Offside: Chapter 7
Offside: Rules of the Game Book 1
Coach Miller probably scheduled dryland training at the crack of dawn on Mondays specifically to fuck up the start of my week. Out of all the players on the team, I hated early mornings the most, and Miller knew it. We butted heads constantly, and he loved to torture me. Or âbuild character,â as he liked to say.
At least it was over with for today. Heâd even gone light on the burpees for once. Now all I had to do was stretch and foam roll, grab a shower, and head home for a good two-hour nap before my first class at ten-thirty. Probably hit the drive-through somewhere in there too. Then back to the rink at four. By the time that was done, Iâd be too tired to do much elseâwhich, I suspected, was Millerâs intention.
Dallas and I limped into the stretching area and sprawled out on the cushioned red mats, still short of breath from our drills. He leaned over his calf, pulling up on the toes of his black Nike sneakers to stretch out his hamstring.
âMorrisonâs ex? Thatâs who was at our place Saturday night?â He let out a low whistle, leaning deeper into his stretch. âAre you trying to make life harder for yourself? Now the Bulldogs are really going to have it out for you next weekend.â
They had it out for me already anyway. I was public enemy number one, which was perfectly fine with me. It made derailing their game that much easier, just like I had this weekendâlike taking shots on an empty net.
âYou didnât let me finish. Nothing happened.â I stood up and grabbed a black foam roller off the rack, then lay back down with it. âShe was too drunk.â
âAre you going to call her? Try for a do-over?â
I sucked in a sharp breath as I leaned on my elbow, rolling my glute. The left side of my ass was full of tight, painful knots. I could barely put any weight into it without flinching. It didnât help that Bailey had been sprawled out across the bed, relegating me to a tiny corner because I wanted to give her space. Sleeping that way totally jacked up my back.
âI didnât get her number.â Chump move, Carter.
Then again, she was too busy vomiting curbside Saturday night. And come Sunday morning, she was skittish after waking up in my bed unexpectedly. When I drove her home, she was silent and stared out the window the whole time. Iâd barely had the truck in park when she bolted. We didnât exactly get off to the strongest start.
Plus, there was the whole part where sober Bailey hated me.
Dallas switched sides, grabbing his opposite foot with a groan. âMaybe for the best. Coach probably wouldnât appreciate you stirring that pot. You get into enough trouble as it is.â
He wasnât wrong, but she was hot enough that I was still willing to risk it if the opportunity presented itself again.
Hey, I never said I made good choices.
âWhat about her friends?â I asked. âDid Tyler hit it or what?â
âI think one of their exes showed up and they bailed not long after you guys did. But we met these other chicks and hit up a party at a penthouse downtown. So XS for the win.â
âI donât know how your reputation stays so squeaky clean,â I muttered. âYouâre no saint, either.â
âIâm just smarter about it. Ever hear the word discretion?â He raised his eyebrows pointedly, wiping his forehead with his red and white Falcons gym towel. Smug shit.
âWhatever,â I said. âWe canât all be perfect like you.â
In contrast to my type-B slacker ass, Dallas was our teamâs all-starâwell-rounded on and off the ice. He played a highly technical game, racked up tons of points, and could stickhandle circles around everyone in our division. In short, it was like heâd been genetically engineered to play; think the Steph Curry of NCAA hockey.
Unfortunately, this also put a huge target on his back. But he wasnât a fighter, and he rarely dropped gloves. That was my job, as was making sure the people who took dirty hits on him answered for it.
âPerfection might be a little unrealistic for you,â he said. âI was thinking more along the lines of trying to stay out of jail.â
âYeah, yeah.â I waved him off. Wincing, I adjusted the angle of my glute on the foam roller, but that made it hurt even more. Maybe I could get in for a sports massage this week. This cylindrical torture device wasnât helping.
âOh.â Dallas jutted his chin toward the door to the training room, âCoach told me he wants to see you before you leave.â
Speaking of torture. Fuck me.
The good thing about Boyd U was that our Division I hockey program was top-notch. The bad part was that Coach Miller was a tyrant. And no one ever got summoned to his office to be congratulated for doing something right.
After a long shower, I took my sweet time getting dressed and finally dragged myself down the hall to his office. Coach Miller sat at his desk with his wire-rimmed reading glasses perched on his ruddy nose, immersed in his phone. His work wardrobe consisted of black track pants with a rotation of Falcons hoodies in black, gray, red, and white. Todayâs choice was black, which I hoped wasnât a bad omen.
