Offside Hearts: Chapter 20
Offside Hearts (Love and Hockey Book 1)
On Friday afternoon, exactly three hours before my date with Noah, Iâm at a sports bar conducting some interviews for a promotional mash-up video Iâm putting together. The bar is basically the unofficial headquarters for the Denver Aces fan club, and even on nights when the Aces arenât playing, thereâs often a large crowd gathered to watch highlight reels and reruns of older games.
Iâm hoping to get a few soundbites from mega fans, but getting these guys to make a statement without the constant use of colorful language has been harder than I expected.
âCan you say that again, but without all the swearing?â I request of the man sitting next to me at the bar.
Iâve been talking to him and his buddy for about thirty minutes, and during that time, theyâve both polished off a beer. Theyâre likely in their late forties or early fifties, and I clocked both of them right away when I entered the bar, because theyâre both wearing worn out Aces jerseys and ball caps.
âI canât swear in this interview?â the man says, laughing as he signals the bartender for another round. âWhat the fuck kind of hockey fan would I be if I didnât swear?â
âI know itâs a pain in the ass,â I tell him. âBut our public channels need to remain family friendly. Itâs a big part of our brand, and weâre actually really dedicated to showing people that hockey games arenât necessarily as rough or rowdy as they may think. We want people to feel like they can bring their kids to a game, you know? Did your parents take you to Denver Aces games when you were a kid?â
The man smiles and slaps his friendâs arm. âYou hear that? She wants to know if we went to games when we were kids.â
The other guy chuckles. He leans across the bar past his friend and looks me right in the eye. âDarling, there was a point in our lives where Jim and I didnât miss a single Denver Aces game.â
âGranted, the tickets were a lot cheaper back then,â Jim adds. âAnd we would save up all our allowance money throughout the year so that we could buy a ticket to every single home game when the time came.â
âThatâs great!â I grin. âLifelong fans who used to save up their pocket change so they could see every game. Thatâs exactly the kind of story weâre trying to tell.â
âIf you like that story,â his friend says, âthen youâll love this. One time, in college, Jim and I worked up the courage to ask a couple sorority girls out to a game. And let me tell you, these girls were way out of our league.â
âEven still,â Jim adds. âThey werenât nearly as pretty as you.â
I smile and shake my head, brushing off the compliment. âIâm sure thatâs not true.â
âOh no, it is,â the other guy chimes in. âThey were gorgeous, but they had nothing on you. Either way, we take them to this game, and Jim and I are all nervous, fumbling around with snacks and trying to keep our cool even though the Aces were losing pretty bad that night.â
âThe dumbest part,â Jim comments, âis that we kept explaining the rules of the game to these girls. We thought they had never seen a hockey game in their lives.â
âTurns out, they had seen a lot of hockey games. And they were superfans.â
I look up from my phone, which Iâm using to record the interviews. âHuh?â
âYeah.â Jim snorts. âWe were confused too. At first. But we found out just how much they loved the game after the second period, when the girls ran up to the glass and took their shirts off. They had two of the playersâ names written across their chests and were banging on the glass, asking the players to take them out on a date.â
A laugh bursts out of me, and I cup my hand over my mouth. âIâm so sorry. I donât mean to laugh. Iâm sure that was really sad for you guys.â
Jim and his friend share a look and shrug. âNah, go ahead and laugh,â Jim tells me with a wry grin. âLooking back now, it was very funny.â
âAnd we shouldâve known they didnât actually want to go out with us. Like I said, they were way out of our league. When they said yes, that really shouldâve been our first clue.â
âAw, you guys,â I say, still chuckling. âDonât be so hard on yourselves. Those girls were lucky to go out on a date with you!â
Jim smiles at me, showing off the small gap between his front teeth. âWe know youâre just saying that to make us feel better, but weâll take it. When a beautiful girl gives you a compliment, you donât ask too many questions. You just say thanks and offer to buy her another drink.â
He looks down at my half-finished glass of beer as he speaks.
âOh, thanks, but no thanks,â I say, waving him off. âTechnically, Iâm still on the clock, so I really need to keep my mind sharp.â I check the time on my phone. âOh, itâs later than I thought. I should head back to the office so I can get this all pieced together before the end of the day.â I stop the recording and nod to them both as I stand up. âThanks again for your time! Maybe Iâll see you at one of the games.â
âI hope so,â says Jim.
âYeah.â His friend tips his baseball cap at me like a gentleman would tip his top hat. âThe only thing that would make a Denver Aces game better would be sitting next to a pretty girl like you in the stands.â
With that, I leave the two of them to start their next round and head for the door.
On my way out, I notice a group of women who look close to my age huddled together in one of the booths, talking about the Aces. I stop short of leaving when I hear one of them mention Theo by name, and I realize theyâre waiting around in the hopes that some of the players might show up. Since the Aces donât have a game tonight, they probably think thereâs a good chance some of them will show up here for a drink or two later in the evening.
