“Yet you went to Oklahoma on a football scholarship.”

“I did, but I played baseball in college, too.”

“So you’ve been doing this juggling thing a long time.”

“Seems like my whole life sometimes.”

She typed notes into her computer. “And you got drafted by Tampa for football and Detroit for baseball, all in the same year.”

“Yeah.” He grinned. “That was a really good year.”

“It didn’t scare you, or make you feel any pressure to be drafted by both a professional football and baseball team?”

“No. It was like a dream come true.”

“So, you’d say you thrive on pressure?”

He liked the way she altered his words. “You could say that.”

She lifted her gaze from the laptop. “Can I say that?”

“Sure.”

“How was it in high school?”

“In what way?”

“With your friends—your athletic peers. Any jealousy?”

He laughed. “Nah. I had good friends. We all worked hard, and we were after the same thing—winning. There was nothing to be jealous about.”

She tapped the laptop. “I did a little research on your high school career. It says here you had some run-ins with a guy named Jerome Kayman.”

“That was more of a misunderstanding. And over a girl. It had nothing to do with sports.”

She arched a brow. “Fighting over the same girl?”

“Uh, no. It was more like Heather Whitfield pitting Jerome and me against each other. Neither one of us knew we were both dating her.”

“Oh. Oops.”

“Yeah. Heather was a hell of a flirt. She was head cheerleader, very competitive. She told Jerome she liked him, and they started going out. They dated for a few weeks, though she didn’t tell anyone she was going out with him. This was all around the time of homecoming, our senior year. Heather really wanted to be homecoming queen, and Jerome was a popular guy—the quarterback of the football team. It looked like Jerome had a good shot of being king of the court.”

“Which upped her chances if she was his girlfriend,” Haven said.

“Exactly. Except then I caught a bunch of passes, got written up in the papers, and suddenly my popularity soared.”

“So she hedged her bet by pulling you into her web as well.”

“Yup. I’m not sure what she was thinking. Jerome and I were friends. And it wasn’t like she could go to the homecoming dance with both of us.”

Nothing Haven hadn’t seen before, especially in high school. “She was thinking she could string both of you along until right before homecoming, and then as soon as she figured out which of you was the most popular, she’d dump the other.”

“That’s exactly what she tried to do. Except Jerome went to her house one Saturday night and found out from Heather’s mom that she was out with me.”

“And that’s when the two of you got into it,” Haven said.

Trevor nodded. “Right. He thought I was moving in on his girl, so he drove to the movie theater and waited for us outside. We had words after. Maybe a couple of punches were thrown.”

“I’ll bet Heather was thrilled to have two guys fighting over her.”

“She thought it would increase her stock in the voting, which occurred the following week. It didn’t work, though, because after I took Heather home, I went over to Jerome’s house. We talked, and figured out Heather’s game. I dumped her, and so did he.”

Haven laughed. “So she ended up with no date for homecoming?”

“There was no way in hell that Heather was going to sit out the homecoming dance. She sweet-talked some guy from the basketball team into taking her. But she didn’t win homecoming queen. And she was pissed.”

“So who won?”

“Jerome did. I was on the court, and one of Heather’s rivals on the cheerleading squad won queen.”

Haven grinned. “You have to love karma.”

“And high school.”

“And you and Jerome stayed friends.”

“Hell, yeah. Never let a girl get in between you and a friend. Or a teammate.”

“I don’t suppose you’ll let me put any of this in your bio.”

“Uh, no. Not unless you get Jerome or Heather to agree to it. Though Jerome probably wouldn’t care. Heather, though . . .”

Haven laughed. “Right. Not a chance.”

“I don’t think she’s the type of woman to mellow about something like that over the years. Last I heard, she was married to Owen Lange and they have three kids and run an insurance agency in town. I remember him as a very quiet kid. He ran track and was pretty popular. Smart guy, president of student council, but kind of shy. She probably rules him with an iron fist. Poor guy.”