Teaming Up
SECRETS and LEGENDS
TEAMING UP
by Abby Gaines
From the opening green flag at Daytona to the final checkered flag at Homestead, the competition will be fierce for the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series championship.
The Grosso family practically has engine oil in their veins. For them racing represents not just a way of life but a tradition that goes back to NASCAR’s inception. Like all families, they also have a few skeletons to hide. What happens when someone peeks inside the closet becomes a matter that threatens to destroy them.
The Murphys have been supporting drivers in the pits for generations, despite a vendetta with the Grossos that’s almost as old as NASCAR itself! But the Murphys have their own secrets…and a few indiscretions that could cost them everything.
The Branches are newcomers, and some would say upstarts. But as this affluent Texas family is further enmeshed in the world of NASCAR, they become just as embroiled in the intrigues on and off the track.
The Motor Media Group are the PR people responsible for the positive public perception of NASCAR’s stars. They are the glue that repairs the damage. And more than anything, they feel the brunt of the backlash….
These NASCAR families have secrets to hide, and reputations to protect. This season will test them all.
Dear Reader,
This is my second book in the NASCAR: SECRETS AND LEGENDS series, and as they say, the plot thickens!
In Teaming Up, you’ll meet Kim Murphy, supersmart scientist…and all-around nerd. When Kim decides she needs to take her mind off her illness by “getting a life,” part of her plan is to date a jock. Jocks don’t come handsomer or more charming than car chief Wade Abraham—but Kim soon discovers she’s way out of her depth. And then there’s the small matter of the secrets they’re both keeping…
I’d love to know if you enjoy this story—please e-mail me at abby@abbygaines.com. And do visit my Web site, www.abbygaines.com, where you’ll find some free short romantic stories, including a couple about NASCAR.
Sincerely
Abby Gaines
TEAMING UP
Abby Gaines
ABBY GAINES
Like some of her favorite NASCAR drivers, Abby Gaines’s first love was open-wheel dirt track racing. But the lure of NASCAR—the speed, the power, the awesome scale—proved irresistible, just as it did for those drivers. Now Abby is thrilled to be combining her love of NASCAR with her love of writing.
When she’s not writing romance novels for Harlequin’s officially licensed NASCAR series and for Harlequin Superromance, Abby works as editor of a speedway magazine. She lives with her husband and three children just a short drive from her favorite dirt track.
Visit Abby at www.abbygaines.com, or e-mail her, abby@abbygaines.com.
For Marsha Zinberg and Tina Colombo,
with many thanks—it’s been wonderful working with you
REARVIEW MIRROR:
Although Dean Grosso has refused to admit this is his last season, there is speculation that his wife, Patsy, wants him to retire. Meanwhile, it is a well-known fact that Hugo Murphy has been at odds with car chief Wade Abraham. Sources say that more than just work has Hugo on edge—and that his daughter Kim’s health is weighing heavily on his mind.
CONTENTS
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 ONE
THE HISTORY OF KIM MURPHY’S life was stored in eight cardboard boxes in the garage of her condo in Charlotte.
With an increasing sense of unreality, Kim carried the heavy boxes into her living room, one by one. She shouldn’t be doing this—she wouldn’t be, if Dr. Peterson hadn’t extracted a promise that she would acknowledge somehow, if only to herself, the seriousness of her condition. “Put your affairs in order,” he’d said. His other suggestion—that she tell her father the latest prognosis—wasn’t going to happen.
There’s nothing to tell. Because for the first time in her life, Kim had chosen not to believe scientific evidence.
“I feel as healthy as a horse,” she announced out loud, as she walked from the garage to the living room for the eighth time. She propped the last box against the doorway to steady herself. As healthy as a horse that had just run the Kentucky Derby. Twice. Okay, so she was breathing a little heavily as she set the box down on the cream-colored carpet…but that wasn’t unexpected for a person whose major form of exercise was lifting a cup of coffee to her mouth.
Another pleasure those darned doctors were determined to deny her.
Kim pffed her irritation as she cut through the tape sealing a carton labeled High School/Correspondence. Thankfully, she was naturally well-organized, so Dr. Peterson’s little face-up-to-reality exercise wouldn’t prove as cathartic as he doubtless hoped.
Why should it? She might not have a medical degree, but she was a scientist, highly respected in the field of stem cell research. She was eminently qualified to analyze data and draw her own conclusions. Which just happened to differ from the medics’.
Before she could dig into the box, the cordless phone rang on the coffee table beside her. Her father’s phone number showed on the display; Kim pressed to answer.
“I’ve been calling since yesterday, where have you been? What did the doctor say?” Hugo Murphy’s gruff manner was off-putting to people who didn’t know him well. But it wasn’t personal, he just didn’t express his feelings—affection in particular—very well. Kim was used to having to second-guess her dad’s state of mind, though even after so many years it wasn’t easy.
