My Second Chance – Secret Baby Read Online Natasha L. Black

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Sports Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 66
Estimated words: 60219 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 301(@200wpm)___ 241(@250wpm)___ 201(@300wpm)
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20

GRAHAM

That was wildly unexpected.

First off, Mallory looked incredible. I shouldn’t be surprised that time once again did nothing but wonders to her. She looked like she had grown into the woman she was always destined to be. An absolute knockout, who I was sure was routinely followed by starry-eyed high-school kids she was oblivious to, the same way she had always been oblivious to how beautiful she was.

Second, I was wildly upset at myself for spending so much time at the diner getting my lunch. It was a mistake I intended on not making again. If I had brought something with me or just gone to the fast-food joint, I would have had more time to catch up with her. Which I absolutely wanted to do.

I’d had no idea she was back in town, much less working at the school. I was positive she was still in New York, being an actress and living the life of an artist in Brooklyn. Or maybe that she had moved to LA and was making it in film. Seeing her back in Murdock, and apparently having moved back into town to settle, was frankly shocking. She was so gorgeous and so talented; it seemed a waste for her to be back in Texas.

Yet, there she was. Mallory, the girl that I had thought might be the one. The girl who made an effort to keep in touch. The girl who grew more and more distant until one day, I realized it had been nearly three months since we’d spoken. She looked happy to see me, but there was something else there too. Something I couldn’t place.

We’d lost touch all those years ago, and I beat myself up over it for the longest time. The stand against Boston was as brutal as the trip to New York had been. Three straight games of getting hammered, even though I’d pitched a halfway decent game. Then, one win and seven straight losses over the next week. We dropped out of first and never got back. By the end of the season, we were scrapping with Boston for the lone remaining wild card slot, and rather than starting me on three days’ rest, they went with a veteran pitcher who had been a world champion before.

He didn’t make it out of the first inning.

We lost by eight runs in the last game of the season in a game that would either let us in or leave us out of the postseason. It was a kick in the teeth, and the stress and insane work I was putting in meant I started missing calls and texts from Mallory. I would call or text her back, but it was always when she was out at one of her several jobs or at rehearsal. Eventually, we just both stopped calling.

Then I sent my last text. It was simply asking if she had time to talk. She never responded.

After that, the postseason was a whirlwind of meetings and courting, looking for a long-term home. My agent wanted me to angle for a ten-year deal somewhere, but I was willing to take something shorter if it meant playing in New York. I thought if I lived there, I could find Mallory again and rekindle what we had. But neither New York team was interested in a long deal, and after pressure from my agent, the player’s union and the press, I ended up signing with Seattle, who was willing to match the length and overpay for pitching.

We just weren’t part of each other’s lives after that season, and I felt like I could trace every negative thing that happened to me to the day I chose to get on that team bus and drive away from her. If I had rented my own car and left later, or whisked her away with me, or something. Even if everything else had happened, I would have gone through it with her by my side. It would have been worth it.

I spent all day thinking about her. My first day didn’t involve a whole lot of coaching, since I wasn’t particularly involved in football and the other sports were foreign to me. I met some of the kids that were on the JV team and a few of the returning kids that were seniors now. All informal get-to-know-you stuff, mostly to let them gawk at me and geek out now so we could actually get something done later.

But every time I was alone, I was thinking about Mallory. When the last bell rang, I almost walked the halls to the auditorium to watch her, but I realized she probably didn’t have a play to rehearse on the first day. Instead, I got in my car and drove quietly home. It was only when I had stopped the car that I realized I had been holding the steering wheel so tightly that it left marks in my hand.



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