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Tackled: A Sports Romance by Sabrina Paige (19)

Colton

We're all sitting around the table – my mom, Cassie and Sable, and my roommates. It's loud, everyone talking and passing food around like we're one big family. My mom has a way of making you feel like you're part of her family, which I guess is one reason my roommates think she's awesome. That and the cinnamon rolls. She makes a mean cinnamon roll.

"Now, Sable," my mom starts.

I know that tone. Next, she’s going to throw Sable at me as a potential girlfriend. I glance at Cassie sitting beside me. I engineered that seating arrangement personally. I wasn't about to let one of my roommates anywhere near her.

"Tell me you're not attached," she says.

"Mom," I warn.

"I'm single and free," Sable announces in the breezy, blunt way she does. From where I sit, I can see her wink across the table at Tank, who's munching on a piece of garlic bread. "That's a hint."

I stifle a laugh. Sable deflected that like a pro.

Tank blinks at Sable like a deer in the headlights. Or a guy who just had a girl out of his league hit on him.

"Subtle, Sable," Cassie says, laughing.

"I've never been a subtle kind of girl." Her eyes are on Tank. "I like to get straight to the point. I pick you, in case I wasn't clear."

"Damn it," grunts Emmett.

"Okay. Uh, you wanna hang out?" Tank asks.

"Well, look at that." My mother looks so proud. "I should run a matchmaking service. Now, if only I could get my son to –"

"Ma," I groan. This time there's no warning tone. I give my mother a look that's clear I'm not joking.

"Jonathan really is the sweetest guy you'll ever meet, Sable," my mom promises, changing the subject. "He has such a kind heart."

The conversation keeps going, my mom talking to Sable and my roommates, and I tune everything out because there's nothing I'm interested in as much as Cassie.

Or more specifically, Cassie's thigh. Under the table, I slide my hand to her leg, my fingers brushing against her skin.

When I look over at her, she's glaring. I think her nostrils might even be flared. She holds up her fork and narrows her eyes, making a subtle stabbing gesture that no one seems to notice.

In response, I squeeze her leg.

She doesn't say anything. She just gives me a look that could melt ice.

I'm honestly kind of surprised when she reaches for her cell phone instead of stabbing me in the back of the hand with a fork, which is totally what I deserve. I watch as she types out a text message. My phone vibrates in my pocket and I only take my hand away from her in order to grab it. Then Cassie turns to Sable, pretending to be preoccupied with whatever super interesting thing Sable is saying.

I open the text message.

Get your hand off my leg, you perv, or I'm going to stab you.

I type a response.

My hands are going to be on a lot more than just your leg.

I don't hear her phone vibrate after I hit send. She must have turned the sound off. But when she glances at me, I can tell she got the message loud and clear, which is good, because I'd hate to be less than clear about what I want.

My mother is busy interrogating my roommates, making sure everyone is making decent grades and asking about what they think of the pre-season hype surrounding our schedule this year. Meanwhile, all I can think about is how much I want Cassie naked again. I want to run my hands over her skin. I want to breathe her in. I can't wait to see her come.

Now my dick is hard, sitting here at the table with all of these people. Including my mother.

Cassie looks over at me again, her gaze falling to my lap. When she sees the hard-on I clearly have for her, she arches an eyebrow and turns away. I get a text message another minute later.

Really? Your mom is at the table.

I text her back.

What can I say? When I think of you naked, I can't help it.

She texts again.

I'm not texting you anymore.

I respond:

What if I'm texting to tell you how much I want to be inside you?

When she gets it, she gives me a wide-eyed glare.

"Cassandra, how much more school do you have left?"

Cassie clears her throat. "Four years," she answers. "Maybe three. I'm taking summer classes and adding an extra class during regular semesters here and there."

Four years. Damn, that's a lot. I find myself suddenly irritated by the fact that my mother has known Cassie for all of five seconds and she knows more about this girl than I do.

"Four years?" my mother asks.

Cassie nods. "Sable and I are getting our Ph.Ds."

My mother practically beams with approval, casting a meaningful look my way. I already know full and well what that look means — that's the look that says, "You had better snap this girl up right now."

