Читать онлайн книгу «Man of the Year» автора Lisa Ruff

Man of the Year
Lisa Ruff
He'll take one for the team Advertising executive Samantha James is looking for a ballplayer who can turn the city's losing team into a winning package. From the moment she sees pitcher Jarrett Corliss in that steamy locker room, she knows she's found her star candidate. She also knows she needs to steer clear of the arrogant player outside the boardroom. Jarrett agrees to be Samantha's poster boy on one condition that she goes out with him.Even though the team's owner has forbidden fraternization because of recent scandals that almost brought down the ball club, Jarrett isn't about to strike out. He needs the team to win this season to save his career, but he also needs Samand this is the one time where he hopes his pitch lands a home run.



Samantha gave Jarrett a cool smile. Well, it was nice to see you again, Mr. Corliss, but I have to get back to my office.
She turned away, looking for the nearest exit, anxious to put distance between her and this too compelling man. He stepped close and stopped her, encircling her wrist lightly with calloused fingers.
Not so fast. Were just getting warmed up here.
The inning is over, Mr. Corliss. Its time for you to go back to the bench.
Come on, Sammy, I havent even had a chance to throw one yet. Have dinner with me tonight.
The question surprised her. The impulse to say yes surprised her even more. Strike one, Mr. Corliss.
Didnt I just put one right over the plate?
Sorry, no. That one was wild.
Tomorrow night, then.
No. Thank you, Mr. Corliss, but no.
She tugged away from him, but he let her get only half-free. He ran a finger down her cheek and over her chin. The touch was so electric that Samanthas hand tightened around his. All her good intentions vanished.
Dear Reader,
Having my very first book published by Harlequin American Romance has been a thrilling adventure! Thanks for choosing to read it; Im glad you decided to join me.
The inspiration for this book came while watching a Little League game one warm spring day. Some of those nine-year-olds played so hard and so seriously. I wondered what happened to those boys as they grew up. Who would they become as young men? Would they still dream of hitting a home run or making a double play? And what would they risk to hold on to that dream? Their love for the game was so intense, what could possibly get in its way? And what about all those little girls who had dreams of their own? I had to know the answers to my questions, and Man of the Year began to unfold, as if the story was telling itself.
I hope you enjoy reading this book as much as I enjoyed writing it. Please visit me at www.lisaruff.net. And keep a watch out for my next book from Harlequin.
Happy reading,
Lisa Ruff

Man of the Year
Lisa Ruff



ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Lisa Ruff was born in Montana and grew up in Idaho but met the man of her dreams in Seattle. She married Kirk promising to love, honor and edit his rough drafts. His pursuit of writing led Lisa to the craft. A longtime reader of romance, she decided to try to create one herself. The first version of Man of the Year took three months to finish, but her day job got in the way of polishing the manuscript. She stuffed it into a drawer, where it languished for several years.
In pursuit of time to write and freedom to explore the world, Lisa, Kirk and their cat sailed from Seattle on a thirty-seven-foot boat. They spent five years cruising around Central America and the Caribbean. Lisa wrote romance, but it took a backseat to an adventurous life. She was busy writing travel essays, learning to speak Spanish from taxi drivers and handling a small boat in gale-force winds.
When she returned to land life, she finally revised Man of the Year and sent it to an agent. Within a year she had a contract from Harlequin American Romance.
She and her husband are cruising on a sailboat again somewhere in the Atlantic Ocean. When not setting sail for another port, she is working on her next Harlequin romance.
For Kirk.
I could not have done it without you.
Thanks for giving up Maine.

Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen

Chapter One
Samantha took a deep breath and unclenched her fists as she neared the wide blue doors. Relax, its just another job. But this was not just another job, at least not like any others shed had. The doors were closed, but the scent of the locker room slipped past them and wafted around her. Male sweat, liniment and antifungal remedies teased her nose, growing stronger with each step. At the doors, her guide, Peter Brinks, stopped and cleared his throat.
Here we are.
She answered with a smile she hoped showed cool assurance. Beyond these doors was a male sanctuary where few women ventured. Few were allowed. Samantha was one of the lucky ones. Or unlucky, depending on how things went today. The thought made her fists clench again. She chided herself: it was only a locker roomno big deal. She had seen a man naked before, right? This was her job and going in there was part of the deal. She squared her shoulders and uncurled her fingers, but sweat coated her palms. She had to admit the truth to herself: an entire room full of naked men was a daunting prospect.
Peter opened one of the doors and poked his head inside. Hey, guys. Cover up, he yelled in warning. I got a lady coming through.
The laughter and chatter swelling out of the room ebbed for a moment. Peter waited, his head still around the edge of the blue door. Samantha smothered a laugh. He was as nervous as she was about all those naked bodies she might glimpse. Finally, he stood back, opening the door wide for her.
Everything looks decent in there now, Miss James. Peter chuckled as he ushered her through the door. At least as decent as it gets in this place. Right this way.
Peter led her through a maze of wood benches and metal lockers enameled the same shade of blue as the two front doors. A fine mist hung in the room, courtesy of the hot showers, and the smells were even more pungent inside. The wintergreen of liniment combined with acrid sweat made Samanthas eyes sting. She tried not to stare as she passed the athletes in various states of undress. It was not easy. They were so large andand muscular. The steam from the showers glistened on rippling biceps and washboard stomachs. Drops of water slipped down powerful chests and into the curling hair spread there. It was no different from being at the beach, she told herself. But she knew that was a lie. These men were professional athletes. They were paidand paid wellto keep their bodies in top condition. Her uncontrollable fascination embarrassed her, though not enough to stop her from sneaking glances. This was better than any beach she had ever visited.
The men watched her pass through their midst with just as much curiosityand, it seemed to her in some cases, with as much embarrassment. After all, it wasnt every day that a woman strolled through this male domain. But Samantha expected to spend much more time here in the future, so they had better get used to her. She would have to get used to them, too. Peter led the way through the maze of maleness to a glass-walled office on one side. As she followed him into it, Samanthas attention settled on the matter at hand. She widened her smile and stuck her hand out confidently.
Coach Cummings, Im Samantha James. Its a pleasure to meet you.

