“So you’re beating yourself up because you’re doing what makes you happy?”
“Who says I’m beating myself up?”
And he wondered if she was really happy. “I do. Journalism is an exciting career.”
“Teaching can be, too.”
“Teaching is a grueling, thankless career and you know it. I’m sure it was a tough career choice to make.”
“But I loved it. I loved the classes, loved my students when I was tutoring, and student teaching. Why didn’t I choose that instead?”
“Because you didn’t love it enough?”
She sighed. “Maybe. I don’t know. It’s not that I don’t like this—” She looked at him. “This used to fuel me. And the opportunity I had to do sportscasting for a network. God, a year ago I would have killed for a spot like that.”
“But?”
“But then, you know, the stuff with my dad happened.”
“And it threw you off. It banked the fire some.”
“I guess so. Lately I’ve been in some kind of funk and I can’t seem to drag myself out of it.”
“Because you miss your dad, and that’s okay.”
“It’s been long enough. I shouldn’t still feel this way.”
“I don’t think you can put a timeline on grief. You feel it and it consumes you until it doesn’t anymore.”
She looked over at him. “You speak like you know about it.”
“I’ve lost some people I care about, so yeah. I do know how it feels. And I cared about your dad, too. Losing him was hard on me. I still feel like there’s a hole, like something’s missing in my life.”
She laid her hand on his arm. “I know you cared deeply for my dad. He loved you, too. He loved all you guys like you were his kids.”
“Not as much as he loved you. He talked about you all the time. He was so damn proud of you, Haven. And no matter what choices you make, he’d still be proud of you.”
She nodded, and he saw the tears fill her eyes.
“Yeah.”
She stood and started up the steps. “I think that’s enough playtime. How about we get back to work?”
He’d started this with his conversation about her dad. She’d been relaxed and having fun, and now she was hurting again. Time to change the mood.
“I don’t know. You look like you might need to get dunked.”
Before she could object, he stood, swooped her up into his arms, and dunked them both underwater.
She came up sputtering, parting her hair that had fallen in front of her face.
“Goddammit, Trevor. Talk about a blindside.”
He laughed and shook his head back and forth to clear the water from his eyes and his hair from his face.
Haven pushed away, shoving her palm over the surface of the water to splash at him. She swam to the stairs and climbed out.
“Oh, come on, Haven.”
“Whatever. You need to find my sunglasses, which are no doubt at the bottom of the pool somewhere, thanks to you dunking me.”
“Yes, ma’am.” He dove down and searched, finding her glasses resting on the bottom of the pool. When he came up, he only had a second to blink before Haven cannonballed into the pool next to him. Water catapulted over his head like a tsunami. Now it was his turn to sputter.
He swiped his face and turned to see her grinning at him. She took her sunglasses from him and slid them on. “Just a little payback,” she said, before swimming away.
“Oh, I don’t think so.” He took off after her.
She laughed, then shrieked when he grasped her ankle and pulled her back. He tugged her against him, cradling her in his arms so she couldn’t escape, though she tried.
“Hey, you started it,” she said.
“And you volleyed back. That means we’re at war.”
Her body felt good against his. He liked holding her, liked seeing her breasts up close. And okay, so he was a little voyeuristic. Who could blame him, since Haven was beautiful, had a great body, and he liked to hear her laugh.
“War, huh? I do like a challenge.”
“Not much you can do about it in your current position.”
“You wouldn’t think so, would you?” Until she tugged at a few of his chest hairs, causing him to yelp and let go of her. Then she dove under the water and did the unthinkable. She jerked his board shorts down, then swam away in a hurry. By the time he’d tugged them back up, she was already out of the pool, offering up a smug smile as she reached for her towel.
“Oh, now it’s on,” he said, climbing out of the pool and coming out after her with deliberate intent.
She backed away. “Hey. It was a means to an end, Trevor. I was trying to get free.”