Icebound: Chapter 1
Icebound (Boundless Players)
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f you donât tell me to stop, Iâm going to kiss you in three seconds.â
âWhat theââ I start, but her mouth crashes into my face, teeth knocking against mine.
Three seconds?
Pretty sure that was two. I recoil, but the woman latches onto me like an overenthusiastic rookie.
âYou taste so good,â she slurs with half-lidded eyes. âLike minty mint mojito leaves.â
Iâve been drinking nonalcoholic beer all night, so thereâs no way thatâs true. This stranger tastes like she took a bath in a gas-station Merlot. I gag.
If thereâs one thing that gives me an awful hangover, itâs red wine, and I canât let my performance suffer. The mediaâs already talking about my retirement, so Iâm steering clear of alcohol this season.
Maybe forever.
Her fingers tangle in my hair. âI like your lips. So soft. You must use lots of ChapStick.
â
I try to say something, but her tongue slithers into my mouth. What made her think she could march up and kiss me?
Yeah, sure, in my twenties, I wouldâve been hauling her over my shoulder, but now Iâm ready to get down on one knee for a woman.
Well, not any womanâthe right one.
My fists tighten, but Iâm not going to be a dick about this because the last thing I need is another media scandal. It took years to clean up my image after Quench pulled my sponsorship, thanks to the Tenerife Incident.
I havenât been able to find another sponsor since, and now, every sportscasterâs calling me a fading legend at the ripe old age of thirty-three. Hell, Brodeur didnât hang up his skates until his forties.
âAlright, bold move.â I force a grin, gently pushing her back. âHow about we start with names, sweetheart?â
She stumbles, and I try to steady her, but she grabs onto the bar ledge in her stilettos. Thereâs no doubt sheâs gorgeous with her full lips, but I care more about what comes out of that mouth.
âIâm so sorry,â she slurs. âIâm drunk. So drunk. Not that itâs an excuse. I really shouldnât have done that. I didnât mean, umâ¦â Her brows pinch. âYou look familiar. Do I know you?â
âAre you a member of the Nashville cross-stitch club?â
âUh, no?â
âThen, no, I donât think weâve met.â I clench my poor excuse for a beer, wishing Iâd worn a feather boa instead of a gray suit tonight, so Iâd blend in with this crowd.
Cruz wanted to come to Wonderbar for his twenty-third birthday, and once our rookie gets an idea in his head, thereâs no changing his mind. Micah Cruz is more stubborn than my goalie coach, but at least his idea of fun isnât making me do butterfly slides on the ice .
This club looks like the Lucky Charms leprechaun fucked a unicorn and had a rainbow for a baby. Itâs full of sweaty bodies grinding on each other.
Men on men.
Women with women.
People kissing people.
Itâs a good time, but Iâm done with the clubbing scene.
Three years ago, I wouldâve been on the dance floor, chugging my eighth overpriced beer, but that was before my mother looked at me with that disappointed flash in her eyes after the Tenerife scandal resurfaced.
Now, Iâm counting down the minutes until I can get home to my cat. Maybe I can bribe someone to turn down the thumping bass.
I shouldâve brought earplugs.
âWait, I do know you.â The womanâs green eyes scan my face, and her expression seems to spark to life as some light bulb goes off in her brain. âYouâre Rhode⦠Rhode something. Rhode Tremblay! I donât watch hockey, but you were in that underwear commercial, right? My MBA class did a case study on it because it generated millions in revenue. People went feral over your thigh tattoo. Donât listen to what everyone says. I like the turtle. Itâs artsy⦠and hot.â
âEveryone loves talking about that turtle on my thigh,â I mutter, sipping my beer that tastes like watered-down oats.
That would be the visual seared into the media. Rhode Tremblay: Nashvilleâs Naughtiest Bachelor. The poster boy of sex appeal carved out of muscleâtheir words, not mine.
Yeah, I look good naked thanks to the decades of soul-crushing workouts, but the main reason I agreed to do the campaign is because the company donated twenty percent of the profit to charity. But the journalist was more interested in discussing the abstract turtle on my thigh .
They all are.
