2
KYLIE TOSSED THE TENNIS BALL INTO THE AIR
AND slammed it with a satisfying thwack. At the height
of her career, when she won her first, and only, Grand Slam
tournament, she could knock the ball into the service court at a
hundred miles per hour. That was ten years, eight knee surgeries
and a full year of physical rehabilitation ago.
Lately, when she punished the innocent little
yellow ball, she did it to show her college tennis team the proper
form. Most of the time. She also did it to work out her issues. Of
which she seemed to have many, especially since quitting her
coaching job at UCLA to return to her hometown with the idea of
reclaiming the life she’d abandoned.
She hadn’t planned on running into Chase Manning so
regularly, though. It didn’t help that he didn’t sport a huge gut
and flabby arms. No, he was even more gorgeous than when she’d
embraced her inner coward and left him. Tall, imposing, muscular in
the perfect kind of way that was sculpted but not bulky. Green eyes
the color of the deep forest and capable of being just as dark and
intimidating. He smelled the same, too—like tropical
sunscreen.
Leaving him . . . no, “leaving” wasn’t strong
enough. Running away, that’s what she’d done. Run and run and run,
as fast and as far as she could. By the time the reality check
smacked her in the forehead that she’d abandoned and hurt the one
person who could get her through losing her dreams, losing her way,
he’d had a ring on his finger and a kid on the way.
Drawing in a long, pulse-slowing breath, she
bounced a tennis ball several times and tried to get her focus
back. Punish the ball. Work it out.
But, God, he’d called her Ky this afternoon.
Hearing her name in that radio-ready voice—like expensive brandy:
smooth with just a hint of fire—conjured memories of breathless
whispers and naked, sweat-slicked bodies that fit, and moved,
together so perfectly.
Cheeks heating, she angled her head to pop the
tension out of her neck. Right. It’s not too warm out here at all.
Focus, damn it. Hit the ball into the next galaxy.
“So, bad time?”
She whirled at the voice behind her, heart rate
spiking into the fight-or-flight zone. She’d already yanked her
racket up, ready to defend herself, when she recognized her best
friend easing through the gate in the fence surrounding the lighted
court. Trisha’s arms were loaded with a couple of bottles of blue
Gatorade and two takeout Chinese boxes.
Feeling foolish, yet grateful that Trisha appeared
oblivious to her overreaction, Kylie jogged over to help her with
her bounty.
In khaki shorts and an orange and teal Dolphins
T-shirt, Trisha Young looked the same as she had in high school.
Freckles still crowded her otherwise fair complexion, and her
short, curly auburn hair still frizzed in the Florida humidity.
She’d gained a few pounds in recent years, but she liked to joke
that the pounds landed in prime locations: her boobs and her
butt.
Trisha started laughing as she bobbled a chilled
bottle of Gatorade right into Kylie’s waiting hands. “Good
catch.”
“Let me guess who loaded you up with all this
stuff. Jane?”
“Quinn, too. They’re worried about you.”
“I know. They’ve been hovering all night.”
“Can’t say I blame them,” Trisha said
lightly.
Kylie twisted open a bottle and quenched a thirst
she’d been too stubborn to deal with half an hour ago. Doing so
would have required going inside where her overly concerned
siblings lingered. Much as she appreciated their concern, she
couldn’t cope with their constant questions.
Are you all right?
Do you need anything?
Want to talk about it?
Yes, no, double no and please, please go
away.
“What have you got?” she asked Trisha, nodding
toward the takeout boxes. Starving didn’t begin to cover the
gnawing in her belly. And it had nothing, absolutely nothing, to do
with Chase Manning. This was good old plain hunger. Beef-cake
wouldn’t satisfy it. Right? Right.
“They couldn’t agree on your favorite,” Trisha
said, “so they had me pick up Singapore rice noodles and Mongolian
beef. So which is it?”
“Singapore rice noodles, hold the shrimp.”
Trisha grinned and held out one of the boxes and a
plastic fork. “Quinn wins.”
Kylie grinned back. “He usually does.”
They both plopped down on the court with their
backs to the fence and tore open their respective containers.
Trisha already had a mouthful when she said, “It’s
so nice out here. Quiet and peaceful.”
Kylie nodded as she glanced around at the private
tennis court. A short walk away, through a small forest of palm and
pine trees, sat the home she’d rented when she returned to the
area. The house itself—a modest fifteen hundred square feet with
two bedrooms, two baths and an open layout—was nothing special. But
it sat on the beach, surrounded by thick, green vegetation that
provided the kind of privacy rarely seen in newer beachfront
property.
She’d furnished it with some of her father’s
belongings, but living with his things, without him, had been
difficult the past six months. Everything still smelled like Irish
Spring . . . and the past. In fact, everything about Kendall Falls,
from the salty gulf air to Chase’s sunscreen, smelled like the
past. And it wasn’t all good.
“I hope you plan to share,” Trisha said, eyeing
Kylie’s takeout container. “I love me some Mongolian beef, but I’m
a sucker for the noodles.”
Kylie nodded as she swirled her fork among the thin
curried noodles. “Always happy to share.”
“Except when it comes to feelings,” Trisha pointed
out before launching into a mournful, off-key version of the old
standard. “Whoa, whoa, whoa, feelinnnnngs.”
Kylie laughed. “Please stop, I’ll talk. I’ll
talk!”
Trisha quieted, expectant eyebrows arched as she
forked up a large piece of beef and chewed.
Kylie captured some noodles and savored the
silence. And missed Los Angeles, where she did her job and lived
quite happily in the present and never had to talk about the past.