JARRETT CORLISS WAS ONE of forty players that watched the woman weave through the room. Unlike some of his teammates, he was not embarrassed to be clad in only a damp towel, slung low across his hips, while a beautiful woman walked past. He was curious, though. The slim, graceful redhead had caused a hush to fall over the normally raucous room. More than one head had swiveled to follow the gently swaying hips beneath the navy-blue suit. And since they were looking in that general direction, they gave her legs a thorough assessment, too: long, luxurious legs encased in silk that looked like they lasted forever.
The fiery mane of hair wrapped into a neat roll at the base of her neck caught Jarretts eye first. He scanned down the rest of her body and back to her face, where his attention locked. From across the room he could see her straight nose, arched eyebrows and clear, peachy skin. What color were her eyes? They must be green to set off that hair. Jarrett narrowed his eyes, squinting as he did during his wind-up on the mound. What would she look like without the stiff business suit, he wondered. Just how far did that peachy skin go?
Jarrett absently rubbed his right shoulder, running his hand over the ridge of scar tissue as he stared at her back. And just how did a woman like that fit into managements plans? With all the changes around the club, he wouldnt be surprised to see them walk an elephant through this place. A woman made him more wary. He rubbed his shoulder harder and figured he would find out soon enough.
Shoulder bothering you, Corliss?
Jarrett turned to the pitching coach. Its a little stiff. A few more workouts, itll be fit as a fiddle, he replied with a sure wink.
The coach didnt smile in return. Give it a good soaking in the whirlpool. And dont overwork it. Before Jarrett could answer, the coach was interrogating another pitcher.
Jarrett grimaced. Was the guy joking? As if he would take chances at this stage of recovery. He tried not to let the burning in his shoulder affect his temper, but the coachs trite advice, coupled with the annoying pain in the joint, ate at him. There was not one inning, not one single practice, when someone wasnt doubting him or fretting over his pitching or his shoulder. Well, let them worry. The satisfaction of proving them all wrong in the end would be worth the pain now.
In his better moments, Jarrett understood why everyone was skeptical. He could be as realistic as they were. Maybe more so. Few teams wanted to take a chance on a pitcher recovering from rotator-cuff surgery. When the injured pitcher was already twenty-eight years old and there were dozens of other hungry, younger arms begging for a chance, why bother with a has-been? But Jarrett had recovered, or at least he was on his way. He had proved himself a few times in practice this last week, so the coachs fussing irked him. It also spurred him to work harder, to put more speed in his fastball, more curve in his slider, for himself and for the team. Mostly for himself. The Rainiers were his last hope.
And if the Rainiers were his last hope, he was theirs, too. The team was in deep trouble. Management denied it fervently to the sports reporters and even to the players, but a persistent rumor said the team would be sold before the end of the season and moved to some other city. He rubbed his shoulder again.
Jarrett knew the Rainiers troubles were precisely the reason they had plucked him as a last-chance free agent. The teams owner, Andrew Elliott, needed a winning season, but couldnt afford the best pitcher in the world. He also didnt have time to groom a new pitcher. So like any desperate owner strapped for cash, Elliott had gone bargain hunting and found Jarrett, injured but full of potential, experience and skill. So while Jarrett was not exactly the Rainiers best hope, he was the best hope they could afford. He was realistic about this. Even grateful. They were taking a chance on him. He would give them everything he had, which might be a considerable contribution if his shoulder held up. And if not? Well, best not to think of that.
Coach Cummings blew a short, sharp blast on the whistle that always hung around his neck. Every head snapped to attention, including Jarretts. Alongside the coach stood the peachy-skinned redhead.
Men, I want to introduce Samantha James. Shes with Emerald Advertising. The club has hired her and her company to promote our team and maybe get a few more citizens into the stadium when we take the field. All eyes that werent on her already shifted to look at Samantha. No one bothered looking at the coach again. Im going to bring her around and introduce her. She would like to speak with each of you personally, since
Honey, you can get as personal with me as youd like, a voice called out from the back of the room. The remark was accompanied by a loud snap that could only have come from the elastic of a jockstrap. The words and the snap brought a burst of laughter from the rest of the team.
Jarrett watched to see how the redhead, Samantha, took the teasing. He thought she would either wither and crawl under a rock, or storm out and threaten to sue the whole bunch of them for sexual harassment. He saw her crane her long, slender neck to find the perpetrator.
Well, honey, she said, a faint smile on her lips, the first thing Im looking for is a spokesman in a TV commercial. A really loud one. You might just get the part.
This comment raised another round of laughter. The redhead gave as good as she got, without ruffling any feathers. Jarretts admiration reluctantly rose a few notches. Sexy as sin and a sense of humor: the woman might be dangerous.
All right, listen up! the coach yelled over the raucous banter and hooting that had resumed. He paused for a fierce glare at the players. As I was saying before I was interrupted, Ms. James would like to meet all of youGod only knows why. So cooperate with her and try to act your best for a change. As soon as the coach finished speaking, the noise in the locker room went back to its previous high decibels.
Jarrett watched discreetly as Samantha moved from one player to the next. The coach performed introductions. She seemed to be joking with each guy, if the smiles and laughter were any indication. She was even getting along with the worst chauvinists on the team. Such a sweet little thing, she was. Pretty as the dew on a honeysuckle vine, as his daddy in Oklahoma would say. Too bad sweet things got chewed up and eaten in this locker room.
She and Coach Cummings circled the room, starting at its far end. With each handshake and burst of small talk, those long, gorgeous legs took one more step toward Jarrett. He had to admire her poise. The only woman in the room, she seemed indifferent to the state of dressor undressof the men with whom she shook hands and talked. He glanced at his own towel and decided to leave it. Besides, he couldnt very well drop it to the floor with her in the room. Or could he?

SAMANTHA PUT ON HER best business smile and gave each player a firm, confident handshake. She asked questions, tried to remember each name and laughed where appropriate. All the while, her head swirled with ideas for an ad campaign. Each man put on a show for her benefit, unknowingly fueling her creative process. Teasing comments flew, but they were never aimed directly at her. Their quips were saved for one another, each one trying to insult the other better than he had been insulted. Their jokes told her volumes about each man. Her anxiety had nearly disappeared, and she began to worry less about being the only woman here as her hope grew. This might not be such an impossible job after all. With the right hook, a good spin and a few flashy graphics, the public would love every single playereven if they didnt think much of the whole team.
The Rainiers were a challenge for any advertising firm. With a string of losses and a host of scandals, their public image was at rock bottom. Before meeting these men, when she had first won the dubious honor of promoting them, she had wondered about the chances of increasing ticket sales. And her own chances at helping them do it. Now before her was a room full of boys pretending to be professional athletes. It was comical, even touching. They wanted so much to be liked, respected and admired. It seemed hopeless. Yet she had to come up with an idea that would capture the very jaded hearts of former fans and regain some of their lost loyalty. The Rainiers future was at stake. So was hers and her companys.
Her mind wandered off on another tangent. Maybe she could use the idea about little boys playing baseball. It would make a cute, humorous TV spot, something endearing that would show their innocent, earnest side. While considering this, she found herself standing before a tall man. He was clad only in a towel, which draped around his lean hips precariously. That towel drew her eyes as well as her imagination. She stopped thinking about the appeal of little boys in TV commercials and started considering other appealing possibilities. As she stared at the towel, the tall man reached down and tightened the damp cloth to fit more snugly. The white terrycloth barely left enough room for her imagination to work.
Samantha, this is Jarrett Corliss. Coach Cummingss voice reached her ears dimly. Hes a pitcher, one of our starters this season.
Pleased to meet you, Samantha. His voice was deep and mellow, with more than a hint of a sweet, country drawl.
His hand reached out, and she unconsciously met it with her own. Samantha barely heard someone call to the coach from across the room, telling him that he was wanted on the telephone. The coach excused himself, but it was as if he had ceased to exist already. Everyone had. For Samantha, the steamy locker room had emptied except for her and this man in front of her. Her eyes crawled upward from the white towel, over the flat, tautly muscled belly to the broad chest scattered with curly, dark-blond hair. The corded neck and shoulders invited her touch.
Her gaze went farther up and finally met a pair of eyes. They dazzled her with the blue of a summer sky over a wide, endless prairie. The eyes were set in a sun-bronzed face, and a wave of hair the color of corn silk dipped over one arched brow. A dimple flashed beside the sculpted lips. The eyes had followed her deliberate stare as she made her way from the towel to look directly into them. Now those blue eyes twinkled with unabashed amusement.
Without a word, the manshe had forgotten his name alreadytook the same liberty. He was in no hurry, either. His gaze traveled slowly from the top of her head, down across her breasts, her legs and back to her face. She felt a prickling sensation on her skin where his eyes touched. She bridled at being gazed at so intensely and deliberatelynever mind that she had committed the same crime just seconds ago.
Samantha struggled to retain her professional demeanor. Why did this man in a towel affect her so much more than the other half-dressed men? By now the clasp of their hands had strayed far from a polite greeting into something more intimate and dangerous. Realizing she was holding his hand, not shaking it, Samantha pulled back abruptly.
Well. Her tone was husky, reaching for brisk firmness and failing. Its nice to meet you as well, Mr. she said, fumbling for his name.
Jarrett. Jarrett Corliss.
Right. Mr. Corliss.
Just Jarrett, he interrupted before she could say any more. Mr. Corliss is in Oklahoma getting ready for this seasons crop of peppers and tomatoes. A slow grin came to his lips. I always thought Dad had it bad, sittin on a tractor all day in the sun. But standin around in a towel meeting beautiful women is a whole lot hotter and sweatier work than plowin up a field.
His voice had lowered, and the words steamed in Samanthas ears, hot with meaning and suggestion. His eyes were trained on hers. Their laughing sparkle invited her to share the joke. She could feel the heatthe heat that came from their blue depths as much as his bare torso.
If its that unpleasant in here, you ought to take a nice cold shower, she suggested. Samantha stepped back a pace, but he moved with her. He was deliberately trying to throw her off balance.
And take off my towel? His glance flickered over her once more in swift appraisal. Is that what you want?
Samantha got a grip on herself. Her immediate attraction to this mans physical presence was undeniable. She felt it down to her bones. But she didnt intend to let that get in the way of her job. She smiled coolly.
It would be a fabulous publicity shot. But not suitable for our target market. Before he could take her up on the offer to pose naked, she changed the subject abruptly. So, youre the new kid on the mound.
Yes, maam. And real eager to work closely with you on publicity. Very close. Jarretts lips curved into a smile that deepened the beautiful, mischievous dimple in his left cheek.
Samantha almost smiled at his persistent charm. His wide grin told her that he read her amusement. She ignored it and said crisply, Good. Well need everyones cooperation.
Well, you let me know when and where you want me to cooperate, Samantha, he drawled. Ill come runnin.
Whatever she might have said next was interrupted when a muscular arm suddenly dropped over her shoulders. Then a whisker-stubbled face smacked a kiss on her cheek.
Sammy, whats a nice girl like you doing in a dump like this?

