A Numbers Game (4 page)

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Authors: Tracy Solheim

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BOOK: A Numbers Game
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“Heath,” she pleaded, but he wasn’t done reacquainting himself with her body just yet. He kissed his way to her navel, snagging his fingers in her panties as he moved lower. Pulling the panties over her hips, he trailed his lips along the inside of her thighs and the backs of her knees before drawing the piece of silk and lace over her ankles and tossing it to the floor.

“Heath, I want you to kiss me.” She made another fruitless grab for his biceps.

He hooked one of her knees over his shoulder and she rose up on her elbows, her face flushed and her eyes frantic. Heath quirked an eyebrow at her. “I am going to kiss you, beautiful.”

She let loose another breathy sigh and Heath almost laughed at her frustration. “This used to be your favorite part,” he said. “Or should I skip it?” He had no intention of skipping any part of tonight. In fact, he intended to practice each play until they’d perfected it. But Merrit was getting that squinty look again, which meant she was thinking too damn much. He knew one way to stop that. As Heath put his mouth to her, she collapsed onto the mattress, her fingers clutching the bedspread. Minutes later she was screaming his name and memories of nights spent making love to her in his South Bend apartment flooded his mind.
This
was what he wanted. She was
who
he wanted.

Heath ripped open the foil package of the condom and rolled it on before making his way back up her body. She was breathless and wide-eyed as he settled himself between her legs. Her face was stained a delicate pink and her heart was racing—or possibly it was his—as his skin met hers. “Is this what you want, beautiful?” he asked as he nuzzled her neck.

“God, yes,” she said, wrapping a foot over his calf to pin him to her.

“Tell me what else you want, Merrit.” He stroked a hand over her flat abdomen, moving lower toward the Promised Land.

“You are all I ever . . .” She stopped midsentence, her pliant body going stiff beneath him. Heath rose up on his elbows to stare into her face. Her eyes had refocused a bit and her lips were set in a firm line as if she were struggling to lock the rest of her statement inside. Heath was desperate to know what she’d intended to say. He rocked his hips against her sensitive core to get her attention, but that only caused her eyes to roll back in her head.

“What else do you want, Merrit?” he demanded. Heath knew what he wanted.
All of her.

“I told you,” she moaned. “I want you to kiss me.” She wrapped her fingers around his skull and pulled him in for a deep, searing kiss, one that nearly wrecked him, damn near splitting him two. His hands found hers and their fingers laced together as he finally thrust into her heat. She breathed his name like a prayer and Heath was once again where he belonged. He dropped his head next to hers, his mouth finding that sweet spot where her neck met her shoulder, and he began to move. And she moved with him, matching his pace. And it was good. Better than good. It was perfect.

He whispered lusty words of encouragement to her while her hands white-knuckled his ass. His mouth melded with hers and they climbed to a frenzied pitch. Heath couldn’t wait to reach the end, yet he wanted to be inside this woman forever. He stretched up on his elbows, dragging his fingers through her hair as she cried out his name again. Heath watched, transfixed, as she shattered beneath him, her face awash with bliss. Then, with a rock of his hips, Merrit’s body squeezed tightly around him, bringing him to his own powerful release.

Four

“You had the tattoo removed,” Heath said, his finger lightly tracing the bare skin where her shamrock had once been. Merrit thought she heard a hint of sorrow in his voice, but she refused to feel guilty. The tattoo had been a part of his ruse, a way to score points in an elaborate contest among his teammates to see how far he could get with her. It hadn’t been hard for him to convince her to agree to get his-and-her ink. She’d been a naïve, starry-eyed freshman, spellbound into believing that a gorgeous athlete like Heath Gibson would be interested in the boring Callahan. Merrit stupidly believed the matching tats represented a permanent bond between the two of them, one that would last a lifetime.

Until she’d found the list and realized what a patsy she’d been.

She rolled over on top of his hard body, slick from the exertion of their lovemaking, and nibbled at the side of his mouth. “I told you, no talking.”

Laughter rumbled in his chest as he threaded his fingers through her hair. “Tell me about him.”

“Who?” she asked, tracing the column of his neck with her lips.

