Game On

Game On by Tracy Solheim Read Free Book Online

Book: Game On by Tracy Solheim Read Free Book Online
Authors: Tracy Solheim
Tags: Fiction, General, Romance, Contemporary, Sports
was doing and he didn’t think it had anything to do with cleats for his kid. He remained standing in hopes of making a quick exit as Penny set a plate of brownies on the counter, still smiling at him. She took another plate over to the table where the girls were seated.
    “Where’d Emma run off to?” Penny asked.
    “She’s in the other room printing,” one girl managed to get out before shoving an entire brownie in her mouth.
    The garage door opened as Penny headed for the back stairs. “Shane, I’ll be right down. I’m going to check to see if Lisa is awake. I know she wants to meet you.”
    Shane could feel his palms begin to sweat. He had to get out of there. He had no intention of meeting the coach’s wife. The warm domesticity of this house was suffocating him. With the exception of his buddy Roscoe’s house, Shane didn’t do the family thing. It was all too unnatural for him.
    He turned toward what he thought was the back door, only to collide with a teenage girl—Emma, he assumed. Papers she’d been holding went flying across the floor and she quickly bent down to retrieve them. Wavy strawberry blond hair hid her face as long, slender fingers efficiently snapped the papers off the floor. He was reminded of Carly and her long fingers passing over her reams of paperwork earlier that morning. God, he had to get out of there! He felt as if the pocket was closing in around him.
    “We’re hooooome!” a young girl’s voice sang out.
    Emma looked up at the same time. Shane felt as if he’d been blindsided and thrown to the turf for a loss. Blue eyes eerily similar to the ones that captivated him in Cabo San Lucas stared at him. A soft, shy smile adorned a face with a familiar smattering of freckles across her nose.
    “Sorry,” Emma said. “I didn’t see you standing there.”
    Shane felt the air leave his lungs as they both found their feet.
    “Look, Em,” the younger girl cried. “Daddy got my ruby red cleats! Aren’t they the bomb?” A pixie version of the coach danced around the kitchen, bright green eyes shining as her ponytail flounced behind her.
    “Molly, your uniform is bright orange. Have you no fashion sense at all?” Emma practically wailed at her sister.
    “Who cares! I like ’em. I’m going to go show Mom. I know she’ll love ’em.” Molly bolted for the stairs, grabbing a brownie as she went.
    “Dad, how could you? She’ll be a fashion don’t!” Exasperation adorning her face, Emma stood facing her father.
    Matt Richardson smiled, leaning down to kiss his middle child on the forehead—much as he’d done with Carly earlier in the day. Shane’s gut clenched even tighter.
    “I pick my battles where I can, sweetie pie. Red cleats are a fight I don’t care about winning.”
    Clearly Emma didn’t agree with her father, letting out a huff as she walked back over to her friends.
    “Welcome to Camp Chaos.” Coach grinned, extending his hand to Shane.
    As the two men shook hands, the back door crashed open and loud footsteps thundered into the mudroom.
    “Get off my case, Aunt Carly!” a male voice yelled. “You’re not my mother!”
    And there it was
. Confirmation that Shane was an ass. Carly March wasn’t fooling around with the coach. They were related somehow. He’d fumbled the play. Badly. Hell, he never should have pushed her buttons earlier in the day. He couldn’t decide if he was relieved she
wasn’t
having an affair with the coach or scared shitless about how and when she’d reveal the accusations he’d hurled at her. Right now, he was having trouble just getting a breath into his lungs.
    A blur resembling a large teenage boy raced by.
    “Hey! Christopher James!” Coach yelled. “You get back here and apologize to your aunt!”
    Carly entered the kitchen, her shoulders slumped. Shane tried to blend into the wall behind her. She’d changed from her uptight power suit into designer jeans that, from Shane’s vantage point, fit her to perfection. A

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