He rolls his eyes, flipping me the bird. “Yeah, I had a burger and a blow job. Let’s go hit the gym.”
We do, and the three of us all seem a little lost in our own worlds as we’re working out.
As for me, I can’t stop thinking about Holden’s comments.
Not the ones about what-if women.
The ones about recognizing mistakes.
30
Nadia
Back when I was in my matchmaker phase, I read dating columns religiously—articles on the latest trends in dating, on where to go, ideal topics for discussion on the first date, and how to read between the lines.
And I want to issue a complaint right now.
Someone needs to pen a column on how utterly awkward it is to be friends with the guy you gave your virginity to the night before last.
Here we are at a golf course on the edge of the city, making small talk.
Small talk is painful. Hell, it’s worse than having your plaque scraped. Loudly.
“So, you’re looking forward to spring training?”
“Absolutely. I love it,” Crosby says, all chipper and upbeat.
“It must feel like everything is possible,” I offer, equally peppy so I don’t think of him doing bad things to me or whispering sweet everythings in my ear.
“Yes, that’s exactly it. The world is your oyster,” he says as we chat by a golf cart as the event is winding down. “We have a lot to work on with our oyster, but I’m stoked to do the work. It’s always good to get back in the saddle.”
Ugh, I want to gag.
He’s talking to me like he’s chatting with a reporter at the end of the game.
I chuckle, but it’s mirthless, maybe even frustrated.
Crosby arches a brow. “What’s that for?”
Should I just let it go? Screw it. “You just sounded like you were giving me a PR answer,” I say.
He laughs. “I guess I did. The truth is, I’m kind of ridiculously excited. I always feel a little bit like a lion pacing in a cage, or maybe a bit of a lost soul, without baseball.”
“See? That’s a better answer. Because you love it,” I say, glad to be talking honestly now.
His smile is magnetic, genuine. Like a kid riding a bike for the first time. “I do. It’s definitely my first love,” he says.
In some ways maybe I should feel jealous. But I don’t. I’m glad he has something that he loves that much. That baseball is it for him. “That’s how it is for me too. I’m not out on the field playing, obviously, but I grew up with a football-is-life worldview because of my dad. I can’t imagine doing anything else. Is it crazy that even when I was a little girl, I wanted to run my dad’s football team?”
“No frogging way,” he says, smiling widely.
“I see I’ve rubbed off on you.”
“In more ways than one,” he says, wistful, his eyes a little lost.
I feel the same. My God, I feel the same.
“It was good to talk to you,” I say, gesturing from him to me. “Like this.”
“It was, Nadia. It was great,” he says, and we both shuffle closer.
It’s that awkward moment when you don’t know if you should hug or not.
We go for the full awkward embrace, and the scent of him, the mind-bending, knee-weakening soapy scent of him, makes me feel lost all over again.
My heart is empty, but I know exactly how it would feel full again.
When I return home, I’m ready to write to the dating sites and tell them what to say. How to deal with this frogging mess.
Deal with it by saying it.
I want the friendship.
I want the love. I want to be the girl warrior and the woman who falls hard for the man. I want to have it all. Is that so crazy?
I send a note to Scarlett.
Nadia: Is it insane to think we can actually have it all?
The hour is late in Paris, and she doesn’t answer, but that’s okay. I think I know the answer.
I grab a late dinner with my mom that evening.
After we order yellowtail and edamame at my favorite sushi restaurant, I give her a wide-eyed look. “So, did Jackson Browne grease the wheels for you this weekend, Mama?”
A flush crawls up her cheeks, and my jaw goes slack. “Are you kidding me, Mom? For real?”
“That’s not what I’m saying,” she says, hushing me, but it’s a half-hearted denial.
“So what are you saying, Mommykins?” I bat my lashes.
She lifts her green tea and takes a sip, her brown eyes sparkling with the kind of delight I haven’t seen in them in a while.
“What I’m saying is I had a lovely time and I’m going to see him again. I want to see what happens. It seems kind of foolish not to.”
I repeat her words in my head—kind of foolish not to.
They feel true.
They feel important.
They feel like one of those statements someone makes that stays with you.
That becomes a brand-new mantra.
More powerful than the one about speaking up.
Or maybe it’s the perfect corollary. “Are those words to live by?”
“I think they are,” she says, then tilts her head, studying me. “Is there something you’d be foolish not to do?”
The answer is as obvious as knowing who I want to hire for the GM.
As instinctive as selecting what pair of shoes to wear.
As simple as talking to my mom.
I know what I want.
“I fell in love with Crosby,” I confess, my throat catching, “and I think the timing is all wrong.”
“But you think you’d be foolish not to try to make it work?”
A tear slides down my cheek. “I do. I want to have it all. And really, why be a fool?”
She lifts her mug and clinks it to my glass.
That night when I slide into my bed, two messages light up my phone.
One is a reply from my friend in Europe.
Scarlett: You should have it all. And if something is getting in the way, figure out how to get rid of it and go get your all.
Then a note from my brother.
Eric: Just landed. Anything interesting happen while I was in the Maldives?
