THANK GOODNESS FOR HARTFORD.
The two-hour drive down had given Mercer and Delante a chance to breathe the same air without shouting at each other. When they got into town, Mercer had been in luck. One of his friend Dave’s hottest kickboxing prospects was on hand and ready for a friendly spar with Boston’s finest.
Life had started to feel elemental again, his responsibilities reduced to the task of keeping Delante on track...at least for a weekend. Then Jenna’s call had come, reminding him that what he was feeling outside the ring was far from simple.
After they said goodbye he sat up in bed, watching the headlights streaming by, restless to the marrow. Knowing Jenna was back in Boston in a still-unfamiliar apartment, her dad’s apartment—struggling to make sense of what she’d learned... If only he hadn’t left her that box the one time he wasn’t going to be around to run damage control.
Midnight came and went and Mercer gave up on sleep. He tried channel surfing in an attempt to bore himself into unconsciousness, but when one o’clock arrived and he’d failed to register a single thing that’d flashed by on the screen, he turned the TV off. Turned his light on. He dressed and pocketed his keys and scribbled a note to slide under Delante’s door. Then he climbed into his car to start the long drive back to Boston.
* * *
JENNA’S EYES FLEW OPEN at the flip of a dead bolt.
She clutched Mercer’s blanket to her chin, frozen. She glanced at the clock, wondering who on earth would show up at three-thirty. An ex of his? A friend? A burglar with superior lock-picking skills? A light came on past the hall—the living room. She shot upright, hugging the covers tighter.
“Who’s there?” she shouted.
“It’s just me.”
Her heart attack ceased at the sound of Mercer’s voice, then her worries flip-flopped, humiliation taking the place of fear.
More footsteps, then he called, “Jeez, where are you?”
“I’m, um, in your room.” In your bed, under your covers. Like a moron.
He appeared in the doorway and eased the dimmer switch up. “What are you doing in here?”
Making a fool of myself. “I got overwhelmed after going through all the photos and cards in my own room. My dad’s room, you know?” Good save.
“Oh, right.”
“Sorry. That’s probably a little creepy of me.”
“Not really. Not like you haven’t slept in that bed before.”
She smirked. “True.”
He took a seat at the foot of his bed, laying a hand on her shin through the covers.
“What are you doing back?” she asked.
“I was worried about you.”
She blinked. “Worried enough to drive all the way here in the dead of night?”
“Looks that way.”
“Oh. Wow. And thank you. I feel bad now, dragging you away. I was upset—not, like, in danger or anything.”
He shrugged. “You didn’t drag me. Plus Delante’ll be happy for a chance to sleep in, and I’ll head back early. I won’t miss anything aside from a bit of rest. Looks like you managed to nod off, at least.”
“Yeah. Just not in my own room.” She rolled her eyes to admit she realized how silly she was being.
“They’re all your rooms.”
The thought stung, reminding her he might not be here much longer. And he’d be gone because of her intrusion, same as the gym, come January. The thought saddened her. Could the place have actually grown on her, so soon? Possibly. And like it or not, she was falling for Mercer.
She sighed. “I should really give you your bed back.”
“Move over,” he said softly.
She slid to the side and he lay down beside her on top of the covers, clasping his fingers over his ribs.
You really like him, a thought whispered. More than you’ve liked anybody before. And so, so fast. “It was awfully nice of you, caring enough to come all the way back here.”
“Well, I feel sort of responsible for you, with your dad gone. Not like your guardian or anything—nothing patronizing.”
“Of course not.”
“Just like... The same way I’m happy to watch over the gym for him.” He turned to look at her, eyes full of kindness.
“I don’t know what to make of him anymore.” Him or this man he’d mentored.
“You still think he was involved in that shady shit that went down all those years ago?”
“I have no clue. But I grew up assuming he really didn’t care about me, and now I know he did and I feel...just awful. It would’ve meant so much to him, my sending him a letter, a Father’s Day card, and I never did. And I don’t understand, either. He could have mailed all those letters to my grandma, and she’d have gotten them to me, behind my mom’s back.”
