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Thanks For Last Night: A Guys Who Got Away Novel Page 18
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“I make a mean artichoke, sausage, and tomato pizza,” I say wryly.
She licks her lips, mouths Yum, then repeats it to Devon.
“‘Sounds delish,’ he says,” she tells me.
“The cheese melts on your tongue. The dough is pillowy. The tastes are incredible. E come il paradiso nella boca,” I reply, dropping into Italian to say it’s like heaven in your mouth because I can’t help myself with this lovely woman who’s so unexpectedly captivating.
“Sounds like it must be,” she says and signs too.
Devon segues to other questions.
“Rumor has it you’re a cat person,” she relays. “I love cats,” she adds to both of us.
The reporter shakes his head then pants like a dog.
“Dog person?” I ask him with a grin.
“Yes, he’s a dog person,” Tempest tells me.
“Personally, I love the feline attitude,” I say, returning to the implied question about my pet preference. “I appreciate that take-it-or-leave-it vibe. You don’t always know where you stand with a cat. I love that you must work for it with them.” My attention keeps sliding to Tempest as she interprets my answer, but hey, she’s the fellow cat lover. “Do you have cats?” I ask her.
After she signs the last thing, a smile takes over her face as if she’s pleased that I asked her a question.
Devon chuckles and says something in sign language to her that she answers before turning her smiling gaze my way and telling me, “I have one. A tomcat. His name is—wait for it—Tom.”
I laugh deeply. “I love the simplicity of that, Tempest.”
She looks to Devon again for his next question. He fires it off, and she puts it to me. “What do you like to do for fun?”
“I enjoy cooking, Scrabble, and candlelit dinners,” I say with a straight face.
She laughs, her hands whipping through my reply.
Devon arches a brow at me, mouthing Really? Then he says something to her.
“‘Is that a line?’ he wants to know,” she says to me, laughing again as she poses the question.
I act deeply affronted, bringing my hand over my heart. “It’s all true.”
When the interview ends, I thank Devon, then I turn to ask the interpreter for her full name.
“Tempest North.”
North.
It’s not an uncommon name.
But it’s not the most common either.
“I hope we will meet again,” I say, because I’m a gentleman, and it’s polite to establish one’s intentions before asking for a phone number. But before I can, her phone trills.
She grabs it, checks the screen, then says she has to take it. She signs something to Devon, who nods, and then gives me a quick goodbye wave before they leave the shop together.
I sigh, shrugging. “What can you do?”
But as I make my way out of the café, I keep wondering if, with that surname, she’s related to my friend.
And whether I have the guts to ask him.
When Saturday night rolls around, I decide to quiz Ransom after the fundraiser ends. But it turns out I don’t need to.
Because the next time I hear the name Tempest North, it’s when I learn that she was the bidder on the phone during my turn at the auction.
And she’s won a date with me.
Tempest
* * *
The night of the auction
* * *
I’m due at the theater at seven thirty for an eight o’clock curtain. As soon as Ransom slides into his Lyft, I turn to my trusty companion.
My phone.
As I march to the theater district, I search for the details on the auction tonight.
The names of the players.
How it works.
And what to do if you can’t be there.
As I cross Fifth Avenue, I learn you can buy a virtual ticket. And you can place a virtual bid. And you can set your bidding limits.
I flash back to Thursday.
To randomly meeting the Yankees pitcher, to that crackle of connection I felt with him, and to that moment at the end.
When I was sure he was asking for my number, for a way to reach out and see me again.
But then I had to dash.
Now, I’ve learned that guy is Marty Boy—my brother’s friend—and he’s going to be up for auction tonight, a date with him going to the highest bidder.
I draw a deep breath, letting it fuel this crazy decision.
I reach another crosswalk and stop to wait at the light.
I have the money. That email from my agent made it damn clear I have plenty to spend.
And it goes to a good cause—his charity of choice supports athletic programs for disadvantaged youth.
Why shouldn’t I do this?
Why the hell not?
It’s been a while since I met someone I clicked with. As in, years. Most men I meet are flummoxed by my twin careers—they don’t know what to make of them or how to accommodate my crazy schedule. I’m either feverishly penning columns and books, studying the market, or prepping to interpret. It’s hard to make time for a date, let alone for browsing the apps trying to meet someone.
This seems like going from zero to sixty on the find-a-date highway, but if there was ever a time to go for it, it’s now.
I felt the chemistry, the connection.
I fill out the form, consider what I’d be willing to spend, and enter the numbers.
Then I add another zero.
There. Done. I turn my phone off, drop it in my purse, and ignore it until Hamilton dies.
As I make my way out of the theater, I turn on my phone, and a message blares at me from the auction organizers.
A burst of excitement flares inside my chest.
I hold my breath as I click open the text, hoping it’s good news.
* * *
You’ve won a date with Adrian Martinez.
