Offside: Chapter 28
Offside: Rules of the Game Book 1
The bus ride home felt like days.
When I walked in, Bailey was curled up on the living room sectional with her silver laptop propped up beside her. She looked adorable wearing black leggings paired with my white Falcons hoodie. Definitely an added perk to coming home.
Her hazel eyes lit up when they landed on me. âHi, stranger.â
She closed her computer and stood to greet me as I rounded the couch. Wrapping my arms around her waist, I ducked my head to kiss her. Her warm vanilla scent surrounded me, always smelling vaguely like a cookie or something equally delicious that I wanted to devourâliterally.
Her lips parted, and our mouths slanted, deepening the kiss. She drew in a soft breath, arms sliding to rest on my shoulders. My hands smoothed down her ribcage, past her hips, cupping her perfect ass. And instantly, I got hard. Maybe I should have done this somewhere else, because I was getting way too turned on in the middle of the living room.
The front door swung open, and Dallas barged in like a goddamn rhinoceros. âDonât mind me,â he called, clomping by. For someone so graceful on the ice, he had lead feet at home. âJust going to find Shiv.â
Mood-killer.
âSorry we ran late,â I said, tracing her jawline with my finger. âSome of the guys took forever to get their act together and check out from the hotel after the game.â
She blinked slowly, lips forming a little smile. âItâs okay.â
âCâmere.â I threw an arm around her, tugging her onto the couch with me. Bailey flopped down beside me, exhaling with a sigh and shifting ninety degrees so her long legs draped across my lap.
I scanned her face and let my gaze drift down to her torso, clad in my gray sweatshirt. It was a little oversized on her, but in the most perfect way. And I knew the curves beneath it were phenomenal.
I wanted to throw her down on the couch and ravage her. But I didnât want her to think that was the only thing I was interested in, especially after a few days apart, so I held off.
Our gazes met again, and it felt like coming home; being with her felt like home.
âWhat were you working on?â I asked.
âWellâ¦â She sank her teeth into her bottom lip. âI was reading an internship posting Zara sent me.â
âWith what company?â
She was playing coy for reasons I couldnât quite discern.
âPenalty Box Online.â She grabbed her laptop, turning it to face me.
I skimmed the description and the requirements.
âJames.â I glanced up at her. âThis sounds perfect. Youâre going to apply, right?â
She made a little noncommittal sound and did a half shrug, dropping her gaze. âWeâll see. Iâm not sure Iâm qualified.â
I studied the description of the internship again. âBabe, it sounds like they created this for you.â
She rolled in her lips like she wanted to argue but didnât. I hated that she thought so little of herself and her abilities sometimes. I hated the reason why even more. Fucking Morrison.
âDonât self reject,â I told her. âYouâve got nothing to lose by applying.â
âYeah.â Her gaze turned distant for a beat, and she nodded. âYouâre right. Iâll do what you would do. Assume Iâm awesome and that everything will work out.â
âExactly. Youâre going to stay over Wednesday, right?â I flashed her a crooked grin, one that almost always got me to yes.
âYeah, I can.â She smiled, suddenly shy. âIâll get some of that stuff done early. And I donât have class until ten on Thursday. Unless you need to be up early.â
âI have dryland that morning, but I can come back after. I should be home around eight.â Crawling back into my bed to find James in it was my literal idea of heaven.
âThat works,â Bailey said. âI still have a group project to deal with tonight anyway. Weâre having issues between group members, and I have to play mediator.â She rolled her eyes, letting out a huff of annoyance that was more cute than angry.
I wasnât sure Iâd ever seen her really angry. Irritated, yes. But never losing her temper. It was probably inevitable with my dumb ass, though.
âUnfortunately, I have a lot of schoolwork to finish before tomorrow too,â I said. âAnd now that I can kiss you freely, Iâm not sure I would be as productive with you here as I was last time.â
âLetâs be honest.â Her green-gold eyes traced my face, pink lips tipping upward. âYou werenât trying to be productive then, either.â
Was I that obvious? Damn.
âI may have been buying some time,â I admitted. âBut Ward has consistently bad timing.â
Her jaw dropped, her mouth forming a little O. âSo you were going to kiss me.â She swatted my arm playfully.
I smiled. I was busted and I knew it. âI was sure going to try.â
âYou can kiss me now if you want,â she said, her voice turning breathy.
Coming closer, I twined a hand in her hair, pulling her to me. Our lips came together softly. She placed a cool hand along my jaw as she kissed me back.