JARRETT WATCHED IN AMAZEMENT as the left fielder, the biggest, most obnoxious womanizer on the team, swooped down on Samantha and kissed her. Jarretts lips tightened as irritation washed through him. Boomernicknamed that because of his power hittingwas a jerk and here he was hanging all over this gorgeous woman. Jarrett silently cursed him.
He had been making progress with Samantha. Despite her cool replies to his bantering, she was attracted. There was nothing cool in her green eyes when she looked at him. They had burned his naked skin wherever they touched. She liked what she saw. Hell, if he ever got the chance to look at her wearing only a towel, he wouldnt pass it up, either. Now Boomer had blown everything.
So you had to make a personal appearance, Sammy, Boomer teased. What? Dont you trust any of your flunkies to do the job?
Oh, I trust my employees. Its you and your little friends here that I have misgivings about.
Their banter was comfortablefamiliar. Obviously, they knew each other well. They might not be doing this chummy routine to aggravate him, but that was the result. Jarrett ground his teeth. He watched with annoyanceand no small amount of envyas Boomer curved an arm around Samanthas waist, and gave it an affectionate squeeze.
Yeah, you may not trust me, but you gotta love me anyway. He gave Samantha another bold, bristly kiss, then turned to Jarrett. Hey, Jarry. Hows the ol shoulder holding out? I hear you might have to pitch underhanded.
Jarrett crossed his arms over his chest. Boomer thought himself a great comedian. Its fine. Hows your ol arm doing?
Great. Never felt better, the left fielder replied and flexed the biceps in his free arm. Ive been knocking them out of the park. Boomer turned his attention back to Samantha again. Listen, Sammy, have you got a minute? I need to talk.
About what?
Boomer flashed a glance at Jarrett. Not now, youre too busy. How about later, when youre done here?
Samanthas curiosity was evident. All right. Ill try to catch up with you after Ive finished.
Great!
Boomer pressed another kiss on her cheek and walked away with a parting wave. Jarrett noticed how Samanthas eyes followed him out the door.
Known him long? The question rushed out before he could stop it.
Since we were in diapers, she quipped. She wore a generous, teasing smile, as if she knew that this vague information would really goad him.
I guess Sammy comes from a long way back, too. Jarrett tried to sound politely interested. To his ears, he failed miserably. He was surprised to see Samanthas cheeks tint lightly in a rosy blush.
Yes, it does. But you can call me Samantha.
Sure, he muttered under his breath. For now.
Coach Cummings rejoined them, forestalling any further retort from Jarrett. Sorry about that, Ms. James. That was Mr. Elliott. I see youve had more than enough time to size up Jarrett.
Yes, thanks, Coach. Mr. Corliss and I are finished.
Hes the last rat in the pack. Now, you wanted to take a look at the uniforms?
Yes, then the stadium.
Sure. Follow me.
Before the coach escorted her away, Jarrett summoned a grin and winked at her. Boomer was gone and that was reason enough to smile. Its truly been a pleasure, Samantha. Call me when you need help with your sales pitch. Pitchings what I do best.
Her eyes flickered to his, but she looked away before he could catch a hint of her thoughts. She didnt say another word, just walked out with the coach. Jarrett watched her until she was gone. You may be finished with me, he thought, but Im not finished with you. Not by a long shot.

SAMANTHA FELT JARRETTS EYES follow her every step out of the locker room. As the coach showed her the team uniforms, the costume for the mascota brown fuzzy suit that was supposed to resemble a marmot, but looked more like a man-sized rugand gave her a tour of the stadium, she mused over Jarrett Corliss. Like most jocks, he obviously thought of himself as Gods gift to women. With his teasing blue eyes and that dimple, she supposed he had more than his fair share of baseball groupies. He would be popular with the young women who hung around the gates after practice or a game, offering their bodies to anything in a uniform. Mitt-muffins, Boomer called them. Jarrett probably took advantage of that willingness on occasion, too. Just like all the other players.
Samantha had yet to meet a baseball jock who would resist what a mitt-muffin offered. She supposed they saw it as their due, a perk of fame and success. But, to her, it was repugnant. She had tried to love a ballplayer once or twice and learned a bitter lesson. Let the boys have their fun: she would find a real man who played the game by the rules.
Which made her own starstruck gawking at Jarrett doubly embarrassing. What had she been thinking? She had acted like a groupieor nearly as bad. No wonder he had flirted with her so outrageously. He was gorgeous, she admitted, but he was just one piece of her advertising campaign. Nothing more, nothing less. This was business, not some singles club. From now on, she would treat him like all the rest of the team. She would put his offer of cooperation to profitable usethough certainly not the way he intended.
She pushed Jarrett Corliss and his dimples to the back of her mind and concentrated on the tour Coach Cummings was giving her. She took copious notes as they walked to the dugout, stood at home plate and took a quick tour of the concessions area. Every new sight, every detail, added to the ideas swirling in her head. All the while, she peppered the coach with questions. When they completed the tour and the talk, Samantha had a feel for the inner workings of the Rainiers: how they practiced, who made decisions on and off the field, what they hoped to achieve and how, and what the biggest obstacles were to winning. She requested videotapes of recent practices and last years games. Cummings promised that he would get them to her office before the weeks end.
By the time they were finished with their tour, the team had dispersed from the locker room. Peter Brinks told her that Boomer had also left for the day. Whatever her brother had to say must not be that important. She bid goodbye to Coach Cummings and slipped through the wire-mesh gate to the parking lot.
The chilly wind and rain cut through her wool suit and she was glad to get inside her red BMW. She turned the heater up full blast and used the wipers to flick away the light mist on the windshield. The typical late-January weather made her long for spring. She skirted Pioneer Square, empty of the tourists that would flock there in summer. She loved this part of Seattle, the buildings all graceful relics of the past. Her car crossed Yesler Avenue, the original Skid Row where logs had been skidded down to the water, milled and shipped away to provide lumber for the world. As she drove, she puzzled over her encounter with Jarrett Corliss. Why had she been so taken in? The way he looked in a towel was undeniably sexy. What woman wouldnt think so? But she ought to know better.
While stopped at a red light, the idea suddenly hit her. Of course! It was the perfect way to get people back into the stadium: sex appeal. She would scatter one or two good photos of the pitcher in tight jeans or a well-tailored Rainiers uniform around town on billboards or in the local magazines. Women would come in droves to see him. Some of his teammates might have the same sex appeal. She knew her little brother would love the idea of strutting his stuff for the camera. Fill the ballpark with women, and the men would quickly follow. The picture of Jarrett wrapped in a towel merged with the players acting like little boys. Pieces of a commercial started to fall into place in her head. The light turned green. Samantha hit the accelerator and sped toward her office.

