Behind the Net: Chapter 10
Behind the Net: a grumpy sunshine hockey romance
THAT EVENING, just before sunset, I park in the driveway of a suburban home in North Vancouver, bag of Greek food sitting in the passenger seat. Thereâs an informal dinner for the players tonight, a get-to-know-you type of thing for the new guys, but I ignored the invite. From the back seat, Daisy wags her tail, curious and excited. I take a deep breath.
I canât fucking believe I told Pippa to move in with me. With her watching the dog, though, Iâll have lots of time to keep an eye on my mom.
From the back seat, Daisy leans her head on my shoulder, sniffing me, and I send her a side-long glance. A weird feeling grows in my chest.
Am I⦠starting to like this dog? I frown at her, and she pants and wags her tail. I snort.
âCome on.â I get out of the car, let Daisy out, and walk up to the small home.
The house is modestâfirmly middle class. I tried to buy my mom something bigger when I went pro, but she refused. She said she didnât want to leave the neighborhood sheâd lived in for years. That she liked the neighbors and didnât want to make new friends.
As I near the front door, movement on the roof catches my eye and my heart stops.
My mom is on the roof, wearing thick gardening gloves. She waves with a big smile. âHi, honey.â
Blood beats in my ears. She canât be up there. My mind races, picturing her having a panic attack up on the roof, slipping and falling, cracking her head open on the pavement.
âWhat are you doing up there?â I demand. Daisy barks up at my mom, wagging her tail.
My mom grins wide at me. âCleaning the gutters.â
âGet down. Now.â Iâm using my firmest voice. âItâs getting dark out.â
âI can see just fine. Iâm just finishing up, anyway.â She chuckles and drops a fistful of leaves on me. They flutter down to my feet, and Daisy jumps and tries to bite one.
âJamie, honey? Whose dog is that?â
I raise an eyebrow at Daisy, whoâs sitting with her tail sweeping back and forth on the pavement. The corner of my mouth twitches as her eyes widen. She thinks sheâs getting a treat.
Maybe a little part of me is starting to like this dog.
âMine,â I tell my mom. âI got a dog.â
My mom lights up, clapping. âYou did? Oh, Jamie, thatâs great. Thatâs exactly what you need.â
âCan you please get down?â Iâm feeling twitchy with her up on the roof, so high. âIâll hire someone to do this.â
âStop treating me like a child. Iâm not incapable of living my life.â
Irritation rises in my gut. Irritation and something else, something angrier. I hate that she pretends sheâs fine when sheâs not. Sheâs always been like that. We never, ever talked about her depression or anxiety when I was growing up. We still havenât talked about the car accident last year. My gaze sweeps to the open garage. Her car is fixed, and I wonder if sheâs been driving. Sheâs not allowed to until she gets help.
She was driving friends home from the bar when she had the panic attack and rear-ended another car. Because of my late fatherâs struggles with alcoholism, sheâs always the designated driver. I think one of her friends smelled like booze, and combined with driving at night, when my dadâs accident happened, it just set her off.
I donât remember himâI was only a baby when he drove drunk and wrapped his car around a poleâbut I resent him for leaving my mom with all this baggage. If not for him, maybe she wouldnât have had depression while I was growing up. Maybe she wouldnât have panic attacks.
âYouâre not even clipped in.â My chest feels tight. âYou could slip and fall.â
She rolls her eyes, making her way over to the ladder. âA meteor could bonk me in the head and kill me.â She descends the ladder, and my heart rate slows. âYou worry too much.â
Internally, I deflate. Sometimes, I wish I was like her, but then who would hold our family together? Who would swoop in and answer my momâs calls when sheâs having an episode?
Daisy loves her immediately, of course. We head inside, and my mom putters around the kitchen, setting out the Greek food I brought while I grab plates. Daisy sniffs every square inch of the house.
âHow are you settling into your new place?â she asks.
I feel the weird urge to tell her about Pippa. What would I even say? My assistant is a drop-dead gorgeous songbird who I had a crush on in high school. Whoâs incredible with my dog. Who stocked the fridge with all the foods I like even though I barked âstuffâ at her as a grocery list. And now sheâs going to be living with me, sleeping on the other side of the wall.
Maybe doing other stuff on the other side of that wall. The thought goes straight to my cock.
âFine,â I tell her. âItâs fine.â
She brings the plates to the table. âI want to come to a game.â
âI donât think thatâs a good idea.â
She blinks at me like Iâve slapped her, and I immediately regret my words. I could have said it differently. It isnât a good idea, though. The smell of alcohol is a trigger for her, and at a hockey game, everyoneâs drinking. If something happens, sheâll take up my full attention, and I canât lose focus on the ice.
âJamie.â She gives me an indulgent look, but thereâs irritation beneath it. âI had one little panic attack.â
One that sheâs admitted.
