Dirty Brawler: A Bad Boy Sports Romance (with bonus novel!) (3 page)

I saw the corner of his mouth twitch. “I can’t say I’ve ever been referred to as ‘prey’ before.”

“You’re being stalked, Shaun, and they are waiting for you to make a mistake. It appears that you keep making them. That means they’ll keep coming after you. Each story from here is going to get bigger and uglier, so it’s a good thing you called us when you did. I’m assuming you’ve started to hear concerns from your sponsors?”

Now we were talking business. I felt myself relaxing.
This
is what I knew best.

“Nigel said three of them are threatening to walk after this morning’s latest round of bullshit.” He pushed off the counter and ran a hand through his closely cropped hair. The movement caused his chest muscles to flex beneath his clothing. I lifted my eyes to keep them squarely focused on his face. And his lips. Jesus, I bet he could do glorious things with those lips.

I brought my gaze back down to my computer screen. “Well, we’re going to fix all of that.”

“How?”

I smiled as the game plan continued to formulate in my mind. “By doing what we do best. The person who controls the story, controls your image, Shaun. And starting today, that person is me. Trust me when I say it’s your lucky day.”

Chapter Three

Shaun

Victoria started asking me more questions, but I wasn’t even sure what I replied. When I put out the SOS for PR help, I didn’t expect a leggy brunette with curves that would make angels sing to show up on my doorstep.

The card for Kommen and Russell came from a buddy of mine I ran into occasionally at the gym. He said the firm had saved his ass from a pretty big scandal, and I trusted him. Given Victoria’s claim that her portfolio of clients was exclusively athletes, I figured she must have been the one working with him. How he managed to keep it in his pants when he was with her was a mystery. The woman was going to be one hell of a distraction.

Speaking of pants, my shorts had grown uncomfortably tight in the crotch. I was forced to lean forward against the counter to hide any obvious bulge despite the loose fit. She didn’t seem to notice. Her fingertips whizzed across the tablet keyboard, seeming to record every word I said.

Shit, what the hell was I saying again?
I should be paying more attention.

Victoria looked up at me with her inquisitive dark chocolate eyes and cocked an eyebrow at me. “Do you need me to repeat the question?”

I shook my head. Somehow her question had managed to penetrate the haziness of my thoughts. “Eleven. I meet my coach Hammer at eleven most days.”

She frowned as she recorded that note. “Seems late.”

What the hell? She was a PR expert, not a coach. The insinuation that I might be slacking off in my training was annoying as shit. It was bad enough that Nigel had been riding my ass for the last nine months about getting back in the ring. I figured winning a gold medal and pushing myself to the extent of my body’s boundaries would have earned me a few months of R&R.

I was wrong.

“During downtime and off-season, Hammer says I don’t need to hit it as hard. As long as I’m not filling my body up with fat and booze, and I’m getting enough sleep, the training I’m doing now is more than enough. It’s ramping up now because I’ve got a fight on the books in a few weeks.”

Victoria put up her hands. “It was just a question. I’m not judging. As I organize different events, I want to be conscious of your training schedule, and don’t want to get off on the wrong foot with your coach. Nobody should mess with a guy named Hammer.” She gave me a sly smile, and I realized I was overreacting.

Of course. That made sense why she’d need to know details like that. Why had I gotten so defensive? It was an innocent question, but I immediately put my hackles up.

“Okay.” It seemed when I strung more than a few words together I got myself in trouble. Best to keep it simple.

She smiled at me again. I felt the muscles in my shoulders relax. She pulled a couple sheets of paper out of her briefcase and handed them over, standing up and putting her tablet away. “The top sheet is a list of clothing and apparel you’ll need. I know you’re a grown man and can dress yourself, but I’d recommend you at least give my suggestions a consideration. If you don’t have all of them, buy them today. The second sheet is the address and time for your first appearance.”

I stared at her. “You’ve already got my first appearance scheduled? This is it? You just got here. We haven’t even gone into the details of those other run-ins. I want to make sure we’re setting the story straight.”

She slung her briefcase over her shoulder and looked at her phone. A moment later, she was tapping something on the screen. “The past is the past. I’m focused on the go-forward story. We’re going on the offensive here. You are the blank canvas, Shaun, and I am the artist. Show up where I tell you when I tell you, do what I tell you, and I guarantee you’ll be fine.”

