Behind the Net: Chapter 55
Behind the Net: a grumpy sunshine hockey romance
CAN WE TALK?
Ten days after New Yearâs, I stand at the kitchen counter, staring at the text I just received from Zach.
My mouth goes dry as I read it again and again. It canât be real, and yet, thatâs his number. The last texts we exchanged were back in August, a couple days before he dumped me, when I was picking up coffee for myself and wanted to know if he wanted anything.
Disgust stirs in my gut. He had the audacity to take my song, and now he wants to talk?
I block him and delete the text history.
Jamie opens the door of the apartment, and I jump. He shoots me that handsome, disarming smile Iâm addicted to, and thoughts of Zach vanish.
The second Jamie flew home from Silver Falls, he had to leave for a ten-day away game streak, but now heâs back. I rush over to hug him. At our feet, Daisy does her excited tippy-taps on the floor, tail wagging a mile a minute in excitement.
âYouâre home,â I say into Jamieâs neck while he presses a kiss to the top of my head. His arms around me, pulling me into his hard chest, is the ultimate comfort.
âFinally.â He presses another kiss to my temple, and when I lean back to look up at him, his eyes go soft. âIâve been wanting to do this for ten days.â
He kisses me, and I sigh into him. His mouth on mine is pure relief, sweet and careful, until he groans and sweeps his tongue between my lips. His stubble lightly scratches me, and heat pulses through me.
âMissed you,â he murmurs against my lips between kisses. âI love coming home to you.â
My heart soars like it did on New Yearâs Eve, when I sang on stage. Like when we told each other we have feelings for each other. It canât be healthy to experience heart palpitations like this so often, but I donât care.
Jamie pulls away, looks down at Daisy, and picks her up. âMissed you, too,â he tells her. She licks at his ear, wiggling in his arms, and he grimaces while I laugh.
This man with a dog is almost too cute to be legal.
âI was just about to take her for a walk.â
Daisy hears the word walk and her head whips to me. Jamie smiles and gives her another scratch.
âIâll go with you.â
Twenty minutes later, weâre walking through Stanley Park. Vancouver is experiencing a cold snap, and snow falls lightly around us, coating the towering emerald trees. People hate driving in the snow in Vancouver, so except for our boots crunching on the snow, downtown and the park are quiet.
âYour mom seemed really good the other day.â Hazel and I took Daisy for a walk with Donna a couple days ago, before it snowed.
He makes a pleased noise in his throat, smiling at the ground as we walk. âShe has an appointment with a doctor on Tuesday.â
I light up, smiling at him. âShe does? For medication?â
He nods, relief spreading over his features. âYep.â
âThatâs great.â God, Iâm so happy to hear this. Not just because Jamie has spent so long taking care of her. Donna is a really lovely person, and sheâs been through so much. She deserves to feel better and have the tools to deal with her panic attacks.
We walk in comfortable silence for a while before Jamie nudges me.
âThe video has over three million views.â
My stomach wobbles. âI know. Donât remind me.â
Hayden took a video of me singing on New Yearâs Eve and, after asking me, he posted it on his TikTok. It went viral, but Iâm pretending it doesnât exist. Just thinking about that many people seeing me sing one of my own songs makes me sick with nerves. I made the terrible mistake of reading the comments on the video, and while most of them were complimentary, I canât shake the few ugly ones out of my head.
Sheâs nothing special. This is boring. Sheâs not even playing the guitar. Thatâs just for show. This song sucks. They only let her up there because sheâs hot.
I couldnât write music for months because Zach hurt my feelings. How could I ever have a career with thousands of Zachs out there, saying even worse things? Maybe saying them to my face, every day?
âHey.â Jamie stops walking and reaches for me, putting his arm around my shoulder and pulling me to his side. âIâm proud of you. That took guts, getting up there.â
I nod with a noise of acknowledgment, but my anxiety about the whole thing bleeds into my forced smile. He watches me for a long moment.
âWe do a visualization exercise with one of the sports psychologists on the team,â he says, studying me. âShe has me picture the game. I imagine the other teamâs forwards trying to score on me and what the puck feels like in my glove or hitting my blocker. I picture each of their guys and every scoring configuration I can think of. The more specific I am, the better.â He arches his brow. âI think you should try that, but with music.â
A frown slides onto my face as I think about enduring mean comments for the rest of my life. âI donât really want to picture people booing me.â A light laugh scrapes out of me to hide my discomfort.
âNot that. Picture the career you want. Picture your dream, songbird.â His hand slips from my shoulder down to my gloved hand, and he gives it a squeeze. âYouâve been stuck in this loop for months. Itâs time to picture something new.â
Heâs right, I realize. All I do is think about the past, and itâs holding me back. Every time I even consider music, I think about what happened to warn myself away. I keep putting my own barriers up in my path.
My throat is thick as I swallow, glancing up at him with hesitance. His warm, confident expression bolsters me, and I nod. âOkay.â
âClose your eyes.â
I glance around. Itâs just us and Daisy, whoâs busy sniffing the side of the path. I take a deep breath and let my eyes fall closed.
The forest is almost silent except for Daisyâs sniffing. Cold flakes land on my cheeks and nose, and the air smells clean and crisp.