The woman blinks like sheâs confused or dreaming. âRhode, right?â
âYou asked me that already.â
âYouâre so hot.â
I sip my beer, glancing around the bar for the nearest exit. âThanks, you should see my personality.â
âNo, but youâve got those blue eyes and dark waves that always look so shiny.â She tramples right over what I thought was a solid comeback. âWhat conditioner do you use? I want it, and you even have that dimple right here.â
She pokes her finger above my cheek.
I lurch back, rubbing my jaw. Iâm not spending another night making small talk with a stranger at a club, especially one who feels like she has a right to shove her tongue down my throat. Iâm not a twenty-two-year-old guy who needs sex to function.
At least, not anymore. Those days are so far behind me that Iâd need a telescope to see them.
I slap the bar counter. âAlright, I better head out. Got to get home to feed my cat. Heâs a menace when heâs hungry.â
I love the little asshole. If it werenât for him, Iâd come home to an apartment emptier than my fridge.
âWe could leave together if you want?â she slurs the innuendo. âCats love me.â
âMine would hate you, but he hates everyone, including me. Stay away from him in a thunderstorm. Heâd scratch up your pretty dress.â
Her eyes spark. âYou think Iâm pretty?â
âI think all women are beautiful.â
The light in her eyes dims, and a twinge of guilt nags at me, but if I wanted a one-night stand, Iâd have one. My DMs are full of offers .
One woman sent me a two-paragraph message saying she was thinking about me while she had sex with her husband.
Reverse cowgirl. Not that I asked.
I hate knowing thereâs someone out there imagining me while she has sex. Thatâs not an image I need in my head, and the last thing I want is to break up a marriage.
Iâm not my father.
âOh no.â The womanâs cheeks bulge like sheâs about to gag.
My body goes rigid. âOh. Shit.â
She begins a series of dry heaves that remind me of the time my cat puked up a hairball, but then she slaps a hand to her lips and bolts toward the bathroom. She drops her drink, splattering pink liquid all over my shirt.
Great, just the nightcap I need.
Iâm tempted to go after her to make sure sheâs okay, but she disappears into the hazy club.
Iâm left standing in the aftermath, my button-down a sticky canvas of cherry sludge. Everyone scrambles to give me a wide berth.
Gritting my teeth, I wave down the bartender in the green cowboy hat. âHey, man, can I pay my tab? Think Iâm gonna head out now.â
The guy gives me a once-over, grimaces, and hands me a napkin. âOn the house, my friend.â
Heâs getting a big tip. I pick up the empty cocktail glass and hand it over. âThanks, you might be my favorite person of the night.â
I dab my shirt while eyeing Cruz, sitting with the rest of our first line on a velvet couch that matches his blazer.
Micah Cruz looks like he just won the Stanley Cup with his arms dangling around two women, so I doubt heâll miss me if I leave.
Patty fires off a text. Iâd bet my entire collection of cross-
stitches that our beauty of a wingerâs checking on his seven-month-old daughter, Betty.
âThe Golden Giant,â as the media calls Wyatt Patterson, can barely clock twenty minutes before texting his two moms for an update. Heâs lucky heâs got live-in babysitters at his house.
I could barrel through the crowd to tell my teammates Iâm going, but I smell like fermented candy, and my feet are sore as hell from these new Brioni loafers. I glance at my Rolex. 10:30 p.m.
If I leave now, Iâll have time for a bath to relax my muscles before our string of away games. I should use the chamomile soap tonight. No, spearmint.
After leaving a hundred-dollar tip for the bartender, I push through the smoky club, step into the cold January air, and order a ride in a white Audi e-tron GT.
It may be high maintenance, but I only get premium rides. I didnât take a puck to the jaw, causing a laceration that required reconstructive surgery, only to share a pooled ride.
I send a message in our group chat, Puck Buddies.
ME Some random woman just spilled her drink all over me so Iâm out.
CRUZ Ayyo the King of Irish exits strikes again. You gonna let a little splash action stop you from celebrating my birthday? Go change and get your ass back here you fucking degenerate.
PATTY Iâm out too then. Iâve actually got a kid at home.
CRUZ And whose fault is that for not knowing how to use a condom at twenty-six?
PATTY *salutes*
Iâm out.
