Icebound: Chapter 13
Icebound (Boundless Players)
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et out,â I demand, pointing to the broken door. Iâll have to go to the hardware store to fix it later. âActually? No. Weâre all leaving.â
I shove Cruz and Patty out of the bathroom, leaving Nina to finish changing in private. I need to get out of there because being that close to her is making it hard to breathe.
The conversation we had in the bathroom is deeper than any conversation Iâve had on a date. I had no idea sheâs been through so much. It took everything in me not to let my eyes drop to her tits while she was talking, and I feel like a jackass for that.
Iâm still angry with my cat for scratching her back, but a twisted part of me likes that I was the one to patch her up.
What kind of man does that make me?
Iâm not going to think about that because then Iâm going to have to think about why I dug through my closet until I found my old, favorite sweatshirt to give to her, even though I did laundry yesterday.
It definitely smells like my sweat, but I donât want Nina to smell like Ocean Breeze laundry detergentâI want her to smell like me. Iâm worse than an animal, apparently, marking her with my scent like Iâve got some claim on her when I donât.
Sheâs eleven years younger than me. Iâve got no business looking at her, but I canât seem to stop.
Chicken scurries across my floor, and I scoop him into my arms, nuzzling him for a second. Iâm tempted to squeeze the hell out of him, but I still love the little guy even when heâs being a dick. He jumps out of my arms and heads to his cat castle.
Cruz rifles through the grocery bags on my kitchen counter. âDamn, and here I thought Phil would be the one scratching up your back, not the other way around.â
âStop talking about Nina, and she told you to stop calling her Phil,â I grit out. âRespect that.â
âHave you not taken a shit today or what?â He looks up from a plastic bag. âAnd whatâs going on with you two? I thought you said you werenât into her.â
âNothingâs going on. My cat scratched up her back, so I was helping her out. Iâm taking her to a sponsorship event. Thatâs all.â
I need a distraction from Nina, so I tickle Bettyâs tiny belly until she giggles. âHi, baby girl, look at you getting so big. Whatâs your daddy been feeding you?â
Patty kisses her fuzzy blond head. âSmashed chickpeas and blueberries. Theyâre her favorite. Sheâs so strange, but sheâs mine, and sheâs in the ninety-fifth percentile for height, so I donât care.â
I slap his shoulder. âThatâs great, Patââ
Cruz cracks open a bag of tortilla chips. âDid I tell you about the suction on this girlâs mouth from the other night? Unreal. I clogged up her vocal cords, but she kept on going like a fucking plunger.â
Glaring at Cruz, Patty drops Betty into the highchair I bought for when he visits. âYou know, sometimes, you should think about the things youâre going to say before you say them.â
âBut then Iâd never say them.â Cruz tosses up a chip and opens his mouth.
âThatâs the point.â I snatch it out of the air and eat it myself. âYou better be getting on your knees for these women and thanking them.â
He grabs another chip. âTrust me. I returned the favor. Three fucking times. Eating pussyâs hard work. My tongueâs still sore.â
âStop cursing,â Patty says. âMy daughterâs first word is not going to be f-u-c-k.â
Cruz puts away the groceries we got for fish tacos because he gets an eye twitch if someone so much as sets a drink down without a coaster.
âLook, Iâll try to control myself, but I canât make any promises. Asking me not to curse is like asking me not to jack off.â Cruz wiggles his dark brows at me. âMaybe Phil can help me out next time. Iâm sure weâd have fun playing together.â
I pick up a foam football and hurl it at him. âSheâs not a fucking toy, Cruz.â
Patty groans. âLanguage!â
Cruz snatches it out of the air. âI know sheâs not a toy, but that doesnât mean I canât play with her, unless⦠you want her?â
âI donât want her,â I lie, like that will convince my brain.
âI deep-throatedly disagree with that comment,â Cruz says.
âWhatâs that even mean?â Patty smashes a blueberry, letting Betty eat it off his finger.
