The Chase: Chapter 2
The Chase: A Grumpy Sunshine College Hockey Romance (Briar U Book 1)
âDance with me?â
I want to say no.
But I also want to say yes.
I call this the Summer Dilemmaâthe frustrating, polar reactions this green-eyed, golden-haired goddess sparks in me.
Fuck yes and hell no.
Get naked with her. Run far, far away from her.
âThanks, but I donât like to dance.â Iâm not lying. Dancingâs the worst.
Besides, when it comes to Summer Di Laurentis, my flight instinct always wins out.
âYouâre no fun, Fitzy.â She makes a tsking noise, drawing my gaze to her lips. Full, pink, and glossy, with a tiny mole above the left side of her mouth.
Itâs an extremely hot mouth.
Hell, everything about Summer is hot. Sheâs hands down the best-looking girl in the bar, and every dude in our vicinity is either staring enviously or glowering at me for being with her.
Not that Iâm with her. Weâre not together. Iâm just standing next to her, with two feet of space between us. Which Summer keeps trying to bridge by leaning closer to me.
In her defense, she practically has to scream in my ear for me to hear her over the electronic dance music blasting through the room. I hate EDM, and I donât like these kinds of bars, the ones with a dance floor and deafening music. Why the subterfuge? Just call your establishment a nightclub, if thatâs what you want it to be. The owner of Gunnerâs Pub shouldâve called this place Gunnerâs Club. Then I couldâve turned right around when I saw the sign and spared myself the shattered eardrums.
Not for the first time tonight, I curse my friends for dragging me to Brooklyn for New Yearâs Eve. Iâd way rather be at home, drinking a beer or two and watching the ball drop on TV. Iâm low-key like that.
âYou know, they warned me you were a curmudgeon, but I didnât believe it until now.â
âWhoâs they?â I ask suspiciously. âAnd hey, wait. Iâm not a curmudgeon.â
âHmmm, youâre rightâthe term is kind of dated. Letâs go with Groucho.â
âLetâs not.â
âNo-Fun Police? Is that better?â Her expression is pure innocence. âSeriously, Fitz, what do you have against fun?â
An unwitting smile breaks free. âGot nothing against fun.â
âAll right. Then what do you have against me?â she challenges. âBecause every time I try talking to you, you run away.â
My smile fades. I shouldnât be surprised that sheâs calling me out in public. Weâve had a whopping total of two encounters, but thatâs plenty of time for me to know sheâs the type who thrives on drama.
I hate drama.
âGot nothing against you, either.â With a shrug, I ease away from the bar, prepared to do what sheâs just accused me ofârun.
A frustrated gleam fills her eyes. Theyâre big and green, the same shade as her older brother Deanâs eyes. And Deanâs the reason I force myself to stay put. Heâs a good friend of mine. I canât be a jackass to his sister, both out of respect for him, and for fear of my well-being. Iâve been on the ice when Deanâs gloves come off. Heâs got a mean right hook.
âI mean it,â I say roughly. âI have nothing against you. Weâre cool.â
âWhat? I didnât hear the last part,â she says over the music.
I dip my mouth toward her ear, and Iâm surprised that I barely have to bend my neck. Sheâs taller than the average chick, five-nine or ten, and since Iâm six-two and used to towering over women, I find this refreshing.
âI said weâre cool,â I repeat, but I misjudged the distance between my lips and Summerâs ear. The two collide, and I feel a shiver run up her frame.
I shiver too, because my mouth is way too close to hers. She smells like heaven, some fascinating combo of flowers and jasmine and vanilla andâsandalwood, maybe? A man could get high on that fragrance. And donât get me started on her dress. White, strapless, short. So short it barely grazes her lower thighs.
God fucking help me.
I quickly straighten up before I do something stupid, like kiss her. Instead, I take a huge gulp of my beer. Only it goes down the wrong pipe, and I start coughing like itâs the eighteenth century and Iâm a tuberculosis patient.
Smooth move.
âYou okay?â
When the coughing fit subsides, I find those green eyes dancing at me. Her lips are curved in a devilish smile. She knows exactly what got me flustered.
âFine,â I croak, just as three very plastered guys lumber up to the bar and bump into Summer.
She stumbles, and the next thing I know thereâs a gorgeous, sweet-smelling woman in my arms.
She laughs and grabs my hand. âCâmon, letâs get out of this crowd before it leaves bruises.â
For some reason, I let her lead me away.
We end up at a high table near the railing that separates the barâs main room from the small, shitty dance floor. A quick look around reveals that most of my friends are drunk off their asses.
Mike Hollis, my roommate, is grinding up on a cute brunette who doesnât seem to mind in the slightest. Heâs the one who insisted we make the drive to Brooklyn instead of staying in the Boston area. He wanted to spend New Yearâs with his older brother Brody, who disappeared the moment we got here. I guess the girl is Hollisâ consolation prize for getting ditched by his brother.
Our other roommate, Hunter, is dancing with three girls. Yup, three. Theyâre all but licking his face off, and Iâm pretty sure one has a hand down his pants. Hunter, of course, is loving it.
