
It is not between the two main protagonists. Since I'm not skilled enough to make a clickable spoiler tag for the blog I'm struggling to find time for, if you'd like to see how cheating is involved, specifically, please scroll all of the way down to the bottom. (The official blurb does not have a content warning at all) But this time, the potentially "nope" content was out there and being publicly acknowledged by people on Twitter, so I knew going in that cheating was part of this book. Because despite my well known aversion to present tense, I found Ryan's voice fantastic.

Contains mature themes.CW: Cheating, chronic illness, self-image/weight issuesĪs angry as I was for reading Long Shot by this author without being warned it was a book about domestic violence, the book itself was compelling enough to get me to try again. But I've got that one dollar, and Jared won't have me. Oh, I didn't say the struggle wasn't real. I'll just be over here ignoring the man carved from my fantasies with a lust-tipped chisel. And Jared has the nerve to think he gets a second chance? Boy, please. They can keep the field while I call the shots, blocking them when I have to. Anything they can do, I have done better. I've found success in a field ruled by men. BANNER If I had a dollar for every time Jared Foster broke my heart, I'd have exactly one dollar. She assumes she's winning, but this game? She doesn't even know how to play. They say even rich men don't always get what they want, but those men don't know how to play the game. I'm sure what you meant to say is, Coming right up.

I'm a successful sports agent because I assume no means you'll think about it.

If I had a dollar for every time she's put me in my place, I'd be an even richer man. Every glare from those fire-spitting eyes, every time she grits her teeth, gets me. The heart everyone assumes is frozen over. JARED If I had a dollar for every time Banner Morales made my heart skip a beat.
