To Have and to Hold (21 page)

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Authors: Serena Bell

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BOOK: To Have and to Hold
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Acknowledgments

This book—and I—have been incredibly lucky. We have benefited from the wisdom and perspective of not only one fabulous Loveswept editor but two. I’m so grateful (with hugs on top) to Sue Grimshaw for her support of this series and her storytelling genius in the planning stages of
To Have and to Hold
. And although I’ll miss working with Sue regularly, I’m beyond thrilled to have the wonderful, thoughtful, brilliant Sarah Murphy as my editor through this book’s writing and revision and going forward. I couldn’t ask for a better dream team.

The dreaminess extends to the rest of Loveswept, as well—Gina Wachtel; Matt Schwartz; Lynn Andreozzi and her beautiful covers; Penny Haynes, Nancy Delia, and Lisa Wolff for their care and attention to production and copyediting detail; marketing masters Ashleigh Heaton and Erika Seyfried; Angel Pastrana for going to bat against the forces of evil in the universe; and everyone else who touches these books and my life through your work. And this year I’ve been blessed to get to know so many Loveswept Lovelies, that terrific group of supersupportive Loveswept authors—you ladies are fantastic, and I’m so grateful to have met you, online and in person.

To my agent, Emily Sylvan Kim: I have LOVED getting to spend more time with you this year. What a joy to have you visit my neck of the woods! And—of course—thank you for all the help and support you give so generously all the time at every stage of the process. Having you in my corner is a superpower in and of itself.

To my two Ambers: Thank you, Amber Shah, for building and repairing my website, and Amber Belldene, for building up my ego and repairing my sanity (among other acts of friendship too numerous to name). To Rachel, thank you for the walks, wise words, and open ear. And there are so many other women, too many to name, who give me the strength and courage to do this sometimes very crazy job of ours.

To my Hero, my Girl, and my Boy: You guys are saints and a constant delight, and I couldn’t do any of this without you. I love you.

B
Y
S
ERENA
B
ELL

After Midnight
(novella)

Yours to Keep

Hold on Tight

Turn Up the Heat

Can’t Hold Back

To Have and to Hold

Getting Inside
(coming soon)

PHOTO: © SUSAN YOUNG PHOTOGRAPHY

USA Today
bestselling author and RT Reviewers’ Choice Award nominee S
ERENA
B
ELL
writes richly emotional novels about big-hearted characters with real troubles and the people who are strong and generous enough to love them.

A former journalist, Serena has always believed that everyone has an amazing story to tell if you listen closely enough, and she adores hiding in her tiny garret office, mainlining chocolate and bringing to life the tales in her head.

When not writing, Serena loves to spend time with her college-sweetheart husband and two hilarious kiddos—all of whom are incredibly tolerant not just of Serena’s imaginary friends but also her enormous collection of constantly changing and passionately embraced hobbies, ranging from needlepoint to paddle boarding to meditation.

serenabell.com

Facebook.com/serenabellbooks

@serenabellbooks

Sign up for my newsletter at
serenabell.com/newsletter/

The Editor’s Corner

Looking for the next romance that’ll give you the feels? Our fantastic selection of books will definitely satisfy.

You’ve never read bedtime stories like the sensual forbidden fairy tales in Sharon Lynn Fisher’s Loveswept debut,
Before She Wakes
. And speaking of debuts, don’t miss
New York Times
bestselling author Kelly Elliott’s
Searching for Harmony
—a gut-wrenching story of a love that transcends all odds. Vonnie Davis’s
Her Survivor
welcomes readers to Wounded Warrior Falls where beating the odds is what it’s all about, while
Bound Beneath His Pain
kicks off a deeply sensual new series from Club Sin author Stacey Kennedy
.