I could only describe it as a shut-off switch for my brain, because everything else faded away. The moment stretched out forever. All that existed were her sweet lips moving against my lips in the most achingly perfect way and her body pressed up against mine.
Slowly, we broke apart. Her lips curved into a shy smile again. Then her expression turned serious, and she studied my face.
âSpeaking of schoolwork, howâs that probation going?â
âThanks to you and to the good grade I got on my essay,â I said, âI am officially out of the woods on that one.â And I was trying to keep it that way. Unless I lost my cool and beat the shit out of Morrison in the near future, which was a strong possibility and would absolutely be worth it.
Ideally, though, Iâd clobber him on the ice, thereby helping the team while avoiding jail.
âReally?â Baileyâs face brightened and she squeezed my hand. âThatâs great.â
âYeah, but I still have to watch myself. Like at the game against you guys this week.â
Maybe I shouldnât have mentioned that part. Coach Miller had been giving me regular âstay the fuck in lineâ pep talksâwhich we both knew were warnings.
Her brow creased, and she shifted her body weight. âAre you sure it wonât be worse if Iâm there?â
âNo, itâll be fine.â I shook my head. That didnât come out the way I wanted it to. Having her there would be so much more than fine. âItâll be great,â I assured her. âIâm looking forward to you coming. I can keep my cool.â
I think.
Dallas strolled into the living room. âDinner? Yes?â He raised his dark eyebrows, pointing at Bailey, then me. âI can cook.â
âWait. You guys go away all weekend, work your butts off, then you come back and cook for us?â Bailey asked.
I mean, Dallas would be doing all the work in this scenario, but if I got credit by association, I wouldnât complain. Grilling wasnât really a two-man job, but I guess I could stand beside the barbecue and pretend to help.
Two hours later, we had perfectly grilled steaks, loaded baked potatoes, and a masterpiece of a Caesar salad, compete with fresh bacon crumbled over top.
The company wasnât too shabby, either.
Bailey set her fork down on her plate and took a sip of water. Her lush lips landed on the glass, drawing my attention. All I could think of was her mouth on my mouth. Or, well, other places.
âYou know,â she said, âI havenât heard any embarrassing stories about you from your friends yet.â
I swallowed a bite of medium-rare steak with trepidation. There were embarrassing stories, and then there were embarrassing stories. But I could trust Ward not to throw me under the bus. Didnât need some of those tales getting out, least of all to James.
Some of the guys on the team might need a small reminder.
âHmm.â Dallas furrowed his dark brow. âThatâs a tough one. I feel like most of them implicate me too.â
âAll the better.â Shiv leaned over in her seat, nudging him with her elbow. She pushed her curtain of dark hair over her shoulder and looked at Ward expectantly. âStart talking, Dal.â
He glanced over at me. We shared a brief, silent understanding that he wouldnât completely ruin my life, and I would do the same for him. Thanks, man.
âI donât know,â he said, drumming his fingers on the wooden table. âThere are some good ones from that juniors tournament in Finland. Like the restaurant thing.â
Ah, that was a fun trip. It was the summer before freshman year, the first time weâd been afforded any real freedom while we were away for a tournamentâwith the trouble to show for it.
âYeah,â I agreed. âThat was kind of funny.â
And low on the embarrassment scale, comparatively speaking. At least my clothes stayed on in that one. Nice save, Ward.
Bailey tilted her head, pausing with a fork full of Caesar salad. âWhy, what happened?â
âOn our first night there, they let us go out on our own,â I said. âWard and I headed downtown, far away from the touristy stuff near our hotel. You know, to get an authentic local experience.â
âObviously we didnât speak a lick of Finnish,â Dallas added, taking a bite of his loaded baked potato.
Shiv and Bailey watched us, rapt, as we continued.
âWe rolled up to this restaurant, and it was packed, so we figured it had to be good.â I tossed back.
âBut with the language barrier, communicating with the hostess was an issue,â he said. âShe pointed at a table, then to a group of people who were already seated. We nodded and were like, yeah, we want a table too. Then she seated us at the end of this long table, right along with these other people. We thought it was strange, but we were like, okay, maybe communal dining is the Finnish way.â
I huffed a laugh at the memory. âThe other people were giving us funny looks, but we thought it was because we were American. The server kept bringing us courses of food, one after the other. We didnât get the chance to order off the menu. Again, it was odd, but we rolled with it.â
âThey even poured us wine without asking,â Dallas added. âWhen we were finished, we went to pay, and they wouldnât take our money.â He paused, taking a sip of his beer, his lips curving against the mouth of the bottle. âBecause we crashed a wedding reception by mistake.â
âWe left a huge tip and booked it out of there,â I said, snickering.
