Chapter 1
INSTANT REPLAY CHAPTER ONE
Oh my God, it’s nothing but naked men in here!” Marlee said on a bit of a squeak. Which was unusual, because calm, cool Marlee Reeves never squeaked.
“Where? Where?” Marlee’s friend, Kathy Robinson, peeked around Marlee’s tall shoulder, looking past the foyer where they stood, and down into the sunken living room.
“Everywhere. There, and there.” Marlee pointed out the men in question to Kathy.
“Marlee, if that’s your idea of naked men, you’ve been in the classroom way too long.” Kathy chuckled and shook her head at Marlee.
Kathy was one of the few people Marlee knew who didn’t think of her as uptight, because Kathy had seen her when Marlee let her hair down, both figuratively and literally, when they’d been roommates at Berkeley.
But most people when meeting Marlee—for the first, second, and even third times—came away thinking of a stereotypical cool, buttoned-up priss. And that was fine with her.
She supposed it didn’t help that she perpetuated the stereotype by wearing nothing but severely cut business suits, her auburn hair always bound up in a tight chignon, and the requisite glasses. The suits were designer, as were the glasses, and very fashionable, but still.
Kathy had told her to dress casually for the football game they’d gone to earlier that day, and she had…or so she’d thought. Kathy, upon seeing her, had laughed and asked her if she even owned jeans. Marlee had only smiled and told her friend that she would be fine in what she was wearing.
And Kathy hadn’t said a word at the looks Marlee received as they’d walked through the crowd at Liberty Field to watch the Pumas lose to the Jets, taking them out of the playoffs and ending their season.
Amidst the face-painted, bare beer-bellied Pumas diehards sat Marlee, in a gray Donna Karan paint suit with cream silk blouse underneath, all covered by a camel hair coat and cashmere scarf.
A large whoop from the crowd in the living room in front of them brought Marlee back from her musings on her wardrobe, and she once again concentrated on the wardrobes of the people in front of her.
Or, rather, lack of wardrobes.
“Semi-naked, then,” Marlee amended. It was still an awful lot of flesh.
It was wall-to-wall bodies, mostly female.
Kathy and she were descending into the living room of the home, had just passed the foyer, when the visual Technicolor of the outfits and the overwhelming aroma of nearly fifty different designer perfumes assaulted Marlee’s senses.
There were probably thirty men. They were all huge. A true rainbow coalition. The skin tones ran the gamut from palest white to blackest black, with every hue in between represented. Marlee assumed that these men were the players she had watched earlier today.
Tried to watch. The game moved faster than she’d imagined. She’d left the game with a headache, hoping for a quiet dinner with her friend Kathy and her husband Joey. This loud, body-filled house was not what she had in mind.
The men at the party all wore either muscle shirts or no shirt at all, and nylon running pants.
Maybe regular pants just wouldn’t fit over thighs like theirs, though it seemed to Marlee that surely these men’s salaries would allow them some custom tailoring.
The huge biceps on most of them would cut glass, they were so hard.
That must be the reason for the sleeveless shirts—to show off the bulging muscles.
It certainly wasn’t to stay cool. Not in January in Boston.
Marlee looked, but was hard-pressed to find a neck on any of them.
It seemed their burly chests blended right into their massive heads.
The women were just as scantily dressed.
Halter tops, tank tops, and even a sprinkling of tube tops.
Lots of them in lamé. All worn a size too small.
In the dead of a Boston winter. Marlee shivered just thinking of how cold the women must be.
They didn’t act cold, though, unless their close proximity to all the men in the room was an effort to bask in the collective body heat.
Marlee wasn’t sure which was more plentiful at first glance: big hair or nearly bared breasts.
Marlee hadn’t seen so much cleavage since the time she had inadvertently gone to a strip joint with some male colleagues after a conference, thinking that “The Trim Club” was a new workout place.
Kathy had taken her to the football game—Marlee’s first—and now they were at an after-game party at a home belonging to one of the players. Marlee and Kathy were there to collect Kathy’s husband Joey, who was a former teammate of the man who was hosting the party.