“The fiancé who obviously didn’t keep you satisfied.”

Merrit smiled against the smooth skin of his pectoral muscles. For weeks, she’d believed she’d been the one to let Grant down—in and out of the bedroom. Not the other way around. But one night—heck, a half hour—in bed with Heath had disproven that theory. She was a passionate woman; Grant had just been ineffective in rousing those passions. Kylee could have him. Merrit felt lighthearted and liberated that Heath recognized the situation for what it had been.

She laid her hands on his chest, propping her chin on top of them. “Who says I’m satisfied now?”

Heath’s lips curved into a smug grin as his finger traced over the telltale flush on her skin. “You’re beautiful when you’re hot and bothered.”

Her skin grew warmer and Merrit bit her lower lip to keep a sigh from escaping.

“My fiancé was too busy satisfying his assistant,” she said, her belly tightening with embarrassment. It wasn’t as if she was sharing a secret with Heath. She’d vowed never to do that again. But the details of Grant’s speedy marriage were available online with the click of a button and there was no sense in hiding it.

His eyes narrowed and his fingers stilled in her hair. “That couldn’t have made him too popular in your father’s agency.”

Heath’s implication that Grant was only marrying her to move up in the firm stung, despite the fact that it was the truth. How had Heath picked up on that when everyone else around her had missed it?

“I’m surprised your brother hasn’t severed one of his limbs yet.”

Merrit smiled, thinking about which limb she’d like Blake to lop off. “I’m pretty sure Blake believes unplanned fatherhood was punishment enough for Grant.”

This time, Heath’s entire body tensed beneath her. He muttered an obscenity and something about killing Grant himself as he tried to pull her down to capture her mouth. But Merrit shook her head; she didn’t want a kiss born out of pity.

“What about you?” she asked, redirecting the conversation away from her. “What ended your marriage?”

His hands found their way to her spine where they gently traced a path to her hips. “Nothing as ugly,” he said, his eyes taking in the shadows on the ceiling. “We both just wanted different things out of a marriage and the relationship between us wasn’t strong enough to overcome those differences.”

“Like what kind of differences?” she heard herself asking even as her brain was reminding the rest of her not to care.

“I wanted the whole package: a house, kids, maybe a dog. And she . . . didn’t. She enjoyed life as a celebrity and didn’t want to give that up.”

Her chest seized at the idea of Heath having children with another woman. Funny, she hadn’t felt that way when she found out Kylee was pregnant with Grant’s child, and the idea crossed her mind that she was perhaps a bit of a hypocrite.
Or foolish
.

“I thought we weren’t talking,” he murmured as his wicked finger stroked the seam between her thighs.

Merrit gasped and her insides turned molten. She wondered how she could feel so satisfied and still want him again so powerfully. He smiled in triumph when, without conscious thought, her legs opened wider. Shifting down farther onto his hand, she flicked her tongue over his nipple.

“That’s it,” Heath said, flipping her over onto her back. “You’ve obviously been neglected way too long. Let me show you how a real man takes care of his woman.”

She wasn’t his woman anymore and she’d never be again. But she wasn’t so foolish that she wouldn’t enjoy what he was offering. Besides, for all she knew she’d be experiencing a sexual drought after tonight. And Heath definitely knew how to take care of a woman.

He took his time, tantalizing her body with his mouth and his hands, making her skin heat with desire everywhere he touched. Her insides ached and her hips refused to stay still beneath his heavy, hot weight. Their bodies slid against one another, creating a friction that Merrit was sure would ignite the room at any point. All the while, Heath whispered his very own play-by-play, telling her exactly what he was going to do to her and then doing it with marvelous precision. The intimacy and the eroticism of their lovemaking made Merrit’s pulse pound wildly, as she strained to meet his every move. Her hands struggled to find purchase on the slick planes of his muscled body, finally fisting in his thick hair as she nipped at his shoulder in exasperation. Giving in, she allowed Heath to take her over the edge again. And then again for good measure. When his mouth found hers, she melted into him, squeezing him tightly until he came in a rush, growling her name.

