The Play: Chapter 38
The Play (Briar U Book 3)
Excitement sizzles in the air as my teammates and I gear up. Whoever wins tonight will progress to the conference finals, so weâre all feeling the pressure. Last season we made it to those finals, and I suffered a broken wrist thanks to a scorned boyfriend. This season my wrist is perfectly fine and my dick hasnât gotten me into an iota of trouble.
Beside me, Bucky is shoving his pants up to his hips, while babbling to Matt and Alec about some new radical therapies being used on athletes these days.
âSwear to God, this chamber looks like something theyâd torture James Bond with. They blast you with liquid nitrogen to like minus-a-hundred-and-fifty degrees.â
âAnd then what?â Alec sounds fascinated.
âWell, in theory it stimulates healing. In reality I think it just gives you frostbite?â
I glance over in amusement. âWhatâs this youâre talking about?â
âCryotherapy,â Bucky replies.
âSounds intense,â remarks Conor, whoâs sitting on the bench beside me. He lifts a hand and tucks his blond hair behind his ears.
âDude,â I tell him. âNot sure if anyoneâs told you this, butâ¦youâre treading pretty damn close to mullet territory.â
From his locker, Matt hoots. âBizness in front, party in the back, yo.â
Conor just gives that easygoing shrug of his. Even being informed heâs rocking a mullet doesnât faze this guy. I wish I could bottle up his confidence and sell it to pimply-faced teenage boys. Weâd make a killing.
âYou should cut it,â Jesse advises. âItâs a lady-boner killer.â
Con rolls his eyes. âFirst off, thereâs nothing I could ever do that would kill a ladyâs boner.â
Heâs probably right about that.
âAnd secondly, I canât cut it. Otherwise weâll lose the game.â
âShit,â Jesse says, paling. âYouâre right.â
Hockey players and their superstitions. Looks like Con ainât getting a haircut till April.
âJesus Christ, what is that stench?â Coach demands from the doorway. He strides into the locker room, his nose wrinkled in repulsion.
I exchange a look with the guys. I donât smell anything, and everyoneâs blank expressions say theyâre equally stumped.
âIt smells like a sulfur factory exploded,â Coach growls.
âOh,â Bucky realizes. âYeah, thatâs Pablo.â
âThe egg?â
I canât help but snicker. âYup yupââ
âDonât fucking say yup yup, Davenport.â
I ignore him. ââbecause thatâs what happens when you ask someone to take care of an egg for like five months. It goes rotten. Weâre all used to the smell now.â I glance at Bucky, whoâs pulling Pablo Eggscobar out of his locker. âI thought you were keeping him in that zippered pouch to try to contain the stink.â
At the current moment, Pablo is wrapped in numerous layers of cellophane, his pink drink-cozy stretched tightly around the plastic bundle. You canât even see his little pig face anymore because the odor-suppressing plastic wrap is an inch thick.
âI took him out because I felt bad for the guy, always being locked up like that. Heâs not a criminal.â
Snorts and chuckles ring out in the locker room. Coach, however, is not amused.
âGive it to me,â he orders, sticking out a meaty paw.
Bucky looks alarmed. He checks with me as if to ask, should I?
I shrug. âHeâs the boss.â
The second Coach has our team mascot in hand, he marches over to the wastebasket by the door and unceremoniously dumps Pablo in the trash.
A strangled cry bursts out, courtesy of Bucky, followed by a widespread hush that lends a spooky air to the room.
I feel like the wind was just knocked out of me. Pabloâs been a part of us for so long that I donât even know what to say. My teammatesâ stunned faces confirm they feel the same way.
Coach Jensen crosses his arms. âCongratulations, you passed the absurd task I didnât want to assign or think youâd remember to carry out. Butââ His voice becomes gruff. ââyou all showed some real teamwork and responsibility passing that egg around. And Iâm a man of my wordâI spoke to the dean and he said we might be able to make something happen with the pig.â
Bucky looks ecstatic. âSeriously? We get the pig? Guys, we did it.â
âPablo the Pig,â Jesse says slowly. âDoesnât have the same ring to it. We need a new name.â
âPablo Pigscobar,â Conor and I blurt out in unison, then turn to each other, grinning.
