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Dirty Game:A Secret Baby Sports Romance(28)

By:Violet Paige


Girl, why did you have to kiss me like that?





The small crowd erupted in applause. Blake looped the guitar strap over his head and placed the instrument next to his stool.

I had no words. My heart pounded in my chest. He had written everything I  had been feeling for the past month. All of the things I tried to  escape and ignore in Dallas, he had managed to capture in a song-an  amazing, beautiful, heartbreaking song.

The butterflies in my stomach were now a full flock of seagulls. If I didn't talk to him, I was going to explode.

I stood, ready to intercept his path to the bar. As he made his way off  the stage, he shook a man's hand and then, in an instant, Cece was next  to him, handing him a beer. He squeezed her shoulder before taking a few  swallows.

I stopped in mid-stride. Cece was planted under his arm, smiling and  looking right at him. Her dark, pixie haircut was perfectly styled-too  perfectly, I thought as I exhaled. This whole thing was a disaster.  Complete disaster. Why hadn't Cole been a little more forthcoming with  the details of Blake's Dock House nights? Maybe he wanted me to find  Blake with another girl. Maybe he thought this was what I deserved.

The exit to the Dock House was about twenty paces behind me. Maybe I  could turn and walk out before Blake saw me standing there like a total  idiot. This didn't have to get any worse than it already was. I reached  down for my purse and slung the leather bag over my shoulder. Blake  looked content with his arm draped around Cece. He hadn't noticed I was  there. He wouldn't even notice I was gone.

I'd tell him another time. Another way. But not like this in the face of  utter humiliation. I couldn't watch him move on with another girl.

I walked toward the door with every intention of going straight to the  car. But I couldn't help it. As much as I wanted to walk right out the  door, I needed one last look. One reminder that he had moved on and I  was the one holding on to a summer crush. One more snapshot of Blake to  remember. This moment needed to be preserved.

Because I would need it later when I held our baby. I would need to  remember why I had to do this on my own. I couldn't raise a baby with a  man who didn't want me. A man who didn't love me as wildly as I loved  him. What kind of life would I offer our child that way? This baby  wasn't bigger than a grain of rice and I already felt the strongest  connection and maternal instinct for its happiness. It was my  responsibility to give our baby everything in this world. And that might  not include two parents who were in a relationship together, but it  could include a mother who loved tirelessly.

I couldn't put it all together in this second. Blake would have a role.  He could be involved, but like hell if I was going to confess every love  sick emotion I had felt. My heart broke and shattered with the  realization that I had missed my chance with him again.

As I pivoted on my heels and looked across the bar, he saw me. Shit!  Panicked and flustered, I slid through the narrow entrance and ran to  the car. Oh my God, where were my keys? I fumbled through my oversized  bag in front of the driver side door and dropped the keys on the  pavement.

"Shit." I crouched down, searching under the car for the keys.

"Sierra?" Blake walked over to where I was a shaking, nervous wreck. He  dropped to the parking lot and scooped up the keys from behind the front  wheel.

"Hey." I let a nervous reply eek from my lips as I tried to stand.

Blake hopped to his feet. "What are you doing here?"

"I-I … " None of the prepared speeches I had rehearsed on the plane or in  the car seemed to fit this moment. Seeing him with Cece had changed all  of that.

I'm having your baby seemed like a ridiculous thing to say right now.

"I don't even know what to say." He stepped closer, causing my senses to buzz from the nearness.

"I should get going. Just popped by to say hi." I reached for the keys that were in his fist.

Blake scanned my eyes. "What? That's it? I haven't seen you in almost two months and you're just out of here?"

I froze. What in the hell did I do now?





38





Blake





I had no idea what was going on with this girl. I thought I had seen a  damn mirage when I looked over at the bar door and locked eyes with her.  Nothing was going to stop me from running after that blonde, just in  case it was Sierra. I knew I had it bad.

There wasn't enough whiskey or beer last night to drink her out of my head, and I had sure as hell tried.                       
       
