The Sweetest Seduction, Breakaway Hearts (37 page)

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Authors: Crista McHugh

Tags: #Contemporary Romance, #sports romance

BOOK: The Sweetest Seduction, Breakaway Hearts
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She’d finally told Ben the truth, and he’d still left her.

So much for second chances.

Chapter Fifteen

 

Ben crawled out of bed and raked his fingers through his hair. Dawn was creeping over the mountains to light up the Vancouver skyline, but it was just a reminder of how little he’d slept. Every time he had closed his eyes, he kept seeing the anguish in Hailey’s face when she’d told him to leave. And even though his mind told him she was just playing him, that her tears were all part of her deception, the ache in his chest disagreed.

Now, part of him wanted to take back all the harsh words, even though he knew he couldn’t. He punched his pillow instead. What was said was said, and he doubted even an apology would set things right for either of them.

The reality of it still hadn’t set in. He’d had a son, a child that was his flesh and bone, and he’d never known about him. He’d spent most of the drive back to Vancouver last night replaying that one night they had been together and wondering how she’d gotten pregnant in the first place. She’d said she’d been on the pill, and he’d used a condom. The only thing that stood out as odd was how empty the condom had been afterward. Maybe there had been a leak. It certainly made her claim that he was the father more plausible.

No, there was no denying Zach was his child. Every time he opened that scrapbook she’d left at his cabin and saw a picture of the kid, he knew the boy was his. Then he was forced to shut it before the grief became unbearable. In the span of a few hours, he’d learned he was a father and that his son was dead. Now he was struggling to stay in survival mode.

A hot shower washed away his fatigue, but not the questions that lingered. She’d brought that scrapbook to him for a reason. Maybe Cindy had told her about their conversation in the grocery store. Maybe she hadn’t. But it appeared that Hailey had planned on coming clean last night.

All I have left of him are memories of a child who loved the game as much as we do and a promise I intend to keep, with or without you.

Her words revived the ache inside him with a new fervor, and he banged his fist against the shower wall. He didn’t even have that. And he wanted to know about Zach. He’d wanted to know about his son, to know if he’d loved hockey like they did, to ask if he had ever wondered about his father. But instead of asking the one person who could tell him these things, he’d accused her of using him, of deceiving him. And in doing so, he’d lost the one woman he’d never been able to forget.

Way to go, Kelly. You’re oh-for-two with Hailey.

Did guys like him ever get a third chance?

By the time he’d dried off, he’d formed a new plan of attack. Something about Hailey had always tempted him to act outside his usual demeanor, but now it was more important than ever to remember why he liked to sit back and put everything together before acting. She’d given him a few pieces of a puzzle, and maybe if he could solve it, he’d find a solution to the questions that plagued his conscience.

Step one was finding out the truth behind the letter she’d left crumpled on the floor. At first glance, it looked legit. It was on the Vancouver Whales team letterhead, and it was signed by Larry, the guy in charge of the team’s public relations. Larry was the one who sorted through their mail and filtered out all the threats before passing on all the letters from their adoring fans. But it didn’t explain why Larry would write her back like that when he’d never asked Ben about her in the first place.

Ben picked up the letter and read it one more time. Time to start digging up the truth.

****

“Ben,” Larry said with a welcoming smile on his face as Ben stepped into his office. “How good to see you again. Mac tells me you’re planning on returning to the team for another season. You have no idea how happy the fans will be to know you’ll be back.”

“If I can clear my physical, I want to play.” His breath hitched after he realized what he’d just said. Hailey had been right about him all along. He loved the game, but he’d needed her to convince him to get back out on the ice. The ache in his chest deepened. “I was wondering if you can answer a question for me.”

“I’ll do what I can.”

He pulled out the letter and handed it to Larry. “Did you send this letter?”

Larry pulled out his reading glasses and scanned the piece of paper. “Oh, yeah, I remember this lady. A real nut case.”

His gut tightened. “What do you mean?”

“She probably sent about twenty letters asking to speak with you. Some kind of crazy puck bunny, if you ask me.” He handed the letter back and went to the filing cabinet. “I even saved them in case we needed to issue a restraining order.”

His fingers turned icy cold while his mind kept whispering
Oh shit, oh shit
, over and over again.

“Yeah, here we go.” Larry pulled out a thick file folder. “Hailey Erikson. Seems maybe I was a little conservative in my estimate. There are probably fifty letters in here.”

Fuck!

Larry spread the folder open on his desk for Ben to look through. “Here’s the first letter she sent five years ago, about a month after you’d started with the team.”

The evidence hit him like a punch to the gut, and it took every ounce of his strength not to double over from the intensity of the blow. She’d been telling the truth. He flipped through the letters, checking the dates of each one. Every month, she asked for the same thing—a chance to speak to him. Only the last letter was different. It begged to speak him and tell him about his son who was dying.

“That’s the one that triggered me to finally respond to her. She was trying to play on our sympathies with the whole dying son bit, but I know you, Ben. You’re not the type to knock a girl up and not know about it. So I sent her that letter, and she shut up.”

A ball of fire formed in the pit of his chest. His breathing quickened, and his blood simmered. His fingers bit into his palms. Ben fought to stay calm as he said, “She was telling the truth.”

Larry took a step back and stuttered, “W-w-what? I mean, shit, Ben, I had no idea.”

Ben closed the file folder and shoved it into the PR manager’s hands. “I wish you’d asked me about this before sending that letter. Maybe then, I could’ve met my son before he died.”

“Oh, shit, I’m sorry, Ben. I truly am.”

“Yeah, well, that can’t change what’s been done.” Including what he’d said to Hailey. He left Larry’s office feeling like he was the biggest asshole on the planet, and he doubted a simple apology would be enough to win her back. He’d blown it.

