Bad Boys Teaser: A Sizzling Bad Boys Anthology
Page 85
“Y’all aren’t gonna start paintin’ each other’s nails over there now, are ya?” Intently listening in, Lou folded his arms over his chest. “’Cause I came to watch the game.”
“I think I might be in love with him too.” I ignored Lou.
Serena rolled her eyes. “Thought so. About time someone made an honest man out of him, don’t you think?”
“Game. The biggest game of our careers. Save the girly talk already, for fuck’s sake.” Lou refilled my glass and pushed it into my hand. “By the way, proud of you.”
“What?”
“Don’t flood me with tears or anything, Jesus fuckin’ Christ.” Gruff as ever, he slouched deeper in his seat, but I didn’t miss the small smile on his lips. “You done good. Billy would be proud too.”
Lou and I had never seen eye to eye.
Not once in all the time he’d been GM for Carolina Crush.
“Okay?” I glanced at him over the rim of my glass. “So you know I made the right decisions about the team.”
“’Course you did, or I wouldn’t have stayed on after your father died.”
“That’s kind of—”
“Holy shit! Denver just fumbled!” Serena shouted, breaking into Lou’s and my almost-come-together moment.
“Deacon Cross, Crush’s new defensive tackle, snags the loose ball for a turnover! Cross, the old warhorse Carolina took out of retirement, breathing new life into the team. This one could be a nail-biter, folks . . .”
“Deacon Cross. New defensive tackle. Case in point.” I smugly smiled.
“Like I said.” Lou clapped a hand on my shoulder, letting me own the moment.
Carolina got off another couple successful plays, gaining an easy twenty yards, but I was still nervous as hell. With good reason, because a minute later Rafe was looking down the barrel of ten yards at the third down.
“Ohhh!” The commentator’s voice cut in. “Would you look at that? Carolina’s still in possession, but Macintyre’s out of the pocket!”
“What?” I charged to my feet, wishing I was on the sidelines.
“Looks like he’s gonna run it, folks! And—oh, no!—the Sack Daddy of the Denver Devils has sacked the Mac Daddy—Rafe Macintyre, if rumors about his son are true!”
Rafe went down hard, dropping our team back ten yards.
My face tightened when he didn’t get up with his usual ease. He laid, flat-out, on the field.
Anything but his arm or his knees. Please, God.
Serena joined me, swearing in a low hiss.
Finally the medic tromped onto the turf, checking him over while his teammates gathered round him. At the medic’s nod, Brooklyn caught Rafe’s hand and tugged him to his feet. He waved off the stretcher, saluted the crowd, leaving the field without even a limp.
Goddamn it. At this point, tied game, there was no reason to risk a fourth down play, putting untried Buckley in as QB, and we were too far away to attempt a field goal.
Carolina’s defense raced onto the field.
Lou shouted as he counted the players. “Too many! We got too many players on the goddamn field for fuck’s sake!”
The refs flagged Carolina Crush, and the Devils got an immediate extra five yards. They came forward for the kickoff, gaining mega ground as soon as their wickedly talented wide receiver caught the punt and ran it all the way to their forty-yard line. That bastard was gonna be a game MVP for sure if we didn’t stop him in his fast tracks.
From there it was another touchdown after only three plays.
The Devils were out to smear us all across the field.
With the ball in our possession again, Rafe came back on, uninjured from the sack and ready to make yards, I hoped. He huddled with the offense, then everyone lined up. His knuckles brushed the turf, the same hard-working hands that had comforted me, made love to me, taken care of our son.
I couldn’t even breathe anymore.
Quarterback snap. Rafe fell back, surrounded by our linesmen.
The ball flew from his hands, a missile on course to Marquis. Marquis, who ate dirt, tackled from behind as soon as he connected with the football. Fletcher the Fetcher—the Devils top turnover specialist—snuck forward, snatched the ball. He curled over it to roars from the crowd as Crush fans surged to their feet in shock.
A fumble. A conversion in Denver’s favor.
I felt hollow. I only hoped Rafe could hold up under pressure.
I could barely stand to watch the second quarter. My heart pumped hard then grew sluggish. I wanted to cheer then slumped down in my seat.
The announcers were not helping my state of mind at all.
“Unbelievable! Carolina Crush is getting CRUSHED again!”
21-7.
Almost halftime.
If I bit my fingernails any more there’d be nothing left but nailbed.
And then Akoni got carted off the field with an injury. Better not be his goddamn ACL.
“Or his PCL,” Lou chomped on a mouthful of ice, about ready to jump out of his seat.
His tie loosened, his jacket shrugged off, he was as torn in two as me.
The Devils quarterback sent the football spiraling as the clock ticked down. He had one man in the end field, one chance to get three touchdowns ahead of us, and he was not fucking faking it out.
Last seconds. First half. Bunyan blasted the receiver off his feet, but not before the Denver player tucked the ball under his arm and hit the end zone.
Serena, completely unserene—like seriously no serenity now—stalked around the skybox. “If this is how Rafe starts the most important season of his life—”
“It’s just a glitch. This isn’t really him.” But a hole gnawed into my heart, and I worried the same thing.
