Wildcat: Chapter 8
Wildcat: A Forbidden Sports Romance (Wildcat Hockey Book 1)
Jade brings the bottle of wine from the kitchen and refills my wine glass while peering down at the screen of my phone. âStop torturing yourself.â
âIt doesnât even look like him. Seriously. Would you have known this guy was Leo?â I hold up the Wildcats roster photo of him. His hair is shorter, and his eyes are wide, like someone startled him seconds before they took the photo. Iâve never seen a more perfect âdeer in headlightsâ impression.
My best friend drops into a chair across from me in the living room. Iâm hiding out inside, trying to convince myself that I donât care, Leo, my hot Leo, is actually Leo Lohan, Wildcats star forward, and currently in the back yard of my family home.
âYou know I donât follow sports, but he does look better in person.â
I groan, drop my phone, and bury my head in my hands.
Her voice is the calm to the chaos raging inside of me. âDo you think he really would have called and asked you out again?â
âI donât know. It doesnât matter. Weâll never know now. I blocked him.â
âYou blocked him? Why?â
I slump back into the couch. I havenât blocked him yet, but Iâm seriously considering it. âHe plays hockey for my dad. Heâs a professional athlete. He lied. Pick a reason.â
âLied is a bit of a stretch.â
I glare, and she snorts a laugh.
âSure, now that he knows who I am, he canât stop thinking about me and wants to see me again. Where was all of this a week ago when I was still hoping he might call?â No one is so busy they canât find a second to text. I replay his words earlier and try to make them line up with the facts. He was full of sweet words, but was it all just to save his ass?
âSo, are you mad because he plays hockey for your dad and seeing him again would be complicated or because he didnât text when he said he would?â
The back patio door opens, and I lower my voice to keep our conversation private. âI donât know. Both. Why?â
Her gaze lifts, and she looks behind me over my head. âBecause he just walked in.â
I hold my breath as his footsteps approach. He stands in the space beside me. I donât look directly at him, but I know itâs him. I hate that after only one night together, my body is so tuned to his. Goosebumps race up my left side where he stands closest.
âIâm going to go⦠anywhere else.â Jade gets to her feet.
Neither of us speaks in the time it takes Jade to cross the room and exit the same way he came in. Iâm too agitated to sit, so I stand and move to the kitchen with my wine. He follows.
âWhat are you doing in here?â I ask. I finally look at him and then wish I hadnât. He skipped the hat today, and his light brown hair sticks up like he might have been running his fingers through it recently. Heâs dressed casually in jeans and a T-shirt, but even so, he looks every bit as good as I remember. His roster photo really doesnât do him justice.
âWe need to finish talking.â
âI donât have anything else to say to you, Leo Lohan.â
âMaybe I have something to say to you, Scarlett Miller.â His lips turn up, and that dimple in his left cheek appears.
The look on his face reminds me of the night we spent together. How fun and easy it all felt. But nothing about this is easy. Iâm not going to fall at the feet of another athlete who knows how to turn on the charm to get his way.
âSave it. Iâm not interested.â
âWhy not?â His brows pull together. âI thought we had fun the other night.â
I glare.
âYour dad being the coach isnât ideal,â he admits, like thatâs the only reason Iâm not falling over myself with excitement to see him again.
âDo you even go to college, or do you just hang at the campus bars trolling for girls?â
âI went pro after my sophomore year, but Iâve been working on finishing my degree. I took a couple of classes this summer, and Iâm enrolled in one this fall. The guys I was with the other night are buddies from my summer class.â
âDo they know youâre⦠you?â I flick a hand in his direction.
One side of his mouth quirks with a hint of a smile. âYeah.â
I drop my wine glass to the counter and cross my arms over my chest. âWhy didnât you tell me? If you really had no idea who I was, then why not tell me? If not at the bar, then at least when I was at your house. It is your house, right?â
He drops his head and pushes his hands down the front pockets of his jeans. âI guess I liked spending time with someone who wasnât interested in what I do more than who I am. And when we got to my place, and you went off on how you didnât care that I lived with my parents because you didâ¦â
I groan as I remember my heartfelt speech. I meant every word, and it turns out I spewed all my baggage, thinking we had something in common. âYou still should have told me. I feel like an idiot.â
In two long strides, he closes the distance between us. His voice is deep and low as he says, âYouâre not an idiot. Youâre smart and funny, and Iâve been thinking about how gorgeous you look when you come for a solid week.â
I breathe in his words like helium. My throat tightens, and my chest expands. My skin tingles as I remember how it felt to be kissed by him, touched by him.
âWe have a busy week, and weâre traveling next weekend, but we have a home game the following week.â
I give him my best âduh, I knowâ glare.
