Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Romance,
Contemporary,
Man-Woman Relationships,
Love Stories,
Fiction - Romance,
American Light Romantic Fiction,
Romance - Contemporary,
Romance: Modern,
Boxing trainers,
Women boxers,
Boxers (Sports)
teeth and ran a hand over his head.
“That went well,” he said.
Cooper waited for the other man to meet his eye. “I meant what I said. Anything else we can talk on, but Jimmy is not, and will never be, a part of our deal. Okay?”
“I hear you,” Ray said. “And for the record, I’m sorry that got so…out of control. Jimmy’s kind of intense. Driven, if you know what I mean.”
“I thought she was your maid,”
Ray laughed, surprised. Then he shook his head. “Don’t let her hear you saying that. She took time off work to come over and meet you.”
“What kind of name is Jimmy for a girl, anyway?” Cooper asked. Not because he was really interested. He was just…curious. Which was definitely not the same thing.
“It’s really Jamie, but Jimmy is a childhood nickname that stuck.”
Cooper made an intuitive leap. “You’re seeing her?”
Ray shook his head. “Years ago. Jimmy doesn’t like to be pinned down.”
Cooper got the distinct feeling that Ray wasn’t too happy about that. He could see where the other man was coming from—even a few seconds in her company had been enough to tell him that Jamie wasn’t the kind of woman a guy walked away from easily.
“So, am I calling my lawyer and getting him to draft a contract?” Cooper asked.
Ray’s glance strayed to the house again. “I need to think about it. Can I call you tonight?”
Cooper frowned. Ray obviously felt a strong loyalty toward this Jamie woman if he was prepared to rethink a deal that had been as good as done. There wasn’t anything Cooper could do about that, however—no way, no how was he taking on a woman fighter. He was building his gym, his reputation, and he wanted to win. Women’s boxing wasn’t going to achieve any of those goals for him, and he refused to join the ranks of has-been fighters who couldn’t cut it outside of the ring.
“You know my number,” he said, standing.
They were both silent as Ray led him through the house. Cooper kept an eye out for Jamie. There was an intensity to her, a focus…And, of course, there was that hot body. But there was no sign of her.
He paused on the doorstep to offer Ray his hand.
“I’ll hear from you tonight,” he said firmly.
“For sure,” Ray said.
Walking down the path to his car, Cooper reflected that if Jamie and her fighting ambitions hadn’t been inserted into the deal, he’d probably be walking away with his first fighter in his pocket right now. He swore under his breath, more and more pissed off as he thought about it.
Damn it, he needed Ray. He was young, full of promise, the perfect cornerstone for the stable Cooper wanted to build.
Some sixth sense made him glance over his shoulder before he stepped into the street. A curtain twitched in one of the front windows and someone stepped out of sight. She was probably wishing she’d slugged him one. Hell, if Ray hadn’t intervened, she might even have tried.
Cooper laughed. Even though he was feeling royally pissed that her presence had soured his deal. She had balls, he’d give her that. Big, hairy ones.
J AMIE’S HANDS flexed as she watched Cooper Fitzgerald stride down the front path and into the street. He walked slowly and deliberately, head up. An advertisement for arrogance.
“Jerk-off,” she said.
“What happened to ‘it has to be Cooper Fitzgerald’?” Ray asked.
Jamie turned around. She shrugged casually. She’d seen so many of Cooper’s fights, read so many interviews with him, she’d had one hell of a preconceived idea about what he would be like. More fool her. He might come across as witty, charming and intelligent in the media, but in the flesh the guy was just another garden-variety knuckle-dragger who saw women as living, breathing amusement parks for his genitals.
She’d known enough of them in her time, thank you very much. Hell, she’d slept with a bunch of ’em, so she definitely knew what she was talking about. Why she’d thought this guy was
Terry Ravenscroft, Ravenscroft