six-one, six-two in an hour and forty-nine minutes. Twice she had held Kingstonâs service to love. Three times she had served acesâsomething Kingston with her touted superserve had been unable to accomplish. Asher Wolfe would go on to the semifinals. She had made her comeback.
Madge dropped a towel over Asherâs shoulders as she collapsed on her chair. âGood God, you were terrific! You destroyed her.â Asher said nothing, covering her face with the towel a moment to absorb sweat. âI swear, youâre better than you were before.â
âShe wanted to win,â Asher murmured, letting the towel drop limply again. âI
had
to win.â
âIt showed,â Madge agreed, giving her shoulder a quick rub. âNobodyâd believe you havenât played pro in three years. I hardly believe it myself.â
Slowly Asher lifted her face to her old partner. âIâm not in shape yet, Madge,â she said beneath the din of the still-cheering crowd. âMy calves are knotted. I donât even know if I can stand up again.â
Madge skimmed a critical glance over Asherâs features. She couldnât detect a flicker of pain. Bending, she scooped up Asherâs warm-up jacket, then draped it over Asherâs shoulders. âIâll help you to the showers. I donât play for a half hour. You just need a few minutes on the massage table.â
Exhausted, hurting, Asher started to agree, then spotted Ty watching her. His grin might have been acknowledgment of her victory. But he knew her, Asher reflected, knew her inside as no one else did.
âNo thanks, Iâll manage.â Effortfully she rose to zip the cover around her racket. âIâll see you after you beat Fortini.â
âAsherââ
âNo, really, Iâm fine now.â Head high, muscles screaming, she walked toward the tunnel that led to the locker rooms.
Alone in the steam of the showers, Asher let herself empty, weeping bitterly for no reason she could name.
Chapter 3
It was the night after her victory in the semifinals that Asher confronted Ty again. She had kept herself to a rigorous schedule of practice, exercise, press, and play. Her pacing purposely left her little time for recreation. Practice was a religion. Morning hours were spent in the peaceful tree-shaded court five, grooving in, polishing her footwork, honing her reflexes.
Exercise was a law. Push-ups and weight lifting, stretching and hardening the muscles. Good press was more than a balm for the ego. Press was important to the game as a whole as well as the individual player. And the press loved a winner.
Play was what the athlete lived for. Pure competitionâthe testing of the skills of the body, the use of the skills of the mind. The best played as the best dancers dancedâfor the love of it. During the days of her second debut, Asher rediscovered love.
In her one brief morning meeting with Ty she had rediscovered passion. Only her fierce concentration on her profession kept her from dwelling on a need that had never died. Rome was a city for loversâit had been once for her. Asher knew that this time she must think of it only as a city for competition if she was to survive the first hurdle of regaining her identity. Lady Wickerton was a woman she hardly recognized. She had nearly lost Asher Wolfe trying to fit an image. How could she recapture herself if she once again became Starbuckâs lady?
In a small club in the Via Sistina where the music was loud and the wine was abundant, Asher sat at a table crowded with bodies. Elbows nudged as glasses were reached for. Liquor spilled and was cheerfully cursed. In the second and final week of the Italian Open, the tension grew, but the pace mercifully slowed.
Rome was noise, fruit stands, traffic, outdoor cafés. Rome was serenity, cathedrals, antiquity. For the athletes it was days of grueling competition and nights of celebration or
Elmore - Carl Webster 03 Leonard