If You Hate Me: Chapter 2
If You Hate Me (The Toronto Terror Series)
The first thing I learn about Flip and Tristan is that wandering around shirtless is apparently commonplace. Iâm sitting at the kitchen island the next morning, nursing a coffee and eating the chocolate chip cookies I brought with me because the only food in their fridge is old pizza and a sad, squishy tomato. Grocery shopping and cleaning are at the top of my to-do list.
Right after I get my stuff from my former apartment.
Tristan saunters into the kitchen. Heâs fresh from the shower and wrapped in nothing but a towel. Water droplets dot his shoulders, and a rogue one tumbles gracefully over his defined pec, caressing each rolling ab on the way down. An image of Tristan fisting his massive erection pops into my head like a whack-a-mole. I shift my gaze back to my coffee cup, which is the only safe place for my eyes.
âSo why are you here?â
Itâs not possible to make me seem like more of a burden than Tristan does with that one sentence.
To my left, Flip runs his hand through his already messy mop of hair. I have no idea what time he got in last night, but he has an absurd number of hickeys on his neck, chest, and stomach. Heâs wearing a pair of gray jogging pants that hang low on his hips. I assume the hickey trail continues, but Iâm thankful I can only hypothesize.
âI might have accidentally quit my job,â I mumble. My first real adult job, and I blew up the opportunity after only three months. Embarrassment washes through me all over again.
âHow do you accidentally quit your job?â Flip shoves his hand down the front of his joggers.
I look away, because no one needs to see that. My shoulders roll forward, and I lower my voice, as if that will make my actions yesterday less awful. âFifteen minutes before the end of the day, my manager set four boxes filled with ten years of receipts on my desk. She told me they needed to be sorted and input by nine this morning. Itâs the third time thatâs happened in a month. I might have freaked out.â
âHuh. Well, that makes sense. Your manager sounds like a dick.â
âShe was. Or still is.â As the newbie, I expected some shitty jobs, but less than twenty-four hours with four bankerâs boxes is unreasonable. Especially when she did the same thing last week. And the week before that.
âWe have waffles and some whole-grain bread in the freezer, if you want something other than cookies for breakfast.â Tristan gives my cookie box a pointed, slightly disapproving look.
âIâm fine. But thanks.â Itâs bad enough that Iâm crashing here and drinking their coffee. I donât want to eat their food, too.
âSuit yourself.â
He grabs a mug and pours himself a coffee, then turns to me and Flip. âEither of you need a top up?â
âSure, yeah.â Flip sets his cup on the counter.
Tristan gives him a look. âDude. The fuck?â
Flip frowns. âWhat?â
âYouâre covered in hickeys, and your sister is right here.â He points at me.
âSo?â
âItâs fine,â I mutter. âNothing I havenât seen before.â
Tristan fills Flipâs mug, still wearing his displeased-dad face, then looks to me.
âPlease.â I push my mug toward him.
âWhat does rage-quitting have to do with you staying here?â he asks as he freshens my coffee.
I really wish I didnât have to share the whys of my needing to stay in their loft. âMy roommates are super into roleplay. They like to dress up in period costumes.â I had a boyfriend in university, before Rob, who was big into Dungeons & Dragons. Sometimes he would dress up as a wizard. It was quirky and adorable. I loved that he was this soccer-playing guy who nerded out with his friends off the field. And as an accountant, I consider myself also a bit of a nerd. But the situation in my apartment is not at all about being nerdy.
Tristan scoffs, and Flip arches a brow.
âAnyway.â I grip the edge of the island, but itâs sticky with orange juice, so I go back to holding my coffee cup. âOn Sunday night they were dressed up in steampunk, which is totally fine. They have great costumes.â Thereâs an entire room dedicated to their roleplay costumes and props. And Eugenia makes most of them. Sheâs super talented. âExcept they tried to get me to dress up as a pirate andâ¦plunder them.â With a pegleg.
Flipâs bottom lip juts out. âPlunder them?â
âThey have an open relationship, and they wanted me to join them.â I said no several times in the months I lived there, but they kept asking and putting me in awkward situations. I should have known the cheap rent was too good to be true.
Tristan bursts out laughing.
âFuck you, asshole.â I flip him the bird.
âAre they hot? I mean, itâd be fun if they were hot,â Flip says, oblivious to how gross that is coming from my brother.
