admitted, dropping her forehead to her raised knees and breathing deeply. “Tell me something you’re scared of.”
“Hmm.” I moved so I sat beside her, our shoulders touching so her body would register that she wasn’t alone. Normally I would have given her some sarcastic answer, but this wasn’t exactly a normal situation. “I’m not scared of too much, honestly. Except maybe disappointing my mom. She gave up everything to raise me and did it on her own.”
She lifted her head, clearly surprised. “Really?”
“If you knew my mother, you wouldn’t look so surprised. She’s pretty much a cat five hurricane when she’s pissed. Stubborn as hell, too. And it’s not like she had any help from my father since he’d hidden the fact that he was already married when he knocked her up.” That was the lightest version of events I was willing to divulge to a near stranger.
The truth was that my sperm donor of a father was a Grade-A asshole…and one of the best goalies the world had ever seen. Sergei Zolotov was a legend, not only here in the NHL, but in Russia, where he was born, and probably still lived with his perfect wife and two of his perfect kids. The third kid, who was no more than three months older than I was, currently played for Las Vegas. We’d crossed paths exactly seventeen times, and only on the ice. He’d never once gotten a shot past my glove and never would. Fuck him.
I had never once uttered the Zolotov name out loud, and thought about that family the least amount possible. My parentage might be one of the best-kept secrets in the NHL, but for all intents and purposes, I was a Sterling, just like my mother and grandparents. The other half of the family tree could rot off for all I cared.
London looked at me like she was reevaluating, her black, delicate brows knitting.
“What?” I asked, my voice coming out all scratchy. Shit, the woman even smelled incredible. She wore just the right amount of perfume, and I wanted to slide my nose along the slender line of her neck and breathe in.
“You’re just…” She shook her head. “Not how I pictured you.” She nibbled on her lower lip.
“You’ve pictured me?” I kept my eyes locked on hers, instead of staring at that plump bit of flesh she tortured with her teeth. There had to be a halo waiting for me somewhere. I couldn’t remember the last time I’d been attracted to a woman and not made a move, not that this was exactly a move-making situation here.
“No!” She did that adorable blinking thing again, and her cheeks flushed with color. “I mean, I’m the new game day coordinator for the Reapers, so when the news came down yesterday that you’d signed, I looked you up, of course.” She swallowed like there was more to the story than she was willing to share.
“Right. You have me at a disadvantage there,” I teased. “If I’d known you were signed to the Reapers, I definitely would have looked you up.” A grin spread across my face.
She snorted and rolled her eyes, but hey, she was breathing slower now. “Do you flirt with every woman you meet?”
“Only the ones I’m stuck in elevators with.” That was a lie. I’d done more than my fair share of flirting and fucking when I’d joined the NHL, but I’d slowed that second part down in the last year. Nameless hookups after random games were getting old. “And in my defense, you did say I could distract you.” My grin widened.
She rolled her eyes again. “Why is it men think that sex is the answer to every question?”
My dick twitched at the word sex, but I ignored the horny fucker. “Not every question. Just the right ones.”
Her gaze flickered to my mouth before she huffed and looked away. “Not in my experience.”
“Then you’re answering the wrong questions,” I teased.
She swallowed, her breathing picking up again as she stared at the opposite walls. “What is. Taking them so. Long?”
“At least look at me if you’re going to complain about being stuck with me,” I joked, hoping my tone carried through even as worry settled in my gut like a stone. She’d done better while focused on me and not our surroundings, and it wasn’t like I could guarantee when we’d get out of here.
“It’s not you I’m complaining about,” she blurted, her eyes locking on mine. Now that rosy little blush was creeping