Pucking Around: Chapter 58
Pucking Around: A Why Choose Hockey Romance (Jacksonville Rays Book 1)
Not a big deal, she says. This is a very big deal. My palms are sweating knowing that sheâs on this plane and not next to me. I want Rachel next to me. I want Rachel.
2B is still empty. Why canât she move up here? Iâll gladly pay. As I reach for the flight attendant call button, a man comes around the corner and I know heâs about to sit in the empty seat. Heâs a businessmanâgolf shirt, slicked back hair, Rolex watch.
He looks right at me, dismissing me as he drops into Rachelâs seat. âUh-huh. NoâChuckâI said, tell Danny I sent the specs on Friday.â
Heâs on his phone, talking loudly into his earpiece. Meanwhile, I feel like Iâm crawling out of my skin. Once they close that door, and we push back, thereâs nothing I can do.
âI told you theyâd go for it. Uh-huh.â My seat mate wordlessly accepts a mimosa from the flight attendant, not even looking up at her.
I politely wave her away.
âWell, just tell Danny that Iâll take care of it when I get back.â
With a groan, I lean in. âExcuse me.â
âYeahââ He turns to look at me, dark brows lowered in annoyance at being interrupted. âYeahâhold on, Chuck. Noâhold on, Chuck. Can I help you?â he says at me.
âMy travel companion and I got separated,â I explain. âWould you be willing to switch seats with her?â
He glances around. âIs she in first class?â
âNo.â
âThen no, palâYeah, Chuck, Iâm still hereââ He chatters into his phone as I feel my anxiety mounting.
âIâll pay you $500 to move,â I say, interrupting his call again.
âHold on, Chuck,â he growls. âDude, whatâs your problem?â he says at me.
âI said Iâll pay you to switch seats with her,â I repeat. â$500 cash.â
He scoffs. âLook, guy, I make $500 an hour. Itâs a short flight. Finger your girl in the bathroom if youâre that hard up.â
My shoulders tense. I donât like him talking about Rachel that way. If he was a player, he would have just earned himself a punch to the jaw. But this isnât hockey. I have to speak the language he understands.
The flight attendant asks him for the second time to hang up his call. Iâm running out of time. Any moment theyâll say weâre pushing back.
âIâll give you $1,000 to move,â I offer, talking over him for a third time.
âJesusâno, asshole,â he snaps. âKeep harassing me, and Iâll have you booted from this flight.â
Swallowing my growl of frustration, I snatch up my bag from under the seat. âThen move.â
âWhat?â
âLet me out. Move.â
âLook, I gotta call you when I land, Chuck. The guy next to me is being a total dick.â He unbuckles his seatbelt and stands.
âSir, you need to sit down. Weâre about to push back,â calls the flight attendant.
âTell that to this guy,â he says, jabbing a thumb in my direction.
âSirs, you both need to sit down,â she repeats.
But Iâm not listening. I slip past the asshole and move down the aisle into coach, my eyes scanning the seats looking for Rachel.
The flight attendant follows behind me. âSir, you have to return to your seatââ
I spot Rachel. Sheâs looking down at her phone, probably texting her pushy red-headed friend.
âSir, I said you need to sitâsir!â
I approach Rachelâs row and she spots me, eyes going wide. âMars, what are you doing?â
Thereâs a young man sitting next to her. Heâs wearing a backwards baseball hat and a Buffalo Sabres t-shirt. His eyes go just as wide as Rachelâs as he sees me approach. âWhoaâholy shit,â he cries, grinning like a fool. âMars Kinnunen? For real?â
Rachel groans.
âHello,â I say at her seat mate. âWould you like to sit in first class?â
âMars, this is ridiculous,â Rachel cries at the same time that the kid just glances between us and says, âUhhhâ¦â
âSir, please take your seat,â the flight attendant says again. âNow. Or youâll be removed from the flight.â
âThis is my seat,â I say, pointing to the kid. âHeâs going up to 2A.â
âOh my god,â Rachel mutters, shaking her head.
âI meanâ¦yeah sure,â says the kid, unbuckling his seatbelt. âHeyâcan I get a picture with you really quick?â
âSirs, find your seats now,â the flight attendant orders.
The kid climbs out of the narrow seat, unafraid of the flight attendantâs threats as he pulls out his phone and leans in, snapping a selfie with me.
I sit down, folding my large frame into the impossibly narrow space.
âJesus, Mars,â Rachel mutters. âAre you happy now?â
I am happier, yes.
âOuchâgodâhold on, you big tree.â She elbows me sharply as she shimmies the armrest up between us. It buys us two spare inches. âThis is why I got you the first class seat. Professional hockey players arenât meant to fly coach.â
I reach for the end of my seatbelt.
âMars, stop grabbing my ass.â
âThen get off my seatbelt,â I mutter, tugging it loose from under her thigh. I do my best not to elbow her too aggressively in the process.
âGod, weâre only an hour into this trip, and youâre already determined to drive me crazy,â she mutters, leaning away from me as I get the buckle fastened.
The plane starts to move, and the flight attendants begin their safety demonstration. I settle into my seat, letting out a low breath.
âMars, why the hell did you do that?â Rachel murmurs, her dark brown eyes gazing up at me, all flecked with gold.
âBecause I wanted to sit next to you,â I reply. Taking her hand, I weave our fingers together, balancing them on my knee. âNo one sits next to you but me, Rakas.â
âRakas?â she repeats with a raised brow. âWhatâis that Finnish for Rachel or something?â
âNo.â
She hasnât tried to take her hand away, which Iâm taking as a good sign. I have no idea what the hell Iâm doing. Ilmari Kinnunen is methodical. I watch and I wait. I weigh my options. But with Rachel Price, there is no plan. I just do.