What a difference a year makes. Last season he was uneasy about all the female attention, said it made him feel a bit sleazy. Now, it appears heâs perfectly cool taking advantage of the perks that come with playing hockey for Briar University. And trust me, thereâre plenty of perks.
Letâs get realâathletes are the most fuckable guys on most college campuses. If youâre at a football school, chances are thereâs a line of jersey chasers begging to blow the quarterback. Basketball school? The groupie pool doubles and triples in size when March Madness comes around. And at Briar, with a hockey team that has a dozen Frozen Four championships under its belt and more nationally televised games than any other college in the country? The hockey players are gods.
Except for me, that is. I play hockey, yes. Iâm good at it, definitely. But âgodâ and âjockâ and âsuperstarâ are terms Iâve never been comfortable with. Deep down, Iâm a huge nerd. A nerd masquerading as a god.
âHunterâs got game.â Summer is studying Hunterâs entourage.
The DJ has switched the beats from electronic garbage to Top 40 hits. Blessedly, heâs also turned down the volume, probably in anticipation of the nearing countdown. Thirty more minutes and I can make my escape.
âHe does,â I agree.
âIâm impressed.â
âYeah?â
âDefinitely. Greenwich boys are usually secret prudes.â
I wonder how she knows Hunter is from Connecticut. I donât think Iâve seen them exchange more than a few words tonight. Maybe Dean told her? Or maybeâ
Or maybe it doesnât frickinâ matter how she knows, because if it did matter, then that means the weird prickly sensation in my chest is jealousy. And that, frankly, is unacceptable.
Summer does another visual sweep of the crowd and blanches. âOh my God. Gross.â She cups her hands to create a microphone, shouting, âKeep your tongue in your own mouth, Dicky!â
Laughter sputters out of me. No way Dean couldâve heard her, but I guess he possesses some sort of sibling radar, because he abruptly pries his lips off his girlfriendâs. His head swivels in our direction. When he spots Summer, he gives her the finger.
She blows a kiss in return.
âIâm so glad Iâm an only child,â I remark.
She grins at me. âNaah, youâre missing out. Tormenting my brothers is one of my favorite pastimes.â
âIâve noticed.â She calls Dean âDicky,â a childhood nickname that a nicer person would have stopped using years ago.
On the other hand, Deanâs nickname for Summer is âBoogers,â so maybe sheâs right to torture him.
âDicky deserves to be tormented tonight. I canât believe weâre partying in Brooklyn,â she grumbles. âWhen he said we were ringing in the New Year in the city, I assumed he meant Manhattanâbut then he and Allie dragged me to horrible Brooklyn instead. I feel duped.â
I snicker. âWhatâs wrong with Brooklyn? Allieâs dad lives around here, doesnât he?â
Summer nods. âTheyâre spending the day with him tomorrow. And to answer your questionâwhat isnât wrong with Brooklyn? It used to be cool, before it got overrun by hipsters.â
âHipsters still exist? I thought we were done with that nonsense.â
âGod, no. And donât let anyone tell you otherwise.â She mock shudders. âThis whole area is still teeming with them.â
She says âthemâ as if theyâre carriers for a gruesome, incurable disease. She might have a point, thoughâa thorough examination of the crowd reveals a large amount of vintage attire, painfully skinny jeans on men, retro accessories paired with shiny new tech, and lots and lots of beards.
I rub my own beard, wondering if it places me in the hipster camp. Iâve been rocking the scruff all winter, mostly because itâs good insulation from the bitter weather weâve been experiencing. Last week we got hit by one of the worst Norâeasters Iâve ever seen. I almost froze my balls off.
âTheyâre soâ¦â She searches for the right word. âDouchey.â
I have to laugh. âNot all of them.â
âMost of them,â she says. âLike, see that girl over there? With the braids and the bangs? Thatâs a thousand-dollar Prada cardigan she has onâand sheâs paired it with a five-dollar tank she probably got at the Salvation Army, and those weird tasseled shoes they sell in Chinatown. Sheâs a total fraud.â
I furrow my brow. âHow do you know the cardigan cost a grand?â
âBecause I have the same one in gray. Besides, I can pick Prada out of any lineup.â
I donât doubt that. She was probably deposited into a designer onesie the moment she popped out of her motherâs womb. Summer and Dean come from a filthy-rich family. Their parents are successful lawyers who were independently wealthy before they got hitched, so now theyâre like a mega-rich super-duo who could probably buy a small country without even making a dent in their bank account. I stayed at their Manhattan penthouse a couple times, and it was goddamn unreal. They also have a mansion in Greenwich, a beach house, and a bunch of other properties around the globe.
Me, I can barely make the rent on the townhouse I share with two other dudes. Weâre still on the hunt for a fourth roommate, though, so my share will go down once we fill that empty room.
Iâm not gonna lieâthe fact that Summer lives in penthouses and owns clothes that cost thousands of dollars is slightly unsettling.