Every once in a while, a new friend would ask, but after a couple
of vague answers and deliberate changes of subject, she always
managed to wiggle off the hook. Not so here in Kendall Falls, where
the world still seemed to revolve around the blackest day of her
life.
“You’re not talking,” Trisha said, her words
muffled by food.
Kylie smiled. Trisha hadn’t paid much attention to
manners as a teenager, and the years hadn’t changed that about her.
She’d changed in other ways, though. She no longer skirted the
tough topics. Her blunt questions drilled right to the heart of the
matter without fear of offense or hurt or stirring up bad memories.
Kylie hadn’t quite figured out how to duck and dodge this new
aspect of her friend when they were face to face. On the phone
long-distance, it was easy enough to say she had to go and end the
conversation. E-mail was even easier: She just didn’t respond to
the parts she didn’t want to.
“How about I get you started,” Trisha said. “I’ll
start a statement, and you can finish it. Ready?”
“I don’t—”
“I really hate, or love, reality TV because . .
.”
Kylie was too relieved by the reprieve to laugh.
“It’s addictive.”
“Hate it or love it?”
“Both, for the same reason.”
“Fair enough. Here’s another: If I could rule the
world, I’d ...”
Grinning, Kylie drank some Gatorade before
answering. “Make daily naps in the workplace mandatory.”
“Good one,” Trisha said, nodding. She held out her
Chinese container. “Trade?”
Kylie made the swap and dug into the Mongolian
beef. Maybe she could handle this little game after all.
Trisha cleared her throat. “When I saw that
baseball bat this afternoon, I wanted to . . .”
Damn. Damn. Damn it.
“Take your time,” Trisha said, casual as she sucked
a twirl of noodles off her fork.
The beef that tasted fabulous a moment ago became
flavorless in Kylie’s mouth, and she had to force herself to
swallow it. No longer hungry, she set aside the takeout box and
rolled her shoulders in the night air. Humidity made everything
feel sticky and thick and uncomfortable, and she thought for the
millionth time of standing in front of Chase Manning while he’d
stared at the bat, his face flushing red. The air had been sticky
and thick and uncomfortable then, too. And it had taken every
instant of competitive training over the years to stand there,
shoulders squared and face still, while her world shifted off its
foundation.
When Trisha cleared her throat, calling attention
to the lengthening silence, Kylie felt she had no choice but to say
something. “It might not be the bat.”
“What if it is?”
Shrugging, Kylie retrieved the box of noodles from
Trisha’s hand and dug back in. “I’ll deal.”
“Too easy. What if it is?”
“I’d rather jump off that bridge when I come to
it.”
“Hmm, I wonder what Dr. Jane would say about talk
of bridge-jumping.”
Kylie grinned at her. “Nothing. Psychiatrists
aren’t allowed to treat family members.”
Trisha, for once, didn’t grin back, her expression
dead serious. “Quit dodging and talk to me. This thing, this bat
being found . . . it’s huge.”
“It isn’t huge until they prove it’s the
weapon.”
“You know it is or you wouldn’t be out here alone
at ten at night smacking the stuffing out of tennis balls.”
“Tennis balls don’t have stuffing.”
Trisha’s reddish brown eyes narrowed. “Now you’re
starting to irk me.”
“I’m not trying to. I just . . .” Frustrated, she
set aside the container. “I just can’t, okay?”
Trisha turned her attention to hunting around in
the other takeout box for any beef she’d missed. “You know I had to
try, right? It’s my duty as your best friend.”
“I appreciate it. I really do. And I’m fine. I
promise.”
Trisha cast her the sure-you-are eye, but before
she could dive into another touchy subject, Kylie asked, “So how’s
Roger?”
Trisha gave a little shrug. “Eh.”
“That doesn’t sound good.”
“He really isn’t my type, anyway. Hey, I heard
Chase Manning is on the reopened investigation.”
Damn. Cornered again. Kylie managed a casual nod.
“He’s one of the detectives on the case. I think we went to school
with his partner, Sam Hawkins. He seems familiar.”
Trisha nodded. “He was a year behind us. He asked
Patti out once. Remember?”
Kylie didn’t, but whatever. She’d managed to change
the subject. “Do you still talk to Patti?” When she’d left, she’d
lost touch with all of her friends except Trisha.
“Occasionally. She’s a nurse in Tampa now. Last
time she came to Kendall Falls, we got together, but it wasn’t the
same without the rest of the gang. We should plan something now
that you’re back.”
Kylie gave a noncommittal nod, but before she could
respond, Trisha said, “Maybe you and Chase will, you know, work out
your differences.”
Kylie had to force herself not to stiffen. “We
don’t have any differences to work out. He became a father nine
months after I left. There’s not a much more decisive way to say he
got over me in record time.”
With that, she pushed to her feet and started
gathering the trash from their dinner. “Shall we go in before Jane
and Quinn come looking for us?”
Trisha rose, too, and brushed at the seat of her
khakis. “Interesting. You’d rather face the hovercrafts than talk
about Chase.”
“There’s nothing to talk about. It was a teen
romance that ended the instant I went away to college. End of
story.”
“A gross oversimplification if I ever heard one.
You’d still be together if—”
“How about some Rocky Road? Jane said she picked
some up on the way over. She thinks it’s my favorite, but I’m sure
Quinn could tell her it’s Moose Tracks.”
Trisha sighed as she fell into step beside her.
“Okay, okay. Hint taken. You win.”
Kylie draped an arm around Trisha’s shoulders and
hugged her. “Finally!”