The Chase: Chapter 19
The Chase: A Grumpy Sunshine College Hockey Romance (Briar U Book 1)
In the past, Iâve felt judged by my female friends. My circle in high school was super competitive, which inevitably led to trash-talking, backstabbing and outright in-your-face betrayal. Even with the girls I (more or less) trusted, Iâd try not to share every aspect of my life. Thatâs probably just a good rule to live by, though. Always keep part of yourself hidden.
Fitz is very good at that, but he does it to the extreme. And me, I havenât mastered it completely. Iâll still share certain personal details with my friends, like whether I kissed someone. Who Iâm interested in. Whether I enjoyed or hated a date.
But admitting that I went from essentially giving one guy an over-the-pants hand job to agreeing to go out with another one? Um. No. If Iâd confessed that to any of my high school friends or Brown sorority sisters, the slut rumors would already be traveling across campus. And donât get me started on all the sub-tweets and social media bullshit Iâd have to deal with.
Typically, Iâd have no problem confiding in my mom, but this time Iâm too embarrassed to confess what happened. How do I even phrase it? Hey Mom, I put my hand on a guyâs dick yesterday. Discuss.
But for the first time in my life, I think I actually found a friend with whom Iâm comfortable providing all the dirty little details that other friends would pass judgment on. I have the utmost confidence that Brenna can be trusted and wonât try to make me feel bad about my actions in some catty, passive-aggressive way.
So, I donât regret telling her everything.
I do, however, regret telling her while weâre sitting in public.
âYou touched Fitzyâs dick?!â she shouts.
Awesome. I probably shouldâve called her after it happened last night. But I needed to mull. And I was mulling this morning too. And this afternoon. It wasnât until we arrived at the Briar arena tonight that I decided I need advice. Brenna and I donât even ask each other to go to home games anymore. We just assume that we are. Tonight I get to meet some of her friends, though, which Iâm excited about. Weâre meeting them at Maloneâs for drinks after the game, and sheâs promised me theyâre really cool chicks.
âWould you keep your voice down?â I order, looking around to make sure nobody is paying attention to us.
âHow on earth did that happen?â she demands. âYou left the bar to check if he was okay after the fight. Did that require grabbing his junk? Was it under the boxers?â She gasps. âWas there sucking?â
I choke on a wave of laughter. âOver the pants. And I told you, it was just touching. Maybe some rubbing.â
Her bottom lip sticks out. âSo no bare dick?â
âNo bare dick.â
âPity. I bet his bare dick is phenomenal.â
The girls in front of us titter, alerting me to the fact that weâve uttered the phrase âbare dickâ one too many times. The braver of the two looks over her shoulder at us, and I give her a sheepish smile.
She smiles shyly in return. I think theyâre both freshmen. They still have that air of innocence to them.
Beside me, Brenna lowers her voice. âHow was it?â
âIt was intense.â
âI meant size, Summer. How was the dick? Big? Small? Long? Thick? Happy? Sad?â
I bury my face in my lap, shaking with laughter. When Iâve calmed down, I ask, âHow can a dick be sad?â
âTrust me, Iâve seen some sad sausage.â She waves a hand, flashing her red-painted nails. âFine, we can discuss measurements later. What was intense about it?â
âI donât know.â I gulp as I recall the naked passion glittering in his eyes. âIt just was. But then it got annoying.â
She frowns. âHow so?â
âHe kept going on about how he wants me but doesnât want to want me. It wasâ¦â I think it over. âInsulting,â I conclude.
âIâll bet. You donât want Mr. Resistance. You want a guy who shouts from the rooftops how lucky he is to have you.â
âExactly.â I love that weâre on the same page about this. I feel like too many girls fail to remember one vital truth: we deserve someone who gives us one hundred percent. Half-assed effort isnât effort. Half-assed love isnât love. If a man isnât all in, then we need to be all out.
âSo, yeah. It got weird, and then Hunter interrupted us, and Fitz drove off.â I avoid her gaze. âAnd then I agreed to go on a date with Hunter next Saturday.â
âOn Valentineâs Day?â
âItâs Valentineâs Day?!â
My screech causes every single person in our vicinity to stare in our direction. Brenna quickly waves her hand again. âNothing to see, folks. Enjoy the game,â she chirps.
âOh my God, do you think he knew it was Valentineâs Day when he asked me out?â I hiss.
âI doubt it. Most guys donât pay attention to that kind of stuff.â
âSheâs right,â a familiar voice confirms.
