It Had to Be You (Chicago Stars Book 1)

It Had to Be You: Chapter 9



Phoebe stood in the flickering shadows of the torches that had been placed at intervals around the pool at the Somerville estate and watched as five giggling women surrounded Bobby Tom Denton. None of the Stars’ management or staff had regarded Bert’s death or the fact that Phoebe would soon be moving out of the house as an excuse to cancel the party he had hosted each year after the season opener. While Phoebe had been at the game, her secretary had supervised the caterers setting up for the event. Phoebe had replaced her carwash dress with a slightly less conspicuous apricot knit tank dress.

The team’s loss that afternoon to the Broncos had cast a pall over the early hours of the gathering, but as the liquor had begun to flow more freely, the mood had grown livelier. It was nearly midnight now, and the platters of steaks, ham, and lobster tails had been demolished. Phoebe had been introduced to all the players, their wives, and girlfriends as they arrived. The players were scrupulously polite to their new owner, but being around so many athletes had brought back too many bad memories, so she had removed herself to a wooden bench set by a clump of japonica bushes well off to the side of the pool.

She heard a familiar voice and felt a queer jolt as she looked toward the patio and saw Dan. Ron had told her that Sunday night was one of the busiest times for the coaches as they graded the players on their performances that afternoon and worked on the game plan for next week. Even so, she had found herself looking for him all evening.

She watched from the shadows as he moved from one group to another. Gradually, she realized he was drawing closer. She saw that he was wearing a pair of wire-rimmed glasses, and the contrast between those studious glasses and his rugged good looks did strange things to her insides.

She crossed her legs as he came up to her. “I’ve never seen you in glasses.”

“My contacts bother me after about fourteen hours.” He took a sip from the can of beer in his hand and propped his foot on the bench next to her.

This man really was a Tennessee Williams wet dream, she thought, as a film strip slowly unwound in her head. She could see him in the shabby library of a decaying plantation house, his white shirt damp with sweat from a lusty encounter with young Elizabeth in the brass bed upstairs. He had a cheroot clamped between his teeth as he thumbed impatiently through an old diary trying to discover where his great-grandmother had buried the family silver.

Her body felt warm and languid, and she had to suppress the urge to rub against him like a cat.

The burst of loud laughter that came from the pool pulled her back to reality. She looked over in time to see five of Bobby Tom’s women shove him into the water fully dressed. When he didn’t immediately come up for air, she gritted her teeth. “I’m forcing myself not to run over and pull him out.”

Dan chuckled and took his foot down from the bench. “Relax. You have even more money invested in Jim Biederot than in Bobby Tom, and Jim’s just lassoed one of the chimneys so he can climb the side of the house.”

“I’m definitely not cut out for this job.”

Bobby Tom rose to the surface, blowing water, and pulled two of the women in with him. She was glad Molly’s bedroom looked out on the side of the house instead of the back.

“Tully told me Jim climbs the house every year,” Dan said. “Apparently, the party wouldn’t be the same without it.”

“Couldn’t he just put a lamp shade on his head like everybody else?”

“He prides himself on originality.”

A burly defensive lineman lay down on the concrete at the side of the pool and began to bench press a shrieking young woman. Dan pointed his beer can toward them. “Now there’s where your real trouble’s gonna start.”

She stood so she could get a better view and then wished she hadn’t. “I hope he doesn’t hurt her.”

“That wouldn’t matter so much as the fact she’s not his wife.”

At that moment a tiny fireball with a shining mane of Diana Ross hair charged from the rear of the patio toward Webster Greer, a 294-pound All-Pro defensive tackle.

Dan chuckled. “Watch and learn, Phoebe.”

The spitfire screeched to a stop on a pair of stiletto heels. “Webster Greer, you put that girl down right this minute or your ass is gonna be grass!”

“Aw, honey—” He dropped the redhead onto a chaise lounge.

“Don’t you ‘honey’ me,” the spitfire shrieked. “You want to find yourself sleeping in that bowling alley you built for yourself in our basement, that’s just fine with me, ’cause you sure as hell won’t be sleeping with me.”

“Aw, honey—”

“And don’t you come crying on my shoulder after I haul your ass to divorce court and take you for every penny you got.”

“Krystal, honey, I was just foolin’ around.”

“Foolin’ around! I’ll show you foolin’ around!” Drawing back her arm, she punched the tackle in the stomach with all her might.

He frowned. “Now, honey, why’d you have to go and do that? Last time you hit me, you hurt your hand.”

