Same Time Next Year

With a razor-sharp undercurrent of lust.

It’s dark in the small arena. The opening act, a female country duo with a harmonic style, is finishing their set. The seats around us are filling, but no one is sitting in front of us, because we’re in the first row of the mezzanine overlooking the general admission floor, the stage beyond. The air is cool and smells a little bit like marijuana—and there’s an exhilarated buzz dancing down the sensitive skin of my arms. It’s that preconcert excitement. More than that, though, it’s the need to cut loose a little bit.

Or maybe even a lot.

Sumner leans over to speak against my ear in that deep rumble. “Do you want something to drink?”

His breath on my neck lights a sparkler in my belly. No, I don’t think drinking is a good idea. That’s what I should say. What comes out instead is, “A vodka tonic, maybe?”

He nods once and stands but seems reluctant to leave me.

I’ll be fine, I mouth at him.

With a final suspicious look at the totally innocent bystanders around me, Sumner moves upstream through the crowd, a giant among regular-size people. I can’t help but watch him the entire way, admiring his shifting shoulder muscles until he’s out of sight. He returns ten minutes later and hands me a clear plastic cup, fizzing with tonic and with a lime wedge on top. There’s a bottle of water in his other hand.

“You’re not having a beer or anything?”

“I’m driving,” he says, appearing almost affronted that I would even suggest such a thing. “I’m driving my wife.”

Another round of dangerous tingles slithers downward, making my thighs feel loose and sexy. It’s growing impossible to ignore how attractive I find this man, mostly because . . . it’s more than physical. I admire him. I like him. And I’ve been missing him for two months.

Missing him a lot.

There’s even a chance I could trust him someday—and that?

That would be an even bigger leap than love for me. Because I don’t know how to trust.

Putting my blind faith in someone isn’t a quality that exists inside me, and I don’t know how to cultivate it. Briefly, I pull my phone out of my purse to check for messages. “Wow. I can’t believe the bar hasn’t called with an emergency yet. The night is young, I guess.”

“You’ve been working a lot lately,” he remarks.

“I have. Trying to make small improvements here and there.”

He turns his head, interested. “Yeah? Like what?”

I ignore the feeling I’ve been having lately. Or the lack of feeling, rather, when I talk about the bar. It has always been my dream to own Sluggers, but now that I do, the magic I was expecting . . . it isn’t there.

“Um. I’ve been coming in early to sand down the bar in sections, adding new varnish. Another couple of days and I should be finished. Riggs is going to love it.”

“Why?”

“He’ll be able to see his reflection in it.”

Sumner chuckles.

“The old register is gone too—I put in a POS system so we’re not handling as much cash. We’re officially a twenty-first-century bar.”

He visibly turns that over in his mind. “I’ll kind of miss the cranking sound of the old register, but that’s great, Britta. Necessary.”

“I couldn’t have done it without you.” Hearing the hint of wistfulness in my tone, I backpedal slightly. “Without the money.”

“Right.” A muscle slides up and down in his cheek. “I knew what you meant.”

I swallow hard, wishing things were easier between us. As much as I crave being around Sumner, there is this invisible knot between us tying tighter and tighter. I have no idea when it’s going to snap, but there’s a whisper of warning in the back of my head saying soon. But instead of being alarmed, my sex constricts, moistening me, and I dig my toes into the leather sole of my cowboy boots to counteract the rush of need. It doesn’t help.

“What else do you need done at the bar, sweetheart?”

I don’t really feel like talking about the bar, which isn’t like me. At least, it didn’t used to be. I could talk about potential improvements for hours. Now, the topic causes the back of my neck to strain. “Nothing I can’t do myself.”

“What else?” Sumner persists. “Me and the guys can help out.”

“That’s okay, Sum. I know practices are getting ready to start again.”

Briefly, he tips his head back, as if the ceiling might help him figure me out. “Britta, the guys would swim to the bottom of the ocean to find a lost earring for you. All you’d have to do is ask. Trust me, I know, because part of me hates how much they like you.”

“Please,” I scoff. “They treat me like their sister.”

Sumner grumbles something under his breath.

I poke him in the ribs. “What was that?”

He gives me a dark look. “I said, that wasn’t always the case.”

It takes me a moment to decipher his meaning, but when I do, the events of the last twenty-one months come flying back in a series of moving frames. “Wait . . . yeah. A couple of them did ask me out a while back, but I said no.”

“Why did you say no?”

“Uh-uh. You tell me why they stopped asking me out.”

“I’m guessing because they wanted to keep their nut sacks attached to their bodies.”

The pieces are coming together quickly. “Sumner, what did you do?”

He has the nerve to look proud of himself. “Made you off limits, Britta. It’s a rule that is rarely invoked among the group. But once it’s done, it’s fucking done.” He leans over until our foreheads are a breath apart. “If you don’t like it, then stop being my dream girl.”

His mouth is warm and parted, our lips stroking sideways in the barest of touches, but it’s enough to shoot a zing down to my navel. “I should be angry at you. Calling dibs on me like I’m the last french fry.”

“You’re more like filet mignon, sweetheart.”

“The metaphor isn’t the issue. It’s the tactic. Toxic, macho—”

“I didn’t make you off limits because I was feeling competitive. Off the ice, I don’t care if I outdo anyone. I wasn’t in control of myself at all.

We were in the locker room. I’d been thinking about you all fucking day with your big beautiful eyes and the way you treat customers like they’re family. The way you mother some people and give tough love to others.

How protective you are of the other women, how they look up to you. How your laugh is better than any music. And the words just came out of me.

‘Touch her, and I will end your life.’ Simple.”

I’ve never actually felt the pupils expand in my eyes before.

Or my heart ripple.



But that’s what happens while his words hang in the air like big marshmallow clouds.

“There was nothing simple about that,” I whisper.

His mouth presses more firmly to mine. “Don’t I know it.”

He’s waiting for me to make the first move. I can sense it. Feel it. He’s offering me a kiss, and all I have to do is take it. I want to take it.

Maybe even need. Desperately.

“You want to kiss me, Britta. Do it.”

“I . . . but . . . we . . . It’ll just be a kiss. You can’t read anything into it.”

He grinds his jaw. “Done. Fine.”