The Striker: Chapter 20
The Striker (Gods of the Game Book 1)
âThat enough popcorn for you, or should I buy you another bucket?â I asked.
Vincent grabbed the bucket from the counter and arched an eyebrow at me. âIâm preparing for you to steal half my snacks the way you always do.â
I gasped. âDo not.â
âDo too.â He pitched his voice higher. âNo, thanks, Iâm not hungry. Ten minutes later: Vince, can I have some of your chips?â
âOh, shut up. Like you donât steal my stuff all the time. Remember when you stole my limited-edition Adele vinyl one summer because she was your crushâs favorite singer and you wanted to impress her? Then you scratched it and tried to make it up to me by taking me to Nandoâs.â
âFirst of all, Nandoâs is great. Second of all, that was ten years ago. You have to let it go.â
âNever.â I followed him to our assigned theatre. âThatâs what little sisters are for. To remind you of your transgressions for the rest of your life.â
Vincent rolled his eyes. âI shouldâve rescheduled my promo video and stayed in Paris. Iâm clearly not appreciated here.â
âWrong. I appreciate you opening your wallet.â Heâd covered our movie tickets and snacks today. âIâm so lucky to have such a generous ATM by my side.â
He snorted out a laugh and ruffled my hair with his free hand. âBrat.â
âStop! Youâre messing up my hair.â I pushed his hand away, but I couldnât resist a laugh.
Despite his overprotectiveness, inflated ego, and totally slanderous lies about my food stealing habits, he was a great brother, which was why my kiss with Asher felt like a betrayal even though I hadnât meant it as one.
A needle of guilt wormed through my gut.
Donât think about it. Today was about sibling bonding and the latest Nate Reynolds movie. There was no room for anything else in this theatre.
Vincent and I secured our favorite middle row seats with ease. It was Saturday afternoon, well before the evening rush, and we were at our favorite little cinema on the outskirts of London.
Heâd also dressed down in one of his ridiculous disguisesâbaseball cap, sunglasses, hoodie with the hood pulled up. I kept telling him that wearing sunglasses inside made him look like a wanker, which in turn made me look like someone whoâd be friends with a wanker, but he wouldnât listen.
While Vincent settled in to watch the trailers, I checked my phone.
Iâd texted Brooklyn last Sunday to thank her again for getting me into Neon queue-free, and weâd been talking like longtime friends since. I had a new message from her inviting me to brunch one day (answer: Of course! Iâd love to join), as well as one from Carina asking if I thought cricket drop shipping was a viable side gig (answer: No, not for her, since she hated insects).
Other than that, I had no other messages.
Not that I was expecting or desiring any, especially not from anyone I was training.
My studio time with Asher had been cordial and professional all week. I showed up, we worked out, I left. Not a single hint of flirting in sight.
I grabbed a handful of popcorn from Vincentâs bucket and stuffed it in my mouth.
âHa! See?â He sent an accusing glare my way. âStealing.â
I ignored him and reached for more.
All the reasons I gave Asher for why we wouldnât work were true, and I refused to be one of those people who got mad when others did what they asked.
I told him to pretend the kiss never happened, and he had.
So why did I feel like crap about it?
âDuBois. That you?â
Vincent and I looked up at the same time.
Blond hair. Hazel eyes. Boyish grin.
My heart sank to my toes.
Clive.
âHart. Whatâs up, man?â Vincent slapped hands with him while I sank deeper into my seat.
If I hadnât been convinced the universe was fucking with me before, I was a true believer now. The chances of us running into Clive in this dinky cinema were so slim, they were near impossible, yet here he was.
If I were a more paranoid person, Iâd find his appearance suspicious, but it was a huge movie opening and I didnât have a monopoly on this cinema. Besides, I wasnât vain or self-centered enough to think a guy would stalk me after meeting me once.
After he greeted Vincent, Cliveâs attention flipped to me. His eyes widened, and a slow smile spread across his face.
âScarlett. Wow. I didnât expectâ¦â His gaze slid to Vincent again. âAre you on a date?â
Full-body shudders ran through me and Vincent at the same time.
âAbso-fucking-lutely not,â Vincent said. âSheâs my sister.â
âSister?â Cliveâs gaze darted back and forth, obviously trying to make sense of our contrasting looks.
