Wells was in the middle of a press conference when he saw Josephine step quietly into the press tent out of the corner of his eye. His hand shot out involuntarily and knocked over one of the dozens of microphones in his face, sending a peal of feedback through the tent.
She tucked some hair behind her ear and smiled at him, and his concentration leaked straight out of his nose. Was that a new blue dress she was wearing? Josephine probably had a lot of items in her wardrobe heโd never seen before and that fact might have annoyed the shit out of himโa lot like this press conferenceโif his girlfriend hadnโt been making moon
eyes at him.
Last night, after getting confirmation from the limousine driver that
Josephine had connected with Tallulah, heโd relaxed. Briefly. Then heโd
gone for a walk through the lobby of the resort, on the off chance heโd catch a glimpse of Josephine. Sure enough, heโd seen her in the cocktail lounge looking so happy, heโd stood there grinning through the glass like a bozo,
before eventually tearing himself away and going back to his room.
This was the first time heโd seen her in three days.
Which was not that long. But it might as well have been a decade. Honestly, did she haveย anyย fucking clue how beautiful she was?
Beautiful and smart and adaptable and funny and adventurous. He could have sat there for a week listing her attributes, but the clearing of a throat into a microphone lassoed Wells, rudely pulling him back to the here and now.
โHow did the practice round go, Wells?โ โDecent.โ
โDo you feel more confident coming into this tournament than say . . . a month ago?โ
โWhy? What happened a month ago?โ
Laughter filtered through the tent. His manager all but slumped over in the back row, a relieved smile on his face. All it took to get his head together was Josephine showing up and smiling at him. Something about that nipped at the back of his neck, like a problem that was beginning to
sprout teeth, but Wells ignored it. There were no problems to speak of when his girlfriend was wearing a blue dress and a smile.
The media waited for him to give a serious answer to their question.
Was this his moment to let it be known once and for all how
indispensable Josephine was to their partnership? To make it clear that she was far from a charity case, but more like an untapped talent that heโd been lucky enough to find and benefit from?
Yeah. It was.
Heโd done more than irritate their sponsor and tussle with photographers over the last two days. Heโd drawn up a new contract with Nate. The kind of agreement that had never been executed between a golfer and his caddie before on the tour.
โYes, I feel more confident,โ Wells finally answered. โA lot more.โ โWould you say thatโs because of your good luck charm?โ
Was it his imagination or did Josephineโs smile falter a little bit?
Yeah. Definitely. But the change had been fleeting. Maybe being the subject of their question had just caught her off guard, because she was back to being her usual serene self now. โWhy donโt you ask her?โ Wells jerked his chin toward where Josephine hovered inside the entrance. โShe just showed up.โ
Every head turned at once.
A few camera flashes popped. Murmurs carried down the rows of reporters.
Someone in a headset rushed out onto the stage with a second chair and Wells stood, holding it for her. โAnd itโs her birthday week, so everyone better have something to say about it.โ
A chorus of baritone happy birthdays rose from the gathered media while Josephine smoothed her dress and climbed the three stairs onto the stage. โHey,โ she whispered, her green eyes turning any remaining waves inside Wells into a placid lake. โI was going to come see you last night, to say
thank you, but Tallulah and I didnโt stop talking until they closed down the bar. Like, we wereย physicallyย removed.โ She took a shallow breath and released it shakily. โWells, Iโll never receive a better present as long as I live. I donโt know what to say.โ
He didnโt, either.
Who had filled his chest with sand?
โUh-hmm.โ He grunted. Pulled her chair out farther. โNice dress.โ Her sides shook with silent mirth. โThank you.โ
Another grunt, as they both took their seats.
Jesus, are you okay?
Was he feeling unbalanced because he hadnโt kissed her yet?