“You know,” Mercer said, “your dad used to say the smartest thing your mom ever did was leave his ass and get you away from here. He didn’t make any bones about the fact that he was a pretty lousy husband—unreliable and hot-headed—and that he regretted it.”
Jenna held her tongue, lost for words.
“I was thinking about this the whole drive from Hartford. I think maybe he sent those letters and things where he did, knowing she’d have a chance to vet them. To show her he respected her wishes enough to let her have the final say in what was best for you.”
“Maybe.”
“It’s just a guess. For all his shortcomings, your dad had a really strict code of ethics when it came to respect.”
“It’s as good a guess as any. Maybe I’ll find more answers, the more I keep reading.” A daunting thought. She sighed again, blinking up at the ceiling. “I feel like a jerk, that I showed up here just assuming I’d close the gym. I was so ready to side with my mom, and the franchise, and all the other business owners on the block, in condemning this place. Like, figuratively and pretty much literally.”
“Yeah. We’re the mangiest of underdogs.”
“And I was ready to just lump you and all the other guys down there in some folder labeled ‘stuff my dad cared about more than me.’”
“Does that mean...? What does that mean?”
“It means I’m softening. It means I’d like the gym to stay open, if we figure out a way to make it viable.”
Mercer spoke quietly, as if physically holding back whatever hope he felt. “Would you extend the trial period?”
“I will. For as long as it takes to see any effects from the tournament. And I’ll do my best to fund your improvements...the modest ones, at least. Enough to give it a real chance.”
Mercer didn’t say a word at first, just brought his lips to her throat, kissing her softly and holding her tight. After a minute’s quiet he rolled onto his back and murmured, “Thank you.”
“You’re welcome. I can’t claim to know my dad yet, but it’s what he would’ve wanted.”
She sensed Mercer nodding in her periphery. They were silent for a few minutes, until a random thought drew a laugh from her lips.
“What?”
She turned onto her side. “Rich wants to join Spark.”
“No surprise there. He’s a shameless attention-whore. Bodes well for his fighting career, at least.”
“Guess I won’t be signing you up anytime soon,” she teased.
“I like to think I do all right on my own.” A funny little smile quirked his lips. “In fact, I recall doing better than just all right, not too long ago. Right in this bed.”
She blushed, then let impulse guide her hand out from the covers to rest on his stomach. “You were right about all this being really confusing. About you and I being too many things to each other.”
“For now, yeah. But before you know it, ‘roommates’ will be off that list.”
She stroked his belly, barely realizing she was doing it until he covered it with his warm, rough palm.
“I got no clue what to do with you,” he murmured.
“Ditto.”
“Or any clue what to do with all these...feelings. About protecting you, or just frigging caring this much, you know?”
“Do you resent me a little, that my dad left this place to me instead of you?”
“Of course not. I’ve never been taught to think anybody owes me anything.”
She nodded.
“And I don’t share your priorities, but I can imagine that matchmaking means as much to you as fighting does to me. And I get that my life must seem just as weird to you as meddling in other people’s romantic lives does to me. You want to help people fall in love. I want to help guys get real good at beating each other senseless. Neither of us is exactly aiming to save third-world orphans. We’re just passionate about things. And nobody gets to choose what they’re passionate about. It just chooses you.”
“Again, levelheaded.”
Another shrug. “I got a deep-rooted sense of fairness.”
“That you do. I’m so glad it hasn’t been punched out of you, yet.” She sighed. “I really ought to give you your bed back so you can get a few hours’ rest before you have to get back on the road.”
He gave her hand a squeeze. “It was big enough for two last night.”
Her face warmed, but not as deeply as her heart. “True.”
“I’ve given up wanting us to make sense, Jenna. I’m useless at navigating any kind of human interaction more complicated than ‘hit that guy before he hits you.’”
She smiled. “Come here.”
He turned onto his side, and the kiss was soft and sweet, lazy. Normally she’d have been beyond hesitant to let a boyfriend of less than six months see her this way, all blotchy from crying, no makeup, hair a tangle, but there was no etiquette with Mercer, no games, none of her precious logic. He’d seen her businesslike, seen her wild and impulsive. He’d taken her spooked, late-night phone call and driven all the way back here to catch her sleeping in his bed. If he took her again, he’d get her as she was, messy and unsure.