âWhole-heartedly didnât feel like a strong enough word choice.â Cruz shrugs. âDoes this mean Philâs fair game?â
My hands ball into fists. Cruz doesnât take anything but hockey seriously, and they clearly get along great because theyâre the same age. Nina can make her own decisions, but I donât want those choices shoved in my face like a win from our biggest rival.
I dart my eyes to the closed bathroom door before striding over to Cruz. Heâs tall, but Iâve got an inch on him, so I make sure to look down. âIâm only going to say this once. I know youâre friends, so Iâm asking you to do this for me. Find someone else.â
He flashes me a wicked grin. âDamn, look at your face. This is gonna be a hell of a lot of fun, isnât it?â
A door shuts, and we snap our heads to find Nina striding out of the bathroom in my massive sweatshirt that goes to her thighs. Some feral part of me purrs like my cat at the sight of her wearing my clothes.
I like that image a little too much.
Cruz spots Nina, and with a quick wink in my direction, he wraps her in a bear hug and swings her around my living room. A sharp stab slams through me, so I focus on Betty slapping her highchair table.
âPhil! Itâs so good to see you, pretty girl. Iâm a little offended you didnât keep tabs on me after high school, but whatever. Iâll let it go this time.â
If he calls her pretty girl all night, Iâm shoving that entire bag of chips down his throat.
Ninaâs small grunt of surprise is muffled against his chest, and in a move that makes me want to bodycheck Cruz into the boards, she jumps up, wrapping her legs around his waist.
âMicah Cruz, look at you, you got huge! And fine, you can call me Phil. Thatâs better than pretty girl.â
Nina sucks in a breath when he pulls her closer, and I have to look away because that has me thinking about the breathy noises she made in the kitchen.
I scrub a hand over my jaw, but nothingâs going to erase that moment. Iâm not even sure I want it to leave my head, until I remember sheâs a year younger than Cruz, and then I want to punch my brain for having the thought.
Cruz finally sets her back down, and smirks at me over her head. âYou know, in brighter lighting, you kind of look old enough to be her dad, Tremblay. I think itâs the gray that does it.â
Patty throws the foam football at the back of his head. âDonât be a d-i-c-k.â
âYeah, donât be an asshole. Rhodeâs still young.â Nina drops onto the wooden barstool next to me, squeezing my shoulder. I lurch away like her touch is an open flame. Her hands might as well be with the way fire rushes to my dick.
âYou know whoâs younger?â Cruz smiles down at her with a glint in his eyes.
Glaring at him, I grip the leg of the stool and pull her closer to my side, so Cruz gets the point. The loud, slow scrape echoes through my apartment. Chicken scatters across the rug. Even Betty quirks her little head at the noise.
Nina pushes her gold glasses up her nose. âWas that really necessary?â
âIt was very necessary.â I keep my eyes on Cruz, whose lips curve in a dare.
She tightens her ponytail. âOkay, anyway. I think me and Chicken are friends. My backâs stopped throbbing, but he let me pet him before running off, so I feel like that was an apology. Oh, and whoâs this cutie?â She squeezes Bettyâs tiny feet, but she may as well be squeezing my heart.
Patty smiles, lifting one of Bettyâs hands to wave. âNina, meet my daughter, Elizabeth, but we call her Betty because Patty and Betty is the stuff daddy-daughter dance competitions are made of. Sheâs eight months, twelve days, and fourteen hours old, loves blueberries, and she finally smiles when you make eye contact with her. Watch.â He plays peek-a-boo, and Betty starts giggling .
âShe also does more than cry and shit now, so thatâs fun,â Cruz adds.
Nina keeps her grin on Betty, but smacks Cruzâs arm. âOkay, sheâs adorable. She looks just like you, Wyatt. Can I hold her?â
I try not to frown at the fact that she sort of called Patty adorable. He is, but fuck, I donât want Nina thinking that about my friends.
âYou can try, but fair warning, sheâs kind of going through a stranger danger phase, where she doesnât like anyone she doesnât know holding her, but go for it⦠Maybe youâll be the exception.â
Patty hands Betty over, and Nina holds her like a football. The girlâs not a natural, but she gets points for trying. Bettyâs cute smile twists into a scowl, and she starts wailing.