โMiss Doyle! Do you think youโll inspire more women to become caddies on the PGA Tour?โ
โI hope so.โ
โHow has the reception been toward you on tour?โ
โNo complaints.โ She hedged. โI mean, thereโs always a little ball- busting in the locker room setting, but it helps that I donโt have any balls to bust.โ
Laughter boomed through the tentโand some of it came from Wells. There was nobody like Josephine.
In the wake of her joke, she turned and smiled at him, her eyes twinkling like twin lakes beneath a sunset, and he lost his ability to speak.
Iโm in love with you, Josephine.
โIโve got a question for both of you,โ said a man standing at the back of the tent. โThe internet seems pretty determined to prove youโre a pair onย andย off the golf course. How do you feel about the speculation about your relationship?โ
Wellsโs ability to speak came roaring back. There was his opening. He leaned forward to speak into the group of microphones. โSheโs my professional partner. Myย equalย partner. Thatโs the only relationship that concerns anyone in this tent.โ
โWhat do you mean by โequal partnerโ?โ pressed the reporter.
โI mean, sheโs just as responsible for any success out there as I am.โ Several beats of silence followed. They were visibly nonplussed.
โAre you going to give her fifty percent of the winnings, too?โ asked the man, dryly.
Skeptical snorts followed that question. Most of the press, however, looked peeved by the reporter. A couple of them even threw crumpled-up paper cups at the man, which he batted away.
โWells . . . ,โ Josephine whispered. โIgnore him.โ
He covered the microphone with his hand. โDo you trust me?โ Her brow wrinkled. โOf course.โ
Victory bobbed in his throat. Sheโd said it faster this time than last time. Wells dropped his hand from the microphone. โI donโtย giveย her anything.
She earns it. Sheโsย thatย good at reading a course. Making calls based on
strengths and weaknesses I didnโt even know I had. Hell, her drive is better than mine. To say Iโm lucky to have her on my team would be an
unforgivable understatement.โ He pressed his thigh against hers, where no one in the tent could see. โThatโs why Iย amย giving her fifty percent of my winnings.โ
Silence abounded.
Josephineโs head turned slowly, her eyelashes fluttering a mile a minute. Everyone started talking at once, taking pictures and shouting questions, but he didnโt have time for any of that. He needed to be alone with his girl.
โNo more questions, you beady-eyed pack of vultures. Weโre out of
here.โ He stood abruptly, sending his chair skidding across the podium, and waited for Josephine to rise, as well.
Which she did. On visibly wobbly legs.
He tried to gauge her reaction. Did she understand why heโd done it?
Sheโd asked him to refrain from trying to correct the mediaโs misconception of her and her so-called victim/hero relationship with Wells, because he might make it worse. But he couldnโt do that. He couldnโt stand by and let people believe Josephine wasnโt the hero in this situation. And heย hoped, maybe, once people stopped seeing her otherwise, their relationship could
thrive out in the open.
Not now, obviously. Someday.
But Wells was shocked down to the soles of his feet whenโright there in front of everyoneโshe reached out and took his hand, winding their fingers together tightly. Lights flashed, feet stomped, more questions were shouted, but they ignored all of it, communicating with nothing but their eyes.
I canโt believe you did that, said hers.
His responded with,ย You havenโt seen anything yet. Side by side, they walked out of the tent.
And Wells only shot the reporters the briefest of middle fingers behind his back.
* * *
Wells stared at the dinner menu in his hands, the words blurring together in indecipherable lines. What did โbraisedโ mean? He couldnโt remember.
He was in the playersโ lounge having dinner with Josephine and Tallulah, but heโd barely managed a proper greeting for Josephineโs best friend when they arrived.
Because heโd been rendered speechless by sex. Utterly fucking speechless.
โWells, do you want one of these rolls?โ Josephine asked, nudging the breadbasket in his direction. All he could do was look at the baked dough in confusion.
โHuh?โ
Josephine pressed her lips together in amusementโbecause she knew exactly what sheโd done to him. Scrambled his brain like a couple of farm fresh eggs, thatโs what.