âIt doesnât matter if theyâre hot. Theyâre my roommates. Were my roommates, because I canât live there.â The roleplay isnât the issue. Itâs more what happened two nights ago and when I came home from work last night.
âCanât you say no and leave it at that?â Flip asks.
âIâve tried. More than once. Instead of respecting my boundaries, two nights ago they had excessively loud sex until three in the morning in the living room.â I was stuck in my bedroom, unable to pee until they finally went to bed. It was awful and may have contributed to my rage-quitting, although I didnât love the job to begin with.
âSounds familiar,â Tristan mutters into his coffee cup.
âWhatever, man. Youâve been part of the equation on plenty of occasions, so donât bitch about how hard it is to be my wingman,â Flip retorts.
I gag. Those are not details I need. I hope Iâm not trading a shitty situation for an even worse one. âYou two are disgusting.â
âIâm in my twenties, and women literally throw themselves at me. I wonât be this pretty or virile forever. Itâs about capitalizing while I can.â Flip has the nerve to sound defensive.
âWhat he said,â Tristan agrees like the fuckboy he is.
âI canât wait for the regular season when we get to play in Vancouver.â Flipâs eyes are all dreamy and far away. âThey have the best bunnies.â
âAccurate.â Tristan sips his coffee thoughtfully.
âAnyway.â Iâd rather talk about my ex-roommates than my brotherâs exceptionally prolific sex life. âThey were at it again in the living room when I came home last night. I decided Iâd had enough, so here I am. Itâll only be for a few days. Or a week at most.â I hope. âI just need to find a new job and an apartment.â Apart from staying at a hotel, which I canât afford for long, this is my only option. My parents live three hours away in buttfuck-nowhere northern Ontario, and my best friend is on the other side of the country in Vancouver, where the best bunnies reside. God, I miss Essie so much.
âWe start training camp next week and then exhibition games, so if you need more than a week to figure shit out, thatâs cool. Right, Tris?â
Tristan gives me a withering look. âItâs fine, I guess. Just stay out of my shit.â Seems offering me a coffee refill was his one nice moment of the day.
I hate that he can make me feel like Iâm thirteen again, getting in the way. âI see youâre still the same insufferable asshole.â
âAnd youâre still as irritating as a mosquito. And just as crushable.â His lip curls, and he has the audacity to look hot while also being a dick.
âJesus. I forgot how awful it is when you two are in the same room. Youâre already giving me a headache.â Flip rubs his temple.
âThatâs probably from the pussy shots you were doing last night,â Tristan fires back.
I throw my hands in the air. âOh my God! I donât want to know about my brother doing pussy shots!â
âI guess you should have thought about that before you threw a hissy fit at your job, lost your apartment, and decided to crash on my futon. Deal with it or beat it,â Tristan snaps.
Flip snort-laughs. âAh, man. I forgot about that nickname. Beat it, Beat.â My brother raises his hand in the air, and Tristan high-fives him.
Theyâre the literal worst. Fighting back is pointless. Thereâs no way Iâll win against them. Being thrust into the annoying-little-sister role, despite being twenty-two years old with an accounting degree, feels like a mammoth step backwards. I wish I had a pint of ice cream and a room I could mope in, but Iâm here, in this crappy situation, and the only way out is to get my stuff from my old apartment, secure a job, and then find a place to live that isnât here. Once thatâs taken care of, I can start plotting revenge against my brother and Tristan. Itâs all about biding my timeâand not allowing myself to be affected by their needling. Iâm channeling Teflon. Nothing sticks.
While they continue laughing at my expense, I drink my coffee, eat chocolate chip cookies, and fantasize about shaving their heads while they sleep.
âKidding aside, what about your furniture?â Flip asks. âDoes it need to go into storage?â
âThe apartment came fully furnished, so I just need to grab the rest of my clothes and personal effects.â
âWhat about your bedroom set from the old house?â he asks.
âMom and Dad sold it.â
Tristan frowns. âYou donât have any furniture at all?â
I shake my head. âI always rent places that are furnished.â Itâs easier and cheaper to move that way. âA few tote bins should cover whatâs left there. I didnât have a lot. I can bus over and Uber back.â
âIâll drive you. Youâre close to that East Sideâs we go to, right?â
âYeah, a couple of blocks south.â
The two of us have a standing monthly dinner date at East Sideâs. Our parents used to take us there for a treat as kids. Weâd always fill up on salad and bread because there were unlimited free refills, and then weâd take two bites of our dinner and save it for the next day.