She welcomed his tongue when he took the kiss deeper, his growing aggression feeling like a relief—a release.
“Take me,” she murmured.
“You sure?”
“I am.”
He left her just long enough to go to his dresser drawer, then set a condom on the side table. Jenna slept in a tee and shorts, and as Mercer climbed under the covers with her, the brush of his jeans against her bare legs felt all the more exciting. He climbed on top of her, chest warm against her breasts, and they kissed for an exquisite eternity, five minutes or ten or an hour—forever wouldn’t have been long enough. This connection felt so right, so grounding and simple in its core, yet pulsing with such passion.
They shed their clothes slowly and in silence, layers shunted to a tangle at their feet. She sucked in her breath as his cock glanced her belly—warm, hard flesh, soft skin. She studied his back and hips with slow caresses, excited to have him in the light this time. She pushed the covers from him, and for a long minute they admired one another’s bodies, his face looking as curious and fearless as she felt herself.
She tugged at his hips.
“Ready?”
“Yes.”
He leaned back for the condom and slid it down his erection, then brought his chest back to hers. As she wrapped her legs around his waist, he entered her with a familiarity she’d never known with any other lover, as though their two bodies were designed exactly for this purpose, no other match possible.
“Tell me what you need,” he whispered, setting a slow, steady rhythm.
She needed nothing more than this. No orgasm even, just proof that something in her life could feel this instinctual, beyond questioning or rationalizing. “Just this.”
The deep, smooth slide of his cock hypnotized her, the soft tempo of his grunts and moans drawing her into him. She stroked his strong back, reveling in the flex of muscle, feeling like a part of a greater whole with this amazing man. He must have been feeling something beyond mere awe, however, and before long, his body’s demands grew harsher. She let her hips tell him she was game for whatever he needed, mirroring his quickening thrusts, welcoming him deep.
“I’m close,” he moaned.
“Take whatever you want.” She held his head as he drove into her harder, faster. Coordination abandoned him and he sped frantically to release.
“Jenna—” Her name died in his throat as his hips pinned her, hard. She clawed his shoulder without meaning to, overcome by the animal urges he roused.
“God. Jenna.” With a huff he rolled from her, stripping the condom. She was poised to cuddle, but he didn’t give her the chance. In seconds he was edging down the bed, kicking the covers and their clothes to the floor, settling on his elbows between her thighs.
“I don’t need anything,” she reminded him softly, stroking his hair. The sex was wonderful, but it was the closeness she wanted. The security of simply having him near. Of knowing he’d driven all those miles to be with her.
He broke his gaze from her sex to meet her eyes. “You saying you don’t want me to?”
“No...I’m not saying that, either.”
A grin. “Good.”
Jenna’s priorities shifted the second his tongue touched her. The firm, slick caress traced the seam of her lips, and she wanted exactly what he was offering. Pleasure, equity. She let him coax her legs wider, invited his tongue deeper. He tasted and teased her for ages, then finally slid his talented, hungry mouth to her clit, the contact hot and violent as a lightning strike.
“Mercer.” She raked her nails down his scalp.
In her head she replayed the visual of him taking her just minutes before. This strong, fearless man coming apart at the seams. She remembered how he’d been the last time they’d made love, beneath her, eyes recording her movements. Nothing in any logical questionnaire could ever have brought them together, but now she worried that if this didn’t last, she might never find the same connection with anyone, ever again.
His soft grunts drew her out of the sad thoughts and back into the pleasure he was giving her. He slid two fingers inside, making her miss his cock with a startling ferocity.
“Mercer?”
He freed his mouth and met her gaze. “Yeah?”
“Is there any chance you’ve got a round two in you?”
“No guarantees, but we can find out.” He left her to fetch a fresh condom and climbed back into bed beside her. He slid a hand to his cock, stroking himself.
“Not that what you were doing wasn’t wonderful,” she said. “It was just so wonderful it made me want more.”
“You’re dangerously good for my ego.”
She watched his hand, saw him growing hard for her again. “Here,” she said, reaching out.
He let her take over and she reveled in his response to her touch.
