Icebound: Chapter 2
Icebound (Boundless Players)
I spend a completely normal amount of time contemplating my deathâI checked with my therapist.
According to Dr. Ghosh, my musings on mortality arenât unusual, thankfully. I plan to live until Iâm more wrinkled than one of those cute dogs, the Shar-Peis, but I do hope that when I go, my death will make a good story.
Dying in a car crash with burnt rubber charring my nostrils and Americaâs sexiest plumber in the backseat is far from iconic.
In the brief moments when I lose control and we careen into oncoming traffic, thatâs exactly what I think is coming for meâdeath.
âWatch out for the car!â
Sexy Plumber lunges for the steering wheel and swerves us back into the right lane so we narrowly avoid hitting the black Tahoe. The sound of screeching brakes fills the starry night.
I punch the brake on instinct, and we jerk, slamming into a pile of trash cans on the sidewalk. Thatâs going to leave a mark on the car.
An orange peel splatters on the windshield with a loud thwap .
The plumber pitches forward, hitting the back of my skull with his forehead. A sharp pain ripples through my temple, and I wince.
âSorry, you alright?â he rushes out. âEasy on the brake. I think that noise was the other carâs tire blowing out. Thank fuck we didnât hit anyone. Please tell me youâre okay.â
âI think so,â I pant, staring at my shaking hands on the wheel.
Iâm okay. Weâre okay. Youâre okay, Nina.
He hovers over me from the backseat, close enough that his stubble brushes my cheek. Sexy Plumber puts the car in park and releases a heavy breath, making my skin prickle to life. I rub my arms to get rid of the little bumps.
âOkay, weâre good.â He slumps into the backseat. âWe made it to the curb. Weâre good.â
âRight,â I pant. âThe curb.â
âThat was too close. Weâre lucky we didnât hit anyone else with all these people around. Guess that four-leaf clover on your neck brought us some luck. I think the other carâs fine but let me go check on them.â
His calm words do nothing to suck the tension from my rigid shoulders. The panicâs building, rising like water in a glass box. My own personal cage thatâs trapped me since childhood. Except, itâs nothing like that time I actually got stuck in an elevator as a kid.
Talk about traumatizing.
Iâll get light-headed, maybe, no definitely, nauseous, and then Iâll spiral into a mental tornado for anywhere from four to thirty minutes and emerge a sweaty mess.
Fabulous.
Dread fills me, and I grit my teeth like Iâm walking into my pottery class to present one of my pieces.
âNina?â he says. âDid you hear me?
â
I jump at the sound of my name. He remembered. âNo, can you shout it in my ear again? Louder this time.â
I regret the words as soon as they fly from my lips. Anxiety always sharpens my words, making them ready to strike the nearest opposing victim, but he hasnât done anything wrong. In fact, this manâs doing everything right.
He deserves soft words, not sharp ones.
His firm hand squeezes my shoulder. I think he means for it to be comforting, but I flinch.
He instantly pulls back. âHey, I know itâs scary, but weâre all going to be fine. It doesnât look like they hit anyone, either. Weâre good.â
My chest rises in short, shallow breaths as I try to keep my hands from shaking. âOkay, yeah. Thanks. Sorry for snapping and punching the brake too hard.â
âItâs all good. You can snap if you need to, just donât break on me.â
I get a lingering trace of his aftershave when he speaks. The aroma wafts through the car, and my eyes close involuntarily. It smells like the crackling fire at the tiny cabin my parents used to take us to in the Blue Ridge Mountains. Each inhalation is like hugging an old friend, but it does nothing to stop the onslaught of memories.
Beeping monitors. Doctors. Hospitals.
The images flicker like ghosts haunting my mind.
My heartbeat grows urgent, like my chest is a prison, and itâs demanding to be heard. Chills roll over my clammy skin while my thoughts spin in a dizzying storm, each one slipping through my grasp before I can make sense of it. I dart my eyes to the ridiculously attractive, but unfamiliar face before me.
The plumberâs gaze is calmer than the Caribbean, but his presence is like a space heater in an already stifling room. The manâs massive. Heâs too much to handle right now .
I subtly pull back, not wanting some stranger to bear witness to my vulnerability. Iâve lived with anxiety long enough that panic attacks are more frequent than my period, and itâs easier to fall apart when no oneâs watching.
âHey, you alright, Nina?â His deep voice reverberates through my mind.
