Mile High: Chapter 7
Mile High (Windy City Series Book 1)
The Chicago Raptors have a home stand, which means I have some time off work this week. And even better, the Chicago Devils have the night off, so I finally get to spend some time with my brother.
Though, Iâve yet to see him today. He had a shoot-around this morning, then a press conference this afternoon, but weâre going to the movies tonight. A little twin bonding moment, if you will. Iâve stayed curled up on the couch in his amazing apartment, waiting for him to get back from the arena.
Iâm not kidding. This apartment building is insane. It was built about four years ago, and Ryan moved in a year after that when Chicago picked him up. Heâs not on the penthouse floor, but heâs a couple of levels below it, and the view is epic from his almost 180-degree porch. We can see most of Chicago from here, including Lake Michigan.
But the view isnât all that pretty today, simply because itâs been pouring rain all afternoon. Iâd typically be at the shelter on my days off, but the dogs arenât getting their afternoon walks because of the weather, so they didnât really need my help.
Instead, Iâve stayed curled up on the couch, wearing my comfiest and ugliest sweatpants.
The three quick road trips were a good way to get my feet wet for this season because our next trip is much longer. And it starts in Nashville next week. Most everyone loves a stop in Nashville, Iâm sure. However, all it does is make me feel anxious.
I grew up right outside the city, and I was thankful to get out and go to the University of North Carolina when I did. Thereâs just something about being in Nashville that makes me feel like Iâm not good enough.
Iâm not blonde enough. Iâm not tall and skinny enough, but Iâm not short and petite enough either.
At least thatâs how I felt growing up, and going back there has been hanging over my head ever since I took a job with a hockey team. Itâs a stop on the NHL schedule, whereas I could avoid a hometown visit when I worked with the NBA.
Ryan is lucky. He doesnât have to go back there multiple times a year for his games. Though he would be welcomed back with a parade, Iâm sure. He was a local high school celebrity, and I was his twin sister that girls were nice to in order to try to get close to the star basketball player.
Regardless, I still have a couple of friends from high school, and though we arenât super close, we are close enough that I should probably tell them Iâll be in town next week.
âHey, Vee!â Ryan calls out as he walks through the front door.
Popping off the couch, I look at him with wide, eager eyes. âDid you get me one?â
âNo âhelloâ? No âmy dearest brother and favorite person in the entire world, how are you?ââ
I scrunch my nose in disgust. âGross, no.â
âYes, I got you one.â He tosses the tinfoil-wrapped hot dog in my lap. âBut you know I can afford to feed you a little better than a five-dollar street-meat hot dog for dinner, right?â
âDonât judge me. The United Centerâs street-meat is the best.â I eagerly unwrap my dog, finding it piled high with grilled onions and peppers, doused in mustard. Just the way I like it. âWhat time do you want to head out?â
âHead out where?â
My head snaps back to him in the kitchen. âTo the movies. Weâre still trying to get to the seven oâclock showing, right?â
âOh, fuck, Vee. I completely forgot that we made plans tonight.â Guilt overtakes his face. âI have a date.â
âOh.â Which is a pure surprise. Because well, my brother doesnât really date.
âI can cancel.â
âYou have a date?â
âYeah, but Iâm going to cancel.â
âNo, donât do that.â
My brother hasnât dated since heâs been in Chicago. Heâs too focused on basketball and his career to add women into the equation. In fact, he practically refuses to date, so even though heâs probably hoping Iâll help him get out of it, thereâs no way Iâm going to enable his singleness.
Heâs the absolute best person I know, and he deserves to be happy, even though he thinks the only answer to that is basketball. Unfortunately, his first date in three years aligns with the only plans weâve been able to make in weeks. Now that itâs basketball and hockey season, we wonât be seeing each other much.
âCan I make it up to you? We can go as soon as Iâm back from this series of road games,â he eagerly offers.