Cruz covers his ears. âFuck, make it stop.â
âLanguage!â Patty shouts, pointing a finger at Cruz.
Nina coos in her ear and tries to bounce Betty, but when that does shit-all for the crying, she hands her back to Patty. The girl instantly calms in his arms, nuzzling into his chest.
âWell,â Nina chuckles. âThat couldâve gone better. I guess she doesnât like me.â
âI wouldâve been jealous if she liked you instantly. Took her months to warm up to me.â I nudge her shoulder and regret it a second later when I brush the side of her tits. Is she not wearing a bra? This dinner is going to be brutal.
âI warned you.â Patty snorts. âSheâs probably not used to your smell. Itâs not like we like everyone when we first meet them. I hated Cruz at firstââ
âDick.â
âLanguage,â Patty shouts. âBut Cruz writes everyone on the team handwritten cards for their birthdays, so now heâs alright. Why should Betty have to be all friendly? My girlâs allowed to be a little mean.
â
Patty grins at Betty in a way that makes me think if the world were to go up in flames, he wouldnât notice. I frown, wishing I had someone to look at like that, and pull my gaze away to find Cruz staring at Ninaâs chest.
I slap a hand on the counter to get his attention, and his eyes snap to mine. âWhatâs up, old man?â
âYou did not just call Rhode that,â Nina interjects. âThatâs so rude.â
Iâm speechless for a second. No oneâs ever come to my defense that fast besides Patty. Cruz rubs the back of his neck, looking a little sheepish. âSorry, itâs just an old habit.â
âCalled out.â Patty gives her a high five. âI like you, Nina. Iâm glad youâre our good luck charm.â
âIâm not your good luck charm, but you can believe whatever you want. That was all you guys.â
Cruz stuffs another chip in his mouth. âYeah, you are, and now youâve got to come to our next home game and watch us play live.â
âNo, I hate crowds,â she says.
I file that fact away under my mental cabinet with the name Nina Alstyne.
âPlease, Phil?â Cruz begs.
She nudges him, and I scowl at where she touched his arm. âWeâre not doing this again, you big flirt. Iâm not going. You donât need me to win. Youâre fine.â
âCome on, please? No one ever comes to my games,â he says, getting on his knees and clasping his hands in front of her. âIâll do anything. Anything.â
âShe said no,â I interject in a hard voice, hating seeing Cruz on his knees for Nina.
She smiles at me, but then turns back to Cruz, giving him an exasperated look. âCan I think about it?
â
âSure, as long as you come.â Cruz winks in my direction. âTo the game, I mean.â
I ball my hands into fists. If I have to listen to him make sexual innuendos all night, Iâm going to lose my shit.
Cruz makes his way to the living room and drops down onto the couch, patting the cushion. âNow, come sit down, Phil. Weâre gonna teach you some hockey terms, starting with the fact that itâs called the penalty box or the sin bin, not boy jail.â
She drops down next to him. Cruz says something low in Ninaâs ear that makes her laugh. I turn my back, yanking open the fridge to stare at the fish taco ingredients for fuck knows how long.
I try to remind myself that it doesnât matter that Iâll never find out if Nina tastes like cinnamon, or that every time she tucks her hair behind her ear, I get jealous of her fingers.
Thatâs lust.
Those are physical feelings that will go away when I find the right womanâsomeone who wants the same things as me. This isnât anything deep. After the event, I need to get Nina out of my head because I canât live feeling like Iâm about to snap at any moment.
We spend the next hour cooking, and Nina keeps laughing at every fucking thing Cruz says, even though none of itâs funny. By the time dinnerâs almost ready, Iâm so wound up that Iâve burned at least five tortillas for the tacos.
âWhat a fucking pigeon!â Cruz shouts at the TV. Heâs bouncing Betty on his knee, so they look damn near perfect together. Sheâs still got on my sweatshirt, though. âToronto just scored. Wesleyâs got a killer slap shot, so you better block âem when we play.â
âLanguage,â Patty groans. âMy girlâs gonna have the dirtiest mouth if she keeps hanging around you.