âAnyway, hipsters suck, Fitzy. No thank you. Iâd way ratherâoooh! I love this song! I had backstage passes to her show at The Garden last June and it was amazing.â
The ADHD is strong with this one, my friend.
I hide a smile as Summer completely drops her death-to-all-hipsters tirade and starts bobbing her head to a Beyoncé song. Her high ponytail swishes wildly.
âAre you sure you donât want to dance?â she pleads.
âPositive.â
âYouâre the worst. Iâll be right back.â
I blink, and sheâs no longer beside me. Blink again, and I spot her on the dance floor, arms thrust in the air, ponytail flipping, hips moving to the beat.
Iâm not the only one watching her. A sea of covetous eyes ripples in the direction of the beautiful girl in the white dress. Summer either doesnât notice or doesnât care. She dances alone, without an ounce of self-consciousness. She is completely comfortable in her own skin.
âJesus,â Hunter Davenport rasps, coming up to the table. Like most of the men around us, heâs staring at Summer with an expression that could only be described as pure hunger.
âGuess she hasnât forgotten any of those old cheerleading moves.â Hunter slants another appreciative look in Summerâs direction. When he notices my quizzical face, he adds, âShe was a cheerleader in high school. Member of the dance team too.â
When did he and Summer engage in a conversation long enough for him to learn these tidbits?
The uncomfortable prickling sensation returns, this time traveling up my spine.
Itâs not jealousy, though.
âCheerleading and dance, huh?â I ask lightly. âShe tell you that?â
âWe went to the same prep school,â he reveals.
âNo shit.â
âYeah. I was a year behind her, but trust me, every hetero guy with a working dick was familiar with Summer Di Laurentisâs cheer routines.â
Iâll bet.
He claps me on the shoulder. âGonna hit the head and then grab another drink. Want anything?â
âIâm good.â
Not sure why, but Iâm relieved that Hunterâs not around when Summer returns to the table, her cheeks flushed from exertion.
Despite the frigid temperatures outside, she chose not to wear tights or pantyhose, and, as my old man would say, sheâs got legs for days. Long, smooth, gorgeous legs that would probably look so hot wrapped around my waist. And the white dress sets off her deep, golden tan, giving her a glowing, healthy vibe thatâs almost hypnotizing.
âSo, youâreâ¦â I clear my throat. âYouâre coming to Briar this semester, huh?â I ask, trying to distract myself from her smokinâ body.
She gives an enthusiastic nod. âI am!â
âAre you going to miss Providence?â I know she spent her freshman and sophomore years at Brown, plus one semester of junior year, which makes up half her college career. If it were me, Iâd hate starting over at a new school.
But Summer shakes her head. âNot really. I wasnât a fan of the town, or the school. I only went there because my parents wanted me to attend an Ivy League and I didnât get into Harvard or Yale, their alma maters.â She shrugs. âDid you want to go to Briar?â
âDefinitely. I heard phenomenal things about the Fine Arts program. And, obviously, the hockey program is stellar. They offered me a full ride to play, and I get to study something Iâm really into, soâ¦â I offer a shrug in return.
âThatâs so important. Doing what you love, I mean. A lot of people donât have that opportunity.â
Curiosity flickers through me. âWhat do you love to do?â
Her answering grin is self-deprecating. âIâll let you know when I figure it out.â
âCome on, thereâs got to be something youâre passionate about.â
âWell, Iâve been passionate about stuffâinterior design, psychology, ballet, swimming. The problem is, it never sticks. I lose interest quickly. I havenât found a long-term passion yet, I suppose.â
Her candidness surprises me a bit. She seems way more down-to-earth tonight compared to our previous encounters.
âIâm thirsty,â she announces.
I suppress the urge to roll my eyes, since Iâm sure thatâs code for go buy me a drink. Only, itâs not. With a naughty smile, she swipes my beer from my hand.
Our fingers brush briefly, and I pretend not to notice the spark of heat that races up my arm. I watch as she wraps her fingers around the Bud Light bottle and takes a long sip.
Sheâs got small hands, delicate fingers. Itâd be a challenge to draw them, to capture the intriguing combination of fragility and surety. Her fingernails are short, rounded and have those white French tips or whatever you call âem, a style that seems way too plain for someone like Summer. Iâd expect extra-long talons painted pink or some other pastel.
âYouâre doing it again.â Thereâs accusation in her tone. A bit of aggravation too.
âDoing what?â
âZoning me out. Curmudgeoning.â
âThatâs not a word.â
âSays who?â She takes another sip of beer.
My gaze instantly fixes on her lips.
Dammit, I gotta stop this. Sheâs not my type. The first time I met her, everything about her screamed sorority girl. The designer clothes, the waves and waves of blonde hair, a face that could stop traffic.
Thereâs no way Iâm her type, either. I have no idea why sheâs spending New Yearâs Eve talking to a scruffy, tatted-up goon like me.
âSorry. Iâm not very chatty. Donât take it personally, okay?â I steal my bottle back.
âOkay, I wonât. But if you donât feel like talking, at least entertain me in other ways.â She plants her hands on her hips. âI propose we make out.â