âWhat are you doing?â Hunter asks as he walks into the kitchen, glancing over my shoulder and squinting at the screen of my laptop. âYou donât even have class today.â
âI know,â I reply. Any senior who has a Monday class is either an overachiever or slacked so much up until now, they didnât have a choice. âJust doing some research.â
âOn distance running? Why?â
Hunter heads toward the fridge, pulling out a carton of orange juice.
I sigh and shut my laptop.
Aidan has a big mouth. Hunter will hear about it eventually.
âBecause Harlow Hayes asked me to train her for a marathon.â
Hunter coughs mid-swallow. âWhat? And you ?â
Heâs incredulous, and I donât blame him one bit. If I understood how it happened myself, I might try to explain it to him. I didnât intend to agree to train her. I just felt guilty and decided to apologize for shooting her half-assed request down. Somehow that resulted in me browsing marathon training forums this morning.
âYeah. Phillips chewed me out about being nicer to her.â
True. But I didnât just agree to help her. I ended up being the one practically begging her to let me, and Iâm still trying to figure out how the fuck happened.
She gave me an out. Multiple of them, actually.
âIs that why you said hi to her last night?â Hunter asks.
âI guess.â
For the first time, ignoring her felt wrong. It was a relief, actually, not having to pretend like I wasnât aware we were in the same place.
âI run already,â I say. âItâs good cross-training. Who cares if she jogs alongside me a few times?â
Hunterâs eyebrows rise. âSo, what? You just mysteriously got over your weird issue with her?â
âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
âUh-huh. Do you have a thing for her?â
âWhat? No, of course not.â
â
? Youâve her, right?â
âSo sheâs hot. Whatever. I donât want Williamsâs sloppy seconds.â
I feel guilty as soon as the words leave my mouth, and theyâre ineffective anyway.
Hunter appears unconvinced. âSpeaking of Williams, are you going to tell him about this? He looked like his dog died when we saw her out on a date last night.â
âThereâs nothing to tell. Iâll make sure she knows how to avoid getting shin splints and that will be that.â
âIf you say so.â Hunter still looks doubtful. âThis is season, Hart. Are you seriously willing to risk your shot at the pros for a chick you claim to have no interest in?â
Heâs right. I know heâs right.
But I still say, âIâm not risking shit.â
Technically, Harlow didnât even agree to show up later. But Iâm betting she will. She may not want to, the same way I donât know if I really want her to.
But sheâs curious about me, the same way I am about her.
Despite what I just told Hunter, I know thatâs dangerous.
I avoid meeting Hunterâs worried gaze when I leave the house a few hours later.
Half the team is over at our place hanging out before our evening skate. None of them ask where Iâm going but Robby smirks as I head for the front door, letting me know where he Iâm off to.
âDonât be late, Hart!â Aidan calls after me. âIâm not doing suicides for you again.â
I was late to hockey practice for the first timeâeverâyesterday. When I was a little kid, Iâd have my mom drop me off a half hour early to make sure I was the first one on the ice. Iâve shown up on time hungover. With the flu. In a snowstorm.
One conversation with Harlow Hayes, and I forgot there were twenty-seven guys and one extremely pissed-off coach waiting on me. Iâve gotten a lot of shit from the team about it, but it would be ten times worse if they knew there was a girl involved in my tardiness. Distractions donât win championships.
I jog through the drizzle to my SUV. The engine roars to life, as it very well should after the three hundred dollars I just dropped getting it fixed. I know nothing about repairing cars. Learning how to change the oil or put on a spare tire sounds like the type of thing you do with your dad in the driveway.
Maybe thatâs why I donât know how to do either.
The drive to the football stadium only takes a few minutes.
Rain-splattered glass blurs the landscape into gray, brown, and green. I park right next to the bleachers. There are still a couple of weeks left in the football season, but the stadium looks as though itâs been abandoned for years.
Probably because the football team is neither successful nor entertaining. The crowds that swarm our home games are notably absent. At least, thatâs what Iâve been told. Iâve never been to one myself. Never seen the appeal of sitting on hard metal and watching a bunch of guys spend minutes lining up for mere seconds of action.
