Wells swiped a gym towel down his sweaty face, tossed it onto the bench press, and took another lap around his home gym. All week, heโd been subjecting himself to grueling workouts. Seven days later, the alcohol was still seeping out of his pores. Apart from the overall need to get himself back into playing condition, heโd been using exercise as a means of distraction. A way to stall. It was now or never, though.
The tournament started in two days and Wells wasnโt yet back on the roster.
He needed to call Buck.
Otherwise, heโd hired Josephine as his caddie for no reason and his new set of clubs had been shipped to the resort in San Antonio in advance of nothing.
โQuit being a coward,โ he commanded himself, picking up the towel
once more to wipe away the perspiration on his chest. โMake the damn call. Whatโs the worst that could happen?โ
Buck could tell him to fuck off.
Technically, his mentor had already done that. There was nothing to lose here. Nothing but his pride.
Wells stared at his reflection in the wall mirror for long moments, caught off guard by the trepidation in his face. When had he become so indecisive? Before heโd been lauded as the next Tiger Woods, heโd never second- guessed himself. Heโd made every decision, even the bad ones, with full confidence.ย What the hell happened to me?
Wells didnโt know. But apparently when heโd told Josephine that golf had stolen his soul, it wasnโt an exaggeration.
Josephine.
His other reason for distracting himself with exercise.
Women didnโt usually get under his skin. It was fucking annoying, was what it was. Last night, while in the shower, heโd had an imaginary conversation with her. Out loud. Defending his backswing. When he thought of the tournament, she was the first thing that popped up in his mind. How sheโd be wearing a caddie uniform with his name on it in big, block letters. And how he liked that image a little too much.
Wells had no time for romantic bullshit. Occasional, casual hookups were part of his bachelor lifestyle, but anything beyond that only led to making plans, enduring long-winded phone calls, and taking on responsibilities heโd never asked for. Heโd learned that early on in his career after threeย very
short-term relationships. Being on television, making millions of dollars, had made him something of a magnet for people with a single motive: get a slice of that money pie. Relationships tended to move very quickly in the golf world. Because players were on the road so often, they were pressured into making commitments. To offset the doubt.
Not Wells. Not ever.
The fact that Josephine had been more than happy to wash her hands of Wells altogetherโand seemed to kind ofย dislikeย himโwas somewhat . . . reassuring. Hell, sheโd tried to throw him out of her pro shop. She wouldnโt even take his money without working for it. Heย definitelyย wouldnโt have to worry that she had some secret plan to make a rich, devoted husband out of him.
Cool.
Great.
Wells realized he was staring at his own thunderous frown in the mirror and shook himself, snatching the phone out of his pocket and pulling up the contact for Buck Lee.
One deep breath and he dialed, hating the way his pulse raced.
Buck answered on the third ring, the older manโs voice as distinct as ever.
A soft boom. โWells.โ
โBuck.โ
โI suppose if youโre calling me, you must be alive,โ drawled the legend. โThe question isย whyย are you calling, Wells? Weโve got nothing to say to each other.โ
Two years had passed since his mentor had washed his hands of Wells, but the memory still had the ability to sting. โI had no other choice but to call you. Iโm asking you to hear me out.โ
โSon, if you wanted to quit, you should have gone through the proper channels, instead of lighting on out of there without showing an ounce of respect. There is nothing anyone can do for you now.โ
โNow thatโs a lie, Buck. You could cancel the tour with a phone call, if you were so inclined.โ
His mentor scoffed. โIf you think flattery is going to get you anywhere
โโ
โWe both know I donโt flatter anyone. Itโs the truth.โ
A long sigh on the other end. โWhat do you want from me? Hurry up, so I can tell you no.โ
Panic moved like an ice cube slipping down his spine. โI want back on the tour.โ
โNever going to happen,โ Buck said, without hesitation. โBut I am curious to know why. Why do you want back on the tour? Youโre
embarrassing yourself out there. I donโt know what happened to the Wells Whitaker I coached to greatness, but heโs long gone.โ
Pressure spread behind Wellsโs eyes, his head pounding.
This was humiliating. He wanted nothing more than to hang up.
The only thing that prevented him from doing so was Josephine. She would be on her way to Texas soon. For him. Because heโd asked. Because she needed help and caddying was the only way sheโd take assistance from him. โThereโs a . . .โ
Girl? No, that sounded clichรฉ. Or made it seem like there was a romantic connotation to his relationship with Josephineโand there definitely wasnโt. Even if he wouldnโt mind a good, long taste of her. Just one, to appease his curiosity.