Lou looked apoplectic. “This is not the fucking team we worked the blood, sweat, and shit outta all summer, Peyton.”
“Coach D will kick them into gear during halftime,” I vowed.
But I wasn’t so sure anymore either. You could only take so many beat-downs before you lost passion. All hope. Any respect for yourself and your game. And Crush had taken a lot of damn beat-downs in the first thirty minutes of this opening game.
28-7.
At the end of the second quarter, Coach D looked like he was about to chew right through his headgear immediately before the usually cool dude threw the expensive equipment to the ground.
Rafe’s shoulders slumped as he charged off the field, in the lead of our team.
Low morale all around, and my heart plummeted to my knees.
This game wasn’t just about regaining our status at the top of the NFL. Carolina Crush was a team, one family. Rafe was the quarterback, my man. We had to be all in. All the way. All the time.
Or we’d lose everything that mattered.
Twenty-Five
Pey Dirt
Rafe
THIS FUCKING GAME.
That fucking team.
Goddamn turnovers.
Akoni injured.
As we tromped into the locker room at halftime I was tempted to slam my helmet against the wall.
Our first chance to redeem ourselves, and we were blowing it all to hell just like I was fucking up my love life.
I hadn’t seen Peyton before the first whistle, and I was beginning to think she was my touchstone.
Needed her.
Needed to get my head in the game and out of my ass.
I wasn’t even paying attention when a fight erupted, only this time it wasn’t me going head to head with Buck the loudmouthed Fuck.
It was Brooks. And the usually mellow dude looked about ready to rip Buckley’s sneering face right off.
“Told you once already to keep your fucking loose lips clamped shut.” Brooklyn smacked dipshit on the side of the head.
“A bitch slap? That’s all you’re good for?”
“Boy. If I lit into you like I wanted to you’d end up with broken bones. Trust.”
“You and your loser crew are screwing thi
s team, Grizzly Adams asshole. I’m fucking surprised any of you are first stringers to start with. How much did you fuck Carolina Crush in the ass already? Only took you thirty minutes to totally tank this game. Fucking bullshit,” Buckley spat out.
And that right there was the call to arms for the rest of the team. Buck had a target on his back, and he was about to get his face kicked in.
The powerful surge of primed men in prime shape meant fight, fight, fight. Only Malone and Cross pressed forward beside Buckley, and as soon as Brooks threw a punch that crunched against the young buck’s cheek, all restraint was off.
Helmets flew.
Fists flew faster.
Full bore locker room brawl in the making.
“Yeah? And you should just keep shaking those pom-poms with the cheerleaders!” Brooklyn took another swing.
This shit needed to stop escalating before Coach D entered the room. And as much as I’d like to knock Buckley out with my fist rammed down his throat, I needed to step off.
Step up.
Man up.
I slipped right between Buckley and Brooklyn, acting like a goddamn human shield in front of my QB competition. “You wanna hit him again, you gotta go through me, Brooks.”
Angry as I’d ever seen him, Brooklyn’s eyes narrowed. “What the fuck you doin’, Mac?”
“Putting this team back together, ’cause we still got a game to win.”
When the mountain man backed off, the rest of the crew stood down.
I turned to Buck. “You say another fucking word or sling one more insult, and I’ll make sure you never throw your first ball in the NFL, feel me, kid?”
He swiped a hand across his bloody lip. “Yeah. Whatever.”
“Not whatever. You got a lot to learn. I could either teach you, or I could take you out. Enough with the shitty attitude. You wanna be treated like a grown man, fucking act like one.” I held my hand out to him.
Brooks groaned in the background. “Why you gotta do that?”
Buckley shook my hand with slow pumps.
After releasing his palm, I jumped up onto a bench and whistled through my fingers. “Y’all! Listen up! Are we mean girls or we a football team?”
“Football team!”
“Damn right we are. Time to start acting like ONE TEAM.”
“ONE TEAM!”
“Time to take all this powder keg energy and turn it on the Devils. Enough of this bitch shit. We are a powerhouse. And remember what Coach D said? This is OUR HOUSE!”
“Our house!”
“So let’s make this a career year, y’all!” I bellowed to the rafters, shouts coming right back at me.
“Man, that was beautiful.” Akoni was in the PT room, but Bunyan seemed to be channeling his emo-mess.
“Dry up the waterworks, Bunyan. I’ll give you something to cry about if you don’t hold the line.” I jumped down into a huddle.
Not before I saw Peyton lurking beyond the half-open door. And holy shit.
Was that approval?
A smile?
She gave me the thumbs up before disappearing from sight.
That was all the motivation I needed.
“All in?” I asked my men.
“All in!”
“What do we want?”
“Super Bowl ring!”
“1 2 3—” I punched my fist to the air.
“Carolina CRUSH IT!”
Cheers came back at me full force. Time to knock this shit out and knock the Denver Devils face down on the field.
I was not about to lose again.
We raced into the stadium for the third quarter revitalized. 28-7? Big deal. I shrugged that shit off and got back into captain mode.
This was the turning point, and I could handle it. I wanted it all. And that included Peyton’s heart.
