The Chase: Chapter 17
The Chase: A Grumpy Sunshine College Hockey Romance (Briar U Book 1)
I grew up in the suburbs outside of Boston, so the odds of me ever seeing a tornado were about as good as the chances of my parents getting back together.
This morning, I finally get to witness one.
The tornadoâs name is Kamal Jain. He bursts into the hotel bar in a blur of gray and black, offering fleeting glimpses of white teeth and brown skin and stubby fingers that he waves at the server as he flies past her.
The vortex grinds to a halt to reveal the short, stocky figure of Kamal Jain, and it takes serious effort to keep my jaw hinged because it turns out heâs not wearing gray and black.
Itâs slate and charcoal, as Summer would say.
And itâs the same fucking outfit I tried on last night. The first one, which Summer advised me to forsake in favor of what Iâm wearing now: dark-blue Ralph Lauren jeans, a Marc Jacobs dress shirt with no tie, and brown Gucci loafers. Summer would be proud that I remembered each designerâs name and can link it to his corresponding clothing item.
Thank God I didnât go with the first outfit, or this interview wouldâve started off a touch awkward.
âColin!â Kamal greets me with enthusiasm, pumping my hand in a shake that lasts the entire time he speaks. âSo good to meet you! Look at youâyouâre huge! You look way smaller in the picture I have of you. In person youâre a giant!â
âPicture?â I say blankly.
âMy assistant grabbed your hockey mug shot off the net. Is it called a mug shot? I donât know. How tall are you? Six-one? Six-two?â
âSix-twoââ
âSix-two, I bet. Iâm five-eight, just a little fella with a big bank account, right?â He guffaws at his own joke. âLetâs grab a seat?â
âSure,â I say, although I doubt he hears me. It seems like Kamal Jain mostly talks to himself, and youâre just along for the ride.
The Ritz bar resembles one of those gentlemenâs cigar clubs you see in the movies. A few round booths span one wall, but for the most part itâs padded leather armchairs tucked throughout the room to provide the illusion of privacy for patrons. Thereâs even a roaring fire in the fireplace, a real one, which crackles as the server leads us past it.
We settle in a pair of chairs in the corner of the room. Kamal orders a vodka tonic. Itâs ten thirty in the morning, but I donât comment on it. No way am I criticizing my potential employerâs morning beverage selection. Also, Iâm a bit starstruck, so speaking might be a challenge in general. Iâve seen this manâs face on the cover of magazines. Iâve followed his career for years. Itâs surreal to be sitting across from someone Iâve admired from afar for so long.
âThank you for coming all this way to see me, Mr. Jain,â I start.
âMr. Jain! We already discussed this, manâcall me Kamal or KJ. âMisterâ gives me the heebie-jeebies. Too authoritarian for my liking.â
âSorry. Kamal.â I decide to be upfront with the guy. I suspect he might appreciate it. âIâm sorry. Iâm almost embarrassed by how hard Iâm fan-boying right now.â
He gives a loud laugh. âOh, trust me, I can relate. One time I met Stan Lee at a comic book convention, and I almost came in my pants. Swear to God, I felt a tingle in the dingle.â
I stifle a snicker. âWell, luckily you were able to control yourself,â I say helpfully.
âBarely! That manâs a legend. Iâm divorcing my parents and hoping heâll adopt me.â
The snicker slips out. I already knew from the interviews Iâve seen with him that Kamal has no brain-to-mouth filter. But experiencing it in person is a whole other spectacle.
âIs that a Marc Jacobs?â He gestures to my shirt. âGreat fit, bomb cuffsâpricey. Hope you didnât clean out your savings account for liâl olâ me. Youâre in college, you canât afford frivolous purchases yet, Colin. Iâll get my assistant to send you a check of reimbursement.â
âOh, thatâs not necessaryââ
âAll right,â he interrupts, âIâve got four more minutes. Letâs do this fast.â
Four minutes? He literally just sat down.
