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MVP.

A second-chance romance as scorching hot as a baseball diamond in August. Slater "Savage" Harlow Winning the MVP award for the Birmingham Bandits last year was the highlight of my baseball career. It was the culmination of childhood dreams, calculated adult decisions, sacrifice, and a hell of a lot of focus. Tearing my ACL in spring training? Not what I expected at all. Now I'm home, in small town Georgia, rehabbing in the comfort of my own home, with people I know. I'm connecting with friends I haven't had time to talk to in years, spending days at home with my parents, and getting to watch my little brother play minor league baseball. What I don't expect is to see Malone Fulcher walking into Del's Diner one morning while having my coffee and egg whites. She's the old flame, the one who got away, and the woman I compare all others to. Malone Fulcher Spending the summer in my hometown wasn't what I had planned, but it's what I need. Recovering from a hard year, both personally and professionally, I need to reconnect with who I am. When my mom encouraged me to come home and do some soul searching, I can't say no. Memories are all over this small town, from the Baptist Church to the east field on my parents farm, to the diner. On my second day in town, I decide to go in, memories be damned. I lost my breath as soon as I saw "Savage" Harlow sitting alone at a booth. Our eyes lock, my heart flutters, and my hands shake - all the same way they did back in high school. But back then we couldn't make it work. Going our separate ways to differing colleges, we decided we weren't meant to be. A decade later, as soon as our eyes meet, I'm wondering if we were right, because those green eyes of his do nothing but take me to a past that I can see being my future. MVP was created by Laramie Briscoe, an eGlobal Creative Publishing signed author.

Laramie Briscoe · Urban
Not enough ratings
53 Chs

Chapter 15

Malone

“I don’t even know where to start.” I take a drink from the bottle, relishing the cold liquid going down my throat, wishing like hell it was something stronger. Something that would give me a little more courage than what I have right now. Being honest is hard, laying yourself bare is hard, and doing it in front of the person I hurt the most in the process of me finding myself? Damn near unbearable.

“Start from the beginning.” He also takes a drink, before sitting the bottle in between us on the bed of the truck. “Why did you accept my proposal?”

That question is easy to answer. “I loved you, and you were everything to me, my home was with you, and I thought it was what I was supposed to do.”

“But what changed?”

“Me,” my voice is small, choked and for the first time I’m telling him the truth. “The resentment I didn’t know I was feeling at the time started to bubble at the surface, and I realized I couldn’t marry you without finding out who I was first.”