They lay there for a time, tangled in one another’s sated limbs, both trying to regulate their breathing. Merrit absently slid her fingers back and forth along his spine as her mind tried to make sense of the contentment lacing through her body. Not just physical satisfaction, but a bone-deep gratification that might have even reached her soul. She’d never believed in the abstract concept of a soul mate.
Until now.
And wasn’t it just her dumb luck to have Heath Gibson as her soul mate, a man she could never trust.

“Hey,” he said softly, his thumb brushing away a tear that had leaked out of her eye. “What’s wrong, beautiful?”

Everything was wrong. It had all sounded so easy back at the gala. Use Heath like he’d used her. Unlock her passion and obliterate Grant’s ugly assertions. She’d found her passion, all right, but what had it cost her? This was why Merrit didn’t stray from the course: she always ended up getting hurt. If Heath didn’t leave now, she’d do something crazy, like forgive him and beg him to stay.

Summoning her strength, she unwrapped her body from the cocoon of his larger one and slid off the bed. She kept her back to him as she pulled on her dressing robe. “You need to go.”

“Go?”

The word came out of Heath’s mouth with such force it practically ricocheted around the room. Merrit squelched down a shiver as she pulled the belt of her robe tighter and turned to face Heath. Her breath caught in her throat at the sight of him ready to pounce. His body—tanned from years of living and playing football in Miami—was dark and hard against the pale sheets. There was a small bruise forming along his collarbone from where she might have done more than just nibble. His hair was unruly from her fingers running through it. Those coffee eyes were narrowed but the heat within them still made her insides quake. Heath Gibson was every woman’s fantasy. And Merrit was a disappointment to all of womankind because she was kicking him out before the night was over.

“Yes, Heath, go. As in leave and don’t come back.” She was amazed at how calm her voice sounded when the rest of her felt like collapsing onto the bedroom floor.

“Whoa, Merrit, what’s going on here?” He began to scramble off the bed but Merrit put a hand up to stop him. She didn’t think she would be able to be so bold if he touched her again.

“What’s going on here is you are leaving.”

He sank back down on the bed again. “Merrit . . .”

“No!”

Heath let out an exasperated sigh as he wrapped his fingers around his head and squeezed. “If this is about before, I told you we needed to talk about it first.”

“And I told you, no talking! I don’t want to hear your excuses. Or your lies.”

He jerked his head up to stare at her, his face incredulous. “This”—he punched a fist into the mattress—“isn’t lying!”

Merrit took a step back in order to maintain her balance. “That”—she gestured to the bed—“was awesome,” she gulped. “But, like you, I want more. And I can’t have more with a man I don’t trust.”

He surged to his feet. “Damn it, that’s not fair! You haven’t even bothered to hear me out. You ran away from school without giving me a chance to explain. Ignoring my calls and letters. Hiding in Europe for the summer. Hell, you’re running away right now.”

Tears stung the backs of her eyes and Merrit had to swallow around the lump in her throat to get her words out. “I don’t have to hear you out. I know who you are.” She made her way over to the small writing desk in the corner of the room and pulled out the weathered Bible that Grandma Annie had given her for her first Communion. Inside it she tucked all her most treasured mementos: ticket stubs from her first Maroon 5 concert and the Blackhawks Stanley Cup Finals game and her acceptance letter to Notre Dame. She pulled out a worn piece of notebook paper, folded neatly into a perfect square.

“I know
exactly
who you are,” she said as she gingerly tossed the paper onto the bed between them.

Heath glanced between Merrit and the folded sheet of paper on the bed, a look of pained resignation on his face. Obviously he recognized what it was. The final bubble of hope hiding in Merrit’s chest burst. She stumbled toward the bathroom. “Please be gone when I finish in the bathroom,” she managed to choke out. “Or I’ll call my brother and he can drag you out.”

He made no protest as she locked the door behind her. She turned the shower on full blast before closing the lid to the toilet and sinking down on top of it. Merrit buried her head in her hands and allowed herself to do something she hadn’t done in nearly a decade: she cried.

