I pull back to go when a touch on my cheek stops me. Gray’s calloused fingertips are gentle on my skin.
 
 “Ivy,” he says with hesitation.
 
 “Yeah?” I whisper.
 
 There’s a look in his eyes, intent yet almost afraid, like he’s struggling, and I’m not sure I want him to say whatever it is he’s going to say. But then slowly his hand glides over my cheek. It’s such a tender caress that my heart gives a little flip.
 
 “Every inch, Ivy.”
 
 My brows knit as I search his face. “What does that mean?”
 
 Gray shakes his head, his mouth tilting with a faint smile. “Nothing really. Just something I say before a game. For luck.”
 
 Swallowing hard, I touch his face. His jaw is warm and rough with stubble. “Well, then,” I say. “Every inch.”
 
 The broad line of his shoulders sags on a sigh, and he nods as if I’ve given him a rare gift.
 
 I leave him then, relief mixing with a strange sense of wrongness within me.
 
 Chapter 11
 
 Ivy
 
 With Gray out of town, I find myself struggling with an excess of restless energy. I don’t know what to do with myself. And, really, I should be figuring it out. I’m a college grad without a job. I know what I want to do, but I dread telling my dad, who’s been footing my bills until now.
 
 Skin twitching and gut clenching, I soothe myself the only way I know how.
 
 Hours later, the house smells of golden, buttery-sweet goodness. I have enough donuts to feed Gray’s entire team. Which sucks since they’re not around to feed.
 
 Fi arrives just as I finish glazing the last batch.
 
 “Hermey, Rudolph, and Yukon Cornelius, what the hell smells so good?” Like a tracking dog, she stalks into the kitchen and nearly sticks her nose into a tray of donuts. “Is that bacon on the top?”
 
 “Yup. Honey-chili bacon. I’m trying to break out from the standard maple bacon.”
 
 She picks up a donut and takes a bite, groaning as she does. “You done good, Iv.”
 
 I select a raspberry-filled with a toasted marshmallow topping. The flavor combination is reminiscent of peanut butter and jelly, but not as heavy and more creamy. Fi steals a bit of it and groans again.
 
 “Hey,” I say with a laugh. “Don’t go getting me sick.”
 
 “Bah. I’m not sick any longer, and if you were going to get sick, it would have already happened. Ooh...what’s that one?”
 
 “Christmas donut. Eggnog flavor with a burnt rum-sugar crust like you’d get on a crème brûlée.”
 
 “Yum.” Fi continues to munch on her bacon donut and speaks around a mouthful of food. “So what’s with all the donuts? You channeling Mom?”
 
 Hedging from answering Fiona, I reach for the bottle of red wine on the counter. “Want a glass?” I ask instead.
 
 She eyes me for a moment then shrugs. “Red wine with donuts? Why not?”
 
 I don’t talk until we both have a full glass of wine. “It relaxes me.”
 
 “Of course it does. It’s in our blood. I mean, I hate it but...” She grins, her cheeks plumping, before becoming serious. “Seriously, Ivy, why are you cringing like a guilty convict over these donuts?”
 
 I take a sip of wine and glance away. “I realized today that I bake—or fry in this case—best when I’m tense.”
 
 The kitchen wall clock ticks away as Fi watches me. “You fried a lot, Ivy Weed.”