Pucking Around: Chapter 61
Pucking Around: A Why Choose Hockey Romance (Jacksonville Rays Book 1)
Somethingâs wrong. Itâs written all over Ilmariâs face. Heâs white as a sheet. It only lasts a moment before heâs burying himself so deep behind his thick walls. Itâs like I watch him disappear, his whole body icing over. And then heâs gone, his face a blank mask.
Doctor Halla is speaking. It takes me a moment to realize why Iâm confused. Heâs not speaking English. Ilmari answers him in what I can only assume is Finnish, his voice low, his words clipped.
I knew Doctor Halla was European, but I never knew from where. Honestly, I never thought to ask. Itâs not like we swapped life stories. If we werenât talking about patient care, we werenât really talking. I doubt he knows a thing about me other than that I like cheesy bagels and require a coffee IV drip to make it through a night shift.
âYou two know each other?â I say, glancing between them.
And thatâs when my heart drops from my chest. Doctor Halla is a tall man, broad-shouldered. He has short blond hair, peppered with grey at his temples, and deep blue eyes. My gaze darts from Ilmari to Doctor Halla and back. Itâs the bridge of their noses that seals my suspicions. The slight downturned crease in the outside corner of their eyes. The thin set of their lips as they exchange clipped sentences in Finnish. âAre you two related?â I say over them, knowing Iâm right.
âNo,â Ilmari replies at the same time Doctor Halla says, âYes.â
Ilmari is hard as stone, giving nothing away.
âIâm his father,â Halla explains.
âYou are not my father,â Ilmari snaps. âYou are nothing to me and never have been.â
As the men stare each other down, my brain is still mid-seizure. âI donât understand,â I manage to say, looking at Mars. âI thought you said your father was a hockey player. Isnât that the point in all of this?â I add, gesturing around. âYou said the Olympics was your familyâs legacyââ
âItâs the Kinnunen legacy,â says Halla with a decided frown. âIlmari is not a Kinnunen.â
âYes, I am,â Ilmari counters. He steps forward, his eyes blazing with heat. âMy father is Juhani Kinnunen. What else do you call the man who raised me? You are nothing to me, Hallaââ
âBecause your mother never gave me a chanceââ
Ilmari cuts Halla off with a string of vehement sentences spat in Finnish that I can only assume are colorful curses designed to let Doctor Halla know exactly where he can go. And then Halla is replying, his tone more measured, like heâs refusing to rise to Ilmariâs obvious bating.
Sensing the rising tension, I step between them. âOkayââ I lift a hand up in each of their directions. âI forgot my universal translator back on the Enterprise, so Iâm gonna need you both to switch to English, okay? Iâm sure we can figure this outââ
âNo. Iâm done,â says Ilmari. âThis is done.â
âSon, donât be a fool. You need these scans,â Doctor Halla replies. âLet me help youââ
âI donât want your help,â Ilmari snaps. âI donât want anything from you.â
And thatâs when the truth Iâve been missing up to this point hits me on the head like an anvil. This isnât some wacky coincidence. Doctor Halla knew what he was doing. From the moment I said Ilmariâs name on the phone, he knew I was talking about his son. He wanted me to bring him here. He used me to get to Ilmari.
And one look at Ilmari tells me how much this has hurt him. He has no relationship with this man, and I have to assume thatâs on purpose. I trust Ilmari. I trust his reasons. My protective instincts flare.
Ilmari snatches the bags up off the floor and turns away like he means to leave.
âIlmari, wait,â I call after him.
âPrice, this wasnât our agreement,â Doctor Hallaâs cheeks are reddening with embarrassment as Joanne, the nurse at the front desk, watches all of this unfold. âYou said you could get him here. You said he would see me.â
My mind is spinning. âIââ
Ilmari turns slowly back around, and now heâs staring daggers at me. âYou said what?â He takes a half-step towards me. âYou did this on purpose? You brought me to him?â
âWell, yesâbut only to help youââ
âDid you know?â he says, looking at me like Iâm a hydra with ten heads. âDid he tell you?â
âWhat?â I cry. âMarsâJeezusâdoes this look like the face of a person in the know?â I say, gesturing to what I hope is a look of utter shock on my stupid, surprised face.
âYou said you would get him here,â Halla challenges. âYou promised me a dinner with my son.â
I see Ilmariâs face fall and then heâs turning away.
âWhat theâoh, come on, Marsâwait!â I call after him. âMarsââ
âPrice, get him back here,â Doctor Halla barks at me. Then he shouts something in Finnish at Ilmari.
Ilmari snaps something back as he shoves his shoulder against the glass front door and leaves. Meanwhile, Iâm halfway between Doctor Halla and the door, my senses spinning, heart racing.
I spin around, angry tears stinging my eyes. âAre you fucking serious right now? What the hell were you thinking? This is so unethical in like a hundred different ways!â
âPriceââ
âOh, donât Price me,â I snap. âYou knew what you were doing. You played me, asshole. I called you because that man is terrified,â I cry, pointing towards the front door. âHeâs alone, and heâs scared, and he trusted me to help him. And I trusted you. And you just shit all over that trust!â
âCareful, Price,â Halla growls. Clearly, he dislikes being reprimanded by a resident in his own clinic. But I donât fucking care. I spin away from him, slinging my purse back onto my shoulder. âPrice, where are you going?â
âI have to go after him! I have to find him and apologize and try to mend the damage from the emotional grenade you just lobbed at us!â
âTalk him down,â he pleads, following me to the door. âReason with him. He needs to do these scans. I can help, Priceââ
I huff, shrugging away from him. âYou really think Iâll get him back in here now? Have you met Ilmari Kinnunen? Thereâs no making that man do anything he doesnât want to do.â
âHeâll do it for you,â he calls at my back as I push on the door. âItâs clear he cares about you, Price. Use that.â
I spin around again. âDonât you fucking dare,â I growl at him. âYouâre a sports injury specialist, not a goddamn coupleâs therapist. Stay out of our business.â
He smirks like Iâve just given him a compliment. âSo, I was right. Youâre together, yes?â He nods like he already knows heâs right. âYouâre good for him, Price. Youâre evenly matched in stubbornness.â
âDonât pretend to know me. Or him. I donât know what you did to that man, but his sentiment seemed pretty clear. And I think Iâll have to echo it. You can go ski into a cunt!â
Not waiting for his response, I turn on my heel and shove on the door, racing out into the crisp October afternoon in search of my wayward goalie.