Five

So that’s how she’d found out. Heath figured when Merrit had beat a hasty retreat out of South Bend all those years ago, someone had told her; most likely one of the jerks who’d come up with the game in the first place. Instead, he’d inadvertently given it away simply by leaving the stupid list lying around his apartment where she could see it.

Damn!

Heath took a swallow of coffee, reveling in the burn as it slid down his throat. His temples were throbbing again, this time from lack of sleep. He’d lain awake most of the night, the sound of her sobbing in her bathroom still echoing in his ears. It had taken every ounce of strength he had to dress and slip out of her condo when she’d been so upset. It was against his nature not to stay and talk it out or to comfort her. But he knew enough to realize a woman wasn’t rational when she was crying. So he hunkered down next door to regroup. No way in hell was he letting Merrit run away from him again.

He fingered the worn piece of paper, the incendiary that destroyed what Heath now knew had been the best relationship of his life. The familiar wave of guilt and shame washed over him and the coffee churned in his gut. It had all been a stupid prank fueled by young bravado, raging testosterone, and way too much beer. The “game” was to compromise a co-ed—the more introverted and bland the girl, the better. A list was drawn up with each item given a numerical value—the wilder the task, the greater the score. Danny Sanduchio had come up with the tattoo idea. Sadly, Heath couldn’t even remember what the end game was, what they were all vying for.

He’d been attracted to the pretty little math tutor the first day they’d met. The game just gave him an excuse to chat her up. He wouldn’t have played otherwise. From what he’d heard, the elegant raven-haired beauty came from a rich Chicago family. To hear the other students talk, Merrit was either an ice princess or harbored some social anxiety disease. But she’d been neither one of those. Behind the quiet reserve was a self-assured girl with an impish smile that made Heath want to slay dragons for her.

She hadn’t smiled last night, though. His chest ached at being denied the sight.

Heath shot out of the kitchen chair and paced to the window overlooking the street. From this same vantage point earlier that morning, he’d watched as Merrit marched down the sidewalk toward her car, escorted by her brother. The only thing in her hands had been a purse, which he took as a good sign.

Dragging his fingers through his hair, he tried to come up with a plan. One that would allow him to explain everything to her. It had never been a game to Heath. None of it. Certainly not after their first kiss. The girl he’d coaxed into kissing him all those years ago had tasted fresh and sweet. Her naiveté and her blossoming passion were addictive and, at times, it was hard to tell where he ended and she began. Throughout that spring, Heath hadn’t thought about football, his future, or anything else besides the feeling of being with Merrit. Of being inside her.
It was raw and new and . . . perfect. He just hadn’t known how perfect until he ruined it.

The Merrit he remembered no longer existed, apparently. Instead, the woman he’d had sex with last night was wild and sassy. Heath was tight and hard just thinking about her. He wanted the old Merrit, but he craved the new Merrit like a junkie needed a fix. All he had to do now was find a way to reason with her.

Heath’s phone buzzed in his pocket, startling him. It was late morning on a Saturday and the rest of the world was chugging away while he pondered the riddle that was Merrit. He glanced at the caller ID: DeShawn Wilson, the Blaze’s star running back. Heath groaned as he remembered he’d agreed to meet DeShawn and a few of the other Blaze players for a round of golf that afternoon. His situation with the Blaze players was a precarious one; he’d played in the league for ten years, but now he was responsible for coaching and disciplining other players. Coach Richardson had advised Heath not to get too chummy with his charges, but the idea of waiting around all day for Merrit to get home was making him crazy.

Hell, smashing a little white ball to smithereens suited his mood. He loved golf and it always relaxed him to play. It was definitely what he needed to clear his aching head today. He’d come up with a plan to deal with Merrit while he was on the links. And when he beat DeShawn and his teammates, he’d be asserting himself as their new position coach. Decision made, he answered the phone.

 • • • 

“You’re not eating again,” Blake whispered in Merrit’s ear.

She shoved a piece of eggs Benedict around her plate with her fork, her appetite seeming to have deserted her along with her common sense. Last night had been a colossal mistake. Clearly her heart wasn’t as hardened as she thought because this morning it felt as if it had been ripped from her chest and used for a game of pickup football. Sex with Heath had only proven to her how much she’d missed him all these years. Sure, their hot encounter the night before had gone a long way toward reviving her long-dormant passions, but it had left her feeling more alone than ever. Getting over Heath a second time was going to be excruciating because now she knew he was the one man who could spark that kind of passion in her.

