Authors: Mindy Klasky
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Contemporary, #Contemporary Fiction, #Sports
REACHING FIRST
Mindy Klasky
Reaching First
Copyright © 2014 Mindy Klasky
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book, or portion thereof, in any form.
This is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Published by Book View Café Publishing Cooperative
Cover design by Reece Notley
Book View Café Publishing Cooperative
P.O. Box 1624, Cedar Crest, NM 87008-1624
ISBN 978-1-61138-xxx-x
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. Thank you for respecting the author’s work. Discover other titles by Mindy Klasky at
http://www.mindyklasky.com
Tyler Brock’s life had turned into a country music song.
His girlfriend dumped him. His truck broke down. And now he was staring at walking papers from the only job he’d ever loved.
Brandee had called him two nights before, catching him just as he got back to the hotel after a big win against San Francisco. She wasn’t congratulating him on his two-run double in the top of the seventh. Instead, she was bitching
again
that he hadn’t texted her
again
at the end of the game. Shit. He’d told her a thousand times that he didn’t text, and that wasn’t going to change, for Brandee or anyone else.
Goodbye girlfriend.
Before the road trip, he’d parked the truck in the airport parking lot. Got back to it on Wednesday night, returning from California. The engine cranked but wouldn’t turn over. He’d taken a cab home and called the dealer the next morning. There was some recall he was supposed to have received. Probably
had
received, but he hadn’t done anything about it. It would take three days to get the part, and another day to install it.
Goodbye truck.
But the girl and the truck, they were nothing, compared to the job. Tyler had taken another cab that afternoon, showed up at the ballpark on time for batting practice. He never made it to the field, though. Skip called him into the office and closed the door, all solemn, like someone had died that afternoon. He told Tyler these were the hardest conversations for a manager to have.
Bullshit. The past three weeks had been full of trade talk. Two teams had bid on him, competing with each other, upping the ante back and forth. In pretty short order, Tyler had known he was leaving Texas. He just hadn’t known where he was going.
Well, he didn’t have to hold his breath any more. Raleigh had bought him, fair and square. They were paying a shitload of cash, plus three players. Tyler should be proud he’d commanded so much, but he just felt rejected. He’d lived in Texas all his life. His mother still lived in the house where he’d grown up, still had his Little League trophies in a case by the fireplace. His five brothers all lived within an hour of the stadium.
But Skip pulled him from that night’s game, with a bunch of bullshit lies about how bad he felt doing it. It’d screw everything up, if Tyler injured himself before making it to his new team. He was due on a plane first thing in the morning, heading out to Raleigh and the Rockets and the first trade of his professional career.
Girlfriend. Truck. Job. All gone. And that was why Tyler Brock was sitting in a ridiculous hipster bar just a couple blocks from the stadium, finishing his fourth beer and spoiling for a fight.
He signaled to the bartender for another as a shout went up from the far end of the bar. Tyler glanced at the television screen in time to see JT Moran whiff on what would have been ball four.
“Pussy Moran!” some guy shouted, and all his asshole friends hooted with laughter.
Tyler knew the type—college guys, getting shit-faced on fake IDs and Daddy’s trust funds. Tyler identified the leader immediately—blond, broad shoulders; he’d probably played
tennis
for his goddamn prep school.
As the camera showed JT stalking back to the dugout, Tennis Dude kept at it. A blind monkey wouldn’t have swung at that pitch. A Girl Scout could have hit it out of the park. The jackass didn’t even realize he couldn’t have it both ways—the same pitch couldn’t have been shit and set up on a T.
“Goddamn faggot,” Tennis Dude shouted. “Moran should be sent down to the minors for life.”
“Can his ass,” another guy agreed before drinking deeply from his hand-crafted lager. He wore a dress shirt and a blue blazer; he looked like he’d just stepped into the bar from his job as a lawyer, or selling stocks.
“Three million bucks a year, and the moron plays like shit,” the third guy chimed in, the one wearing the backwards baseball cap. “Worst guy on the whole goddamn team.”
That did it. Tyler bulled his way into the middle of the group and announced, “JT Moran is the best right fielder to play for Texas in a decade.”
For a heartbeat, all three guys just stared. They recognized him; it’d be hard not to, with the shitty “career retrospective” the reporters had aired between the third and fourth innings. Lawyer Guy held up his hands, palms out, as he said, “Hey, man. It’s just a game. We have the right to express our opinions.”
Tyler set his mug on the bar, only the precision of the move giving the slightest hint that he was four beers down for the night. “Your opinions are wrong,” he said, directing his words to Tennis Dude. No reason to screw with the other guys. Might as well go for the leader.
That was the first lesson Tyler had ever learned in schoolyard fights, and it translated pretty well to bars. Take down the leader, and the rest of the guys’ll back off, run away like screaming little girls.
It wasn’t like Tyler
wanted
to fight. He would have just ignored the dipshits, if they’d been ragging on anyone else. But not JT Not the guy who’d had his back for the five years he’d spent in the majors.
And that wasn’t just the beer talking. Tyler was going to be lost in Raleigh without JT, without the only teammate who knew the truth about Tyler but had never told a living soul. Not since that first day, when they’d both stood in the locker room, staring at a notice on the team bulletin board. Tyler had known it was important, with bold letters and a headline in red. But he couldn’t pin down the words, couldn’t get the text to stop jumping all over the goddamn page.