โI have a new caddie,โ Wells settled on, attempting to banish the thought of kissing the spirited redhead. โSomething about the way she speaks about golf, my game in general, that makes me think . . . she could . . .โย Make me love it again.ย โMake a difference.โ
This time, the pause was so long, Wells checked to see if Buck had hung up.
Then finally, he said, โIโm sorry, did you say your caddie is aย woman?โ
Wells frowned. โWhat about it? You think that means she canโt be qualified?โ
Buck let out a breath in his ear. โQualified or not, youโve already become a joke out there. Now youโre proposing a tour comeback with a woman carrying your bag? Have you thought about how thatโs going to look, son? If another player made the same attempt, heโd probably be called progressive. But you? Theyโre just going to think itโs another way for you to mock the establishment.โ
The word โmockโ in the same sentence with Josephine made him want to throw a dumbbell at the mirror and shatter it to the ground. โFirst of all,
Buck, I think youโre forgetting that I donโt give a flying fuck what anyone thinks.โย Draw back the irritation.ย His mentor was his only hope. Heโd be screwing himselfย andย Josephine over if he lost his temper. Heโd gone into
this phone call knowing it would be hard, hadnโt he? โSecond . . . she needs this.โ
That wasnโt what heโd planned to say.
But when it came down to making the request about him or Josephine,
his pride prevented him from asking for himself. Wells might not care what anyone thought about him, but there was still a significant part of him that wanted to make Buck proud. And that meant keeping his pride intact.
Josephineย wasย the main reason he was attempting to get back on the tour. He wouldnโt really allow himself to hope for some fairy-tale return to greatness, so he went with the simplest truth.
Besides, that information wouldnโt go any further than Buck and the tour chairmen.
โHer familyโs pro shop was devastated by this storm and sheโs just . . . good. All right? A good person. But I can just tell sheโs also clever at reading the course.โ Wellsโs mouth nudged up at one corner. โShe used to whisper conflicting advice to me from behind the rope. One time, she outright argued with my caddieโโ
โWait. Whoa whoa whoa, slow down. Youโre talking about that fangirl who used to hold up signs for you down in Florida?โ
โSheโs not just some fangirl. Sheโs smart. And dedicated. Or . . . she
was.โ The throb behind Wellsโs eye intensified. โLook, sheโs in a bind. If I can finish in the money a few times, she can see her way out of it.โ
He could practically hear Buck processing the whole explanation. โLet me get this straight. You expect me to believe youโre coming back on
tour . . . purely out of goodwill. You want to help a fan rebuild her pro shop?โ
Yes.
And maybe, on some level, she makes me want to try again. One last time.
Wells made a sound in his throat.
Buckโs fingers tapped on an unseen piece of furniture. โIโll tell you something, but you didnโt hear it from me.โ
โDone.โ
โThe tour has been quiet this year. Viewership is down. Thereโs no . . .
Cinderella story. You know how the fans eat that kind of thing up. After all, youย wereย the Cinderella story once.โ He paused. โAgainst my better judgment, Iโll take this to the commissioner. Down-and-out golfer makes
his return for a good cause.โ
Wells dug his fingers into the center of his aching forehead and rubbed. โIf thatโs the story you need to go with to get me back in the lineup, so be it.โ
He ignored the voice telling him heโd live to regret that decision.
* * *
Bright and early on Tuesday morning, Josephine set down her suitcase on her parentsโ front stoop and willed herself to ring the doorbell. She had so much to tell themโand they werenโt going to believe a word of it. Probably not until they saw her on television, broadcasting live from the Texas Open in San Antonio in two daysโ time.
It had been one week since Wells Whitaker blew back into her life and possibly changed it forever. Being offered a caddie position on the PGA tour was not something that happened to everyday people. In the golf world, caddying for a professional golfer was like finding a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow. Golfers made, in scientific terms, aย fuck-tonย of money. Winning a major tournament, such as the Masters, paid outย 2.5 million dollarsย for first place. Heck, coming in fortieth place earned thirty grand.
Caddies took 10 percent of the cut, in addition to their salaries.
Every night this week, sheโd lain in bed well past midnight staring at the ceiling, spinning fantasy scenarios in her head. What if she couldย actually
help Wells get his missing stroke back? What if he finished high in the money a couple of times? Not only would she be able to afford to rebuild
the Golden Tee, but she wouldnโt have to beg her endocrinologist for spare medical supplies. She wouldnโt have to choose between groceries and rent money.
