The Bromance Book Club - Lyssa Kay Adams Page 0,87
finger and all the endorsement deals that should have come with it!”
Thea sputtered like a rusty tractor engine after a long winter in the barn. But when she finally got into gear, her rage propelled her forward with a kick. “My husband? Let’s talk about your husband and that two-run homer he allowed in the third inning! Or how about that double that gave the Cubs the lead?”
Rachel reared back, looking surprised. “Well if your husband had done anything at the plate in game seven—”
“There wouldn’t even have been a game seven if not for what my husband did in game six!”
It was exactly the opening Rachel had been waiting for. Her lips pursed, and one perfect eyebrow arched in derision. “And if you were any kind of baseball wife, you would’ve been at game seven.”
“What the hell is going on?” The booming voice of her husband brought Thea around in a whirl. Gavin stood a few feet away, face stormy.
Rachel snorted out a laugh. “Aw, here he is. The big strong man to the rescue.”
Except the big, strong man wasn’t alone. Rachel’s husband, or maybe soon-to-be ex-husband, rounded the corner with what appeared to be half the team behind him. That same flash of empathy rose again, and Thea considered for a moment just walking away.
But that’s what she used to do.
She was done walking away from the fight.
Thea stepped closer to Rachel, so close the woman had to take a wavering step back. “You want to know what kind of baseball wife I am? I’m the kind of baseball wife who had to give birth alone because her husband was gone. I’m the kind of baseball wife who had to spend twenty-four hours in the emergency room with twins by herself because they had a stomach flu during the season. I’m the kind of baseball wife who still isn’t sure the difference between a no-hitter and a perfect game, and you know what? It doesn’t matter. Because I didn’t marry baseball. I married Gavin, a man with more integrity than you could ever dream of having.”
Rachel actually looked a bit afraid now, and she took another retreating step on her own, her back hitting the corridor wall. Thea stepped forward one more time. “And I’m the kind of baseball wife who put her own goddamn dreams on hold for three years so I could support my husband’s career and try to fit in with the likes of you, but that is a mistake I am finally fixing. And the only reason you actually hate me is because you don’t have the guts to do the same. You’d rather lash out, blame other people. But no one broke up you and Jake but you.”
She spun on her heel but then stopped and came back for one last comment. “And for your information, yes, Gavin stutters in bed. And it’s fucking beautiful.”
And then, without even looking at Gavin or the rest of the team, Thea lifted her head and stalked away.
CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE
Gavin caught up with Thea at the elevator. She’d retrieved her scarf and her purse.
“Thea—”
She held up a hand. “Don’t. She had it coming.”
The elevator arrived, and he followed her in. She was still breathing hard from the argument, and her words reverberated in the charged air between them. Yes, Gavin stutters in bed. And it’s fucking beautiful.
He should be humiliated. Furious. But he wasn’t. He was hard as a fucking rock.
Thea met his eyes and he felt a shock wave all the way to his groin. She was as turned on as he was. They peeled away from their corners at the same time and collided like two mating animals on a crash course with nature’s primal calling. Gavin stumbled, and together they fell against the wall.
“You’re not faking it tonight,” he growled into her mouth. “You hear me? You’re not faking it ever again.”
He’d never driven so fast through the city. The hotel was only a mile away, but it felt like the far side of the Earth. He screeched to a stop at the entrance and tossed the keys to the valet. The kid could keep the car for all he cared.
Gavin grabbed their bags from the back seat. Thea waited for him on the sidewalk, eyes dark and hooded with desire.
His wife has having an orgasm tonight if it killed him.
Checking in took no more than five minutes, but it felt like an hour. In the elevator, they collided again with hands and lips, stumbling