Chapter 11
Playbook (The Holland Brothers 2)
âChris? Oh my gosh.â Her words come out all high-pitched and breathy.
I turn and look at the woman next to me. I barely know London, but I can tell sheâs one hundred percent putting on an act. Gone is the fiery woman that told me off and instead sheâs faking politeness. The question is why.
I try to shake off the weird turn of events of the past few minutes and focus on the couple in front of us. The man is a few inches shorter than me, with dark hair and an air of importance and sophistication about him. I catalog him quickly as a total prick who thinks heâs Godâs gift, but itâs the way his stare lingers on London that pulls it all together for me.
Sheâs slept with this prick. Dated him maybe? Heâs definitely looking at her in a way that tells me he wants me to know heâs had her already. Correction, heâs a grade A prick.
âI thought you saw me. You looked right at me,â the guy, Chris, says. He doesnât like being ignored. What a shock.
âSorry, no. I didnât see you.â She leans into me and rests a hand on my stomach.
I have no idea whatâs happening or what to do, but my arm just sort of naturally wraps around her waist. She fits against me nicely.
Chrisâs stare locks on my hand resting against her hip.
âSo this must be him,â he says. âThis is the guy you just started seeing.â
If we had just started seeing each other, I think itâd still be an awkward thing for him to toss out so casually, but as it is, Iâm a) taken aback and b) wondering why she agreed to have a drink with me when sheâs not single or why she yelled at me over the body shot when sheâs got someone else.
Iâm also pissed I missed my window. She was single just last week.
Londonâs eyes widen and she tries to pull away from me, but thereâs a crowd around us and she canât get far.
âOh, uhâ¦â She trails off like she isnât sure if she should introduce me. She probably doesnât want to, but itâs getting awkward. Well, more awkward.
Stepping forward, but not letting go of her, I extend the other hand. âHey, whatâs up, man? Iâm Brogan.â
Chris studies it for a moment before shaking my hand. âYou play for the Mavericks.â
âYeah, thatâs right. Are you a fan?â I ask even though heâs wearing a Mavericks shirt under his jacket.
âOh my gosh,â the girl next to him finally speaks up. âWe were just at the game. No way!â
âMy company had some free tickets,â Chris says quickly. He looks to London. âThis is the guy youâre dating? Brogan Six?â
âUmmâ¦â She trails off, then smashes her lips together like she doesnât trust her voice.
Chris looks to me like he wants my verification.
I can feel her body stiffen against me. Itâs all coming together now. Or at least enough to know whatever lie sheâs wrapped up in hangs on my response.
âArenât you going to introduce me to your friends, sweetheart?â I ask her.
She looks up at me with a flare of shock that slowly dissipates into a calm resolve. Her lips curve into a smile and she turns her head to stare at the guy standing in front of us.
âThis is Chris. We went to high school together,â she says.
âWe dated,â Chris says, like I didnât already have that figured out by the possessive way heâs eyeing my hand draped over her hip.
âIâm Gretchen,â the girl pipes up. She looks to London. âYouâre Sierraâs sister, right?â
âThatâs right,â London says. âHave you and Sierra met?â
âNo, not yet, but Ben talks about her nonstop.â
I feel Chrisâs stare still hard on me.
âCan I get you guys something to drink?â I ask.
âNo. Thanks. Weâre gonna head out.â
âWe are?â Gretchen asks.
I can practically feel Londonâs relief.
âYeah. I think we should try that new bar down the street.â
âWell, hey, it was good to meet you. Any friend of my London is a friend of mine.â I extend my hand a second time, forcing him to shake it again. I might squeeze a little extra hard too, just to fuck with him. I donât know whatâs gone down between these two but itâs easy to be team London when the other side is this prick.
âIâll see you next weekend,â Chris says to her, then, as if it just occurred to him, he asks me, âAre you coming to the engagement party?â
âWouldnât miss it,â I say without missing a beat and then I wink at him just for kicks. I donât usually try to piss people off, but this guy is making it too easy and too much fucking fun.
He tugs his girlfriend away and they head straight for the door to leave. London slumps beside me and lets out a breath.
âThank you,â she says.
âNo problem, sweetheart,â I say, using the endearment that had rolled off my tongue so easily in front of her ex. Iâm not mad, in fact I rather enjoyed it, but I am curious. âWhat the hell was that about?â
âNothing. Absolutely nothing.â She smiles. Sort of. Itâs kind of a grimace. âWell, this was fun, but Iâm going to go home and smother myself with a pillow now.â She starts to walk off, but I grab her hand and she slingshots back to me. A tingle spreads up my arm.
