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The place was as run-down as I imagined, bigger than it looked from outside, with a sparring ring in one corner, a few workout and weight areas, and some open, matted spaces with punching bags hanging from the ceiling. There were a dozen guys there, of all sizes and colors, working out their sweaty, bulging muscles. They barely glanced my way when I walked in the door, and no one bothered catcalling me in my yoga pants and sweatshirt. I was relieved and a little miffed at the same time.

I noticed Nick immediately. It was five o’clock, and he was here, just like he said he’d be. He was on the mats, punching one of the bags, wearing black gym shorts and a gray T-shirt that was soaked through in a V on his chest and back. The edge of a tattoo showed past the sleeve of his T-shirt, dark on his bicep. I hadn’t noticed that when I’d first met him, the night he’d punched Josh with his jacket thrown to the floor.

As if he had a sixth sense, he stopped what he was doing and turned to me. A look of surprise crossed his expression, and he waved me over.

I walked to him, trying to look cool and nonchalant. Because, holy fuck. Nick wasn’t bulging with muscles like some of the guys here, but his body was lean and mean, his chest and stomach taut with muscle that I could see through the clinging t-shirt. Even his legs were sexy, his calves roped with muscle and fine hair. There was a sheen of sweat where his neck disappeared into his shirt, his brown hair was damp, and he still had that shadow of stubble on his jaw. His gray eyes were focused on mine like lasers as I approached.

“So you decided to get mad, huh?” he said as he pulled off the gloves he’d been wearing.

I tried not to watch in fascination as the tendons and muscles moved in his arms. “Sure,” I said. “Here I am.”

“I knew you’d show.”

“Because you’re so irresistible?” I dropped my bag at the edge of the mat.

He was looking me over, the same look he’d given me in the diner that had stripped me naked, but there was a thoughtful edge to his expression. “No. I’m not. You know that, redhead. I knew you’d show because Bank Boy pissed you off, and you want to hit him.”

“You keep calling him Bank Boy,” I said. “I work at the bank, too.”

He shook his head. “You won’t last.”

“Excuse me?” Jesus, did everyone think I was hopeless at having a career?

“You don’t belong there,” Nick said, his look going up and down me again. That look should make me mad, but instead it made me weirdly breathless. “That body, in a suit? You’ll quit. I’m calling it.”

What about my body? Was he saying something good or bad? I couldn’t tell. “You don’t know anything about me.”

“We’ll see who’s right,” he said. “In the meantime, you came here.”

“You said I have an anger management problem.”

“Yeah. I think you should hit something.”

“You?” I asked.

He laughed low, probably at the hopeful tone in my voice. And now I was turned on again. It was so strange, what he did to me. “You’re dressed good enough,” he said. “Take your sweatshirt and shoes off and get on the mat.”

I pulled off my sweatshirt, toed off my sneakers, and fished a hair elastic out of my bag, swiping my hair back into a ponytail. “I’ve never hit anything before,” I told him as I got on the mat, my blood pumping.

Nick took a stance square across from me, just out of reach. “Okay, throw a punch,” he said. “Let me see your form.”

I made a fist and punched the air.

He watched me carefully, even though my punch was laughable and my arm looked like spaghetti next to his. “You’re punching up,” he said. “You hit on an angle, you lose power and you put stress on your shoulder. You want to punch at shoulder level, never above it. Not right or left, but straight to keep the power focused. Try it again.”

I did. “Can I punch you now? Or at least the bag?”

“Not yet, because you’ll crack something. Turn your fist, rotate it.” He demonstrated in slow motion. “Use your wrist. See? And your stance is all wrong. Put your power leg back.”

I moved my feet, but he shook his head. “Here.” He stood next to me and slapped the front of my right thigh impersonally. “Leg back. Heel up. This is a power stance.” He took my hips in his hands and turned them, his big, warm grip making me jump, though he didn’t seem to notice. “Turn your torso.” He used the same warm grip on my shoulders, moving them just so. “Right arm back. Now you twist and hit in one motion, and the power flows from your feet up through your body and your arm. You feel that?”

I did. I felt everything, the power of my legs, the turn of my body, the jab of my fist. I could also feel the heat of his hands on my hips, as if he was still touching me. He was close enough that I could smell the tang of his sweat and I could see the way his biceps moved when he extended his arm. Good God. I was starting to get pleasantly wet, something I wasn’t about to admit to him. “Now can I try the bag?”

He moved me over, his touch giving me the shivers again. “Just hit lightly. You don’t need force. Practice the hit. Straight from the middle knuckle, not the fourth finger or the pinky. Go.”

I hit it a few times, hearing the satisfyingsmackwhen my knuckles hit the leather, feeling the surprising jolt in my arm. “I like this,” I said. “Now I know why you hit Josh.”

“You bet your sweet ass,” Nick said. “Now the cross.”


Tags: Julie Kriss Romance