âIâm leaving for Nashville the day before youâre home, but donât worry about it. Weâll hang out eventually.â
Ryan comes behind the couch and wraps his arms around my shoulders. âPlease tell me not to go.â
âYouâre going. Who is she anyway?â
âOur teamâs GMâs niece.â Ryan takes a seat on the edge of the couch. âSheâs going to some big movie premier, and our general manager called in a favor.â
âSo, you are going to the movies.â
A subtle laugh heaves in Ryanâs chest. âApparently, she needs some kind of PR overhaul, and who better to show up with than straight-laced, boring Ryan Shay.â
âYouâre not boring, Ry.â
âIâm pretty fucking boring, Vee.â
âWell, maybe youâll actually like her?â
âNot my type. This is strictly a business transaction.â
âHow do you have a type if you donât date?â
âUncleâs money? That shouldnât be anyoneâs type.â Ryan quickly shakes his head in disapproval. âSpeaking of dates, thereâs this big charity gala coming up that I need a date for.â
âPerfect, ask your brother-stealing famous movie star girlfriend.â
âYouâll go with me, right?â
âSure. If Iâm not on the road for hockey.â
âYouâre not. Itâs one of your playersâ charities. Active Minds of Chicago. Take my card and buy a dress for it. Itâs black-tie.â
I tilt my head around to look at him, my eyes narrowing. âI have my own money. And besides, Iâd rather find something secondhand.â
Ryan pulls his head back. âNo way. Vee, you know I think your thrifted style is great, but you cannot wear a dress from a thrift store to this thing.â
âWhy not?â
âBecause that room is going to be filled with the highest-paid athletes in Chicago. Youâll stick out like a sore thumb.â
That statement quickly solves our debate. Thatâs the exact kind of attention I donât want.
âFine. You can buy me an expensive-ass dress to wear around your rich-ass colleagues.â
A satisfied smile slides across his lips. âTake the black Am-Ex when you go.â He gives my shoulders a quick squeeze before swiftly snatching the hot dog from my hands and taking a giant bite.
âWhat the hell?!â
âFuck, that is good. Iâll have to get myself one of those next time.â He wipes the mustard from the side of his mouth. âSo, Nashville, huh? You gonna tell Twiddle Dee and Twiddle Dumb youâre coming back to town?â
âIf you mean Hannah and Jackie, then Iâm not sure yet. Havenât decided.â
Ryan rummages through the kitchen pantry, looking for something to snack on. âDonât. Those girls are evil.â
âTheyâre my friends.â
âTheyâre not your friends, Vee. Theyâre mean girls.â
I let out an exhausted breath. My brother is right, but they were my closest friendships in high school, no matter how much I felt left out from our trio.
âSpeaking of mean girlsâ¦have you talked to Mom?â
Ryan shoots me a death glare over his shoulder. âMom is not a mean girl.â
âNot to you. You are the favorite child after all.â
âNo, I havenât talked to her. But you better tell her youâre coming back to town. Sheâs going to want to see you.â
No, sheâs not.
âYeah, of course, Iâll tell her.â I avoid my brotherâs stare before he figures out the truth that I hadnât planned on letting my mom know Iâll be back home. I would love to see my dad, but my mom? Not so much.
âSpeaking of that galaâ¦â Ryan takes a seat on the armrest of the couch, eyeing me cautiously. âBrett hit me up today.â
âWhy?â I quickly snap.
My brother inhales a deep breath. âHe wants to visit. Come to that event.â
âVisit? Here? Like Chicago?â
Ryan pulls his gaze away from mine. âI told him it wasnât a good idea. He didnât know you were living here, but heâs really struggling right now, trying to find a job in sports. Every big team in the city will be at that charity gala. Itâs a good place for him to network.â
Thereâs a shortness of oxygen going to my lungs and subsequently my brain from hearing Brettâs name. The last person I want to think about is my brotherâs college teammateâmy ex.
We dated most of college, but there were multiple periods of time when he would end things with me because he had other options. Then, heâd come crawling back when he was bored, only to keep me on an endless roller coaster of trying to be good enough to keep his attention.
And I was the idiot who took him back. Every. Single. Time. He was my weakness. I loved him, and all I wanted was for him to want me back, but he didnât. Not really.
I was there to fill a void. To be a warm body in his bed while he continued to look for better options. I didnât realize it at the time, but my confidence in myself took a huge plummet from constantly feeling like I wasnât enough for him, and of course, it was the same time my mother started to make comments about the way I looked.
Then, in our senior year, when Brett found out he was offered a spot at training camp with a pro basketball team, he dropped me quicker than you can say, âIâve been using you for three years,â which is essentially what he said without saying those exact words.
I remember it all, clear as day. I was waiting for Ryan outside of his locker room at UNC, but little did I know my brother was in the middle of an interview out on the court while the rest of his teammates were shooting the shit behind a thin door that was anything but soundproof.