Sheโd given him head.ย Twice.ย Enthusiastically.
Were his legs even attached to his body anymore? He couldnโt feel them. Couldnโt hear or see anything but Josephine on her knees in that blue dress, telling him softly that it was okay to come in her mouth. That she really wanted him to.
You better not be doing this because of the press conference, heโd said, while flexing his hips toward her mouth.ย Or because I flew in your friend, Josephine, I swear to . . .
Canโt I just miss the taste of my boyfriendโs cock?ย sheโd purred, kissing his crown.
And his brain went offline after that.
Heโd literally passed out from the sucker punch of relief sheโd given him. And when heโd woken up, she was back at it.ย Moaningย as she sucked him.
No clothes this time. Not a single stitch.
Now he was supposed to make small talk. Chew things and operate utensils.
How.
Wells watched the waiter approach with a sense of dread. โSomething to drink, folks?โ
Josephine and Tallulah ordered glasses of white wine. Wells helplessly gestured to the bar.
โA . . . beer, sir?โ guessed the waiter.
Wells nodded, his neck so loose, he probably resembled a bobblehead. He had no idea what heโd done to deserve the Cadillac of sexual favors,
but he wanted to be a better person now. Volunteer more. Build orphanages with his bare hands. Save the bees. All of it.
โSo, Wells . . .โ Tallulah buttered a roll. โDo you have rituals you perform before a tournament starts? Like, is there a song that hypes you up?โ
Both women looked at him expectantly. As if his brain wasnโt still a pile of mashed potatoes on the pillow upstairs. But didnโt he want to make a good impression on Josephineโs best friend?ย Get your head on straight.
โLately, I usually just argue with Josephine.โ
Tallulah snickered. โHow long did it take you to realize she always wins?โ
โDay two, I think. Maybe three.โ
โAnd yet, he keeps trying,โ Josephine said, squeezing his thigh beneath the table.
Making him think of how sheโd held on to his thighs while she stuck out her tongue for his spend. โIโm never going to argue with you again,โ he rasped. โYou win forever.โ
โOh. This is a victory dinner?โ Tallulah raised her glass of wine. โArenโt those supposed to comeย afterย the tournament?โ
โYeah. But weโve always been a little unconventional,โ Wells said, and he could actually feel his fucking heart pounding in his chest as he looked at Josephine. โAnd I donโt want to change a single thing.โ
Josephineโs smile dipped a little, seemingly beneath the weight of the moment. โMe either.โ
โHoly shit,โ Tallulah said, setting down her glass with a clink. โLook at that giant man with a childโs backpack on his shoulder.โ
Halfway through Tallulahโs exclamation, Wells somehow knew she was referring to Burgess. In his panic to reach Palm Beach, followed by the rush to reach California early, heโd forgotten all about his phone call with the hockey bruiser. Now, Wells tore his eyes off his girlfriend and followed
Tallulahโs line of sight toward the lobby, where, indeed, Burgess was towering among a sea of people with a miniature, sparkly silver backpack on his shoulder, a very solemn young girl holding his hand in the check-in line.
โWow, he actually brought his kid,โ Wells said. โTo a golf tournament.โ Tallulah raised a dark eyebrow. โYou know him?โ
โYeah.โ Why was he shrugging so much? โCasually.ย Like, beers and the occasional phone call, but itโs not a big deal.โ
Josephine tapped her temple. โMaking a mental note not to fly him in forย yourย birthday.โ She split a look between Wells and the lobby. โDo you want to ask them to join us?โ
โWith aย kid?โ
โKids eat, too, last time I checked,โ said his girlfriend.
Suddenly, he was very fixated on what Josephine was saying. โDo you like kids?โ
โOf course, I like kids.โ
โDo you want one?โ he half shouted.
โOh, I wish they had popcorn on this menu,โ Tallulah said wistfully, tipping her glass to her lips. โBut I guess wine will have to do.โ
โMaybe,โ Josephine answered, finally. โNot yet. But maybe someday.โ โI donโt know a damn thing about kids,โ he warned her.