I wonder what itâs like to be SO IMPORTANT that you fly to Boston for a five-minute meeting before having to board the old company jet again.
For the next three minutes, Kamal launches questions at me as if heâs firing an interview rifle. They seem to have no rhyme or reason. Jumping from one topic to another before I can blink and only allowing me about ten seconds to answer before firing again.
Who are your artistic influences?
Whatâs your favorite movie?
Do you eat meat?
Would you be willing to work weekends if needed?
What do you think of No Manâs Sky?
Would you consider yourself a jock?
In fact, the jock issue comes up in at least three questions. I get the distinct sense that Kamal is anti-athlete. Bullied by a jock or two in high school, I suspect.
I canât tell if I answered a single question correctly, or to his liking. Whereas Kamal moves and talks like a tornado, the interview itself is a tsunami, slamming into me without warning and retreating just as fast.
Before I can blink, heâs shooting to his feet and pumping my hand again. âCan you be in Manhattan in a few weeks?â
âUm, Iâm not sure. It depends on my game scheduleââ
âItâs a Thursday nightâyou play on Thursdays?â He frowns. Itâs evident that the biggest strike against me right now is hockey.
âNo, butâ¦â I wrinkle my forehead. âWhatâs in Manhattan?â Have I gotten the job? Am I supposed to start working that day? My cover letter clearly stated I couldnât start until after graduation.
âIâm hosting a fundraiser at the Heyward Plaza Hotel. Itâs to raise awareness for autism. No, itâs a kids-with-leukemia event. Autism is in April,â he babbles. âApril Autism Awarenessâmy fucking team loves their alliteration. Iâve invited the other candidates Iâm considering. Only three others now. Two didnât impress me in the face-to-face.â
And I did? Iâm legit baffled. I canât fathom how he was able to judge me one way or the other, given the length of the interview and the absurdity of his questions.
âItâs between the four of you now. The leukemia event will let me gauge how you network.â
Aw crap. Iâm not good at networking. At all.
âPlus, itâll be fun as fuck. Open bar, lots of ladies. You have a plus one if youâve got a girl at home, but I recommend leaving her at said homeâ¦â He winks, and I hide my distaste.
Itâs no secret that Kamal is a womanizer. According to an article I read, he almost married his college sweetheart about ten years ago but didnât go through with it because she refused to sign a prenup. Since then, heâs been photographed âcanoodlingâ with a Leonardo DiCaprio-amount of supermodels, along with several actresses and heiresses.
âMy assistant will email you the invitation. If you donât RSVP, Iâll assume youâre removing yourself from the running.â He slaps my shoulder. âBut nobody is that stupid, soâ¦â He grins widely. âIâll see you next month.â
He tornadoes out of the bar in another blur of motion, leaving me standing there alone. Two seconds later, the server returns with a tray holding Kamalâs vodka and my coffee.
She stares at me in confusion. âOh. Your party had to leave? Do you stillâ¦?â She lifts the tray slightly. âThe tabâs already been paid.â
I look at the coffee cup, then at the glass tumbler. Screw it. Who cares if itâs early.
I reach for the vodka tonic and down it in one long swig.
âFive minutes,â I tell my friends later that night. Weâre all jammed in a booth at Maloneâs. Directly under a speaker too, which means I have to raise my voice to be heard over the Drake track blasting in the bar. âIt lasted five minutes. I checked my watch.â
âTime is money,â says Hollis.
âI donât even know how the interview went,â I say with a loud groan. âSeriously. I got no indication one way or the other if he even liked me.â
âOf course he did,â Summer says firmly. Sheâs on the other side of the booth, sandwiched between Hunter and Matt Anderson. âHe wouldnât have invited you to the fundraiser if the interview had gone poorly.â
âTime is money,â Hollis says again.