âOh Jesus,â Matt says with a wail of laughter. âThatâs it, everybody stop talking. Nothing you say could ever top that.â
The rest of the team is cackling their asses off. Even Coachâs lips are twitching. But then he claps his hands to signal that Happy Time is over, and everyone resumes getting ready.
Iâm about to slide my chest protector over my head when my phone buzzes. I peer into my locker to see an incoming call from Garrett.
âHey Coach,â I call out. âYour favorite child Garrett Graham is on the line. Mind if I take this?â
He glances at the clock. We have thirty minutes before the puck drops. âYes, but make it fast, Davenport. And tell him that was a brilliant play at the end of the third during yesterdayâs game against Nashville.â
âWill do.â The locker roomâs too damn loud, so I step out into the hallway, where I nod at the security guard standing there. Briar takes the protection of its athletes seriously.
âG,â I answer, raising the phone to my ear. âWhatâs up?â
âHey, glad I caught you. I was worried youâd already shut your phone off.â
âAw. Calling to wish me good luck?â
Thereâs a snort in my ear. âNah, you donât need it. BU doesnât stand a chance.â
Damn right they donât. Theyâve been our toughest competitor this year, but Iâm confident we can beat them. Granted, I wouldâve preferred playing a softer opponent. Like Eastwood College, who, just as I suspected, couldnât pull their shit together despite their amazing goalie. Kriska can stop a thousand goals, but it wonât help if his forwards arenât scoring any on the other net.
âAnyway, Iâm with Landon in his office right now. Heâs headed for LA tonight and will be gone for two weeks, but he wanted to touch base with you before he leaves.â
âLandon?â I have no clue who G is talking about.
âLandon McEllis? My agentâbut that word isnât allowed to be spoken right now, so pretend I never said it. In fact, weâre not having this conversation at all, okay?â
âOkay? Why are you calling exactly?â
âBecause I was just talking to Demi and she said you were hoping to sign with a franchise after graduation.â
I almost drop the phone. âWhat?â When the hell did he speak to Demi?
âYeah, she and I spoke at length about it. She was wondering if youâd need an agent in order to do that, and I explained that technically you canât have an agent while youâre in an NCAA program. But I was with Landon when she called, and he wanted to have a quick chat with you. Just rememberâthis conversation ainât happening.â
I understand his need for secrecy. NCAA athletes arenât allowed any contact with sports agents. Even guys whoâve already been drafted are required to officially end their player-agent relationship for the duration of their college careers.
Thatâs the official party line, anyway. In every sport, thereâs a fair bit of shadiness behind the scenes. But itâs important to be careful.
âIâm putting you on speaker now,â Garrett says. âCool?â
âSure.â Iâm still a tad dazed.
âHunter, hey. This is Landon McEllis.â
âHello, sir.â
âCan it with the sir stuffâcall me Landon.â He chuckles. âListen, when G mentioned you might be in the market for an agent next year, I just about jumped out of my chair and dove for the phone.â
Damned if that doesnât puff up my chest a little.
âI wanted to introduce myself,â he goes on. âUnofficially, of course.â
I try not to laugh. âOf course.â
âAnd I wonât beat around the bushâyouâre one of the top college players in the country. If youâre interested in going pro, I can put together a deal for you without even lifting a pinky.â
âReally?â I know itâs far easier for the eighteen- and nineteen-year-old guys to land somewhere big. But Iâll be twenty-two when I graduate. Yup, Iâm getting up there in my years, an old man at the current age of twenty-one. But athletic careers have short life spans.
âAbsolutely. And look, I canât sign you right now, and we canât speak again after tonight. But I just wanted to gauge your interest, find out which other agents you might be considering.â
âIâm not considering other agents,â I admit. Hell, I didnât expect to hear from this agent. I donât know whether to be pissed at Demiâs interference, or eternally grateful for it. I could get in trouble with the university if anyone found out Landon and I were even having this conversation.