When she emerged from the bathroom last night to an empty condo, she’d been both relieved and disappointed. And she hated herself for her ambivalence. Sleep had eluded her. Even freshly showered and with clean linens on the bed, Heath’s presence still lingered in her bedroom. When she closed her eyes, she could still feel his fingers on her skin, his breath whispering in her ear, and his mouth pleasuring her body.

“You’re all flushed, Mer. Are you sure you’re okay?”

She brought her hand to her cheek at Blake’s words, embarrassed by her thoughts. Glancing around the outdoor patio of the country club, she sighed with relief, as most of the other customers enjoying brunch weren’t paying any attention to her. Jay McManus, the only other person at their table, was on his cell phone, which seemed to be permanently affixed to his ear. In spite of his electronic appendage, however, Merrit doubted the man missed much, and she didn’t need McManus or her brother probing into what was really bothering her.

“It’s just a little warm out here, that’s all,” she said. “I’m fine.”

Blake breathed an explosive sigh. “I swear, I’m going to kill that man.”

Merrit was sure her blush had faded considerably at her brother’s words. As angry as she was at Heath, she didn’t want Blake tangling with him.

“If it’s the last thing I do”—he gave her hand a little squeeze—“I’m going to ruin Grant Hillier. He’ll never work in advertising in Chicago or anywhere else. Not if I can help it.”

Releasing a soft sigh of relief, Merrit relaxed. She could care less about Grant, but she wasn’t averse to using him to hide behind. After everything he’d said and done, the jerk still proved useful in distracting her family from delving too deeply into what really bothered her.

“Forget about Grant.” She patted her brother’s hand. “He’s not worth your time.” Placing her napkin on the table, she stood up. “I’m just going to walk through the air-conditioning for a minute and grab some fresh fruit from the buffet. Will you order me a ginger ale, please?” Not giving her brother a chance to tag along with her, she quickly made her way inside.

Picking up a plate from the buffet line, Merrit watched as a silver-haired gentleman carefully piled strawberries onto a plate held by an elegantly dressed woman, stooped with age. The woman’s hand shook gently, nearly sending the berries scattering across the floor, but the coy smile she gave the man lit up the room. Merrit’s belly squeezed. Her grandmother looked at her grandfather like that despite decades of marriage. Even her parents, whose relationship had been tested more than once, shared a glance laced with desire when they thought no one was looking. A sadness permeated Merrit’s bones as she realized she’d never have what the older couple had, because beneath that loving gesture and look was a solid foundation of trust. And she wasn’t going to trust a man ever again.

Mindlessly filling her plate with melon slices, she made her way back outside, hoping her brother and his friend would hurry up with whatever business they were conducting. The Callahan Agency handled all the advertising for Jay McManus’s hugely successful software company, and Merrit was sure her brother was hoping to secure the Blaze as a client once Jay took over the team’s ownership. Their friendship wasn’t necessarily a guarantee in the cutthroat business world both men inhabited, however.

“I was surprised to see Heath Gibson on the team’s coaching staff.” Her brother’s words caught Merrit off guard, nearly causing her to dump her fruit right in his lap. He speared her with his patented
what the hell?
look before grabbing her plate and gingerly placing it on the table. Arching an eyebrow at her, he continued his conversation. “I figured that guy would go on to endorsement heaven or a career in broadcasting. He’s certainly got the face and the charisma for it.”

“Yeah,” Jay said, not bothering to look up from his phone as he tapped out a text message. “Apparently he doesn’t have the brain power for broadcasting. Not right now, anyway.”

An appalled gasp escaped her mouth before she could stop it. Heath was in no way dumb! In fact, he’d been an Academic All-American at Notre Dame.

Blake chuckled. “That explains why they had a freshman tutoring him in college.”

“I never said that I tutored
him
,” she argued. “I’m pretty sure he tutored other guys on the team. And if you think he’s so stupid, why did you hire him to be a coach on your team?” she challenged Jay.