I turn in time to see Brooks Weston flopping down in an empty seat behind us. Jake Connelly is with him, lowering his broad body onto the neighboring seat. Jakeâs dark hair is swept away from his chiseled face, and I canât tell if itâs windblown or slicked back with gel, but either way it looks hot. Both guys wear hoodies conspicuously lacking the Harvard logo or colors.
Because thatâs not suspicious.
Sharing my thoughts, Brenna flicks a cagey glance at them. âScoping out the competition?â
Weston nods, unabashed. âAbsolutely. We play you again in a couple of weeks.â He winks. âCorrectionâwe beat you again in a couple of weeks.â
âYou wish. Weâve got home-ice advantage,â Brenna reminds him.
Weston simply grins.
She glances at Jake. âWhat about you? Donât feel like taunting us about how youâre going to kick our asses?â
He cocks a brow. âWe are going to kick your asses. I donât see the point in rubbing it in.â Jake focuses on me. âAnd to answer your question, I doubt he knew the date. V-Day isnât something we usually mark on our calendars, unless weâve got a girlfriend.â
âGirlfriend?â Brenna echoes, her tone dry. âFrom what I hear, you donât know the meaning of that word.â
The smile he gives her is seductive as hell. âYou been asking around about me?â
âNope. Your puck bunnies just like to talk.â She shrugs. âApparently you never go out with the same girl twice.â
âSo?â Somehow, heâs able to inject cockiness, sheepishness, and pure sex into one measly syllable.
I speak up before Brenna can. âDo you think I should give him a heads-up about what day it is?â I ask the boys.
âDepends,â Connelly replies.
âOn what?â Iâve completely abandoned the game being played on the rink below us. I twist around in my seat, desperate for some male advice.
Jake licks his bottom lip. Iâm not sure if itâs intentional or if his lips are dry. But again, looks hot either way.
Itâs a bit alarming, this strange fascination I have with the guy. I donât want him for myself, but Iâm wholly aware of the sex appeal he radiates. Maybe Iâm feeding off Brennaâs energy? Despite her constant mocking of him, Iâve noticed that her gaze always lingers on him a bit longer than necessary.
âDepends on whether you want to fuck him or not,â Jake explains.
âTrue,â Weston agrees. âIf you want to bang him, donât tell him. Chances are heâll bail if he knows the date. Unless you want him to bail?â
âI donât know,â I confess.
Thereâs no denying that Hunter is incredibly attractive. Heâs easy to talk to, he makes me laugh, turns me on. But Fitz does something to my stomach. Saying he gives me butterflies would be an understatement. And he does something to my heart too. Damned if I can tell you what that something is, but rest assured he does it for me.
Crap. Maybe agreeing to go out with Hunter was a mistake. Here I am preaching about deserving someone who gives me one hundred percentâwell, doesnât Hunter deserve the same?
As long as Fitz is on my mind, even if heâs only taking up a teeny corner of it, is it fair of me to date someone else?
I donât say this out loud, because I donât want to reveal to these Harvard guys that Iâm torn between my two roommates. But deep down I suspect thereâs not much of a competition there. I wanted Fitz from the moment I met him last year. I think those might actually be the first words I spoke to Deanâs girlfriend. I pointed at Fitz and said, âI want him.â
And this isnât about me being a spoiled brat and needing a shiny new toy. Fitz isnât a pair of Louboutin pumps or a Valentino clutch.
And itâs not about me wanting him simply because heâs been making me chase him.
And while it may have begun as a physical kind of wanting, thatâs changed.
I think I might want more now.
Fuck.
The game is surprisingly low scoring. Weâre playing Eastwood, our conference rival, and theyâre damn good at keeping the puck out of their zone. Whenever the Briar guys cross the blue line, they need to take full advantage of the opportunity, and they havenât been doing it so far in the first two periods. Plus, Eastwood has this goon on their team thatâs driving me nuts. Heâs already instigated several scrums, but nothing to warrant the attention of the refs.
âMan after my own heart,â Weston cracks from behind us. He says this after the goon once again gets a few good shoves in on a Briar player before skating away.
âFigures youâd fall in love. A goon always recognizes the goon in another,â Brenna says sweetly.
Weston reaches out and ruffles her hair good-naturedly. âI wear my goon badge with pride, babe.â
On the ice, the Eastwood goon just stole the puck from Matt Anderson after slamming the defenseman against the boards. He takes possession and flies toward our net, his teammates skating fast in tow.