Nate knocks him on the back of the head. âCut it out with that nonsense. Just âcause Fitzy met a billionaire today doesnât make you a billionaire by association.â
âIf he wasnât serious about hiring you, he wouldnât have flown all that way to meet you in person,â Matt points out. âHe woulda sent an underling.â
âNot necessarily,â I counter. âHe was a poor kid from Detroit when he designed his first gameâhe actually stole a lot of the parts he needed to build his own computer. The company is his baby. I think he takes a hands-on role as often as he can.â
âEither way, weâre here tonight to celebrate that you caught the eye of a major game designer and thatâs amazing,â Summer declares. âEven if you donât get the job, itâs an honor that you were even considered.â
âLetâs toast!â Hollis pipes up, raising his pint glass. âTime is money!â
Nobody participates in his toast, but I take pity on the guy and tap my Sam Adams bottle against his glass. It was Hollisâ idea to go out and celebrate, and as much as I donât like being the center of attention, Iâm touched that heâs so supportive of me. I think heâs more thrilled than I am at the possibility that I might snag a position at Orcus Games.
Luckily, the bar isnât too crowded tonight, probably because we didnât have a game. Maloneâs tends to be a Briar hockey bar, though we do get the occasional football player in here. Typically, though, the football guys prefer their off-campus houses to the very pathetic Hastings nightlife. Theyâre notorious for their house parties. Me, I prefer the bar. Means I donât have to clean up after anyone. Plus, the beer is cheap and Friday nights they have half-price wings.
âOh, fine,â Summer relents, raising her glass to Mikeâs. âTime is money!â
She flashes me a wink and a smile, and my insides promptly melt like butter on a hot pan. She has the kind of smile that makes a man want to start writing very bad poetry. Dazzling and genuine and as beautiful as the rest of her.
Iâve been in a permanent state of semi-hardness since we got here. When we left the house, Summer looked like a snowman, bundled up in parka with a fur hood, gloves, scarf, the whole winter shebang. Then we got to Maloneâs, where she unzipped the coat and removed the rest of the gear to reveal skinny jeans that cling to her impossibly long legs and a boner-inducing crop top. The top is a halter-style one that leaves both her back and midriff completely bare. Itâs amazing.
âBrenna texted sheâs here,â Summer says, checking her phone. âDo you guys see her?
âMy Juliet has arrived!â Hollis says happily.
Hunter snickers. âDude. Sheâs not interested.â
âReally? Because I seem to remember her looking very interested when she walked into my bedroom last weekâ¦and looking very satisfied when she walked out of itâ¦â He waggles his eyebrows.
Summer flicks one of Mattâs French fries at Hollis. âOneâno locker room talk, please. TwoâHunterâs right.â
âIâm always right,â Hunter says.
âWhere is sheâ¦â Summer twists around, flashing the bare expanse of her back.
Jesus. Itâs as pretty as the rest of her. Delicate shoulder blades. Smooth, tanned skin.
My semi turns into a fully as I envision kissing my way down the bumps of her spine until my lips reach the top of her perfect ass. Iâd use my hands to squeeze it. Hmmm, and what would I do with my mouthâ¦maybe Iâd nibble on one of her firm, round ass cheeks.
Motherfucker. Thank God the boothâs table covers my lower body, because Iâm hard as a rock now.
âWhy are you guys hidden in the corner?â Brenna demands when she finally appears. âHow am I supposed to ogle all the hot men if I canât see them?â
âYou can ogle me,â Hollis offers.
She ignores him and scopes out the seating situation. When she realizes neither side of the booth can accommodate her, she shrugs and grins at me. âGuess you can be my chair, Fitz.â
My mouth opens to voice a protest, but itâs too late. Sheâs already plopping onto my lap.
Brennaâs eyes widen.
She squeaks in surprise, and I curl my fingers around her hip and shoot her a warning look. If she says one word about the erection pressing against her left butt cheek, Iâll be the target of my teammatesâ ragging until the end of time.
âWhat is it?â Summer asks in concern.
Brenna recovers quickly. âSorry, didnât mean to alarm you. I think Iâm sitting on your phone, Fitz.â She makes a big show of shifting around, then slides her hand in my pocket and pulls out my phone. âThis was digging into my butt.â
âHot,â Hollis says.
