Bad Intentions: Chapter 40
Bad Intentions: A Dark Hockey Bully Romance (Hellions of Hade Harbor Book 1)
I sat in the locker room before the game, cracking my knuckles, my mind blank and empty. I was way early for the game. I needed to get into my stuff before anyone could see my injuries. Coach poked his head in the door and spotted me.
âI thought you were here. You missed dinner,â he said.
I hadnât wanted to go back to the house after school today, seeing as Lily and her mom were going to the airport. I couldnât bring myself to watch her leave for the campus visit. She was going to go there and love it. She was going to accept the offer and make plans to move, and soon, Iâd never see her again. I felt frantic when I thought about it, and I couldnât afford that right now. If Iâd been home, I was pretty sure I would have snuck out to let the air out of her momâs tires so they couldnât make their flight. It was safer to stay at school.
âHungry? Iâve got dinner covered.â Coach smiled at me from the locker room entrance. âYou canât play on an empty stomach.â
Right. I hadnât eaten. It was weird how things with Lily had made everything else pale in importance.
âI didnât know you cooked, Coach,â I observed as I followed him to his office.
He let out a bark of laughter. âI donât, but my ordering skills are top-notch.â
Two boxes of takeout pizza sat on his desk, and the smell made my stomach growl.
âIs this the dinner of champions?â
âYouâre young and fit, it doesnât matter what you eat, only that you do,â he replied with a grin.
I sat across from him, and he put on the TV that was mounted on his wall and brought up the latest footage we had of our opponents.
âCome on, letâs study the competition one more time while we eat,â he suggested.
I grabbed the pizzas.
We ate, and I watched the game. It was nice. I wondered if this was what normal kids did with their fathers. Iâd never had anything even close to it.
Coach checked his phone now and then and finally smiled at a message he got.
âTheyâre at the airport and checking in,â he reported.
I nodded, my belly clenching at the update from Lily. She hadnât messaged me. I had a long way to go to get back into her good graces, it seemed, and it was all I could think about.
âArenât you worried sheâll want to really go there? Itâs so far away,â I remarked after a moment.
Eric sighed, and I knew it was something heâd wrestled with a lot.
âIf she wants to go, I canât stop her. I wonât stop her. I love her, and I just want her to be happy.â
âEven if that means only seeing her during the holidays?â I hoped my desperation didnât sound too obvious. It certainly felt fucking obvious.
âEven then. When you love something, let it go, or whatever the adage is.â
My instincts rebelled against the very thought of that. I loved Lily, or was as close to love as someone like me could be, and I was more and more against the idea of letting her go. If you loved someone, surely you held on to them through thick and thin. That made a lot more sense to me.
âAre you nervous about tonight?â Coach asked me.
I shrugged, the game less on my mind than Lily was. âItâll be fine. I might not end up going to HHU, who knows?â
âWhat the hell? Of course youâre going to HHU,â Coach said dismissively.
âMaybe I was thinking of somewhere with a warmer climate,â I muttered and took a long drink from my water bottle.
âA warmer climate for hockey? HHU is perfect for you, Cade, and we both know it.â
âItâs not so crazy to want to see the country, is it?â I offered after a moment, smiling at him to break the rising tension. I could hardly say to him that since his daughter was moving across the country, and I had to be with her, and making her stay was apparently unloving, that it looked like I was just going to need to go after her, wherever she went.
âThatâs what vacation is for,â Coach deadpanned. âHere, at HHU, Iâve got you, Cayden. Together, we can get you into the NHL. You move schools, youâll work with coaches who have different favorites, who arenât your fan, for whatever reason, and you risk getting sidelined.â
âI know,â I muttered, shoving another piece of pizza in my mouth so I didnât have to speak.
âYou should stay here, work hard, work smart, and get drafted. Then you can do whatever you want with your career. But get there first.â
âI know,â I repeated, unable to say anything else.
