Behind the Net: Chapter 38
Behind the Net: a grumpy sunshine hockey romance
I SIT UP STRAIGHT, worry sobering me. He props the phone against his ear with his shoulder while pulling his pants on.
âWhatâs going on?â he asks when Donna answers. Concern is etched into his features, which were so relaxed a moment ago.
He pauses, listening, hands faltering on his socks. His eyes widen. Iâm already off the bed, getting dressed.
âOkay,â he says before listening more. âIâll go over to her place to see if sheâs okay.â He glances at me. âCan you try those breathing exercises Pippa did with you?â
He listens, but his eyes are locked on me, brows knitted together as I pull my sweater on, goosebumps rising all over my arms.
After promising to call her back, he hangs up before scrolling through his contacts.
âWhatâs going on?â
âShe had her friend Claire over for dinner and asked her to text her when she got home, but she didnât, and then my mom couldnât get a hold of her.â His jaw tightens. âAnd then it turned into a panic attack. She always worries people are going to get hit by a drunk driver.â
Claire came to a hockey game with us recently. She lives in the southern part of the city. Itâll take him an hour and a half to get there and then up to North Vancouver.
Iâm buttoning my pants up. âIâll go to your momâs place.â
He shakes his head. âNo, I can go there after.â
âJamie, Iâll take an Uber to your momâs place, and you can pick us up there after, or I can just take an Uber home if sheâs fine.â
He stares at me, and something passes through his eyes. âOkay. Thank you, Pippa. I really appreciate this.â
âNo problem.â I grab my phone and book a pet-friendly Uber before digging my headphones out of my bag and calling Donna.
âPippa?â Her voice is high.
âHey.â I smile at Jamie, and my tone is warm and reassuring. âIâm going to pay you a visit while Jamie drives out to Claireâs, and Iâm bringing Daisy. Maybe we can take her for a walk around the neighborhood.â
âOkay.â She sounds hesitant, and her breathing is thin. âI could do that.â
âIâm going to stay on the phone with you until I get there,â I tell her, pulling my hoodie on.
Iâve been reading online about panic attacks. Some people who get them recommended distractions as a way to calm down.
âThat would be nice.â She sounds relieved. âIâm so sorry, honey. I just got all worked up and thenââ She cuts herself off. âI donât know what happened.â
âItâs okay. Tell me about your day.â
While Donna talks, Jamie stares at me like he doesnât know what to make of me, and I gesture at him to go. He nods and stalks out of the room, and moments later, I hear the front door close.
âIs that Orion?â I ask Donna, pointing up at the stars while Daisy sniffs a rosebush.
Donna cranes her neck. âI thought that was the Big Dipper.â
We talked on the phone the entire way here, and by the time I arrived, her breathing was almost back to normal. Jamie called to explain that Claireâs phone was dead and she couldnât find her power cord. As Donna and I wander her neighborhood, I can hardly tell she had a panic attack within the last few hours.
âHuh.â I point over to the east. âI thought that was the Big Dipper.â
Donna laughs. âI have zero knowledge of astronomy, so donât ask me.â
âMe neither.â
We both laugh, and she gives my shoulder an affectionate squeeze. âThank you so much for coming up here on short notice, honey.â She rolls her eyes at herself, looking embarrassed. âIâm so sorry I took over your evening.â
âItâs fine.â I shake my head, smiling. âHonestly. We donât want you to be stuck up here all by yourself.â
âDonât say that to Jamie or heâll try to move in with me again.â
I snort. âHe can be stubborn when he wants to be.â
An image of him flashes into my headâarms folded over his chest, t-shirt straining across his shoulders as he glares down at me using the toy. My skin feels hot, and I turn away so Donna canât see whatever expression is on my face.
âI pictured her in a car accident, like Paul,â Donna says quietly. âJamieâs father. And then I couldnât stop picturing it. It was like the thoughts took over and I couldnât get a hold of things. Theyâre normally triggered by the smell of alcohol.â Her eyes meet mine, and she searches my expression for something. Judgment, maybe. âSometimes driving. But never out of the blue like this.â
I make a noise of acknowledgment. âLots of people have panic attacks. There are doctors who specialize in this.â
She shakes her head hard. âNo. No way. No doctors, no medication.â She lets out a bitter laugh. âIâve been there and Iâm not going back.â
I think about what Jamie said at dinner tonight, about how his mom had depression when he was a kid, and thatâs why he knows how to cook. My heart aches for them. I can see why Donna isnât interested in revisiting the past, and I donât even know the whole story.