* * *
It’s the best of news.
And I can’t wait.
Martinez
* * *
A few days later
* * *
The door to the bullpen swings open, and I jog across the field, wiggling my hand in my well-worn glove then adjusting the bill of my cap, as is my custom.
When I reach the pitcher’s mound, the music crests, the crowd roars, and I nod to Jose Carnale, who’s waiting there, his mask pushed back from his face.
We go over the pitches for the guy at the plate—Baltimore’s slugger has been belting homers all season, not to mention plenty of doubles that send runners home. With a man on second, another on first, and only one run keeping us ahead, there is no room for error.
No room to let the runners move around the bases.
“Get ’em with the cutter,” he says, then claps me on the back and trots to home plate.
I inhale deeply and visualize my ninety-eight-miles-per-hour cut fastball whizzing across the plate, teasing the batter and making him think it’ll be straight down the middle.
But it’ll veer to the outside corner, breaking at just the last second.
As I go into the windup, then throw the first pitch, it breaks beautifully, tricking the batter in a futile swing.
And that’s how it goes for all three batters.
The first one strikes out looking, the next swinging, and the third pops up a lazy fly ball to first.
I record my thirtieth save of the season, we wrap up the home stand, and I eventually shower and make my way out of the stadium, finding my driver easily and heading away from the Bronx. But I don’t go to my home off of Park Avenue.
Instead, I stop at a quiet restaurant in the East Nineties, a ramen joint that’s up a flight of stairs and around a corner. The type of place with so many dark nooks it might as well invest in them.
Once I’m there, the hostess shows me to a quiet corner table, and my pulse spikes when I see the brunette with the blue glasses.
Spikes so much higher and faster than when I’m o
n the mound.
Tempest rises, smiles, and says, “Nice save, Tree.”
“Nice job watching my game,” I say, then slide a hand around her waist, my fingers skimming over her lower back.
She murmurs, slinking closer to me. “Who said I watched it? Maybe I just looked up the stats online to impress you.”
I grin, yanking her closer, her firm, lush body pressed against mine. “I’m impressed, then. So very impressed, mi querida.”
She trembles as I call her my darling. “Fine, maybe I did watch. Also, I love when you talk to me in other languages.”
I tuck a finger under her chin, lifting her face so our eyes meet. “Then I’ll keep doing it. But first did you enjoy what you saw when you watched me?”
“A little. I think maybe I enjoy the feel of you a little more.”
I shake my head in admiration. This woman. Her appetite. It matches mine perfectly.
That I discovered earlier this week when we met for lunch after she won me. The meal was good. The dessert of her was even better.
I experienced it again the next day when we met in the park and walked for an hour, talking about pizza and cats and New York and growing up mostly in Spain, a bit in Italy, and now and then in France, as well as her family and her fascinating careers , then decided being horizontal would be more fun than being upright.
And it was. Oh hell, yes, it was.
Now I have the distinct feeling she wants that again.
“Tempest, are you trying to distract me from eating?”
Her lips curve into a naughty grin. “Oh, no. I don’t want to distract you from eating at all.”
“So deliciously dirty,” I tell her, then, in the middle of the tiny hole-in-the-wall restaurant, I haul her in for a kiss. I gather her close, bend my knees, since she’s a little shorter, and brush my lips against hers.
It starts chastely, as far as kisses go with women you already adore.
But it doesn’t stay chaste for long.
She loops her arms around my neck. I wrap mine tighter around her waist, and I draw her snug against me, all while kissing her more deeply, more passionately, with more tongue and teeth and fire.
She’s heating me up with her sexy sighs, her soft skin, and the way she melts into my touch, her body liquid against mine.
When I break the kiss, she nibbles on the corner of her lips. “Hungry?”
“I am ravenous,” I tell her.
We head to the hostess stand, place an order for delivery, and then book it to my place a few blocks away.
Once inside my penthouse, I press her against the wall.
“Cuore mio,” I whisper. “Italian for my heart. I thought about you all day, cuore mio.”
“Not while you were on the mound in the ninth,” she says, grabbing at my shirt and tugging it over my head.
“Fine, not then. You caught me on a technicality,” I say, stripping off her skirt then pulling at her shirt. “But the rest of the day.”
“All day? That’s a long time to be thinking of me.”
I growl, reach for her wrists, and pin them over her head. I slam my pelvis against her, letting her feel the length of me, the truth of my desire for her. “Does it feel like I’m lying?”
She groans, shaking her head. “No, but you can show me the proof just to be sure.”
And I do just that. Unhooking her bra. Tugging off her panties.
Finding a condom and then fucking her.
Hard, beautifully, and passionately up against the wall.
“So fucking gorgeous,” I groan.
“Harder, more,” she urges.
“And so greedy, mi querida. So greedy when you want my cock . . . deep in you.”