âRight. You probably know the schedule.â His mouth pulls into a tight smile. âAfter home games, we usually go to a bar called Wildâs. Itâs a couple of blocks from the arena. Meet me there and let me make it up to you for not calling sooner.â
It would be so easy to give in. It would feel good. I know it. My body freaking knows it, too. Every nerve ending crackles with desire. Easy and good, but also dumb.
Ignoring the heavy thrum of my heart, I step back. âIâm not interested, Leo Lohan.â
The next morning Iâm in the kitchen eating a bowl of cereal while I replay yesterday like a horror movie. Leo freaking Lohan. Of all the guys to go home with, I would pick the one thatâs totally off limits to me. Iâm a freaking mess.
Momâs voice cuts through my thoughts. âCan you run this to your dad at the arena on your way to class? The man was going to wear a suit from the nineteen nineties in his team photo.â She groans and lays the garment bag over the chair beside me.
The seemingly simple request sends panic pulsing up my spine and I sit straight. âI canât.â
Mom fills her travel mug with coffee and grabs her lunch bag from the fridge before she responds. A wrinkle forms between her brows. âWhy not?â
I donât come up with an answer quickly enough because I donât have a good excuse.
She cocks her head to the side. âPlease? I cannot bear the thought of your father being the worst-dressed NHL coach two years running. Iâll never live down the shame.â
âWorst-dressed coach?â I ask. âThatâs a thing?â
âI believe the exact words of the online article were, That suit belongs in the dumpster along with the Wildcats post-season performance.â
âMan, the internet sucks.â Except for odd animal friendship videos and military members reuniting with family. Those can stay.
âWell, they arenât wrong, at least about the suit.â She has her hands full but comes around to lean in and place a kiss on my forehead.
âI donât even know where his office is.â Itâs true. I havenât been to visit Dad at work since Iâve been back. It wasnât intentional. At least not until twenty-four hours ago.
âYouâre a smart girl, Scarlett Marie. Iâm confident that youâll figure it out. See you tonight.â
I take my time finishing my cereal, then shower and get ready. The extra effort I put into my hair, makeup, and outfit is entirely unrelated to the possibility of running into the hockey player Iâm hell-bent on avoiding. Completely unrelated.
At the arena, I walk through the front doors, and a security guard ushers me to a sign-in desk.
âName and purpose of your visit?â A woman asks without looking up from her computer.
âScarlett Miller. Iâm here to make sure Coach Miller doesnât commit a crime of fashion.â I lift my arm to show off the garment bag as her eyes slowly glance up from her screen to me.
I canât tell if she believes me or notâshe has the piercing, take no shit gaze of a woman who takes her job seriouslyâbut Iâm eventually guided to an elevator and down to a lower level by a security guard who whistles lightly the whole way.
âLetâs check his office first,â the guard says. âIf heâs not there, then heâll be on the ice.â
I nod like I know. But I donât. Not anymore. Itâs one of those things that I knew had changed since Iâd left for London two years ago, but until now, I didnât realize that meant I didnât know how he spent his day in the same way I used to.
Dad was still coaching at the junior hockey level then. Iâd occasionally pop in to have lunch or just to see him. It was nothing like this. Everything about this place is bigger and nicer.
The guard in front of me stops in a doorway while Iâm still admiring the massive hallway with its green paint that smells like it was recently done, the framed photos of players and coaches, and the light music playing over speakers in the hallâTaylor Swift, which for some reason makes me smile.
âYour daughter is here to see you, Coach.â
âMy daughter?â Dadâs voice snaps me back to my purpose for being here, and I walk through his office door.
âWhat are you doing here?â He smiles behind a messy desk stacked with papers, so many papers, along with stick tape, hockey pucks, a brown banana, and those are just the things visible. Who knows whatâs buried underneath?
âMom sent me.â I hang the bag on an open filing cabinet and unzip it.
âThanks, Mick.â He waves to the guard and then loosens the brown and white tie heâs wearing, walking toward the mom-approved outfit without a word of complaint. That is true love. Or twenty-seven years of experience telling him that changing his shirt and jacket are easier than listening to Mom gripe.
I take a seat behind his desk in a big, worn leather chair that I know for sure he had at the last place. It creaks as I lean back.
âThey couldnât spring for a new chair?â I spin around in it. âOr a maid.â I lift the banana and toss it into the wastebasket, which is empty, so maybe they do clean in here.
âIâve had that chair for fifteen years. Itâs lucky.â He winks and goes about switching his shirt and tie.
I move a few items on his desk and uncover a sandwich that definitely shouldnât be eaten and another ugly brown tie that Mom would probably pay me to make disappear for good.
âHow do you work in here?â
âIt isnât usually this bad.â He takes out the jacket and pulls it on, grimacing as he rolls his shoulders and shifts to get comfortable. âAnna needed to take some time off to visit her family in Michigan.â
âWhoâs Anna?â I stand and straighten his tie.