âAdopted.â Vincentâs brows drew together. âWait. How do you know her?â
Oh, fuck. My fingers curled around the edge of my seat. If Clive mentioned Neon, that was a step away from mentioning Asher, and that was a step away from total disaster.
âWe met at a party last weekend. Sheâ ââ
âThe one I told you about,â I added quickly. âRemember, Vince? I was there with Carina, and you called me on my way home.â
Cliveâs eyebrows rose at the emphasis I placed on Carinaâs name. He knew I hadnât shown up with a girlfriend, and I could practically see the wheels turning in his head.
Please be smart enough to pick up on what Iâm putting out.
âWhere was the party? You didnât say.â Suspicion leaked into Vincentâs voice.
I didnât blame him. Carina and I werenât big partiers, and we certainly werenât the types who usually attended the same events as someone like Clive.
âSome club. I forgot the name,â I said. âThe night was kind of a blur.â
âHart? You remember?â Vincent asked. The suspicion grew from a seed into a sapling.
I saw the instant the pieces clicked for Clive. I was Vincentâs sister. Iâd lied about being at the party with Carina so I didnât have to mention who I was really with (Asher). Like 98 percent of the planet, Clive probably knew Asher and Vincent didnât get along.
It didnât take a genius to put two and two together.
âPeony, Legends, MYXâ¦it couldâve been any or none of those,â Clive said. âHonestly, I was pretty smashed. Donât remember much beyond meeting Scarlett.â
âHuh.â Vincentâs eyes narrowed. âWhat happened after you met?â
âWe talked for a few minutes. Then I took Carina to the loo because she, uh, got sick and threw up all over the bar.â Iâm so sorry, Car. Iâll donate extra to your penguin fund to make up for the slander.
My brother grimaced.
Thankfully, we were saved from further interrogation when the lights dimmed and a prerecorded voice announced the film was about to start.
âHow do you know Clive?â I whispered after the rugby player left and took his seat several rows behind us.
My nerves were still in knots from the close call. I needed to know how often Vincent talked to Clive in case the latter slipped up about Asher.
âWe have a few mutual friends, but weâre not that close.â Vincent finally took his sunglasses off and dropped them in the cup holder. âStay away from him. Heâs a fuckboy.â
Interesting. Asher had said the exact same thing.
The opening credits rolled. The ensuing action sequences and up-close shots of Nate Reynoldsâs face temporarily alleviated my worries, but my bladder caught up with me an hour in.
I snuck out during a lull and quickly used the loo. I didnât want to miss anything important.
I exited the toilet and nearly bumped into Clive, who was leaving the menâs room at the same time.
âHey!â He smiled. âThird run-in in a week. Iâm starting to think the universe is trying to tell us something.â
The universe has been trying to tell me a lot of things lately. I wished it would keep its mouth shut, but it had a tendency to butt in where it wasnât welcome.
âPerhaps, though Iâm not sure the cinema and the cinema toilet count as two separate instances.â Just because I had beef with an immortal, amorphous force didnât mean I had to bring innocent bystanders into it.
Clive laughed. âI guess not.â
âThank you for not blowing my cover earlier,â I added. âVincent can be a little overprotective, and I didnât want him knowing that, umâ¦â
âYou and Donovan have a thing going on?â It mightâve been a trick of the light, but I thought I saw Cliveâs eyes flicker at the mention of Asher.
âWe donât have a thing going on.â If I could bold, highlight, and underline that sentiment three times, I would. âWeâre justâ¦â Friends? Colleagues? Acquaintances? None of those terms felt right. âPlatonic.â
I was starting to hate that word, but it was the most accurate description I could come up with.
Platonic people donât kiss each other, my inner voice sang in an apparent bid to outdo the universe as my most hated incorporeal entity.
âPlatonic, huh?â Cliveâs eyebrows winged up. âDoes Donovan know that? I thought he was going to punch me when I gave you my number.â
âI donât know.â I forced a flippant smile. âYouâll have to ask him. From my end, weâre platonic.â The words tasted strangely like betrayal, but I swallowed nonetheless.
âThatâs good to know.â Clive rubbed a thumb over his bottom lip. âIn that case, would you like to get dinner sometime?â
âAre you asking me on a date?â I shouldâve seen where this was going, but that didnât stop surprise from bleeding into my tone.
