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After The Rain (One Pass Away #1)




  AFTER THE RAIN

  ONE PASS AWAY

  BOOK ONE

  MARY J. WILLIAMS

  Copyright ©2016 MARY J. WILLIAMS

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  Want to know how to motivate yourself to write a book? Have your favorite football team lose the Super Bowl. On the last play. With an interception. The next day I was so depressed I tuned out all media. No TV, no internet, no newspapers — nothing. And I started to write. I’m still writing. As you can see, a little motivation can do wonders. Football is the center of my next series of books. And since I’m writing the ending? No interceptions. Guaranteed. Happy reading everyone.

  Mary J. Williams

  HOW TO GET IN TOUCH

  Please visit me at these sites, sign up for my newsletter, or leave a message.

  http://www.maryjwilliams.net/home.html

  https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mary-J-Williams/1561851657385417?ref=hl

  https://twitter.com/maryjwilliams05

  https://www.pinterest.com/maryj0675/

  https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5648619.Mary_J_Williams

  MORE BOOKS BY MARY J. WILLIAMS

  Harper Falls Series

  If I Loved You

  If Tomorrow Never Comes

  If You Only Knew

  If I Had You (Christmas in Harper Falls)

  Hollywood Legends

  Dreaming With A Broken Heart

  TABLE OF CONTENTS

  About the Author

  How to Get in Touch

  More Books by Mary J. Williams

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Epilogue

  Coming Soon

  PROLOGUE

  LOGAN. LOGAN. LOGAN.

  Logan Price closed his eyes, taking it all in.

  “Hear that, kid?” Starting quarterback Gaige Benson slapped him on the back. “Two games under your belt and you’re a star. Now let’s go out there and add super to the front of it.”

  The announcer for the team set them in motion down the tunnel with his familiar introduction.

  “And now, let’s hear it for your division champion SEATTLE KNIGHTS.”

  The roar of the crowd. There was nothing like it. A packed stadium. Fans chanting his name. Few people would ever experience what it was like to take the field in a professional football game.

  Logan Price had been working for his entire life. He could still remember in exact detail the first game he ever saw. Too small to climb onto the stool in his father’s bar by himself, his old man had lifted him onto the seat.

  Stay and be quiet.

  Not an easy order to follow for an active, inquisitive little boy. One look at the game and for once, Logan had no problem following his father’s command. The old TV transported him to a foreign world filled with bright lights and shiny helmeted warriors. Logan didn’t know what he was watching. He did know he wanted to be one of those men.

  A Sunday afternoon in rural Oklahoma. Lefty’s Pub was filled with after-church drinkers who figured they had done their duty to God and family. The rest of the day was their time. A beer. Or two. Or six. Cronies who understood a man’s need to unwind before the start of another workweek.

  And football.

  If the Friday night high school game was their true religion, the Sunday afternoon games were a close second. As Oklahoma boys, they hated anything Texas. The men of Denville gathered every week to root for whichever team was playing the Dallas Cowboys.

  No matter how the games ended. Whether the crowd was happy or disgruntled. It meant more drinking. Hours later, husbands, boyfriends, and sons would stumble out, pile into beat-up trucks, and weave their way home to frustrated wives, girlfriends, and mothers.

  As he grew older, Logan’s view changed. He moved from the stool to behind the bar. And he promised himself one thing. He would never become one of those men. He wouldn’t spend the week at a job he hated. His home wouldn’t be a semi-wide trailer filled with hand-me-down furniture and a wife to whom he couldn’t face going home.

  His Sundays were going to be spent playing football, not watching it.

  “Ready to take down this vaunted Arizona defense?” Gaige yelled at him, butting helmets.

  Vaunted. Good word, Logan thought. His QB liked to use what his granny called highfalutin talk. Must have been that Ivy League education. He knew that Gaige Benson didn’t grow up with a silver spoon in his mouth. He came from the mean streets of Brooklyn. He had the scars to prove it.

  Like Logan, Gaige had vowed to get out of the life into which he was born. In the process, he polished himself up like a new penny. He took advantage of his full-ride scholarship to Yale. He didn’t spend all his time on the football field. Fancy vocabulary. Fancy clothes. Fancy women. They were all part of the package Gaige purposefully fashioned for himself.

  Seventeen years after clawing his way out of the tenement that he grew up in, very little of that borough-rat remained. Until game time. No one was tougher than Gaige Benson. Three-time league MVP. Considered one of the best ever to play the game. No one stood in his way when he was playing the game. He had the scars to prove it.

  “Gather round.”

  Knights head coach Harry Coleman gathered the team close. He had to yell over the crowd, but he had the voice to do it. Booming was putting it mildly. The first time Logan heard it he stood right beside the man. The ringing in his ears didn’t go away for three days.

  “Divisional game. If I have to say any more than that, you shouldn’t be out here. Go kick some ass.”

