Page 2 of Pitcher Perfect (Big Shots #4)
Target acquired.
The drop-dead gorgeous brunette was looking at him as though she’d like to vivisect him with a spoon, but, wow, that disdain
only made her huge brown eyes sparkle. God, they were remarkable. Rich and deep, complementing the ponytail that blew in the
wind. Hints of sunlight from the overcast sky washed over her fresh face and she had the look of someone who’d just woken
up. Kind of messy and cranky.
Apparently, he found that combination... fucking adorable.
The rich quality of her skin appeared sunbaked, possibly from playing an outdoor sport. She wasn’t short by any means, in
fact she was probably bordering on five foot nine, but positioned as she was in a sea of big, ugly baseball players, she was
a princess that needed to be rescued.
Robbie Corrigan was just the man for the job.
“We win, you show up to our next home game in our jerseys,” his Bearcats teammate, best friend, and roommate Mailer was saying.
“And when you lose?” Elton the Dipshit scoffed.
Robbie struggled to tear his attention away from the bristling brunette.
Honestly, he could have gone on cataloging her attributes all damn day, but his hatred for baseball had brought the entire Bearcats squad to this park on a Saturday morning to settle some beef.
Standing there in a stupor over a girl wasn’t going to cut the mustard.
Beef. Mustard. Can’t believe I skipped breakfast. “How about this?” Robbie barked.
“Your prize is you don’t get your asses kicked.
” He looked past Elton to the group standing
at his back. “Obviously, the lady would not be included in an ass kicking of any kind.”
The girl in question didn’t even take a beat. “Aw shucks, that’s so sweet.” She wrinkled her freckled nose. “But I think I’ll
stick around and give you the junk punch you so clearly deserve.”
Amusement flared in Robbie’s chest. “Fair enough.”
She smiled at him without her eyes losing an ounce of their malice—impressive—all while grinding her fist into her glove.
This bloodthirsty baseball chick was not his type. At least, he didn’t think so. It had been a long time since he’d had to
try with women. Or bother with anyone who wanted more than a good time. And they fell into his lap these days. They had in college,
too. Instant popularity with the opposite sex was the second-best thing about being a hockey player. The first best part was
playing hockey, obviously.
On their nights off, he and Mailer went to the club, booked the VIP section, and no other effort was required. Pulling this
girl, whose first words to him had been “fuck you,” would probably require a great deal of effort. It might even be impossible.
Why the hell couldn’t he stop staring at her?
Mailer elbowed Robbie in the ribs, pointing to a figure approaching the baseball field from the direction of the dog park.
Was that Chloe? Sig Gauthier’s future stepsister?
Yeah, it was. An English bulldog trotted behind her on a leash, looking half asleep.
“Hey, Elton ,” Chloe shouted, sounding decidedly pissed.
“Chloe!” every hockey player in attendance said in unison.
After all, the girl was a ray of sunshine.
It was impossible not to like her. She cheered for the Bearcats on the sideline like democ racy was at stake, slandering the referee with an unexpectedly colorful vocabulary every chance she got.
Mad respect. Everyone knew she and Sig were together, even if they refused to admit it publicly.
Despite that, Robbie and Mailer flirted with Chloe as often as possible, hoping to force Sig into owning up to the relationship, but Sig hadn’t pulled that trigger quite yet.
Now, collectively, the Bearcats surged toward Chloe to welcome her, as well as bring her into the fold of hockey players where
she was safe from baseball cooties.
She whipped up a hand to stop them, her ire directed squarely at Elton.
“Uh-oh,” Mailer muttered, frowning. “Hold up a second, what is Chloe doing here?”
“That’s what I would like to know,” Chloe said through her teeth.
“I invited her,” Elton answered Mailer with a smug grin. “She’s here to cheer us on.”
“Excuse me?” Chloe sputtered, sounding like her vocal cords were being suppressed.