âIâm great,â I say, a little too brightly since Iâm used to hiding beneath faux grins.
I canât for the life of me remember his name, and now I feel guilty because he knows mine. Ronald, maybe? âYou can go check on the other car. Iâm fine. Iâll be right out.â
His dark brow furrows. âYou sure youâre alright? I donât feel good about leaving you alone.â
I force a smile, even though it feels like Iâm running a marathon underwater. âYes, Iâm fine, really. You can go. Iâm good. Great.â
His gaze scorches my cheek, but I focus on the flickering streetlights. On. Off. On. Off. Life would be so much easier if I could dim my emotions with a simple flip. Iâd keep my anxiety turned off and my sarcastic quips turned on.
He gives my shoulder a gentle squeeze. âSure, but you let me know if you need me. Iâll be close. Let me check the other car.â
My lips feel like theyâre stitched together, so I dip my head in a silent nod. His hand twitches up, but after a second, he clenches his fist and climbs out of my sisterâs Audi.
Every time I breathe, the seat belt pulls against my nipple piercing. That was a godawful decision, but I canât regret it when it was the last time I laughed with my sister. If we donât die tonight, sheâs going to murder me for crashing her car.
Now, that would make a good storyâOlder Sister Bludgeons Rival Sibling with Curling Iron after Months of Feuding.
As he walks away, my head thumps back against the seat.
The air feels lighter now that heâs gone, but black spots still flirt with the edges of my vision.
I suck in a long breath.
In for four.
Hold, Nina.
Out for four.
Gritting my teeth, I zone in on the mouse, scurrying on a telephone line. Wait, is that a mouse or a rat? Please be a mouse. Breathe. The crowd of pedestrians gathering around the plumber. Breathe. The smoke spiraling up to the twinkling stars. Breathe. A dog peeing on a fire hydrant.
âBreathe, Nina,â I say to myself. âYou arenât swimming in shark-infested waters. You arenât walking into a burning building to save a baby. Itâs just the adrenaline rush that makes your body feel like this. Youâre safe. Thanks to Sexy Plumber, youâre okay.â
I continue with my box breathing techniques, all while resenting the anxious monster in my chest, lurking, waiting in the dark.
Always waiting.
Sometimes it hibernates, and other days, it claws its way out to attack my thoughts. I never know what mood the devious creature will be in, so the only thing I can do is drag myself out of the mental ditch over and over again.
No one else can fight my battles. All I want is someone who sees the darkest corners of my soul and doesnât get scared off by the cobwebs.
Anxiety might suck me into the whirlpool of my life, but I always come up for air.
After what feels like a millennium of breathing techniques, my heart rate returns to normal. I glance at the time on my phone. âHm. Not bad. That one was only six minutes.â
Those words are like calling a tornado a fall breeze, but Iâm proud of all the work I put in while sitting on Dr. Ghoshâs lumpy green chair with that stain shaped like Italy. Therapy might not be a cure-all, but it does come with a decent side of coping mechanisms.
Now that Iâm sufficiently sweaty and exhausted, I dig through the console and grab some tissues to dab the sweat under my arms. I refuse to step outside looking like chaos incarnate in front of the plumber who must bench press toilets when heâs not fixing them.
Wrapping my thrifted puffy jacket around my shoulders, I head out onto the packed residential street. The freezing Tennessee wind nips at my cheeks.
Pedestrians line the sidewalk, maintaining a respectful distance, but their eyes are fixed on the plumber. When I see him, I canât blame them for staring.
This man looks like he was handcrafted with temptation.
Heâs rolled up his sleeves, even though itâs frigid, revealing the thick veins lining his forearms like a map leading to a naughty destination. Howâs he not freezing his ass off? Heâs got that type of muscle definition that only comes from hours spent in the gym, and if anything, the dedicationâs impressive.
The manâs got it allâbroad shoulders, neck veins, sharp jawline. I wouldnât be surprised if he had fuckboy tattooed on his dick.
I search his face for a flaw, any flaw, Iâll even take an oddly shaped mole. My shoulders loosen when I see the slight bump in his nose like itâs been broken.
As I navigate through the crowd, I notice several people with phones raised, but Iâm more concerned with the man hunched over the black Tahoe.
âIs that the guy from that underwear commercial?â
âNo, I think heâs from that yacht scandal.â
âI thought he was retiring from the League?â
My curiosity piques, but I have no idea what league theyâre talking about, so I ignore them and nudge my way through the onlookers.