I felt another rise of annoyance. “So I’m some kind of puppet now and you’re pulling the strings? I’m just supposed to put up and shut up?”

She glanced up at me with a look of chagrin. “You called
us
, remember? Let me do my job. Be at that address Monday morning at 9am. Wear outfit number three on the list of attire. It really is that simple for you because I’m doing all the heavy lifting on the back end. I’m looking forward to working with you.”

She started back toward the front door with a casual toss of her long hair over her shoulder. I was caught thinking about
her
back end. I followed in her wake dumbfounded. I shuffled the papers to look at the address for the appearance. My forward momentum stopped.

“This is my old gym,” I mumbled, recognizing the address.

She opened the door and turned back toward me. “There’s a kid’s boxing class every Monday morning at 9am during the summer. You’re going to make a surprise appearance and do a short meet and greet with the kids. It’ll show you have a soft spot for where you came from. It’s a start to the new story we’re going to be telling about you.”

I stared at her. Was letting this whirlwind into my life the right call? She must have sensed my hesitation, because I saw the expression on her face soften.

“Shaun, people are afraid of you. If we feed a story to a few carefully chosen press outlets about you hanging out with a bunch of kids who obviously aren’t scared of you, it’s a step in the right direction. You have to trust me.”

I nodded but didn’t say anything else. I felt off-balance. I didn’t always do well with new situations and new people.

“See you on Monday,” she said with another smile. Then she was gone, leaving me to wonder what in the hell I had gotten myself into by dialing the number for Kommen and Russell to begin with.

*

Monday morning, my nerves were still frazzled as I walked through the door of Halston’s Gym. I told myself it was because I wasn’t wearing typical gym attire. I always felt far more comfortable in a pair of gym shorts than anything else. The slacks and white polo shirt seemed out of place. I was going to call and ask Victoria about it, but even in our brief encounter I had a feeling she’d just tell me she knew what she was doing. I was supposed to trust her judgement.
Yeah, the judgement of a fucking stranger.

I entered the main room of the gym, two small rings on either side of the regulation-sized ring, and spotted her before anything else. She was over in the weights area, talking with the short, balding owner, Pete Halston. Pete stared up at Victoria as if he was looking at a fine painting. I understood and appreciated the sentiment.

Victoria wore a simple navy blue wraparound dress and a pair of kitten heels, but they did nothing to disguise her height. She should have looked out of place in the middle of a sweaty, dirty gym, but she didn’t. She seemed perfectly at home.

She caught sight of me and her eyes widened for a split second. It made me wonder if she liked what she saw as much as I did. She waved at me to join them, and I made my way over to where they stood.

“Pete,” I said, as I stuck out my hand. “It’s been awhile.”

“Glad to see you haven’t forgotten about us, Shaun,” Pete said, gruff. “I’ve been wondering when you’d come around again.”

When was the last time I’d been at Halston’s? Two years ago? Three? Suddenly I felt a twinge of guilt. Pete was my first coach back when I was just a punk kid whose mother sent him to the gym to keep him out of trouble.

“How could I forget? I got my first black eye and broken rib here,” I joked. Once upon a time, I sucked royally at dodging punches. It only took so many blows to the head before I figured it out, though still not fast enough for my mother’s liking. There were times I was sure she’s have a heart attack in the gym. Once I caught the boxing bug, though, it hadn’t let go. Not once in fifteen years.

“You left yourself open a lot,” Pete said with a shrug. Pete had always been a tough-love kind of coach. That was probably the reason I worked so well with Hammer.

Victoria looked back and forth between us with a satisfied smirk. “Well, I know Shaun hasn’t stopped talking about everything he learned here at your gym all those years ago, so we had to come over and take a look. You don’t mind if Shaun gives me a tour of the place, do you, Pete?”

Considering my one and only conversation with Victoria had lasted less than half an hour and was primarily focused on my shitty public image, I couldn’t help but raise an eyebrow at her. But it was clear she’d done her homework.
That
was impressive.

“Not at all,” Pete said. I shook my head at his quick acceptance of her suggestion. The grizzled old coach seemed to be eating right out of her hand. He hated having any kind of fuss around his gym, and I realized that Victoria had neatly found a way to insert us without it appearing as if we were trying to interrupt anything.

