Some rules were
made to be broken.
Forbidden Bases
Bridger City Falcons Book 1
by Alexa Fauli
Genre: Sweet Fake Dating Sports Romance
CARTER
I’m Carter Blake—star first baseman for the Bridger City Falcons. Fame, money,
women… I have it all.
Except the one woman I was never supposed to want.
Darcy Simmons is my best friend’s little sister. Off-limits. Always has been.
But when she comes back to town, every line I drew years ago blurs fast. One
bad night, one viral photo, and suddenly we’re pretending we’ve been secretly
dating.
It’s fake. Temporary. Harmless.
Until it isn’t.
DARCY
Carter Blake was my teenage crush—the one I never got over. Now he’s a
professional baseball star with a reputation that screams heartbreak.
Faking a relationship with him should be easy. Safe. No feelings allowed.
But the longer we pretend, the harder it becomes to ignore what’s always been
there—and the more I risk losing my heart to the one man who could destroy it.
FORBIDDEN BASES is a sweet
baseball romance featuring fake dating, brother’s best friend, no cheating, and
a guaranteed HEA.
Some rules were made to be broken.
WHAT READERS WILL LOVE
✔ Fake dating
✔ Brother’s best friend
✔ Sweet and emotional romance
✔ No cheating
✔ Slow-burn tension
✔ Guaranteed HEA
✔ Perfect for fans of Hallmark-style romance with a
sporty twist
Carter
I pulled into the players' lot at Falcons Stadium, my
truck's tires crunching over the gravel as I found my usual spot. The afternoon
sun bathed the stadium in golden light, and I could already smell the freshly
cut grass as I grabbed my gear from the passenger seat. Practice days had their
own rhythm, different from game days—less pressure, more fine-tuning. I
stretched my arms over my head, feeling yesterday's game still lingering in my
muscles. Coach Miller would be waiting, probably already pacing the field with
that damn whistle, ready to critique every move we made.
The locker room buzzed with the usual pre-practice chatter.
I nodded to Rivera at his locker across from mine.
"Blake! How's that shoulder feeling?" he asked,
tossing me a roll of athletic tape.
I caught it with one hand. "Better than your batting
average." I grinned to soften the jab.
"You're an asshole," he laughed, pulling his
practice jersey over his head.
I changed quickly, my movements practiced after years of
this same routine. The smell of liniment and sweat permeated the air, familiar
and oddly comforting. I laced up my cleats, grabbed my glove, and headed for
the dugout.
The late afternoon sun hit me full in the face as I stepped
onto the field. I paused at the top step, taking it in—the emerald expanse of
the outfield, the reddish-brown dirt of the infield, and the crisp white
baselines freshly laid down. This view never got old. A baseball field was the
one place in the world that made perfect sense to me.
"Blake! Stop admiring the scenery and get your ass over
here!" Coach Miller's voice cut through my moment. I jogged over to where
the team was gathering along the first-base line. Coach stood with his arms
crossed, his Falcons cap pulled low over his eyes, that perpetual look of mild
disappointment etched on his face.
"Alright, listen up," he barked, not bothering to
raise his voice—he never needed to. "Infielders with me. Outfielders with
Coach Taylor. Pitchers to the bullpen with Ramirez. We're working on
fundamentals today because apparently, some of you forgot what those are during
yesterday's game."
A few guys chuckled. We'd won yesterday, but it had been
sloppy—three errors and some baserunning mistakes that had Coach's veins
popping out of his neck by the seventh inning.
I followed the rest of the infield to our positions. The
dirt felt firm under my cleats as I took my spot at shortstop. Coach Miller
stood at home plate, fungo bat in hand.
"Let's go! Double plays. Martinez to Blake to
Thompson."
He smacked a grounder toward second base. Martinez fielded
it cleanly, pivoted, and fired the ball to me. I caught it as I glided across
second, tapped the bag with my foot, and threw to first in one fluid motion.
The ball hit Thompson's glove with a satisfying pop.
"Again!" Coach called, already sending another
one.
We fell into rhythm. Ground ball, scoop, throw, catch,
pivot, throw, catch. My body knew what to do without my brain getting involved.
The sun warmed my back, and sweat began to trickle down my spine. I loved
this—the mechanical precision of it, the way my muscles remembered every
movement.
"Blake! Watch your footwork on that double play!"
Coach Miller's voice cut through my flow. "You're getting lazy with the
pivot. Do it again."
I didn't argue. Coach's eyes missed nothing. Instead, I
reset my position, adjusted my stance slightly, and waited for the next ball.
"He’s on your ass already?" Thompson called from
first base.
"When is he not?" I shot back with a grin.
The next grounder came hot, a tough short-hop that I had to
charge. I scooped it cleanly, stepped on second, and fired to first—textbook.
"Better," Coach Miller said, which from him was
practically a standing ovation.
We worked through the drills for another twenty minutes. The
rhythm of practice wrapped around me like a comfortable blanket—the crack of
the bat, the calls from teammates, the thud of balls hitting gloves. My shirt
stuck to my back with sweat, and dirt collected in the creases of my palms.
"Water break, then switching to situational
defense," Coach announced, blowing his whistle.
I jogged to the dugout, grabbing a paper cup and filling it
from the cooler.
"Looking smooth out there, Blake," said Diaz, our
catcher, as he filled his own cup.
"Thanks, man. How're the pitchers looking?"
"Chen's slider is nasty today. Cruz is still fighting
his control."
I nodded, draining my cup and crumpling it. The water was
cold against my throat.
"Blake!" Coach Miller appeared at the dugout
steps. "I need you to work with Rodriguez on his transfers. Kid's got good
hands but he's fumbling the exchange."
"Sure thing, Skip."
Rodriguez was our rookie second baseman, called up just last
month when Pearson went on the injured list. Good kid, quick feet, but still
learning the ropes.
I found him by the batting cage, nervously fielding
grounders from one of the assistants.
"Hey, Rodriguez," I called, trotting over.
"Coach wants us to work on transfers."
"Oh, yeah, sure." His eyes widened slightly.
Working directly with a veteran always made the rookies nervous.
"Relax, I don't bite. Much." I grinned,
positioning myself next to him. "Show me what you're doing."
The assistant coach hit him a grounder. Rodriguez fielded it
well but fumbled slightly as he moved the ball from his glove to his throwing
hand.
"I see the issue," I said. "You're rushing
it. Let me show you."
I nodded to the coach, who sent a grounder my way. I fielded
it smoothly, transferring it to my throwing hand in one fluid motion.
"See how I let the momentum of the ball carry into my
throwing hand? You're trying to force it." I demonstrated again.
"It's all about rhythm. Like dancing with a pretty girl—you've got to feel
the flow."
Rodriguez nodded earnestly. "Can I try again?"
We worked for another fifteen minutes, his transfers
gradually becoming smoother. Coach Miller watched from a distance, his arms
crossed but his scowl a little less severe.
"Better, kid." I clapped Rodriguez on the shoulder. "You'll get it."
Alexa Fauli is a devoted sports romance author whose passion
for the Atlanta Braves and love of hockey inspire her vibrant stories of
competition and connection. When she's not dreaming up unforgettable characters
who play hard for both love and victory, Alexa enjoys sipping toasted white
mochas, watching anime romances, and cherishing time with her family. Her life
is a delightful blend of heart, heat, and the magic that happens both on and
off the page.
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