Wells stared down at the green-eyed girl who wasโvery inconvenientlyโ even prettier than he remembered, a corkscrew winding into his chest cavity. He kept his jaw tight, gaze unconcerned, but letโs face it, he was starting to get pretty damn concerned.
Unusual for him. To say the least.
Wells Whitaker didnโtย needย anybody. After his parents got jobs on a
cruise ship and started sailing nine months out of the year, heโd been raised by his NASCAR promoter uncle, who didnโt take much of an interest in his nephew beyond allowing him to sleep on the pullout couch in his one- bedroom apartment in Daytona Beach. Wells had engaged in a lot more than the typical childhood mischief growing up, shoplifting and fighting his way to two school expulsions, and his behavior only escalated when his parents decided he wasnโt worth the constant aggravation.
After getting caught with a stolen bike heโd intended to pawn in order to buy a new pair of sneakers, heโd ended up in juvenile court and the judge had given him one more chance to turn his act around. Since he was sixteen, that included getting a job. Looking back, that judge could have
come down a lot harder on Wells, and he appreciated what the man had been trying to do. Getting that job shagging balls at the local course had led to his career, his mentor-apprentice relationship with Buck Lee, and eventually his spot on the PGA tour.
And heโd let himself begin to need that friendship. Thatย bond.
Heโd allowed himself to need the roar of the crowd after sinking a putt.
But their attention had been quickly diverted to the newest hotshots on the tour.
At the end of the day, though, Wells was pissed only at himself. For believing that people were capable ofย anythingย unconditional. There were always contracts or understandings that allowed your colleagues and
โfriendsโ to wiggle out, if you turned up lacking one day. Heโd fallen victim to the classic has-been plight and that, more than anything, pissed him off.
This fierce girl, whoโd gone from holding back tears to looking like she wanted to grind a golf cleat into his guts, couldnโt be any different than
anyone else. Sheโd dropped him, too.
Something inside Wells refused to let him put her into the same category as the ones whoโd come and gone, though. Josephine was in a class by herself and goddammit, she wouldnโt seem to budge from it. Not an inch.
Iโm not your fan anymore.
โYes, you are. Youโre just having a bad day.โ
She started to blink very rapidly. He shuddered to think what she might have said to him if a series of beeps hadnโt filled the room in that moment. She sighed, reached into her pocket, and pulled out a small plastic tube, emptying two quarter-size tablets into her mouth.
โWhatโs beeping? What are those?โ
Absently, she lifted her arm until her elbow was pointing up at the ceiling. For the first time since heโd โknownโ Josephine, he noticed a small, gray, oval-shaped button on the back of her arm. โThe beeps are letting me know my blood sugar is low.โ She dropped her arm. โIโm a diabetic. Type
one.โ
โOh.โ He should have known that. Why didnโt he know that? Wells searched his mind for any knowledge whatsoever that might be lurking about diabetes and came up empty. They werenโt supposed to eat anything with sugar, right? โAre those things . . . all you need right now?โ he asked, tipping his head toward the tube as she stowed it back into her pocket.
โYes. Right now.โ Under her breath, she added, โBetter to have low blood sugar than high.โ
โWhy is that?โ
She pushed a hand through her hair, turning away from him slightly to survey a damaged display rack. โHigh blood sugar requires me to give myself insulin to come down and I need to spread my supply out.โ A slight flush appeared on her cheeks. โMy health insurance isnโt up to date at the moment.โ
โOh.โ
The knowledge that this person was so much more than his most loyal fan came crashing down on Wellsโs head like a ton of bricks. Josephine had problems to contend with. Serious ones. Her familyโs shop was underwater and she had to worry about blood sugar going up and down. And heโd ripped her fucking sign in half?ย What kind of a monster am I?