She ignores him again, probably because sheâs focused on fishing her own phone out of the pocket of her black hoodie. The sweatshirt is half unzipped, revealing the tops of a black lacy bra. Only Brenna would wear a zip-up with nothing but a bra underneath.
She texts something one-handed, and I stifle a resigned sigh when my phone buzzes. I nonchalantly read the message.
BRENNA: Please please tell me that boner isnât because of me!
The sigh slips out.
When she raises her eyebrow, I quickly type, No.
BRENNA: OK good. It was there before I sat down so I assumed it wasnât me. Just making sure, tho. You and I arenât meant to be, sweet Fitzy. Iâd eat you alive
Ha. Sheâd eat any man alive. And for some reason, I feel the stupid need to justify why I have a boner. Or rather, had, because the poor fella has retreated like a Confederate soldier.
ME: Chick sent me some nudes right b4 u got here. Iâm a guy. Shit happens
BRENNA: Think about Hollis. That always kills my desire
I laugh out loud, causing everyone to look in my direction.
âWhatâs so funny?â Summer asks lightly.
I set the phone on the table and pick up my beer bottle. âNothing. A friend just sent me a funny meme.â
âYour mean your girlfriend?â Summerâs tone doesnât sound as light and airy anymore. A darker note threads through it, something I canât quite decipher.
Nate looks surprised. âYou have a girlfriend? Since when?â
âIs she hot?â asks Hollis.
Brenna wads up a napkin and throws it at him.
He catches it easily. âHey, itâs a valid question.â
She sighs. âItâs never a valid question when it comes from you.â
âSheâs pretty,â Summer says grudgingly.
Iâm a bit lost. I thought this was a joke conversation, but obviously sheâs referring to a real person. Suddenly it occurs to me. âOh, you mean Nora?â
Summerâs mouth flattens in thin line. âYup.â
âYou donât sound like a fan,â Nate says, lips twitching in humor.
She shrugs, reaching for her vodka cranberry. She takes a demure sip, and I see every guy in the booth eyeing her lips. âI think sheâs condescending. And she was rude to me because I admire a Nazi sympathizer.â
Hunter chokes on his beer mid-sip. âIâm sorryâwhat?â
âChanel,â Summer explains. âChanelâs my idol, and Fitzâs girlfriendââ
âNot my girlfriendââ
ââwouldnât shut up in class about how Chanel was a wartime criminal.â Summer juts her chin stubbornly. âAllegedly.â
Nate snorts.
âHow dare she,â Brenna says mockingly.
âWait, this is your girlfriend?â Matt asks me.
âNo. We went on one date,â I say in aggravation. âI doubt thereâll be a second one.â
Summerâs contemplative gaze fixes on me. âNo?â
I shrug. âProbably not.â
Nora and I have texted a few times since we went for drinks, but to be honest Iâm not feeling the click. Noraâs really nice, but the chemistry isnât quite there. Iâm usually a believer that two dates are required before you completely write someone off. People are always nervous on the first date. Maybe Nora was anxious, and thatâs why the conversation felt so stilted.
When she suggested we go out again, I said yes, but I havenât followed up on it. Now Iâm not sure if I will. The fact that I jerk off every morning to fantasies of another girl kinda tells me everything I need to know about my feelings for Nora.
âOkay, clearly our server is never coming back,â Brenna announces, sliding off my lap. âIâm going to order a drink at the bar.â
âIâll come with you,â Summer offers, and Matt gets up to let her out of the booth.
We all turn to admire the two girls as they walk away. Two pairs of skinny jeans means two amazing asses for us to salivate over, and the sleek bare skin of Summerâs back is an added bonus. It means sheâs not wearing a bra, and my mouth turns to sawdust as another dirty image flies into my brainâSummerâs naked tits jiggling softly with each sultry step she takes.
Nate gives a low whistle. âDa-yum. They really are the hottest girls in this place.â
âEveryone wants to kick our asses,â Matt agrees, smiling ruefully.