âIâll come for the ride,â Tristan announces.
Wait, what? âYou donât need to. I donât have that much stuff.â
His expression remains flat. âI want to meet these roommates.â
Of course he does. âWhy? So you can invite yourself over for a gangbang? Eugenia isnât your type.â
âHow do you know?â
âBecause sheâs not a bunny.â I know my brotherâs type, which means I also know Tristanâs.
âOkay, as fun as this is, I need to shower,â Flip says. âThen weâll pick up your stuff, Rix. Please try not to kill each other while Iâm gone.â He leaves me alone with Tristan, who is still clad in only a towel.
Thereâs no escape.
âI should grab my keys.â Iâm wearing shorts, a tank top I stuffed in my bag last night, and the same bra and underwear from yesterday. Getting away from mostly naked Tristan is my current top priority.
I hustle around the island, but heâs right thereâa wall of hot, muscular flesh that Iâd like to punch and run my nails over with equal measure, especially now that heâs not covered in glitter or smelling like cheap perfume. Instead, he smells like fresh fucking rain and warm skin, and I want to hump his leg a little. Which is so, so wrong. Especially when I know what he gets up to with my brother. My emotions about Tristan should be fully channeled in the hate direction.
I consider sidestepping him, but heâs a hockey player, and I only went to weekly yoga with Essie because she was allowed to bring a friend for free. And Kawartha Dairy ice cream was my reward after. Now sheâs in Vancouver, and Iâll never yoga again without thinking of her. I give him a âcome onâ gesture. âSay what youâre going to say, Tris. I donât have all day.â
âDonât you, though?â He lifts his hand, and I twist my head away but refuse to back down or step aside. He doesnât make contact, but his fingers trail along the edge of my jaw, so close I feel his heat. He leans in until his warm, humid breath breaks against my cheek. âYouâre the one drinking my coffee, sleeping on my couch without anywhere to be.â
His words hit home in a way I donât like. âYou think I asked for this?â
He tips his head. âIs that your interpretation?â
Heâs playing with me. Pushing me. Needling. âMust be nice to have a throne to sit on so you can pass judgment on us peons. Of the three of us, I had to fight hardest to get where I am. Iâve always been the afterthought, never a big, shiny star.â
His smirk slides off his face. He opens his mouth, but before he can speak, I barrel on, wanting to slice him like he has me.
âAnd look how quickly both of you have tarnished that shine. How lovely that you can be assholes of the highest order and no one ever calls you on it. How proud your parents must be. Mommy must love that youâre a big hockey star.â The words are out of my mouth before I consider their impact. His mom left when he was twelve. It was a low blow. Too low. I try to backtrack. âI didnât meanâ ââ
âYeah, you did.â He turns around and disappears into his bedroom.
My heart is pounding, and my palms are sweaty. I may have made things infinitely worse for myself.
Twenty minutes later, we file out of the condo. The woman across the hall is letting herself into her unit.
âHey Dred, howâs it going?â Flip asks.
Tristan raises a hand in a wave.
âItâll be the best day ever as soon as Iâm in comfy clothes.â Sheâs currently wearing flats, a pair of dress pants, a white blouse, and a cardigan. She looks like a librarian with her bun and her glasses.
He motions to me. âRix, this is Mildred, Dred for short. Dred, this is my sister Rix. Sheâs staying with us for a couple of weeks.â
Dred smiles at me. âNice to meet you, Rix.â
âYou, too.â
âYou up for a movie later this week?â Flip asks.
âFor sure, just knock, Iâm around most evenings.â
She lets herself into her condo and I wait until weâre on the elevator heading to the lobby before I say, âIs it really a good idea to bang your next-door neighbor?â
âIâm not banging her. Weâre just friends. We watch movies and play board games and sometimes we listen to podcasts.â
âHuh.â I didnât see that coming.
Two minutes later Iâm crammed into my brotherâs car. Itâs a two-door, with a tiny back seat. Tristan pushes the passenger seat all the way back. Thereâs no room for my legs, and the headrest is almost touching my face.
âCan I get a couple of inches of space?â I grumble. âOr maybe you should stay behind, Tristan.â Iâm concerned my stuff wonât fit in here, even without Tristan tagging along, and Iâd prefer to get it all in one trip. But his enjoyment of my misery seems to be holding steady, even after all these years.
