Brutal Obsession: Chapter 23
Brutal Obsession: A Dark Hockey Romance (Hockey Gods)
Heâs going to kill me.
I didnât think it before. When we first collidedâwell, not the first timeâI thought I was strong enough to endure him. To outlive his anger and his ego.
Now, Iâm not so sure.
Itâs funny how things change when hope enters the picture.
I sparred with him because there was a recklessness inside me that didnât give a shit if I came out unscathed. In fact, I think I expected the barbs to sting, if only to distract from my own pain. The voice in my head that said Iâd never dance again. The worry that my mother was done with me. The fear of not knowing what I was going to do after college.
Mia Germain infused hope back into me with one phone call.
Iâm less than forty-eight hours away from seeing if my dreams are still possible.
And it. Fucking. Sucks.
Iâve never been more stressed.
We park outside the stadium, in one of the VIP spotsâas if Greyson needs more egoâand go inside. Itâs cool and dark here, and intensely quiet.
âDo you practice here?â
âMost evenings.â He straightens his shirt and glances at me. âSome girls watch.â
âWhy would they do that?â Seems it would get tedious, watching them do drills over and over again. At the very least, mind-dullingly boring.
He lifts a shoulder. When I glance over at him, heâs smirking.
I stop. âThey come for you, donât they?â
Greysonâs smirk widens into a shit-eating grin. âMe, Knox, Steeleâ¦â
I narrow my eyes. âYeah, I know pretty intimately why theyâd show up for Steele.â
His gaze turns flinty, the smile sliding right off. He doesnât respond to thatâhow could he? Heâs the one who forced me to get on my knees.
In the back of my mind, I know I had a choice. I couldâve walked away.
But then I wouldâve had to deal with the repercussionsâworse ones than these.
He leads me to an elevator and hits the up button. We wait in silence, then step inside. Immediately, it feels like weâre in a vacuum. The silence gets louder.
My skin itches with the need to break it. To say something.
I last two floors before I crack. âWhat are we telling her?â
His cocky, self-assured smile is back. The same one Iâm sure he wore when he strolled out of the police precinct after his father got him out. The same one he probably also wore when he left the scene of the crime. He rolls his shoulders back, then cracks his neck. Everything about him relaxes. Even the little muscles around his eyes that, up until this point, held stress.
I look away. This Greyson has been hiding. Shuffled out of sight, because everyone we interact with already knows and loves him. Iâm fascinated by it. By the way he just seems to radiate an easy-going confidence. Heâs brought out this persona for the publicist.
Sheâs going to fall in love with him before our time is up.
Am I going with him to be the scapegoat?
Or his savior?
I eye him again, drawn back to the expression he wears like a mask. Maybe Iâve been getting it wrong. Backwards. The anger, the way he is around me⦠maybe thatâs his true nature, and this is the mask. Itâs easier to believe that than to think he wears his anger as a guard.
No. Heâs shown me who he really is deep down. Not everyone gets to see that.
My nerves are eating me alive by the time the elevator doors slide open. And he still hasnât answered me about what weâre telling herâwhat he expects me to say, if anything. I mean, Iâm assuming that I have to say something. Otherwise, itâs pointless that I be here.
We exit into a brightly lit foyer. There are windows to our left, and a set of glass doors to our right. We go through them and stop in front of the wide desk that a receptionist mans.
Greyson smiles and tells her who weâre here to see. His gaze flicks up and down the womanâs body, and he winks at her.
She blushes.
I silence my disbelief.
She rises and gestures for us to follow her, and Greyson winks at me . This is all an elaborate game to him. When we reach a corner office, the receptionist opens the glass door and steps back to let us pass.
âThank you,â he says to her. Then his attention switches to the woman striding toward us from behind her desk, and his smile widens. âMs. Dumont.â
âMr. Devereux,â she answers.
They shake hands.
Sheâs probably a few years younger than my mother. Her hair is white-blonde and pulled back in an elaborate braid. Her makeup is flawless, and her eggplant-purple dress is form-fitting. She has the sort of energy that translates into no bullshit. I imagine sheâs had to become a shark to survive in a male-dominated sport.
How did she end up a publicist for CPU? With a corner office at the stadium, no less.
âGood game last week,â she says to him. âThe final few minutes were exciting.â
âIt was the one time I broke out in a sweat,â he responds. âBut we managed to put them away.â
âThat you did.â She gestures for us to take a seat. âThis year has been great for donors. They particularly like seeing the self-assured nature of the team this year. Thereâs been minimal stressâand minimal sweat, as you said.â
âWell, that comes down to our coach.â Greyson takes my hand and pulls me with him to the couch against one of the walls. Thereâs a glass coffee table in front of it, and two single chairs beside themselves on the other side. When he sits, he drags me down so Iâm almost on top of him. âThis is Violet Reece.â
The publicistâs gaze flips to me. âAh, yes, I recognize your face from the pictures.â
I swallow and slowly extricate my hand from Greysonâs grip. âRight. Thatââ
âIs what weâre meeting with you about,â Greyson finishes. âCoachâs orders to straighten this out and all.â
âOf course. Your reputation is our reputation.â
He nods along with her words, then leans back. He splays himself out, his arm over the back of the couch behind me, his legs spreading. Taking up space comes easily to him, I think. Itâs natural. Whereas girls are taught to shrink.