Josephine opened her mouth, closed it. โPeople usually donโt know, until they have one. Not really.โ She very clearly kicked her friend under the table. โRight, Tallulah?โ
The aspiring marine biologist choked on her wine, but recovered fast. โSheโs right. You have toย haveย one to find out if you actuallyย wantย one. Itโs pretty fucked.ย Unlessย your mother had one of your siblings late in life, like mine did, and you helped raise them.โ She rubbed her hands together. โThatโs how I know I want โem. Bring me that child!โ
Wells had the very distinct urge to witness Josephine around a young kid and he had no idea where it was coming from. โIโll ask them if theyโre hungry.โ
Josephine slumped, as if relieved to be done with his line of questioning. And heย wasย done with it. For now. Heโd never been remotely serious about a woman, the way he was with Josephine. It stood to reason that he should know her vision for the future. Obviously, she wanted to turn the Golden Tee into a premier destination in Palm Beach for golf, but beyond that . . .
what did she want? A house? Did she want a split-level or more of a ranch style?
Unbelievable. He knewย nothing.
When Wells reached Burgess, he briefly clapped a hand down on the manโs gargantuan shoulder. โHey, man. You made it.โ
Burgess turned halfway. Dipped his chin. โThatโs right. You better not suck tomorrow.โ
โDad!โ The little girl punched her father in the leg. โNormal people say hi?โ
The hockey player grunted. โThis is Lissa. Sheโs eleven.โ
โHi, Lissa who is eleven.โ Wells stuck his hand out for a shake. To his surprise, she didnโt hesitate to take his hand and squeeze it firmly. โDo you eat? Food?โ
โNo, she eats tree bark,โ Burgess deadpanned. โOf course, she eats food.โ โLook, Iโve had anย afternoon. All right? Iโm lucky to be alive right now.โ
Wells jerked his thumb at the restaurant, his ridiculous heart skipping when Josephine waved. โWeโre having dinner over there. Me, Josephine, and her friend Tallulah. Youโre welcome to join. Theyโve got a lot of things that are braised on the menu. Thatโs all the information I have to report.โ
โDo they have chicken fingers?โ asked Lissa.
Shit, that sounded good. โI donโt know. But if they do, Iโm fucking ordering them.โ
Burgessโs left eye twitched. โWatch the language, Whitaker.โ Lissa doubled over giggling.
Wells stared in stunned silence. Holy shit. Heโd made a childย laugh.
Wells turned and made eye contact with Josephine, pointing at Lissa.
Sheโs laughing at me, he mouthed.
Josephine sent him a double thumbs-up.
โWeโll check in and come join you,โ Burgess said, already walking toward the attendant who was waving him over from behind the check-in desk. โCome on, Lissa.โ
Wells went back to the restaurant and sat down in his chair, feeling more than a little smug. โPretty sure I was born to be a father.โ
โWow.โ
โWow.โ
โIโm as impressed as you are, ladies.โ
A few minutes later, Burgess and Lissa entered the restaurant, the hockey player required to duck to make it beneath the doorframe without smacking his head. Lissa looked embarrassed just to be alive, hugging her elbows and hiding behind her fall of blond hair as she wove her way toward the table and sat down, expelling a breath.
Wanting to keep his Cool Adult streak going, Wells picked up the breadbasket and dropped it in front of the eleven-year-old. Zero movement at the table. Why was nobody speaking? Wells traded a look with Josephine, who tipped her glass subtly at the hockey player . . . who was staring at Tallulah like sheโd just arrived on a cloud, wreathed in sunbeams.
โYou want to take a seat, B-man?โ Wells asked, nudging a chair out with his toe.
Which just happened to be the seat beside Tallulah. โI . . . yeah. Uh.โ Burgess made no move to sit.