âThen youâre interested,â he says.
âDefinitely.â Even if I had a dozen agents knocking on my door, Landon McEllis would still be at the top of the list. His client roster is staggering, and Garrettâs said nothing but good things about him.
âPerfect, then weâre on the same page.â He chuckles again. âIâll touch base with you next year.â
âSounds great. Thank you, sirâLandon.â
âKick ass tonight,â Garrettâs voice chirps in my ear. âIâll talk to you later.â
âLater, G.â I hang up. Once again I feel winded, as I stand there staring at my phone. Fuckinâ Demi. That woman is literally the best thing thatâs ever happened to me.
âDavenport,â booms a deep voice.
The universe has a real sense of humor, because the moment I think about Demi, her father appears like a scary apparition.
I stare in confusion, because either Iâm hallucinating it, or thatâs actually Marcus Davis at the other end of the hall.
A second security guard is preventing him from entering. The university started taking more precautions after one too many troublemakers snuck into the team locker rooms. It never happened in my day, but Dean said that when he was a freshman, a rival team smuggled in a duffel full of chocolate syrup containers and sprayed the brown sauce all over our locker room. When the Briar players showed up before the game, they thought there was actually diarrhea dripping down the walls.
âHey, itâs okay,â I call to the guard. âI know him.â
The guard steps aside, and Dr. Davis comes stalking toward me in all his terrifying glory. Jeez, he is a big man. Ironically, heâs only two, maybe three inches taller than me, but heâs built like Dwayne the Rock Johnson, and looks twice my size. It boggles the mind that this enormous man spends his days performing delicate surgeries in an operating room. But never judge a book by its cover, right?
âHello, sir.â I brace myself for his responseâI suspect it wonât be pleasant. I havenât seen him since our very short, very awkward brunch back in January, when he made his dislike for me crystal clear.
âItâs time we have a talk,â Dr. Davis retorts. âMan to man.â
I swallow a sigh. âI would love to do that, sir, but Iâve got a game starting in about twenty minutes. Maybe we could postpone this until tomorrow?â
âNo. We canât. I take matters regarding my daughter very seriously.â
âSo do I,â I say simply. âShe means a lot to me.â
âDoes she? Is that why youâre encouraging her to throw her future away?â Ice hardens his tone, and his harsh features are even more forbidding when heâs pissed.
Evidently Demiâs trip to Boston didnât go as well as sheâd hoped.
âSheâs not throwing her future away,â I reply in a careful tone. âSheâs staying in the same field, just taking a different direction to get there.â
âDo you know how much a psychiatrist makes on average? Over two hundred K annually. Two seventy-five, on the top end. Want to compare that to a clinical psychologist? Or better yet, a run-of-the-mill therapist? Thereâs one of those on every street corner.â
âDemi doesnât care about money. And she doesnât want an MD. She wants to get a doctorate.â
âLook, son, where do you get off dictating my daughterâs life choices?â
âIâm not dictating her life choices. If anything, sheâs the dictator in our relationship.â I canât help but snort. âHave you met your daughter? Sheâs the bossiest person on the planet.â
For one fleeting second a flicker of humor lights his eyes, and I think maybe, just maybe, heâs softening. But itâs gone in a flash, and his face turns to stone again.
âI donât trust you,â he says tightly.
I let out a tired breath. âWith all due respect, sir, you donât even know me.â
âYou and my daughter are too different. Sheâsââ
The door behind me flies open without warning. I expect Coachâs furious face to appear, so Iâm already uttering, âIâm sorry, Iââ when I realize Iâm looking at Matt.
Matty is startled to find a beefy bald man looming over me, but then he shakes himself out of it. âDude, you need to get in here right now.â He waves his phone under my nose. âItâs fucking chaos.â
I knit my brows. âWhat is?â
âShitâs going down at Bristol House. Thereâs two people up on the roof, and it looks like theyâre going to jump. Someoneâs live-tweeting it, and a chick on the top floor of Hartford House managed to snap a picture.â Matt thrusts the phone in my hand. âOne of them is your girl.â