These ladies are puck bunnies, and what they have to say about the players is definitely not going to be anything family friendly, but I canât help but linger awhile by the door and eavesdrop. But as the seconds drag on, I realize just how obvious it is that Iâm standing around listening, so I pretend to get a text and stare down at my phone as I take a seat in the booth next to theirs.
âNo way,â one of the girls is saying. âI read that Reese is, like, totally devoted to his girlfriend. Youâd never get him to take you home.â
âI might!â insists another. âIâve talked to him once before, you know. At this very bar. He was really sweet, and I thought we sort of⦠clicked.â
âWhy are we even talking about Reese Sutton right now?â A third woman lets out a trilling laugh. âI came here to run into one man and one man only. Noah Blake.â
I perk up, leaning back into the booth so I can hear what theyâre saying a little better.
âYou know Noahâs rule,â one of her friends says. âHe doesnât hook up with the same girl twice. Youâve already slept with him, so what makes you think heâs going to break that rule for you?â
âWell, for starters, Iâm not sure he would recognize me!â Her friends laugh at that, but she continues to make her case. âIâm serious! We hooked up over a year ago, and that was back when my hair was blonde. Heâs had sex with so many women. Do you really think heâs got a photographic memory of them all? Not a chance.â
I wince a little when the girl emphasizes how many women Noah has been with, but I try my best not to let it affect me too much.
âI donât blame Hillary for wanting to hook up with him again.â This must be the fourth girl in the group, because itâs a voice I havenât heard yet. âThat man is sex on a stick, I swear. Watching him play is like watching a god on the ice.â
âThank you,â the girl I now know to be Hillary crows. âThatâs what Iâm saying. Seriously, Iâve never had sex like that before. That man rocked my fucking world.â
I donât know why exactly, but that last comment is what bothers me the most. Pretty much since I met him, Iâve known that Noah has a past and can be a bit of a player, but hearing just how good he made that woman feel is sort of like a punch to the gut. What he did for me, the things I felt the night we were together, the passion and the pleasureâit wasnât anything new for him. He may have given me the best orgasms of my life, but apparently heâs used to providing women with those kinds of climaxes.
Rocking a womanâs world is just old hat to someone like Noah Blake.
Against my better judgment, I steal a look over my shoulder and regret it right away. All the ladies are just as pretty as I thought they were going to be, a couple of them even prettier. They look like they could all be models, like they work out five times a week and get their roots touched up the moment their real hair color starts showing.
They work on themselves in a way I simply do not. Even though I go to the gym a couple times a week and know how to do a good smokey-eye look, these women are on a whole different playing field when it comes to the beauty game. And these are the type of women Noah normally spends time with.
So where does that leave me?
As Iâm thinking this, my phone buzzes, and I look down to see a text from Noah. Itâs a photograph from inside a flower shop, and underneath it is another text.
NOAH: Can you believe they donât have a single sunflower in this entire store? Iâve been walking around for thirty minutes, and thereâs not anything that even LOOKS like a sunflower. Donât they know itâs the best flower in the world?
A smile curves my lips before I can stop it, and I take a deep breath in and let it out slowly.
This is why Iâm falling for Noah. This is the side of his personality that he doesnât let other people see. The woman sitting behind me may have had sex with Noah once, and he very well mightâve rocked her world, but she doesnât have little inside jokes with him. He doesnât know her favorite flower, hasnât comforted her when she was afraid, or told her that she brings him good luck when she wears his jersey.
What we have is deeper. Itâs different.
ME: I also like daisies ð
NOAH: Filing that away for future reference. But still, daisies arenât your favorite. And Iâm not going to settle for your second-choice flower. There are still a few more shops I havenât gone to yet. Wish me luck!
Grinning, I text him back good luck and then put my phone away. The women are still chatting behind me, but now Iâm determined to tune them out. I stand up and walk out of the bar without paying them any mind, then head back to the office for a few hours.
Once the work day ends, I head out, getting home just in time to start prepping for my date.
Getting ready, however, proves to be far more daunting than I originally anticipated. I end up changing my outfit three times, then having to get undressed all over again when I decide that Iâm actually wearing the wrong bra and underwear combo.
By the time I settle on an outfit and the right undergarments, I only have thirty minutes left to do my hair and makeup. I watch a tutorial on the internet on how to do a loose, messy braid, but after my third try, I get frustrated and decide to just leave my hair down. I work some honey-scented oil through it to give it a bit of shine, then do a simple makeup look and apply my favorite lipstick.
Looking at my reflection once more before walking out the door, Iâm satisfied with what I see.
