Offside Hearts: Chapter 47
Offside Hearts (Love and Hockey Book 1)
Itâs Wednesday, and Margo still hasnât shown up for work.
When I asked Ted where she was yesterday, he said she was still out sick, but I could tell he was lying. His tone was clipped and curt, and I got the distinct impression that he blames me for what happened with Margo.
As he should.
Itâs all my fault, and Iâve been carrying around the weight of that responsibility ever since I got back.
Practice is a fucking nightmare. I miss every shot I take, and Iâm so distracted that half the time one of my teammates passes me the puck, I let it go flying by without even noticing it until after itâs long since been nabbed by someone else.
Dunaway is yelling at me from the sidelines, telling me to get my head in the game, and I wish I could. I keep trying to focus, to keep my eye on the puck, but no matter what I do, I canât seem to stay present. My mind keeps wandering back to the day Margo confronted me outside my condo, back to the way her face looked when she asked whether or not I had been with another woman.
âBlake, come on!â Dunaway, whoâs now red in the face, and who hasnât screamed at any other player except me all morning, throws his hands in the air as I miss another pass, then stalks off toward the lockers.
Practice is technically scheduled to go on for another fifteen minutes, but once Dunaway disappears, Coach Price takes over for a while before finally shrugging and giving up. Itâs obvious that nobody feels like running any more drills, and an uncomfortable tension hangs in the air of the practice rink. Iâve fucked up our flow, and itâs really difficult to get that sort of thing back, especially when the head coach isnât here to guide us.
I hit the showers and then get dressed with the rest of my teammates, keeping my head down and avoiding making eye contact with anyone. Then I grab my bag and throw it over my shoulder, heading for the exit. Iâm hoping to slip out without having to talk to anyone, but as I pass by the coachesâ office, Dunawayâs deep voice cracks out like a whip.
âBlake, get in here!â
I come to a stop, closing my eyes and tipping my head back. Fuck.
The door to the office he shares with Coach Price is partway open, and I step inside and close it behind me. Dunaway has his phone in his hand, and it looks like he just got done talking to someone. I hope it wasnât the team owner or anything, although it wouldnât surprise me if there was talk of trading me so that I could screw up someone elseâs chances of winning the Stanley Cup.
âHey, Coach,â I mutter. âI was just about to head out, soââ
âSit. I want to talk to you.â
He gestures to one of the rolling office chairs, and I sink into it, shifting uncomfortably in the seat. He studies me in silence for a long moment, a dark expression clouding his face, then shakes his head.
âWhat the hell was that out there?â he demands, gesturing in the direction of the ice. âYou looked like a fucking kid whoâs never even been on skates before. I was having flashbacks to years I spent coaching my sonâs elementary school team. Except those kids actually had better control of the puck than you did just now.â
âI know, I know.â I blow out a breath, looking down at my feet and rubbing the back of my neck. âIâm sorry. I just had a rough weekend.â
Dunaway snorts, crossing his arms over his broad chest. The lack of hair on his head only emphasizes his square jaw and thick eyebrows, and when he gazes at me from beneath those brows, I have the uncomfortable feeling that he can see right through me.
âAre you sure thatâs all it is? Because Iâve seen you after some pretty bad losses, and Iâve also seen you after some late nights out drinkingâbut Iâve never seen you play like that before.â His phone is still in his hand, and when it vibrates, he glances down at it and snorts under his breath. âI just got off the phone with my wife, and now sheâs texting me to make sure I keep a cool head. She says I make bad decisions when Iâm angry, and sheâs not wrong.â
I hate that Iâm the reason Dunaway had to call his wife to get talked down off a ledge, but I donât think thereâs anything I can say right now to make things better, so I just sit patiently and wait for him to either give me a lecture or yell his head off.
âLook,â he says after a pause. âI donât know all the details of whatâs going on with you, and frankly, I donât want to. The less I know about your personal life, the less I have to worry about, and thatâs the way I like it. But that said, you need to get your shit in order, Blake. Because if you keep playing like you did in practice today, Iâm going to have to bench you.â
âIâm trying,â I say, and I despise the way my voice breaks a little as I speak. I clear my throat, but I know Dunaway heard it.
Hell, he can see it on my face. Everyone can.
Iâm wrecked, and I donât know how to pull myself out of this spiral.
Dunaway looks at me again, his dark brown eyes perceptive and sharp.
âDo you know why Iâve expressly forbidden my daughter from ever dating a hockey player, Blake?â he asks.
I shrug. âBecause weâre all jerks?â
He smirks and shakes his head. âYeah, alright, thatâs part of it. But the real reason I donât want her involved with any of you meatheads is because itâs gotta be miserable dating a hockey player. Theyâre relentless. Once they know what they want, they never stop chasing after it. Itâs the same way they chase the puck down the ice, with nothing but determination. Hell, I know my wife gets sick and tired of my determination and single-mindedness.â
âI donât really understand what youâre getting at, Coach.â
For a moment, the hard lines of his face smooth out a bit, his expression turning almost fatherly.