My disdain for football might be colored by the fact that the athletic half of my DNA came from a former wide receiver.
If holding grudges were a sport, Iâd be better at it than hockey.
I climb out of my car and into rain thatâs suddenly falling faster. Iâm wearing the same sweatpants and jacket I pulled on early this morning. Theyâre soaked within minutes, so I donât bother walking under the bleachersâ cover. I lean against the chain-link fence that surrounds the running track and wait.
Harlow shows up five minutes later, parking in the spot next to my car.
She doesnât get out right away, and I wonder if sheâs considering leaving.
She stays.
Harlow climbs out of her car in the ugliest jacket Iâve ever seen. Itâs yellowâa stop-and-stare shade that burns my eyes. Paired with her vivid hair, she stands out against the muted landscape of brick buildings, bare trees, and grass.
Her hood remains down as she walks toward me, appearing unbothered by the rain saturating her red hair and dripping down her face.
âHow was it?â I ask when she reaches me.
âHuh?â She looks confused.
I barely manage to tamp down the smirk that desperately wants to form. âThe ugly raincoat competition you just came from. Did you win?â
She flips me off, but I catch a lip twitch.
âIs this your Halloween costume? The McDonalds logo?â
âYou hate the coat. I get it. And no, Iâm dressing up as Elle Woods.â
âBut youâre not blonde,â I tell her.
âSoâ¦â
âItâs literally the title.
Blonde.â
Harlow stares at me. âYou have seen .â
I nod. âSure, I have.â
She crosses her arms. âProve it.â
âOkay.â I think for a minute. âThis is the dance they do in the hair salon, right? The bend and clap or whatever?â
I pull off a pretty flawless rendition of it, if I do say so myself. I even remember itâs a snap, not a clap.
Harlow stands frozen for a few seconds. Then she doubles over and bursts out laughing. It continues for a . She has to clutch her stomach. Wipe tears from her eyes.
Itâs at my expense. But Iâd do that stupid shimmy all over again, just to watch her laugh like that.
âI you did that. That youâve seen it. You play .â
I arch one eyebrow. âWay to stereotype. I canât watch a comedy if I play hockey?â
âNo, I justâ¦â Harlow shakes her head. âNever mind.â She mutters something under her breath. All I catch is some mention of cooking.
âMy mom loves that movie.â
I donât know why I say itâwhy I share thatâbut I do.
Then I head for the gate that leads onto the running track. I open it and gesture for Harlow to walk through first.
She doesnât; she remains in place.
Our silent stand-off lasts for thirty seconds before she walks through the opening onto the track. She wasnât anticipating any gentlemanly behavior from me, clearly.
I normally thrive on being the cocky player people expect.
Surprising Harlow Hayes might be my new favorite hobby. Watching her green eyes try to figure me out. Making it difficult for them to do so.
Once weâre on the track, I switch to business mode. âOkay, I did some research. You should start with six to twelve weeks of base training. Begin by running three or four times a week. You should start with only a couple of miles, then slowly start adding mileage. Goal will be to get up to five or six miles by the end of base training. Build slowly, and itâs about hitting the distance, not speed. If you need to alternate running and walking, then do that.â
Harlow nods. Sheâs listening carefully, and it feels different than when I coach my teammates through a drill or tell them to add on more reps. Iâm conscious of every word Iâm saying.
âOnce youâre through base training, then you begin adding mileage. One longer run a week, plus several shorter ones. By then, you should start upping your diet and doing rest days. Cutting back on swimming. But we can figure all that out later. For now, consistency is key. And stretching, so you donât injure yourself. Leg swings are popular, lateral and front-to-back. Like this.â I demonstrate both. âI usually do walking lunges. And butt kicks. You can alsoââ
Harlow suddenly smirks.
âWhat?â
âNothing. I just never thought Iâd hear you say the words to me. It was kind of funny. Keep going.â
I say the first thought that pops into my head. âIf youâre laughing at , you must be a real riot in bed.â
She snorts. âStop saying . And yeah, itâs gotten awkward a couple of times.â
I blink at her. I was expecting her to get offended or tell me itâs none of my business. Not .