âUgh! I hate this guy!â Annoyance has me jumping to my feet. âGo away!â I shout at him. âNobody wants you here!â
Jake and Brenna snort in unison, then frown at each other as if any sort of united reaction is unacceptable.
Weston taps the back of my knee. âHey, you know who that is, right?â
âNo.â I canât see his jersey number or his name. I just know I hate him.
âItâs Casper Cassidy. From Greenwich Prep,â he replies, naming the high school that my brother Dean attended.
I went to Greenwich for freshman year, but I transferred to Roselawn because I couldnât handle the workload. Greenwich places a lot more importance on academics than Roselawn does. In fact, in the prep-school circuit, Roselawn has a rep for being a party school. The kids are rich enough to buy their way into college, so nobody is too concerned about getting straight As.
Despite the fact that my dad pulled strings to get me into Briar, Iâm at least proud to say I was admitted to Brown all on my own. My GPA wasnât something to write home about, but I made up for it with my extra-curriculars and community service.
âAre you kidding me?â I marvel, trying to spot the goon again. There are too many jerseys battling it out behind the net. âThatâs Casper Cassidy? Did he have some sort of growth spurt? He looks enormous.â
âNo, he was always that big,â Weston argues.
I twist in my seat again. âI played 7 Minutes in Heaven with him at a Greenwich party, and he fingered me in a closet. Trust me, he was not that big.â
Connelly starts to laugh. âYouâre really something else, Di Laurentis. No filter whatsoever.â He tips his head. âDoesnât embarrass you at all to admit that, huh?â
âNope.â
âWhy should she be embarrassed?â Brenna challenges. âWhat, you donât think girls are allowed to hook up?â
Jakeâs mouth hitches in a wry grin. âJensen, I think no matter what I say, youâd still argue the point.â
âThatâs not true.â
âYouâre arguing right now.â
âBecause youâre annoying me.â
âWhat a coincidence,â he mocks. âYouâre annoying me too.â
A collective gasp from the crowd interrupts their bickering. Iâd turned away, so Iâm not certain what happened, but I stumble to my feet when I glimpse the blood.
âOh shit, thatâs Fitz,â Brenna says. âWhat the hell happened?â I guess she hadnât been watching, either.
The freshmen in the row ahead help us out. âHe took a shot to the face,â one girl says.
âWhat!â My heart jumps to my throat.
âHe laid out to block Cassidyâs shot,â Weston explains. âPuck was deflected.â
âBut heâs wearing a visor,â I protest.
âVisorâs probably what cut him,â Jake says wryly.
âHeâs fine,â Weston says. âDoesnât look too bad.â
Now that the whistle has been blown and the players have skated away from the net, I can clearly see the red drops staining the white surface. Itâs not as much blood as I thought. But still.
My panicked gaze seeks out Fitz. Heâs on the Briar bench. His head is being tipped back by a woman I assume is the team doctor. Sheâs pressing a square of gauze to the outer edge of his right eyebrow. Not his eye, then. Relief flows through me.
Fitz is arguing with the doc. His mouth is moving, and his body practically vibrates with frustration. He wants to go back on the ice, but the woman keeps shaking her head. She readjusts the gauze, and my stomach churns when I glimpse the river of blood pouring down the side of his face.
âHe needs stitches,â Brenna says unhappily.
Fitz flings a gloved hand toward the scoreboard, I assume to point out the game clock. There are eight minutes left in the third. Clearly heâs determined to keep playing. The doc once again shakes her head, unyielding. Then Coach Jensen shouts something at them, and Fitz stands up.
With my heart still lodged in my throat, I watch as heâs ushered away. He slams an angry glove against the boards before disappearing in the tunnel that leads to the locker rooms.
Iâm already marching toward the aisle. âLater, spies,â I call to the Harvard boys. To Brenna, I issue a sharp order. âCome on, Bee.â
I expect her to object, insist we need to watch the rest of the game, but she surprises me by following me down the steps. Outside the rink doors, I gaze imploringly at her. âCan you sneak me into the locker room? Or the medical room? Whatever you call it. I want to make sure heâs okay.â
She nods, her eyes softening. âSure. Iâve got you.â
In the hallway, she takes the lead, while I scramble to keep up with her brisk pace. When we reach a door that requires a keycard, Brenna whips one out of her purse and holds it to the scanner. It turns green and off we go. Being the coachâs daughter comes with perks, apparently.
The doctor whoâd been arguing with Fitz exits the locker room at the same time we approach it.
