Summer Heat (The Storm Inside #5) Read online




  SUMMER HEAT

  STORM INSIDE SERIES BOOK 5

  ALEXIS ANNE

  CONTENTS

  Praise for The Storm Inside

  —The Storm Inside Series—

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Thank You

  More from Alexis Anne

  Acknowledgments

  Excerpt from When Lightning Strikes

  About the Author

  -Be A Frisky Friend-

  Welcome To The World Of Tease

  Excerpt From TEMPT

  PRAISE FOR THE STORM INSIDE

  “It was one of the best love stories I have read to date. The writing at times was so descriptive you could feel the love, pain, confusion and desperation between the characters.”

  -Books Unhinged

  “This book starts off with a BANG! Literally!! Their scenes together were so intense and the sex scenes were so hot, my whole body felt on fire.”

  -Lustful Literature

  “The sex was HOT! Jake melted me with his words.”

  -Miscellaneous Thoughts of a Bookaholic

  “I loved the writer’s portrayal of what life can throw at young love.”

  -Brenda’s Book Beat

  PRAISE FOR TEMPT

  “Very erotic.”

  -Cosmopolitan.com

  “This has truly been an awesome book and an amazing series.”

  -Books of Past, Present, and Future

  —THE STORM INSIDE SERIES—

  Welcome to the big little city of Tampa, nestled into the heart of Florida along the salty Gulf of Mexico. This is where sun and second chances find love and sexy times. The Daniels family has baseball in their blood. The daughter of “Papa Joe” Daniels, Eve has taken up the family tradition along with her sisters Cassandra and June and gone to work for Major League Baseball. . . . using her career as a shield for her broken heart.

  Jake Spencer is from the other side of the tracks. Broken and abused his entire life, he’s risen to become one of the most prominent businessmen in town along with his best friend Greg Hamilton. Driven to succeed by their failures, these brothers-in-life don’t believe they deserve love . . . Until the sexy, powerful women of Tampa teach them otherwise.

  The Books of The Storm Inside Series:

  The Storm Inside

  Jake and Eve

  10 years spent trying to forget each other…

  Reflected in the Rain

  Jake and Eve

  Happily ever after begins with I do…

  Never Let Go

  Jake and Eve

  In sickness and in health. Love conquers all…

  When Lightning Strikes

  Greg and Maire

  Single mom, grumpy workaholic…fireworks were inevitable

  Summer Heat

  June and Roman

  He was forbidden. Taboo. Off limits. She couldn’t resist the temptation…

  Night Games

  Wes and Carrie

  Baseball’s biggest player is about the get played…

  SUMMER HEAT

  By Alexis Anne

  http://alexisannebooks.com/

  Copyright 2017 Alexis Sykes

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.

  Cover design by Romanced By The Cover

  Get my new releases in your inbox!

  For my #HBIC family

  1

  I pushed the heavy metal door open and stepped into the visiting team’s locker room at Tropicana Stadium.

  “Hello? Did someone call for a trainer?” It was unusual, to say the least, to get a call asking for medical help for the opposing team, but then again, this wasn’t a game day and no one should be in either locker room. Visions of horror movies filled my head as I tentatively stepped further inside.

  “In here,” a familiar voice called. A very familiar voice. Too familiar.

  No . . . he couldn’t possibly—

  I stopped short at the sight of Roman St. James standing beside his best friend Wes Allen. Wes was laid out on a bench with his foot propped up and he was very clearly in pain. I averted my eyes before Roman looked up because no. Just no. There was absolutely no way I could look that man in the eyes.

  “What have we here?” I asked, dropping my bag on the ground and immediately looking over the hurt foot.

  “I think I sprained it?” Wes’s voice rose an octave in question.

  “I want to be sure it’s only a sprain before he moves,” Roman explained. “I know this isn’t exactly normal but I didn’t know who else to call on such short notice.”

  Had Roman asked for me specifically? Was that why I’d been sent instead of someone else when the call came in?

  “Of course,” I murmured, running my finger over the swollen flesh.

  “That is, if it’s legal? I’m sure it’s not insurable and it is most definitely not kosher to look over someone from another team.”

  I snorted at Roman’s logic. “I’m almost positive this isn’t illegal. We’re not at war, just on different teams.” Except Roman and I were very much at war, just not over this. Enemy combatants in a fight neither of us chose.

  He rocked back on his heels and from the corner of my eye I could see that he was wearing a grey suit. He looked wonderful, actually, not that I noticed. Nope. I didn’t notice the way his shoulders filled out the jacket or how his stubble was perfectly trimmed to look sexy and rough at the same time. I definitely didn’t notice the way the air crackled between us.

  Not one little bit.

  Denial was the only way I was getting through this.

  “Still, it’s very generous of the Rays to lend us your talents,” Roman murmured.

  Wes gave him a funny look. “You’re acting weird.”

  Roman shrugged. “Whatever. Is it broken?”

  I shook my head. “Definitely not broken.”

  They both sighed with relief.