Chapter Two
Samantha rushed in out of the rain and walked briskly to the elevator. The brass hand in an arch above the doors pointed at the number ten, slowly dropped to nine, then stopped. She waited, staring at the ornate brass curlicues on the door in front of her without actually seeing them. Her mind was still on the commercial for the Rainiers. A few minutes later a soft chime sounded, and the doors opened. An old man in a burgundy uniform with gold braid carefully held the door for her to enter.
Hello, Ted.
Good afternoon, Miss James. A fine day weve got, dont you think?
Samantha grinned at the elevator operator. With rain and wind like this, you can say its a fine day?
Oh, well, its Seattle. If this isnt a fine day, then itll be a while before we have one.
Samantha laughed. He was right. With all the rain in Seattle, they had to appreciate days when it only drizzled. Ted pulled the door closed and shifted the lever to up. With a clank and a slight wheeze, the ancient elevator rose slowly to the twelfth floor. The Smith Tower, the oldest high-rise in the city, had its quirks. This elegant brass relic of an elevator was one of them. But Samantha loved the old building. Much taller skyscrapers rose all around, but they seemed like polished, characterless monoliths in comparison. Since 1913, the tower had outlasted both developers that coveted the land it occupied and earthquakes that tried to shake it down. Now, quirks and all, it was an intrinsic part of the Seattle skyline. It was also the perfect home for Samanthas company.
The car jerked to a halt, a foot above the twelfth floor. Ted patiently shifted the lever up and down, joggling the car closer to the same level as the floor. Samantha waited just as patiently, though she would have been happy to hop down the short distance. The elevator was Teds pride and joy, and Samantha respected his need to do his job perfectly. He opened the brass gate and waved Samantha on her way.
Thanks, Ted.
My pleasure, Miss James. You have a good day.
Walking down the short hall, Samantha opened the door into her corner of the advertising world. On the front end, Emerald Advertising looked like any other business. Muted rose paint on the walls and furniture upholstered in navy and plum greeted the visitor, an image of tasteful yet understated affluence. At the large mahogany reception desk, phones rang quietly and were answered graciously. The lighting was also subdued, soft. Two equally inviting conference rooms, one large and one small, lay directly behind the reception area.
If Samantha knew anything about her business, it was that packaging made the product. Her clients had preconceived ideas of how a successful ad business should look, how it felt, smelled and worked. So, she gave them glass walls, a touch of brass and chairs with ample padding: the plush trappings where deals could be made in comfort. The front office looked spacious and gracious, as Samantha liked to say, with enough room to stretch out your checkbook.
Behind this formal front lurked Emerald Advertisings messier, creative side. A three-quarter-height wall of frosted glass separated one half from the other. Occasionally, this seamier side of the company slipped over the wall and broke into the respectable realm. While sitting in the waiting area, clients occasionally caught glimpses of objects flying through the air. These strange sights happened so suddenly that they were usually dismissed as figments of the imaginationindoor UFOs. After all, mature adults did not throw things in an office, did they?
Samantha greeted the receptionist. Debbie smoothly put one caller on hold while simultaneously routing another call back to Pam at her desk.
Brenda pulled your messages when she got back from lunch. Ive put most of your calls through to her this afternoon.
Samantha thanked her and walked behind the wall into Never-Never Land as her employees called it. Most of the back half of the business had no walls, cubicles or other hindrances to carve up the space. Only Samanthas corner office was enclosed. The walls were frosted glass for an illusion of privacy, but her door was nearly always open. Illustrators and copywriters were free to toss ideas back and forthor erasers, spitballs or rubber bands, if the whims of creativity so required it. The front office decor flowed back to this area, but in a more lively fashion. Where the entrance to Emerald Advertising inspired business, the working area inspired creativity. The colors were bolder and brighter, the energy level higher.
The clutter in this creative room was terrible, which was mostly Samanthas fault. She encouraged her employees to hang personal art, current projects, comic strips on the wallsanything pertinent to their work, and things not so pertinent, whatever generated fresh ideas and imaginative thoughts. It was an idea factory where slogans, logos and images for products from detergent to auto parts were crafted. The waste from this process littered the tables, desks and floor.
One of four walls was entirely devoted to Emeralds competition. Ads for lingerie, espresso, software, oil-and-lube service and more were plastered one atop another. Comments were scribbled across them. Just above eye level to the left was a small banner that read Worst. To the far right was a similar banner with Best. Under these headings were the ads that had won either award that week. For each ad pinned to the wall, Samantha wanted a critique. Did it succeed in promoting the product? Why did it fail? How could Emerald do it differently? How would they do it better?
Better was always what Samantha wanted from her company, her employees and herself. Because of this, Emerald Advertising had earned a steadily increasing reputation for fresh, offbeat campaigns in the marketing world. It was a reputation that Samantha worked hard to cultivate. Staying on the cutting edge of advertising was a continual challenge. Thats what made the work so interesting. In time, Samantha hoped to turn Emerald into one of the leading advertising firms in the cityand the nation. The contract with the Seattle Rainiers was a critical step toward fulfilling that dream.
She stopped to greet Stuart and Lane, one of her best creative teams.
Hows it going, guys?
Pretty good, Ms. Boss-lady, Lane answered playfully. Weve got the storyboards ready for Big Snot Auto Parts. I think theyll go for it.
Samantha laughed at Lanes irreverence. Good. When do you meet with them?
Stuart answered. Next Tuesday.
Id like to see what youve got planned. Samantha glanced at the clock. Not this afternoon. How about first thing tomorrow morning?
The two men agreed, and Samantha moved on to her office. She smiled, thinking about Stuart and Lane. As a creative team, they worked together beautifully, though she sometimes thought that they shared the same mind. Often youd ask a question of one, and the other would answer. Or one would finish the sentence that the other had started. Nice guys, but oddperfect for advertising and her company.
As she went through the door to her office, Samantha noticed a short, blond spike of hair peeking over the top of her blue swivel chair. Those pale spikes could only belong to Brenda Miller, Samanthas right-hand woman. Brenda kept Samanthas world organized. She followed the progress of current projects, passed on the information she thought needed to be heard, and filed the rest for future use. Samantha was certain Brenda could do at least seven things at once. Besides all that, Brenda was Samanthas closest friend.
Hey, what is this? Some sort of coup? Samantha teased. Im gone for two hours, and youve already taken over.
Samantha! Brenda spun around in her bosss chair, ignoring her teasing. How did everything go? Did you meet the team?
The question was laced with more excitement and zest than Brenda usually mustered for business. She and her husband, Craig, a lawyer, were dedicated Rainiers fans. She had made Samantha promise that she would get autographs of any new players for Brendas collection.
It was fine. Samantha dropped her briefcase to the floor and perched on the edge of the desk, flipping through the mail piled on it.
Come on, Samantha, Brenda begged. Fine cannot describe a trip to a locker room full of half-naked, gorgeous hunks of male flesh.
Samantha laughed. Why do you think they were half-naked?
Wishful thinking.
Samantha chuckled at Brendas wistful look. Well, I might have noticed one or two that were wearing less than the regulation uniform. An image of Jarrett Corliss wrapped in a damp towel popped into her mind, as if it were a jack-in-the-box that had wound itself up, springing into her head unannounced. Samantha blinked, pushed the image back into the box and slammed the lid tight.
What do you mean? Or should I say who do you mean?
No one, Samantha denied firmly.
Bull. You met someone.
Samantha shook her head. Ill tell you later. Whats happened here at the factory?
Brenda allowed the subject change without comment. Running wild and crazy as usual. If there are any problems, everyone seems to be handling them on their own and not sharing them with me. She levered herself out of Samanthas chair with some effort. Boy, that gets harder to do every day.
Samantha reached out and helped her friend to her feet, steadied her, then patted the protruding stomach. Six months pregnant, Brenda had started to waddle a bit. Junior giving you problems today?
Only when he does a tap dance on my bladder. She sighed. Now, the urgent mail is on the left, the not-so-urgent is on the right, the important messages are here, I fielded the rest. You want a cup of coffee?
I can get one myself. I thought the smell made you nauseous. Samantha sat and looked over the piles Brenda had indicated.
Not anymore, Brenda said with a grimace. Now cat food, that makes me green. Both women laughed at that.
Then, yes, thank you. Id love a cup. And if youve got time, Id like to go over the material I picked up at the Rainiers today. I think I have a campaign just about figured out.
Jeez, youre quick. Stuart and Lane will be disappointed. They want to come up with all the brilliant ideas.
Samantha wiggled her eyebrows and did a poor imitation of Groucho Marx. I had a lot of inspiration while I was there.
Brenda groaned. Okay, Ill get my notepad and the coffee and be right back.
Samantha pulled a thick file from her briefcase. She took an envelope of photographs from the file and went to the large worktable just outside her office door. Around her, activity buzzed. Stuart and Lane took turns shooting a foam basketball through a hoop over the windows. Samantha didnt ask what that had to do with auto parts. A printer hummed, spitting out paper. Carol hunched over a computer, composing a layout. Somewhere in the back Pam argued on the phone.
Samantha spread the photographs out before her on the table. Eight-by-ten headshots mingled with the action poses that she had always found corny. She pulled out the headshots and lined them across the table. Players were identified by name across the bottom of each photo. Other personal data, vital statistics and averages were listed on the back. None of the official information said much about the individuals. Samantha recalled her conversations with the players: their jokes, their quirks, their stories all came back to her.