The whole truth was that going to HHU, going pro and all the riches and celebrity that came with it, had lost its shine now that Lily wouldnât be there. It felt like she was leaving me behind, and suddenly, nothing else seemed to matter.
The game tonight was all anyone had been talking about for a week. Everyone knew there would be scouts there, and every single player on the team wanted a shot at catching their eye. For all the locals, it was a dream to play for the Hellions. Getting to stay in their beautiful small town of Hade Harbor and go to an internationally recognized university was a dream come true for most students. Just not Lily, apparently.
We shot onto the ice before the game and started to warm up. My muscles burned as I pushed myself, forcing blood through my tired body. Ever since that night on the cliff top, I had barely slept. Now, it was finally time to get into HHU, the goal Iâd come to Hade Harbor with, and I was distracted. The cause of my distraction was sitting on a plane, moving farther and farther away from me with every moment.
When the first buzzer went off, I quickly saw that this wouldnât be an easy game. The defensemen made for me, quickly blocking me off. I was clearly the target to watch in this game, and usually that would only fire me up, but my distraction pulled my attention away. Not only that, but every time one of the hefty defensemen slammed me into the boards on my wounded side, all the air left my lungs. Josh was also playing, which was yet another distraction. The fucker hadnât dared look me in the eye since the cliff top.
We played well, but it was a fair fight, and I wasnât at my best. By the end of the first period, we were down two.
The first intermission flew past, and we were into the second play. I was banged into the boards more often than I could count and was flagging. There was too much riding on the game. The pressure was getting to me, and I was choking. Or maybe it wasnât just the pressure but the thought of losing the little redhead who held my battered heart in her small hands. The pain in my side was also getting worse. Gratefully, I skated off for a shift change at my turn and lowered myself to the bench. Josh followed and had no choice but to sit next to me. We hadnât spoken at all about that night at Black Lake trailer park.
âThe way I see it, I can run interference on their left defenseman. Heâs a big bastard. They wonât expect that, and itâll give you a window to break through,â Josh suddenly said to me.
I turned to him, surprised by his words.
He was nodding, studying the game. âItâll work, and as soon as we even the score, we can change the tide.â
âWhat, you want to win that badly? You know the scouts are here to see me. Iâd have thought that losing tonight would suit you fine.â
A muscle clenched in Joshâs jaw, and he shook his head. âThatâs not me. Itâs not who I want to be, anywayâ¦and Iâm no good at apologies, and I sure as hell didnât owe you one when I started all that shit, but I owe you one now, and this is it. If you want it, that is.â
He turned to me and met my eyes for the first time since that night at Uncle Jackâs.
A new respect for the guy grew in me. Sure, I was still mad as hell, but Lily wanted it to stop, and the fucker was basically apologizing.
âI want it. Letâs do it,â I replied finally.
He grinned. He looked like a kid when he smiled.
âCome on, then. Seems like thereâs someone in the audience who came here to see you win, not lose.â
âYouâre wrong. Sheâs not here.â
Josh gave me a grim grin. âIsnât she?â
Something dangerously hopeful shifted in my chest. I twisted around, but I couldnât see from where I was sitting. My leg bounced, my skate cutting into the ice as I waited impatiently to get back out there.
When our shift came, we shot onto the ice. I turned and looked behind the coachâs bench. Brilliant red hair met my gaze, sending my heart thumping hard.
Sheâs here. Sheâs come. She isnât in California. My thoughts jumped around like live wires in my head.
Sheâd just arrived and was in the act of taking her jacket off, standing and easy to make out. She stilled when her eyes connected with mine. Even from a distance, I could feel the moment she sensed my gaze on her. Suddenly, she dumped her jacket off her shoulders and twisted around. She was wearing a Hellion jersey.
It only took a second for the number on her jersey to register with me.
It was my number.
My girl had on my number, and she didnât come here to see me lose.
I was Cayden West, and there was no way in hell I was losing with my girl watching.
No fucking way.