I run my thumb over his message. Should I tell him? Well, not that I discovered I love when Crosby plays with my ass.
But rather that I’m in love with his best friend?
I flash back to the mantra that has served me well.
Don’t be afraid to speak up.
I answer Eric with three words.
Nadia: Yes. Crosby happened.
31
Crosby
I cut the engine in my mom’s driveway, grateful that she stayed up for me. I head up the steps to her lemon-yellow Victorian house, lined up amid the painted ladies on Steiner Street, and the second I reach the top, she opens the door with a soft whoosh.
She lifts a finger to her lips, letting me know Kana’s asleep. I nod and slip out of my shoes as I go inside. We pad quietly to the sunroom at the back of her house on the far side from the bedrooms.
Starlight streams through the windows, and I grab a seat on the rattan couch, tossing my keys on the table. Mom pats my leg. “Want some tea? Some sliced mango? Kale soup?”
Laughing quietly, I shake my head. “Nope. Just good old-fashioned advice.”
“Ah, that’s a piece of carrot cake,” she says, then pats my leg again. “I assume this is about Nadia?”
“How did you know?” I ask, but truthfully, I’m not surprised.
“Like I said the other night, it’s been years.”
“Yeah, what did you mean by that?”
She licks her lips, a sign that she’s thinking. “It means I always saw something between you two. But especially you. You were so . . . enchanted with her.”
My heart warms like the sun. “Sounds about right.”
“You loved listening to her tell stories, you loved talking to her, and you were nearl
y impossible to pull away from her when you were at their house,” she adds.
I groan, dropping my head into my hand. “What am I going to do?”
Her soft laugh fills the room. “Stop being so superstitious, I presume?”
I look up. “Why do you assume I’m being superstitious?”
“Because I raised you. You always liked your routine, everything in order. Practice at a certain time. Putting in so much work. Wearing your lucky socks. If you had a bad game, you’d figure out what you’d done differently and try to undo it,” she says, calm and knowing.
I push out a forced laugh. “Sounds like me.”
She smiles like it’s a fond memory. “And you’d analyze every game. See what you could learn from it. Do better. It’s served you well in baseball, all the way to the major leagues.” She squeezes my leg. “But I suspect you’re not worried about baseball right now.”
I slump back against the couch, heave a sigh, and scrub a hand over the back of my neck. “No. I’m here about the woman. The one who enchants me.”
She chuckles knowingly. “Well then.”
I cock my head, meeting her eyes. “Well then, what?”
She rolls her eyes, something she rarely does. “I feel as if your question has already been answered.”
I frown, trying to unpack her meaning.
But then I stop.
I stop analyzing, and I listen to what she just said.
I can’t apply baseball logic to women. I can’t force superstitions on love. And I definitely can’t expect lucky-sock reasoning to apply to my past.
Or my present.
Or the future I want to have.
“So what if I swore off women?” I say, straightening. “So what if I was taking a break?” I stand to pace the room. “Who cares if I should take things slow, or if the timing is wrong? None of that matters.”
Mom simply grins.
I grab my keys from the table. “This isn’t about being smart or measured or patient. This is about not being a dumbass who lets the woman who enchants me pass me by.”
She stands, clasping my shoulders. “I couldn’t have said it better myself.”
I hug her hard, kiss her cheek, then get the hell out of there, dialing Eric from the car.
He starts speaking as soon as he picks up. “Well, I bet you—”
“Listen, I broke the pact. I don’t care. I’m in love with your sister. Some people aren’t meant to be just friends.”
He coughs, sputters, then laughs. “I’m not in the least bit surprised.”
Ten minutes later, I pull up to the curb outside Nadia’s house, turn off the car, and call her as soon as I hit the sidewalk.
She answers right away, sounding breathless. “Hi, what’s going on?”
“Wait. Are you going somewhere?”
“I’m in the elevator. I was going to see you.”
I grin like it’s going out of style. “Talk about lucky socks. I’m right here, waiting for you to buzz me in.”
Thirty seconds later, I see her through the glass door, coming through the small lobby, a wild smile on her face.
She lets me in, and I lift her in my arms, kiss her gorgeous mouth, and say what I should have said yesterday morning. “Screw adulting. I’m in love with you.”
32
Crosby
Nadia wraps around me like a koala, her legs around my hips, her ankles hooking over each other behind my back, her arms around my neck.
I couldn’t be happier to have her go all marsupial on me.
Still, I tip her back so I can look her over. She’s absolutely adorable in a peach hoodie, jeans, and Converse sneakers.
“Were you going to catch a Lyft or something?”
She nods, laughing and smiling. “Told you I was going to see you. And yes, I better cancel the Lyft. But first I just want to say, adulting sucks.” She drops a kiss onto my lips. “And I am stupid in love with you. I don’t care about timing or how things are supposed to happen. I don’t care about dating in a certain way or certain order.”
The beautiful admission spills out of her in a fantastic rush.
A rush that makes my heart thunder, and my happiness meter redlines, going off the charts. “You’re taking the words right out of my mouth, sweetheart. I don’t care either. I was so caught up in my old mistakes that I didn’t realize till tonight that leaving things between us as just friends would’ve been the biggest mistake of all.”
