Hard and Fast (33 page)

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Authors: Erin McCarthy

Tags: #Man-Woman Relationships, #General, #Romance, #Erotica, #Fiction, #Contemporary, #Stock Car Drivers, #Women Sociology Students, #Stock Car Racing

BOOK: Hard and Fast
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As he watched her walk away, he concluded that he could take a page from Imogen’s book. If he wasn’t so damn impulsive, he never would have dated Nikki, and he could have filled hours of his life with something—anything—of substance.
The thought didn’t improve his mood, nor did the sight of his crew chief.
“Are you ready to pull your head out of your ass?” Sam asked him, meeting him on the thoroughfare to the pits.
“I wasn’t aware that’s where it was,” Ty lied. “No wonder I’ve been having neck pain.”
“I’m serious,” Sam said. “It’s all on the line here and you’ve been distracted for a month.” He shot Ty a long look. “I guess love will do that to a man, but I wish you had waited until December to fall for a woman.”
“I’m fine.” And he was a big fat fucking liar.
Especially given that ten minutes later the sight of Evan Monroe soured his mood even further. The guy wasn’t doing anything, he was just waiting to run his qualifying lap like Ty, but it irritated Ty to think the guy had wanted to date Imogen. Evan was not her type.
Then again, neither was Ty.
That thought really set him on edge, and he almost groaned out loud when Evan approached him and said, “Is it true you and Imogen broke up?”
Not trusting himself to speak, he nodded.
“Man, I’m sorry. That’s sucks.”
“Yep.”
“You must be devastated.”
“I’m fine. It’s not a big deal.” It seemed he was getting really good at lying, because Evan’s sympathetic expression disappeared.
“Really? You’re not torn up?”
“No, not at all. It was a mistake in the first place.” Pride was a funny thing. Ty couldn’t even believe he managed to eek those words out between his lips, but for the sake of his pride, he did just that.
“Oh, okay. So you wouldn’t be upset if I asked her out? I’ve got a thing for brunettes.”
One minute Ty was standing upright, keeping his cool with Evan.
Then the next Evan was on the ground and Ty was on top of him.
He couldn’t explain it. Nor could he explain his hands gripping the front of Evan’s racing suit.
But everything had gone black and buzzing, and it had seemed that the only thing to do was to pound Evan into the asphalt so then maybe he wouldn’t feel so damn lousy.
Even as he gripped Evan’s jacket, he suspected he was wrong on that count, too.
Yep, every day had sucked just a little bit more and he just might have reached the height of suckiness.
 
 
 
RYDER called Suzanne, still stunned by Ty’s behavior.
“Suz, turn on the sports channel,” he told her.
“What? Why?”
“Ty just jumped Evan Monroe at qualifying and a camera caught it. They’re rolling it over and over.”
“What! That’s insane. Ty never loses his temper.”
That’s what Ryder would have said, too. Flopping down on his couch, he kicked off his shoes. “It seems that Evan asked Ty if he would mind if Evan asked Imogen out now that they’re broken up.”
“Uh-oh.”
“Yeah. Big fat uh-oh. I understand getting pissed, but my God, he went after him. At the track! In the last week of the season. It’s a PR nightmare. The man has lost his mind.”
“I’m watching it right now,” Suzanne said. “You’re right. He’s officially one hundred percent lost his mind.”
“Look, you know I’ve never been big on interfering in other people’s lives, but Ty is a mess and I can’t stand back and do nothing. We need to at least try to get him and Imogen to talk to each other and work this out. Or at least get some closure.”
“I agree.” Suzanne paused, then gave a small laugh. “Holy shit. We agree on something.”
Ryder smiled. “It happens sometimes.”
“Alright, so I think a dinner party is a bad idea. At this point, we pretty much just need to throw them in a room together and lock the door. I can’t do it early in the week, I have appointments. How does Friday sound?”
“That will work. Ty is going to have a shitty week with all the backlash from this stunt. He’ll need a beer by Friday.”
“Keep him at your place. I’ll take Imogen out and make up some stupid thing about stopping by your house for paperwork.”
“Got it.” Ryder hesitated. “Thanks, Suz. You’re a good friend.”
“Yeah, well, you don’t suck either,” she said.
Ryder laughed. That was Suzanne.
 