âThat looks like Scorpio,â Donna says, pointing at a cluster of stars.
I squint at them. âYeah. I think youâre right.â
We both laugh, because we have no clue.
While we walk, we chat easily, but my mind slips back to Jamie and what we did in my bed. I canât believe how easily things happened for me once he made me sit in his lap. That was the first time I was able to come with a guy. Maybe it was the way he felt against me, maybe it was the way he knew what he was doing, or maybe it was that exercise he did, where he asked me what I felt. Or maybe it was all of it combined.
Jamie isnât just the hot hockey player I had a crush on in high school. Heâs so much more. Under his surly, chiseled exterior, heâs kind and caring and protective. He cares more about the people in his life than about himself. He encourages me in music like no one else has. Iâm becoming friends with his mom, and I love taking care of his dog.
Hesitation rises in my stomach, and my mouth twists to the side. Zach used to think I was special, but the shine wore off. I canât bear the idea of Jamie losing interest in me like Zach did.
At just the idea of it, I feel sick. I canât go through that again.
When we get back to Donnaâs place, Jamie is already inside. I texted him earlier that we were out on a walk.
âHi, honey,â Donna calls to him as he strides over to her, studying her face.
He scans her, worry in his eyes, and my heart twists. This is a lot for one person to deal with, and it must be tough to watch his mom struggle. He wraps her in a tight hug, and she sighs with exasperation.
âIâm completely fine,â she says. âJust ask Pippa.â
Jamieâs eyes find mine over her shoulder and he gives me a look of gratitude. I just smile and nod.
For the next half hour, Jamie hovers while Donna makes tea and I sit at the kitchen table, making conversation with her. Finally, Jamie is convinced his mom will be okay on her own, and she shoos us out the door.
The drive home is weirdly tense, and I sneak glances across the car at him. His jaw is tight. Our eyes meet.
âThanks for tonight, Pippa,â he says, voice low and serious.
âDonât mention it.â
He glances back at the road, looking frustrated. âI, uh. I would be so screwed without you.â
âI know.â
He huffs, amused. âHumble.â
I look at him with my eyebrows raised, smiling. âDonât mention it. Honestly.â
He nods and turns back to the road, but tension still lingers in his expression. When we arrive home, Daisy can barely keep her eyes open as she heads upstairs. She sleeps in Jamieâs room when he isnât traveling.
Jamie and I exchange a glance. Now that weâre alone again, Iâm thinking about what we did earlier, how hot it was, how I want to do it again.
But we canât. I know that. I canât keep my emotions out of it the way Hazel suggested.
âAbout tonight,â he starts. His throat works and he rubs the back of his neck.
âI donât think we should do it again,â I blurt out, and his eyes shoot to mine. Is that disappointment or relief? I canât tell. âYou have your mom and I haveâ¦â I trail off, shaking my head. I canât tell him the truth.
I have a very breakable heart and a big crush on him.
âRight.â His intense gaze roams my face, studying me, and his jaw ticks again. âIâm sorry if I made you uncomfortable.â
âNo.â I shake my head. âYou didnât. It was great. Like, really great.â Okay, Iâm blushing now. âI work for you and we have a good thing here.â
He nods, still watching me with that careful gaze. âYeah. We do.â
My throat feels thick when I swallow. âGreat.â I glance at the stairs. Through the giant windows of the living room, the ski-hill lights in the mountains twinkle, and I know Iâm going to be staring at them for hours, replaying the entire night. âI should get to bed.â
âGood night, Pippa.â His voice is low, and thereâs something in his eyes that makes me want to hug him.
âGood night.â
Inside my room, I lean against the closed door and gather my thoughts. Jamie doesnât have room in his life for meâtonight was a huge reminder of that. It wasnât Jamieâs fault; it was just bad timing, but I know heâs downstairs blaming himself for it. Itâs going to keep happening, and heâs never going to choose me over his mom. He canât. She needs him too much.
The whole situation has a neon warning sign over it that says DANGER, blinking, with giant red arrows pointing to it. If I let it continue, I know exactly how itâll end for me.