They kissed as she stroked him, then she felt his hand at her thigh, coaxing it wider. They broke apart, and when he grabbed the condom she took it from him, rolling it down his length. He slid his thigh between hers, holding her hip as he pushed inside. Forehead to forehead, they found their pace and angles. He reached between their bodies to tease her clit, making her gasp. Her palm stroked his backside and she admired the flex there as he took her deeply.
“You feel so good,” she muttered.
He kissed her in perfect rhythm with their undulating bodies. When she came it was from everything, equally—his mouth and cock and fingers, from the comfort of his proximity and strength. As she fell back to earth, he rolled her onto her back and got both knees between hers, thrusting fast and frantic for half a minute before he groaned, back arching into his own release. With a disbelieving noise, he flopped onto his back next to her. She rolled to her side and laid her cheek against his shoulder.
“Wow,” he said, wide eyes aimed at the ceiling. “I didn’t know I was capable of that. Not since I was about twenty.”
“A good coach will always push you beyond your limits,” she teased, patting his chest.
“This going to be a regular thing, you ambushing me in my bed? Because I’ll be honest, it’s not exactly motivating me to move out any quicker.”
She laughed. “I’m not feeling especially eager to see you go, myself.”
He closed his hand around hers.
After a long silence she asked, “What will you tell Delante, about where you disappeared to?”
“I’ll tell him the truth—I had to come home to tend to an emergency.”
“I wouldn’t exactly classify my emotional breakdown as an emergency.”
“It was enough to bring me back, wasn’t it?”
An unsettling sensation filled Jenna. She found the courage to ask him, point-blank, “What exactly do you feel for me?”
“Hell if I know.”
“No, really. I don’t want to sound clingy, but if this keeps happening, I am one of those girls who gets attached. I know this is all just for now, for however long it lasts. But if I found out in a week that you hooked up with another girl...I won’t lie. It’d hurt. I’m wondering where we stand, I guess.”
“Where we stand is that we’re lying in my bed together,” Mercer said. “I don’t know exactly what you think my love life’s about, but this doesn’t happen to me that often. And if it does, there’s almost always at least been a date involved. Really, you’re the most casual fling I’ve had in ages.”
“Oh.”
“So if you’re worried I might wind up doing something with some other woman next week, it’s not going to happen. Nothing good ever came of multitasking, sex- or romance-wise.”
“True.” Still, she wished he’d say something more...reassuring. Something more personal, to let her know she had more than mere dibs on him. That maybe she had just a little piece of his heart.
“Plus I’ve never...” He trailed off with a sigh.
“Never what?” Tell me tell me tell me.
“Whatever we are...I’ve never been this bent out of shape over a woman before. I can’t tell you if it’s the sex or if it’s the bad-idea factor, or what. But seriously, you’ve got me all screwed up in the head. A busload of naked women could unload at the curb and I doubt I’d notice. You’re in here,” he said, tapping his temple. “Like a splinter or something.”
Jenna would have preferred if he’d tapped his chest, but she’d take whatever he gave. She relaxed against his shoulder. “I promise I’m not gunning to be your girlfriend or anything.”
“You’re just into commitment, even with your flings.” He smoothed her hair back, voice dropping to a near-whisper. “Wouldn’t run screaming if you were, though. Gunning to be my girlfriend, I mean.”
Thump, thump, thump from her heart. “Really?”
“Nope.”
“Oh.”
He smirked. “Though I’d question your taste.”
She laughed.
“But we can keep it simple. Just know that my bed and my body are yours to do with as you see fit.”
She smiled. He was, without a doubt, the most reasonable man she’d ever met.
But another thought was still hovering, regarding another man who’d called this place home. Who’d called himself her father, when she’d never seen fit to return the favor. There was more to Monty Wilinski than she could learn from old newspaper articles. And until she understood what, she was never going to feel right holding the fate of his legacy—and Mercer’s future—in her hands.
* * *
MERCER GOT UP EARLY the next morning. He slipped out of Jenna’s arms and took a shower, sneaked quietly out the door and jogged to the corner store for eggs.
Jenna shuffled into the kitchen just as he found the whisk.
“Good morning,” she said, finger-combing her hair. “Breakfast of champions? I thought you were supposed to just eat those raw.”
