Chapter 13

Chapter Thirteen

LOGAN

I lie back on my bed, arm flung over my eyes, trying to quiet my brain. Big game tonight. I should be resting. Focusing. Visualizing plays, timing my swing, dialing into that flow state I’ve trained for since I was a kid.

But unfortunately, all I can see is Cassie.

She’s naked and glowing, with water droplets clinging to her curves like she was sculpted from steam and sin. That stunned expression when I pulled the curtain back. The way her eyes dropped—not to mention lingered—then dragged back up my body like she didn’t want to miss a single inch.

I shift on the bed, already hard again, and groan like a man being punished by the gods.

I try to ignore it. Breathe. Think of anything else.

But the images come anyway.

Her hand on my chest. Soap gliding over my stomach. Down. Her fingers wrapping around me, slick and slow, like she’s not just cleaning me—she’s claiming me.

I swallow hard, and my hips twitch up off the mattress involuntarily.

It wasn’t just the way she touched me. It was the restraint. The unspoken current holding us taut, keeping us on opposite ends of a line we both know we’re going to cross. I mean…I think we will.

I shift again, hating how badly I want to rewind time just to feel the heat of her skin pressed to mine again. Then there was how her thighs brushed my legs as we stood there. Every brush of her fingers, every glance was like she was trying not to get burned.

Spoiler alert: We’re already burned.

I groan, pressing the heels of my hands into my eyes like that’ll erase the reel playing in my head.

It doesn’t. Instead, it plays slower, and in finer detail. Her lip catching in her teeth. The glint in her eyes when I said “I should go.” The tension in her shoulders when I didn’t.

I exhale hard.

Nope. Nap’s not happening.

I roll onto my side, pulse still pounding, and mutter to the empty room, “Get it together, man.”

But the worst part that I can’t shake?

It isn’t even the sex.

It’s how good it feels to be around her. To make her laugh. To talk casually.

That’s what terrifies me the most.

Because lust? I can handle that. But this feels like something else entirely, and it’s completely new to me.

The stadium lights buzz overhead, bright even in daylight. I step out of the tunnel into the locker room, duffel bag over my shoulder, heart doing this slow, steady thud that somehow feels louder than all the shit-talk flying around me.

“Hey, new guy,” one of the pitchers says. “You ready to show us you’re not just a pretty face?”

I grunt something that sounds like a yes and head to my locker, trying not to let it show that my head’s barely here.

The guys are amped. Slapping each other’s backs, hyping up tonight’s home opener like it’s the World Series. For me, it might as well be.

First start in a long time. First real shot to prove I still belong on a diamond.

But my focus is shot to hell.

I shove my headphones in and pretend to scroll through playlists. I don’t hit play. I just need the illusion of a barrier between me and everything else.

“Logan.”

I glance up. Coach Gentry, the hitting coach, is at my side, arms crossed, chewing gum like it wronged him.

“You good?” he asks.

“Yeah, Coach. Just dialed in.”

He nods once. “Good. Because I need you hot at third tonight. Team we’re facing likes to bunt down the line all game. Eyes up. Stay sharp.”

“Yes, sir.”

He claps me on the shoulder and walks off. And I tell myself to lock in. Focus. One pitch at a time. You’ve done this a thousand times before.

“Hey, Logan,” one of the outfielders calls out. “You got a girl back home, or are you flying solo like the rest of us degenerates?”

Laughter erupts. I open my mouth to answer—maybe something cocky, or vague—but I freeze.

Because Cassie’s face flashes in my mind.

Her soft laugh. That damn yoga set. The way her eyes lingered on mine this morning like maybe…just maybe…

I hesitate a beat too long. Okay, this is getting ridiculous.

One of the guys whistles. “Ohhh, shit. He’s got somebody.”

I shake my head, smirking. “Kind of.”

Kind of, I think. Kind of like that.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.