The Striker: Chapter 10
The Striker (Gods of the Game Book 1)
I hated to admit it, but moving our training to Asherâs house was a genius idea. The facilities were better, there was more privacy, and I didnât have to take the hot, jam-packed tube home every day.
The armored car did ease my anxieties, and Earl was an excellent driver. By our third day together, I was comfortable enough to release my death grip on my seat.
That was also the day Asher and I experimented with outdoor drills for the first time. We trained in the open-air gym for a while before he offered to show me the grounds during our break.
Iâd agreed, thinking it would be a quick walk. I was wrong.
I knew his estate was big, but I hadnât realized how massive it truly was until we reached the southwest corner.
âYou built a football pitch in your back garden?â I stared at the sea of perfectly cut grass. White lines marked the most important playing areas, and nets anchored both ends of the pitch. âThatâs mad.â
âItâs not an official pitch.â Asher lifted his shirt to wipe the sweat off his face. âItâs a mini pitch.â
âA pitch is a pitch.â I kept my eyes glued to his backyard and not on the flash of chiseled abs and tanned skin.
Admittedly, calling this place a back garden was like calling Versailles a house. Besides the football pitchâsorry, mini pitchâit boasted an Olympic-size pool with a waterfall and attached Jacuzzi, heated cabanas, two clay tennis courts, a wisteria walkway, and an outdoor dining area.
I couldnât imagine how much Asher shelled out for landscaping every year; the flowers alone mustâve cost tens of thousands of pounds.
âFair enough. You play?â Asher grabbed a football from the ground and tossed it lazily in the air. He caught it with his toe, flipped it to one knee, and bounced it to his other knee.
âNo.â I grabbed the ball, halting his impromptu show. âShow-off.â
His eyes gleamed with laughter. âNot even a little? You mustâve kicked a ball around once or twice.â
âKicking a ball around isnât the same as playing.â
âLetâs see.â He snatched the ball back and dribbled it onto the pitch. âFirst person to score a goal wins bragging rights and a pint of ice cream.â
âThatâs stupid. Thereâs no goalkeeper!â I yelled. Unguarded football nets were so large a toddler could score if they got close enough, which meant the challenge was retaining possession of the ball and, well, getting close enough.
Asherâs laughter drifted across the pitch.
Oh, screw it. My competitive drive kicked into high gear, and I sprinted after him.
My muscles protested immediately. Iâd avoided high-impact activities like running since my accident, but I gritted my teeth and focused on the satisfaction of scoring on Asher.
I caught up to him surprisingly fast. I suspected heâd held back for my sake. Even so, it was frustratingly difficult to steal the ball from him. I succeeded twice, but he stole it back almost as quickly as he lost it.
âYouâre better than you let on.â He wasnât even breathing hard, the bastard. âCome on. Put that fancy footwork of yours to the test.â
I issued a little growl that earned me another laugh. Then we were off again, and my mind blacked out everything except for the need to score.
I may have been better than I let on, but there was a reason Asher was the top-paid footballer in the world. Playing against him, even in an unserious two-person match, was like pitting David against Goliath (if David lost). Nothing couldâve prepared me for it.
Iâd watched him play before, of course. There wasnât a single person in the UK who didnât remember his legendary halfway line goal against Liverpool or his spectacular header in the quarterfinals of the last World Cup.
Asher was incredible onscreen, but up close, in person? He was magic.
He matched me turn for turn, feint for feint. He intuited what Iâd do before I did it, and he was barely trying.
Sweat poured down my face and neck, but sheer stubbornness held me together.
One goal. I just needed one goal.
A wheezing cough rattled my lungs. I shouldâve warmed up or drank more water before I came out here.
Asher slowed, concern sliding over his face. I took the opportunity and attempted a steal. To my shock, it worked.
However, my triumph was short-lived. Asher reacted so fast, he almost regained possession immediately, but I wasnât letting go that easily this time.
Back and forth, left and right. Somewhere during our tussle, our legs tangled.
I hit the grass with jarring force, and I didnât have time to move before Asher fell too. He braced himself against the ground so he didnât totally crush me, but he was still thereâright on top of me.
We froze in simultaneous shock. If someone were to come across us at that moment, I imagined weâd pass for stone statues in Medusaâs garden, entangled and unmoving.
My heart rate slowed to a crawl. Despite his braced position, his body pressed against mine enough for me to feel every ridge and plane.
All that muscle pinning me to the ground shouldâve been uncomfortable. Instead, it was oddly comforting, like a shield against the outside world.
An extremely well-toned, sculpted shield.
I tried and failed to swallow past the dryness in my throat. I really shouldâve drank more water earlier.
My tongue darted out, wetting my lips unconsciously. Asherâs eyes dipped to my mouth, and the remaining oxygen in the air snuffed out with a near audible puff.
Move. Breathe. Push him off. Do something.
My brain fired commands at me, and I didnât heed a single one. I couldnât. I was stuck, trapped by the heat of his body and the soft rise and fall of his chest against mine.
I was tingling all over. Either my muscles were shutting down from overexertion or it was an involuntary reaction to Asherâs proximity. Or both. Either way, the stutter in my chest when his gaze drifted up and met mine again couldnât be healthy.
Did he always have those golden flecks in his eyes? They were absurdly beautiful, like splashes of sunlight on a verdant hill.
A hint of aftershave and sweat teased my nostrils. Instead of smelling gross, it smelled earthy and masculine and utterly addicting.
Leave it to Asher Donovan to make sweating sexy.
His chin lowered. If I tilted mine up, we wouldâ â
The soft but distinct whirr of a shutter snapping smashed into the moment with the grace of a wrecking ball.