âAnd miss out on this quality bonding time?â
âCan it, you two.â Flip pulls out of the underground lot and follows the GPS instructions to turn right.
Iâm practically eating Tristanâs hair, his seat is so close. And of course, they put the windows down, so my hair is blowing all over the place in a wind vortex. My hair tie is in my purse, which is at my feet, and I canât reach it.
I carefully pinch a strand of Tristanâs hair between my fingers and tug it free from his head. He runs his hand through it. He loses four hairs before he clues in.
âThe fuck are you doing?â His fingers wrap around my wrist before I pull out a fifth.
It sends an electric jolt up my arm and makes the hairs on the back of my neck stand on end. âRelieving you of your grays.â
âI donât have grays!â
âThat you can see.â I try to free my arm, but his hold tightens.
He reaches between the seat and the door with his free hand and reclines further. The headrest pushes into my stomach and the backrest hits my knees, forcing me to flatten my legs.
âStop! Youâre crushing me!â I yelp.
âStop ripping out my hair!â Tristan snaps.
âGive me some space!â
âGive it a rest, you two! I missed the turn because youâre distracting me.â
Tristanâs head is almost in my lap. He tips his chin up, his green gaze meeting mine.
I mouth, Youâre an asshole.
An amused smirk tips the corner of his deliciously full mouth. âI know. What are you going to do about it, Beat?â
Heâs still holding my wrist, and Iâm trapped under his seat. I lean forward, my chest pressing against the top of his head, my hair forming a curtain around us. Something shifts, and a tangible, raw energy crackles between usâhate, annoyance, frustration, who knows what else. But I shock even myself when I lick the edge of his jaw.
His free hand slides into my hair and curls into a fist, holding my head. âYou know what they say about playing with fire.â He twists my head, his lips dragging across my cheek until they reach my ear. âBad little Bea,â he taunts, catching my earlobe between his teeth.
Warmth floods my body as he sucks the skin, then nips at it again. âDonât you dare bite me!â
âUse your manners, and maybe Iâll be nice.â His voice is a gritty whisper. His grip on my hair tightens, and his tongue sweeps the shell of my ear.
I canât tell if this is retaliation or foreplay. Which isâ¦a messed-up thing to think, especially since my brother is less than a foot away, in the driverâs seat. But that doesnât stop me from slipping my hand down the front of his shirt. I try not to admire how firm his pec is as I find his nipple and roll it between my thumb and finger.
His surprised sound makes my nipples peak. âAny excuse to put your hands on me, huh, Beat?â
His ego is ridiculous. I stop playing nice and pinch. Instead of releasing my ear, he sucks it, then bites harder. I twirl some chest hair between my thumb and finger and tug.
âAh!â he grunts. âThat was dirty!â
âYouâre biting me!â I twist my head away, but heâs still fisting my hair.
The car jerks, and the tires squeal.
Tristan releases my hair, and I sit back in a rush.
âWhat in the actual fuck is wrong with you two?â Flip gapes at us.
Weâre both red-faced and panting. I have no idea why that felt equal parts aggressive and sexual.
âHe started it!â
âShe started it!â
âI donât care who started it. It ends right now, or you can get out and catch a rideshare home. Or call one of your fun-time friends to pick you up.â Flip gives Tristan a pointed look.
âIâll stop if she stops.â Tristan rubs his pec.
âCan you put your seat up so I can breathe?â I grouse.
âAsk nicely,â he sneers.
âMove your seat, Tris. Youâre literally lying on top of her,â Flip orders.
Tristan grumbles but raises the seat so the headrest is no longer digging into my ribs. I can take a full breath again.
âDonât say a word to each other for the rest of the ride,â Flip snaps.
We spend the next twenty minutes in awkward silence. The closer we get to the apartment, the drier my mouth becomes. Flip parks in a visitorâs spot, and I un-pretzel myself from the back seat while Tristan pulls the seat belt aside, presumably so I donât clothesline myself getting out of the car.
âThis is a shitty fucking neighborhood,â he announces. It sounds like an accusation. I donât know what it is about Tristan, but he always makes me feel small.
âI thought when you said you lived close to East Sideâs, you were in the nicer part.â Flip frowns as he takes in the surrounding buildings and houses. Iâve met him at the restaurant all three times weâve seen each other since I moved here. This is the first time heâs seen where I live. Lived. Past tense, once I get my things. A few blocks west, the neighborhood is less run down, but also more expensive.
