No Limits. Lori Foster
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Each man showered her with compliments, come-ons and good-natured ribbing. He knew exactly what they were thinking.
Because he was thinking it, too.
Yvette was just too hot. Her eyes were striking, her lush mouth a turn-on. And that soft, restrained laugh...it stroked over him.
Only now she was laughing with other guys—guys who didn’t need much encouragement to horn in.
Without showing a single sign of awareness for their over-the-top flattery, Yvette spoke with each of them.
Denver even took Cannon’s seat beside her. Stack sat across from her. In one way or another, each man angled in close to her until she was surrounded by big, muscled fighters.
Didn’t seem to bother her, though.
Armie, the only one hanging back now, elbowed Cannon. “You’ve been holding out.”
“She’s a friend.” Who would be more soon as he could arrange it.
“No shit? Can I be her friend, too?”
“No.”
Armie laughed.
Folding his arms over his chest, Cannon continued to watch her while schooling Armie. “She’s not your type.”
“Meaning she’s nice instead of nasty?”
“Very nice.” Cannon eyed him. “Aren’t you supposed to be meeting a girl later tonight?”
“Yeah.” He checked his watch. “In fact, I’m already late.”
Armie was not known for his consideration toward the fairer sex—except maybe in bed. “Figure she’ll wait?”
He shrugged. “If she doesn’t, she doesn’t.”
There were times when Cannon didn’t understand his friend. More often than not Armie seemed to work at driving “nice” women away.
Speaking loud enough for them all to hear, Cannon said, “Time for you guys to hit the road.”
Stack leaned in toward Yvette. “He means he wants you all to himself.”
“Selfish,” Miles added. “That’s Cannon.”
“At least when it comes to the pretty girls,” Armie explained. “Otherwise, he’s a ‘saint,’ don’t you know.”
As Denver stood, he said, “Right now, I can’t say I blame him.”
The way she gazed up at them from her seat made her eyes look even bigger and more innocent. She lowered her lashes—and they all looked ready to fall at her feet.
Cannon shook his head.
Not understanding just how smitten they all were, Yvette teased, “Are all fighters so outrageous?”
That started another round of jokes, but as they wrapped it up, Armie said with a teasing lilt, “’Bye, Yvette.”
She grinned. “’Bye.”
When the last guy had walked away, Cannon reseated himself beside her. “There you go. You’re now well acquainted with the warped psyche of fighters.”
“I’d call them colorful, not warped.”
“That’s because you’re a nice person.”
Far too serious, she shrugged. “I try to be.” Before he could question her on that, she said, “Do they fight professionally? I don’t recognize any of them.”
“At different levels, yeah. Armie’s good. He could be competing with the SBC if he really pursued it. But he’s also great with kids and he loves coaching, so he runs the rec center for me around fights in smaller, more local organizations.”
“He has a lot of interesting tattoos.”
“Not as many as some of the fighters.” Armie’s tats were mostly on his forearms, with one in the middle of his shoulder blades. “He’s into the art, though.”
“Do they have special meaning?”
“He’s never said.” In general, guys didn’t talk about special meanings with each other. Smiling, he told her, “The woman he’s seeing now has more ink than him, along with a lot of jewelry.”
Yvette tipped her head in that curious way. “You mean like a belly button ring?”
Cannon tugged at his ear. Yeah, the girl had that—and more. She hadn’t been shy about sharing the various body parts she’d pierced. Armie swore it was hot, but it hadn’t appealed to Cannon.
Rather than go into all that, he said, “Denver’s already with the SBC, but he’s between fights right now.”
“He’s the one with the longer brown hair, right?”
“Yeah, that’s him. He has to put it in a ponytail when he fights.”
“Does he wear contacts?”
Ah, so she had noticed. Most women commented on Denver’s predatory gaze, usually to Denver himself. Cannon appreciated that Yvette hadn’t reacted as others had. “No, that’s his natural eye color.”
Her phone made a sound; she glanced at it while saying, “He has the eyes of a wild animal.”
“So I’ve heard.” Cannon would admit the color was different, sort of a bright golden-brown.
She frowned at the phone before tucking it away.
“Anything important?”
“No,” she said too quickly and without conviction. When she didn’t elaborate, Cannon let it go.
For now.
“Miles is good, too. He’s making a name for himself. And Stack is getting there. He helps Armie at the rec center a couple times a week.”
As if looking for a change in subject, she asked, “How’s the rec center doing?”
“Great. Busy. Come by tomorrow and see for yourself.”
She nodded, started to say something and instead had to cover a yawn. “Sorry. It’s been a long day.”
They’d indulged in a lot of chitchat and numerous interruptions. It all felt so surface, when being with her wasn’t. He took her hand. “You look good, Yvette.”
“For someone who’s driven cross-country?” She smiled. “Thank you. Of course you know you look amazing. You were always incredibly fit, but now...”
“Now what?”
Squeezing his hand, she pulled away