Our heads jerked toward the sound, and my jaw dropped when I saw a man peeking out at us from over the greenery.
âWhat the fuck?â
Asherâs outburst mirrored my feelings exactly. The cameraman had somehow climbed over the twelve-foot-hedge bordering the grounds and was capturing our interaction with a super zoom lens.
Now that heâd been spotted, he didnât waste time. He lowered his camera, tucked tail, and ran right as Asher pushed off me and bolted after him.
After a beat, I followed suit.
Our impromptu football match earlier (if one could call it that) had sucked away most of my energy. My entire body ached, especially my legs, which burned with each step. A fresh surge of adrenaline was the only thing propping me up.
Luckily, there was a shortcut through the hedges to the driveway, so I didnât have to traverse the entire mansion.
By the time I turned the corner, Asher had already caught and restrained the pap by pinning his arms behind his back. A fancy Nikon lay in several pieces next to them.
âYou broke my camera!â the man howled. His bulbous nose reddened.âThatâs an eight-thousand-pound lens!â
âYour lens?â Asher twisted his arms harder, and the man let out a pained yelp. âYou trespassed on my property. Took photos of us during my personal time.â His eyes glittered like emerald knives. âI put up with your bullshit when Iâm in public, but make no mistake. If I ever catch you anywhere near either of us again, Iâll break more than your camera. Understand?â
The manâs mouth flattened into a mulish line.
I didnât recognize him. He wasnât one of the regulars whoâd hung around RAB when we trained there, and the ease with which Asher caught him suggested he was new to the job. If so, heâd made a terrible new enemy.
âI said, do you understand?â Asher twisted his arms again, and the manâs stubbornness dissolved into a pathetic cry.
âYes.â
âGood. Now get the fuck off my property before I change my mind.â
âI canât believe you caught him,â I said once the pap left. He mustâve had at least a minute head start on Asher. âAnd I canât believe you broke his camera.â
âHe got off easy with the broken camera.â The cords in Asherâs neck bunched with tension.
Iâd never seen him so furious. I didnât know it was possible for him to be furious. He was always so good-natured, but right now, with his body coiled and his face creased in a scowl, he was the picture of pure, unadulterated anger.
However, with the pap gone and air quiet once more, the anger slowly drained, leaving visible frustration behind.
âI need to upgrade my security.â Asher rubbed a hand over his face. He sounded tired, and a needle of sympathy pierced my gut. âI didnât want to turn this place into a bloody surveillance state, but I canât have people sneaking in like that. If we hadnât caught him in timeâ¦â
A chill rippled over my skin. In one month, weâd had two close calls with the paparazzi. How long until our luck ran out?
âHow did he get in?â
Breaking onto school grounds was one thing; breaking onto someoneâs private property was another.
âMy landscaping crew was in and out while we were training. He mustâve slipped in with them.â Asherâs jaw clenched. âPeople like him are fucking vultures, sniffing around for any scraps they can find.â
The needle of sympathy dug deeper. âBeing in the public eye like that must be awful.â
Vincent dealt with the same thing to a certain degree, but no athlete sold headlines like Asher. The scrutiny and invasions of privacy he faced were on another level.
âI could handle it if they were just coming after me. I know what I signed up for,â Asher said. âBut youâre getting caught up in this mess, and thatâs not fucking okay.â
His words pulsed in my veins, filling them with uncomfortable warmth. âOh. Iâ¦â I stumbled for a second before I regained my composure. âYou donât have to worry about me. Iâm a big girl. I can handle an out-of-shape pap.â
That brought forth a small curve in his lips. âSays the person panting like she just ran a marathon.â
âGive me a break. Itâs been years since I ran like that.â My jelly-like legs confirmed my long break with cardio.
The hint of a smile vanished. âShit. I forgot how high-impact running is. Itâs not good for chronic pain, is it?â
The warmth in my veins melted into honey. Hell, everything melted. At this rate, theyâd have to scrape me off the driveway with a spatula. âYou looked up chronic pain?â
A wash of dull red colored Asherâs cheekbones. âOut of curiosity, thatâs all,â he said. âI didnât know much about it, so I figured I should learn the basics. Obviously.â
âObviously.â
Was it normal for a human heart to beat this fast? I had my annual checkup a few weeks ago. The doctor said everything looked normal, but maybe I needed a second opinion because something strange was going on inside my chest.
Asherâs eyes flickered with an array of emotions I couldnât decipher. âDo you want to take a bath?â
The abrupt switch in subjects was so absurd, it jolted me back into normality. âExcuse me?â
âA bath. For inflammation. I take one after a particularly intense workout. It helps with recovery.â
âInflammation. Right.â Of course he wasnât asking if you wanted to take a bath with him, idiot. âItâs okay. I can take one at home.â
Except a bath did sound wonderful, and home was at least an hour away if I factored in afternoon traffic.
The remaining adrenaline drained from my limbs. I wanted to lie down on the driveway and let the sunbaked stone take away my soreness.
âAre you sure? I have a million guest baths. Itâs not a big deal.â Asherâs frown suggested heâd picked up on my dip in energy. âTraffic is a nightmare at this time of day. If youâre not feeling well, I donât want things getting worse while youâre stuck in Piccadilly.â
No. It would be too weird for me to take a bath at a traineeâs house, especially when said trainee was Asher Donovan.
I should absolutely, positively, 100 percent not accept his offer.
Except I was so tired, and my body hurt, and if I didnât sit down right now, I might pass out for the second time in front of him and wouldnât that be embarrassing?
âIâ¦â Donât do it. Suck it up. Wait until youâre home. âOkay. If you donât mind.â