âHow long have you been living here?â Tristan asks with a frown.
âA few months.â I shrug. âItâs affordable.â
âBut there are bars on all the windows of the corner store.â Tristan flings a hand toward the Tasty Mart across the street.
âThe store where Flip and I grew up wasnât any different,â I point out.
âYeah, but we knew everyone. This is totally sketch,â Flip says.
âHow far was your job from here?â Tristan looks annoyed.
âHalf an hour on the subway, but I donât work there anymore.â
âBut you did, for three months. Whereâs the closest subway station?â Tristanâs nostrils flare.
âA couple of blocks. Itâs a seven-minute walk.â
Tristanâs jaw tics. âAnd you walked there by yourself?â
âI have pepper spray, and Iâve taken self-defense classes. Besides, after today, I wonât be living here, so it doesnât really matter, does it?â I donât get why heâs suddenly so concerned. He was biting my ear and crushing me twenty minutes ago.
âLetâs pick a better neighborhood for your new apartment,â Flip says.
âAs long as it fits into my budget, sure.â Toronto is an expensive place to live.
Flip falls into step beside me, and Tristan follows with his phone in his hand. Heâs probably sexting tonightâs victim.
My nerves kick into high gear as we pile into the tiny elevator with the little old lady who smells like tuna and mothballs. She makes small talk about how nice the weather finally is and how hard Canadian winters are on her old bones. Itâs a standard conversation. Canadians like to bitch about the six months of snow and subzero temperatures. We also like to moan when it gets too hot. Thereâs really no pleasing us.
The little old lady gets off on the twelfth floor, and we continue to the twenty-third. The elevator clunks and groans, but the doors open, which is awesome. I got stuck in here once when it stopped between floors. I was trapped with a pizza delivery guy. Heâd been worried about the forty-five-minutes-or-free situation. I was worried Iâd pee my pants. Ten interminable minutes later, they pried the doors open. Iâd used the stairs for two weeks after that.
Flip and Tristan follow me out of the elevator and down the hall to my soon-to-be former apartment. I stupidly dropped my fob back into my purse, so they stand there awkwardly while I rummage around searching for it.
âWhatâs all that crinkling?â Tristan asks.
âMini bags of goldfish crackers and a few fortune cookies,â I mutter. I always carry snacks in my purse. I finally find my key fob and swipe it over the censor. I didnât warn my roommates I was coming. I figured the element of surprise would benefit me.
But as I examine the scene before me, I reconsider that strategy. On the upside, Eugenia isnât tied to the pillar in the middle of the living room. On the downside, her boyfriend, Claude, my other former roommate, is doing the helicopter, and every rotation of his wiener slaps Eugeniaâs cheek. Sheâs dressed in another impressively designed period piece, her boobs hanging out.
Iâd like to say this is a first, but that would be a lie.
âWhat the fuck?â Tristan mutters.
âIs he slapping her in the face with his flaccid dick?â Flip asks.
âYeah,â I confirm.
Eugenia is the first to notice me. My brother and Tristan are still in the hall. For now. She scrambles to her feet. âWhat are you doing here?â Her eyes flare as two shadows appear on either side of me. âOh! You brought friends! Is this your way of apologizing for calling me a psycho bitch last night? I have dibs on the yummy one behind you. Claude, you can have the other one.â Eugenia squeezes Claudeâs arm, her voice trembling with excitement.
I hold up a hand. âIâm not apologizing. Iâm here to get my stuff. Then Iâll try to erase this nightmarish little blip in my life, probably with copious quantities of booze.â Cheap wine, most likely.
âYou still need to pay next monthâs rent. Itâs on the lease that you have to give thirty daysâ notice, and you gave us no notice,â Claude says. Heâs tucked his penis back into his pants, thank God.
âThese two asked you to take part in a threesome, yeah?â Flip confirms.
âYeah.â
âAnd you said no, yeah?â
âThatâs correct. I said no.â
âAnd they still tried to get you involved again?â Tristan asks.
âUh, yeah.â
âSo they asked twice?â he presses. âAnd both times you said no?â For a second, I expect him to tack something shitty on the end, but after a few seconds of silence, I realize Tristanâs on my team.
âThey asked more than twice, and I always said no.â Iâm embarrassed that itâs gone on as long as it has, but with the hours Iâd been pulling at work, I didnât have time to look for another place. Nor the ability to comfortably afford something on my own.