So this is the new team. Brenda peeked over Samanthas shoulder. Heres your coffee.
Thanks.
Not bad. Brenda picked up a photo. Hey, this is Jos Alvendia. He used to play for Houston. Craig and I wondered what had happened to him. He used to be really good.
Lets hope hes still really good. Samantha eyed the photo. Between you and me, Elliott told me that this is the last chance hes giving the team. If they dont turn things around, hes going to sell it.
What? I thought the city had a contract with him for two years.
No, only one year is guaranteed. The second year depends on this seasons revenues.
You think they can do it? Pull the club out of the toilet, I mean? Brenda knew as much or more about the team as anyone, and the skepticism was evident in her tone.
I dont know. Elliotts put some money into getting players. About half of these guys are new this year. Samantha waved at the spread of photos with her coffee cup. But your guess is as good as anyones whether they can pull it off.
Well, that could either mean new energy, or too many egos to make a team work together.
Exactly. Samantha sipped her coffee thoughtfully. But for better or worse, weve got to shove our personal doubts aside and assume theyll succeed.
Brenda eased herself onto a chair at the side of the table. Maybe we should just stick to auto parts and bookstores.
Samantha eyed the photos as she pondered Brendas words. Not only had the Rainiers been rock-bottom in the league, theyd also managed to bring just about every scandal swirling around the club: drugs, drunk driving, bar fights. One player had even been caught having an affair with the mayors wife.
Well, at least the problem players have either been suspended indefinitely or left the team, Samantha said, thinking aloud.
Or theyre in jail.
Dont remind me. Its been four months since the end of last season. If we hit the public with a whole new image, play up the bright future the team has, I think we can win the fans over.
So whats your big idea, boss? Brenda sipped the glass of water she held. Hows the rookie ad-lady going to save the day?
Samantha perched on the edge of the table, facing Brenda. Try this one: When I was talking with some of the players, I had this flashback to grade school. Do you remember at recess, the boys would try to outdo one another with jokes and tricks when they were around the girls? Theyd do all this silly stuff just to get our attention and we ended up thinking they were just thatsilly?
Yeah, and the weirdest ones always turned out to be the guys you dated in high school, Brenda said with a laugh. So how does this sell a baseball team?
What if we play on that image to reintroduce the team to the public? Especially the new ones. Set up a series of commercials with the players shown as boys. Take them through childhood when theyre on the playground to adulthood in the stadium. Each guy would have some particular talent that revealed itself at an early age. Or maybe its just a quirk that has followed him through life that makes him good at what he does now.
You mean like the naughty boy throwing a rock that breaks a church window? Brenda asked. In the next spot, hes the teams star pitcher.
Exactly. Thats a good one.
What about the print ads and the billboards?
We could use stills of each player, showing a parody of them as a kid, then as an adult. You know, a photo of a kid breaking the church window, then a still of the actual player winding up for a pitch. Samantha felt the seed of the idea blossoming in her head. We can use the new faces on the team. The old ones, too. Introduce all of them so its like theres a completely new ball club. We give the customer the feeling of getting to know the team from day one. How a new era of great baseball got started. Or, at least a new season. Samantha finished with a shrug.
Brenda sat for a moment sipping her water. This has promise, boss. Youre good. But Im still thinking about those half-naked men. What about them?
What half-naked men?
The half-naked men that gave you that glazed look a little while ago? You said youd explain later. Its later now. Brenda was watching Samantha with wide, guileless eyes.
Samantha was not fooled. Hmm. Think youre pretty smart, dont you?
Thats why you hired me.
I havent quite figured out where the half-naked men fit into the picture, but I have my target.
Who?
Jarrett Corliss.
The pitcher with the bum shoulder? Why him?
Samantha sorted through the photos and pulled one from the mess. This is why. She handed it to Brenda.
Brenda took one look at the blond, blue-eyed man and whistled her approval. My, oh my. He was with Arizona a while ago, wasnt he? I wondered what happened to him. Brenda shot an inquiring look at Samantha, then added, Well, his shoulder may be toast, but the rest of him has sure improved with age.
Brenda, I am telling you the complete and honest truththis man is the best-looking thing in a damp towel that Ive ever seen in all my twenty-eight years. Samantha pointed her finger at the other woman. And that opinion is never to be mentioned outside of this conversation.
Brenda had a steadily widening grin on her face. That good, huh? Hes the reason for your glazed, dreamy look?
Samantha had to smile. Well, he did kind ofpop into my head unexpectedly.
The two burst into laughter that had a decidedly wicked ring to it. Others in the office glanced up to see what the joke was, then went back to what they were doing after deciding that it was private.
Samantha wiped the corner of her eyes. Hes also thewhat do I want to say? Hes the smoothest man Ive ever met. She felt her blood sizzle from the memory of Jarretts bold appraisal. Hes from somewhere south
Oklahoma, Brenda supplied, looking at the back of the photo she held.
Oklahoma, then. He has a drawl and entirely more charm than whats good for him.
Brenda laughed. Sounds like youve got a thing for the man in the towel.
No way, Bren. No ballplayers. Never again. You know that.
Its been a long time, Samantha. Brenda looked at her friend directly. Just because he plays baseball, doesnt mean hes going to run around on you.
Whether he plays baseball or not, hes not going to get the chance.
Brenda shot her an exasperated look. Those were boys, Sam. These she waved a hand at the photos arrayed on the table are men who know what mitt-muffins are like and what they want. Not every guy in the league is only interested in empty sex.
Samantha snorted. Yeah, and Im the Queen of Sheba. The mitt-muffins are just the tip of the iceberg, Bren. Its the ego I cant stand. Every player I ever met acted like hes Gods gift to the universe. That hasnt changed much from when I was a kid, hanging out at Boomers high school games. Samantha looked at Jarretts picture, then turned it so the handsome smile was directed at Brenda. This guys got an ego as big as them all. Maybe bigger.
You know that after meeting him just once?
Oh, yeah, that came through loud and clear.
But he still turned you on, Brenda added smugly.
I said he was sexy, not that I was interested in him.
I say go for it, Sam. If hes as sexy as you
You know I cant, even if I did want to, Samantha interrupted. I told you what Elliott said.
He cant tell you who you can and cant date, Brenda said.
Sure he can. He holds all the cards. At least as far as the team is concerned.
You think hed cancel the contract because you went on a date with a player? Brenda was incredulous.
I dont know if he would cancel, but he could make our lives very difficult, Samantha said, serious now. I cantI wonttake the risk of finding out how far hes willing to be pushed. I do know Elliott was dead serious when he said he didnt want any trace of scandal around the team.
I suppose youre right. Brenda sounded doubtful.
I know I am. We need this contract much more than I need a date with some smooth-talking, sexy farm boy from Oklahoma.
Its your call, Sam.
Exactly, and I dont want anything that smells even vaguely suspicious getting back to Elliotts nose. Besides, I get enough of baseball from Boomer. More, I dont need.
Speaking of which, what are you going to do about him? Brenda shuffled the pictures and came up with Boomers. Whats his bit in all this?
Nothing special. I treat him just like any other player. He knows that and so do I. Elliott didnt seem to think there was a problem, as long as we both knew that there would be no special treatment. I told him about the connection, but it turns out he already knew. Thanks to Boomer.
He told him? Brenda asked, surprised. Why would he do that?
Little brother didnt want any blotch on his career because I was bidding on the teams ad contract.
Huh? I dont get it.
Samantha shrugged. Thats how he explained it. As it turned out, I may have gotten the contract because of my connection with him, at least indirectly. Elliott said that my knowledge of baseball was one thing that tipped the scale in our favor.
That and being low bidder.
Well, his budget is tight this year, so that worked to our advantage as well.
Samantha was philosophical about why she had beaten other, more prestigious firms for the high-profile job. In the end, all that mattered was that she knew her team could do the work as well as, or better than, any other firm. She had convinced Elliott of that. And her spiel to him was not merely boastful, hopeful words. Samantha would not have taken the contract if she did not think Emerald was right for the job and that the job was right for Emerald.
The size of the project was a bit daunting for a small company, though. The firm would be responsible for not only the advertising, but also a new logo, uniform design and colors. Caps, buttons, bumper stickers, giveawaysthe list was endless. They would set up interviews for the players at local radio and television stations. The budget ran into the millions.
To handle all this work, Samantha had to turn away numerous smaller jobs, some with clients that she hated to lose. In the past, those small jobs had been the companys bread and butter. The contract with the Rainiers would usurp all their resources. If Emerald succeeded, it would earn national exposure. Other corporate clients would notice the small company from Seattle and come courting. Samanthas fledgling firm would fly to a higher altitude in the ad business. With that flight would come money and prestige.
And if they failed? Samantha had not thought much about that possibility. Without consulting her accountant, she knew her business could not afford to lose. If Emerald failed to show Mr. Elliott a healthy return on all his advertising dollars, it would be stretched pretty thin, maybe too thin to recover. Nothing like putting all our eggs in one basket, Samantha had thought when she signed the contract.
So, Bren, this is the big one. Lets get started. I want to schedule a kickoff meeting with everyone on Monday. Afternoon is best. She gathered up the photos.
Brenda jotted a few more notes on her pad of paper, then boosted herself out of the chair. Right, boss. Ill set it up.
Samantha dropped the photos in the center of the mess on her desk. As if by magic, Jarretts picture slid out of the pile. He smiled up at her.
Wipe that cocky grin off your face, Jarrett Corliss, Samantha warned the man in the photo as she tapped his nose with the eraser end of her pencil. Ive got plans for you.