Needed to give Carolina Crush fans something to believe in. Had to make sure Peyton believed in me as a man and as the leader of this team.
After the first few plays, the second half was a blur of defense and offense. Tight maneuvers and fast action passes.
Deacon Cross intercepted a ball midfield, tucked it tight against his chest, and barreled downfield at Mach speed. No fucker was catching him. The whole stadium and our entire team pulsed to their feet, Cross gunning past linemen to the Devils’ thirty, the twenty, the ten . . . THE TOUCHDOWN!
Unbelievable.
A playmaker that would be watched on repeat.
28-14 after the extra point.
“That’s what I’m talkin’ about, baby.” Coach D grabbed the grill of Cross’s helmet when he jogged over to the sidelines amid roaring chants. “Defensive touchdown.”
Just before my next turn on the field after our line held the Devils at the fifty, Coach D gripped my shoulders. “Bring it home, baby. We need scores. We need deep and complete passes. Play it large and in charge.”
Out on the field, I hunkered down before calling out, “Blue thirty-sixer!”
Hands clapped, and then we got into formation. I crouched, ready for the snap when a flag flew onto the field.
Better fucking not be because of someone on my team. We still had a point deficit to dig ourselves out of.
“Offsides. Defense! First down Carolina!”
We moved to the first down, and hell yeah I’d take that easy yardage in a heartbeat, but I was so ready to dig in and drive forward under my own steam.
At the next snap the football slid neatly between my hands. This was my life. What I did. My freaking calling.
I fell back, palming the pigskin, watching the field widen.
Marquis open.
The ball shot out of my hand just as I was taken down in a bone-crushing move. So much energy shivered through me I roared back to my feet, tossing the defense player off me.
Marquis caught the deep pass.
“RUN,” I shouted until my lungs ached.
Fuck yeah, Carolina!
He jumped over downed players, peeled away from almost-tackles, ran like his feet had wings until he toe-tapped over the goal line. Then spiked the ball to the ground.
The following extra point narrowed the scores.
We kept Denver from taking it home again with three QB sack attacks in a row, forcing the punt.
My offensive team and I took the field on our twenty-five.
By the late fourth quarter we were still down. But not by much. We’d shut out the Devils this half, but they maintained a seven-point lead over us.
Three minutes to go.
We couldn’t let the clock run down. And every second zoomed faster than I could throw the football on my best day.
With the ball in my hands, I was in the zone. The crowd exploded around me, the stadium filled to bursting, but I heard nothing except my heart beating in my chest.
Everything slowed down in that moment.
This was it.
I felt it in my bones.
Adrenaline sizzled in my veins. There was no opening.
Time sped.
I peeled out of the pocket and charged downfield.
Giant men came at me, falling one by one as I blasted by. My guys created a passageway toward the end zone.
Twenty yards left and the Devils goliath stood between me and six crucial points.
I stiff-armed him and got my race on. Eating up the turf beneath my feet, I crossed the line.
TOUCHDOWN!
And a tie score after the extra point hit right between the fishbone of the goalpost from our kicker.
The Devils came right back out and put on the hurt. They steamrolled to another six points, but either by bad luck or fate, they missed the extra point.
Coach D blasted into us on the sideline. “One team. Our house! They’re only six points ahead. Bring it or go home and cry.” He dragged me to him. “Show me you’re the man.”
“I’m the man!” I thumped my chest.
“You the man!” Brooks took up the chant.
“Mac Daddy! Mac Daddy! Mac Daddy!” The Cr
ush fans surged to their feet when I took the field.
Sweat covered every inch of my body. I was bruised in more places than I could count. I didn’t feel any of the pain.
Coach D lectured us about late game scenarios, but my gaze was aimed way up high in the stands, to the owner’s box I knew Pey was in, watching.
This game was for her.
And I’d fucking win it.
Several plays later, we were still down by six points, huddled at the Devils’ forty. Fourth and five.
Ten seconds on the clock.
No time outs left.
I would not take a knee.
Fourth down and going for it—for the motherfucking win.
I handled the snap.
Heard men grunting. Muscles taking a beating. Growls, taunts, and linebackers closing in.
I saw the chute.
Brooks sprinting backward. He had a straight shot to the end zone if I could just make one more long-armed pass.
Ignoring all the safe plays, I lobbed the ball deep.
Twenty-Six
Playmaker
Peyton
I SPRANG FROM MY seat as soon as Rafe got into position to take the fourth down.
The entire second half I’d shouted so loudly my voice was hoarse. I’d heard his locker room pep talk, approving of every word. And I’d seen him put word into action time after time the past two quarters. Chills shot all over my body, and my hands stung from clapping so much.
This was the man I knew. The one who could get the job done no holds barred, his entire heart in this game and on the field.
“I can’t believe it! He’s going for it! Macintyre is really going for it!” One of the announcers bellowed with bone-shaking excitement.
“Some people might call this reckless, but Macintyre’s always been risky. Today it’s paying off.”
Serena joined me, unexpectedly clasping my hand in hers while Rafe caught the snap and surveyed the field with that strategic mind of his.
He can do this. I know he can.
Ten seconds left on the clock.