Shiv tipped her head back, letting out a throaty laugh. âHow is this the first Iâm hearing of this?â She recovered partially, shaking her head. âOh, itâs a good thing you two are pretty.â
âSure is.â Bailey bit her lip. Her shoulders shook beneath my gray hoodie as she attempted to fight back a fit of giggles and failed.
I waved them off, fighting a sheepish smile. âYeah, yeah.â
Dallas looked down at his plate, cutting off a piece of steak before glancing up again. âThere was also the Amsterdam thing on the way home.â
Bailey turned to face me. âAmsterdamâ¦?â Her brow knit together, expression turning wary.
I laughed, squeezing her thigh beneath the table. âWe did edibles, James. Magic brownies. We didnât hit the red-light district.â
The father of one of our teammates handled the travel arrangements for the entire team. We got stuck with a random thirty-six-hour stopover in the middle of the Netherlands. Obviously, we had to seize the opportunity to check out a âcoffee shop.â
âBut edibles are tricky, and we had no idea what we were doing. So, of course, we overshot and ended up super high,â Dallas explained. âLike, super fucking high.â
Bailey and Shiv exchanged a look over the table that was somewhere between amusement and these idiots.
âThen we got the munchies,â I said, âso we found a McDonalds. We ordered everything on the menu, and with the exchange rate, it worked out to like two hundred dollars by the time we were done,â I recalled. âYou know, I bet we could have dined at the fanciest joint in Amsterdam for that.â
âTo be fair, those were the best chicken nuggets Iâve ever eaten.â Dallasâs expression turned wistful. âWorth the twenty-five bucks.â
I guffawed. âBecause you were higher than a fucking kite. You were dipping them in your strawberry milkshake, dude.â
âOnce we got back to the hotel, Carter lost his phone. We ransacked our room looking for itâusing his phone as a flashlight. Finally, I wised up and decided to use my phone to call his. And he screamed when it rang in his hand.â
Shiv laugh-snorted, slapping her palm on the table, and Bailey broke into a fit of giggles. It wasnât my sharpest moment, but it was funny in retrospect. Iâd been pretty fucked up before, but that took the cake. Or brownie.
âThen we turned on Anchorman,â I told them. âWe were a solid half hour into the movie before either of us realized the TV had been on mute the entire time.â
âOh my god,â Bailey shouted, hazel eyes crinkling. âYou two are such a gong show.â
Dallas chortled. âI blame Carter. It was all his idea.â
âI believe you,â Bailey said.
âWhat?â I shrugged, picking up my bottle of beer. Beneath the table, Bailey shifted her weight, accidentally brushing her leg against mine and momentarily diverting my attention. âItâs legal there. When in Rome. Er,â I stumbled, âAmsterdam.â See? She had a crazy amount of power over my brain.
âI think the lesson here is that you should never be released into the wild together without proper supervision,â Shiv said, still fighting back a chuckle.
âIn our defense, we were only eighteen,â I said. âI like to think weâre a little bit smarter now.â
âI should hope so.â Bailey wiped away a tear of laughter. âYou a closet pothead, Carter?â
âHa, not really.â
âThatâs not a no.â Her brow crinkled, expression sobering. âBut what about drug tests?â
âIâm talking a couple times a year, max. In the off-season.â Usually. Ty was another story, with an encyclopedic knowledge about how to outwit drug testing and several successes doing so.
âAh,â she murmured. âYou really are corrupt.â
âTrying to reform,â I said. âKinda. Why? Are you telling me youâve never done that?â
She scrunched up her nose. âOnce or twice. I just didnât like it.â
Huh. I couldnât picture Bailey doing anything illegal. Or breaking the rules in general, for that matter. Wasnât sure how she ended up with me, but definitely wasnât complaining.
âAh, my rule-follower.â I patted her thigh beneath the table, letting my hand linger on her leg. She shot me a sidelong glance that was more than a little suggestive, which instantly turned me on again. Dammit.
Not long after, Shiv drove Bailey home so they could swing by and check out the exteriors of the apartments on their list. To, quote, âassess the sketchiness factor of the area and check out walkability to nearby Starbucks.â Chick priorities, I guess.
Wednesday couldnât come soon enough.