â
Nina catches my eye. âThereâs nothing wrong with a girl whoâs got a dirty mouth. Isnât that right, Rhode?â
That teasing edge to her voice is going to be my undoing, and I want nothing more than to flirt back, but thatâs not fair to either of us.
My traitor cock twitches in my sweats, and this material is way too thin to let that happen, so I subtly adjust myself. âMm-hm.â
That cute, playful half-smile turns into a frown, and I hate myself a bit for pushing her away, but weâd never work long term.
Cruz gives her a high-five. âOh shit, I forgot how much I like you, Phil. Donât you like her, Tremblay?â
I give him my best withering glare, but all that does is make the kidâs grin widen. Iâm acting like a grumpy fucker, but I have to stick to one-word answers, so I donât lose it in front of Cruz.
I donât know why Ninaâs affecting me so much, but this canât be normal. Iâm starting to think it has everything to do with the fact that I need to get laid.
Itâs been over a year since Iâve been with a woman, which is the only explanation for why I feel like my chest is about to burst when I look at Nina in my sweatshirt. Iâm not going to mistake lust for some deeper emotion. Thatâs what got my father in trouble.
âSpeaking of dirty things.â Cruz gags, lifting Betty in the air. âI think something died in your girlâs diaper, Patty-Daddy. Here. Take her. This stench is offensive.â
Patty holds up his red hands sprinkled with paprika. âCan you help me out? Iâve got seasoning all over me, and I want to make sure the fish doesnât burn.â
He dangles Betty in the air. âYou made her. You change her.â
âIâll change her. Come here, baby girl.â Iâll take any distraction from Nina at this point, so I grab Betty from Cruzâs lap and sniff her tiny butt, grimacing. âWhat the hell are you feeding her, Patty? Straight cabbage?â
âItâs the chickpeas. Her digestive system canât handle them, but she loves them, so I donât want to deny my girl.â Patty rubs paprika on the mahi-mahi. âThanks. I think Iâve changed seven, no, maybe eight, diapers today. Can you tell me what color it is too? Actually, just take a picture.â
The things parents do for their children. âSorry, but Iâm not taking a picture of your daughterâs shit.â
Nina stands from my leather couch. âIâll do it. Iâve never changed a diaper in my life, but I can take a picture. Sounds like it might be a two-person job.â
âYou know what else is a two-person job?â Cruz says. âThree people if youâre lucky?â
âStop talking,â I say to him, facing Nina. âAnd you donât have to come. I got this.â
She peers at me with those big, beautiful eyes. âI want to help.â
âAlright, then. Your call.â I hitch Pattyâs orange diaper bag over my shoulder, prop Betty on my hip, and head to the guest room with Nina following. Her gaze feels like itâs singeing my back, but I donât turn around.
I lay out the pink diaper mat with giraffes and set Betty on the soft padding, tickling her belly. She squeals. âYeah, Iâd be smiling too if I were you right now. I bet you feel a million pounds lighter.â
Ninaâs laugh fills the room. âYouâre a lot nicer to her than you have been to me tonight. Iâd be jealous if she werenât so cute.â
I grunt in response, unclipping Bettyâs yellow onesie, but I canât help myself. I glance up to see Nina watching me with a small smile. âWhat?â
She shrugs, and the motion makes her blonde hair shimmer in the light. Shimmer? Look at me turning into a poet. âNothing.
You just look like a natural. Youâre going to make someone very happy one day, Rhode.â
Swallowing, I shift my gaze back to Betty. Yeah, I want mini versions of me skating around, but I also want them with the right person.
Bettyâs got drool dribbling from her mouth, so I lift her onesie and wipe it away. âDo you want kids?â
âHonestly?â Nina plops down on my guest bed. âI havenât thought much about kids. Right now? No, but I canât decide what I want for dinner, much less how Iâll feel in ten years, so probably one day. I just want to focus on myself for now. Save money for my living expenses in Argentina.â
âWhat are you going to do after that?â I ask, needing to know more about her life.