âWhat about Stevie?â one of the boys had asked when they learned about my boyfriendâs new opportunity.
Brettâs response? âWhat about Stevie? She was there because I was bored, but Iâm going pro. Do you know the quality of women that are about to throw themselves at me? You think Iâm going to stay with Shayâs sister when I have better options?â
And that was that. That was the final straw on my end. Heâs reached out a couple of times over the years, especially after he got dropped during training camp of his rookie season, never once making it onto a professional NBA team. But that day outside of the locker room was the day it clicked. I was never anything to him, and Iâve been carrying that weight of knowing I wasnât good enough ever since.
Ryan has no idea how bad it was. Brett is his college teammate and was once one of his closest friends. Though, the heartbreak my brother saw me endure had him keeping his distance from his old friend without even knowing the full details.
Not to be dramatic, but he fucked me up.
And this, ladies and gentlemen, is why I will never date an athlete again. Theyâre shallow, only caring about the trophy on their arm. And I am no oneâs trophy.
âI told him it wasnât a good idea,â Ryan adds, pulling me out of the past and back to the present. âBut I feel like maybe I should help him out? Get him in contact with some media networks? I donât know. I feel bad for the guy.â
Ryan wouldnât feel bad if he had any idea what his old teammate said about me. In fact, heâd probably kick his ass.
âIâll tell him not to come.â
âNo.â I shake my head. âHeâs your college teammate, Ry. Itâs cool. But could you find him somewhere else to stay?â
He shoots me a thankful and understanding smile. âYou going to ever tell me what happened between you guys?â
âWe broke up. Simple as that.â
âI would like for you to tell me one day.â He walks behind the couch, shaking my curls before taking off to his room to get ready. âLove you, Vee.â
The distaste for Ryanâs college teammate lingers in my mouth as I finish the rest of my hot dog before falling back on the couch and hiding under my giant weighted blanket for the night.
I spend my evening in my coziest sweats. Albeit theyâre also my rattiest, but who am I trying to impress? Iâm alone in this giant apartment, in the heart of a city where I still donât know too many people yet. I consider texting Indy to see what sheâs up to, thinking maybe it would be a good chance to get to know her better, seeing as we are about to spend the majority of the next six to eight months on the road together. But the weight of this blanket and the fact that I really donât want to get off this couch keeps me from doing so.
Thankfully, the rain has stopped, so when I get the mental strength to pull myself off this sofa, Iâll head out and spend the rest of my night loving on my favorite guys. And gals.
Of course, Iâm talking about the dogs at SDOCâSenior Dogs of Chicago.
Itâs a rescue a short walk from here, where older dogs wait to get adopted to a loving home where they can live out the rest of their days. I started volunteering there the day after I moved to Chicago. I did something similar back in North Carolina when I was in college, and itâs become sort of a passion project of mine.
If I could live off taking care of these animals and giving them the love that no one else will, I would. But unfortunately, itâs a nonprofit barely surviving off slim to no donations. So those of us who volunteer do so because we love the animals.
And I relate to them.
Not necessarily the senior thing. I mean, I am only twenty-six, but the idea of not being someoneâs first choice. I get that.
These dogs are passed up for puppies, left to live the rest of their short lives in a shelter. Iâm not going to be dramatic and say I get passed up by every man I meet because thatâs not the case. But after that conversation about Brett, I remember all too well how it feels to be the backup choice. So, for these sweet senior dogs who just want a warm home and someone to love, I make them my first choice.
And if my twin brother werenât allergic to dogs, Iâd have an apartment full of them.
Surfing the channels to find something decent to watch, I stumble upon the Raptors game. There are only two minutes left in the final period, and Chicago is up 4-2 on their opponent. Seems like an easy win for them.
Their stadium is packed to the brim, the way it is when I get to watch Ryan play in person.
I donât know much about hockey, but I suppose I should learn now that itâs my job, so I watch the final two minutes. And in those last minutes, all I learn is that thereâs a thing called icingâlike cake. But I have no idea what it means. Though, they call it twice.
They do some sort of announcements of the best players for the game, and low and behold, Evan Zanders gets the first star, which apparently, is a good thing.
âHow are you feeling tonight, Zanders?â one of the announcers asks.
He lifts his jersey to wipe the sweat off his brow before his hazel eyes lock with the camera, shooting his signature megawatt smile. Itâs all attractive and smug and shit.