âEh. We can take them,â Hunter assures him. Thatâs not an exaggeration. Summer and Brenna might be the hottest girls in the bar, but weâre the biggest guys in the bar.
From the corner of my eye, I see the girls approach the counter. Another shadow crosses my peripheral. I glance over and hide a frown. Some guy in a black polo shirt is chatting up Brenna, who touches his forearm and says something that makes him guffaw loudly.
âShe is smokinâ,â Hollis says with a heavy, soul-sucking sigh. His blue eyes are locked on Brenna.
âAw, why so glum, chum?â Nate mocks.
âYeah, you should be wearing a perma-smile because that gorgeous chick actually fooled around with you,â Hunter pipes up. âThatâs probably how Jesus felt when he turned water into wine.â
Matt and Nate snicker.
Hollis flips up his middle finger, but he doesnât offer his characteristic douchebag response. He simply picks up his glass.
I lift one eyebrow. âWhat, youâre not gonna say that it wasnât a miracle because youâre such a stud, et cetera, et cetera?â
Rather than answer, he chugs the rest of his beer, as if he needs the liquid courage to speak his next words.
âGuys. I think maybe she only hooked up with me that night because she was bored.â
Everyone goes dead silent.
Hunterâs the first to laugh. I canât help itâI do too. Then Nate and Matt join in.
Hollis buries his face in his hands. When he lifts his head, heâs scowling. âYou guys are the most unsupportive assholes Iâve ever met.â
âDude, she cuts you down every time she sees you,â Hunter finally says, but I donât miss the way his tone has softened. Heâs trying to let Mike down gently.
I feel bad letting Hunter do this alone, so I speak up too. âItâs not gonna happen,â I tell Hollis.
âIt might,â he protests.
We all look to the bar again. Brenna flips her long, dark hair over one shoulder. Sheâs still with the frat boy. I can tell heâs in a frat not just because of the polo shirt, but because a couple of his friends have joined him, and one is wearing a hoodie with the Sigma Chi logo on it. The other one is talking to Summer.
I notice Hunterâs shoulders stiffening as he watches Summer and the guy. Luckily, the bartender finally gives the girls their drinks. I didnât see any money exchanging hands, which tells me the male barkeep is as enamored with them as everyone else in this bar.
They return with a second vodka cranberry in Summerâs hand, and a bottle of Harpoon in Brennaâs. This time Brenna squishes in beside and not on me, while Summer settles next to Matt on the end instead of between him and Hunter. Hunter flicks a contemplative look at her.
âFrat boys are the worst,â Brenna tells us as she raises her beer to her red-painted lips. âThey have a sense of entitlement that really pisses me off. Even the poor ones.â
âAre there poor ones?â Nate cracks.
âOf course. Anyone can pledge.â She rolls her eyes. âYou just have a better chance of getting in if youâre rich.â
Summer shrugs. âThose guys werenât too bad.â
Jealousy stabs at my gut. Luckily, Brennaâs reply ensures that I donât have to worry about Summer going home with one of those dudes.
âPolo Douche tried to slide his hand in my shirt and cup my boob, Summer.â
Her eyebrows fly up. âSeriously? Oh my God. Gross.â She shakes her head. âI thought the one in the salmon shirt was really nice.â
âPink,â Hollis grumbles at her. âJust fucking say pink, Summer.â
âThere are different shades of pink, Mike.â
âYeah? Name ten.â
âFine.â Like a pro, she starts listing hues. âSalmon, rose, blush, fuchsia, watermelon, flamingo, cerise, bubble gum, magentaââ
Sheâs on number nine when a blur of red and yellow rushes up to the booth.
I barely have time to blink before a pale arm flings out and a waterfall of liquid rains down on us. The intended target was Brenna, who receives the bulk of it, but Hollis, Nate, and I are victims of secondary splashing.
Brennaâs jaw falls open as a furious blonde glares down at her. âWhat theââ
âKeep your hands off my man!â