Kicked: A Bad Boy Sports Romance (6 page)

BOOK: Kicked: A Bad Boy Sports Romance
9.41Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Thanks,” I said, trying not to lose the spirit of the night.
Too late.
I could feel the heavy weight in my chest.
Tyce ran away from home to couch surf and finish school here. Why? Why not come back home and visit us? Or at least call?
I couldn't figure it out without asking him, and that was something I just wasn't prepared to do yet.

Kai and I finished the drive in silence, and when he asked if I'd like him to walk me to my door, I said no. We could both tell that nothing else was going to happen between us tonight—not that I'd been planning on sleeping with Kai or anything. Still, I had a feeling that the ghost of Tyce had interfered in my life yet again. I doubted Kai Duran would be calling me back for a second date.

“You didn't tell me you had a childhood sweetheart,” Kai said the next morning, ambushing me in the locker room. He snapped his towel at my ass which he knew I
hated.
I turned around, letting my dick hang out, nice and proud, and flipped him off.

“What the fuck are you talking about?” I asked as he slipped off his shirt and tossed it on a bench. He was smirking when he turned and punched in his key code for the locker door. They were fancy as hell, like something out of a sci-fi movie, all hooked up with ventilation and temperature control, things that Teagan and her mom hadn't even had in their trailer. I felt like a prick just being in here sometimes. I knew the facility had to cost tens of millions of dollars, and whether it was donated or not, I felt uncomfortable there at times. In my mind, I knew I'd earned the right to stand here, but in my heart, I felt like a coward.

“You know, that sexy Irish thing with the cute little freckles,” Kai told me with a grin, holding his hands out in front of his Swedish pale chest. “She was stacked out to here and packing an ass like nobody's business. Too bad she was too caught up on you to have any fun.”

Before I realized what I was doing, I was shoving Kai in the chest and sending him stumbling back into the row of lockers. Before I could chase him down and pummel the crap out his ass, he was holding up his hands in surrender.

“Dude, I'm sorry. Chill, man, relax. Jesus Christ.” He swore under his breath in another language and rose to his feet, looking at me carefully, studying me like he thought I might come at him again. I managed to reign myself in, clenching my fists by my sides and taking deep breaths. I stared at him across the locker room and tried to come to terms with the fact that he might've slept with Teagan. I knew logically that it wasn't any of my damn business, but just imagining my best friend's hands on her made me want to scream. Last night, I'd chased down a good party, had a good time with a hot girl and still, I couldn't stop thinking about Teagan.

This is exactly why I left,
I thought to myself as Kai slicked his fingers through his blond hair and gave me a sheepish look.

“Nothing happened between us, okay? I'm sorry, bro. I didn't realize you had a thing for her.”

“I don't,” I snapped at him, turning back to my locker and tossing shit around like I was actually looking for something. In reality, I was just pissed. Again. And for no reason. I was seriously going to need some therapy after this. “I just don't want to hear you talk about her like that, okay? We grew up together.”

“So I heard. How come you've never mentioned her before?” I shrugged my shoulders and stared at the rose tattoo on the back of my hand, at the sparrow taking flight between my thumb and pointer finger. It gave me something to focus on while I calmed my suddenly frantic heartbeat.

“Dunno. Didn't think it was important,” I said, snatching my practice gear and covering up my dick with a jockstrap and a cup. Kai waited until I was covered before he broached the subject again. “She seemed to think it was. As soon as your name was mentioned, she fell apart. She was a fun girl and all, but holy crap. She went all super goth on me when we started talking about you.”

“Yeah, well, maybe you should keep our mouth shut around Teagan,” I said, slamming my locker closed and tossing Kai a glare over my shoulder. “In fact, maybe you just shouldn't talk to her at all.”

At least practice wasn't a complete bust.

We spent our day on the outdoor practice fields with full pads, giving me a chance to let out the pent up frustration I was feeling.
This is why I left,
I kept telling myself as I went through the motions, leading the first string players in a game simulation.
This is why I disappeared. With Teagan around, I can't think straight.
I bent over and blew out a breath of sweat, enjoying the burn of my muscles before standing up and surveying the field. Kai was still giving me weird looks, but I didn't give a shit. He could have any girl he wanted, so screw him. What was wrong with having some limits? I'd never screwed his exes.
Although Teagan was never anything like that to me. She wasn't an ex because she was never my girlfriend or my lover, just … a friend.

I gritted my teeth and forced myself back into the game, the green of my uniform a beacon of hope in my suddenly cluttered brain. Shit might be going down around me, but I had this. I'd always have this. Football was both my god and my muse, my reason for living. It was the reason I'd left my hometown, come all the way up to the Eugene metro area to play, to snag that scholarship out of nowhere. I'd followed a dream and I'd made things happen.

While leaving a nightmare at home behind me.

I refused to think about Teagan's mom, Venus. Knowing she was gone was fucking devastating, and if I let myself go there, I'd screw up my whole game. Smack dab in the thick of the season, going to the dark places in my head wouldn't get me anywhere. I refused to let that happen. I shut all of that down and dove back into practice with a vengeance.