Sexy Plumberâs brow is pinched in concentration, and a sudden wave of gratitude washes over me. Without him, Iâd probably be dead. Either that, or Iâd be sitting here, freezing my ass off while googling how to change a tire to help the other car.
As I get closer, I realize heâs actually huddled over a little boy who looks like heâs hyperventilating next to his terrified mom. Itâs probably how I looked moments ago, so without a second thought, I push through the last two people. âIs everything okay? What happened?â
He gives me a tight smile lined with worry. âYeah, weâre alright. This is Gabriel and his mom. They were in the other car when their tire popped, and Gabriel here has asthma. He got a little scared, and I canât blame him because I did too, but heâs having an asthma attack. He doesnât have his inhaler, so weâre waiting on an ambulance.â
His tone is calm, but thereâs a deep crease between his brows. I wrack my brain, and this is one of the few times Iâm actually grateful for my sleepless nights and the internet rabbit holes I spiral down. âWait here.â
I rush back to my car and dig through the console until I find my sisterâs leftover cold brew that could bring a corpse back to life. I avoid caffeine like I avoid alcohol, but sheâs a coffee addict.
Grabbing it, I sprint back to the mom and her son. The crowd parts for me in the way people normally part for my older sister .
I thrust out the drink to the boyâs mom. âHere, I know itâs not his medication, but I read that caffeine can help open up the airways in asthma patients.â
The plumber balks. âI forgot. I shouldâve just asked you from the beginning.â
I donât know what he means by that comment, but the mom gives me a grateful smile and pulls me into a hug, thanking me profusely. âThank you. Thank you so much. Youâre truly a lifesaver.â
My eyes prickle as she releases me. Anxietyâs never made me someoneâs hero. I better soak up this moment, so I can remember it the next time I canât sleep.
The woman huddles over her son, giving him sips of the coffee, and then sirens shriek through the cold night like the wrong note plucked in a symphony. Red and blue lights paint the street as the ambulance arrives.
The next thirty minutes are a jumbled mess.
People crowd around the cars. Cameras flash. A few people even ask to take pictures with the plumber, which is strange, but maybe heâs got a home renovation show. It must be a slow news night because a reporter shows up for some reason.
As weâre checked for injuries, I message my sister to come to pick me up because her Audi needs to be fixed, and even though weâre feuding, she always answers my texts in less than a minute.
By the time the first responders deem everyone fine, Iâm exhausted, but Gabrielâs okay, and thatâs what matters. People are still crowding around the plumber while he inspects the black Tahoe, but he keeps glancing my way. I tap my foot, scanning the street for my ride.
âSo, I think theyâre going to need a tow too,â he says, standing. âEither that, or weâll have to lift the car ourselves to change the tire.â
I point over my shoulder. âShould I just head to the gym for the next fifty years, so I can pack on a thousand pounds of muscle?â
Chuckling, he gives me a lopsided smile that turns him from sexy to endearing in less than a heartbeat. The throaty sound sinks into every crevice of my body before I can stop it from happening.
Thatâs one dangerous grin.
He needs to be careful flashing that smile around. Someone might accidentally end up naked on top of him.
âNo weight-lifting necessary. We can use a car jack. Let me see if youâve got one.â A dimple pops on his right cheek because, of course, it does.
Thankfully, he doesnât have a matching set. Itâs like whoever created him started to give him two dimples and then realized one was lethal enough.
He digs around my trunk. The streetlightâs glow casts a gleam in his dark hair, almost making it look wet. Now, Iâm imagining water streaming down his bare back in the shower, but I donât want to objectify him just because his chiseled physique could rival the statues on campus.
I shake my head.
Hard.
Then again, so my brain gets the point.
Heâs got this intense look that whispers temptations of nights spent tangled in bedsheets, but Iâm done with men who look like fallen angels. Iâm done with men in general. The next person I sleep with better be obsessed with me, so I donât have a repeat of the Isaac fiasco.
He slams the trunk. âAlright, no car jack, but there are uh, ten boxes of condoms back there, which has me wondering what you get up to when you arenât cutting into brains.â
âWhat?â I gasp. âCutting into brains?â
He points his thumb at me, brows quirked. âDoctor, right?