âMy dreamâs to start my own studio one day, but Iâll need to save for that, so for now, I want to sell mugs and plates online. Teach classes on the side. I want time to figure out the rest of my life.â
Thatâs what I needâmore time.
Iâm impressed with her direction, but a pang of envy hits me. Once I latched onto my NHL dream, I never let go. Never got the chance to explore other options outside of the League.
Part of me always wonders who I wouldâve been without hockey, but those days are behind me. Itâs funny how sometimes dreams turn into jobs. Iâm in my thirties, so itâs time to settle down.
âWhat about you?â She hands me another packet of Wet Wipes from the diaper bag. âDo you want kids?â
I pinch Bettyâs tiny feet. âYeah, I do.â
âWell, that shouldnât be too hard since you could probably get someone pregnant by sneezing on them.â
I almost laugh, but I rein it in.
Nina hands me some rash cream. Sheâs quiet for a moment, but it feels like her thoughts are screaming at me. âIs everything okay, Rhode? Youâve barely looked at me all night, and youâre only giving me one-word answers. Iâm not mad at your cat if thatâs what this is about. My back feels fine now.â
âThatâs not it.â
âThen whatâs wrong?â She pauses, twisting her hands in my comforter. âYou donât have to push me away if thatâs what this is about⦠I know you donât think about me like that anymore.â
She doesnât have a clue how much Iâm thinking about her, but I only want her because I canât have her.
Thatâs all.
She needs to find someone her own age that enjoys doing goat yoga or some shit, but Iâm not about to tell Nina that every time she touches Cruz, I want to tackle the kid. âIâm good.â
She hands me a clean diaper, and our fingers brush. Her touch feels like a shock, so I flex my hand.
âAre you sure?â she asks. âYou can talk to me. I have big ears too.â
I battle the urge to grin at our inside joke. âIâm fine. Just tired.â
At least thatâs not a lie. My bodyâs always aching. Gritting my jaw, I focus on changing Bettyâs diaper, but Ninaâs gaze burns my cheek.
âIf you didnât want me to come tonight, you couldâve said something. Iâm not great at being in new places, so if you donât want me here, Iâll go because it seems like Iâm making you really uncomfortable. Do you want me here or not?â
Her words hit like a flying puck. I canât concentrate when sheâs in the room, and thatâs on me, but Iâve got a headache from clenching my jaw so hard. I donât want to be the one to tell her to leave, so I end up staring at her with an open mouth while Betty kicks her tiny legs .
Ninaâs neck turns splotchy, and her breathing becomes ragged like sheâs just finished a tough workout.
She reaches for her bag and grabs a piece of cinnamon gum, stuffing it into her mouth. She chews like her life depends on it and suddenly leaps from the bed. âYou know what? Iâll go. Iâll see you at the event next weekend. Good luck with your games.â
I mutter a curse. âNina, wait.â
She pauses with her hand on the doorknob. âWhat?â
I donât know what to say. All I wanted was for her not to leave, but she should go. Iâll be able to breathe again once this girlâs gone, but I donât want her thinking Iâm mad at her.
âThank you, Nina. For coming to the sponsorship event with me. I know you didnât have to, and these past couple of years have been rough, so it means a lot.â
Part of me wants to tell her not to come to the event, but I donât want to risk screwing anything up with Andrea. Itâs not that big of a deal if Iâm not on her arm, but I canât bring myself to take back my invitationâeven if people are judging the hell out of me for bringing a college student as my date.
âYouâre welcome, but Iâm going to head out. See you there.â She smiles, but it doesnât make those cute half-moons appear under her eyes. Nina strides out the door like I just set the room on fire, leaving me in the ashes.
I stare down at Betty sucking her thumb. âYou donât think Iâm an asshole, do you, baby girl?â
She starts crying, and by the time she stops three hours later, it feels like my ears are bleeding. Parenting might be tougher than I thought.
I blame that for the reason it took me so long to notice Nina left my favorite sweatshirt folded neatly by the door.