âMy assistant.â
âI donât remember you being this disorganized at the last place.â
âItâs been busy with camp and practices. Iâll get to it eventually.â
A phone rings from somewhere on his desk. I stifle a laugh as he rummages around until he pulls the receiver free and answers.
âIâll be right there.â He fidgets some more with his tie after he hangs up. âLook okay?â
âYep, and now I have fulfilled my daughterly obligations.â
âYou donât want to come check it out? Media day is pretty impressive. Lots of fancy cameras and photography equipment.â
My eyes light up, and he grins like he knew the mention of cameras would have me following him down a hallway and into a tunnel that eventually leads to the ice. A quick look, and then Iâm out of here.
On the ice, a big green backdrop is setup, and in front of it, another man in a suit sits on a stool, smiling as a woman snaps pictures of him. She moves from left to right, to center, capturing every angle. They have music going and lots more people with cameras and video equipment mill around the ice.
Eventually she has him stand and takes more photos that way, then has him don a Wildcat hat and takes a few more.
Dad sneaks a glance over his shoulder to check my expression. The buzz of excitement thatâs worked its way into the very core of my being must be radiating from me because he smiles and says, âThis is just for the coaches. Once the players get here, the real fun starts.â
âCoach Miller.â
At his name, Dad and I both look up to see the man on the stool has vacated his seat, and the photographer is walking toward us with a friendly smile.
âLindsey, this is my daughter Scarlett,â Dad says, adjusting the cuffs on one sleeve.
âHey. Nice to meet you,â she says. She removes the camera from around her neck and hands it to someone else. âAre you ready for us, Coach?â
âYeah. Letâs get this over with.â He messes with his tie. If they manage to capture a photo with the thing not crooked, I will be amazed.
âGreat. Give me two minutes.â She starts off the ice with a bounce to her step that makes her short blonde hair sway around her head, then stops. âOh, hey. Do you have the schedule for the rest of today and through the week? Anna mentioned there were a few changes. She was going to email it over, butâ¦â
âRight.â Dad frowns. âItâs probably on her iPad, but I think she printed me a copy.â
Green catches my eye on the other side of the bench, and I glance over in time to see the first players arriving. Three of them huddle together in their full uniforms. I donât see Leoâs head, but I pull my gaze away so quickly, I canât be sure he isnât among them.
âIâll grab the paper,â I say, a little too eager.
Dadâs forehead crinkles as his brows lift, but he nods. âItâs on the desk. If you canât find it, bring the iPad. Itâll be on there somewhere.â
âIâve got this,â I say with far more confidence than I feel the second I step back into the tunnel. Iâm not even sure I can find his office again, let alone a single sheet of paper on his disaster of a desk.
When I get to the end of the tunnel, I pause and look left and right, then left again. More green jerseys are headed this way from my right, so I gamble and go left.
Dadâs office isnât that hard to find, thank goodness, and I start sifting through the piles of paper. I donât know exactly what Iâm looking for, but Lindsey said it was a schedule, so I look for dates and times.
As I work, I stack the piles neatly and throw away more spoiled food. Gross, Dad, seriously.
I finally find what Iâm looking for. Two pages stapled together with the word âscheduleâ and this weekâs date on it. I hold it up and kiss it, then remember it was on a desk with old food.
I start toward the door, but a mass of green fills the escape route. A very handsome mass.
âCoachââ Leo stops with his hand up like he was about to knock on the open door. Two very long seconds pass before he speaks my name. âScarlett.â
He starts to smile, but my horrified expression must scare it off his handsome face.
I hold up the paper to indicate why Iâm in here, but donât speak. Iâm incapable of forming words as I take him in, all six feet and two inches of him covered in padding and wearing skates that make his already big frame mammoth.
He takes a step closer at the same time I do, then we both stop.
âWhat are you doing here?â His deep voice snaps me out of the trance.
âFinding a schedule. Coach is on the ice.â I try to brush past him, but he steps in front of me.
âIâm glad I ran into you. I wanted to clear the air.â
âI already told you I wonât tell my dad.â Talk about an awkward conversation with dear old dad. He canât really think Iâd be eager to share the details of my one-night stand.
âThank you, but that isnât it. You and I are bound to run into one another, and thereâs no reason it should be weird between us.â
âYou mean except for the fact weâve seen each other naked?â I ask in a hushed tone.
His mouth curves up. âExcept that.â
I fight the flush climbing up my neck from standing this close to him. âLike I told you yesterday, Iâm not interested in a repeat. It was just one night. Zero weirdness coming from me.â
He studies my face without speaking. The office is quiet. Way too quiet. Noise in the hallway gets louder, and Leo finally steps back, and I can breathe again. âPerfect. Zero weirdness.â