  The defense took the field to start the game. Arizona had a rookie quarterback drafted in the second round from a small college in the Midwest. The only reason he was out there was because the regular starter suffered a concussion in last week’s game and the regular backup had food poisoning. Thrown into action at the last minute, Logan swore he could see the guy’s hands shaking before he took the first snap. When the ball went sailing between his legs, Logan shook his head.

  The moment was too big for some people. For Logan, it wasn’t big enough. He aimed for the biggest stage of all. The Super Bowl. It wasn’t a matter of if he would get there, but when.

  “Three and out.” Gaige grinned, pulling on his helmet. “Come on, kid. Let’s go show them how it’s done.”

  Logan ran onto the field. Kid. He shook his head, grinning. From the first day of training camp, Gaige had hung that moniker on him. Ironic since he was almost twenty-five, a good two years older than most of the other rookies. However, he supposed when someone had been in the league as long as Gaige, all the new guys seemed like kids.

  “We’re starting on the ground,” Gaige instructed them in the huddle. “Sweep out left. Basic. Got it?”

  Lining up as he had a thousand other times, Logan checked the defense. He knew he was fast. One of the fastest in the game. What set him apart was his anticipation. He had the uncanny ability to read the guy covering him. He knew when to fake left or when to fake right. Stutter step or flat out, in your face, catch me if you can.

  His speed got him out of Denville, Oklahoma. His brains and determination got him to the NFL.

  The sounds of the game were as familiar to Logan as the back of his own hand. The cal
l from scrimmage. Each quarterback had his own unique cadence. Gaige was a master of mixing his up. Study him all you want. Good luck figuring it out. His teammates knew. A signal just before they broke the huddle.

  Pay attention, you were golden. Slack off even once? Gaige could ream a guy out with the best of them. And he had no problem doing it in the middle of the game.

  An entire YouTube channel had been devoted to Gaige and his rants. They were as legendary as the man himself. With a ball in his hand, he was cool as ice. The rest of the time, watch out.

  No one would ever accuse Logan of lacking focus. Today was no exception. They were driving down the field. First and ten from the Arizona twenty-yard line. He already had three carries of thirty-five yards. It was going to be a good day.

  “Ready to take it in?” Gaige asked.

  “Always.”

  “Then show them what you’ve got.”

  A quick snap later, Gaige handed the ball to Logan. The offensive line created a seam. Not a big one. Just big enough. Using the push of his powerful legs, Logan surged through. One more step. They wouldn’t catch him. No one could.

  Like everything connected with the game, Logan heard the snap of the bone with total clarity. The agony that surged through his body was so intense he almost passed out. In the next few minutes, he was going to wish he had.

  “Get back.” Logan heard Gaige through the haze of pain. “Goddamn it. Move the hell off.”

  The three-hundred-and-fifty-pound linebacker didn’t get off by standing. He rolled. Crushing Logan’s broken leg as he went. He would never know if the move had been deliberate. Now, it was the last thing on his mind. He only cared about two things. How bad was the injury and when would he be able to play again.

  “Hold on, kid.” Gaige took his hand. “They’re bringing the stretcher.”

  The team doctor checked his eyes. Logan knew he was asked some questions. What they were and how he answered, he would never remember. By the time they carted him off the field, Logan knew the break was bad.

  “Gaige.” Logan reached for him.

  “I’m here, kid.”

  “Is it over?”

  “The game?” Gaige walked with him, his head bent toward Logan. “No. But I promise we’re going to win the bastard.”

  They loaded him onto the open cart. They had him secured and the vehicle rolled away before Logan had his answer. He wasn’t wondering about the game. It was his career.

  To no one in particular, he whispered the question again.

  “Is it over?”

  CHAPTER ONE

  LOGAN SAT UP in bed, his body covered with a fine coating of sweat.

  He glanced at the clock. Three in the fucking morning. On the one night he managed to get to bed at a reasonable hour, he was plagued by the nightmare that had haunted his dreams for the past two years.

  Running his hand through his long, damp hair, Logan fell back onto the mattress. His sheets were as wet as he was. With a grimace, he rolled onto the floor. Flexing his stiff knee, he stripped the bed, tossing everything onto a pile of dirty clothes he planned on taking to the laundromat on his day off.

  There was an alternative. He could always take Linda Sue Hemmings up on her offer. She would do his laundry anytime. Payment. On-call stud service whenever her husband Darryl was out of town on business. As much as Logan hated folding socks, he decided the price was too high. He had lost a lot in the last few years. He still held onto his dignity. Just barely.

  Still groggy, Logan shuffled to the bathroom. Flipping on the light, he grimaced at what the mirror reflected.

  Too many late nights followed by not enough sleep. As patterns went, it wasn’t a healthy one. Perpetually bloodshot eyes. Dark circles on his dark circles. He needed a haircut. Logan ran his hand over his face. Even more, he needed a shave.

  He had to hand it to himself. When he let himself go, he went all the way. All he had to do was stop showering. If he wasn’t worried about driving the customers away with his smell, he might have considered it.