She sat back on her heels and ignored the question as to why she hadn’t returned her father’s call. “Dr. Peterson said, and I’m quoting him here, ‘the disease is progressing as expected.’”
“That’s all?”
“Pretty much.” Half the truth, anyway.
“What are you doing now? It sounds mighty quiet there.” Dad always acted as if he’d rather she was having a raucous party. Of course, if she was, he’d fret about her getting overtired. His protective instincts worked 24/7, and they never took a vacation.
“I’m tidying.” She figured tidiness was a learned behavior, rather than genetic, because in this regard, she took after her adoptive father.
Hugo made an approving sound, then launched into a familiar refrain. “It’s time you moved in with me. You’re sick, you’re alone, you need company.”
“But, Dad, who would look after these hundred cats?” Kim tucked the phone under her ear so she could pull a folder from the carton in front of her.
“Huh?”
She put a smile in her voice. “You make me sound like one of those old ladies with piles of garbage around the house and cats everywhere.”
Hugo barked a reluctant laugh. “Dammit, Kim, would you just let me look after you?”
“No.” She didn’t embellish her refusal with arguments; plain speaking worked best with her dad. She flicked through the folder, then set it aside to form the basis of her discard pile. No one would want a bunch of twelfth-grade exam papers from seventeen years ago. “I’m worried about you.”
He sounded almost pleading, which disconcerted her so much that before she could think better of it, she said, “I’m worried about me, too.”
Silence. Uh-oh.
“That’s it, you’re moving in.” Hugo’s voice took on the implacability that commanded instant obedience from the m
echanics and over-the-wall guys at Fulcrum Racing, where he was the team’s top crew chief.
“I’m worried—” she backpedaled furiously “—that I don’t have a date for the silver anniversary party at work next month, and Jerry will think I’m a loser.”
Her father took the bait. “You’re not seeing him anymore? What happened?”
“We just…broke up,” she said vaguely, aware that her colleague hadn’t given her much of a reason, and she hadn’t pressed him.
Hugo harumphed. “Let me guess. He couldn’t handle that you’re so much smarter than he is.”
“Dad,” she protested, “Jerry’s one of the brightest guys in the lab.”
But there was a kernel of truth in Hugo’s words. Though Kim never talked about her genius-level IQ, her inability to speak any language other than Science Geek when she was nervous—as she invariably was on a date—didn’t make for a fabulous love life. Of course, she wouldn’t have the job she loved if she wasn’t smart…but momentarily, her mind drifted to the advantages of cute and funny over brainy.
“It won’t take five minutes to move your things in here.” Hugo renewed his attack on her independence. “I could come over now.”
A tiny part of her was tempted to say yes. But the minute she moved in with Dad, he’d be scrutinizing her every move, pressuring her to do things his way. As stubborn as they both were, they’d be at loggerheads in forty-eight hours. And if arguing didn’t finish them off, the deterioration in her health might. She’d resolved more years ago than she could remember that she would never be a burden to her father.
“I’m too busy,” she said. “My place is much nearer my office—” Booth Laboratories was on the west side of Charlotte, just ten minutes from her condo “—and I need every minute I can get in the lab. I’ve already cut back my hours.”
“There’s more to life than work.”
Kim grinned. Her father devoted almost every waking hour to his job as a NASCAR crew chief. She stood, crossed her small living room to gaze out the window at the busy street below. “I also have a few social engagements coming up in this part of town.”
Now that was an outright lie. But when Hugo’s voice gladdened and he said, “That’s nice, honey. I’m pleased you’re seeing your friends,” she ditched the guilt. Then he said abruptly, “I haven’t heard from her.”
Kim groaned inwardly. She’d steered her way through one minefield, only to be pitched into another. Her. Kim’s mother. She said carefully, “I didn’t expect you would.”
“She would come back, if she knew you needed her,” Hugo said stubbornly.
“I don’t need her.”
“She might be a match.”
“She might not.” Kim doubted Sylvie Ketchum would donate a dollar, let alone a kidney, to Kim.
“I’d give you both my kidneys, if it would do any good,” Hugo said fiercely.
When he said things like that, she felt horrible for ever doubting his affection. But there was no escaping that when Sylvie left, he hadn’t had a choice about looking after his adoptive daughter. And Hugo was not a man who shirked his responsibilities, no matter what his feelings.
“Thanks, Dad,” she said.
“Will you be at the race this weekend?”
“You know I can never resist a trip to Indy.” Kim seldom attended the NASCAR Sprint Cup Series races, even though she loved the intense action. NASCAR was her father’s world, and her cousins’, and whenever she went she was reminded that she didn’t fit in. She watched the races on TV, from a distance.
But she never missed a race at Indianapolis. She loved the track for its history, as well as for the rollercoaster ninety-degree turns that made both drivers and spectators feel as if the cars might plow right into the grandstands.
“If Justin wants to win, he’ll have to stop driving too hard into the turns,” Hugo said. Kim’s cousin Justin Murphy drove the No. 448 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series car, and Hugo was his crew chief. “And Wade Abraham’s going to have to stop feeding Justin ideas that don’t fit with our setup.”