Joey played for the Portland Lumberjacks, and their season had ended a week earlier. He’d wanted to come to a game of a former teammate of his who was retiring. As it happened, with the loss today, it turned out to be his final game.
Marlee didn’t care about any of that, but she was thrilled to see her old roommate Kathy and meet her husband. When they’d married so quickly after meeting last year, Marlee had been concerned. But even just spending this short amount of time with them, she could see the couple was deeply in love.
But now, Marlee just wanted to collect Joey and go to dinner.
The thought of spending any more time in this place made her extremely uneasy.
She felt like she did in high school when the football team strolled down the hall, slamming the nerdy boys into lockers, and the cheerleaders trailed after them, all twittering and giggling.
It made her feel insignificant and out of place, even a little nervous.
Those nerdy boys had been her friends, her fellow chess club members.
And she had never had anything in common with the cheerleaders.
As she looked around the room, she pushed her glasses up her nose (a testament that she hadn’t left her nerd roots totally behind).
She wasn’t sure if it was the huge men or the scantily clothed women that bothered her, but this was not her cup of tea.
Nevertheless, she held herself with her usual poise and dignity, as if large men tossing a tiny woman above their heads and passing her across the room was an everyday occurrence.
She turned her attention away from the people and to the décor of the room.
It was lovely. Marlee had assumed that they’d be going to an ostentatious mansion furnished in lots of black leather and chrome with big-screen TVs, quadraphonic stereo systems, and trophies lining every available inch of wall space.
Possibly some zebra-skin rugs. But this place was no mansion, though it was definitely an expensive home.
The room they were in was what Marlee assumed was the great room. Through the throng of people she could see one wall was dominated by a gorgeous stone fireplace. Another wall was painted a Tuscan gold that set it apart from the rest of the room.
She’d done something similar in her home, painting one wall a dramatic salmon color. This player’s wife and Marlee had similar tastes, and she debated trying to stay at the party long enough to meet the woman and to see the kitchen. She was a kitchen connoisseur.
The house was in the quiet, family-oriented, affluent Boston suburb of Brookline, one that Marlee had driven through many times, mentally adding it to her list of places she would look into when she settled down and had a family.
She wondered now, as she looked around the warm, homey decor, if she wouldn’t be better off spending more time trying to find someone to share a home like this with than looking at neighborhoods.
“Look at all those glorious bare chests, all those muscles. Man, these guys are sculpted. Of course, none can hold a candle to my Joey. We better find him and get the heck out of here; looks like this place is about to get out of hand. I’m thinking this party is for the single players.
I don’t see too many wife-looking women here.
Besides, I don’t want him comparing me with all those nubile young groupies. ”
Kathy joked about her husband of just over a year, but Marlee knew that they were deliriously happy together. Joey’s grandmother was staying with their baby in Portland while the couple took the quick trip to Boston so Joey could wish his friend well.
Joey had felt he should at least make an appearance at his friend’s party, so he went right after the game, and Kathy and Marlee were to pick him up and the three would go out for dinner.
Marlee had something she wanted to discuss with Joey, and she didn’t want to do it with Metallica blasting in the background and young girls in spandex giggling in her ears.
As if Marlee had conjured him up, Joey stepped forward from the crowd and started walking toward them.
He walked quickly, making several moves worthy of his football god status—just to avoid making contact with the huge men who were in various stages of dancing, drinking, flirting with the groupies, and lamenting the loss that had ended their season.
Joey wasn’t alone. Beside him walked the most handsome man Marlee had ever seen.
He was smaller than Joey, and was dwarfed by the behemoth football players who seemed to part like the Red Sea to allow the men past. He was dressed more like Joey too, in khakis, a crisp white dress shirt with its sleeves rolled up his tanned forearms, and very expensive loafers.
Marlee, a shoe freak from way back, noticed the loafers first, made a note of the designer and the probable cost, and wondered if this man with Joey might be a team member’s agent.
Marlee’s chest tightened just from looking at the man coming their way. God, he was handsome. A physique to die for. He must work out a lot. If he was an agent, he had players for clients and maybe wanted to look good when he was next to them. And boy did he look good.