Sure enough, Krystal was cradling her hand, but that didn’t stop her sassy mouth. “Don’t you worry about my hand. You worry about your ass! And whether or not I’m ever gonna let you see your kids again!”

“Come on, honey. Let’s go put some ice on it.”

“Go put some ice on your dick!”

With a dramatic flip of her hair, she stalked away from him and headed directly toward Phoebe and Dan. Phoebe wasn’t certain she wanted a confrontation with this pint-sized termagant, but Dan didn’t look all that unhappy about it.

As the woman came to a stop in front of him, he wrapped her injured hand around his beer can. “It’s still cold, Krys. Maybe it’ll keep the swelling down.”

“Thanks.”

“You’ve got to stop hitting him, honey. One of these days you’re going to break your hand.”

“He’s got to stop making me mad,” she retorted.

“That female’s probably been after him all night. You know Webster’s the last man on the team who’d fool around with another woman.”

“That’s ’cause I understand how to keep him in line.”

Her tone was so smug that Phoebe couldn’t hold back a bubble of laughter. Instead of being offended, Krystal smiled back at her.

“Don’t ever let a man know he’s got the upper hand if you want a happy marriage.”

“I’ll remember that.”

Dan shook his head, then turned to Phoebe. “The scary thing is, Webster and Krystal have one of the best marriages on the team.”

“I guess I’d better go settle him down before he picks a fight with somebody.” Krystal rolled the beer can in her injured hand. “Mind if I take this along as an ice pack?”

“Help yourself.”

She smiled at Phoebe and then rose on tiptoe to plant a kiss on the corner of Dan’s jaw. “Thanks, pal. Stop by the house sometime and I’ll fry you up a hamburger.”

“I’ll do that.”

As Krystal returned to her husband, Dan lowered himself to the bench. Phoebe sat next to him, keeping as much space between them as she could manage.

“Have you known Krystal for long?”

“Webster and I were teammates right before I retired, and all of us got to be pretty good friends. Neither of them liked much about my ex-wife except her politics, and Krystal used to show up at my door with milk and cookies when I was going through my divorce. We haven’t been able to see a lot of each other socially since I joined the Stars.”

“Why is that?”

“I’m Webster’s coach now.”

“Does that make a difference?”

“Rosters have to be cut, players traded. There has to be some distance.”

“A strange way to conduct friendships.”

“That’s just the way it is. Everybody understands.”

Although the others were in sight, the bench was tucked far enough into the shadows of the japonica bushes that she had begun to feel as if they were alone, and she was so aware of him that her skin prickled. She welcomed the distraction of a female squeal, and, looking through a break in the hedges, saw a woman whip off the top of her bikini. The accompanying hoots and squeals were so loud she hoped they didn’t awaken Molly and frighten her.

“The party’s getting a little wild.”

“Not really. Everybody’s on their good behavior because the chaperons are here.”

“What chaperons?”

“You and me. The boys aren’t going to let their hair down with the owner and head coach hanging around, especially since we lost today. I remember a few parties during my playing days that lasted right through till Tuesday.”

“You sound nostalgic.”

“I had some fun.”

“Getting tossed in swimming pools and judging wet T-shirt contests?”

“Don’t tell me you’ve got something against wet T-shirt contests. That’s the closest most football players ever come to a cultural event.”

She laughed. But then her laughter faded as she saw the way he was looking at her. Through the lenses of his glasses, his sea-green eyes were enigmatic, yet something seemed to crackle between them, an electricity that shouldn’t have been there. She was thrilled, frightened. Dipping her head, she took a quick sip of wine.

He spoke softly. “For somebody who flirts with everything in pants, you sure are nervous with me.”

“I am not!”

“You’re a liar, darlin’. I make you nervous as hell.”

Despite the wine, her mouth felt dry. She forced her lips into a fox’s smile. “Only in your dreams, lover.” Leaning close enough to inhale his after-shave, she said huskily, “I devour men like you for breakfast and still eat a five-course lunch.”

He gave a snort of laughter. “Damn, Phoebe, I wish we liked each other better, ’cause if we did, we could have ourselves a real good time.”

She smiled, then tried to say something sexy and flippant only to discover that she couldn’t think of a thing. In her mind the springs on the brass bed had begun to creak, only this time she was lying on it instead of young Elizabeth. She was the one in the lacy slip with the strap falling off her shoulder. She imagined herself watching him as he stood beneath the paddle wheel fan with his shirt unbuttoned.

“Damn.” The curse was soft, hoarsely uttered, not part of the dream but slipping through the lips of the real man.

