Offside Hearts: Epilogue 2
Offside Hearts (Love and Hockey Book 1)
Two Weeks Later
âAlright class,â I say as the kids begin to gather their books and get ready to run out of the building. Itâs Friday, and theyâre eager to get out of here and start their weekends. I canât blame them. Itâs been a long week, and as much as I love my students, sometimes itâs nice to get a little break from the chaos that is being an elementary school teacher. âDonât forget, your science fair project proposals are due on Monday. Did everyone hear me? Due on Monday!â
Some of the kids groan in response, and I spot a few writing down actual reminders in their planners. Then they all start filing out of the room, but I stop one of them on his way out.
âHey, Joey,â I say in a soft voice so that the rest of the class wonât think heâs in trouble. âCome here for a second.â
Joey is one of my sweetest but most hyper students, and if I donât take special care to make sure he knows what the homework is, he never remembers.
âYeah, Miss Marshall?â
âDid you hear what I said about the science fair?â I ask, once the rest of the kids are gone. I donât like to embarrass Joey in front of his friends, so I always make sure to talk to him at the end of the day when none of the other students are around so he doesnât get teased for being forgetful.
âUhâyeah.â
I frown. âDid you really?â
âUh huh.â
âThen what did I say?â
âThat⦠the science fair⦠will be on Monday?â
I laugh. âNo, not quite. I said that the proposal for your science fair project is due on Monday. The science fair itself isnât going on for another few weeks.â
âAh, okay. I got it.â
âYou sure?â
He nods excitedly. âYeah, I have a really cool idea, actually. But Iâm not going to tell you about it. Itâs a surprise.â
âAlright, then. Just make sure you get the proposal done this weekend, okay? It has to be a full page long.â
âI know,â he says. âI wonât forget.â
Then he shrugs his backpack a little higher up on his shoulders and takes off running after his friends. I smile as I watch him leave, wondering what the odds are that heâll actually show up Monday morning with the assignment ready to turn in.
I go back to my desk and start packing my bag, tossing in the romance novel Iâve been reading during my lunch breaks. I left it in my desk in the classroom last weekend and was so bummed because Saturday nights are when I get most of my reading done. Reese makes fun of me for staying in on the weekends, nose deep in a book, but I donât really care. There are plenty of things I make fun of him for, like his terrible taste in TV shows.
Speaking of Reeseâ¦
I check the time and realize Iâm running late to meet him. With my bag in tow and my book securely packed away, I leave the school and hop on a bus toward his place.
A lot of his teammates live in expensive condos in downtown Denver, but heâs got a house a little farther out from the heart of the city. We made plans a few days ago for me to meet him there so he can help me shoot a fundraising video for supplies for my classroom, using his hockey star clout to help me raise more money. A lot of the teachers at my school, myself included, often pay for school supplies out of our own pockets, but I really want to get some better materials for my classroom than I can currently afford.
Maybe having him flash his megawatt grin on camera will inspire some hockey fans to donate to my class.
I pull out my book on the bus, careful to check behind me to make sure no one is reading over my shoulder. Not that Iâm ashamed of reading spicy romance, but itâs not exactly a conversation I want to strike up with a total stranger.
The bus drops me off near Reeseâs house, and as I walk the last few blocks through the gorgeous residential neighborhood, I text him to let him know Iâm almost there.
His house is one of the newer ones on his block, with clean lines, large windows, and a nice big front yard. I walk up to the door and knock, checking my phone at the same time. He hasnât texted me back, but the door is unlocked, so I figure he mustâve gotten my message.
I feel bad that Iâm running late, so I step inside, calling out, âHey, Reese? Iâm here! Iââ
He steps out of the hallway at the same moment I close the door behind me, and my words break off.
Heâs naked.
Entirely, completely, ass-to-the-wind naked.
For a suspended second, we just stare at each other in shocked silence. Iâm vaguely aware that he seems somehow taller without his clothes onâor maybe thatâs just because thereâs nothing to hide all that long, lean muscle. The broad expanse of his chest and shoulders, his washboard abs, and the little V cuts at his sides that lead down toâ
I yank my gaze back up to his face, realizing that I just came perilously close to ogling my best friendâs dick.
âAhhh!â
The scream rips out of me at the same moment a loud, startled yell bursts from his lips. He ducks back down the hallway, disappearing from view. I clap my hand over my mouth, then move it up to my eyes, then back down to my mouth.
Thereâs a loud thump, and I hear him mutter, âOw. Fuck.â
A second later, he returns, tugging a pair of gray sweatpants over his hips.
âJesus, Callie. You scared me.â
I shake my head and drop my hand, still trying to get my equilibrium back. âIâm sorry. You left the door open, so I thought that meant I should come in. I did not mean to seeââ I wave a hand at his⦠everything. ââall of that.â
He runs a hand through his messy dark blond hair, which is still wet from the shower he mustâve just gotten out of. âItâs okay. It doesnât matter. Weâve been friends forever, Cal. Itâs no big deal.â
âIâm not sure Sienna would see it that way,â I mutter, my cheeks burning with embarrassment. Iâm not sure his girlfriend has ever really liked me, and Iâm positive this wonât help.