Chapter Three
Okay, sports fans. Heres the pitch, Samantha announced.
Her staff groaned loudly, their heads falling limp to rest on the conference table in mock anguish.
Samantha grinned. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Show some respect here. Im the boss and if I want to play sportscaster, you all get to listen in rapt silence.
A loud, wet raspberry cut across the end of her sentence and she scowled at the culprit. She should have expected itBrenda. Quiet! No dissension in the ranks. She softened the stern warning with a smile. Then, before she lost control of the unruly bunch, she plunged ahead with the meeting.
As you all know, I met with the Rainiers last week. Heres the schedule Ive penciled out for what needs to be done. She passed a stack of papers around the table. First, I have a meeting with Elliott and his people on Friday. We have to have presentation DVDs by then.
There were several moans of protest.
I know. Its a push, but we need to roll in high gear. The photographer is scheduled to reshoot the team photos next Tuesday. The first commercial will be shot the middle of the following week, probably Wednesday and Thursday, depending on Dietrichs schedule. Well use photos or pull stills from the video for billboards.
Before she could continue, Lane interrupted. Wait a minute, chief. What happened to all the time we were supposed to have to get ready for this project? Weve known about it for a month.
Youre right. But contract negotiations were delayed, so were up against the wall. The team leaves for spring training camp in three weeks. All this has to be done before they go. Samantha knew what the next few weeks were going to be likean unbroken string of long days and longer nights. She didnt like it any more than her team did, but it was essential that they attack it with all their enthusiasm and momentum.
Hey, after three weeks of twenty-seven-hour workdays, things should settle down to a more reasonable pace, she added with a smile.
She paused to survey the faces around her. They all looked interested, eager and alert. A little apprehensive, too. No harm in that. No one was surprised by the amount of work. No one complained.
The tight deadline will mean a lot of work, but we can do it. Brenda has a list of all the details to be covered that well go over at the end of the meeting. First, I want to start with the overall thrust of the campaign.
Samantha outlined the information she had on the Rainiers, their recent history, changes in staffing, their strengths and weaknesses. If her staff hadnt all heard this somewhere else, she wanted to be sure they did now. To design a good advertising campaign, Emerald Advertising needed to somehow magically erase the past. She wasnt fooling anyone about how hard that would be.
Lets bounce some ideas around. Nothing is too far-fetched or corny at this point. Brenda, got your crayon and notepad warmed up?
Ready, coach. Let em fly. Ill catch em. Brendas pencil was poised to write, but the room was silent.
Come on, Samantha coaxed. I can see those wheels turning. Spit something out. Anything.
Okay, Lane began cautiously. What about bikinis?
What about them?
Well, sports and women in bikinis just go together like, like
Like safe and sex, Pam finished. A burst of laughter followed.
Im all for bikinis, Carol chimed in. But only if the players are wearing them. More laughter greeted this sally. Samantha joined in, then guided the conversation.
Lane has a point. The commercials that have been used during most major sporting events have featured any number of bikinis and skimpy attire to promote everything except swimwear and clothes. But how do we use them? Were promoting a baseball team. Is that a different market than beer commercials target?
Samantha sat back and let the others debate the issue. Ideas were tossed out randomly. Bikinis and beer ledby a very circuitous routeto nuclear reactors and life preservers. She let them mine the raw possibilities of each idea for a while then pushed them off in another direction. Brenda wrote furiously, so every speck and notion was documented for future reference. Ideas and patterns of ideas mentioned in this session might even prove useful later for a completely different product. Brenda was a storehouse of past brainstorming sessions, any of which she might mention without warning to send them off in a new direction.
The discussion returned to its start and an argument raged back and forth about the ethics of using bikinis to promote anything. The women opposed it, the men were for it, so long as good-looking female models wore them. Then Lane yelled something crazy about extraterrestrials and the brainstorming took a decidedly odd turn. Samantha laughed and broke into the ruckus.
Okay, guys. Thats a little bizarre, even for me. I know I said nothing was too far-fetched, but come on, aliens in bikinis kidnapping a baseball team?
Sure, itd be great, Stuart said, adopting Lanes brainchild for the moment. Like Willie Mays meets ET. But with less cellulite.
Yeah. The players could be sucked up into this ship. Then weird creatures would operate on them and make them better players. Carol picked up Stuarts thought and gave it another twist.
When this craziness had run its course, Stuart asked the question Samantha had been waiting for. What do you have in mind for this campaign, Samantha? Weve been spilling our guts for over an hour, but you havent offered much yourself.
Well. Ive heard some good ideas passed around today, except the one about aliens. She shook a finger at Lane. He smirked. But I want to focus a little tighter on the problem before we look for solutions. The Rainiers are a bunch of druggies and bullies, and no one wants to go to their games because they always lose. Right? There were nods of agreement.
To change that perception, we need to recast the Rainiers as a completely new team. The old is gone. Heres this new gang of kids that no one knows anything about. Its our job to introduce them and show how theyre starting out fresh. She paused for emphasis. So I think we should show what the players were like in grade school.
Grade school? was the startled question from several people.
Yep. Grade school. Samantha went on to outline her idea as she had to Brenda. What if we set them up as a sandlot team on the playground. Make their individual talents come from something they did then. Exaggerate to show how they started out in the game.
This set everyone into another flurry. Ideas spun around the room like Frisbees.
Like the kid that hits a home-run ball through the plate glass window two blocks away, Lane said.
Or a pitcher that used to hit birds with rocks, Stuart added.
No. Thats too mean. Besides, the animal-rights activists would have a cow, Carol countered. How about throwing newspapers on a paper route. Or winning all the Kewpie dolls at the county fair. Something like that.
But what about the aliens? Lane asked plaintively. Everyone laughed.
The groups creative juices flowed freely. Once a basic theme was set, their ideas began to mesh. At the end of the meeting Samantha knew they were on to something good. She divided her staff into two creative teamsStuart and Lane in charge of one, Carol and Pam the other. Then she assigned several of the more urgent items on Brendas list.
Everyone know where were going and what were doing?
There was a chorus of acknowledgment.
Good. I want both groups to work closely with one another on this. It all has to mesh. Lets meet again on Wednesday afternoon to go over the preliminaries. If you have any questions, I plan to be in all week. Thanks, gang. The meeting was over.
Samantha watched as they exited en masse. Pam and Carol were already sketching ideas in the air for the project. Between them, she knew shed have some good, solid stuff by midweek. Samantha crossed her fingers and hoped the Rainiers would be just as excited.
The wait to find out how the Rainiers felt didnt take long, or at least it seemed that way. The week flew by and before she knew it, she had delivered her pitch to Andrew Elliott and the rest of the Rainier managers and coaches.
A skookum presentation! I like it. Elliott pounded his cigar into the ashtray on his desk. He was about sixty years old with the energy of a teenager. His short, round frame and rosy cheeks held all the good humor of Santa Claus. Except when he was crossed. Then he could outdo both Scrooge and the Grinch. The cherubic exterior hid a core of pure steel.
Thank you, Mr. Elliott. If youre satisfied, well get the first commercial ready to shoot in about a week.
Its wonderful, Ms. James. The campaigns shaping up to be a real corker. Just what this team needs.
Samantha chuckled at his quaint colloquialism. Ill let your staff know where and when we begin shooting as soon as I make the final arrangements with the director and the camera people. She shook Elliotts soft, chubby hand. As gentle as his grasp felt, Samantha knew it cloaked the proverbial iron fist with which Elliott ruled his organization.
Before she won the contract with the Rainiers, Samantha had wondered why Elliott had let the organization run so far into the dirt. Fearlessly, she asked him that exact question early in their negotiations. She had a lot at stake by taking on a project this size. If the owner wasnt committed to bringing the team up to par with the rest of the league, there was no reason to stick her companys neck out. After all, the advertising contract only covered one season. If the team did wellthat is, if the stands were fullit would be extended to the next season. The gamble was acceptable to Samantha only if Andrew Elliott had the wherewithal and desire to pull the team from the bottom of the standings. Otherwise, what was the point?
Her direct and candid question was one of the ways she had impressed Andrew Elliott. He admitted his mistake: turning too much power over to the wrong man. His confidence had been misplaced, and he had found out only after disaster struck. Consequently, ninety-nine percent of management had been firedcanned was his word. Now Elliott was making the decisions, and the team would change. Which was not saying it was a sure thing. If they didnt improve, Elliott planned to put the whole kit and caboodle on the auction block and sell to the highest bidder. Samantha liked his honesty, and despite the high stakes, she had signed the contract.
Ill talk to you Monday morning. The team photos are scheduled for Tuesday. I left a copy of the details with your secretary.
Once out of the office, Samantha did a little dance of elation. The campaign was going exactly as she had hoped. Impulsively, she decided to walk over to the ballpark. Where better to revel in this small success? Besides, inspiration had hit her there before. Maybe another bolt of ideas would come with a new visit. She still had to catch up to Boomer, too.
Management offices for the Rainiers were in a four-story structure just north of the stadium. As she strode toward the main entrance, she was struck by how little Sicks Stadium looked like a ballpark. With its brick-and-wood facade, the old structure looked more like a large factory. Inside, a pitched roof covered the horseshoe-shaped stands. Like other stadiums built in the early part of the last century, the playing field was open to the elements.
She showed her badge to the security guard and wound through the maze of tunnels to the field, following a path she had memorized on her first visit. She didnt see anyone until she climbed out of the dugout onto the field: a few players and coaches stood near the bullpen. Samantha ignored them and slowly turned in a circle, taking in the entire spectacle.
Anticipation filled the air, as if the old building was waiting for the season to begin. After so many summers of baseball, so many games won and lost, maybe the fanciful sensation was true. Maybe this place, like the fans that would fill the seats, waited impatiently for winter to end and another long summer to begin. She laughed at herself: she had definitely been spending too much time thinking about baseball.