It wasn’t the first time Hugo has grumbled about Wade Abraham, Justin’s new car chief. Kim hadn’t met the guy, but she had a sneaking admiration for the way he’d reportedly withstood several run-ins with her father. Most men caved under Hugo’s steely command.
“You tell him, Dad.” Kim was smiling when she ended the call, and she finished emptying the first carton with more enthusiasm than the contents warranted.
Letters from a pen pal in New Zealand, a correspondence Kim had maintained diligently long after the letters coming the other way had ceased. A sheaf of straight-A school reports reflecting her accelerated progress through high school. She’d graduated at fifteen, moved on to Duke University. No prom photos, no pressed corsages, no love letters. She sighed, then gave herself a short, sharp shake. She’d never written a love letter so why should she regret not having received any?
Methodically, she progressed through several other boxes, all equally inoffensive.
As she worked, she was acutely aware of one carton that she’d instinctively placed a little apart from the others. The Mom Box. It held photos of herself as a toddler, then as a preschooler. Photos of Sylvie, and of Sylvie and Dad’s wedding, at which Kim had been a flower girl. Kim gave the box a little shove with her foot. She didn’t plan to open it.
The last three cartons held notes, folders, textbooks from her college studies. She didn’t really need to go through them, but nostalgia had her opening one. She pulled out a binder of notes from her sophomore cellular biology class. This class had given her what she thought of as her calling—her fascination with the stem cells whose ability to regenerate tissue over a lifetime assured them of a vital role in treating medical conditions once deemed hopeless. The class had inspired her choice of postgraduate study, and her thesis had won her the job at prestigious Booth Laboratories.
Kim opened the binder and inspected her meticulously organized notes. In that sophomore year, she’d been seventeen going on thirty.
She flipped to the section on stem cell differentiation, the focus of her work today.
“What’s this?” Her own voice startled her in the darkening room. She flicked on a lamp to examine her find. The section divider was decorated with hearts, flowers and elaborate curlicues, doodled in blue ink.
Kim grinned. Maybe not all those cellular biology lectures had been as fascinating as she remembered. She flipped to the other side of the divider. And found a list, which didn’t look as if she could have written it, except the neat handwriting was undoubtedly hers.
Ten Things to Do Before I Die
She froze.
Saliva pooled in her mouth, metallic, bitter.
The list had nothing to do with her illness, she reminded herself. It wasn’t the result of some presentiment or foreboding.
If it had been, she surely wouldn’t have started with something as trivial as…
1. Play hooky
She skimmed the list in search of a more meaningful ambition. The seventh item arrested her gaze.
7. Date a jock
Relief spread through her, loosening knots of tension in her neck and back, and she found herself smiling. Now she remembered. There’d been a guy, the quarterback on the college football team. Kim had admired him from afar, woven intriguing fantasies in her head.
She’d written the list after she’d realized that if he ever registered her existence, it would be as the freakish kid who’d had more A-plus grades than anyone in the college’s recent history. Guys like him, she remembered thinking, dated girls who, when they weren’t playing hooky, sat at the back of the lecture hall. Girls who—Kim glanced at item number two on the list—buy a push-up bra.
Cheeks heated, she glanced around, as if someone might be witnessing this testimony to her teenage nerdiness.
“My thirty-something nerdiness,” she corrected out loud. She’d capped off her flawless attendance record at college with a dedication to her job that
saw her turning up at the laboratory most weekends. Until a few months ago, she’d never taken sick leave and had to be forced to take her vacations.
Nerd!
Kim unbuttoned the top of her blouse and peered inside. She still didn’t own a push-up bra. Her white cotton sports bra did nothing for her figure, and the dialysis that had added a few pounds to the rest of her over the past month possessed its own sense of irony—it had left her chest the same unimpressive size it had always been.
She turned back to the list. Maybe somewhere on here she’d find a more noble intention—like curing cancer.
3. Get a tattoo
4. Get drunk
5. Be the life and soul of a wild party
6. Drive a stock car
7. Date a jock
8. Make out at the movies
9. Dump the jock
She snickered. She’d been smart enough to suspect the jock wouldn’t hold her interest for long, but arrogant enough to think he wouldn’t tire of her first. She’d probably have had more chance of finding that cancer cure than getting to dump the jock.
Kim read the last item on the list.
10. Find Mom
She moved her thumb to cover the words, looked back up at those simpler goals.
Simpler? She hadn’t done any of them, for Pete’s sake. She’d never been to a wild party. Never dated a man who didn’t wear spectacles—Kim felt an unreasonable flash of annoyance toward all male scientists who hadn’t thought to invest in contact lenses.
She’d never even made out during a movie. Maybe that was because she usually went to foreign films that required her full attention to read the subtitles—and required her non-jock date to keep his glasses on for the same reason.