Thankfully, Josephine set down her glass and sprang into action, because she was perfect. โBurgess, itโs so nice to meet you. Iโm Josephine.โ
โMy girlfriend,โ Wells added, leaning forward. โAnd equal partner.โ
โYeah, I saw a clip of the now-famous press conference.โ Burgess shook Josephineโs hand. โYouโre the one.โ
A wrinkle formed between her brows. โThe one what?โ
โMyย one.โ Wells frowned at her. โGet on the same page, belle.โ Josephine stared.
โAnd Iโm Tallulah,โ blurted the other woman, leaning forward, while very clearly kicking Josephine under the table. Two, three, four times.
โNice to meet you, Burgess.โ When she got no response, she tilted her head at the eleven-year-old. โWhatโs your name?โ
โLissa.โ
Tallulah reached out and gave her a fist bump. โHey, Lissa.โ
Burgess finally sat down across from his daughter, very careful not to brush any part of himself against Tallulah. โDo you want me to see if they have a placemat you can color?โ
โDad, I donโt color placemats anymore,โ she whispered, blushing furiously.
The man known as Sir Savage hung his head slightly, appearing to mentally berate himself. This was the first time that Wells had ever seen the athlete with his childโand there was no comparing the two sides of the man. Usually, he was dry-humored and relaxed. Right now, he appeared to
be at a total loss. โLetโs get those chicken fingers, right?โ Wells said, not sure if he was helping. โBut if anyone dips them in anything other than ranch, they can go sit somewhere else.โ
Lissa giggled again.
Wells gave Josephine a pointed look.ย See?
โIโm having the veggie burger. One of the hazards of studying animals for a living is I feel too guilty eating them. I canโt chew without thinking โpoor Georgeโ!โ
โWhat kinds of animals?โ Lissa asked in a mumble, fiddling with the sugar packets in the center of the table.
โEmperor penguins, most recently. I love cold-weather animals.โ โLike . . . polar bears?โ ventured Lissa.
Tallulah beamed. โYes!โ
That got a smile out of the kid.
โTallulah is part of a research team studying in Antarctica,โ Josephine said.
Lissaโs jaw dropped. โIsnโt it freezing?โ
โYes. I have to put onย eight layersย just to walk outside. I feel weirdly naked right now.โ
Burgess coughed. Snatched up his water and drained it. โHow . . . long are you here for?โ asked the hockey player, once heโd set down the glass.
โJust until tomorrow morning.โ Josephine and Tallulah traded a pout. โBut the project runs for only another month and then itโs back to school. Iโll be working on my masterโs at BU.โ
โBurgess lives in Boston,โ Wells pointed out absently, while looking around for the waiter. โRemind me which neighborhood, man.โ
โBeacon Hill,โ Burgess said.
โIs that a nice area?โ Tallulah asked. โAre there parks?โ โParks?โ Burgess echoed.
Josephine nodded. โMy best friend loves a park.โ
โTheyโre free,โ Tallulah explained. โYou can sit in them all day. Reading, suntanning, people watching. Itโs a very underrated activity.โ
Lissa threw a sugar packet at Burgess. โDad, thereโs a park on our roof.โ
Tallulah reared back slightly. โOkay, baller. I doubt Iโll be able to afford a neighborhood that has roof park buildings.โ She grinned. โNot while Iโm still in school, at least.โ
โWhere would you live, instead?โ Burgess wanted to know.
Tallulah shrugged. โNot sure yet.โ
Burgess made a long sort of grinding sound, like a car engine turning over and over and over. โWe have space.โ
Josephine kicked Tallulah under the table. Tallulah kicked her back.
The athlete coughed into his fist, leaned back. โThe roof park has a waterfall.โ
Tallulah pretended to faint.