âSo they kept pressuring you, even though youâd made it clear you werenât interested in participating?â Tristanâs nostrils flare, and I try not to notice how hot he is when heâs defending me.
âIâm pretty sure thatâs sexual harassment.â Flip looks like he wants to punch Claude.
âIf someone says theyâre not interested, but the other person keeps pushing them, and then gets naked in the living room when their roommate could come home any minute, knowing full well it makes them uncomfortableâ¦â Tristan and Flip exchange a look, and Iâm not sure if Iâm imagining it, but there seems to be a weird tension between them. âIt does sound a lot like sexual harassment.â Tristan turns to me. âWould you agree, Bea?â
âUm⦠Yes.â This is the Tristan I had a crush on. The one who did nice things unexpectedly, like bring me my favorite chocolate bar for real and not throw a toad in my face.
âI could post about it on my social media, see what other people say. You know, in case weâre off base,â Flip says.
âHow many followers do you have again, Flip? Two million, or is it three?â Tristan pulls his phone out of his pocket and starts scrolling through social media apps.
âYouâre lying.â Eugenia crosses her arms, which thankfully cover her nipples.
âAm I?â Flip pulls up one of his social media accounts, where he has over three million followers, and shows it to Eugenia.
âFlip Madden?â Her eyes bounce from the small screen to my brotherâs face and then to me. âHeâs your brother? And he plays professional hockey?â she asks.
âYeah.â I often keep my brotherâs status to myself, in part because people can get weird about it. I turn to Flip. âIâm gonna get my things so we can get out of here.â
âI can help,â Flip says.
âItâs fine. It wonât take long. Itâs just clothes and books and stuff.â
Tristan says nothing, but carries the empty plastic bins into my bedroom, then stands outside the door with his arms crossed. I frantically toss stuff in the bins, glancing over my shoulder to make sure Tristan isnât paying attention as I empty my top drawer. It contains all my most important itemsâbras, panties, and self-gratification toys. It takes less than twenty minutes to pack my belongings, and they fit into three bins. One for each of us.
Eugenia and Claude are sitting on the living room couch, looking terrified and slightly awestruck. Flip is standing in the doorway of their roleplay room, rubbing his bottom lip. Tristan is being his annoyingly attractive self, hair flopping over one eye as he leans against the wall outside my bedroom, wearing a pensive expression.
âAll set,â I squeak. I want to GTFO and forget this ever happened.
Flip turns as I set the heaviest of the bins on the floor. He makes a circle motion with his finger. âAnything out here that belongs to you?â
With my brother and Tristan standing sentinel, I scan the room for any of my personal effects. The role-playing living-room sex-capades had escalated in frequency recently, so Iâd been disappearing into my bedroom most nights.
I cross over to the fridge and tuck my bottle of orange juice into my purse, as well as the half-block of sharp cheddar and two apples. My condiments will take up too much room and are mostly empty. But the freezer contains a box of ice cream sandwiches. The good ones. They were my grocery splurge this week. I check for those. It was unopened yesterday, and now there are only three left. Jerks.
I hold up the box. âEither of you interested in an ice cream sandwich?â
âSure. Letâs take them to go. Ready to roll out?â Flip grabs one of the heavy bins and heads for the door.
I set the apartment key on the counter.
Tristan picks up the lighter bin, then he sets it down and takes the one full of books. His biceps pop under the strain. He waits at the door, keeping it propped open with his foot as I pass through with my bin.
âThanks,â I mumble.
He grunts and turns his attention to Eugenia and Claude. âYou two are fucking assholes. If you cause Bea any more drama, Flip and I will make your lives a living hell.â He lets the door fall shut, his expression unreadable. âLetâs get the fuck out of here.â
I follow Flip down the hall to the elevators.
It isnât until weâre inside and on our way back to the lobby that anyone says anything. âHow long has that shit been going on?â Tristanâs right eye tics.
âIt only escalated into super-weird territory over the past few weeks.â
âWhat about your financial situation? Is it bad? Is that why you were living there?â Flip asks.
âRent was cheap. I know why now. It meant I could save twenty-five percent of every paycheck instead of ten. Iâd only planned to stay for a year, and then Iâd have a cushion and could afford a nice studio or something.â
I want to have at least five thousand in savings. Thatâs enough of a buffer to cover first and last at a new place and incidentals for a couple of months. Our parents never had savings. It didnât matter that they both had full-time jobs and my dad even had a side hustle painting houses on the weekend. Every time they tried to sock away money, something would happen, and theyâd need it to cover an emergency. And Flipâs hockey was expensive. I donât ever want to be in the same position.
