The Play: Chapter 12
The Play (Briar U Book 3)
Iâm up at six a.m. on Monday. We have morning skate at seven and I need to eat, because I always have breakfast before practice. And then a second breakfast afterwards in the hockey facility kitchen. Like a hobbit.
Hollis is already awake. He needs to make the drive back to New Hampshire today. Sometimes he leaves on Sunday night, but some weekends he simply canât sacrifice one single second with his fair maiden Rupi and leaves early on Monday. I guess this was one of those weekends. But heâs in for a bitch of a commute at this hour.
âHey,â I say as he staggers into the kitchen.
He grunts in response.
I head for the coffeemaker. I need a dose of caffeine to jumpstart my brain. âWant some?â I offer.
That gets me another grunt.
I decide to treat it as a yes. A couple minutes later weâre drinking our coffee while I scroll through my phone to check the meal plan for the week. Our nutritionist Karly has the team on a strict diet. Granted, we break it all the time, but as Karly always warns, ignoring her meal plans only does ourselves the disservice in the end.
I skim the options on the list and decide on an egg white omelet loaded with veggies. âYou want breakfast?â I ask Hollis. âOmelets.â
He nods. âYeah, one for the road might be nice. Actually, make that two.â
âYou want two omelets.â
âIâm hungry.â
âIâll start with one and then weâll see if thereâs time left. Coach will be pissed if Iâm late.â I slide a cutting board and a knife across the counter. âGet dicing.â
Hollis chops mushrooms and green peppers while I prep the eggs. As we cook, the rest of the house remains eerily quiet and the skyâs still dark beyond the kitchen window. The darkness makes it feel like nighttime, and my brain is unwittingly transported back to Saturday night.
Fuck.
Nico absolutely slept with that chick I saw him exiting the bedroom with.
Or at the very least, he had his pants off with her.
And when you have a serious girlfriend, your pants should never come off in the presence of another woman.
The thing is⦠I didnât actually catch him red-handed. I caught the potential aftermath. And Iâm not about to stir up trouble in the relationship of someone I barely know. Demi doesnât trust me enough yet to take my word for it. If I went up to a friend, like Dean, for example, and said, âHey, Allieâs cheating,â he would believe me. Because Dean knows Iâd have no reason to lie or play games. But Demi doesnât know that. She would question my motivations, maybe even suspect me of trying to sabotage Nico so I could have her for myself, which isnât the case.
âHey Mike,â I say as I pour the first omelet mixture into the hot pan.
âMmmm?â Heâs busy chopping up a red pepper now.
âIâve got a hypothetical for you.â
âAll right. Hypothetical me.â
âWhat?â
âYou know, like hit me, only with the word hypothetical instead ofâwhatever, just fucking say it.â
âAll right. Letâs pretend someone you know is in a long-term, committed relationship, and you caught their boyfriend or girlfriend cheating on them. Well, possibly cheating. Youâre not a hundred percent certain, but the circumstances were very suspicious andâ¦â I set down the spatula on the counter. âYou know what? Screw it. I am a hundred percent certain. I know when a dude just got sucked off. I literally saw Conor ejaculating three seconds before that.â
âDavenport.â Hollis speaks in a voice so ominous that Iâm almost nervous to turn to face him.
âYeah?â
âAre you trying to tell me that you saw Rupi sucking Conor Edwardsâ dick?â Hollis rumbles like an angry bear, his face redder than the pepper on his cutting board. âWhen the fuck did it happen? Was it at the party? Was it when she went to fix her hairââ
âRelax,â I interrupt. âIâm not talking about Rupi. Are you insane? That girl would never cheat on you. Sheâs obsessed with you, Hollis. Sheâs your stalker. Youâre dating your stalker.â
âThatâs the nicest thing anyoneâs ever said to me.â
âIâm talking about a friend from class, okay? Iâm pretty sure her boyfriend cheated on her. The question is, do I tell her?â
âNope.â Zero hesitation from Hollis.
âWhy not?â I use the spatula to transfer the first omelet from the pan to Mikeâs plate, then get to work on my own breakfast.
âBecause you donât want to stick your nose in other peopleâs biz. Trust me.â
âBut heâs cheating on her.â
âSo? Thatâs his biz, not yours.â
âItâs also her business,â I point out.
âIt canât be her business when she doesnât know about it,â Hollis counters.
I pause. âSo you subscribe to the whole âwhat she doesnât know wonât hurt herâ camp? Really?â
âIâm just saying, is some rando from class worth you getting involved in a third-party relationship? Child, please.â
âPlease donât say child, please.â
He ignores me, taking a huge bite of the omelet. âLook, if it was one of us,â he blabbers with his mouth full, âthen Iâd say hell yeah, you have a duty to say something. But how well do you know this chick?â
âNot well. Weâre still getting to know each other.â
Hollis finally swallows his food. âThere you go. So even if you do tell her, she wonât believe you, bro. If someone Iâm âstill getting to knowâââhe uses air quotesââaccused Rupi of cheating, Iâd say child, pleaseââ
âIâm begging you to stop saying that.â
ââand Iâd think they had an ulterior motive.â
Mike Hollis, of all people, is rationally confirming my own doubts. But maybe men are naturally cynical? Iâm sure if I polled any of the women living in this house whether theyâd want to know, the answer would be YES! In a heartbeat.
