

  "That's funny," Colton mutters.

  "Says the guy with the drawl so thick you could cut it with a butter knife," I say, my voice light. "I haven't lived there since I was eighteen. I went to school in Georgia and now I've been in Texas for two years. The accent kind of faded away when I moved to Georgia."

  "And what do your parents do?" asks Doreen.

  "Ma, stop grilling her," Colton cuts in. "She's not going to give you grandchildren."

  "A mother can dream, can't she?" Doreen says, and Colton turns toward me, mouthing I’m so sorry from across the room.

  "Don't think I didn't see that, Colton Anderson King. I'm simply engaging in polite conversation."

  "Your version of polite conversation and normal people’s versions of polite conversation are not the same thing.”
/>   “I’m not listening to you,” she says back. "Now, how long have you been tutoring him, Cassandra?"

  "Almost a month," I answer.

  "Almost a month, Colton King." His mother turns to him. "This girl has had to put up with you for almost a month and she hasn't gone running for the hills."

  Colton laughs. "You think you're selling her on me?"

  "I think by now she's surely figured out what a stubborn ass you can be," his mother reasons. "Haven't you?"

  I laugh. What the hell do I say that sounds professional? "Colton can be…difficult."

  Colton turns around, his eyes locked on me. "I'm not difficult when I get what I want."

  I flush warm and spin right back around, pretending to be super busy chopping vegetables for a salad. "My father is a retired Captain from the Boston Police Department," I say, changing the conversation abruptly, "and my mother is an elementary school teacher. She just retired."

  "Oh, well that must be where you got the patience to deal with Colt," Doreen says. "You're genetically predisposed."

  A guy pokes his head into the kitchen. "Are there cups in here? We're going to play beer pong. Smells good, Mrs. K. I've been missing your cooking."

  "You boys take one of those folding tables and play in the yard, not in the house," she says. "If you destroy the dining room, you're not getting any dinner. And don't be getting wasted playing beer pong, either. No one's going to be throwing up my spaghetti."

  "Yes ma'am." He snatches a plastic bag of red cups from Colton. "Hey, did Colt show you the roof slide yet?"

  "Shut up, man," Colton hisses, punching him in the arm.

  "You're trying to kill an old woman with worry, aren't you?" Doreen scolds but she's smiling as she shakes her head. She walks over to Colton and puts her arm around him. "You boys take it easy so you don't get injured. Remember, this kid here is my retirement plan."

  "I'm not getting broken, mom," Colton insists. "The roof slide is a structural masterpiece."

  "Have you seen this masterpiece, Cassandra?" asks Doreen.

  Colton grins at me. "Yeah, Cassie. You've seen my masterpiece, right?" His voice drips with innuendo.

  Yeah, I’ve definitely seen the masterpiece between his legs.

 

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