I picture myself on stage. Itâs a small show, and Iâm opening for a bigger artist. There are a couple hundred people in the crowd.
No. I catch myself, opening my eyes, blinking up at Jamie, whoâs still watching me with a small smile on his face. I want more than being the opener. My eyes close and I try again.
Iâm on stage in an arena. Iâm the headliner, and my dream guitar is slung across my chest. Iâm touring with my new album that I recorded with my dream producer, Ivy Matthews. Sheâs known in the music industry for being eccentric and picky as hell, but sheâs supremely talented at creating unique and authentic musicians. Behind me, a hand-picked band of kind, talented musicians is ready. Iâm wearing something that makes me feel gorgeous and strong, and my hair is loose around my shoulders.
âIâm Pippa Hartley,â I say into the mic, and they cheer. Every person in this arena bought tickets to see me, but I like to introduce myself at the beginning of every show. Itâs my thing.
I glance to the wings. Jamieâs standing there, looking proud, and I smile at him.
âAnd this is a song about falling in love.â
In my mind, I launch into the song, the band begins to play, the arena fills with sound and light, and itâs fucking spectacular.
My eyes open, and I beam up at Jamie. Tears well up in my eyes, because what I just imaged was so sweet. My chest aches for it.
âI donât want the marketing job.â My voice is hushed.
He nods, serious. âI know.â
A weight settles in my stomach. When I told my parents I passed the second interview with flying colors, they could hear the false cheerfulness in my voice.
I wish they could be proud of me. I wish I didnât have to shove myself into some job I donât want to gain their approval. My throat tightens with the ugly realization. I know their intentions are good; they tie happiness to financial stability, because itâs what they lacked growing up.
I didnât, though. Working a job I donât like wonât make me happy, even if it does pay my bills. My heart twists in my chest, and like he can feel it, Jamieâs hand is on my back, rubbing slow, calming circles.
I got swept up in what they wanted, just like with Zach. Jamie looks at me right now the same way he looks at me every time Iâm about to step up on a stageâlike I can do anything. The flame in my chest is a pilot light, fueled by memories of singing on New Yearâs and recording songs that I wrote in the living room. That fire is my love of music, the way I feel like Iâm flying when I sing my heart out. Itâs the reason I canât walk away from the music industry even though I tried. Something sharp and glowing rushes through my blood, and I suck a breath in.
Iâll figure out how to tell my parents. The idea of letting them down makes my stomach clench, but itâs what I need to do.
âYou want to tell me what you pictured?â Jamieâs mouth tilts. âYou donât have to.â
Jamie isnât Zach. Heâd never laugh at me, never tell me my dreams are stupid or that I should stay in my lane.
âI want to.â
I tell him everything, and when Iâm done, his eyes are bright with affection and excitement.
âWould you ever reach out to her?â
I blanch. âWho? Ivy Matthews?â
He nods.
âUm.â I blink. My instinct is to say no, but I catch myself again.
No more putting up roadblocks for myself. No more letting what Zach said weigh me down. If I want what I imagined just now, Iâm going to have to do scary things⦠like send my music to people who could reject me.
âI guess I could.â Determination pours into my blood, and I nod at Jamie. âYeah. Iâm going to do it.â
His smile is so broad, it makes my heart break open. âGood girl.â
I laugh, and he slings an arm around my shoulder as we keep walking.
While Jamie is at the gym that afternoon, I study Ivy Matthewsâ website. Thereâs an email address, but no information about whether she takes submissions. She probably wouldnât want to work with me unless Iâm signed by a record label. She didnât even want to work with Zach. His manager tried to arrange something with her and she turned them down. He was so angry about the rejection.
This is such a long shot, itâs not even funny, but I told Jamie Iâd do this. I write a brief, professional message about my experience in the music industry and attach links for my viral video and the songs I wrote for Jamie for Christmas.
Hesitation rears its ugly head again and again, but shoving it away gets a little easier each time.
I hit send and blow out a long breath. Even if nothing will come of itâand Iâm certain thatâs the caseâI tried. I took one step forward.
That evening, Iâm about to feed Daisy dinner when my phone rings with an unknown number, and I answer.
âIs this Pippa Hartley?â a woman asks.
âThatâs me.â I drop the cup of dog kibble into Daisyâs slow-feeder bowl, and she races to eat it.
âMy name is Marissa Strong. Iâm Ivy Matthewsâ assistant.â
My brain stops working.
Thereâs a pause. âAre you still there?â
âYes,â I say quickly. âIâm here. Just wondering if Iâm hallucinating.â
She laughs. âYeah. I get that response sometimes. I saw your submission and passed it along to Ivy. Sheâs in town recording, and the band has wrapped up early, so sheâs free tomorrow. If youâre free, sheâd like to record a demo with you.â
Iâm staring at nothing. I donât think I even have a pulse right now.
âThereâs absolutely no guarantee anything will happen with the demo,â Marissa continues, all business, but her tone changes to something thoughtful. âThereâs something interesting about you, though, and sheâs curious.â
Something interesting about me. My pulse kicks in, and I try to breathe.
âIâm free,â I say, feeling breathless. I canât believe this. âIâll be there.â