âHey, Coach.â I rapped on the gray metal doorframe and stood at the threshold, praying he wouldnât order me to come in. âWard said you wanted to see me?â
âSit.â He pointed at the chair in front of him without glancing up from his phone.
Dammit.
Not only did I not want to get chewed out, but this was eating into my nap window. Maybe I could make up an excuse about having a class soon. Nah. After my bumpy sophomore year, Miller was up my ass constantly. I was pretty sure he had my schedule memorized inside and out. He probably even did spot checks to make sure I was in my classes.
But I didnât have a choice, so I obeyed, plopping into the worn black leather seat across from his solid-oak desk. He continued to scroll on his phone, face contorted into a sour frown. I scanned the walls of his office, lined with trophies and photos from tournaments and championships dating up to twenty years back. Man, Miller used to have a nice head of thick, wavy brown hair. Maybe thatâs why he was so pissed off all the time. I would be mad at the world too if I went bald.
After another minute, he locked his phone and set it facedown. He placed his elbows on the desk, studying me warily from beneath his red Falcons cap. âI finished my semester check-in with your professors.â
âOkayâ¦â This wasnât leading anywhere good, given that heâd done all of this by eight oâclock on a Monday.
âLong story short, youâre on probation.â
âProbation?â I echoed. Weâd gone down this road last spring, and it was an utter waste of everyoneâs time and paperwork. After a month or so, I pulled my grades up enough to pacify them, and we all moved on. The theatrics and procedural crap were unnecessary. Why were we doing this again?
âNot officially, thank god.â He glanced up at the ceiling. âBecause then I would have no choice but to pull you from the line.â
âPhew,â I said, leaning back and crossing an ankle over my knee.
âNo, Carter,â he snapped, pinning me with an icy gaze. âNot phew. Youâre still on probation with me. With the program. I spoke to the athletic director about it. Weâre trying to keep it under the radar this time because repeated probations look bad for you and for the program.â
âWhatâs the reason youâre putting me on probation?â
âYou really donât know? Your grades are in the goddamn toilet. Just like last year.â
Well, that wasnât a surprise. Since school started three weeks ago, Iâd dedicated approximately twenty minutes to studying and completing assignments. It was my last year at Boyd. I wouldnât be staying to graduate, so I gave no fucks whatsoever about my grades.
College was merely an annoying detour along the way to the league. At least I didnât have to worry about losing a scholarship on top of everything else. I was paying my own way through this circus.
âIâll address my grades,â I told him.
âYouâd better.â He gestured to his phone. âYouâve failed two quizzes in history already. And you have a term paper due next month thatâs worth a third of your grade. I expect youâll expend extra energy on that paper to ensure you donât fail the class.â
âYes, I will.â Extra energy having someone else write it for me, maybe. That history class was drier than cardboard.
âWhile weâre on the topic of problematic behavior, I heard about your antics at that little end-of-school party you threw this spring.â
What, specifically, had he heard? He would take issue with several things, I was sure, some of which werenât exactly legal. Asking for details didnât seem like a good idea, though. Then he might start digging.
âIâm sure whatever you heard was greatly exaggerated.â
He shot me a look so searing my skin prickled. âIâm told there are pictures. You better hope that is not the case.â
Shit. Maybe we needed to confiscate phones at the door. No evidence, no crime, right?
âI have eyes everywhere, Carter. If it happened, assume Iâve already heard about it.â
Cute how he was trying to scare me. But if that last part were true, I would have been kicked off the team freshman year.
He added, âStop gallivanting around with girls, getting into fights, and acting like a teenage idiot.â
I almost pointed out that at twenty-one, I was not, in fact, a teenager. Then I realized that was his point. Instead, I nodded. Silence was usually the safest bet in these situations.
âLook,â he said, his tone marginally less hostile. âYou add a lot of value to the team. And I appreciate your knack for getting into your opponentsâ heads. But you have to reel it in a little off the ice, or youâre going to ruin all your hard work. Understand?â
âYes,â I muttered. âI understand.â
âYou canât impress the scouts from the sidelines, Carter. Get it together or get benched. Youâre dismissed.â
âYes, sir.â I stood up and threw my gym bag over my shoulder before heading for the door. There was still enough time to catch some sleep before class.
âAnd Carter?â
âYes, Coach?â I turned back to face him.
He snatched a pen from its holder with a worrying amount of violence. âConsider this your first, last, and only warning.â