"So you'll be doctors," my mom says. She gives me the same look, but with raised eyebrows this time, as if I wasn't already clear on her meaning.

"Not the medical kind," Sable clarifies. "But yeah. Cassie will be a professor in a few years."

"You won't, Sable?" my mother asks.

Sable shrugs. "I don't know what I'm going to do," she admits. "I might set up a foundation or run a non-profit or something. That's pretty much what people in my family do."

Tank finally speaks. "That's cool," he says to her. "A foundation. Helping people is cool."

Cassie wants to be a professor. My mother asks her questions about what sociologists do and when Cassie speaks, she's so enthusiastic about what she does – and so damn sexy explaining it — that all of us jocks who don't give two shits about academics are sitting around the table practically slack-jawed listening to her talk.

She really likes teaching. I can tell.

And not just in the way she's been teaching me.


"Cassie!" I catch up with her outside the house where she's walking with Sable toward their cars.

Sable waves. "I'll see you at home, Cass," she yells before ducking away quickly.

Cassie pauses at the door of her car, looking around. "Don't, Colton," she warns me before I even try to touch her. "It's not even dark outside. Someone will see you."

"What if I don't care if they see us?"

"I lose my job if someone sees us," she says, her lips pursed. "So it matters to me."

"All right." I suddenly feel badly for pushing her like I have been without considering the consequences for her. I'm not used to thinking about them. I do what I want and let the chips fall where they fall. Being a star athlete means you get away with a lot of shit. I definitely don't think about them when it comes to women — easy hookups with no strings attached mean no consequences.

"Okay," she says, nodding. "I had fun. At dinner, I mean, not ... the other part. I mean, I didn't not have fun in your room."

I think this might be her way of blowing me off and suddenly I feel defensive.

"Yeah, totally fun," I agree with a careless shrug. "I mean, you know, it was no big deal. If you want to do it again sometime, text me."

Shit. The words sounded okay in my head, but as soon as I hear them, I realize I sound like a total asshole. And what's worse is that I realize I don't want her to think I'm an asshole.

She gives me a weird look, then opens the car door. "Yeah. No big deal."

Back inside, my mother gets right on my case about Cassie as I help her load the dishwasher.

"Cassie is a catch," she says.

"She's my tutor," I remind her, irritated. That conversation by the car set me on edge.

And I keep fucking things up with her.

"Uh-huh," my mom says. "I saw the way she was looking at you tonight."

"There was no look, mom. There are rules about that stuff."

"Did I ever tell you about how my parents hated your father?"

"Your parents hated dad? I thought they loved him." My parents were high school sweethearts, married when they were eighteen. My father died at the beginning of my senior year in high school, twenty years later.

"Well, they did. Eventually," my mom concedes. "But your father wasn't exactly the kind of guy they wanted their daughter dating, much less marrying."

I don't bother to hide my laugh. "Dad was what, a juvenile delinquent?"

My parents are the definition of straight-laced. They're farmers, for shit's sake. Or were farmers before my dad's heart attack. I can't fathom my father being anything except the rule-abiding man who worked the family farm.

"Don't laugh," she says. "Your father was trouble in high school."

"What, did he steal a candy bar from a convenience store?"

"He was bootlegging alcohol in ninth grade," she says. "Selling it after school. Had his own label and everything."

"Are you kidding?" I let out a laugh. "That's awesome. How did I not know that about dad?"

"It's not something I was going to tell you boys about. Anyhow, my parents found out," she goes on. "That was the end of that. They forbade me from seeing him, but your dad was persistent. He didn't stop seeing me, although he did stop bootlegging. And he wore my parents down bit by bit."

"I get your point," I realizing it. "Breaking the rules worked out for you. This is different, mom."

"I don't think it's that different."

"What you and dad had, that's not how things are anymore, ma."

"Some things don't change, Colt." She takes a plate from my hands. "When you go pro, women will be throwing themselves at you for all the wrong reasons."

"Maybe that's what I want, ma," I tell her. "I'm just having fun. I'm not stupid. I'm not getting involved with any of the girls here at school — they're all after the same thing. I'm a meal ticket or a way to be in the limelight."

She looks at me, her expression stern. "I don't care how many girls you have fun with," she says. "But that girl isn't a girl you just have fun with."