“I’m making us French toast before I hit the road.”
She smiled. “Are you?”
“It’s the only thing I know how to cook from scratch. My mom used to make it every Sunday, when she wasn’t working.”
“Well, I better shower fast, then.” Jenna came around the counter to lay a hand on his chest and kiss his cheek.
Mercer caught her fingers, holding them against his heart. “You look beautiful.”
She pulled away with an embarrassed smile. “I look like a mess. But thank you.”
He let her escape to the bathroom, stealing a peek ten minutes later as she passed by in only a towel. He whistled.
“Shush, pervert.”
Mercer smiled, going back to breakfast duties. Not long after, he heard Jenna’s voice from her room, unmistakable alarm. “Oh my.”
He hurried to her threshold.
She’d dressed for work, hair still twirled up in her towel. Beside her on the bed was the big bin full of photos and keepsakes, and Jenna had a letter unfolded in her hands.
“What’s wrong?”
“I was just organizing some of the mess I made last night, trying to get these in order, so I don’t miss any....”
“But?”
“I found some other letters, in a paper shopping bag. I started reading one, assuming it was for me. Except the envelope had been slit open already.”
“Who was it to?”
She looked up from the page. “It was to my dad. It looks like a Dear John letter, almost. From some woman named...” She checked the envelope. “Lorraine Temple. Did he ever mention her?”
A chill tensed Mercer’s back. “I remember Lorraine.”
“Did my father date her?”
Her pursed his lips. “They were friends.” Or possibly more? It hurt Mercer’s heart to imagine it. “Lorraine was... She was his best friend’s wife.”
He put his hand out and Jenna gave him the letter, standing and crossing her arms. He skimmed it with a thumping heart.
Monty,
You agreed to what I did, that this correspondence has to stop. It’s not fair to Frank, and it’s not fair to us, either. I’ll never forget what you did for him, but you and I... We’re over. I’m forever in your debt, and you’re forever in my heart. But we can’t stay in each other’s lives, and you know that as well as I do. The day you won your appeal was one of the happiest of my life, but it’s time to leave all that in the past, and start again with clean slates. I owe you my eternal gratitude, but that’s all I have to give. I can’t keep sharing my heart this way...
“Did you know this Frank guy?” Jenna asked.
“Kind of. He was around the gym all the time doing pro bono work, accounting or legal stuff. I never paid any attention to the business side of things back then. I can’t believe he...” Mercer folded the letter, feeling sad to his very bones. He’d put a lot of faith in Monty, turned him into the father figure he’d missed out on for his first fifteen years. It hurt like hell to imagine him capable of having an affair with his best friend’s wife.
“Maybe there’s more to it.” Jenna sounded more curious than upset, and why shouldn’t she be? Monty had never been her father, not the way he’d been Mercer’s.
“Maybe.” He wanted to hope so, but something in his gut told him not to hold his breath.
“There are more letters in the bag. I’m tempted to read them, to try to understand...but it feels too personal. I don’t understand if he left those with my letters because he wanted me to find them, too, or if it was a mix-up.”
“I have no clue.” Felt as though he didn’t have the first clue about anything anymore.
If Monty had been capable of that, what about all those other things? The drug-running and money laundering?
What else had his mentor packed up in boxes, hoping to forget, or needing to confess?
And another thing nagged at him. He’d always thought Monty had been somehow above romantic relationships, smart to opt out of them after his disastrous marriage to Jenna’s mom. Mercer had even thought Monty had been lucky in a way, able to spare himself all the heartbreak love could bring. Too strong to fall victim to that bull.
But love wasn’t like drowning, a danger you could dodge simply by avoiding the ocean. It found you. It had found Monty, after all. No man was safe.
For the past three years, training had been Mercer’s priority, the thing he put before sleep, before leisure...miles ahead of his love life, and probably not accidentally.
Then Jenna had turned up and flipped his world inside out. He’d just put his trainee’s needs on hold, driven two hours in the dead of night to dry this woman’s tears.
Lust or love or whatever this was, he had been right. It was the death of focus, worse than booze. But once you were drunk... Goddamn if bad ideas didn’t feel good.