  The old plumbing rattled with protest when he turned on the faucet. It wasn’t a bad place. There were worse. Logan splashed some cold water on his face. He didn’t bother with a towel. It would dry soon enough on its own.

  He had two choices.

  Toss and turn for a couple of hours on the unmade bed – he really needed to get more than one set of sheets.

  Or lose himself with an old friend.

  Sleep wasn’t coming which made the choice an easy one.

  Logan pulled on a pair of old shorts, a faded t-shirt and sweatshirt that was too ratty to be called anything as fashionable as a hoodie. After lacing up his sneakers, he hit the road. When he was a kid, he ran for the fun of it. In high school and college, it strengthened his legs and improved his stamina. Now, the only thing it accomplished was getting him a reputation as that half-crazy Price boy. Running the deserted streets at all hours? Maybe his head had been permanently injured along with his leg.

  Logan jogged past Lefty’s Pub. The place where he spent most evenings tending bar. The day he left for college he swore to anyone who would listen that he had served his last beer. Eight years later, here he was, washing glasses and putting up with not so subtle jabs about how the mighty had fallen.

  Coming back to Denville was more of an adjustment than Logan anticipated. He expected the cracks about his failed NFL career. Any kind of success tended to breed a certain amount of jealousy and resentment. There were those who reveled in his injury.

  Logan Price always thought too much of himself. Denville wasn’t good enough for the high school’s star running back. He forgot all about us when he made it big.

  The sound of his feet pounding on the unpaved side street couldn’t keep the usual thoughts from creeping back. Some of what those people said was true. He had been full of himself. At seventeen, one wasn’t written up in national magazines without it going to his head.

  Logan never tried to hide his plans. A full-ride scholarship to the college of his choice. Then the pros. MVP awards. Super Bowl rings. The cocky attitude of a teenager wasn’t any easier to take than if he had been an adult. Most of Denville embraced their golden boy.

  Then there were the ones who didn’t. The ones who occupied the same table at Lefty’s Pub every Saturday night and Sunday afternoon. Led by Rafer Macafee, their sole purpose was to drink as much cheap beer as possible. The bonus was goading Logan.

  Rafer hated Logan from way back. Before they played on the same high school team. Why, Logan couldn’t really say. One of those cases of instant dislike – on both sides. They had been rivals. Basketball, baseball, football. The seasons and the sports changed. The antagonism never did.

  Early on, he and Rafer were equal in ability. Each had his strength. Logan’s outside shot was a killer. Inside the paint, Rafer couldn’t miss. Rafer had the better fastball, but Logan hit more home runs. On the gridiron, Rafer knocked down the opposition with brutal glee. Logan used his speed to win games.

  The separation started sophomore year. Something happened to their growing bodies. Logan shot up while Rafer sagged out. Along with his new height, Logan added muscle. Using the money he made doing odd jobs around town, he drove his father’s truck fifty miles each way, three days a week, to the nearest gym. If he wanted to be taken seriously by recruiters, weight training was essential. Fast was great. Fast and strong was better.

  Rafer, on the other hand, had no ambition. He used his growing size to push around smaller bodies on and off the field. After high school, he planned on marrying Janna Lindstrom, working in his family’s seed and feed, and being a bully. Why change what worked for you?

  Turned out, Rafer’s lack of big plans didn’t stop him from harboring resentment over Logan’s. Rafer was always the first to point out how much the odds were against a nothing running back from a backwater town. Who the hell was going to notice Logan’s gaudy stats? When the national press started to do just that, Rafer’s hate and resentment grew.<
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  Logan was too caught up in his own world to worry about Rafer Macafee. Everything was going as planned. In a year, he would graduate. Logan Price planned to celebrate his nineteenth birthday as a member of the Alabama Crimson Tide. He didn’t doubt for a moment his dream school would come calling. And they did.

  Logan was on his way. Then the unthinkable happened. His father had a heart attack. For years, it had been just the two of them. His mother died when Logan was three. No brothers or sisters. Not aunts or uncles. Jonas Price did what had to be done. He brought his son up with a firm hand and a loving heart. A heart that turned out to need a triple bypass.

  There was no way he could leave his father. Someone had to take care of him and the bar. There was no one else. Logan’s dreams would have to wait. He gave up his scholarship and stayed in Denville.

  Friends were sympathetic. Rafer Macafee rubbed it in Logan’s face every chance he got.

  Eighteen and already washed up.

  Logan didn’t respond. This time, he kept his plans to himself. He didn’t consider it the end, only a slight detour.

  The first thing Logan did was volunteer to be an assistant coach for the high school team. Money was always tight in Denville, so they jumped at the chance. Free and a local legend? They would be crazy to turn that down.

  Logan saw it as his chance to stay connected to the game. He worked out hard with the team, staying in shape. Not that it was all about him. He didn’t slack in his duties. Most of the players knew him. He was only a season removed from taking them to the state championship. The connection was already there.

  For the next year, Logan worked his ass off to keep Lefty’s Pub running and his dreams on track. All the hard work paid off when his father returned, the doctors giving him a clean bill of health.