As he gazed into her eyes, her body felt as if it were shedding years of musty cobwebs to become moist and dewy. The sensation was so strange, she wanted to run from it, but at the same time, she wanted to stay here forever. She was overwhelmed by the temptation to lean forward and touch his lips with her own. And why not? He thought she was a champion man-killer. He didn’t have any way of knowing how out of character such a gesture from her would be. Just this once, why didn’t she take a chance?

“There you are, Phoebe.”

Both their heads snapped around as Ron emerged through a break in the hedges. She took a quick, unsteady breath.

Since Ron had been rehired, he and Dan had kept their distance, and so far there had been no explosions. She hoped that wasn’t about to change.

Ron nodded at Dan, then spoke to Phoebe. “I’m going to head home soon. The cleanup will be taken care of.”

Dan glanced at his watch and stood. “I’ve got to go, too. Did Paul show up with those films for me yet?”

“I haven’t seen him.”

“Damn. He’s got videotape I wanted to take a look at before I went to bed.”

Ron smiled at Phoebe. “Dan’s notorious for surviving on four hours of sleep a night. He’s a real workhorse.”

Phoebe’s encounter with Dan had shaken her because she felt as if she’d exposed too much of herself. Standing, she ran her fingers through her hair. “It’s nice to know I’m getting my money’s worth.”

“Do you want me to have him bring the tape over to your house as soon as he gets here?” Ron asked.

“No. Don’t bother. But tell him to have it on my desk by seven tomorrow morning. I want to take a look at it before I meet with my staff.” He turned to Phoebe. “I need to make a call. Is there a phone inside I can use?”

His manner was so businesslike that she wondered if she had imagined the crazy, charged moment that had passed between them such a short time ago. She didn’t want him to know how he had unsettled her, so she spoke flippantly. “Don’t you have one in that beat-up heap you drive?”

“There are two places I don’t believe in keeping phones. One’s my car, and the other’s my bedroom.”

He’d won that round, and she tried to recover with a lazy gesture toward a door on the far side of the house. “The one in the family room is the nearest.”

“Thanks, baby cakes.”

As he walked away, Ron frowned at her. “You shouldn’t let him address you so disrespectfully. A team owner—”

“Exactly how am I supposed to make him stop?” she retorted, turning her frustration onto Ron. “And I don’t want to hear about what Al Davis would do or Eddie De—whatever.”

“Edward DeBartolo, Jr.,” he said patiently. “The owner of the San Francisco 49ers.”

“Isn’t he the one who gives his players and their wives all those lavish presents?”

“He’s the one. Trips to Hawaii. Big, juicy Nieman Marcus gift certificates.”

“I hate his guts.”

He patted her arm. “It’ll all work out, Phoebe. See you in the morning.”

As he left her alone, she stared toward the house in the direction Dan had disappeared. Of all the men who had passed through her life, why did it have to be this one who attracted her? How ironic that she found herself so profoundly drawn to what she feared the most: a physically powerful man in superb condition. A man, she reminded herself, made all the more dangerous by his sharp mind and quirky sense of humor.

If only he hadn’t left so soon. Ever since she had arrived in Chicago, she had felt as if she had been transported to an exotic land where she didn’t know the language or understand the customs, and her encounter with him tonight had only intensified the sensation. She was confused but also filled with a strange sense of anticipation, a sense that—if only he’d stayed—something magical might have happened.

Molly drew up her knees and tucked them under her long blue cotton nightgown. She sat curled in the window seat of the cavernous family room looking out through the glass at what she could see of the party. Peg, the housekeeper, had sent her to bed an hour ago, but the noise had kept her from sleeping. She was also worried about Wednesday, when she would start public high school and all the kids would hate her.

Something cold and wet brushed against her bare leg. “Hello, Pooh.” As Molly reached down to stroke the dog’s soft topknot, Pooh reared up and placed her front paws on the teenager’s thigh.

Molly lifted the dog into her lap and bent her head to croon soft baby talk to her. “You’re a good girl, aren’t you, Pooh. A good, sweet doggy girl. Do you love Molly? Molly loves you, doggy girl.”

Dark strands of her hair mingled with Pooh’s white fur. As Molly laid her cheek on the powder-puff softness of her topknot, Pooh licked her chin. It had been a long time since anyone had kissed her, and she kept her face where it was so Pooh could do it again.

The door to her right opened. A large man entered, and she quickly set Pooh down. The room was dimly lit, and he didn’t see Molly as he walked over to the telephone that sat on a table next to the sofa. Before he could dial, however, Pooh bounced over to greet him.

“Damn. Down, dawg!”