âI wouldâve helped you out, Rix. You know that.â Flipâs forehead is furrowed.
âYou already helped with university tuition, and that was a big enough deal. I had it mostly handled. Iâll get a new job and find a decent apartment and be out of your hair.â
The elevator stops on the eleventh floor, and we pick up an adorable elderly couple. Weâre silent for the rest of the trip. I exit after the couple, and we troop out to the car. Two of the bins fit in the trunk, which seems like a minor miracle. The third takes up seventy-five percent of the back seat.
I try to savor ice cream sandwiches because theyâre my favorite indulgence, but these are melting, so Iâm forced to devour mine while standing beside Flipâs car. Afterward, I cram myself into the back seat again.
âEast Sideâs?â Flip asks.
I tuck my hands between my legs. âWe donât have to. I know you probably have stuff to do.â
âYou hungry, Tris? Wanna go for lunch?â Flip asks.
âIâm always hungry,â Tristan replies.
Two minutes later, we pull into East Sideâs parking lot.
Tristan snorts. âDude, I havenât been here since we got drafted. Do they still do the unlimited salad and garlic bread?â
âThey sure do.â
âAh, man. Theyâre gonna hate us by the time we leave.â Tristan hops out of the car.
I flip the seat forward and push it as far as I can to make it easier to get out, but he closes the door on me. Obviously the being-nice blip is over. âFor fuckâs sake.â I grab the handle, opening it back up.
âI forgot you were back there.â He holds the seat belt for me again.
I fight the sting of that comment and extricate myself from the back seat. Once Iâm back on my feet, I stretch out the kinks. Despite the ice cream sandwich, Iâm starving. Chocolate chip cookies arenât a filling breakfast.
The hostess takes us to a booth, and I scoot in first, Flip taking the spot beside me. Tristan sits across from us. He sets his phone on the table, screen-side up. It flashes every few seconds with a new notification.
The server comes over to take our drink order.
âHey! I didnât expect to see you for another week!â Adelaide, our usual server, greets us with a wide smile as she approaches. âOh! And you brought a friend.â
âHey, Addy. This is Tristan. We were in the area and figured weâd stop for lunch.â Flipâs smile makes her blush.
âWell, thatâs a nice surprise.â She turns her dimpled grin to Tristan. âHi. Welcome to East Sideâs.â
He gives her a smirky smile and chin tip in greeting.
Such a dirtbag. Heâd better not try to pick up Addy and ruin me ever coming back here.
Addy turns back to us. âShould I start you two with the usual?â She glances over her shoulder before lowering her voice. âThe regular manager isnât on, so it might be harder to get two salads on the table at a time, but Iâll bring two loaves of bread and put in a second salad order right away.â
âDonât get in shit on our account,â Flip says.
She waves a dismissive hand. âIâll tell him weâve got a pro hockey player in the restaurant, and heâll probably have a mini coronary. Itâll be fine.â
She takes our drink orders and leaves us to look at the menu. I donât need it. I get the same thing every time.
âHave you slept with that girl or something?â Tristan asks Flip once sheâs gone.
âNah, man. Rix and I come here once a month. Sheâs usually our server.â Flip looks through the menu. He typically orders one of three things.
âYou could go somewhere nicer. With fewer screaming children.â Tristan glances to our right, where a family with three kids, all under six, fight over crayons. The toddler is smashing goldfish crackers into dust and screaming his head off. Who is he to look down on those who appreciate unlimited salad and garlic bread?
Flip shrugs. âItâs where we go.â
âYouâre more than welcome to leave if the noise bothers you,â I say with a smile.
Our server returns with drinks. Flip and I have Coke, and Tristan has a draft beer. We order our mains, and a minute later, the salad and garlic bread arrive. Addy waits while we empty the bowl onto our three side plates and tells us sheâll be right back with salad round two. I spread my napkin on my lap and cross my legs. My foot connects with a shin because Tristan is manspreading.
âSorry,â I mumble around a mouthful of delicious salad.
He grunts but doesnât move his leg or comment otherwise.
Every few minutes, Addy passes by with another bowl of salad and more garlic bread.