โDad, I thought you were going to rent that room to a nanny.โ Lissa rolled her eyes at the table. โHe thinks I still need one.โ
โIโm going to be on the road, off and on, Lissa. Not to mention practices . . .โ
โIf you need to rent the room to a nanny, thatโs fine. I totally understand.โ Tallulah traded a conspiratorial wink with Lissa. โLissa and I can still have a park date or two.โ
Lissaโs spine snapped straight. โUnlessย youย want to be my nanny.โ
There was a tremendous amount of kicking happening beneath the table. Wells wondered if the women knew he and Burgess could see all of it. โI-I guess . . . I mean, that would depend on what it entails . . . ,โ
stuttered Tallulah.
โFifteen hundred a week. Free room and board.โ Oblivious to the fact that Tallulahโs mouth had dropped open, Burgess continued without ever once looking at Tallulah. โI wouldnโt expect you there every second of the day, just mornings, evenings.โ He shifted in his seat. โThrough the night. Especially while Iโm not there, of course.โ
โOf course,โ Tallulah said quickly, she and Josephine trading some silent girl communication with their eyes, lips moving imperceptibly. Wells could only watch in fascination. โIโll be home most nights anyway, since Iโll be studying. But Iโll need to negotiate at least two nights for social activity.โ
Burgess squinted at her. โAs in?โ
โPartying, of course. Life canโt be all work and no play,โ Tallulah said brightly. โMornings are no problem. If my terms are acceptable, Iโm . . . not sure I can say no to the offer.โ
โFine,โ Burgess boomed. โDone.โ Lissa clapped her hands.
Tallulah very discreetly sipped her wine while checking out Burgessโs biceps.
Wells and Josephine turned to stare at each other.
What the hell had just happened?
Any why was . . . Josephine suddenly rocking in her seat? Not just rocking, but kind of . . . shimmying.
Dancing.
She wasย dancing.
Spine snapping straight, Wells desperately tried to dig through the restaurant din to unearth the song that was playing. โCalifornia Girls.โ But not the one by Katy Perry.
Tallulah let out a hoot. โOh, they knew you were coming, Joey!โ โHoly shit.โ Wells fell back in his chair. โTheย Beach Boys?โ
โMy grandparents used to play this on vinyl when I was little and went to visit. Itโs in my bones,โ Josephine said, wincing, but still dancing. โIโm sorry for what youโre about to witness.โ
Wells grinned. โIโm not.โ
Tallulah grabbed Josephine by the wrist and hauled her toward a space between tables that was decidedlyย notย a floor designated for dancing, but they were obviously determined to make it one. Both of the women gestured enthusiastically for Lissa to join them. When the eleven-year-old responded by bounding out to turn the duo into a trio, Burgess couldnโt seem to hide his shock. In no time, Lissa was stepping side to side between Josephine and Tallulah, if a little self-consciously.
The Beach Boys.
A little old-fashioned, uplifting, positive, revolutionary, warm. It fit Josephine so well, he should have guessed it before.
โWow. Look at you. Youโre a goner,โ Burgess remarked into his beer. โIโm well past gone, man.โ Wells managed to tear his eyes off a joyful
Josephine long enough to spear the hockey player with a look. โLooks like youโre headed in the same direction. Enjoy the trip.โ
โWhatโs that supposed to mean?โ
โThe only part of your new nanny youโre supposed to check out are her references.โ
Burgess seemed to realize he was staring at Josephineโs friend and ripped his gaze downward, growling into his beer. โSheโs too young for me.
Probably . . . eight? Ten years?โ โYup.โ
โLook, I play hockey, I raise Lissa, I stay home. I donโt people watch. I
definitelyย donโt party,โ he spat, like the very idea was laughable. โSheโll
probably have a boyfriendโher ageโbefore sheโs fully moved into my place.โ
โOkay.โ
Burgess bared his teeth. โStop giving me one-word responses.โ โOh. Okay.โ
โI donโt know what the redhead sees in you.โ
Wells laughed. Just let the happiness escape him in the form of a sound without trying to smother or temper it and Josephine met his eyes, her own softening at the sight of him enjoying himself. โMe either, man, but Iโm not questioning it.โ