  Yes, it would most definitely be a problem to have the Jacksonville Waves star catcher out with a broken ankle. But why was the Waves catcher in the Tampa Bay Rays locker room?

  My locker room.

  “Thank God,” Wes mumbled, lying back on the bench. He was in uniform but not dirty. “I’m an idiot. You’re supposed to stop me from doing idiotic things, Roman.”

  “What did you do?” I chuckled as I pulled out an emergency cold pack and a wrap.

  Roman grinned and cocked his thumb over at Wes. “Knucklehead here is a romantic. He was making a video for his girlfriend when he tripped over second base.”

  “Oh, the dirty jokes I could make about that one,” I giggled as I pressed the cold pack to his ankle.

  Wes groaned. At six-foot-three he was a tall and truly talented catcher for the Waves. Catchers tended to be shorter but Wes made it work. I’d watched his transformation first hand in college, putting all the naysayers to shame. I was in no way surpris
ed that he’d not only made it to the majors, but was quickly becoming the most famous catcher in the game.

  “Please don’t, I feel dumb enough as it is . . . ”

  “How long have you been together?” I’d almost stopped noticing exactly how close Roman was standing beside me.

  Almost.

  “That’s the really ridiculous part,” Roman scoffed. “Two weeks.”

  Wes covered his face. “Stop making fun of me! I love, love. What’s so wrong with that?”

  My heart kicked up a little bit because there was nothing wrong with a massive dirty blond ballplayer who also happened to be terribly romantic.

  Roman groaned. “The problem is that you fall in love with everyone, Wes. You might want to reserve grand gestures that get your ass on the disabled list for the one.”

  “She’s out there,” he grumbled.

  “How do you know it isn’t this one?” I asked. I’d moved on to wrapping the ankle and ignoring the heat my body suddenly seemed to be generating simply by being in the same room with a man I desperately wanted but could never, ever have.

  “Because ‘Annie’s’ gonna dump his ass the minute she sees the ankle,” Roman said.

  I frowned at Roman’s subtle reference to baseball groupies. “She’s a cleat chaser?”

  They both nodded. I was not a fan of the baseball groupies, or “Annies”, as our fathers called them—women who bounced from player to player for fame and financial reasons—but it was a relationship that worked for the individuals involved. The players got beautiful arm candy that stroked their egos while the women got the favors of fame. I didn’t want to know what technically happened between the sheets, but I could imagine it was more mechanical and less romantic. I didn’t begrudge anyone who chose that life if that was what they wanted. But it wasn’t me. I wanted fireworks. I wanted devotion, loyalty, and passion the likes of which I’d only seen in a few very special couples. Anything less was unacceptable.

  And I’d thought I’d had it once. For six glorious weeks Roman St. James had been my world. He was fire and excitement and he had eyes only for me . . . until reality set it.

  I swallowed down the lump in my throat. “You’re tall and you have weak ankles Wes, you always have. You need to be more careful.”

  The room went silent and when I looked up Wes was staring at me. “How do you know I have weak ankles?”

  Shit. I froze, realizing my colossal mistake. “Uh . . . ”

  “Do you not know who this is?” Roman stepped in. My heart took off in a panic. What was he going to say? He wasn’t going to tell Wes, was he? “This is June Daniels.”

  I held his gaze and watched as Wes tried to place me. “Papa Joe Daniels daughter?”

  I nodded, hoping that the knowledge I grew up in the game was enough to satisfy Wes’s curiosity. “And,” I added, “I know ballplayers.” My father had been a famous third baseman for the Twins. I was raised in the world of baseball, just as Roman was. It was, quite literally, in my blood and the reason I’d chosen a career as an athletic trainer. It perfectly blended my two favorite things: medicine and baseball.

  Wes arched a skeptical eyebrow. “You’re telling me Roman St. James intentionally called the daughter of his father’s mortal enemy to fix me up? What the hell is going on here?”

  I finished wrapping the ankle and stuffed my gear back into my bag like it was on fire. I needed out of there fast.

  Roman shifted back and forth on his feet. “We all went to college together, Wes. She was one of our trainers at The University of Florida.”

  I sighed heavily and for the first time, locked eyes with the man I had avoided for five long years. Roman was the most beautiful man I’d ever seen and nothing had changed in that department. His skin was permanently tan from years on the field and his eyes . . . oh his eyes. They were what did me in. He had these deep brown eyes that had a way of showing everything he was feeling. They could see inside me and strip me bare.

  But that wasn’t why I’d fallen for him. I’d watched Roman for a long time before anything happened and yeah, his eyes were expressive, but the only time they ever looked like that was when he was looking at me. Believe me, I’d studied that look for months after we parted ways, hoping to see him turn that gaze on another woman so I could officially hate him with every fiber of my being. But he didn’t. Not once.

  Not until now.

  I felt the world fall away as he searched my eyes with the softest expression. I saw regret and hope mixed together in an older and far more mature version of the man I’d once loved.