â
It takes me a moment to jump onto his train of thought. Then, I remember I told him Iâm a resident because Iâve been on a medical drama kick recently. I was mostly joking because Iâm still fifty-fifty on the plumber comment, but itâs utterly shocking he didnât call me out since I look like Iâm headed to a music festival.
He tosses the blue box back in the car, but Iâm not going to admit there was a ten percent off sale if I bought ten boxes of condoms to a stranger. âWe were doing a sex educational course at the hospital. The other resident brought cucumbers so we could roll on the condoms as a demonstration.â
âNot bananas?â he says wryly. âI feel like youâre setting some unrealistic expectations there with the cucumbers.â
He winks. I try not to frown, but men who wink at strangers should come with a warning label. I donât say anything because what am I supposed to say? Iâve seen plenty of cucumber-sized dicks?
I havenât.
Silence swells between us. It looks like his cheeks flush in the dim light, but itâs freezing out.
He coughs. âAlright, cucumbers aside⦠The tow company should be here soon to take your car to the shop to get rid of the dent. Do you need a ride? I should get home to feed Chicken, but I want to make sure you make it back safe.â
I quirk my head. âIs Chicken your⦠chicken?â
âNo, heâs my cat,â he says like itâs obvious.
âYou named your cat Chicken? Why? Does he eat chickens?â
He frowns. âYeah, but I donât know why it sounds so nasty when you say it like that. My sister chose the name because thatâs all heâd eat when we brought him back from the shelter, but now Iâm imagining him devouring a bloody chicken. He eats canned chicken like a normal cat.â
âOh.
â
âYeah.â He shoves his hands into his pockets. âSo, how about that ride?â
The question catches me off guard. It probably, no, definitely, makes me a bit judgmental, but I expected a man who looks as tempting as him to care more about my condom plans than whether I made it home safe.
I wave a hand. âNo, thanks, but Iâm fine. I already texted my sister to come get me. Do you need a ride?â
The corners of his lips turn down. âOh, uh, no. I already texted one of my buddies to pick me up.â
Thereâs a hushed pause, a beat where our stares linger. His eyes are a bright shade of cerulean blue, more vivid than the colors in Frida Kahloâs paintings.
He cocks his head like heâs waiting for me to say something. âSo, I guess this is goodbye?â
âYeah, I guessââ
The sudden flare of headlights cuts through the crowded, cold night, veering around the corner. The blinding glare forces me to squint through my glasses until I spot the familiar red Jeep thatâs taken me to countless pottery lessons and office hours.
The door swings open with a creak, but instead of my sisterâs familiar face, a completely unwelcome set of dimples steps out into the dim streetlight.
I used to find that confident strut charming, but now it reminds me of a waddle. I dig my nails into my palms. If I have to hear him ask me one more time in that patronizing tone if Iâm sure Iâm okay with this, or if Iâm hanging in there, I might self-combust.
Red flags wave in the back of my mind, but bad choices are my forte. Exhibit A is walking toward me in his sweatshirt that reads I might be N. Er. Dy. but only Periodically. I can still see the stain on the shoulder where I spilled my decaf coffee that I wish Tide had washed out.
A few onlookers watch as I race over to the plumber, gripping his insanely muscular forearm. This man must live at the gym. He jolts at the contact, but at least he doesnât pull away. Thatâs a good start. âOkay, this is going to sound crazy, but are you married?â
âWhat?â His brows nearly fly off his forehead.
âAre you married?â I repeat. âOr in a civil union? Maybe a domestic partnership?â
âNo, Iâm not married or any of the above. Why?â
I narrow my eyes on the gray sprinkling his temples. He looks like heâs in his late twenties, maybe early thirties. I drop my gaze to his ring finger. Itâs bare, which means he must microwave puppies or something equally horrific because no one looks like him and stays single unless theyâre hiding some serious flaws.
âAre you dating anyone?â
He smirks. Of course, he smirks. âNo. You interested?â
âIn theory, yesâ¦â I swallow. âOkay, hereâs the thing. I need you to do me one tiny favor. I realize I have no right to ask you this, and you probably have a lot of toilets to fix, so you can absolutely say no, and I wonât be offended.â
âAlright, letâs hear it. Whatâs the favor?â
I draw in a lungful of air. âCan you please pretend like we were on a date, and Iâm not your Lyft driver? Oh, and if you could act like youâre completely obsessed with me, thatâd be even better.â