âYouâre not getting off that easily.â
âCanât we just call us even? You can go back to doing body shots and I can go home and forget this all happened.â
âItâs been a strange night for sure.â I try a smile on her. She doesnât seem pissed anymore, more like shell-shocked. âStay. Just for a little while. Itâll give your douche ex enough time to get to his next stop and you wonât risk running into him on your escape route.â
She finally nods. âOne drink and then I need this day to end.â
After getting our drinks, I lead her to a table in the bar away from my teammates. I get the sense that whatever she has to say, she doesnât want an audience.
She takes a long pull from the beer bottle before setting it down. Iâm across from her, watching her and waiting for her to speak. She fiddles with the label on the beer, pulling at a corner.
She doesnât meet my gaze as she says, âThat was my ex-boyfriend.â
âOh, I know. He made sure I knew.â
She looks up. Those dark green eyes lock on me. âItâs a long story.â
âIâve got all night.â
Iâm not sure sheâs going to say any more at first. She sits across from me, picking at the beer label, seemingly lost in her own thoughts. Iâm content just to stare at her. Iâd forgotten just how gorgeous she is. That thick, long brown hair, the contrast of her inky black lashes against her skin, and the way her top lip flips up, giving her mouth this puckered look like sheâs just been kissed.
âWe broke up a couple of years ago, but thatâs only the second time Iâve seen him since then. The first time was last weekend when I lied and told him I was dating someone. Sorry for getting you involved.â
Am I relieved sheâs not actually dating someone? Yes, yes I am.
âWhyâd you lie?â
âPride?â She shrugs. âI knew he was dating someone else and I didnât want him to think I was hung up on him or anything.â
That makes sense, but it seems like a lot of effort for some douchebag that doesnât deserve any of her thoughts or attention.
âI never expected to need to prove it, but then he walked into the bar as I was trying to escape you and I didnât know what to do.â
âIâm thrilled I seemed like the better option.â
âWell, I didnât expect him to think weâre together.â She laughs. âCan you imagine?â
I can, actually. Or at least some heavy making out.
âIn hindsight, I probably should have just told him you were a friend and that the guy I was dating was meeting up with me later.â
âHe wouldnât have believed that.â
âNo?â
âNo guy is letting you out of his sight at a bar and heâs definitely going with you to meet up with another guy.â
Her cheeks take on a light-pink blush.
âWhoâs getting married?â
âMy sister,â she says, âis marrying his brother.â
My brows rise. Damn. Thatâs sticky.
âYeah,â she says as if reading my thoughts. âThey started dating shortly after Chris and I broke up. Iâd successfully avoided him until they announced their engagement. Theyâre getting married in a few months so suddenly there are all these parties and plans, and I guess Iâm not going to be able to avoid him forever like Iâd originally planned.â
I never understood how two people who used to date or cared about each other could come to a point where theyâd need to avoid each other. Itâs beyond the feelings Iâve ever had for someone, I guess. But I can read the pain on her face and I feel for her, even if I donât think that asshole is worth it.
She blows out a breath and gives me a smile that doesnât seem all that happy. âThank you for going along with it tonight. I guess heâs going to figure out that I was lying soon enough.â She laughs. âI probably should have thrown myself at someone a little less high-profile.â
âRight,â I say, thinking. It wouldnât take a lot of research to find pictures of me with another girl as recently as tonight. An image of the woman who asked me to take a shot out of her cleavage comes to mind. âYeah, I guess so.â
We fall quiet. She keeps picking at that label, and I look up toward the bar where my teammates are still hanging out. Cody glances over at the same time and I can tell heâs assessing the situation. His words from earlier this week come to mind and an idea forms slowly.
âOr maybe thereâs a way we can help each other.â
Her head lifts and the question is on her face before she asks, âHow?â
âI have started to get a bit of a reputation.â
One brow cocks and her lips twist into a smirk.
âI know, I know,â I say. âIâm not trying to say it isnât deserved, but my performance on the field is being questioned now because of it and I canât have that.â
âMaybe you should stop taking body shots at the bar.â
âShe pulled my head into her cleavage.â
âOr stop calling women during the game.â
I wince. Yeah, Coach wasnât happy that I was almost late. I just had to make sure she didnât run off again. It felt like my last chance.
Fuck. Maybe my dick is still getting me into trouble. Which gives me all the more reason to convince her of my grand plan.
âJust hear me out.â
She leans forward, elbows resting on the table.
âLetâs just keep telling people weâre together. You can let the prick ex think weâre dating for as long as you need.â
âWhat do you get out of it?â
âThe same thing.â I motion with my head to the bar. âIf they think Iâve settled down, then theyâll get off my back, and hopefully my coaches will too.â
She looks at me like she thinks Iâm joking. Her lips turn up at the corners and she opens her mouth as if to speak, but then stops herself.
The longer I think about it, the more Iâm certain itâs a great idea.
âHow would we pull that off?â she asks.
âSimple.â I shrug one shoulder.