JT had waited for Tyler to say something. Waited for him to react to whatever was posted there, plain as day. And when Tyler hadn’t said boo, JT grumbled, “Team meeting’s moved to seven. Last one there is volunteered to sit in the team’s booth at the State Fair all day Sunday.”
Tyler had snorted. And hustled off to the meeting with JT. But he’d seen the look in the other player’s eyes. JT knew his secret. JT knew Tyler couldn’t read.
Not that the guy ever made a big deal out of it. He let Tyler figure things out the way he always had—watching the guys to see what gate they all walked to at the airport, flipping through official forms like he was too busy to study them, just signing wherever someone pointed out a giant X. Tyler wasn’t an idiot, after all. He’d figured out how to sign his own name back in grade school. Numbers hardly ever gave him trouble.
But when he was lost, when there wasn’t any hint about what he was supposed to do, where he was supposed to go? Somehow, JT always managed to be there. He’d make a joke out of it, turn everything into a story. He’d make it sound all casual-like, as he told Tyler exactly what was going on.
And JT wasn’t going to be in Raleigh.
Tyler would be on his own, for the first time in five years.
So maybe he was just ready to beat the shit out of three over-privileged college dudes who thought JT Moran should have taken the base on balls, should have walked to first.
And Tennis Dude wasn’t exactly
trying
to keep the peace. “Shit, man,” the guy said. “If your
boyfriend
just lost us the game, that isn’t your fault. You’re not even on the team any more.”
Rage.
Instant, heart-stopping rage, painting Tyler’s vision crimson, folding his hands into fists. This wasn’t the hotheaded push-and-shove of a fight on the baseball diamond, the type of bench-clearing brawl that added up to a lot of hot words and a few sharp jabs with the heel of a hand. This was the white-hot desire to
obliterate
someone, to make someone pay.
“What?” Tennis Dude said, laughing. “You’re going to
fight
me?”
Lawyer Guy tried to intervene, saying to Tyler: “Hey, man, come on. He didn’t mean anything by it.”
But Tennis Dude waved off his friend. “I meant every word I said.” He stepped away from the bar, squaring off in a way that told Tyler the guy wasn’t a stranger to throwing a punch. He probably worked out in some gym with his
personal trainer
, learned to go after the heavy bag as part of his
fitness regimen
. That was fine. Tyler wasn’t a stranger to a good fight, himself.
“Come on,” said Baseball Cap. “Jackson, leave him alone.”
Jackson
. Tennis Dude.
Tyler didn’t take his eyes off Jackson as he taunted, “What about it? Going to listen to your friend? Sit down and have another—what? A
cosmo
? A goddamn
appletini
?”
“Leave me alone, asshole,” Jackson growled.
“Make me.”
Those two words dripped from Tyler’s lips, burning like gasoline.
Make me
. The order that had kicked off every playground fight in his childhood. The rebellious demand that had sparked a dozen battles with his brothers. The defiant claim that had kept him after school for countless detention sessions, until he’d finally figured out he’d rather go to baseball practice, to football practice, to
basketball
if that was the only sport in season, than to sit in a windowless classroom, staring at a clock, and waiting for the bell to ring so he’d finally be free.
His heart pounded. He forced himself to take a deep breath, to steady himself like he was staring down a 100-mile-an-hour fastball. He was all too aware of the alcohol pumping through his veins; he couldn’t move as fast, strike as accurately as if he were stone, cold sober. But things had gone too far for him to back down now. Way too far.
Jackson swung first.
Tyler ducked away, catching the worst of the blow on his biceps. The guy was stronger than he looked. Tyler swung a quick left hook, automatically folding his thumb over his knuckles instead of inside his fist, to keep from breaking it. The blow glanced off Jackson’s forearm.
Tyler heard a woman scream. Lawyer Guy started swearing. Someone shouted, “Call 911!”
Jackson threw another punch, connecting directly with Tyler’s jaw, hard enough to make him see stars. The blow unlocked something in Tyler’s brain. He forgot about being a professional baseball player. He forgot about drowning his sorrows, about drinking away his last night in Texas. He forgot about everything except beating the living shit out of the guy in front of him.
The bartender and the bouncer finally wrestled them apart. But not before Jackson’s nose was broken, gushing blood. Not before Tyler’s knuckles were bruised and bleeding.
And not before the wail of a siren silenced every last voice in the bar.
* * *
Emily Holt sat in her best friend’s office, wondering if she was making the biggest mistake of her life.
“Anna, the guy’s a
criminal
.”
Anna Benson shrugged. “He’s a ballplayer. They all get into trouble at some point. Besides, you’re a social worker. Isn’t it your mission to get troubled souls back on track?”
“It was my mission to help victims of abuse rebuild their lives, until the hospital laid me off!”
Anna’s face grew serious. “That’s why this is so perfect. You
need
to get back on the horse, get back to work. And Tyler needs this chance.
I
need this chance, Em.”
“But the guy was in a bar fight! He pleaded guilty to assault!” Emily couldn’t put into words how much the thought disgusted her. After spending a couple of years counseling women who’d been beaten by the men in their lives, she had no sympathy for a man who used his fists when he got angry. Angry and drunk.
Anna shook her head. “It’s not like that. The other guy threw the first punch. Brock only took the plea because he had to wrap things up in Texas. We need him here, to start playing tonight.” Anna softened her voice into the cajoling tones she’d used for the past seven years, whenever she needed something special from her best friend. “Come on, Em. They wouldn’t have let him off with community service if he was a threat to anyone.”