“I do, oh God, I do,” she murmurs as I thrust deeper, stroke faster, and slide my fingers between her legs and over that delicious rise of her, where she wants me the most.
“Oh, yes you do, and you’ll get it. I’ll make you come so damn hard.”
A minute later, she’s crying out, shouting, babbling, groaning as she comes apart.
And I follow her there, shuddering, cursing as an orgasm wracks my body.
After we clean up, I take her in my arms and ask her to spend the night.
She says yes.
The next night, after Fitz’s wedding, she meets me here too, and we do it again and again and again.
As she curls up beside me in bed after midnight, she says, “I should tell my brother about us.”
“Yes, you should tell him you won me and had to have me. And now I have to have you over and over.”
“Is that what I should say?” she asks with a sassy lift of her brow.
“Maybe not all that,” I tease, running my fingers down her waist. “But we should let him know I’ll be seeing you as much as I possibly can—it seems I’m already addicted to you.”
“And you haven’t even had your official date with me yet,” she says.
I shrug happily, draw her close, and drop a kiss onto her forehead. “When you know, you know.”
And I know that there’s something between us.
A few days later, we go on a double date, of all things.
We take pictures for social media. We tag each other and offer cute write-ups about the auction and the charities, snapping pictures as we walk through the Museum of Natural History, then watch a sunset in the park and drink milkshakes.
At the end of the night, as the four of us wander through the park, I fall back with Ransom while Teagan and Tempest move ahead. “Don’t think for a second this changes anything between you and me.”
The hockey star scoffs. “It changes nothing, asshole.”
“Not a damn thing, you ugly bastard.”
Hearing us, Tempest shrugs, and Teagan laughs, saying, “Boys will be boys.”
And that’s fine by me.
Then I say to my buddy, “By the way, about that bet . . . I’m glad you won.”
He shoots me a look. “You are? Even though you had to pay up?”
“Crazy, I know. But I could tell you liked her. I could tell you wanted to be with her.” I shrug. “Maybe you needed a little competitive nudge.”
“Maybe I did,” he says. “Thanks for giving it to me. She’s pretty amazing.”
“She is, and don’t you ever lose sight of that.”
“I’ll do my best. Also, asshole, same for you with my sister.”
“Don’t worry, Puck Boy. I’ll take good care of the woman I’m already falling in love with.”
Ransom offers a fist for knocking, and I knock back.
Life is very, very good.
I’d like to tell that reporter that it’s only gotten better since the day he interviewed me.
Especially since later that night when we’re alone, she loops her arms around me, and asks if I can dirty talk to her in French too.
“Mais oui, mon cheri.”
And then I slide into that language, tell her all the filthy things I’ll do to her, then show her too.
Soon after that, I say something else. Something sweet, rather than dirty.
Tempest, je t’aime.
Which I plan on saying in every language.
Ransom
* * *
Look, all I’m saying is I had a feeling.
And I was right.
So there.
Epilogue
Ransom
* * *
A year later
* * *
When the season ends with a gorgeous Stanley Cup in my hands, I think my life can’t get better.
Because really, this is the motherfucking tops.
This is what I’ve played my ass off for my whole life over.
This chance.
This victory.
This Cup.
And it is awesome.
It is magic and moonlight and everything good in the world.
Plus, the Yankees are having a killer start to the season and that makes my sister all kinds of happy.
Yay, us
.
The next morning, my wife smiles when I wake and tells me she has news.
“What’s that, sunshine?”
From her spot in bed, she grabs something from the nightstand and waggles it. A white stick with two pink lines. “Looks like the Stanley Cup winner is going to be a dad.”
And yeah, my life keeps getting better. I wrap my arm around her, kiss her like crazy, then slide a hand over her belly.
“Looks like we scored quite a goal.”
She kisses me back, smiling for days. “I’d absolutely say we did.”
And even though winning the Cup feels awesome, this right here is my real win in life.
* * *
THE END
* * *
If you missed Dean and Fitz’s romance, it’s available everywhere in A GUY WALKS INTO MY BAR, an irresistible USA Today Bestseller!
Don’t miss the book early readers are calling my sexiest ever! That’s ONE EXQUISITE TOUCH and you’ll want to meet Cole and his heroine, the rival hotel owner across the street from him! It’s available everywhere and it’s scorching!
Exciting news, friends! I wrote a sexy romantic comedy with Joe Arden—the popular and award-winning romance narrator who voices many of my heroes in audio! Not only does he have a sexy-as-sin voice, he’s funny AF and he can write hot scenes with me! Sweet scenes too! And emotional ones! Our sexy rom-com HOW TO GET LUCKY is coming to you in January and you can preorder it everywhere! Check out the prologue below!
Prologue
* * *
I don’t have to see something to believe it. Don’t have to experience something to know I’d like it.
I’ve never vacationed in Fiji, for instance, but I’m 100 percent confident I’d love every second in that tropical paradise.