My team had a three point lead with four minutes on the clock so I moved the chains once, used a hard snap and got the defense to jump offsides. Easy as frigging cake.

“Nice job today,” Coach said was I made my way off the field. “Looks like you finally got those panties untangled?” I gave him a one shoulder shrug and a smirk, my helmet tucked against my body on the other side. “Well, whatever it is, don't let it distract you on Saturday, you hear me?”

“You got it, Coach,” I said as I made my way back towards the locker room.

I had to wonder the whole way if that would be a lie.

The next day, I went running again, as if that was a surprise.

Coach was seriously going to kick my ass.
Let's just hope I don't twist my damn ankle out here,
I thought as I wound my way through the park. At nearly four hundred acres, the chances of actually
running
into Teagan again were pretty slim. Hell, having it happen even once was a goddamn miracle.
It was fate.

I gritted my teeth and pushed myself harder, veering off the cement and onto a winding dirt path, the trees swaying overhead in the dying twilight. Even though it was fall, there were plenty of evergreens to keep the atmosphere emerald and lush, a far cry from the dry desert shit hole where Teagan and I grew up.

Deep breath, deep breath, deep breath.

The rhythmic movement of my legs, the pumping of my arms and the thumping of my pulse in my neck kept me calm as I raced through the trees and over protruding roots. I leapt those like they were the enemies on the field, like I was a running a Hail Mary pass into the end zone.

I was so up inside my own fucking head that when I actually veered around a corner and came up on another runner, I didn't even consider the fact that it might be Teagan, not until I closed the gap between us and caught a flash of that bouncing red ponytail.

Fate.

Fucking fate.

I picked up the pace until I was literally running next to her, leaping over branches and stray bushes on the narrow path. The heavy sounds of our breathing mingled together, turning my thoughts in the wrong direction, sending all that pumping blood in my body to my cock. It didn't help that with each movement of her body, I saw the swell and bunch of long, lean muscles, the perfect roundness of her chest, the hot flush on her cheeks.

“What do you want, Tyce?” Teagan panted, flicking her gaze over to me. Her eyes were the color of chilled mint ice cream, and I wanted so badly to dig into that expression, pull it apart and figure out exactly what was going on in her head. “I'm a little busy here.”

“I thought you might need someone to catch you in case you fell,” I said, my voice pitching low despite my labored breathing. Without meaning to, I switched right into flirting with her when that was the last thing I'd meant to do. I flirted with girls that didn't mean shit to me. Teagan … was a whole different ball game.

“Haha,” she said, but at least she didn't elbow me off the edge of the path.
Deep breath, deep breath, deep breath.
“Seriously though, what?”

I wasn't about to cop to running on the off chance I'd see her again, so I lied. Again. Seemed like the easiest route out. I wasn't proud of it, but it was there.

“Didn't know I'd run into you,” I panted with a shrug she didn't see. Her gaze was focused on the path in front of us again, on the constant beeping of the heart rate monitor strapped to her arm. “Just trying to be friendly.”

“Really? That seems like a skill you could use some practice with.”

Pound, pound, pound.
Our feet hit the dirt in unison as we rounded a corner and came up on the cement. Moving across the Autzen Footbridge, I could hear the roar of the river beneath us like a second heartbeat.

“We need to talk,” I said as we hit the end of the bridge and Teagan turned around to double back, coming to a stumbling stop and leaning hard against the cement railing on the edge. I moved up close to her, careful to keep at least a foot between us. I didn't know what I'd do if I got any closer. I wished I could say nothing, but I couldn't trust myself around her.
This is why I left.

I took another deep breath, reaching down to pluck my sweaty shirt away from my chest.

“You … chased me … all the way down here to … talk,” she gasped, glancing over her shoulder at me, sweat dripping down the tip of her small nose, right over those freckles I used to tease her about way back when. “Don't you mean berate me? Yell at me?”

“I never yelled,” I said, feeling my fists clench and release. That old familiar anger was still burning inside me. It never went out, like embers in a fire, hot coals to burn anyone that got too close, who was either too stupid or too naïve to realize they should stay away. “I just … I want to know what you're doing here, Teagan?”

“I live across the street, Tyce. Why wouldn't I come here?”

“You know what I mean,” I snapped back at her, trying to control my temper. It'd never done anything good for me, so I don't know why I hung onto it. In the past though, anger had been my shield, so I held it up like a good soldier and fought the good fight. “Why did you enroll at the U of O? Why are you in here Eugene? What happened to Venus, Teagan?”

She whirled on me then, a force and fury that I recognized all too well.
Now there's the girl I left behind.
This calm, quiet new persona of hers was too weird, too unfamiliar. I didn't understand it at all.

Other books

A Killing Spring by Gail Bowen
The Last Runaway by Tracy Chevalier
The City Jungle by Felix Salten
Devil's Food by Kerry Greenwood
Blessed Are Those Who Weep by Kristi Belcamino
Letters to Penthouse XXXVI by Penthouse International
Highland Heiress by Margaret Moore
The Suicide Shop by TEULE, Jean