CRUZ You guys are so fucking lame. Itâs my birthday. I thought weâd be having an orgy by now.
ME Always here to throw a used condom on the night.
CRUZ Do you even know what that is anymore? Fine. Have fun with your hand tonight old man.
ME Iâll make sure the left one doesnât get jealous.
A muscle twitches in my jaw. I like being called old man about as much as I like freezing my balls in an ice bath, but Iâll never admit it makes me feel ancient to a rookie like Cruz. Itâs getting harder and harder to keep up, but my save percentage is still one of the best in the League.
Micah Cruz latched onto me when he signed with the Guardians, and our center annoys the living shit out of me, but heâs one talented player.
Thereâs a reason every announcerâs talking about him winning the Calder Memorial Trophy. Heâs got everything it takes to be Rookie of the Year if he can rein in his attitude.
My phone vibrates with a notification that my driverâs approaching. I scan the neon-lit street but get distracted by the family eating at Taj Kitchen across the road.
The dad looks younger than me, and heâs feeding his son spoons of yellow curry in a highchair. The little boy claps his hands, squealing with each bite.
A corner of my mouth lifts as I watch the kid, but then the guy kisses his girl, and my lips fall back into a flat line.
Thatâs what I thought my life would look like at thirty-three, but instead, Iâm going home alone, covered in someoneâs nasty pink drink.
By the time the white Audi pulls up to the curb, my slacks are crusty, and Iâm exhausted, irritated, and starving. I yank open the car door and sniff the fresh leather-scented air. Too bad Iâm about to ruin the smell.
âRhode?â
I stiffen at the womanâs voice. Itâs smoother than these brown leather seats, nothing like the shrieks in the club. âYeah, thatâs me.â
âHowâs your night been?â she throws out. The question hits the air with forced casualness like sheâs checking a box.
I climb into the backseat and shut the door. âNot great. Some random woman just kissed me, almost puked, and then spilled her drink all over my shirt. So, sorry if I smell like ass. Iâll pay extra for cleaning if you need it.â
âWell, it couldâve been worse. At least she didnât actually puke and then kiss you.â She pauses. âUnless she almost puked because youâre a terrible kisser. Then, the other way is worse.â
A laugh bursts through my lips. Itâs my first one of the night. I glance at her from the backseat, and once I look up, I canât turn away.
Holy fuck.
I wouldâve shaved if Iâd known this woman would be driving me around.
Sheâs got little tattoos all over her hands and neck. Her hair hangs down her overalls in curls, but I canât tell whether itâs light brown or blonde in the dim light. Caramel, maybe ?
Donât know where the hell that thought came from.
Thereâs a piece caught in her small nose piercing, and Iâm tempted to pull it out. I absorb every detail of her, from the line of earrings on the curve of her ear to the sunflower tattoo on her inner wrist, all the way up to the gold circular glasses covering the freckles on the bridge of her nose. Sheâs even got a four-leaf clover etched on her neck.
Maybe this is my lucky night.
The womanâs like one of those abstract paintings Cruz drunkenly bid on at a charity auction. Thereâs so much going on that I need to look closer to figure it out, but Iâm intrigued.
Really intrigued.
On instinct, I check her left hand. No ring. Whatâs this woman doing driving Lyft? Iâd never let my younger sister drive around with strangers at night. Hell, if I belonged to this woman, Iâd use those overalls to clip her to the headboard.
She turns the volume knob, and some random flute album fills the car. Solid music taste. Her blue-green eyes meet mine in the rearview. âWhat are you looking at?â
I jerk, missing the click of my seatbelt. âNothing. Sorry, so whatâs your name, sweetheart?â
âSweetheart? Oh no, Iâm going to stop you right there,â she says, turning on a street lined with brownstones. âIâm not normally this prickly with strangers, but Iâve been having a really shitty week ever since⦠Never mind. Iâm not about to tell some random my life story, but I donât want to talk to any more grumpy assâmen,â she corrects.
Alright, sheâs a straight shooter. I like that. I deal with enough media bullshit that honesty is as rare as a Gordie Howe hat trick. âGrumpy ass-men? Thatâs a big assumption. What if Iâm an eye-man? I was raised by a woman who taught me the only way to see a personâs soul is to look them in the eye.