 
 
IMOGEN was staring at her computer, trying to find the right wording to submit her letter of withdrawal for her thesis project when there was a pounding on her front door. She debated ignoring it but then her cell phone buzzed with a text. It was from Suzanne.
I’m at the front door. Answer it.
Sighing, Imogen went to hit Save on her document then realized she hadn’t actually written anything so there was no point. Trudging to her door, she glanced down at her PJ pants. Good thing it was just Suzanne. She had been having something of a drawn-out pity party for the last two weeks and dressing hadn’t been a top priority on her day off.
“Hey,” she said. “How are you?”
Suzanne bustled into the living room. “Where’s your remote? You have to see Ty on TV.”
Did she have to? “No, thanks.” It was possible her wounds from their fight were finally starting to scab over, so she didn’t want to tear them open to bleed again by seeing him smiling on camera at the racetrack.
“I’m not giving you a choice. You have to see this. Ty has lost his mind.” Suzanne dug around on the coffee table until she found the remote and clicked the TV on. She surfed until she found the sports channel. “Come on . . . show it again.”
Despite her wariness, Suzanne’s agitated manner drew Imogen’s attention to the screen. They were discussing football.
“Shoot, I should have recorded it.”
“What?” she asked, bewildered.
“Wait! Here it is.” Suzanne cranked up the volume. “Look.”
The sportscaster mentioned something about hot tempers at the racetrack and then Imogen gaped at her TV. Ty was wrestling on the ground with someone. She knew it was Ty on top—she’d recognize his butt anywhere—but she couldn’t tell who was on the ground. “Who is that? Why are they fighting?”
“That’s Evan Monroe. Ryder told me that Evan found out from Elec that you and Ty broke up, so he asked Ty if he minded if he asked you out. Obviously, Ty minded.”
“You can’t be serious.”
“Oh, I am. He threw him down and had to be hauled off. It’s all they’re talking about in stock car racing. Ty’s going to get penalized some serious points for doing this. He probably just lost the championship.”
“Oh, my God, that’s awful!” Imogen stared at the image of the man she loved gripping Evan’s shirt. “Why would he do something so incredibly stupid and macho and . . .
stupid
?”
“Because,” Suzanne said triumphantly, “he is in love with you. This is jealousy, honey. The man is so cut up from your fight that he just threw his own season down the toilet.”
Imogen felt her cheeks start to burn at the very thought she had Ty behaving irrationally. “That’s insane. It’s irresponsible. It’s—”
“Hot. That’s what it is,” Suzanne said. “Just admit it. The fact that he’s torn up and wanting to beat up guys over you has you just a little damp in the panties. I know that’s how I would feel.”
Imogen shook her head rapidly. She shouldn’t think that was hot. It was macho and ludicrous and . . . hot. “Okay, I admit it! I want him to be upset. I want him to be jealous.” She flung herself down on her sofa. “I want him to want me. This has been just horrific.”
“So remember what we talked about? Go see him.”
“I can’t!” she wailed.
“Why not?”
Because the thought of him telling her she was uptight rolled over and over in her head like a video recording of all her worst fears. “I don’t know.”
Suzanne huffed in impatience. “The man just might need a friend this week as all hell breaks loose over him and his career. Maybe you should be that friend.”
The thought that Ty would be hurting hurt her. Imogen suddenly knew what she needed to do. “I will. I am. I’m going to.” She jumped off the couch. “Can I talk to you later? I have something I need to do.”
“Hopefully it’s to take a shower,” Suzanne commented. “Your hair could use some help.”
“Later. I have to do something else first.” She knew exactly what she needed to do.
Imogen wanted to spend her life with Ty.
But before she told him that, she had a few projects to take care of.
 