This unexpected fork in the road could be life changing.
Or, leaving Palm Beach when she could be finding aย realisticย solution to her family and personal problems could make things exponentially worse.
She was putting her faith in Wells and it could cost her a lot of valuable time and effort.
There must have been part of Josephine that still believed in Wells, though. A piece of her that had never lost hope or counted him out, because staying home felt like a bigger risk than leaving. Andย man, she wanted him to win again so badly, the possibility was like a chocolate bar with almonds dangling in her face. Eating it could throw her blood sugar out of whack, but indulging in the anticipation tasted so good, she couldnโt help but reach for it.
Her mother opened the door, pink towel in place around her head. โJoey- Roo. What are you doing standing out here?โ Evelyn Doyle leaned to one side. โIs that a suitcase? Did you come for a little staycation? I have sugar- free cookies in the pantry.โ
She kissed her mother on the cheek. โNo, not a staycation.โ Josephine picked up the suitcase and followed her mother inside. โBut, obviously, Iโll take some cookies.โ
โI always keep them on hand!โ Evelyn yelled, hustling through the รผber- Floridian living room toward the kitchen. The entire house was decorated in various shades of yellow and green, indoor plants in abundance, ceiling fans whirring lazily. A moment later, her mother emerged from the kitchen, shaking a white-and-blue box. โYum yum!โ
Josephine snort-laughed and took the box, hesitating to open it. โIs Dad here?โ
โHeโs in the backyard. Honey!โ shouted her mother, pausing to listen. โHoney! Joey is here. Come inside. The man canโt hear a damn thing, I swear.โ
โI can hear just fine,โ Jim blustered, ambling into the living room while folding the newspaper under his arm. โHello, honey.โ
Cheek kisses were followed by her father gesturing to the suitcase with his folded-up newspaper. โWhatโs that?โ
โI have some news.โ Bold understatement. Her parents were golf fansโ and knew quite well about her past devotion to Wells Whitaker. They were likely going to faint from shock. โMaybe you should sit before I tell you.โ
Evelyn and Jim exchanged a look, plopping down on their plastic- covered couch simultaneously. They were already smiling, because they trusted that whatever she said was going to be positive. They were all fired up and ready to be supportive, just like always.
If only they knew how much sheโd let them down.
A notch formed in her throat while she prepared to speak.
Sheโd let the insurance lapse on the Golden Tee. Hadnโt been taking care of her health, the way sheโd promised to do in exchange for some independence.
Now she was betting on a long shot to fix everything. Would it pan out? Yes. No.
Maybe.
Please. Let this work.
โSome volunteers helped me clean up the shop this week. Itโs still waterlogged and damaged, but the ruined inventory has been thrown away and we pumped out the water.โ She smiled at her father. โI think thereโs a chance weโll still be able to use Pop Popโs old register, once it dries out a
little bit.โ
โThat isย excellentย news, honey.โ
โYes.โ She looked down at her suitcase, briefly wondering if sheโd hit her head during the hurricane and this was an elaborate coma dream. โItโs going to take some time before we . . . have the money to repair the shop. But
once we do, Iโm going to meet with a contractor about finally making the
additions weโve been talking about forever. Itโs going to be more functional and modern. Weโll have the drive-through window and consultation lounge. The putting green outside. Itโs going to be bigger and better than ever.
Youโll see. We just have to be patient.โ
Her mother blew a raspberry. โThose darn insurance companies. Theyโll take your money easy enough, but God forbid you try to get some back.โ
โWhat your mother said.โ
โYes. Thatโs all very true.โ No more stalling. Josephine opened her mouth to continue, but her phone buzzed in the pocket of her jean shorts.
โEr . . . hold on. Someone is texting me.โ
โWho is it?โ Evelyn asked. โIs it the insurance company?โ โThey donโt text people, Mom.โ
Josephineโs stomach jolted at the name on her screen: Wells. Wells was texting her.
It hadnโt stopped being weird.
The afternoon sheโd taken him downtown for a haircut, theyโd exchanged numbers out of necessity. After all, she was going to be working for him.
Since then, however, heโd texted only once with her flight information and seven measly words.
Be in San Antonio by Tuesday night.