JARRETT PICKED UP A new ball, gripped it loosely and slowly pulled his arm back to throw. He went through a pantomime of a pitch in slow motion, not actually letting the ball leave his hand. He repeated the movement over and over, loosening his arm and shoulder muscles. As they warmed, he could feel them easing, a fluidness coming in where rigidity had previously lay. He exaggerated the motions of pitching to work his entire arm, up into his back, down to his legs and toes, preparing his body for the real thing, the whole business of muscle and bones working together in perfect harmony.
Or not.
Jarrett had once taken the gift of painless motion for granted. Not so long ago, those muscles worked perfectly, giving him the control to pitch a baseball however he chose, as fast as he chose. He could fine-tune each pitch to place it low or high, inside or out, with any sort of spin the catcher signaled. And speed? His fastball was a thing of glory. These days, he struggled to reach that perfect grace. When it did return, it was often accompanied by grinding pain.
Nor had he always been so aware of the muscles in his arm. He had known the names of the major muscle groups, but that was it. Now he knew, down to the tiniest connective tendon, the name and function of each part of his shoulder: deltoid, trapezius, teres minor, teres major, scapula. He swore he could feel each one during his slow warm-ups. Learning how his body worked had been one of the ways he had kept his sanity during the long recovery. He had thought that if he understood the anatomy, he could somehow heal faster. It had helped him focus during therapy. With every pinch of discomfort or stab of outright pain, Jarrett would name the muscle and think beyond the agony. He supposed his method had worked, since he was pitching a baseball again, but at a price. His shoulder never completely stopped hurting him and control was elusive.
All right, Corliss, the pitching coach yelled from the other end of the bullpen. Lets see some heat.
Jarrett stepped up to the mound and took his stance. He tried not to think about anything at all. Just throw the ball. The first pitch was wild, and Jarrett winced. The second wobbled a bit, but made the strike zone. With each throw, he tried to place the ball where he wanted it to go. Speed would come later in the session.
The coach stood, arms folded across his chest, hat pulled low over his eyes. Jarrett couldnt read his expression and hoped his own was as blank. Training was always this way, from bad to better with each pitch. He just wished he didnt start at square one each day.
Try dropping your shoulder a bit on the follow-through, the coach said, coming toward Jarrett. He picked up a ball and mimed his request. I think youre too high when the ball is here. See?
Jarrett continued his practice, but control came hard. A few balls would be on the money, but the next would fly wildly astray. He felt frustration rise, which did nothing to help his game. He knew the coach was unhappy, too. As they discussed another tactic, Jarrett caught a flash of red out of the corner of his eye. When he looked, he was surprised to see Samantha James climb the steps out of the dugout and walk onto the field. The coach spoke again and Jarrett wrenched his attention back to his job, but his concentration was abruptly shattered. What was she doing here? And how could he get away from practice long enough to talk with her?
He had spent considerable time thinking about the lovely advertising executive. He hadnt had a chance to pursue his attraction to her, but here was his opportunity. If he could just get away for a moment. The coach tossed him a ball. Jarrett wound up and threw. Perfectly. He blinked.
Hey! Whatever you did, do it again, the coach demanded.
Jarrett followed orders, and the pitch sailed over the plate. Without a word, the coach threw him more balls, and Jarrett pitched them. Each one flew as good as the first. Control was suddenly back in his hands.
The coach walked up to Jarrett. Whats the deal, Corliss? You been holding back all this time?
Not on purpose. Jarrett was as amazed as the coach. Where had this control come from? He looked over to be sure Samantha hadnt left yet and an idea occurred to him. Maybe Ive been using the wrong lucky charm, he said slowly.
The coach followed his gaze and saw Samantha. Nice. And better looking than that mangy rabbits foot Seibert wears around his neck. Is she yours?
No, Jarrett admitted, sharing a grin with the other man. But if you give me a break, Ill make that a yes.
The coach chuckled. Sure, Corliss. Go for it.
Jarrett pulled off his glove and opened the gate on the bullpen. As he jogged over to her, he remembered how hot her gaze had been, stroking along his skin. This time there would be no interruptions. There was no telling what progress he could make today. He was back in control.