  He’d been a brilliant third baseman and had a body that went with it. Six-foot-one with a strong right arm that could throw bullets across the infield with laser precision. He would have been great. Maybe one of the greatest.

  “I don’t remember you and I’m pretty sure I’d remember a Daniels,” Wes said, but I barely heard him. I was trapped in Roman’s gaze. Frozen where I stood. How was it possible to feel just as strongly all these years later? It was as if no time had passed. We were still twenty-one and spending the longest, sexiest weekend of our lives alone together in a hotel room. His look turned me on every single time. How could it not? When he looked at me I was the only woman who existed. I could see and feel his need for me in that gaze.

  And when he touched me? Oh yes. When his hands grazed across my skin it was fire and electricity, but deeper than that. His touch always sank inside until all I could feel was him.

  I cleared my throat, trying to find my voice. “I kept away from Roman and his friends. It was best for everyone,” I finally murmured. “I should go.”

  Panic flared in Roman’s eyes.

  I ignored it and reached for my bag. I caught Wes’s wide eyes as I stood up. He glanced back and forth between us, jaw slack, putting together pieces he really should leave apart.

  “Oh. My. God,” he finally whispered. “It’s her! She’s the one.”

  My heart stopped beating. The one. As much as I wanted it to be true, I’d never allowed myself to believe Roman felt as strongly toward me as I’d felt toward him. He couldn’t. Not if he’d let me walk away.

  “I should go,” I repeated and bolted for the door. Behind me I heard Wes’s voice rise up to almost a shout.

  “June Daniels was the secret woman that had you so fucked up? I can’t even wrap my brain around this.”

  There was silence just before I heard a growl. And then as the locker room door swung shut, “Never speak about her that way ever again.”

  The venom in his voice…it was intense. For me? Or for the secret we shared? If his father ever found out we’d had a relationship—

  “June, wait!” Roman called out, his voice echoing off the white cinderblock walls.

  I rushed forward hoping he wouldn’t see me as I rounded the corner. If I could just get back to my office I’d be safe. What could he possibly say in front of my coworkers?

  But then a strong hand wrapped around my bicep and gently pulled me to a stop. “Please, June. Just let me explain.”

  The warmth of his palm seared into my skin like a brand. It took my breath away. “Explain what?” I sneered, sounding much angrier than I intended. I didn’t want him to hear just how much he was affecting me, whether it was positive or negative.

  “Everything.”

  I screwed my eyes shut and silently counted to ten. “Everything? Like, why you’re here at my place of work in a suit, or something a bit older, like why you never apologized after our last conversation?”

  His dark eyes locked onto mine. “Everything,” he repeated again, this time as a whisper. Then he seemed to remember himself and cleared his throat. “I’m here right now because we’re in negotiations for a trade to the Rays. Wes cannot afford to get hurt.”

  I studied Roman—this time with intention. The suit looked good on him, so did the way his jaw ticked with frustration. Why did he have to look so appealing even when I wanted to hate him?

  And then it hit me. “Yo
u’re an agent now?”

  He nodded. “I am. I’m Wes’s agent. When I called Marie looking for a suggestion on who to take Wes to she suggested you.” He shrugged. “How could I say no to that?”

  My jaw fell open as more pieces fell together. “Wait . . . you work for Marie?” Marie Hamilton was a very close friend of the family and one of my oldest sister’s best friends. She was CEO of Bancroft Sports, her family’s company, and, apparently, Roman’s boss?

  He nodded.

  “Since when?” Did Eve know about this? Or had Marie kept it a secret from all of us? Why would she ever hire a St. James when her best friends were all Daniels? It didn’t make a lick of sense.

  “Six months. Marie just brought me down, partially to work this deal for Wes.” He kept searching my face, looking for some clue as to my reaction, no doubt.

  And at this point I was so shocked that I had no idea what kind of expression I had on my face or what he was able to read in my responses. What I did know was that I needed to escape. An overwhelming need to flee had taken over my entire body.

  “If Wes takes it easy he should be good as new next week.” I turned to leave, but he stopped me again, and damn it all, I loved the feeling of his large hand on my arm. It was familiar and unleashed a longing deep inside my chest.

  “Wait.” He yanked his hand away as if he’d been burned, then ran it through his dark hair. “Thank you for this.”

  I nodded, not trusting myself to look into his eyes again. “Of course. This is what I do.”

  “And I hear you do it very, very well.” There was deep admiration in his voice that made my pride swell in ways that it really shouldn’t.

  “Marie is biased. She thinks of me as a sister.”

  “That’s not where I heard about you.”

  For some reason, that admission took my breath away. “Are you checking into me?”

  He didn’t say anything. Instead he slid both his hands onto my arms and turned me to face him. And I let him, mostly because I seemed to have lost all feeling in my limbs or ability to string together thoughts that didn’t involve the way my pulse pounded in my veins or the way the air around us seemed to be alive.

  I didn’t dare look up into his eyes again. I knew if I did I wouldn’t be able to look away, so instead I stared at his throat where his collar and tie pushed up against his Adam’s apple.