The Chase: Chapter 3
The Chase: A Grumpy Sunshine College Hockey Romance (Briar U Book 1)
Once again, I choke mid-sip.
Oh, sweet Jesus. Did she seriously just say that?
I glance over, and sheâs got one perfect eyebrow arched, awaiting my response. Yup. She said it.
âUhâ¦you want to, umâ¦â I cough again.
âOh relax!â Summer laughs. âIt was a joke.â
I narrow my eyes at her. âA joke,â I echo. âSo you have zero interest in making out with me?â Hell, why am I challenging her? My dick twitches against my zipper, a warning that I shouldnât be entertaining the idea of kissing Summer.
âI mean, it wouldnât be the end of the world if we did,â she says with a wink. âAnd itâs always nice to have someone to kiss at midnight. I was mostly joking, though. I just like making you blush.â
âI donât blush,â I object, because Iâm a dude, and dudes donât go around declaring theyâre blushers.
Summer hoots. âYes, you do! Youâre blushing now.â
âOh really? You can see this supposed blush right through my beard, huh?â I rub my face defiantly.
âUh-huh.â She reaches out and strokes my cheek above the heavy beard growth. âRight. Here.â
I gulp. My dick stirs again.
I hate how attracted I am to her.
âFitzy,â she whispers in my ear, and my pulse goes careening. âI think weââ
âHappy fucking New Year!â
Saved by Hollis.
My friend lurches toward us and plants a sloppy peck on Summerâs cheek. Theyâd just met tonight, but she doesnât seem offended by the kiss, only mildly amused.
âYouâre about twenty minutes too early with that sentiment,â she informs him.
âAnd you donât have a drink in your hand!â He fixes her with a disapproving glare. âWhy doesnât she have a drink in her hand? Someone get this beautiful woman a drink!â
âIâm not a big drinker,â Summer protests.
âBullshit.â Dean cackles. Heâs wandered over, his girlfriend Allie Hayes at his side. âYou were off your face when you burned down the sorority house.â
âYou burned down a sorority house?â asks a familiar voice.
Dean spins around. âG!â he crows. âJust under the wire!â
âYeah, we almost didnât make it,â Garrett Graham says as he strides up to the table. âThere was a ten-car pileup on the bridge. Sat there for almost an hour before traffic started moving again.â
âHan-Han!â Allie says happily, throwing her arms around Hannah Wells. Hannah is Garrettâs girl, but she also happens to be Allieâs best friend. âIâm so glad youâre here!â
âMe too! Happy New Yearâs Eve.â
âGarrett Eve,â her boyfriend corrects.
âDude,â Hannah retorts, âgive it up. Iâm not calling it that.â
Summer snorts. âGarrett Eve?â
Dean rolls his eyes at our old team captain. âPompous ass.â He glances at Summer. âHis birthday is New Yearâs Day.â
âGarrett Day,â G says automatically, before turning to greet me and Hollis and the other guys from the team who made the trek to Brooklyn. Summer gets a quick hug and a peck on the cheek. âGood to see you, Summertime. You torched a sorority house?â
âOh my God. No. I didnât torch anything!â She glowers at her brother.
âBro, everyoneâs staring at you,â Hollis suddenly says, grinning at Garrett.
Hollis is rightâseveral heads have turned in our direction. Most of the people here are too hammered to pay much attention to their surroundings, but some of them have recognized Garrett. Heâs in the middle of one of the most explosive rookie seasons in Bruins history, so Iâm not surprised heâs attracting attention even outside of Boston.
âTheyâre probably gonna start heckling me soon,â he says glumly. âWe lost to the Islanders last night. Final score was five-four.â
âYeah, but you scored a hat trick,â Hannah counters. âAnyone who heckles a player with a hat trick is a stupid moron.â
âCan a moron be anything other than stupid?â Dean asks with a grin.
âOh, shut it, Di Laurentis. You know what I mean.â
When a few more people start looking and pointing at Garrett, Allie teases, âHow does it feel to be famous?â
âYou tell me,â G jokes back.
âHa. Iâm so not famous,â says the person with a role on an HBO show.
Allieâs show is actually based on a book I really enjoyed, and although Iâm happy that sheâs a working actress, I secretly think the book was better.
The book is always better.
âStop being so modest!â Summer slings an arm around Allie, whoâs almost a head shorter than her. âGuys. I saw her sign four autographs tonight. Sheâs a star.â
âOnly half the season has aired so far,â Allie protests. âWe might not even get renewed.â
âOf course you will,â Dean says, as if itâs not even up for debate.
Summer releases Allie and returns to my side, laying a hand on my arm. Itâs not a possessive grip by any means, but I donât miss the way both Garrett and Hunter zoom in on it. Dean doesnât notice, thank God, because Allie is dragging him away, saying she wants one more dance before the countdown.