Diana Quincy continues her Rebellious Brides series with a tale of forbidden love between a socialite and a scholar in
A License to Wed
. Wedding bells are ringing—and tempers are flaring—as Marquita Valentine’s Take the Fall series continues in the sweet and sexy
Hard to Fall.
The Brothers of Mayhem MC ride again in Carla Swafford’s explosive novel,
Full Heat
. Ashley Suzanne follows up
Raven
with the next round in her scorching Fight or Flight series,
Cutter
. The third book in Beth Yarnall’s Recovered Innocence series,
Reclaim,
is brimming with angst and sensuality. And don’t miss the next book in Stacey Lynn’s deeply emotional Fireside series,
His to Protect
. Or the story of a war hero fighting to remember the love he left behind in Serena Bell’s emotionally charged
To Have and to Hold
.

Then Shawntelle Madison’s seductive
Surrender to You
follows two career-oriented friends with benefits. And finally we have a cold case that leads to blazing-hot temptation in Kathy Clark’s romantic suspense
Almost Forever
.

Until next time ~Happy Romance!

Gina Wachtel

Associate Publisher

Read on for an excerpt from
Getting Inside
A Seattle Grizzlies Novel

by Serena Bell

Available from Loveswept

Iona

I wore the wrong bra for this.

I wore a going-away-party bra, not a football-playing bra.

I should have predicted that the girls—the middle school ones I coach, not the ones in my bra cups—would want to play a game of goodbye flag football, and I should have predicted that they’d want me to play with them and that I wouldn’t be able to resist.

I should have foreseen the bouncing, the sweating, and the
wire
. Ow.

It doesn’t take long, though, before the game makes me forget. They want me to QB one of the impromptu teams, and as soon as I get the football in my hands and am looking out over my little squad, instinct takes over and I stop thinking about my lingerie and equally improper footwear—black boots—and just play.

First and ten. Ish. More like first and seven, actually, because of the necessity of improvising the hash marks. But whatever. I hand off to Neve. She gets about four yards before Marci deflags her. So I feed Neve again. Why not? Because Neve will carry that ball all day long, juking and dodging to evade her teammates. I’m going to miss her like crazy—not just how brilliant and natural an athlete she is, but the totally unruly attitude that makes her stubbornly refuse to use any of the footwork I’ve tried to teach her. She reminds me of myself.

Third and inches. Keisha is way downfield, wide open, because her teammates have once again underestimated her. Love that girl.

For a moment I’m tempted to grab the big play, but then I look over at Neve, and I guess I just identify with her too much. This is hers. So I fake the pass and hand it to her. And she darts and weaves through traffic and then—keeps on going. Running all the way downfield, faster than her large frame makes her look. Right into the end zone. And she turns around and shows me the grip she’s got on the ball. Just like I’ve showed her.

For a moment I’ve forgotten. The boob sweat, the fact that I’ve probably ruined my one pair of decent shoes. The fact that we’re playing a game of flag football for zero stakes in a ratty park fringed with dangerous neighborhoods. It could be the Sunday night game. There could be bright lights and television cameras and the roar of tens of thousands of adoring fans.

You can see it in Neve’s eyes, too. That moment of victory stands in for all the moments in her beautiful, vivid future.

We win the game, even though I try to keep things fair. Afterward, the girls swarm me and hug me and tell me how much they’re going to miss me. And my eyes fill with tears as I clutch their sweaty bodies around me and tell them I’m going to miss them so much. It’s true. I’m going to miss them more than the grown women I coach, even though the grown women in question have risen to the top of their division and probably would have a shot at a championship next year.

I feel a stab of guilt at the thought, but I push it away, because the only way to become a great women’s coach is to take advantage of every opportunity that comes your way to work with the best of the best of the best. And that’s exactly what my new job in Seattle is. And when I’m done there, I’ll come back to Baltimore and I’ll have that much more to give the girls and women I work with here.

“Ms. Thomas?”

I don’t know the man standing in front of me, but he’s got the same long lashes and slight hangdog expression as his daughter. It’s Neve’s dad; I’d bet on it. I’ve never met him because he’s been deployed the whole time I’ve been working with Neve. I’ve only met her mom, a slight, quiet woman who doesn’t seem like she could possibly have given birth to her bruiser daughter. Now I know where Neve got her stature, her strength….