âAwkward how?â
âHow do you think?â Harlow raises one eyebrow. âKilled the mood. You know.â She holds a finger straight out, then drops it.
Now Iâm the one snorting.
Iâve never discussed sex with a girl while weâre both fully dressed with no intention of sex. Never had a girlfriend or a girl who was a friend.
Itâs entertaining. Or maybe thatâs just Harlow.
âYour turn,â she says.
âMy turn for what?â
âTo tell me something embarrassing about you.â
I raise both eyebrows. âHow was that embarrassing? That youâre a boner killer?â
âYeah.
, Conor.â She rolls her eyes.
âIf you were laughing, they were doing something wrong. Not you.â
. Thankfully, thatâs a thought I keep to myself.
Sex with Harlow will not be happening. Iâm not even sure if sheâs interested. I shouldnât be interested. Sheâs Williamsâs ex. Landonâs best friend.
Most importantly, she me.
My phone buzzes with the timer I set earlier, and Iâm shocked. That means itâs already been thirty minutes since she got here. Weâve done nothing.
âIâve only got ten minutes before I have to leave for practice,â I tell her. âDo fifteen of these.â I show her a knee hug. âThen weâll jog a few laps.â
Harlow nods. She lifts her leg and pulls it into her chest, drawing my attention to her bottoms for the first time. I was so distracted by her ugly raincoat I didnât notice the black, tight leggings sheâs wearing.
âHold your knee for a few seconds,â I say, tearing my gaze away from her ass.
Those guys are idiots. Even if she kept the awful raincoat on, I could easily get hard.
But those are the exact opposite of the thoughts Iâm supposed to be having, so I force myself to focus on her form.
Harlow finishes stretching, then we set off at an easy jog.
Neither of us says anything. Thereâs just the sound of the rain and the pounding of our feet against rubber.
âAre you really not going to tell me something embarrassing?â she asks me after two laps.
âHayes, I didnât ask to know about your sex life. Youâre seriously asking about mine?â
âLet me guess. You donât have an embarrassing story. Models magically fall into your bed, and you pound them into the headboard.â
âJesus, Hayes.â I laugh, continually surprised by the stuff coming out of her mouth. Itâs a flattering perception, I guess. âOf course I have stories.â
âGreat. Go.â
I glance over to make sure sheâs still good with this pace. We donât have long, so Iâm running about the average speed I usually do. Sheâs keeping up. Thereâs a tiny kernel of pride, like I have anything to do with it.
âFreshman year, this girl was giving me a blowjob. She hadnât had anything to drink, but I guess she had a gag reflex. Threw up all over my dick and the carpet. My roommate was pissed. Our dorm room smelled like vomit for a couple of weeks.â
âThatâs disgusting, not embarrassing.â
I exhale. âAidan called me Puke Dick for the rest of the semester.â
âI still donât feel bad for you.â
âOkay, fine. In high school, I was hooking up with this girl in the backseat of my momâs car and I got a nosebleed. She was traumatized and I had to explain to my mom why there was blood all over the seats back there.â
âWhat did you tell your mom?â
âThe truth. That I had a girl back there.â
âAnd she was cool with that?â
âNo. She grounded me for a month. But that was mostly because I lied and told her I was going to a friendâs house.â
âOkay, thatâs worse,â Harlow says. âBut still not that bad.â
âWell, Iâm out. Other than that, itâs been all models and broken headboards.â
She laughs, and I want to savor the sound.
âWhat did the guys say?â I ask.
Immediately, her laughter stops. âIt doesnât matter.â
âCome on, I gave you details.â
âFine. One guy started talking about my body like I wasnât even there. Like sorta describing it? He had a lot to say about my boobs, and I started laughing. He was super embarrassed and never talked to me again. The other was rightâ¦â She exhales. âRight after my parents died. He knew about it, obviously, and I think he thought I needed more help getting in the mood or something? He started talking like he was narrating a porno, and again⦠I lost it. He apologized for five minutes.â She pauses. âIâve never had a serious boyfriend. The longest Iâve dated a guy was Jack, and that wasnâtâ¦the feelings werenât there for me. He was such a gentleman and I didnât know how toâ¦â She exhales. âI canât believe Iâm telling you this.â
âI asked.â
Harlow is silent for a minute. I was going to keep track of how many laps weâve run, but I lost count a while ago.