THE SUN MAGICALLY APPEARED for a moment to brighten the wet grass of the infield. Samantha took a deep breath of air and smelled her past: early mornings spent at the ballpark with her father and brother before school started, the air cool and damp, the grass wet with dew. Here she was again, wondering why the game had fascinated so many for so long. And how could she make one team recapture that allure and fill all these seats? Was she the right person for the job? Too late for second thoughts, she reminded herself.
If youre looking for someone, a voice announced, hes right behind you.
Samantha spun to face the man she had consistently banished from her thoughts over the past week. Jarrett! she said. I mean, Mr. Corliss.
The first name suits me best. A slow, warm smile creased his face. Its right nice of you to come all the way over here to check on me.
That smile, coupled with the gleam in his eyes, sent her heart fluttering. The visceral attraction she had felt in the locker room was back in full force. Samantha was breathless. She struggled once more to pull a cloak of professionalism over her jangled nerves. Im checking up on the whole team. Not just you.
Check up on me as much as you want, darlin, he drawled, a twinkle in his eyes. Youre great for my game. As soon as I saw you standing over here, my pitches started smokin.
Oh, stop, Samantha said. All this flattery makes my heart go pitty-pat.
Jarrett laughed. Cant be flattery if its true.
Samantha rolled her eyes at that. I just stopped by to check on a couple of items for the ad campaign, she said lightly. Well be shooting the commercials soon.
On Tuesday?
No, thats a photo shoot for new close-ups and team shots, things like that. Samantha gave Jarrett a cool smile. Well, it was nice to see you again, Mr. Corliss, but I have to get back to my office.
She turned away, looking for the nearest exit, anxious to put distance between her and this too compelling man. He stepped close and stopped her, encircling her wrist lightly with calloused fingers.
Not so fast, were just getting warmed up here.
The inning is over, Mr. Corliss. Its time for you to go back to your dugout.
Come on, Sammy, I havent even had a chance to throw one yet. Have dinner with me tonight.
The question surprised her. The impulse to say yes surprised her even more. Strike one, Mr. Corliss.
Didnt I just put one right over the plate?
Sorry, no. That one was wild.
Tomorrow night then.
No. Thank you, Mr. Corliss, but no.
Why not?
She tugged away from him, but he only let her get half free. Her wrist slipped through his fingers until they were holding hands, then he tightened his grip. She eyed him warily. What difference does it make? No is no. Let go of me, please.
Jarrett ignored her request and stepped closer to her. He ran a finger down her cheek and over her chin. The touch was so electric that Samanthas hand tightened around his, and the desire she could see so plainly in his eyes mesmerized her. She felt as warm as she had in the locker room, when he had been wearing only a damp towel. All her good intentions vanished. When he spoke, his voice was low, a thread of amusement running through the words.
Well, sometimes no is just maybe wearin a different dress. Come on, Sammy, he coaxed, threading his fingers through hers. Have dinner with me tonight.
Samantha was struck by the look of complete and utter assurance on Jarretts face. He was certain she would say yes, just because he wanted her to do so. He was just as cocky and arrogant as all the others. She tugged her hand back sharply, breaking the connection and stepping away.
Well, in case you hadnt noticed, Im wearing a business suit. When I say no, I really do mean no.
Give me a chance, Sammy. If were going to be working closely together
I assure you, were not going to be spending that much time together, Mr. Corliss.
Jarrett. Please. His eyes were an innocent blue, but the dimple in his cheek gave his teasing away. Samantha felt a smile tug at her lips. Really, he was too charming for his own goodor hers.
Jarrett, she said reluctantly. No matter what we call each other, my answer is still no. Besides, I dont date people I work with.
He frowned at that, all teasing gone from his face. We arent working together. I pitch baseballs, you pitch the team.
That is working together, she insisted calmly. At least we both work for the same man. And Andrew Elliott has definite ideas about how he wants the team run this year. One of them is that no one from my company gets personally involved with the team.
I cant believe Elliott cares diddly about us having dinner.
Trust me, he does. He wants business to stay business.
Itll be our secret then.
This conversation is ridiculous. It doesnt matter what Andrew Elliott thinkseven though I happen to agree with him. I said no, thank you. Thats all I have to say. Exasperated by his stubborn arrogance, she turned and walked toward the stands.
Jarrett followed every step of the way. Then what about you and Boomer?
Boomer? She looked over at him, thrown off by the mention of her brother. What does he have to do with this?
If you agree with Elliott, then what are you doing cozying up to Boomer? You two were pretty chummy in the locker room the other day.
Samantha tilted her head, looking up at him, confused by the direction the conversation had taken. What was he talking about? Then, in a flash, she realized. He thought she had a thing going with Boomer. The very idea made her want to laugh. Boomers different.
Ill say. So whats Elliott think about you and him? Jarrett said with a scowl. If he gave his blessing to your seeing some second-rate left fielder, I dont see why hed object to you having dinner with a starting pitcher.
Boomer is not second-rate.
Jarrett snorted. Okay, Ill take that back. He gets the job done. I just wouldnt trust guys like him.
What do you mean, guys like him?
Guys who think the rules are made for everyone else but them.
Thats who you think Boomer is?
I do.
Samantha folded her arms. Why do you think that?
He was silent.
Come on, Jarrett, she prompted. Out with it. What rules are we talking about? What rules has he broken?
Rules like corking your bat, gambling on the team, you name it, hed do it.
Has he actually done those things?
Not that I know about, Jarrett admitted. Maybe hes done something worse that no one knows about. I wouldnt put it past him. Boomers the kind of guy whos going to get caught someday doing something illegal and probably stupid. Hes too arrogant.
Samantha would have laughed if she hadnt been so angry. Talk about the pot calling the kettle black. She shook her head. I dont think you know him at all, Jarrett. I dont know how you could, youve only been on the team
I dont need any time at all to know what Boomer is like. Its plain for anyone with half a brain to see. Jarrett threw his hands up in the air and stalked a short distance away before turning to face her again. Come on, Samantha, hed steal from his grandmother if it suited him, and hed sleep like a baby at night afterward.
He would not.
Yeah, he would. Hes got the least conscience of anyone Ive ever met. You think youre special to him? he asked with a sneer. Dont bet on it. Hes juggling more women than any man Ive ever known.
Its not like that
No? So, it doesnt bother you to hear youre just one of the harem?
No. Even if it were true, Samantha said in a cold, furious voice. Because if you had half a brain, youd know that Boomer James is my brother.
With a contemptuous look, she turned her back on Jarrett and stalked away. Too angry to think, she stomped up the steps, through the tunnel, to the nearest exit. Just as she pushed the door open, Jarrett caught up to her and grabbed her by the arm.
Im sorry. I am an idiot. I didnt even know the guy had a last name.
Most people do, Mr. Corliss. Samantha glared at him, then at the hand that restrained her. He dropped her arm.
Im sorry for what I said about Boomer. I thought
Forget it.
Please let me make it up to you, Samantha, Jarrett pleaded. Id really like to take you to dinner.
She laughed incredulously. No thanks. I think weve spent enough time chatting.
Please, Samantha.
She reined in her anger. Look, Jarrett, youre entitled to your opinion about my brother. I thinkI knowyoure wrong, but Im not going to argue about it. I accept your apology. Lets just leave it at that.
Their eyes warred for a moment. She could tell he wanted to keep arguing, but he held his tongue. Not too bright, but he was learning. He had dug himself a hole from which there was no easy way out. She pushed the door open and walked away without another word. This time, he didnt follow.
Back at Emerald Advertising, the expectant faces of her entire staff eagerly welcomed Samanthas return, like a nest full of baby birds waiting with hungry mouths wide open. She was still furious with Jarrett and would have preferred to fume privately in her office. But she couldnt let that anger spill over onto this moment. Her staff had worked too hard this past week and deserved a bit of jubilation.
Well? How did it go? Brenda demanded. Did they like it?

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