           



       

I thought I saw Sierra everywhere I went. The girl I spun around in the  grocery store yesterday almost clocked me. Even my cousin, Cece, had  started teasing me about it. The music helped; singing about Sierra  helped. When those notes were in the air and I could sing about her, my  heart didn't hurt quite as much for that one song. Taking a hit on the  field, or scoring a touchdown took the edge off. But, now here she was,  already running out of town, and she hadn't been here five minutes.

"I shouldn't have come. Big, big mistake." She fiddled with the door  handle, suddenly very clumsy. "I don't know what I was thinking. I'll  call you later."

I reached around her and took the keys from her hand. "Call me later?"

I wasn't letting her out of here until we had it out. I was still a  little drunk. Drunk enough I wasn't going to hold anything back.

Her eyes fell to the pavement. She pinched her lips together.

"Say something before you leave. Have a beer with me at least?" I realized I might be begging a little, but this was crazy.

"I think you've got that covered. Cece's keeping a barstool warm for you, isn't she?"

"What?"

"I saw you two. You don't have to say anything else. We'll talk another time. Just let me go, Blake."

I laughed. Once it started, I couldn't stop. I wiped the tears that started squeezing from the corners of my eyes.

"I'm glad my humiliation is so funny to you." Sierra stood, looking disgusted as I tried to control the jolts of laughter.

"You-you're mad, because you think I'm with Cece."

"Aren't you?" She sputtered the question.

"No, she's my cousin. She's here every week with her friends." I stopped  laughing long enough to brush a lock of her hair away from her face.  "She heard I was here for tonight so she didn't want to miss it. Don't  know when I'll be back."

Sierra's eyes softened. "So, you're not with someone else?"

My hand moved along her neck and snaked its way through her hair. "No,  didn't you hear that song I wrote about you? I am not with anyone else."  I was still trying to wrap my head around her being here.

"Just how many freakin' cousins do you have?" I could see the blaze in her eyes.

I looked toward the sky to count. "You want a first cousin number or what?"

She shoved my chest. "That's not funny. Oh my God, I thought you were  with someone, and I flew here and I didn't stop driving until I found  you. I couldn't stop and now … "

My wide eyes conveyed all the surprise I was feeling. "You were that serious to get here?"

She bit her lower lip. "Yeah."

"Why? Why now?"

She shivered. "Do you think we could go inside, but maybe not here?" She  rubbed the sides of her arms. "I don't think I can face Cece after the  death stare I shot her."

I laughed. "I doubt she thought anything of it. Cece's a tough girl."

"We need to talk, Blake."

Talking could wait. There was only thing I wanted right now, and the more I played with her hair, the harder it was to deny.

I didn't need a second invitation. I pulled her into my arms and pressed  my mouth against her. Sierra wrapped her hands around my neck and  moaned. Had I let her walk away? I was a fucking idiot. She started to  giggle as I picked her up, and her legs wrapped around my hips.

"I missed you." I growled into her neck. "More than I can say in words or in a song. There's only one way to show you, darlin'."

Sierra leaned into my body. "So can we get out of the freezing cold and can finish this somewhere else?"

"Hell yeah, I wanna go." I placed Sierra's feet back on the ground and took her hand. "Come on."

Sierra looked at her car and then back to me. "You want to take my car? I don't see your truck anywhere."

"Girl, you have been gone way too long. You know the best way to travel  around here is by boat." I flashed her a smile. "We'll get your car  later. Come on." I tugged on her hand.

Sierra followed me down the boardwalk to the slip where I had tied up my boat.

"Let me untie the ropes, and I'll shove her off. Hold on." I held out a  hand to Sierra. Before she boarded, she glanced down at the side of the  nameless boat we had cruised on so many times over the summer.

Sierra settled into the bench next to my captain's seat. I tossed the ropes into the boat and started the engine.

The boat picked up speed, and the fall night encircled us as I cruised us out onto the open sound.