âSo, your plan is to play professionally after graduation?â she asks.
âYeah.â
âWhy?â
No oneâs ever asked me that. â
?â
âYeah. Why do you want to play hockey professionally?â
âMoney, fame, women, glory?â Harlow says nothing. It forces an honest answer out. âLife is simpler on the ice. Stuff that Iâm worried aboutâupset aboutâwell, it canât follow me out there. Iâll chase that feeling as far as I can.â
She still seems unsatisfied by my response.
âYou donât have anything that makes you feel that way?â I ask.
âNo, I do.â She doesnât elaborate.
âYouâre moving back to Canada?â
She gives me a questioning look as I mention her future plans. I guess Harlow has forgotten I know just as much about her as she thinks she knows about me.
I shrug in response to her silent question. âPeople in Claremont gossip.â
âOh. Right.â Weâre getting uncomfortably close to the shared history between us. Closer than I ever thought we might get together. âYeah, probably. That was always the plan. Come here for university and then go back.â
âIt was?â
âYeah. Kinda flipped the rebellious teenager stereotype. I wanted to be just like my mom, and she always raved about her time here. Itâs how she met Allison. They were in the same dorm freshman year.â
âOh.â
She did it.
She mentioned them. Just Allison, but still.
Weirdly, Iâm more occupied by another piece of her past falling into place. I assumed she resented ending up at Holt for college, not that it was her first choice.
âI also liked the location.â
I look around at the scenery. Past the sad, empty bleachers, the grass is a vibrant green. The sky is gray, which makes the orange and red leaves pop.
âYeah, itâs nice, I guess.â Not as nice as white ice and boards.
Harlow follows my gaze. âI meant the Sound. Iâm a marine biology major. I like being this close to the ocean.â
âSo youâre a swimmer who likes water, huh?â
She glances at me, eyebrow raised. Thereâs a strange jolt when our eyes connect, and I tell myself my heart rate is only accelerating because Iâm exercising. âYouâre a hockey player who likes ice, huh?â
My phone buzzes in my pocket again.
My steps slow as we approach the gate where we entered the track, and Harlowâs do too.
I pull my phone out and silence the alarm. Keep staring at the screen, pretending I took my trainer role more seriously than losing track of time talking to her. âSeven thirty mile. Not bad. You could aim for four and a half hours as your target time.â
âMy target time?â
Harlow reaches up to collect the red strands that have escaped from her ponytail. I force my eyes away from the strip of stomach the motion reveals.
âYeah. Your goal time to finish in.â
âMy only goal is to cross the finish line, Hart.â
âAnd youâre running a marathonâ¦why?â
She looks away. âItâs stupid. Bucket list shit.â
âBucket list shit?â I echo. âIf you want to start running, why not aim for like, a 5K?â
âI didnât think Iâd need to explain the concept of competitiveness to Holtâs all-time leading scorer in hockey.â
I donât take the bait. Donât jump on the compliment she just offered up on a silver platter. I donât let myself wonder what her knowing my stats means, either.
âFine.â Iâm annoyed with myself for being annoyed she wonât tell me the real reason why. âIâve gotta get to practice. See you.â
âConor.â
I pause, three steps away. âWhat?â
The rain eased off while we were running. Now itâs picking up once more, soaking my damp clothes all over again.
âWas thisâ¦it?â
I glance back at her. Thereâs no sign of the teasing smile or the vulnerability on display when we were running together. She looks serious.
âDo you want it to be?â I ask.
âI should.â Harlow steps closer. Holds out a hand. âGive me your phone.â
Silently, I unlock it, then pass it to her.
She types something quickly, then returns it to me.
I glance down at a phone number. Hers, Iâm assuming.
âI know youâre busy. But if you have time to meet again and want to text meâ¦â She bites her bottom lip. âIâll show up.â
âOkay. Bye.â Thatâs all I say. I need to get my ass to practiceânow.
I spin and hurry away.
Leaving her standing on the track in the rain.