“Excuse her?” Robbie echoed, intending to hold down the fort until Sig arrived to provide backup for Chloe—which he would.
It was only a matter of time before—
And yup.
There was Sig. Coming in hot from the parking lot, visibly ready to blow.
Chloe, unaware that Sig had arrived, was turning pink. “Did you invite me here under the false pretense of a doggy date, just
so you could piss off my friends?”
“I don’t know, did I?” Elton winked at the Bearcats. “And did it work?”
Were they evolved enough not to take that bait?
No. No, they were not.
Hockey players converged on baseball players, everyone arguing at the tops of their lungs.
Gloves were thrown down into the dirt. Off to the right, there was a heavy sigh and the rustle of chain-link, Burgess inserting himself in the middle of the fray with an air of exasperated patience.
“Just a reminder that we’re all adults here,” said Sir Savage, the legendary Bearcats captain and reigning hero of the planet.
“Let’s take a second to locate our maturity. ”
“Some of us never had any to begin with,” Elton drawled, taking a step closer to Chloe. “Obviously she figured that out and
made a better choice.”
Sig loomed behind Chloe, fury causing him to vibrate. “Get any closer to her and I will use your kneecaps for batting practice.”
Some people had the ability to predict the weather by looking at the sky. Or determine the direction of the wind by holding
up a blade of grass. Robbie Corrigan could smell a brawl coming a mile away—and the air was beginning to get ripe for flying
fists.
Without any conscious thought, he found himself edging toward the brunette.
Because God help everyone if her beautiful face caught one of those fists. He’d even let her punch him in the junk if it meant
she stayed out of the fray. It would hurt, but he’d recover. Eventually.
As slyly as possible, Robbie reached through an opening among the group of baseball players and nudged Brown Eyes. “Psst.”
He jerked his chin in the opposite direction of the brewing altercation. “Come on. Let’s go.”
What? she mouthed, incredulous.
“Move. Before you get hurt,” he whispered.
“I’ll hurt you ,” she whispered back, furiously.
From five yards away, she’d been interesting to look at. Obviously pretty.
Up close?
Her scowl made him wonder how much a bouquet of long stem roses cost.
“You wore Crocs to play baseball?” murmured the brunette while looking down at Robbie’s feet. “Are you serious?”
“When I want to play a real sport, sweetheart, I put on skates.”
“I could do a lot of interesting things with a blade right about now.”
“You’re kind of violent, aren’t you?”
She gave him another one of those evil smiles in response.
By insulting baseball, he’d probably just ruined his chances of taking this girl out, but he never backed down from a challenge.
Hence this Saturday morning face-off that literally no one asked for.
“I wasn’t going to play,” Sig was saying in the middle of removing his jacket, which only meant one thing to Robbie. It was
time to kick someone’s ass. “But the possibility of hitting you with a line drive between the eyes is too tempting.”
Elton scoffed. “My sister, Skylar, is pitching and she’s D1 all-American. You’re welcome to try.”
Sister.
Skylar.
She was the sister of Elton ? The jackass Robbie had been feuding with?
They didn’t even appear to be related.
But clearly, they were, in some form or fashion.
Excellent.
His shot with Skylar was basically nonexistent now.
But as he watched the blush spread along her cheekbones, the way she ducked her head, as if shy about her brother’s open admiration,
Robbie decided he was still going to try like hell. A Division 1 all-American pitcher who made fun of his shoes and implied
she’d like to stab him with a hockey skate?
Hot. That was fucking hot.
Even hotter? When she stomped her way through the baseball players to reach her brother, slapping him in the chest with her
glove. Hard. “Idiot. Can’t believe you pulled something like that,” she hissed, referring to the glaring reality that he’d
brought Chloe to the field just to piss off the Bearcats.
Skylar hit Elton once more—Robbie almost swooned—before heading for the pitching mound and calling over her shoulder, “I’m
telling Mom.”
Elton trailed after her. “You better not.”