Sheโd reread and analyzed that single sentence all week. Did that mean heโd succeeded in reinserting himself into the tour? Because that was not going to be easy. The PGA tour officials took tradition and sportsmanship very seriously. Walking off the course in the middle of a round without consulting anyone, followed by a highly publicized disappearance from the public eye? Not very sporting, indeed.
Josephine tapped on her second text from Wells, hoping it would provide more insight than his last message. Perhaps what she could expect once she reached San Antonio, a tee time for Thursday morning, his overall feelings about the course itself.
Nope.
WELLS:ย Bring a dress.
โA dress?โ she muttered.
For what? Certainly not to wear while caddying. All sheโd packed was the proper attire for spending four days traipsing around in the hot Texas sun. Sheโd have to swing home on the way to the airport in order to pack something fancier.
JOSEPHINE:ย Why?
Of course, he didnโt answer. Wells Whitaker didnโt like questions.
Josephine sighed. โWhile weโre waiting for the repair money, Iโm going to be out of town a lot. Traveling.โ
โTraveling?โ Her mother lost some of the color in her face. โWhere?โ
Jim patted his wifeโs hand. This was going to be hard for Evelyn. Sudden changes to the daily routine of a diabetic meant adjustments up the wazoo. Mainly meal planning, but the change in time zones also meant rearranging her long-acting insulin schedule and preparing for big fluctuations in her blood sugar numbers. Diabetes was a bucking bronco of a condition and it didnโt like change, which made traveling a challenge. While Josephine was growing up, theyโd rarely gone anywhere outside of Florida as a result.
โThis week, Iโll be in San Antonio. Texas.โ
โOh, I see.โ Jim beamed. โSheโs going to watch the tournament. Good for you, kiddo.โ
โWell,โ Josephine drew out. โI will be watching it in aย sense. But Iโll also be caddying for Wells Whitaker.โ
Evelyn and Jim looked at each other. And how theyย laughed.
โYou really had us going for a second there, Joey-Roo,โ said Evelyn, dabbing tears of mirth from her eyes.
Josephine had seen this reaction coming. โGuys, Iโm serious.โ She shook her phone at them. โLook, heโs texting me right this second.โ
โSure, he is,โ her father said with an exaggerated wink. โAsk him how he managed to birdie the fifth hole at Pebble Beach back in โ21. Did he go into the rough on purpose?โ
โWells doesnโt like questions.โ
Evelyn and Jim fell back against the plastic couch cushions, laughing. โI knew you werenโt going to believe me,โ Josephine called over their
guffaws.
โShe brought a suitcase as a prop and everything!โ Evelyn hiccupped, before turning slightly serious. โOh, Roo. Itโs not that we donโt think you
couldย caddie for Whitaker, but how in the world would that ever happen?โ
Josephine debated telling them heโd arrived at the Golden Tee out of the blue, but they wouldnโt believe that, either. Frankly,ย sheย was still trying to decipher the logistics of his unannounced arrival at Rolling Greens. โJust watch the tournament kick off on Thursday morning, okay?โ She pointed at their entertainment center, which was used primarily to hold plants, but
there was a television somewhere among all the greenery. โYouโre going to see me on TV. Itโll be live coverage, so I wonโt be able to answer phone calls. Okay?โ
โYouโre too much.โ Jim chuckled. โWhere are you really going?โ โDid you pack an extra test kit?โ
โYes.โ
โWhat about your emergency shot? Are you traveling with someone who knows how to use it?โ Her mother stood, hands clasped beneath her chin.
โAre you meeting Tallulah somewhere? Sheโs always so good about making sure you have a sugar stash for lows.โ
โTallulah is in Antarctica, remember? And Iโm fine, Mom,โ Josephine called over her shoulder, already rolling her luggage toward the front door. If she stayed, Evelyn would inevitably insist on inspecting her suitcase to perform a detailed medical supply checklist, and nothing would ever be enough.
Even if she packed an actual doctor in her carry-on, Evelyn’s worrying wouldnโt stop. โDonโt forget. Thursday morning.โ
โOhhhh-kay!โ Evelyn and Jim chorused in unison. โYou betcha,โ her mother added.
Josephine pointed to the Uber waiting at the curb. โIโm heading to Texas now. After I stop at home for a dress, Iโm off to the airport.โ
โTo caddie for your idol, Wells Whitaker,โ Jim said with a dramatic wink.
โThatโs right.โ
She shut the Uber door, leaving their laughter behind.