âThe second you hook up with another girl, theyâll all know.â
âAll right. Good point.â I tap my hands on the table as I think. Lying low isnât such a bad plan. Especially as the season is ramping up. I donât want my game on the field to be overshadowed by anything else. âSo I wonât hook up with anyone else.â
âAnyone else?â she repeats. âIâm not hooking up with you.â
âThat isnât what I meant.â Though it doesnât sound so terrible. My gaze drops to her mouth. âThe season is about to get hectic anyway, so how hard could it be to make people believe Iâve settled down and become a one-woman man?â
She huffs out a short laugh. Her green eyes shine bright with disbelief. âYouâre serious?â
âAbsolutely.â
âNo one will ever believe we are dating.â
âChris did.â
âOnly because you were with me. I canât just go around telling people Iâm dating Brogan Six.â
âWeâll tell them together.â I pull out my phone. âIâll post it.â
âHold up.â She flings a hand out between us. âYou want to post on your very public social media that youâre dating me?â
âYou can post and tag me if you prefer.â
Laughter slips from her lips. It starts quiet but soon her body is shaking with it and she canât seem to stop.
âDonât worry. My ego isnât hurt at all,â I say wryly. I honestly didnât think itâd be so hard to convince her to do this. It seems like the perfect solution to both our problems.
âIâm sorry,â she says through more laughter. âItâs justâ¦this is crazy.â
âMaybe, but itâs a quick, easy fix.â
âOne social media post isnât going to convince anyone.â
âWhen is the engagement party?â
She shakes her head. âOh no. You canât show up to my sisterâs engagement party.â
âWhy not?â
âBecauseâ¦â She trails off. âSo many reasons.â
âI like parties and weddings, and Chris already thinks Iâm the guy youâre dating.â
âBut my entire family will be there.â
âDo they think youâre dating someone too?â
She doesnât need to answer for me to read it on her face. She went to a lot of trouble to avoid telling Chris sheâs single.
âWould any of your teammates truly believe youâre suddenly dating someone?â she asks.
âSure.â I think they would anyway. Archer is the only one that would question it, but Iâd have to tell him the truth anyway. âIâm gonna grab another drink. You want anything?â
She shakes her head, and I leave her at the table to go to the bar.
Cody steps up beside me as I order another beer. âWhoâs that?â
âThat is the girl that handed him his ass at the club.â Archer smirks.
Codyâs eyes widen. âI thought she looked familiar. The one with your old mailbox?â
âYep.â I accept the beer with a thanks to the bartender. âWeâve been talking since then. She came to the game tonight.â
âThatâsâ¦â As he trails off as if heâs unsure what to think about the situation, I wait in suspense. Maybe she was right. They wonât buy it.
âSurprising. You need someone like that who can keep you in line,â Cody finally finishes, wearing an amused smile. The worry I had at selling the idea that I had a girlfriend is quickly forgotten. Sure, theyâd be suspicious if I continued hooking up with other girls at the bar or parties, but if I donât and instead she were thereâ¦
âI gotta go,â I say to him quickly. âDonât want to keep her waiting.â
Iâm mentally preparing how Iâm going to convince her to do this, but when I slide into the chair across from her, she looks up at me with a steely resolve.
âHow do we do this?â
âReally? Youâre in?â My relief is so swift and immediate that it takes me by surprise.
âOn several conditions.â
âWhat conditions?â I sit taller, leg bouncing with excitement.
âNumber one: no hooking up. Not with other people and not with each other.â She gives me a pointed stare like sheâs sure Iâm going to cave on that point.
âFine. Me and my hand for the foreseeable future.â
âNot an image I needed.â She winces. What the hell? My dick is a sight to behold. Or at least I like to behold it quite often. âBut along those lines, the foreseeable future is how long? I think through the wedding should be fine. After that, I can tell them we broke up or whatever.â
âWhen is the wedding?â
âThe last Saturday in October.â
âThatâs not that far away.â Two months. Weâll be smack dab in the middle of the season. âHow about December?â
Her eyes widen. Before she can argue, I add, âA two-month relationship isnât that long. It doesnât really sell me as a changed guy.â Iâve had casual flings last longer than that. âI know itâs a lot to ask. Youâre a beautiful woman and giving up that amount of time to pretend to date me when there are lots of dudes wanting to take you out for real is not ideal for you.â
She snorts. âThatâs not the issue. Itâs justâ¦four months is a long time.â
âIâm gonna be busy. We have games nearly every weekend and practices and meetingsâ¦â
âWhat kind of things would you need me to do? Parties and bar hangs?â She glances around.
âWe also have some team events. Thereâs a community health and wellness day coming up.â
She looks visibly nervous. âAnd Iâd go with you as your girlfriend?â
âMhmm.â Picturing it, I smile. This could be cool. Iâll get to hang with her while easing the minds of my coach and teammates.
She blows out a breath that puffs out her cheeks. âOh god, I feel like Iâm going to regret this.â
âNah. Itâs going to be great,â I tell her. âFor both of us.â