Wells cleared his throat hard. โHealth insurance seems like it might be pretty vital when youโre a diabetic.โ
โTrust me, it is. But . . .โ Her throat worked. She paused, coughed, and kept her voice even. Brave? Or was she just trying to avoid getting emotional in front of him because heโd demanded it? Both? โEverything just snowballed so fast, you know. Ironic in Florida.โ Why did that joke
make him want to splash through the water and . . . hug her? Jesus, he was not a hugger. He wasnโt even a shoulder patter. โI fell behind on rent
payments for the shop. At first, it came down to paying for rent or the commercial insurance . . . like, flood insurance? I paid the rent.โ
A weight sank in his stomach. The shop wasnโt covered. โShit, Josephine.โ
โMega shit.โ She closed her eyes, shook her head a little. โLast year, I put my health insurance on pause so the payments wouldnโt be a burden on the shop. Started taking on more golf lessons, so I could just buy my medical
supplies out of pocket. But like I said, everything just seemed to snowball and . . .โ She trailed off. Took a breath, lifted her chin, and pasted on a determined smile. โIโm going to figure it out, though. I always figure it
out.โ
He hadnโt deserved to have this girl in his corner for the last five years. That fact was growing more obvious by the moment.
Someone should have been cheering for her, instead.
โI can give you the money,โ Wells said, easing the worst of the pressure in his chest. Okay. Yes. He had the solution. She wouldnโt have to spread out her insulin or be forced to take any other measures to remain healthy.
He might not be the number one golfer in the world anymore, but he had tens of millions banked from those earlier, successful days. Might as well give the cash to someone who needed it, before he spent it all on scotch. โIโll write you a check. Enough to repair the shop and cover your health
insurance for a year. Just until youโre back on your feet.โ
She stared at him like heโd suggested they take a vacation on Mars. โAre you serious?โ
โI donโt say things I donโt mean.โ
Silence passed. โNeither do I. So believe me when I say, there isnโt a
single chanceย Iโm taking your money. Iโm not a charity case. I can take care of myself.ย Andย my family.โ
โWhat is this? A pride thing? Youโre tooย stubbornย to accept?โ
โAre we really pointing out each otherโs flaws, because I donโt think you have that kind of time on your hands.โ
โI have nothingย butย time on my hands.โ โFine! Then your backswing is timid.โ
โMyโโ His neck locked up like a prison cell. โWhatย did you say?โ
โI said . . .โ She stomped through the water and got right in his faceโand damn. It had been a very long time since heโd wanted to take a woman to bed this badly. In fact, maybe heโd never wanted that outcome more in his life. At this exact point in time, it would have been the angry kind of sex that ended with nail marks down his back and her in a stupor, because yeah, sheโd just taken a shot at his technique. And she wasnโt done. โYou used to swing like you had nothing to lose. It was glorious to watch. Now, you
handle the driver like youโre worried the ball might yell at you for hitting it too hard.โ She stabbed him in the chest with her index finger. โYou swing
like youโre scared.โ
No one had spoken to Wells like that. Not since Buck.
Not since those early, early days when heโd picked up the club and felt magic race all the way up into his shoulder and a sense of purpose in his fingertips.
It was like coming up through the surface of the water and taking a deep breath.
Her honesty was oxygen.
But breathing it? That part was terrifying.
โYou thinkย youย could show me better? I had no idea you were a professional.โ
โI might not be a professionalโโ
โNo. Because if you were, you would know that once you lose your stroke, getting it back is like trying to find a needle in a haystack. Iโveย looked, Josephine. One day, a player has formula and the next, heโs forgotten how to pronounce the ingredients. Thatโs why these greats go on winning streaks that seem endless, but theyย alwaysย end. Success in golf is finite.โ
โDo you really believe that or are you just making excuses to be a quitter?โ
โI donโt need this shit.โ โThen leave.โ
โOh, donโt worry. I will.โ
He didnโt move an inch. The dumbest, most harebrained idea of his life was occurring to him and the more he allowed it to invade his mind, the
more oxygen he breathed. Her oxygen. She was an endless supply, standing right in front of him and, Jesus, he couldnโt walk out of there knowing the obstacles sheโd have to face by herself. Leaving her to deal with everything alone would haunt him day and night, along with her . . . mouth. God, her mouth. It was the most stubborn and kissable mouth heโd ever seen.