Iâm not dressed like a puck bunny, but I still look sexy. I have some cute panties on, and the locket necklace I always wear draws attention to my cleavageâbut at the same time, Iâve maintained my own style and prioritized my comfort. Iâm wearing boots with a low heel instead of stilettos, because Iâm not interested in having sore feet the whole night. Iâm also wearing a fluffy black sweater over my tight red dress, because as much as I want to seduce Noah, frostbite just isnât cute.
I smile and push my shoulders back, letting go of the nerves that rise up and reminding myself that tonight is going to be fun.
âForget everything you heard those ladies say, forget all the rumors youâve heard about Noah, and just remember the kind of person heâs shown you to be,â I murmur to myself. âDonât get in your head, Mar.â
Then I touch up my lipstick quickly, grab my purse, and leave for my first real date with the captain of the Denver Aces.
I knew Noah lived in a penthouse in Downtown Denver, but I had no idea his building would be this fancy. At the door, a man wearing a suit smiles and dips his head deferentially to me like Iâm some sort of princess.
âGood evening,â he says.
âHi.â I smile at him, pulling my sweater a little tighter around me to ward off the cold. âIâm here to visit Noah Blake. Heâs expecting me.â
âOf course. Do you know where youâre going?â
âUm, sort of,â I answer. âCan you point me in the right direction?â
âNot a problem,â the doorman says, following me inside. The lobby of the building is stunning, and thereâs jazz music playing from the speakers overhead. I feel like Iâve just walked into a five-star hotel. He points toward an elevator on the far side of the lobby. âThat will take you up to Mr. Blakeâs condo. Top floor.â
âThanks,â I say, stepping forward as the doorman turns his attention to another woman who just entered the building.
Ugh. Elevators.
Iâve been a bit skittish about getting into elevators ever since being trapped in one, but I always remind myself that if Noah can get on an airplane for every away game, I can face my fears and take an elevator. Iâm just starting to walk toward it when someone taps me on the shoulder.
I turn around to see the woman who came in after me, a pretty brunette with her hair pulled back into a ponytail. She looks a bit flustered, and her cheeks are red.
âExcuse me, Iâm sorry. Did I hear you say youâre going up to Noah Blakeâs condo?â she asks.
âUh⦠yes,â I say, startled. âI am. Why?â
âGreat!â Her face lights up with relief. âCan you give this to him?â She sticks her hand out, and I realize sheâs holding a folded up t-shirt. Itâs soft to the touch, and when I take it from her, I catch the familiar scent of Noahâs spicy aftershave. âHe left it at my studio last night. I would run it up to him myself, but Iâm late for an appointment.â
I blink, my chest tightening like someone knocked the wind out of me.
âHe⦠he left it at your studio?â I ask. âLast night?â
âYeah,â she tells me, glancing down at her watch. âHe was in a hurry to leave, and he forgot it. Do you mind giving it back to him for me? Tell him he left it at Stacyâs. Thank you so much!â
With that, she gives me a quick wave and hurries away, disappearing back out onto the street.
Once sheâs gone, I stare at the t-shirt in my hand, trying to process what just happened. Was that woman another one of Noahâs random hookups? The way she was talking sure as hell made it seem like it. And the fact that they slept together last night makes me feel sick to my stomach.
Is this what I can expect if I start dating him? We never talked about being exclusive or anything, and thatâs on me for not clarifying. But am I really okay with being just another woman in his revolving door of sex partners?
No. I canât fucking do that.
My stomach twists, and I clench my jaw as an unexpected wave of sadness rushes through me, more intense than I wouldâve expected. After all, not much has happened between me and Noah. We havenât even been on a single actual date yet, so it makes no sense for me to be so heartbroken about the prospect of losing something I never had.
But I am heartbroken.
Because despite his reputation, I thought things were different between us. I knew he wanted me, but I naively thought he wanted only me.
Of course thatâs not the case. How would a guy like Noah ever be satisfied with one woman? Heâd probably get bored so fucking fast.
My thoughts are spiraling, all the excitement that built up inside me over the week crumbling to dust in my chest. I curl my fingers around his shirt and blink rapidly, glancing around the lobby.
I canât face Noah right now. I feel stupid and angry and hurt, and I just want to go back home.
Pivoting quickly, I turn around and head back toward the front door, heading straight for my car. The doorman waves to me on my way out, but if he has anything to say about the fact that Iâm leaving so soon after arriving, he keeps it to himself.
In the car, I realize Iâm cradling Noahâs shirt against my chest like some sad sack who just got dumped. I angrily throw the garment into the backseat and ball my hands into fists. I can feel the tears escaping one by one out of the corners of my eyes, and I hate that he can make me feel this way. I pull down the mirror and try to clean up some of my makeup, running my fingers along the bottoms of my eyes as I meet my reflectionâs gaze.
Itâs better that you found out now, I tell myself.
But itâs hard to be comforted by that thought.