To avoid any social awkwardness, Molly politely cleared her throat and stood. “She won’t bite you.”

The man replaced the receiver and looked over at her. She saw that he had a nice smile.

“Are you sure about that? She seems pretty fierce to me.”

“Her name is Pooh.”

“As a matter of fact, she and I’ve already met, but I don’t think the two of us have been introduced.” He came toward her. “I’m Dan Calebow.”

“How do you do. I’m Molly Somerville.” She extended her hand, and he shook it solemnly.

“Hello, Miz Molly. You must be Phoebe’s sister.”

“I’m Phoebe’s half sister,” she stressed. “We had different mothers, and we’re not at all alike.”

“I can see that. You’re up kind of late, aren’t you?”

“I couldn’t sleep.”

“It’s pretty noisy. Did you get to meet the players and their families?”

“Phoebe wouldn’t let me.” She wasn’t certain why she felt compelled to lie, but she didn’t want to tell him she was the one who had refused to go outside.

“Why not?”

“She’s very strict. Besides, I’m not fond of parties. Actually, I’m a solitary person. I’m planning to be a writer when I grow up.”

“Is that so?”

“I’m currently reading Dostoyevski.”

“You don’t say.”

She was running out of conversation, and she cast about for another topic to hold his attention. “I can’t imagine they’ll study Dostoyevski at my new school. I start there on Wednesday. It’s a public school, you know. Boys go there.”

“Haven’t you ever gone to school with boys?”

“No.”

“A pretty girl like you should get along just fine.”

“Thank you, but I know I’m not really pretty. Not like Phoebe.”

“Of course you’re not pretty like Phoebe. You’re pretty in your own way. That’s the best thing about women. Each one has her own way about her.”

He’d called her a woman! She tucked that thrilling compliment away to be savored when she was alone. “Thank you for being so nice, but I know my limitations.”

“I’m pretty much an expert on the subject of females, Miz Molly. You should listen to me.”

She wanted to believe him, but she couldn’t. “Are you a football player, Mr. Calebow?”

“I used to be, but I’m the head coach of the Stars now.”

“I’m afraid I don’t know anything about football.”

“That seems to run on the female side of your family.” He crossed his arms. “Didn’t your sister bring you to the game this afternoon?”

“No.”

“That’s a shame. She should have.”

She thought she detected disapproval in his voice, and it occurred to her that he might not like Phoebe either. She decided to test the waters. “My half sister doesn’t want to bother with me. She got stuck with me, you see, because both my parents are dead. But she doesn’t really want me.” That, at least, was true. She had his complete attention now, and since she didn’t want to lose it, she began to fabricate. “She won’t let me go back to my old school and she hides the letters I get from all my girlfriends.”

“Why would she do something like that?”

Molly’s active imagination took over. “A streak of cruelty, perhaps. Some people are born with it, you know. She never lets me leave the house, and if she doesn’t like what I’ve done, she feeds me bread and water.” Inspiration struck. “And sometimes she slaps me.”

“What?”

She was afraid she had gone too far, so she quickly added, “It doesn’t hurt.”

“It’s hard to imagine your sister doing something like that.”

She didn’t like to hear him defending Phoebe. “You’re a potent man, so her physical appearance has affected your judgment.”

He made a funny choking sound. “Do you want to explain that?”

Her conscience told her not to say anything more, but he was being so nice and she wanted so much for him to like her that she couldn’t help herself. “She acts differently around men than she does around me. She’s like Rebecca, the first Mrs. de Winter. Men adore her, but she’s quite vindictive underneath.” Once again she thought she might have gone too far, so she tempered her statement. “Not that she’s entirely evil, of course. Just mildly twisted.”

He rubbed his chin. “I’ll tell you what, Molly. The Stars are part of your family heritage, and you need to know something about the team. How about I ask Phoebe to bring you to practice some day after school next week? You can meet the players and learn a little bit about the game.”

“You’d do that?”

“Sure.”

The rush of gratitude she felt toward him blocked out her guilt. “Thank you. I’d like that very much.”

At that moment Peg stuck her head in the door and scolded Molly for not being in bed. She said good-bye to Dan and returned to her room. After Peg left, she retrieved Mr. Brown from his hiding place and snuggled beneath the covers with him, even though she was much too old to be sleeping with a stuffed animal.

Just as she was drifting off to sleep, she heard a soft scratching at her door and smiled into her pillow. She couldn’t open the door because she didn’t want Phoebe to discover that she’d let Pooh into her bedroom. But, still, it was nice to be wanted.


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