âHey, Alex,â Brenna greets her. âHowâs Fitzy?â
âPhysically? Heâs fine. I stitched him up.â The womanâAlexârubs the bridge of her nose. Sheâs visibly aggravated. âBut his attitude could use an adjustment. Your dad said heâs done for the night.â
Brenna nods. âMakes sense. Weâre ahead by two.â She gestures to me. âYou mind if Summer pops in to see him?â
Alex scrutinizes me for a moment. Sheâs a short, stocky woman with sharp features and a narrow jaw, but thereâs kindness in her eyes. Finally she nods. âBe quick,â she tells me. To Brenna she says, âIf your father asks, I never saw either of you.â
âYou rock, Alex.â Once the team doc disappears around the corner, Brenna gives me a cheeky grin. âIâll stand out here and keep watch. If someone comes, Iâll hoot like an owl.â
I swallow a laugh. âSolid plan,â I reply, reaching for the door handle.
When I enter the locker room, I find it completely empty. No Fitz, only sleek benches, padded lockers, and a faint whiff of sweat and old socks. In all honesty, the room smells a hell of a lot better than other locker rooms Iâve been in. Briarâs hockey facility boasts the kind of ventilation system other teams probably have wet dreams about.
The sound of rushing water captures my attention. I glance toward the wide doorway across the room. Wisps of steam float out of it, but I donât see any light. Thereâs nothing but darkness beyond that doorway.
âFitz?â I say warily.
A beat.
Two.
Then his equally wary, albeit muffled, voice replies with, âSummer?â
âYeah, itâs me. Iâm coming in, okay?â
I cross the threshold and am greeted by a cloud of steam. It takes a second for my eyes to adjust to both the darkness and the haze, for me to make out the bulky figure in the stall nearest the door. Iâm not sure why I donât turn on the light. I guess because he didnât. If he wants to take a shower in the dark, who am I to stop him?
I inch my way toward the stall. In the shadows I glimpse the swirl of his tats and the ridges of his abs. Cotton fills my mouth when it occurs to me that heâs naked. The only barrier between Fitzâs naked body and myself is a short swinging door. All I have to do is nudge that partition, and Iâd get an eyeful ofâ
âWhat are you doing in here?â His gruff voice interrupts my thoughts.
âI wanted to make sure youâre all right. Howâs the eye?â
âFine,â he grunts.
He turns the shower off and steps toward the little door. My heart rate triples. Water drips down his bare chest, rippling over his tattoo and trickling between his defined pecs. One muscular arm reaches out, and I forget how to breathe. Is heâ
Reaching for the towel on the hook behind my head? Yes, he certainly is.
I gulp hard, hoping to bring some moisture to my arid mouth. Fitz wraps the towel around his waist and exits the stall, but rather than go into the other room, he stays put. We stand there in the darkness, facing each other. The air is still hot and muggy from the steam, but now itâs also thick with tension.
The sexual kind.
The âholy shit, this guy is looking at me like heâs already inside meâ kind.
I try to ease backward, but my knees knock together. I honestly didnât think it through when I decided to check on him. Heâd just left the ice in the middle of a fast-paced, demanding game. Heâs in pain because he took a puck to the face. Heâs probably still hopped up on adrenaline.
Heâs dangerous.
I donât fear for my safety. But I fear for my sanity.
Shadows dance across his masculine features. I catch a glimpse of his tongue dragging over his bottom lip. Long fingers scraping over his wet hair. Then he speaks in a gravelly voice that sends a hot shiver up my spine.
âYou should leave.â
My pulse hammers in my throat. Itâs all I hear, the relentless thump-thump of my heart. âWhat if I donât?â I find myself asking, and we both hear the breathy note in each word.
He moves closer. Slowly. Deliberately. Until heâs completely backed me up against the tiled wall.
âIf you donât go? Then Iâll probably kiss you,â he says bluntly.
My mouth is so dry I canât answer him. I swallow, once, twice. Itâs pointless, though. Thereâs nothing to swallow. No saliva, just the sawdust thatâs coating my throat. My heart beats even faster. I swear itâs going to give out on me any second.
He dips his head, and his next words rumble in my ear. Low and silky. âWhat do you think, Summer? You want me to kiss you?â
Itâs the sexiest question Iâve ever heard in my life, voiced by the sexiest guy Iâve ever met in my life. I find the strength to lift my head so I can meet his eyes. Itâs too dark to fully make out his expression, but I donât need to. I know exactly what heâs feeling right now. Iâm feeling it too.
Hot, uncontrollable lust.
âYes or no,â he whispers.
I finally find my voice. âYes.â