Perhaps she’d argued her point a little too vehemently, because both men were staring at her now. Her brother eyed her as if she were an alien being—it was a look she’d seen on his face repeatedly throughout her teenage years—while Jay peered at her shrewdly.

“As I won’t own the team until the end of the upcoming season, coaching decisions are left to my godfather, the current owner, and the team’s very capable general manager, Hank Osbourne. And I didn’t say Gibson was stupid, Merrit. I said he doesn’t have the brain power for broadcasting,
right now
,” Jay said quietly. “He took a wicked hit to the head last season that left him with a lingering concussion. The bright lights of a TV studio are too much for his mind to handle until it heals.”

The breath seized in Merrit’s lungs. Had Heath’s injury been that bad? She’d assumed he’d retired because he’d aged out, not because he hadn’t fully recovered from a concussion. There’d been a lot of talk lately about athletes who suffered concussions and the lasting impact they could have on player’s life. Merrit wrapped her arms around her body to keep from shivering.

“He’s going to be fine,” Jay said, as if sensing her anxiety. “When it became known that he’d have to delay his broadcasting career for a while, Matt Richardson snatched him up. Presumably because he
is
very smart.”

Merrit tried not to squirm in her chair as relief pulsed through her. She avoided her brother’s all-knowing eyes while she tried to remind herself that whatever happened to Heath didn’t concern her. She had a week left in the audit. After that, she was heading back to Chicago to heal her broken heart for good this time.

“But that doesn’t mean he can’t work as a spokesman,” her brother was saying. “Like I said, he’s got the charisma the ladies love. We can work around the bright lights.”

“As long as he’s wearing the Blaze insignia, I have no problem with it,” Jay said with a laugh before glancing back down to his phone’s keypad again.

Four hours later, after Merrit had survived the brunch and dropped her brother off at the airport, she tried in vain to focus on the audit report’s supporting documents spread out on the small dining table in her condo. But her concentration was on the fritz. Instead, she found herself worrying about Heath and his injured brain. She’d scoured the parking lot when she arrived at the condo complex earlier, but without knowing which car was his, she had no idea whether he was at home or not. Or whether he was okay
.
Surely if his injury was serious, he wouldn’t be living alone. Maybe she could just knock on his door and make sure he was alright. But that would mean having to speak with him and Merrit wasn’t prepared to do that ever again. She didn’t trust herself. Heck, she didn’t trust her traitorous body.

Heath’s body had been functioning just fine last night, she reminded herself. Her insides heated up at the thought of just exactly how fine. Jay McManus had to have been wrong about the severity of Heath’s injury.
Except Heath didn’t stay at the gala. And he’d been sitting outside in the dark
. Merrit threw down her highlighter in disgust. Here she was worried about a man she’d vowed never to see again. A man who’d preyed on her and made a fool of her. A man whose touch still had the ability to drive her insane.
She’d just go out for a quick stroll to clear her head. And while she was outside, she might check for any cars with Florida tags.

Shoving her feet into her flip-flops, she pulled the front door open and was startled to find Heath standing on the porch. Dressed in khakis and a Blaze golf shirt, his face sported a fresh hint of bronze as if he’d been outside all day, and his perpetually tousled hair stood on end, making him look rugged and sexy. In fact, the man she was picturing lying helpless in a coma looked quite healthy. And quite dangerous.

“Heath!” She nearly jumped into his arms before she thought better of it. “Are you alright?”

He pushed his sunglasses up onto his head, giving her a peek at his stormy eyes. Merrit took a step back as he stalked across the threshold. “Hell, no, I’m not alright!”

“Oh” was all she could squeeze out of her panicked lungs as Heath backed her up against the foyer wall. She wasn’t afraid
of
him. She was afraid
for
him. At least that’s what she kept telling herself.

Merrit reached up and laid her hand on the solid wall of his chest. His heart beat steadily beneath her palm. He seemed to be breathing fine, also. The injury was to his brain, she reminded herself, and she risked a glance back into his eyes.
Big mistake
. Her insides nearly melted at what she saw reflected back at her.

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