â
She scoffs. âOkay, fine. What color are my eyes?â She turns her head to the side. âOh, and I already know yours are blue.â
I grin like a first-round draft pick. âYeah? You noticed my eyes?â
âTheyâre very bright,â she says with no shame. I canât tell if thatâs a compliment. âNow, go. What color are they?â
âI didnât get a good look because itâs dark, but I think theyâre blue. Maybe green? They remind me of this mood ring my sister gave me. Youâve got the type of eyes a man needs to stare at a little longer to figure out the color, and I donât mind staring.â
She rolls those stormy eyes of hers. âThatâs such an ass-man response.â
I lean forward, getting a whiff of cinnamon and something delicate. It covers up my smell, so I breathe deeper. âAlright, what kind of woman are you?â
âAn incredible one,â she deadpans.
I try not to grin, but her answerâs too good to resist. âThereâs no doubt, but are you an ass-woman or an eye-woman? Or, hell, maybe a shoulder-woman? And donât act like women donât notice those things because I know they do.â
She slows to a stop light. âIâm a personality-woman.â
âWell played.â My smile widens. âWhatâs your name, personality-woman?â
She sighs like I asked her to drive me across the country. âFine, donât check the app. Itâs Nina. Well, technically, itâs Philomena, thanks to my grandmotherâs dying wish, but I go by Nina because thereâs no way Iâm going by Phil.â
âNinaâ¦â I swirl the name like itâs a forty-year-old aged whiskey. âNina, I like it. It fits you.â
âGood. I was really on the edge of my seat, wondering if a stranger would like my name.â
The corner of my mouth lifts higher. Her personalityâs got a bite, and it has me wanting more of a taste. âIs this your main job, or do you do something else?â
âYou first, ass-man.â
âIâm a plumber,â I lie. No one asks more questions about plumbers, and I talk about my hockey career enough in media interviews since itâs my contract year. The constant questions about my potential retirement are grueling.
She makes some noise in her throat, switching lanes under the flickering streetlights. âRight. If youâre a plumber, then Iâm a neurosurgical resident.â
My brows fly to my hairline. I canât tell if sheâs lying, but my sister says Iâm so trustworthy that I border on gullible. Iâm less naive now since itâs not a good trait for someone in the spotlight, but I like to believe the best in people, even if it bites me in the ass.
When I started my rookie year, the veterans on the team convinced me everyone went commando for home games because it was good luck. I spent that first year in the League rubbing my bare ballsack against a jockstrap. My skinâs still a darker shade from all the chafing.
I narrow my eyes. âOh, yeah? Prove it. Tell me a fact about the brain.â
âWomenâs brains are seven-point-nine-two percent larger than menâs brains.â
Thereâs no chance in hell Iâm arguing that, and the fact is specific enough that I believe her. âAlright, thatâs impressive. How old are you? You mustâve been in school for a while.â
Itâs awkward, but I always have to ask because I can never tell a womanâs age, and I refuse to date someone under thirty. People in their twenties are still searching for themselves, and I need a woman whoâs already found herself. I donât play games unless Iâm on the ice. Not anymore.
âIâm in my residency, so I guess that makes me thirty.
â
My shoulders loosen. She looks younger, but Iâm not going to call her on it when I know nothing about the medical field. I called a stethoscope a telescope until I was twelve.
She flicks on her turn signal. âSo, a plumber and a neurosurgeon get into a car. Sounds like the start of a terrible joke. What do you think the punchline is?â
âIâm pretty sure the neurosurgeon gives the plumber her number.â
She laughs. The raspy sound fills the entire car. I smirk. Damn, do I smirk big. âIâm pretty sure thatâs not theââ
A gunshot cuts her off.
She screams, swerving the Audi.
My head slams into the window, and pain bursts through my temple.
Shit, that hurts.
Iâm stunned for less than a second before my reflexes kick in, and I lurch for the wheel.
Decades of playing hockey taught me how to perform under an adrenaline rush. Thereâs no chance Iâm letting a future doctor die tonight.
Thatâs not the punchline of our joke.