For an insane second, I contemplate mimicking him. Spreading out like him, my legs thrown wide.
Might not endear me to the publicist, whoâs sitting in the chair like itâs stinging her ass. Sheâs perched on the edge, her ankles crossed. She opens her phone and types something, then springs back up and grabs her laptop off her desk.
Once sheâs reseated, the laptop open on her knees, she looks up and meets his gaze. âSo, Greyson. There are some very harmful allegations against you.â
He nods once. The movement is jerky, brittle. I wish I had reread the article before I got in his car, just to better familiarize myself with it. It feels like a blur. Itâs been too long.
âAnd Violet. The author of the piece seems to insinuate that youâre involved.â
I glance from her to Greyson, then back again.
Sink or swim time?
âItâs a fabrication,â I lie. âThereâs nothing between us. Never has been.â
Anger doesnât count. Shame doesnât count. Twisted hate. His brutal obsession. Itâs all meaningless, because it wonât protect either of us.
âViolet Reece was a ballerina,â Greyson says suddenly. âShe had supporters, and after she injured her leg and ended her career, I think some people were upset.â
I grit my teeth. Was . Had . Ended her career . I desperately want to refute it, but I canât. That hope in my chest, that burns so brightly sometimes I canât sleep at night, is just for me.
âOh, Violet, Iâm so sorry to hear that.â Her features soften.
I donât remember her name. Isnât that bad? Greyson knows it. Iâm sure he probably already said it. Maybe heâll use it again at some point, as part of his charming, schmoozing act.
âWhat happened? Do you mind if I ask?â
Greysonâs hand lands on my thigh, hot over my skirt, and I blink. Itâs a warning.
âA car accident,â I say. âI donât remember much about it. I was rushed into surgeryâ¦â
Greysonâs fingers skim my head, pushing back my sideswept bangs to reveal the ugly scar across my temple. I avoid looking at that stupid thing as much as possible. I keep my bangs long to hide it. And now heâs touching me, and the publicist is staring in horror, and I canât breathe.
I rise. âIâm so sorry. I donât know what else you expect from me⦠I just need some air.â
I rush out the door. They let me go. I donât think they move as I navigate the halls back to the elevator and slam my palm against the button. The doors slide open, and I step inside.
As soon as I start to move downward, I lean back against the wall. I let out a breath.
Everyone thinks ballet has evaporated for me.
I have two days to prove otherwise.
When the doors open on the first floor, I step out and almost crash into Steele.
He grabs my arms, steadying me, and then looks me up and down. I find myself doing the same to him. Heâs dressed in sweats and sneakers. His dark hair is damp and combed back, and thereâs a little scruff on his cheeks. It gives him a more rugged appeal.
His lips quirk. âYou okay, Violet?â
I shake myself out of it. âYep, perfectly fine.â
His gaze lifts to the elevator doors, now closed. âYou meeting with Rebecca?â
I raise my brow. âWho?â
âThe schoolâs publicist. Coach said Greyson had to meet with her to clear up that article, and since youâre in itâ¦â He shrugs. âEither that, or youâre coming to watch our practice⦠and youâre early. Very early.â
âDonât you practice in the evenings? Why are you here?â
âThe gym.â He wiggles his eyebrows. âItâs the best one in Crown Point. Of course, most of the athletes at CPU use it, so it has to be the top of the standard.â
A gym. Iâm getting tired of hiking to the public oneânot to mention, thereâs been a creepy guy there the last few nights. Creepy enough to deter me from going back at that time. He leers at my ass when I run and turns into my shadow when I circulate around the weights area.
âIs it open to anyone?â
Steele smiles. âAnyone? No. But if you want in, I could help you out. Be an escort, you know?â
I smirk at the double meaning. âDidnât take you for an escort, Steele.â I shrug. âBut either way, our schedules wouldnât align. I work out at night.â
âOkay, Violet. I like to work up a sweat at night, too. Here.â He pulls out his phone and opens it up to a new contact. âPut your number in, weâll see if we can figure something out.â
This is a bad idea, but the thought of getting on Greysonâs nerves does give me a certain level of satisfaction. I take Steeleâs phone and give him my number, then hand it back.
âIâll text you.â
âOkay.â I sidestep him. âIâve got to get to class.â
He chuckles. âOkay. Well, donât be a stranger.â
I eye him. âPretty sure thatâs out of the question. Afterâ¦â
His chuckle turns into a full-blown laugh. âYeah. Right. If you ever want a repeat⦠You know, a different kind of workout? Iâd be open to it.â
âOh, um⦠no, I think Iâm good.â I shake my head and speed-walk away from him. I only have room for one asshole in my life. Well, maybe thatâs not even true. Dare I say I donât have room for any, since Greyson takes up my whole capacity for dealing with them.
But if Steele can get me into a nicer gym, he can be useful. And Greyson can just⦠deal with that .