Page 4 of Truly (New York 1)


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“Season doesn’t start until next week.”

Oh. Oh. The stupid jersey. Not her breasts.

“Believe me, I know.”

“Plus, Einarsson is a douche.”

Right. That.

Even back home, she sometimes got flack about continuing to wear the old jersey of a quarterback who’d abandoned the Packers for the Jets, only to lead his new team to a Super Bowl victory against the old one. She might as well be sporting a pin that read, I support Benedict Arnold!

Still, douche seemed a little harsh.

Ben sat up straighter, his eyes refocusing on something over her right shoulder. He slid off his bar stool and raised a hand. May turned just as another man came off the last basement step and into the bar. A blond, good-looking man who actually knew how to smile.

“How’s it going?” Ben asked.

“Good,” the other man said. “Sorry I’m late. Erin’s been texting me about some crisis, and I lost track of the time.”

“Don’t worry about it. Got you a PBR for old times’ sake.”

“Classic. But you’ll have to drink it—I can’t stay long, and I’m in training anyway.”

“You’re always in training.”

“Tell me about it. Let’s go in the back.”

Ben pushed the spare beer a few inches in her direction. “You want this one?”

“Sure. Thanks.”

He took the other, and the two men walked past the pinball machine and disappeared into the back room.

May allowed herself a small, self-pitying sigh.

She’d hoped to throw herself on the mercy of some kind Midwesterner, and instead the universe gave her Ben. An intimidating stranger who liked to read books about corpses and who’d called her boyfriend—her ex-boyfriend—a douche.

This whole Pulvermacher’s fantasy was a lost cause.

But at least he’d given her another beer. Now she had until the bottom of this glass to come up with a better plan.

CHAPTER TWO

Ben Hausman took a deep breath, quieting his body and his mind.

He thought of the farm. The view of Lake Superior from the roof of the chicken house, flat and deep blue, stretching away until it fell off the end of the world.

Calm.

Lifting his arm, he bent it and directed all his energy toward the target on the wall. On an exhale, he cocked and flung the dart.

It hit the outermost ring of the target at an angle, bounced, and fell to the floor.

“Dude, you suck at darts,” Connor said from his perch on the arm of the bar’s ratty couch. “Give up. I’ll play you at pinball.”

“Bite me.”

Connor shook his head with a grin. “It’s Tron.”

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