Whatever you do, donโt voice this ridiculous idea out loud.ย It probably wasnโt even possible. The longest of long shots. But maybe . . .
Maybe one last time, heโd swing like he had nothing to lose.
โIf I can get back on the tour, if theyโll allow me back on, why donโt you put your money where your mouth is and caddie for me? Since you know so goddamn much.โ
Josephine went so perfectly still, she might have transformed into a mannequin. โWait . . . what? Wh-what did you say?โ
โYou heard me. Next stop on the tour is San Antonio. You in?โ He crossed his arms in defense of her shock. Hell, hisย ownย shock. โIf you wonโt just take my money, earn it, instead.โ
She stepped back from him, her chest rising and falling. โAre you messing with me?โ
โLetโs get one thing straight, belle. You will never wonder where you stand with me or if Iโm bullshitting you. You get exactly what you see. I donโt mess around with people, but especially you.โ
Heat singed the back of his neck. Fuck.
That last part had slipped out.
โBecause Iโm potentially going to be your caddie,โ she tacked on, mercifully. โThere canโt be any secrets or pretenses between a golfer and his caddie. A caddie is a chauffeur, coach, and priest all in one package.โ
โIs that a yes?โ Wells asked gruffly, holding his breath.
โI . . .โ She looked around the flooded pro shop, as if searching for
someone to talk her out of his wild idea. โI mean, I would have a couple of conditions.โ
โName them.โ
โI canโt caddie for you indefinitely. When and if I make enough money to remodel the shop the way Iโve always wanted, Iโll have to . . .โ
Wells waited. And waited. โYou canโt even say the word โquitโ can you?โ She made a face. โIโll have to comeย home, is what Iโm saying.โ
โGot it. What else?โ
Green eyes zeroed in on him and he sensed the gravity of what came next. โI meant it, Wells. I wonโt be pitied. Okay? Iโve been coddled and treated like a charity case many times before, all because of my T1D. But Iโm not one. If we make this agreement, itโs because itโll benefit us both. Not just me.โ
Whether this arrangement would benefit him remained to be seenโ nothing heโd tried to bring his game back on line had worked, so why would this? But heโd bite. Hell, he didnโt want her to feel like a charity case, either. โDone.โ
โThen . . . I donโt think I can say no.โ
Wells tried not to be obvious about his breath escaping. โFine.โ He shrugged. โGood.โ
โDo you really think you can get back on the tour?โ
โYou let me worry about that. You just show up and carry the bag.โ
Several beats of silence passed while she looked at him, almost appearing bewildered.
โWhat is it, Josephine?โ
โYou didnโt even . . . consider that diabetes might make it hard or
impossible to carry your bag all over a golf course for eighteen holes.โ โYouโve done harder things than carry a bag. Havenโt you?โ
God help him, the sheen that appeared in her eyes made him utterly fucking determined to get his ass back on the tour, even if it meant swallowing his prideโand heโd be doing that by the mouthful. โYes,โ she finally answered. โI . . . yes. Thank you.โ
Before Wells could do something out of character, like ask if she perhaps needed a tissue or a comforting shoulder pat, he turned and stomped out of the water.
โWait!โ She splashed after him. โI have one more condition.โ
โWhat now? A kidney?โ
โMaybe later,โ she responded, without missing a beat. โFor now, let me take you to get a haircut and shave. Iโm not being seen on national television with a guy who looks like he just survived six months in the
Amazon.โ
Wells cast her a dark look over his shoulder, despite the bubble of amusement lurking near his collarbone. Honestly, he shouldnโt have given up any more ground, but the PGA wouldnโt allow him onto the green looking like an ungodly mess, anyway, so might as well concede the point to Josephine. โIs that theย finalย item on your list?โ
โYes.โ
He sighed. โFine. Letโs go. Iโll give you a ride.โ โA ride? Didnโt you say you walked here?โ
โWhat did I say about questions?โ Sliding on his shades, he unlocked the door of his Ferrari with an expensive-sounding beep. โGet in and hold on.โ