Right now, the thing Iâm doing is holding her hand. And it feels fucking good.
Sheâs looking up at me, those dark eyes searching me, knowing me. I canât get this woman out of my head. Iâve been trying for days. Weeks. Everything in me is telling me to walk away. Sheâs my doctor. To ask for more would be unprofessional. And I am not unprofessional. I do my job. I put in the work. I leave it all out on the ice. I donât let emotion cloud my thinking.
Yet, here I am, flying on a plane on my off day, because she asked me to. Traveling to a strange city to meet a doctor I donât know because she trusts them to help me. Offering a man $1,000 to move seats because I canât be in the place where she is and not be by her side.
And now Iâm holding her hand and sheâs letting me. I donât dare look down. I donât move. I just breathe. Next to her. Her hand is so small in mine. I fight the urge to lean in, dropping my face to that place at her neck where I know sheâll smell sweetest.
What is this perfume she wears? The scent is soft and warm. It makes me think of lichen on rocks warming in the sun on a summerâs day. You put your hand on it and feel a heat that doesnât burn. But it seeps through your skin, warming you all the same.
âMars?â she says again, her free hand brushing down the bare skin of my arm. âYou alright?â
âNo,â I reply, giving her the honest truth.
Iâm not alright. Nothing is alright. Iâm at war with myself. Part of me wants to jerk my hand free and move away. No more Rachel Price. How many times have I said it? This needs to be finished. I need to put distance between us. But the idea of distance aches like a physical pain. No more distance. I want closer. I want touch. I want to drag her down the aisle of this plane and fuck her in the galley. I want us to sink to the floor, utterly spent, my cum sticky between her legs. Iâll wrap her in my arms and hold her tight, blocking out the rest of the world.
She sighs, leaning back against her seat. âYeahâ¦Iâm nervous too,â she admits, giving my hand a little squeeze. âBut itâs okay. Weâll get through this together, yeah?â
She thinks Iâm worried about the scans. She thinks Iâm worried theyâll be bad, that Iâll be out for the season and lose my chance at the Winter Olympics. I am worried. Of course, I am. But whatâs wrong with me that now Iâm more worried the scans will be clear?
Without this to bind us together, we have nothing. Without her caring about my physical health, I have no point of connection to Rachel Price. No reason to call, no reason to seek her out. Iâll have to watch her drift away, giving her full attention to other players.
Saatana, it makes me angry just thinking about it. I canât watch her laugh with another man or share her smiles as he shamelessly flirts with her. Iâm already within an inch of flattening Compton. He looks at her like heâs seen her naked. Iâve watched them together. Heâs so obvious with his intentions, the way he finds excuses to touch her as he brushes past. He wants her too.
I finally let myself glance down at our joined hands. She hasnât tried to pull away. Not once. At this angle, I can see the tattoos on the inside of her forearm. One is an electric guitar with a signature tattooed along the neck. She likes tattoos. She likes talking about them. Maybe sheâll talk to meâ¦
âWhat does this one mean?â I mutter, the finger of my free hand brushing over the signature.
She glances down, and I donât miss the way she shivers slightly at my touch. âOh, umâ¦okay, well this is my dadâs favorite model of Gibson Les Paul,â she explains. âAnd this is his signature,â she adds, tracing over the jagged script.
âIs he a musician?â
She fights a smile. âYeah, Mars. Heâs a musician.â She turns to face me more squarely. âActually, my father is Halston Price. Heâs the lead singer ofââ
âThe Ferrymen,â I finish for her.
Her smile curls up on one side. âYeahâ¦you know them?â
Know them? The Ferrymen are my favorite rock band. I grew up working out to their music. Iâve seen them in concert in different venues across Europe over a dozen times. Rachel Price is Hal Priceâs daughter. How did I never put that together?
âListen, Mars.â She shifts in her seat. âThereâs something else Iâve been meaning to tell you. Something I think itâs only right that you know before weâbefore we land,â she finishes.
We both know thatâs not how she ended that sentence in her mind.
âTell me,â I say, not letting go of her hand.
âIâm with Jake Compton,â she says on a breath, her dark eyes wide and hopeful and she gazes up at me. âWeâre together, Mars.â
Her fingers go like ice in my hand as I pull away, leaving her open hand resting atop my knee. Sheâs with Compton. Theyâre together. And now everything makes sense. He laughs with her, teases her, looks at her like heâs seen her nakedâ¦because he has. Jake Compton kisses Rachel. He fucks my Rachel. And suddenly my world is crashing down. Sheâs taken. Of course, she is. She was never going to be mine. I was deluding myself.
âMarsââ
âItâs fine.â I drag a calloused hand over my face, stroking my beard. âItâs not my business. Please, letâs not discuss it.â
âI think it is your business,â she replies. âYou deserve the truth, Mars. I donât want to hide anything from you or lead you on when I canât offer you what you want.â
Why the hell is she still talking?
âAnd Jake and Caleb agree with me,â she goes on. âYou deserve to have all the facts. If you really think youâre interested in me, you better know what the heck youâre walking into. Because I canât offer you exclusivity, and the guys are pretty sure thatâll be a deal-breaker for you. You know, because of the whole âgoalies work aloneâ thingââ
âCaleb?â I say, cutting her off. âThe equipment manager? You and Compton spoke to him about me?â
She nods, biting her bottom lip as she holds my gaze. âYeahâ¦cause thatâs the other thing. Iâm sort of with Caleb too.â