âYou donât want to get involved,â Hollis warns. âTrust me, man. Stay as far away from this situation as you can.â
Morning practice is fast-paced. Iâm sweating like a dog, and panting like one as I skate hard toward the net. Weâre running two-on-ones, designed for the defensemen to attempt to stop a forward on a breakaway. But Iâm way faster than Kelvin and Peters. During the entire drill, Iâve managed not only to outskate them, but to score on net every time.
Until now. I wind up my slapshot and unleash the puck, only for the goaltender to pluck it out of the air with his glove. Itâs Trenton, our backup goalie.
He lifts his mask and flashes a toothy grin. âHow do you like them apples, captain?â
I whistle in admiration. âThatâs a wicked glove you got there. If you were a bit faster with the pads, youâd be giving Boris some real competition for the starter job.â
Rather than look defeated, Trentonâs eyes gleam with fortitude. âThen Iâll get faster,â he vows.
Oh yeah, heâs got that hunger. The kidâs gonna be starting games in no time.
I skate toward the bench. Coach blows his whistle, signaling practice is over. Our defensive coordinator OâShea asks a couple of D-men to stay behind to run one more drill, but the rest of us are free to go. Good, because my stomach is grumbling. Time for second breakfast. But first I need to wash all the sweat off me.
Our showers have the sweetest set-up. Each one is its own individual stall separated by waist-high partitions, so we can see each otherâs heads but not our junk, just the way I like it. In the stall next to mine, Con is dunking his head under the spray, smoothing his longish hair away from his forehead. Heâs got a bite mark on his left shoulder. This fucking guy.
âHey, about this weekend,â I start, deciding to poll more people about my dilemma.
But Conor misinterprets. Chuckling softly, he turns to grin at me. âYeah, sorry âbout that. I forgot to lock the door.â He raises a brow. âYou shouldâve joined us.â
Iâm helpless to stop my dick from twitching. Bad enough that Iâm not having sex with the parade of women throwing themselves at me at partiesânow Iâm being invited to threesomes? The universe has a lousy sense of humor.
âNah, Iâm not talking about the BJ. I neededââ
âFeed me!â The anguished shout reverberates in the shower area, making Con and me jump.
âFor fuckâs sake,â Conor says, turning toward the doorway.
Matt and Treeface are standing outside Jesse Wilkesâ stall, the latter waving Pablo around in the air. Iâm not worried about the egg falling into one of the showers, because itâs been established that pigs can indeed swim.
Jesse remains unfazed by the intruders. He simply squirts shampoo into his palms and lathers up his hair. âYou can wait five minutes, Pablo,â he says cheerfully.
Matt glares at him. âWould you really do that if he was real? If your pet pig was standing in the doorway begging to be fed?â
âHell yeah, I would. Iâve got three golden retrievers at home. They eat when I tell them to eat.â
Laughter bounces off the acoustics in the room. Heâs got a point. I had a Jack Russell growing up and he ate twice a day, like clockwork. My control-freak father wouldnât have it any other way.
Man, I miss that dog. I was ten years old when he died, and I remember crying my eyes out in my bedroom until Dad came in to inform me that real men donât cry. Good chat.
âBut heâs starving,â Tree says in accusation.
Jesse just gives them the finger before continuing to wash his hair. Heâs even whistling.
Althoughâ¦heâs shampooing rather fast⦠In fact, I barely have time to blink before heâs shutting off the water and darting through the doorway.
Conor grins at Jesseâs retreating backside. âDude. I think theyâre actually starting to believe itâs a real pig.â
âRight?â But I canât deny that Pablo has developed a life of his own. Even I canât be certain heâs an egg anymore. I think he might be a real boy.
âAnyway,â I say as I rinse off. âI need advice.â
âHit me,â Conor replies, because thatâs a normal response from a normal person. I donât understand why Hollisâannnnd thereâs no point trying to figure out Hollis. Itâs like trying to understand the wind.
Toweling off, I quickly outline the situation. Unlike Hollis, Con does hesitate. He thinks it over for several beats before providing an answer.
âIâd tell her.â
âYeah? Even though she might punch me in the face?â
âWell, sure, the messenger always risks getting shot, but is it better to leave her in the dark? What if you run into her and the boyfriend? What do you do, pretend everything is cool and that you donât know heâs a total douchebag?â
âIâm with Con,â Foster pipes up from my other side. Heâs been listening in this entire time. âYou gotta tell her, man. And hey, if it turns out youâre wrong? You say Iâm sorry, I was trying to be a good friend and look out for you, and I made a mistake.â
Which is precisely what this boils down toâme wanting to be a good friend. I hate the idea of Demi being played for a fool. Nico seemed like a good guy the first time I met him, but he was emitting some real slime vibes at the party. On the other hand, I hardly know the dude. Maybe heâs just a bit slimy. Doesnât make him a cheater.
I poll a few other teammates in the locker room, and the consensus seems to be to tell Demi the truth. But it isnât until Jesse texts his girlfriend for her opinion that Iâm fully swayed to the side of morality. In all caps, Katie texts back a resounding:
TELL HER RIGHT EFFING NOW, YOU HEARTLESS MONSTER!!!!!!
I guess I have my answer.