âI feel good. Good win for the boys tonight.â
âCongratulations on being named the first star of the game. Are we celebrating with someone special tonight?â
Iâve watched plenty of professional games, and Iâve never heard a question like this, though, from the bit Iâve learned about Zandersâ reputation, most of the media seems to only care about who heâs being a dick to or who heâs putting his dick in.
His lips slide up into a smirk, looking right back to the camera. âA couple of special someones.â
Gross. I lift the remote and shut off the TV.
Grabbing my laptop, I delve into the FBI-level stalking that Indy already did. If Iâm going to be stuck on an airplane with these guys, I may as well figure out who the hell they are.
Rio is the first name to pop up. Thereâs not much information about the green-eyed defenseman, but heâs clearly the team clown. There arenât many pictures of him where heâs not wearing his goofy smile or carrying his old-school boom box.
I donât find much about the other guys on the team except where they went to college, their home countries, and a few images that pop up from my Google search with them and their girlfriends or friends.
The team captain is a different story. When I click on Eli Maddisonâs name, an endless list of websites comes up. His old university, the teams he played for previously, and most notably, the charity heâs the founder of. The name sounds familiarâActive Minds of Chicago.
As all the pieces connect, I realize that the gala Iâm going to with Ryan is a charity event for Maddisonâs organization to support kids and teens suffering with mental illness.
There are also plenty of pictures online of him and his family. His wife looks vaguely familiar, but I canât quite place her, though her red hair stands out to me, and Iâm almost positive Iâve seen this woman before.
Thereâs also an endless supply of pictures of Maddison with his daughter, including a clip of her bombarding a press conference last year that took over the internet.
Itâs clear that Maddison is the family guy on the team.
Contrary to that is Evan Zanders. Thereâs about as much information on Zanders as on Maddison. However, thereâs no family represented on Zandersâ Google search. But there are countless images of him leaving the arena with a different girl on his arm, no two pictures having the same woman. And below those photos are numerous headlines, including:
âChicago Raptorsâ Evan Zanders out at the club until 4 AM.â
âNumber eleven, ejected from game for fighting. Facing fines.â
âEvan Zanders. Chicagoâs resident bad boy.â
Jesus. Cliché much?
Unintentionally, I roll my eyes, finding exactly what I knew I would before I close my laptop and toss it back on the couch.
Standing, I whip my curls into a quick bun, throw on an oversized sweatshirt, and slip into my Air Force Ones. Before I hit the door, I grab a bag of dog treats from the console table and take a quick glance in the mirror.
I look like a hot mess.
My sweatpants are stained, the fabric so thin from being overly worn, and my hair needs to be washed. I donât have a touch of makeup on, and thereâs a good chance thereâs dried mustard on my chin from my hot dog earlier. But these pups donât care, and neither do I.
Grabbing my phone, purse, and keys, I leave the apartment and slip into the elevator.
Iâm excited to see all my furry friends who I havenât seen for days at this point. And thatâs the thing with some of these older dogsâyou donât know how much time youâll get with them. You just have the give them as much love as you can because you donât know how much longer they have on Earth.
I ride the elevator alone down to the lobby floor as the low hum of violin strings pours out from the speakers and fills the metal box. As I said, my brotherâs apartment is bougie as hell, and only the extremely wealthy live here. Iâm sure the kind doorman has a mini heart attack anytime he sees me enter or exit wearing my baggy flannels, oversized T-shirts, and dirty sneakers. Though, heâs always polite and never says a word.
The elevator stops on the main floor, and as soon as the doors open, I step out, walking smack dab into something solid.
âJesus,â someone says, holding me steady with a heavy arm. âYou good?â
My head feels a little wobbly from vibrating off a chest of pure muscle, but I can see perfectly clear.
My eyes trail the strangerâs body, noting the contrast between my dirty sneakers and his shiny dress shoes. His legs are thick, but his suit pants are perfectly tailored to fit his strong thighs. His crisp white shirt is practically see-through, showcasing his tatted skin, and when my gaze falls on the thin gold chain around his neck, I realize who I ran into.
My body, thanks to the warmth flowing through me from the unexpected contact, knows too.
I lift my eyes slightly higher, hazel irises staring back at me as the most mischievous grin slides up his lips.
âStevie,â Zanders says. âYou following me?â