âYes.â He offered a crooked smile. When Asher did it, it seemed genuine, but for some reason, Cliveâs looked a little put on. âI didnât get a chance on Saturday, and I figure this is the universeâs way of giving me a second shot. I promise Iâll take you somewhere nicer than this.â He gestured around us.
I drew my bottom lip between my teeth. The conversation had already dragged on too longâIâd missed a good chunk of the film while we were chattingâbut I was torn.
Asher and Vincent had both warned me away from Clive. What did they say? That he was a âfuckboy?â Then again, they were biased, and what good-looking professional athlete didnât go through a player phase?
The important thing was, Clive wasnât Asher. His smile didnât make my heart flutter, his flirting didnât get under my skin, and a dinner with him had no consequences beyond a few potentially wasted hours. If the date went south, I wouldnât have to see him ever again.
Clive was still waiting with an expectant expression.
âIn that case, yes,â I said. âIâd love to go out to dinner with you.â
I told Asher about my run-in with Clive and the story Iâd concocted for Vincent during our next session. I doubted the party would come up between him and Vincent, but in case it did, I wanted to make sure our stories were aligned.
However, Asher seemed less concerned about my brother finding out we were at Poppyâs party together and more concerned about Clive.
âHe just so happened to show up at the cinema you and Vincent frequent?â His nostrils flared. âThat doesnât strike you as suspicious?â
âWe donât own the place. He has as much right to be there as we do.â
âHave you ever seen him there before?â
âNo,â I admitted. âNot that I remember. But that doesnât mean anything.â He couldâve been in the area and dropped in, or we couldâve crossed paths there before but I didnât notice.
No one paid attention to the random people they passed unless there was a good reason to. Asher was being paranoid.
âI donât like it,â he said flatly. âYou slipped through his fingers at Neon, and now he sees you as a challenge. I wouldnât be surprised if he somehow figured out you liked that cinema and planned the âaccidentalâ run-in.â
I didnât get a chance on Saturday, and I figure this is the universeâs way of giving me a second shot. Cliveâs words echoed for a beat before logic took over.
âOkay, you need to ease off the thrillers because youâre entering conspiracy territory.â I crossed my arms. âMaybe heâs a player, but I doubt heâs a stalker. How would he know the exact date, time, and movie Vincent and I were going to see? Itâs not like we broadcast that information online.â
Asher opened his mouth, then shut it without replying.
âExactly. As for the other partâ¦â I gripped the barre. âDo you think the only reason someone could possibly like me is if they see me as a âchallengeâ?â
Was that why heâd been so persistent in his flirting? To stick it to Vincent?
The prospect made bile rise in my throat. It was ridiculous. By now, I knew Asher well enough to know he wouldnât do something so mean-spirited, but once the seed had been planted, it was hard to dig it out.
His mouth thinned. âThatâs not what I meant, and you know it.â
âActually, I donât.â I shouldâve left it at that, but my mouth kept running of its own accord. âAlso, player or not, I like Clive. Heâs nice.â
âThatâs what he wants you to think.â
I ignored the snark. âAs a matter of fact, he asked me out on a date, and I said yes.â
The words fell into a pool of TNT-laced tension. Asherâs jaw ticked, and I instinctively braced myself for an explosion.
It never came.
After a beat of silence, he turned and jabbed the power button for the sound system. The faint strains of a classical hip-hop instrumental filled the room âGood for you,â he said, his tone unreadable. âHave fun.â
âI will.â Stop talking. But I couldnât. It was like my mouth had a mind of its own. âHeâs taking me to the Golden Wharf this Friday. Itâs supposed to be one of the best restaurants in the city.â
âGreat.â
âAfterward, we might head to this secret cocktail bar thatâ ââ
âI get it,â Asher bit out. He faced me again, his expression stamped with irritation. âCan we start training, or will you continue to regale me with unsolicited details about your love life?â
I suppressed a flinch, but he was right. Why was I provoking him? We should be working, not engaging in this ridiculous back and forth.
However, things had been so coldly civil between us that it was nice to see sparks fly again.
âI guess things didnât work out with your West End suitor,â Asher said, more calmly this time.
