is something else. Making out with one chick all night, and then booty-calling another.
“Do you mind getting me a glass? I don’t know where anything is.” She licks her lips. “I’m thirsty.”
She’s thirsty, all right.
I open the cupboard, grab a drinking glass, and hold it out. Her fingertips brush my knuckles suggestively as she accepts it. “Thank you.”
“No prob.” I withdraw my hand. “You look cold,” I say with a pointed glance to her nipples.
“Actually, I’m feeling really hot right now.” She giggles. “And you’re looking it.”
“Looking what?”
“Hot.”
I try not to raise my eyebrows. This chick is bold. Too bold, considering whom she came to see tonight. “Weren’t you just with my roommate?” I nod toward the corridor.
“Yeah? So?”
“So you probably shouldn’t be telling some other guy he’s hot.”
“Brooks already knows what I think about you.”
“Does he.” An itchy feeling crawls up my spine. I don’t like the idea of people discussing me. And I seriously hope I’m not part of whatever kinky games the two of them play behind closed doors.
She pours herself a glass of water from the filtered dispenser in the fridge. Then she stands there and drinks, topless, no care in the world. She’s got a gorgeous body, but something about her rubs me the wrong way. It’s not the brazen attitude. I like outspoken girls. Girls who bust my balls. Like Brenna Jensen—she’s the very definition of bold, and she doesn’t make me want to sprint out of the room.
This girl, on the other hand…
“What’s your name?” I ask warily. I don’t know where the distrust in my gut is coming from, but her presence is unnerving me.
“Kayla.” She takes another long sip, propping one hip against the granite counter. She’s completely unfazed by the fact that she’s wearing teeny panties and nothing else. “We met before,” she tells me.
“Did we?”
Visible displeasure darkens her eyes. Yeah, I don’t imagine this is a girl who likes being forgotten. But I genuinely have no recollection of meeting her, ever.
“Yes. At Nash Maynard’s party?”
“You go to Harvard?”
“No. We talked about that at the party, remember?” she says tightly. “I’m at Boston University?”
I draw a blank. There’s a black hole in my memory where this alleged interaction is supposed to be.
“Babe,” a sleepy voice drifts from the hallway. “Come back to bed. I’m horny.”
I give her a dry smile. “You’re being summoned.”
She grins back. “Your roomie’s insatiable.”
“I wouldn’t know,” I say with a shrug.
“No?” She finishes her water and places the glass in the sink. Curiosity gleams in her expression as she studies my face. “You and Brooks have never…?” She lets the question hang.
“Nah. I don’t swing that way.”
She tilts her head thoughtfully. “What if there’s a girl in the middle to act as a buffer?”
Annnd we’re done here. It’s too late and I’m too tired to be discussing threesomes with a strange girl in my kitchen. “I don’t do that either,” I mutter on my way past her.
“Pity,” she tells my retreating back.
I don’t turn around. “Good night, Kayla.”
“Good night, Jake.” A teasing lilt.
Jeez. So many invitations in one measly encounter. She would’ve let me bang her on the counter if I’d made a move. If I were into threesomes, she’d have me and Brooks banging her together.
But neither notion appeals to me.
I go back to bed and make sure to lock my door, just in case.
Early the next morning, I make the trek to see my folks. This requires a quick ride on the Red Line, followed by a not-so-quick one on the Newburyport/Rockport line, which takes me all the way to Gloucester. It’d be faster to borrow Weston’s car and drive up the coast, but I don’t mind taking the train. It’s cheaper than gassing up the Mercedes, and it provides me with quiet time to reflect and mentally prepare for today’s game.
Our entire season rides on this game.
If we lose…
You won’t lose.
I heed the self-assured voice in my head, tapping into the confidence I’ve been cultivating since I was a kid playing Pee Wee hockey. There’s no denying I was talented from an early age. But talent and potential mean nothing without discipline and failure. You need to fail in order for the win to mean something. I’ve lost games before, games that counted for rankings, trophies. Losing is not supposed to crush your confidence. It’s meant to build it.
But we won’t lose today. We’re the best team in our conference, maybe even the best in the entire country.
The train rolls into the station