“I’m so glad you’re here,” she says, roping her arms even tighter around my neck. “I was going after you to tell you that too, because I’d be a fool to let you go without saying how I feel.”
“Let’s not be fools,” I say softly.
She kisses the corner of my lips. “Let’s not.” She pulls back, a brow arching. “But I should cancel the Lyft.”
I set her down, she grabs her phone from her back pocket, and a few taps later, she proclaims, “Done!” and slams her body against mine, snuggling up against me. Holy hell, I love this woman’s affection. I love how she wants to get close.
“Do that again,” I murmur.
“I want to do everything with you.” She presses harder against me, then gazes up at me, her tone going all vulnerable and thoroughly sweet. “This is what I realized this weekend—I wanted a relationship like Eric and Mariana have, or Brooke and David, or my mom and dad. I thought we needed to do it that way. How they did.” She pauses, takes a breath, and smiles once more. “But you and me, we can do things our own way.”
“We sure can, sweetheart,” I say, buzzing with possibility as I brush another kiss to her lips, savoring the moment, the contact, the connection. “We can do everything our way. And I just hope you’ll forgive me for being so stupid yesterday,” I say, sliding my hands up her back, never wanting to stop touching her.
“There’s nothing to forgive. I agreed to be all adult about it too. What a ridiculous idea,” she says with the most adorable eye roll.
I laugh. “So ridiculous.”
My right hand slides into her hair. “God, I love your hair. It’s so soft and fantastic, and I just want to touch it and touch you and kiss you and taste you and make love to you.”
“Well, you went pretty quickly from ‘so ridiculous’ to wanting to bang me,” she says, a little saucy. Or maybe a lot.
“That’s the thing, Nadia,” I say, squeezing her hips. “I want everything with you. I want all the things. And I can’t believe I thought we had to stop. But I hope you know the reason was that I love you so damn much. So much that I was terrified of messing this up.” I watch her, making sure she knows that, though we can have fun anytime, I’m dead serious now. “I let you go because I wanted to ensure we could have something someday. I didn’t want to risk messing up the best thing that’s ever happened to me.” I lift a hand, stroking her cheek. “You’re the best thing, and you have been happening to me for years.”
This is the truth I’ve learned in the last week with her. I was drawn to bad girls, but only because I’d been missing a piece of my heart for the longest time.
I’d surrendered it when this gorgeous woman went to prom with another man. When I felt the first inkling of jealousy over the mere possibility of something.
Ever since, I’ve been looking for that something in all the wrong places. But ever since Nadia gazed at me with those wide, vulnerable eyes, I’ve known that she’s the lost treasure I’ve been searching for.
“It’s been years for me too.” She cups my face, sliding her thumb along my jaw. In those brown irises, I see my long search reflected back at me, all my hopes echoed. “It hit me at the rehearsal dinner—I’ve had a big crush on you for a long, long time.” She sounds giddy with happiness. Her eyes glisten with it.
I lift my thumb, swiping away the hint of a tear. “Don’t cry, sweetheart.”
“It’s because I’m happy. Because this is crazy and amazing and wonderful. That’s what I realized at the dinner—how much I care for you, how much I feel for you. An
d I’ve kept realizing it over and over again. But it’s not teenage you. It’s who you are now, the man I’ve come to know in the last week. It’s the way you talk to me and laugh with me and tease me and take care of me. It’s the way you touch me and hold me and want me. It’s the way you understand me.”
I beam from deep within. “I love everything about you, Nadia. And I’ve loved getting to know the woman you are now. That’s the woman I’m in love with. So the last thing I want to do is get on that plane tomorrow morning with us on hold. I don’t care if I’m gone for a month. And I know I’m on the road a lot, but I want you to be mine and I want to be yours, no matter what.”
Laughing, she presses another kiss to my lips. “There’s FaceTime, and sexting, and phone calls. And then when you come home from a week on the road, there’s super-hot homecoming sex.”
I growl, my eyes narrowing, lust tearing through my body. “I love your dirty plans for us.”
“I’ve got dirty plans for us tonight too.”
I thread my hands through her hair. “Ask me to spend the night, and I’ll say yes.”
“Spend the night.”
It’s more of an order than an ask, but I’ll take it.
Even though we nixed the whole friends-with-benefits scheme, we’re definitely friends still, and we’re definitely enjoying the benefits.
For instance, my cock is benefiting right now from Nadia’s eagerness to try a new position. She climbs over me in bed, having already stripped me to nothing in record time. Straddling me, she sets her hands on my chest. Then she slides her wet pussy against the hard ridge of my cock. Back and forth, silky and hot. Over and over. Closing my eyes, I groan in pleasure. “You better not tease me all night long, sweetheart.”
“But what if I do?” she purrs.
And really, what if she does? “Fine, fine. Tease me all night. I’m yours.”
She rocks her hips up and down along my shaft, her breasts swaying, her hair flowing. She’s an eager vixen, ready to explore all this new terrain.
The Virgin Rule Book (Rules of Love 1) Page 20