My brows knitted. âWest End suitor?â
âThe guy you went to see a West End show with earlier this summer.â
What is heâohhhh. He was talking about my girlsâ night with Carina. Weâd watched a musical and gotten smashed on blueberry cocktails afterward.
I hadnât outright said it was a date, but Iâd led Asher to believe it was a romantic outing. Even back then, Iâd unconsciously been trying to make him jealous.
The realization struck with the force of an anvil. I swallowed, wishing I had a pair of magic scissors so I could snip my way out of this tangled mess.
When it came to Asher, should and want battled for dominance over my decisions, and the winner changed by the hour.
I hated myself for how wishy-washy that made me. I kissed him, then I ran away. I told him to pretend the kiss never happened, then I tried to provoke him by discussing my upcoming date with Clive. I wanted to make him jealous, but I wanted him to leave me alone.
I was turning into the type of person I hated, the kind who couldnât make up her mind and flip-flopped between what she said and what she did.
The problem was, I didnât know how to stop it.
âNo,â I said in response to Asherâs statement. âIt didnât work out romantically. We decided weâre better off as friends.â
It was the truthâ¦if I stretched the truth out and dipped it in a bowl of lie-by-omission sauce.
âI see.â Asherâs jaw ticked again. âItâs funny you mentioned the Golden Wharf. I have a date there this Friday too.â
I couldnât hold back a snort. âOh, please.â
âYou think Iâm lying?â
âWhat are the chances you have a date at the same restaurant on the same night as me right after I tell you about it?â
âWhat are the chances you run into Clive at some hole-in-the-wall cinema a week after meeting him when youâve never seen him there before?â he countered.
Dammit. He got me there.
âWhoâs your date?â I asked, still suspicious.
âSomeone I met over the weekend. Sheâs cute, funny, and loves football. Iâm excited to take her out.â
The fact he was clearly trying to make me jealous didnât stop me from feeling, well, jealous. âGreat.â
âIt is.â
More silence, punctured only by the instrumentals soaring in the background.
âWe should go on a double date,â Asher said after ten long, tense seconds.
I burst into laughter, but it tapered off when he didnât join me.
He couldnât be serious.
âAre you daft?â I demanded. âWhat makes you think thatâll be a good idea? You donât even like Clive!â
âI donât have to like him to double date with him.â
âThatâs the stupidest thing Iâve ever heard.â
âNo, itâs not. Think about it. First dates are awkward. Itâs a small restaurant, and weâll both be there anyway. This is the perfect way for us to get to know the other person without the pressure of a one-on-one.â
âAsher, darling, if you donât have faith in your first-date skills, you shouldâve just said so,â I said, deliberately throwing his nickname for me back at him.
His smirk indicated heâd caught it. âMy dating skills arenât the ones Iâm worried about.â
âAre you implying Iâm a bad date?â
Asher shrugged. âI wouldnât know. But I know Iâm not a bad date.â
âPlease. Iâll have Clive eating out of my hand before the main course.â I hadnât been on a date in a while, but I could turn on the charm when I wanted.
âHeâs a guy,â Asher said. âHeâll eat anything you put in front of him.â
âWay to insinuate my date has no standards.â
âYouâre the one who said it, not me.â
âYou shouldnât talk. You depend on your looks and money to do the heavy lifting.â I jabbed my finger at his chest. It was like poking a brick wall. âI bet you canât carry a dinnerâs worth of conversation to save your life. Your date will be bored to tears.â
âYou want to bet on it?â Asherâs eyes glinted with challenge. âLetâs see who ends the night with a second date lined up. Winner gets bragging rights. Loser suffers eternal shame.â
âA bet? What are we, teenagers?â I scoffed. A beat passed. âWhat happens if we both get a second date?â
âThen we can sleep soundly knowing weâve made it to adulthood with the proper social skills.â
It was a trap. A double date with Asher was the worst idea in the history of worst ideas, and my self-preservation instincts were screaming at me not to take the bait.
But if I backed down, heâd say I was afraid. That I wasnât up for the task. And that was unacceptable.
âFine. I accept your bet.â Even if we werenât betting on anything material, I had no intention of walking away from Friday nightâs dinner without a second date locked in. âMay the best man or woman win.â