Beside me, Hollis examines the room with a surprising degree of intensity for a drunk guy. âI gotta decide whose tongue I want in my mouth at midnight,â he announces.
âClassy,â Summer says.
He leers wolfishly. âYou play your cards right, that tongue could be yours.â
Her response is to throw her head back and laugh.
Luckily, Hollis has an ego made of Kevlar. He shrugs and wanders off, which spurs most of the other guys to scatter. Pierre, our resident French-Canadian, and Matt Anderson, a junior defenseman, head for the bar. Only Garrett and Hannah remain. And Hunter, whoâs got a beer in one hand and his phone in the other. Heâs taking a video of the crowd for his Snapchat story.
âHow about you?â Summer asks Hunter. âI saw you dancing with seven different girls tonight. Which one are you going to kiss?â
âNone of them.â He lowers the phone, his blue eyes dead serious. âI donât do New Yearâs kisses. Chicks always try to find meaning in them that isnât there.â
Summer rolls her eyes so hard Iâm surprised she doesnât pull a muscle. âRight, because all women start planning their weddings after one kiss.â She glances at a laughing Hannah. âWanna hit the ladiesâ? I want to touch up my makeup before the countdown. My lip gloss needs to be perfect for when I kiss my future husband at midnight.â She directs another eye roll at Hunter.
He winks at her, unfazed. âBetter hurry, Blondie. Only sixteen minutes left.â He nods at the huge digital clock hanging over the DJ station.
âBe right back.â Hannah gives Garrett a kiss and then follows Summer.
âI need a refill,â I tell Garrett. I gesture at his empty hands. âAnd you need a drink.â
He nods, and we leave Hunter at the table and make our way to the bar. We stop at the far end of it where itâs quieter, near the arched doorway leading to the restrooms.
I order two beers and hand over some cash. When I turn back, I find Garrett eyeing me.
âWhat?â I say awkwardly.
âWhatâs going on with you and Summer?â
âNothing.â Fuck. Did I answer too fast?
âLiar. You answered way too fast.â
Goddammit.
His tone becomes cautious. âWhen she got handsy back thereâ¦you didnât seem to mind.â
Heâs right. I didnât mind. The last time I saw Summer, I made a conscious effort to keep my distance. Tonight, I let her touch my arm. I shared a drink with her. Honestly, if I liked to dance, I probably wouldâve let her drag me onto the floor.
âSheâs⦠Well, sheâs into me,â I say slowly.
Garrett snorts. âNo shit, dude. That chick wants to ride your dick.â
âI know.â Guilt pricks my throat. I hope I havenât been leading her on tonight. âDonât worry,â I assure him. âI wonât go there.â
He looks startled. âWhy would I be worried?â His eyebrows furrow. âWait. You might be misunderstanding. Iâm not warning you away from her. I think this is a good thing.â
A frown touches my lips. âYou do?â
âOf course. I mean, oneâyou never hook up.â
I swallow a laugh. Thatâs not true at all. I get lots of action. I just donât talk about it.
âTwoâSummerâs cute. Sheâs fun. Easy to talk to.â He shrugs. âShe could be exactly what you need. Youâd have to run it by Dean first, though. He thinks sheâs a brat, but heâs protective of her.â
Run it by Dean? As in, ask Dean for permission to bone down with his little sister? Garrett is frickinâ crazy ifâ
My thought process halts.
âYouâre talking about more than a casual hook-up here,â I say.
âWell, yeah. Sheâs Deanâs sister. Heâd kill you otherwise.â
âIâm not dating her, G.â
âWhy not?â He reaches forward to grab our beers, passing one my way.
I twist off the top and take a deep gulp before answering. âBecause sheâs not my type. Weâve got nothing in common.â
âShe likes hockey,â he points out. âThatâs a start.â
âAnd I think it might end there,â I say dryly. âI design and review video games. Iâm into art. Iâm covered in ink and I binge-watch crime shows on Netflix. And sheâs⦠I donât even know.â I scan my brain. âSheâs obsessed with shoes, according to Dean. And he insists she has a shopping problem.â
âOkay. So sheâs into fashion. Some people consider that art.â
I snicker. âYouâre reaching.â
âAnd youâre judging. She seems like a good girl, Fitz.â
âDude, she got kicked out of Brown for partying too hard. Sheâs a party girl. Sheâs in a sorority.â
Iâm on a roll now, because my dick is still semi-hard and Iâm desperately grasping for reasons to not screw Summer.
âSheâsâ¦fluff,â I finish.
âFluff.â
âYeah, fluff.â I shrug helplessly. âYou know, not serious about anything. Sheâs surface level.â
Garrett pauses for a long moment, searching my face.