âYou just need to figure out what it is you want,â he tells me. âBecause once you figure that out, Iâm sure youâll stop at nothing to get it. And thatâs whatâs going to turn things around for you. Thatâs whatâll make everything fall back into place. So, Blake, do you know what you want?â
My heart twists, my chest tightening. âYeah, I do. But I canât have it.â
He squints. âYou sure about that? Maybe you just need to be more relentless.â
I donât really have an answer for him, but he doesnât make me give him one. Sighing, he rises from his desk, gesturing toward the door to let me know Iâm dismissed. I pick up my bag from where I dropped it near the chair and head for the door, but before I leave, his voice stops me again.
âI donât want to bench you, Blake. Youâre one of the best players Iâve ever coached. We need you out there.â
I nod without looking back, letting him know I heard him.
Outside the practice rink entrance, I stand for a while in the cold air, not ready to go home and face my empty condo just yet. A few minutes later, Sawyer and Theo walk out of the building, and Sawyer shoots me a pissed off look as they walk by. Everyone on the team seems to believe the story about me getting another woman pregnant, and since Sawyerâs ex-wife cheated on him, he has zero tolerance for people who betray their partners like I did. Or, like they all think I did.
God, I fucking hate this.
Theo on the other hand, lifts his chin in acknowledgement, although he doesnât stick around to talk or ask if Iâm going out for drinks after the game later this week. They make their way to the parking lot, and Reese steps out of the building a second later.
He stops when he sees me.
âHey, man,â he says carefully. âRough morning, huh?â
I grunt under my breath. âHow could you tell?â
He combs a hand through his messy blond hair. âWell, the first clue was when you didnât snipe that shot on net during the scrimmage. Usually, thatâs your bread and butter. But, come on. Youâve been playing like shit all week, and weâve all seen it.â
âYeah. I know.â
I shove my hands into my pockets, feeling even more like shit than I did in Dunawayâs office. Reese isnât even calling me out for letting the team down, but the concern in his voice is almost worse.
He hesitates, as if debating whether or not to say whatever else is on his mind, then sighs. âSo, listen, I donât know if youâve heard this yet, but I thought I should tell you in case you havenât. Rumor has it, Margo might be quitting her job.â
âWhat?â I stiffen, my eyes flaring wide. âWho told you that?â
âI overheard Ted talking to someone else in the marketing department yesterday when I was upstairs in the office. I had to go talk to payroll about my new bank account, and they were in the breakroom when I went to grab some coffee on my way out. He said he doesnât think sheâs going to come back to work after her sick leave is up.â
Panic wells up inside me, and I shake my head. âBut she canât quit.â
âOf course she can.â Reese pulls a face. âI mean, can you blame her? You know Iâll always have your back, but⦠you fucked up. Did you really expect her to stick around after everything went down the way it did?â
Goddammit. This is not how things were supposed to go. Not at all.
My mind is churning, trying to figure out some way to undo this, to make it right. I canât let Margo lose her job.
âI know I fucked up,â I tell my teammate, and itâs the truest thing Iâve ever said. Pulling my keys out of my pocket, I start backing toward the parking lot. âListen, Iâve gotta go.â
âUh, okay.â He nods, worry glinting in his brown eyes. âIâll see you at practice tomorrow.â
I give him a wave, already halfway to my car. As I settle behind the wheel, a single thought rises above all the others jockeying for a foothold in my head. A single thought that beats against the inside of my skull, urging me on. nod,
I have to see Margo.
Now.
I speed across town to her apartment and spend fifteen minutes ringing the buzzer outside her building. She doesnât answer, but I manage to slip inside the building when someone else is leaving, and I take the stairs up to her floor. Iâm in the middle of banging on her door when an annoyed looking older woman with a long braid sticks her head out of the unit across the hall.
âSheâs not here,â the woman informs me, glaring at my fist, which is still poised a few inches from the door.
âWhere is she?â I practically beg.
âHow the hell should I know?â She shrugs, throwing her hands up. âShe left a couple days ago with a packed bag and asked me to water her plants.â
Somehow, I get the feeling that this woman hasnât held up her end of that agreement, but thereâs no time to argue with her, so I just thank her for the information and run out of the building and back to my car. Iâm fairly certain I know where Margo is, so when I get on the interstate, I follow the signs toward Boulder, drumming my fingers against the steering wheel the whole way.
When I pull up in front of her parentsâ house, the first thing I notice is her car parked in the driveway, and the sight of it fills me with both relief and anxiety. She really is here, which is greatâbut it also means that I have to figure out what the hell Iâm going to say to her in the next few seconds.
Assuming sheâll even come to the door to talk to me.
As I stride up the snowy pathway toward the front door and knock, my palms are sweating despite how cold it is outside. My breathing becomes labored as I wait in a frigid silence for someone to answer, and when the door finally swings open, I tense in anticipation.
Margoâs brother, Derek, is the one who answered, and when he catches sight of me, his head jerks back in surprise. Then his eyes narrow, fury darkening his features as he takes a half step forward.
âWhat the hell are you doing here?â