“Thanks, Pete,” Victoria said. She pointed at a wall behind me. I turned and saw a guy standing there with a camera.

My face immediately turned into a scowl. I’d had enough of cameras over the years.

“I hope you don’t mind if we take a few shots of Shaun around the gym,” Victoria continued. “They’ll be great for using in his upcoming memoir.”

Memoir? I was pretty sure anyone who knew me was aware I had a hard enough time stringing a couple of sentences together verbally much less writing any of them down.

Pete nodded and moved toward his office. Victoria shifted to my side with a shit-eating grin on her face. “So, take me around.”

I was a boxer, not a tour guide, but I found over the next few minutes I enjoyed showing Victoria the modest gym. There were a couple of guys I’d practiced with when I was a kid working out. We stopped to have a few words. All of them told me how proud they were, how hard they knew I worked to win the gold. These were guys
I
admired when I was a kid. Honestly, it was humbling to hear their praise. It felt… good.

I hadn’t realized how disconnected I felt from all of this. The swarms of fans too often felt disingenuous, but I saw the open admiration and respect on these men’s faces. The best part of all of it was that the feeling was entirely mutual.

It was after the third introduction Victoria tapped me lightly on the shoulder and leaned in close. I could smell the scent of her hair. It reminded me of the ocean, endless and open… fresh. “Tori,” she said to me quietly.

“Sorry?”

“You can introduce me as Tori. It sounds a hell of lot less formal than Victoria. Besides, all my friends call me Tori.”

“Are we friends?” I asked boldly. Shit. Was I flirting with my PR agent? I wasn’t sure. The only thing I knew was how acutely aware of her every movement I was, the same  awareness I felt when tracking my opponents in the ring.

She laughed, a sound I found I enjoyed immensely. Her whole face lit up when she laughed. “I work for you, Shaun. We’re not going to be friends, but that’s no reason we can’t be friendly.”

I let that thought settle, my mind wandering, starting to figure how far I could push the boundaries of ‘friendly’. I wasn’t left with much time to ponder on it, though, before we arrived back at the center ring.

There was a group of kids from roughly ten to fifteen in the ring—five boys and a couple of girls. Pete stood in the center of their group going over a couple of basic punches while letting them practice each one.

As we arrived ringside, I heard the familiar buzz begin around me. There were scattered groups of people not dressed in gym gear around the edges of the ring, clearly the parents of the kids taking the class. One of them recognized me. I could feel the weight of their stares and heard the whispered exchanges.

“You’ve been spotted,” Tori said under her breath.

“Now what?” I asked.

She cocked her head toward me. “Now you turn on the charm. Go over and introduce yourself to them. Stick with the mothers. Ask questions about their kids. Show some interest in them.”

“And after that?”

“Go with the flow. Smile. Smile until it feels like your face is going to fall off, and then smile some more. Frowning and scowling is not allowed,” she said with a cluck of her tongue. When I didn’t immediately start moving, she gave me a hard nudge to the shoulder. “Go.”

I had no idea what I was going to say to these parents. I didn’t have the same way with words Jake or my other friends did. I communicated best with my fists, but that wasn’t going to get me anywhere outside of the ring.

The first group was made up entirely of women. I saw them starting to gather themselves as they noted my approach, straightening their clothes and smoothing hands over their hair. I might not communicate well verbally, but I was a fucking master at reading body language. These women found me attractive. I could work with that.

“Hi,” I said, at the last minute remembering to smile. “I’m Shaun Nichols.”

Ten minutes later I was the center of attention. We spoke in hushed tones to keep from disturbing the kids in the ring, but I learned the class was an intervention dictated by one of the local schools for kids with behavioral issues. The school worked with the parents to identify activities that would bolster confidence and focus, while also taking the edge off through physical activity. It was the third week. All of the parents were amazed at the benefits so far.

I realized with a bit of chagrin the kids in the class and I had more than boxing in common. Then one of the women, Katie, suggested I show the kids some of my moves.

“Go on. They’ll love it,” she pushed.

Other books

Solo by Carol Lynne
Dark Screams, Volume 1 by Brian James Freeman
Thirst No. 1 by Christopher Pike
Love or Money? by Carrie Stone
The Summer of the Danes by Ellis Peters
Valerie French (1923) by Dornford Yates