And apparently, her stubborn expression. My stomach seizes, anticipating trouble.

“Neve says you want her to try out for the boys’ high school team next year. She says you’ve been running contact drills with the girls and private coaching her for tackle.”

I decide to play this one straight, for now. No point in turning it into a battle before we’ve even gotten started. “Yes, sir,” I say. “Neve is an incredibly talented running back, and I think she has what it takes to get a spot on the high school team.”

“Girls don’t play tackle football.”

He says it so flatly, for a moment the fight goes straight out of me, and I’m suddenly thirteen years old and face-to-face with my own dad, telling me that girls don’t play football.

But this is not my dad and I’m not the one whose fight this is, so I shake off my feelings of childlike helplessness and frustration.

“Why not?” I ask.

“She’s gonna get hurt.”

“Not if she plays smart. The coach at Winfrey is good. Very few player injuries there. They do a lot of fundraisers and the money goes into equipment.”

But he’s got a certain look on his face, pinched and disdainful, and a cynical part of me knows this fight isn’t about safety.

Sure enough, he says, “It’ll ruin her social life. I want her to fit in with the other girls. A girl who plays football—where does she belong?”

He doesn’t say,
No boy will ever want to date her
, but I hear it. The echo of my father’s warnings. I say, “With due respect, Mr. Keyes, if you’re lucky enough to love something and be as talented at it as Neve is, you don’t just walk away from it because it’s going to make your social life more difficult for a little while.”

(Or for the rest of your life. But I refrain from saying that. I don’t think it’s going to help my argument with Mr. Keyes.)

“She could easily get a full scholarship to college,” I say instead.

“She’s not gonna get a scholarship that way. Not if I have anything to do with it.”

Jesus; he could be my dad. I think those exact words came out of his mouth.

There are a lot of people who would agree with him, but I’m not one of them. I’ve been playing football as long as I can remember, straight through high school, with the boys. And I wasn’t just the place kicker, either, which is where a lot of girls get relegated. I played backup QB, running back, safety, and even linebacker. Then I played in college. Of course things got even more competitive then, and I didn’t get a lot of reps, which was when I started playing pro women’s.

Like me, Neve isn’t content to play the safe
girl
version of the game. She wants what most male football players want—the satisfaction of a good hit, the physicality of the
real
game.

And if her dad took the time to ask her about it, and really listen, he’d probably get it, because he’s probably felt the same way about something in his life.

But this man is not listening, not to his daughter, and not to me. “I didn’t work this hard and spend half her childhood overseas to put her in danger, both physically and emotionally. I did it so she can be safe and happy. And there’s no way football’s gonna do that for her.”

I know he’s sure he has her best interests at heart, but all I can think is,
Poor Neve.
Last week, she’d been over the moon about having her dad back from his deployment, but I’m betting she’s not so happy to see him now. “Sir,” I begin, but he crosses his beefy arms over his chest.

“There’s nothing to discuss here. She’s my daughter. Stay away from her. You got a new job, you go do that job and leave my daughter alone. No emails, no phone calls, no advice.”

The fact is, I’m not going to have time to interfere in Neve’s life. Or do anything to help her out with her dad. At best, I could maybe tell her,
Been there, done that. Hang in there, honey, and stand up for yourself
. And the guy’s right. He’s her dad; I’m just her coach. Not even her high school or college coach, just a volunteer who plays a couple times a week with this motley crew of girls—some with talent, some who I’ve admitted to the team because I know they’d be getting in trouble somewhere without it.

But I said I identify with Neve, right? With her stubborn streak, her trouble accepting authority. So I can’t let Mr. Keyes have the last word. Just can’t do it.

“That’s right, sir. You’re the parent. So if you take football away from her, you’re the one who’ll have to live with breaking her heart and ruining her prospects.”

And then I walk away, leaving him with his mouth open, and start the messy, tearful business of saying goodbye, one by one, to these girls I’ve come to love.

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