Page 28 of The Clinch

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“Sleeping with the man I’m fake dating would be stupid.”

I keep my face neutral and let the rest hurt.

“A good exit matters,” she adds. “And I don’t get one anymore.”

The realization hits hard.

She was planning to bolt.

Simple. Fast. Finished before it ever turned into a problem.

That’s the smart play. That’s always been the smart play.

The spike of irritation that follows has nothing to do with her. That’s what I tell myself, anyway.

I clamp down on it and step back, giving her the space she’s clearly drawing a line around.

“Fine,” I say evenly. “Then I won’t make it harder.”

She continues with her warm-up. Conversation over.

I turn away before my body can argue with my brain, already telling myself what this is.

Temporary.

Contained.

Not personal.

“I can handle myself. If Travis shows up, I have a plan.”

That stops me. “What kind of plan?”

She lifts her arms overhead in a long stretch, ribs lengthening, hair sliding down her back in a curtain. She looks completely unconcerned, half-naked and painted in color, talking about danger like it’s a grocery list item.

“I’ll run,” she says simply. “He can’t catch me.”

I stare at her. “That’s your plan?”

“It’s a good one.” She drops her arms, rolls her shoulders. “I don’t go places alone at night, I watch my exits, and now I’m staying with a professional fighter.”

“Liz—”

She cuts me off with a quick, small smile. “You did more than enough. Let me do my part. I’ll help you clean up the PR mess, you stop putting your career on the line for a woman you barely know.”

The problem is, I don’t need to know her to want her.

“You’re not going out alone. Take it or leave it. If you want to run, we go together. I was about to head out for roadwork anyway.”

She laughs. “I don’t think our tempo will match.”

“We’ll go at your pace. I’m in recovery for a few days anyway.”

One eyebrow lifts. There’s amusement in her eyes. “Suit yourself.”

She pops in her earbuds and opens the door.

I fall into step beside her.