He stares for so long that I fidget with the sleeve of my hoodie, feeling like a specimen under his microscope. I hate that intrusive sensation of eyes boring into me. Itâs a scar left over from childhood, a need to blend into the background, to be unseen.
Iâm two seconds from telling him to cut it out when he starts to laugh. âOh, I get it. I was wasting my time trying to sell you on her. You were already sold.â His gray eyes light up gleefully. âYou have a thing for Deanâs sister.â
âNaah,â I say, but itâs a halfhearted denial at best.
âReally? âCause it sounds like youâre trying to convince yourself that sheâs not right for you.â He grins. âIs it working?â
I sigh in defeat. âKind of? I mean, Iâve managed to keep my hands off her all night.â
That gets me a laugh. âLook, Colinâcan I call you Colin?â His jaw drops. âI just fucking realized Iâve never called you Colin.â
Garrett literally shocks himself into silence, until I let out a growl of impatience.
âSorry,â he says. âThat just blew my mind. Anyway. Fitzy. On paper, Wellsy and I donât seem like weâd work, right? But we do, donât we?â
He has a point. When I first saw them together, I couldnât make sense of it. Hannah was an artsy music major. Garrett was a smartass jock. Theyâre opposites in so many ways, and yet they really do click as a couple.
But Summer and I⦠Weâre not even on the same piece of paper. From what Iâve seen and what Dean has told me, sheâs drama-llama at full force, all the time. She craves the spotlight. I shy away from it. Itâs bad enough that our games are televised every Friday night on the local New England network. And the major games make it to ESPN. Makes me cringe to think of strangers watching me skate and shoot and brawl on some huge screen.
âAll Iâm saying is, keep an open mind. Donât fight it.â He claps me on the shoulder. âJust let it happen.â
Let it happen.
And, fuck, it absolutely could happen. All Iâd have to do is smile in Summerâs direction, and sheâd be in my arms. Sheâs been sending out interested vibes left and right. Butâ¦
I think what it boils down to is that sheâs out of my league.
I play hockey. Iâm fairly intelligent. Iâm good-looking, if we go by my success in the chick department.
But at the end of the day, Iâm that nerdy kid who would hole up in his bedroom playing video games, trying to pretend his parents werenât fighting like cats and dogs.
In high school I had a brief moment where I tried expanding my horizons. I started hanging with a nihilistic crew who got a charge out of rebelling against any cause. But that came to an abrupt end when they got into a brawl with some kids from a neighboring school, and half the group was arrested for assault. I quickly reverted back to my loner state after that, not just to save my place on the hockey team, but to keep from giving my parents new fighting ammunition. I listened to them scream at each other for two hours about which one was to blame for me running with a âbad crowd.â It was easier just being a loner.
Needless to say, I didnât have girls like Summer throwing themselves at me. And I didnât party with my teammates after hockey games, so not even the puck bunnies wasted their energy on me.
In college, Iâve made more of an effort to be social, but deep down Iâm still the guy who wants to remain invisible.
Summer is the most visible person Iâve ever met.
But Garrettâs right. Iâm being a judgmental bastard. She might come off as a bit spoiled and superficial at times, but she deserves a chance. Everyone does.
Hannahâs already back at the table when Garrett and I return. âCutting it close!â she scolds, pointing at the big clock. Itâs two minutes to midnight.
I frown, because Summerâs not with her. Dammit. Where is she?
Iâve decided to take Gâs advice and stop fighting it. Iâm going to give in, kiss the hell out of her when the clock strikes midnight and see where it goes from there.
âOne minute to go, boys and girls!â the DJâs voice thunders.
I give the room a visual sweep. Summerâs still nowhere to be found.
I want to ask Hannah where she is, but Hannahâs got her arms looped around Gâs neck, and they only have eyes for each other.
âThirty seconds!â shouts the DJ.
All around me, people are coupling up or gathering with their group of friends. Allie and Dean are already making out. Hollis has reunited with the brunette he was dancing with earlier.
Still no Summer.
âTEN!â everyone yells.
The red numerals on the clock tick down in time with the crowdâs screams.
âNINE!â
Each passing second brings another jolt of disappointment.
âEIGHT! SEVEN!â
And then I spot her. Or at least I think itâs her. The strobe lights are going off now, zigzagging over the sea of bodies crammed in the bar. Each burst of light helps me form a clearer picture of the girl against the wall.
âSIX! FIVE!â
White dress. Red ballet flats. The ponytail.
âFOUR! THREE!â
Itâs definitely Summer.
âTWO!â
But sheâs not alone.
âONE!â
I wrench my gaze away the moment Hunterâs mouth hungrily collides with Summerâs perfect lips.
âHAPPY NEW YEAR!â