Her eyes are on the lasagna as she dishes it out. âYouâre treating me with kid gloves.â
Thatâs because youâre fragile and you donât have the best track record of keeping it together, I think. And in my head, Iâm ten and making my own school lunch during one of her low points of depression.
âDo you need any help moving in?â She moves to the kitchen, and Iâm relieved that sheâs dropped the idea of coming to a game.
âNo. Iâm all unpacked.â
She gives me a funny look. She knows how demanding my schedule is. âThat was fast.â
I clear my throat. âI hired an assistant to help with Daisy and other stuff.â
My mom blinks at me. A smile stretches across her face. âYou? You hired someone to help you?â
âItâs not a big deal.â I give her a hard look, but the corner of my mouth tugs up.
She laughs. âIf you say so.â As she passes, she nudges me with her elbow. âThatâs great, honey.â
Warmth spreads in my chest. I duck my head, embarrassed. âYeah, well.â I shrug. âShe does a lot of things for me that save time so I can focus on hockey.â
âShe?â Her head tilts and her eyes sparkle.
My gut dips, and my gaze darts to my mom. I shrug again. âYeah.â
The back of my neck heats.
âWhatâs her name?â My momâs eyes are like lasers, and thereâs that little twitch at the corner of her mouth.
I hold my face neutral, not wanting to give anything away, even as my pulse picks up at the thought of my pretty assistant. âPippa.â
Please donât ask where sheâs from, I beg silently. Iâll blurt out that we went to the same high school and then itâll all come tumbling out.
She makes a pleased, humming noise. âPretty name. How old is she?â
She smells blood in the water.
Iâm twenty-six, which puts Pippa at twenty-four. âI donât know.â
âGuess.â
My skin tingles. She knows. She so fucking knows. âA little younger than me.â
âHmmm.â She smiles, nodding, watching me. âInteresting.â
I stay silent.
âIs she pretty?â
I rake a hand through my hair. âI donât know.â
âI mean, you have eyes, donât you?â She asks it so innocently, like she doesnât know the answer.
I blow out a long breath, frustrated with my mom but also with myself, because I shouldnât have this inconvenient crush.
And I sure as shit shouldnât have demanded she move in with me.
âYes, okay?â I rush out. âSheâs very pretty and she has a beautiful singing voice and Daisy loves her.â
My mom rolls her lips to hide a smile, but her eyes are bright.
âWhat?â I demand.
She bursts out laughing.
I groan. She has a way of getting things out of me.
She smiles at me as she takes a seat across the table, tilting her head. âErin was a long time ago.â She says it quietly, and my lungs tighten. âI saw her on a new TV show. Sheâs the star.â
My jaw tenses so hard my teeth might crack, and I think back to seven years ago, during my rookie year. Erin Davis, the supermodel on her way to the top who shocked the fashion industry when she left modeling abruptly. Over the past few years, sheâs been acting. I look her up once in a while to see if sheâs still working.
My mom thinks Erin and I broke up because I couldnât handle hockey and a relationship, which is technically true. She doesnât know that when Erin told me her period was a week late, I panicked. Erin was so excited, and I had terror written all over my face. We were nineteen, for Christâs sake. It was my rookie year and I was working harder at hockey than ever. Every chance I could, I was flying home to visit my mom. My best friend growing up, Rory Miller, wasnât interested in being friends now that we played for separate hockey teams. Everything was different and I was barely holding it together. Adding another commitment to my life was terrifying. I would have done it, though, no matter how hard it was.
She got her period a day later, but the damage was done. We both knew the relationship was over, and a week later, I saw the news about her leaving modeling. She fell off the face of the planet for almost five years.
Guilt squeezes my lungs. Thatâs why I donât do relationships anymore. Because Erin wanted so much more than I was able to give her. Because it was casual for me, and I broke her fucking heart and blew up her life. She was so traumatized, she left a promising career.
I did that.
Maybe I wasnât in love with her, but she was a nice person, and she deserved so much more than the half-assed attention I was able to give her. If we had ended up having a baby, that kid would deserve so much more than the limited time I could give them.
Iâll never hurt someone the way I hurt Erin.
When I retire from hockey, Iâll have time for that stuffâa relationship, maybe getting married, maybe having kids. If I stay fit and keep my head in the game, I can play until my mid-thirties. Until then, those other things arenât part of the plan.
âJamie?â
My head whips toward my mom. Sheâs looking at me with a curious, soft expression.
âThereâs more to life than hockey, you know.â
I nod and make a noise of acknowledgment, but she doesnât get it. After seeing Pippa cry the other day, itâs not going to happen. I know I donât have time for her, and I canât crush her like her ex did, and like I crushed Erin.
âAnd I still want to go to a game.â She widens her eyes at me in an affectionate I mean business way. âIâll sit in the nosebleeds if I have to.â