 
 
SATURDAY blew. Sunday blew harder. Monday sucked less in comparison. Tuesday would have been a shitty day in a better week, but under the circumstances, Ty thought it wasn’t half-bad. Wednesday and Thursday were a numb blur, and Friday brought relief that maybe the worst of it was over.
So maybe knocking Evan Monroe to the ground hadn’t been one of his better ideas. He could admit that. He had even apologized to Evan.
But he’d had his ass chewed from one end to the other by everyone from his car owner, Carl Hinder, to his sponsor rep, to Toni, to Ryder and his own mother. He’d been issued a penalty and a fine. The money he didn’t care about, but the penalty of losing points had knocked him out of running for the championship. That honor had gone to a driver who wasn’t even on the Hinder Motors team, which had really upset Carl.
Ty pulled into Ryder’s condo parking lot and rubbed his eyes. It had been stupid. He knew that. But what could he say? Love made a man crazy, and he was crazy in love.
Now that the week was behind him and the season officially over, he was planning to have a beer with Ryder, then he was going over to Imogen’s unannounced and probably unwanted. He was going to apologize for his harsh words, then he was going to pretty much beg that she take him back.
It wasn’t going to be sophisticated. It wasn’t going to be attractive.
But he was a man on the edge and he wanted his woman back, no matter what it took.
He was going to throw some more Shakespeare at her. Hell, he’d quote the Bard until the cows came home if she wanted him to, and he was going to tell her that he had signed up for a private tutor to assist him with his reading skills, or lack thereof.
As he walked to Ryder’s front door, he rubbed at the pain in his chest. He was getting old. He constantly had a burning sensation in his chest, like acid reflux or something, and he would kill for an antacid. He knocked on the front door but Ryder didn’t answer, even though Ty could hear him talking to someone inside the condo. It was a woman, and Ty heaved a sigh. Just what he didn’t want—having to make small talk with Ryder’s flavor of the week.
Opening the door, he stepped inside and saw it was actually Suzanne who Ryder was talking to, which brought him some relief. He could handle Suz hanging around, since he’d known her for ten years. Plus he could potentially pump her for information about Imogen.
Suzanne and Ryder were arguing.
“He was supposed to be here!” Suzanne said in an irritated stage whisper.
“Well, what am I supposed to do about it?” Ryder asked. “I asked him over, but I can’t make him show up on time.”
“She’s getting antsy! She said she has plans. Which scares me because she’s been shut up in her apartment all week. I’m afraid she’s going to do something drastic.”
“Like what?”
“Dye her hair blond or something scary like that.”
“Oh, damn, that would be bad.”
Ty started down the hall. “Who is dying her hair blond?”
Suzanne squawked and put her hand to her heart. “Jesus, you scared me.” Then she frowned. “It’s about time you got here. I’ve had a hell of a time keeping Imogen here for no apparent reason whatsoever.”
“Imogen is here?” Ty’s heart rate kicked up a notch, and even as his palms grew sweaty, he was relieved. He wanted to fix this, the sooner, the better.
“Well, duh. Of course she is. That’s why Ryder invited you over, so we could force you two to be in the same room and work this out because you’re driving us insane.”
“Shouldn’t we act like it’s a coincidence that they’re both here?” Ryder asked.
“Wait a minute.” Ty just realized what Suzanne had said now that he knew who they were talking about. “Imogen is going to dye her hair blond?”
“Probably.”

No
. No, no, no. You can’t let her do that. She looks perfect the way she is.” The very thought of her ruining that lush brown hair with bleach made him downright sick to his stomach.
“So go in there and tell her. She’s in Ryder’s living room listening to her iPod—”
Ty stopped listening to her as he moved toward the living room, trying to figure out what he should say. The words were jumbling in his head, how he wanted to tell her he was sorry, that he loved her, that he wanted to spend his life making her happy. He paused for a moment in front of her just to drink in the sight of her sitting on the couch.
Earplugs in, she wasn’t aware of him yet, and she was wearing a black sweater and jeans, a lot like the ones she’d had on that night out on Tammy’s porch. Her glasses were sliding down her nose, but her hair was neat and tidy in a ponytail.
It was then he realized that he’d left the ring in the car because he hadn’t known she was going to be there. Debating whether to forge ahead or to go out and get it, he was standing there in indecision when she looked up.
“Oh! Ty.” She yanked the buds out of her ears. “What . . . what are you doing here?”
Standing there like an idiot at the moment. Not sure of her mood, whether she was still furious with him, or if she was having second thoughts like he was, he tread lightly. “I was on my way to your place, actually, but I stopped off to have a beer with Ryder first. Good thing I did, since you’re here.”
“Suzanne and I were having coffee and she needed to get some paperwork from him.” She glanced down the hall. “I think they’re arguing so I put on my headphones.”

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