His face falls. He rests a hand on the wall, scrubbing his other hand over the back of his neck as he looks down at the floor. âYeah, well, I doubt she cares much about anything I do anymore. She just broke up with me.â
âWhat?â My jaw falls open.
âYeah.â He snorts a breath, his lips pressing together. âEarlier today. She told me it was over.â
Now that Iâm no longer so distracted, I can see the lines of strain on his face, the dullness in his brown eyes. Reese is one of the most cheerful people Iâve ever met, and the expression heâs wearing right now is so different from his usual charming grin. It hurts my heart, and before I even think about it, Iâm stepping forward, striding across the room and wrapping my arms around him.
âIâm sorry,â I murmur. âThatâs awful.â
âThanks.â His muscled arms band around me, and I feel his chest rise and fall with a heavy sigh. âItâs my own damn fault. I shouldâve known something was wrong when she kept putting off moving in with me. I brought it up for the first time months ago, and she kept coming up with excuses for why it wasnât a good time. But the truth is, she was already one foot out the door.â
I wince. âYou couldnât have known that, Reese. I mean⦠I thought things were okay with you two.â
Heâs silent for a moment, but he doesnât let go of me. Iâm shorter than him by a good eight inches, and he rests his chin on the top of my head. My cheek is pressed up against his bare chest, a few of his chest hairs tickling my skin, and my hands are splayed over the thick muscles of his back.
I forgot he was shirtless when I went in for a hug, and I feel suddenly awkward about it. Heâs been my best friend for years, so itâs not like heâs never hugged me before, but we havenât hugged for quite this long or quite this intimately in⦠well, maybe ever.
I start to slowly lift my hands from his back, easing my arms out of a hug position, and after another moment, he drops his arms too.
âWe can do that video another time,â I tell him, brushing my unruly red hair over my shoulder.
âOh, fuck.â Realization crosses his features, and he runs a hand down his face. âThatâs what youâre doing here. I totally forgot about it. Iâm sorry, Cal. I thought about it this morning, and then with everything that happened, I just totally spaced.â
âItâs okay,â I say quickly. âWe can do it a different time. It really doesnât matter.â
âNo, no. We should do it now.â
He shakes his head firmly as he speaks, but I can tell that his mind is still in a million different places. Heâs clearly still reeling from being dumped, and Iâd feel like an asshole making him shoot a video with me where he has to smile for the camera and pretend to be happy right now.
âTruly, Reese.â I hold up a hand. âAnother time is fine. Itâs not urgent or anything.â
A flicker of relief passes over his face, and his hand moves a little, almost like heâs about to reach for me again. Then he blows out a breath and nods, taking a step back.
âYeah, maybe another time is better. I want to get it right, and Iâm not sure Iâd be very effective at convincing people to give you money right now.â He grimaces. âUnless youâre going for the pity angle.â
I make a face, trying to lighten the mood. âReese, if I was going for the pity angle, I couldâve shot the video on my own.â I gesture to myself, waving my hand to encompass my entire being. âPitiful is all up in my wheelhouse.â
He snorts, rolling his eyes. âNo, it isnât.â
I laugh, settling back into the easy banter the two of us always have. âWell, if not pitiful, then at the very least, awkward.â
A grin curves his lips, although it doesnât quite reach his eyes. âIâd argue with you there, but I do recall you accidentally groping the waiter at that little diner we used to go to.â
âIt was college!â I protest. âI was tired. Weâd been up all night studying, and Iâ¦â
âGet a little handsy when youâre tired?â
I glare at him. âNo. It was an actual accident.â
For a moment, amusement glints in his eyes, but it slips away quickly. His gaze drops to the floor again, taking on an out-of-focused quality, and I know heâs probably thinking about Sienna. I bite my lip, wrapping my fingers around the strap of my bag.
âIs there anything I can do?â I ask quietly. âAnything you need?â
âJust to be alone for a bit,â he says, his voice a little rough. He clears his throat, looking up at me with a forced smile. âIâll text you about setting up another time for the video, okay? Sorry to bail on you today.â
âItâs okay,â I reassure him.
Iâm not sure if thereâs anything else I should do or say, so I linger awkwardly for a second before giving him one more quick hug and heading for the door.
He follows me, his bare feet quiet on the wood floor. He holds the door open for me, then closes it as I step outside, and I scrunch up my face as I hurry down the walkway toward the street.
God, you really are the queen of awkward encounters, Callie.
Iâve always felt like I have the giftâor the curseâof making any situation particularly awkward, and today just proves that theory correct.
Who else but me would walk in on their hockey player best friend while he was naked, on the same day his girlfriend broke up with him?