Flip eats like someone is going to steal his food, while Tristan is methodical and mannerly. He grew up in an upper-middle-class family, so having manners and not eating like every meal might be the last one heâll get makes sense.
Iâm already stuffed to bursting by the time our main courses arrive. Tristan has manspread so much that his foot keeps hitting mine. Even without trying, he manages to take up all the spaceâand not just on his side of the booth, but in the room. Everyone who passes the table gives him a second glance.
I kick him not-so-gently. âCan you stop?â
He arches a brow while he twirls noodles on his fork with the help of a spoon. âYouâre the one kicking me.â
âBecause youâre manspreading into my space.â
âI donât know if youâve noticed, but Iâm six-five, and these booths arenât designed to hold someone my size, let alone two people this size.â He motions to Flip.
âYou keep stepping on my foot!â
âAnd you keep kicking me in the shin. Seems like maybe weâre even.â
âCan you cut the bickering for two minutes? Youâre worse than that table over there.â Flip nods toward a table of tween-girl soccer players who are shrieking and taking endless selfies.
I cross my legs and angle my body toward the edge of the booth. My heel rests against Tristanâs calf. I peek under the table. He and my brother are strategically positioned so their legs donât hit each other. I stop bitching and pop a slice of spicy sausage into my mouth, even though Iâm already full.
The whole point of eating at East Sideâs is to fill up on salad and bread and take my pasta home. I can usually make it last for an additional lunch and dinner the next day.
A minute later, a pair of twelve-year-old boys walk by and do a double take. Theyâre wearing Terror ball caps with the raging goose mascot emblem. One elbows the other. âHoly crap. Flip Madden and Tristan Stiles?â
Flipâs grin is instantaneousâhe loves the fame. Tristan takes a moment to catch up, but he, too, smiles. The shift is disarming, in part because all it does is make him hotter. He and Flip entertain the boys for a minute, scooting out of their seats to take a few photos and sign the boysâ hats before their parents usher them back to their table.
âYou just made their day.â I donât want to find how kind Tristan was to those boys attractive.
âPart of the job.â Tristanâs phone lights up, and he frowns as he taps on the screen. âWell, shit.â
âShit what?â Flip asks through a mouthful of noodles.
âHendrix is coming back. I thought he was still recovering from knee surgery.â
âGuess he healed up better than they expected,â Flip says.
âYeah, I guess.â Tristan pokes at his noodles but doesnât spin any onto his fork.
âItâll be good to have him back on the ice,â Flip offers.
âYeah.â Tristan rubs his bottom lip. He doesnât look like he feels the same way. âI wonder what line theyâll start him on?â
âYouâre talking about Hollis Hendrix, right?â I ask.
âYeah. Heâs been out since the middle of last season,â Flip says.
âI thought he might retire. Isnât he in his mid-thirties?â I spear a mushroom.
âHeâs thirty-three.â
âHow many years are left on his contract?â I ask.
âTwo,â Flip replies.
âSo maybe they want to make the most of whatever time he has left? Especially since heâs pulling six million a year.â Flip has three more years on his current contract with Toronto, but I donât know about Tristan. Theyâre peaking in their careers while Hendrix is on his way out. Heâs played for the league since he was nineteen, which is a solid run.
Tristanâs brows are pulled together, and heâs staring at me with an unreadable expression.
âWhat?â I ask.
His phone buzzes, dragging his attention away. âIâll be back in a minute.â He slides out of the booth, his phone already at his ear. âHey, Brody, everything okay?â
Brody is Tristanâs youngest brother. I think heâs still in high school.
Heâs gone so long we have the remains of his lunch boxed up, and I offer to pay as a thank you. But Flip refuses and covers it.
Tristan is quiet on the ride home, and as soon as we arrive, he hops in his flashy sports car and says he needs to take care of something.
âIs he okay?â I ask. Not that I care about his feelings.
âYeah. Heâll be fine. Brody has hockey competitions coming up, and Tristan gets on the ice with him when he can.â
âWhat about his dad?â
âHeâs not a pro hockey player, and Brodyâs on track to be drafted this year.â
âRight. That makes sense.â
I try to fit that piece somewhere into the puzzle. I donât know how to take Tristan. Heâs still a jerk, but he stood up for me today. And then there was whatever happened in the car.
Flip pops the trunk. âCome on, letâs get you settled in the loft.â
âI promise it wonât be for long.â