Boyfriend Bargain (Hawthorne University #1)(69)
I see an expression on his face, perhaps pity. He shakes his head as if clearing it and narrows his gaze at me. “Do you know where he runs after a nightmare?”
I do, sort of, but I keep my mouth shut. Z likes his privacy.
His gaze is unwavering. “He goes to see where she’s buried.”
My nose flares.
“You should ask him more questions, you know.”
“Like what?” I stand there, waiting, feeling that trickle of foreboding inch up my spine.
“Have you ever seen a photo of Willow?”
“No.”
“She was beautiful.”
He plays with the HU Lions salt and pepper shaker set on the table, his eyes staring out the bay window next to the table. “I was in love with her, you know. Sometimes I thought it was reciprocated, but you could never tell with her. She’d string me along when she and Z would fight, and I always held out hope…” He stops and grimaces. “She kissed me the night she died, but it was a pissed-off, getting back at Z thing. My lips were the last ones to touch hers.” He stares down at the table, the salt shaker in his grip. “She was going to have his baby, but I would have done anything to have her as mine.”
I blink, struggling to keep up. Does Z know all this? Is this why they aren’t close?
“You’re nothing like her,” he grinds out. “I mean, sure you—”
He stops, his lids closing.
My heart drops. I keep my mouth shut and wait. Just wait.
“I hear him thrashing around in there, reliving that night. He…I…we saw her on the rocks. She was thrown from her car.”
Dread gathers within me and questions teeter on my lips, but I know this isn’t an appropriate time. “I’m sorry.” No other words are adequate. None. “Maybe you should talk to Z.”
He flinches, his eyes coming back to me. Anger colors his face as he takes me in and opens his mouth to say something but then presses his lips together.
“What?”
He glares at me. “I wish you would go away. You remind me of…everything.”
His words are like bullets and my chest clenches, trying to make sense of them. I tug my coat around me, feeling cold even in this warm house. I shake my head, not knowing how to respond. He’s grieving, obviously still working through something, and I can’t argue with that right now.
I walk past him to the front door and open it. A sharp, crashing sound breaks the silence as I shut the door. The salt shaker, presumably.
31
Zack
I’m doing some early pre-game skating with our team at Concord State University, one of the schools in our conference. They’re a smaller university with a string of recent losses, and we’re here to kick ass and take names. Every game is a priority, though, especially since we’re in the same conference, and a few local reporters and photographers are in the stands already, watching and taking notes. I felt the heat of their scrutiny as soon as I took the ice. An agent from the Predators flew in today, Stan Wilcox, and I spoke to him briefly on the way to the locker room. He congratulated me on our last wins, slapped me on the back, and told me how excited he was to see me in Nashville this summer. He wants to have a quick dinner with me tonight.
Dread pooled the moment I saw him, especially when he asked about my bout with the flu when we lost to Minnesota-Duluth.
I lied through my teeth, told him some bullshit about how I need to get the flu shot next year. I’m sure I’m breaking all kinds of rules by not disclosing the entire truth about my mental health—
Yeah. Don’t want to go there.
I inhale a slow breath and let it out.
He’s here to see what his team is getting. I need a great game tonight.
I do some warm-ups and shake out my limbs, trying to lose this sense of foreboding, but there’s an edge in the air, something itching to crawl out. Part of this apprehension is because I haven’t done the right thing by Sugar. I haven’t told her the truth about how she looks like Willow, and the more I fall for her, the more I’m fucking terrified of telling her and losing her.
Stop your whining, I tell myself.
It’s been a good few weeks. I’m in control of my body. I’ve got this.
Eric skates over for passing drills, just enough to get us loose, and we line up in formation. He slaps one to me, and I nearly fall trying to go for it, overextending my reach.
I exhale and roll my shoulders.
“What’s wrong with you?” he says a few minutes later when I miss another pass.
“Nothing,” I snap.
Reece skates around us, watching, and I see the lowered brow on his face through the shield of his helmet. He had his eyes on me the entire bus ride up here. At one point we pulled over at a rest stop for a break, and he came up to me and said he wanted to talk about Willow, but one of the coaches interrupted us, and I stalked away.
I get it—he doesn’t want Sugar around. Maybe she reminds him too much of Willow. Maybe he really is worried about me and how I’m juggling a new relationship and hockey.
But he isn’t me, and I make my own damn decisions.
I scowl, not even cognizant of where I’m going when I bump into one of the defensemen on the ice and my stick falls out of my hands. I curse and snatch it up.