He found no peace when he returned home. The scrapbook on the table kept mocking him, reminding him of what a jerk he’d been. But it also reminded him of a lost opportunity. Hailey had memories. All he had were pictures. He finally sat down and opened the scrapbook. The first page held a birth announcement.

The space for the father’s name was blank, and a knife twisted in his chest. What had Hailey gone through, carrying and delivering Zach by herself? What had she told people when they asked who the father was?

Shame blurred his vision when he realized that the guy who’d done her wrong was him. Not only had he left her with a child to raise on her own, but her pregnancy and single motherhood had ruined her Olympic dreams. No wonder she hadn’t tried out for the Vancouver games. She’d been too busy taking care of a dying child and trying to explain to him why his father was never around.

He reached for his phone and pulled up her number, but he couldn’t bring himself to hit send. He’d fucked up—badly. And until he found a way to ask for her forgiveness, he was stuck wallowing in this personal hell of regret.

He flipped the page and found a picture of a glowing Hailey smiling down at her newborn son. The ache burned through him. He wanted to have been there, to see the happiness in her face as she’d held their child. And he might have missed it with Zach, but there was still time for that.

“Damn,” he whispered and sat back in his chair, rubbing his stubble-lined cheek. He still wanted a future with her, now more than ever.

Somewhere during all this, he’d fallen in love with her.

And he had no clue how to win her back. But he could work on a strategy to do so, starting with learning everything he could about his son.

He continued to flip through the scrapbook’s pages, through his son’s first steps, his first time on the ice, his first day of school, and his first hockey game. Then the pictures took on a darker tone. Zach’s thick black hair disappeared, first shaven with a jagged scar running across his scalp, and then gone altogether from chemo. His face went from bloated to gaunt, and every picture seemed to involve some piece of medical equipment in the frame. An IV, a feeding tube, a series of wires stuck to his bald head.

But one thing remained constant—that bright, dimpled smile never faded, no matter how sick he appeared.

The last few pages of photos all seemed to have been taken from the same hospital room. He recognized the Vancouver skyline in the window, and a curse fell from his lips. His son had been so close, and he’d never known about him. One of the last photos showed Zach posing with his teammate, Patrick, and a spark of hope flared inside him.

Ben snatched the photo from the page and called Patrick. “Hey, are you in town?”

“Sure I am. You finally decided to stop being a recluse?”

“Yeah.” He stared at the picture as he asked, “Can you meet me for dinner at the Grill tonight?”

“No problem, Ben. I’d love to fill you in on everything that’s happened since you’ve been gone. Is eight good?”

“I’m looking forward to it.”
And I’m looking forward to hearing what you can tell me about my son
.

He hung up and carefully stowed the photograph in the back of his wallet, energized by the start of putting a new plan in motion. Maybe he still had a chance to know his son after all.

****

Patrick was leaning against the bar, downing a longneck when Ben arrived. His teammate gave him a warm handshake that turned into a playful check. “No cane. You must be doing better.”

Even though it felt great, Ben grimaced and grabbed his knee.

Patrick’s eyes bugged out. “Oh, damn, I didn’t—”

“Relax—I was just messing with you.” He pointed the nearly empty beer bottle. “I see you got started without me.”

“Just warming up.” He finished the beer and pointed to the bruise that had appeared under Ben’s eye after last night. “What happened to you?”

“Had a run-in with the Gordie Howe wannabe.” There was no way he admitting to his teammate that a woman had decked him.

The hostess came up to them with a stack of menus and led them through the dimly lit restaurant to a table in the back. Loud music competed with the blaring TVs, and as they passed some of the tables, a fan would shout, “Go Whales,” to them. Patrick soaked up the attention, flashing a grin and giving the fans a thumbs-up, but Ben had never been one for the spotlight. It was one of the things that had drawn him to the goalie position. His face was hidden behind a mask for most of the game, and most people had to do a double-take when they caught him off the ice.

The Global Grill was a glorified sports bar in Yaletown, where the beautiful and famous of Vancouver liked to congregate. Groups of women in their sexiest outfits vied for the attention of the actors and athletes who frequented the restaurant, but none of them compared to Hailey. She was real, genuine, and had a passion for everything she did, unlike most of these gold diggers. After watching them size Patrick up, he was glad their table was relatively hidden from the main scene and far away from the throbbing dance music.

A beefy bouncer let them pass into the quiet corner of the restaurant.

“VIP section, eh?” Patrick said with a nudge. “Nice.”

“I wanted to make sure I could hear the updates from you without interruption.” Thankfully, dropping his name here worked just as well as it had in Cascade.

They sat down and ordered a pitcher of beer, the Kobe meatballs, and a couple of the Grill Platters without looking at the menu. Ben listened quietly while Patrick shared the rumors of who was staying, who was leaving, and who had earned a spot on Mac’s shit list. But as he got to the end, the defenseman grinned over his glass. “But you’re not losing me. Someone’s got to look out for you, especially after last season. I feel bad for not stopping that fucking mucker.”

“Don’t be. It’s part of the game.” He caught himself as he soon as the words slipped out. Strange how much his attitude toward his injury had changed over the past few weeks. He’d gone from fearing it was a career-ender to blithely saying it wasn’t a big deal. And he had Hailey to thank for that.

Time to put his plan into action before Patrick either got too drunk or too distracted by the puck bunnies who frequented this place. He pulled out the picture of Zach. “Do you remember this kid?”

Patrick held the picture for a moment, the mirth fading from his eyes. “Yeah, Zach Erikson. Great kid. Loved hockey. Had a cute mom, too. Why?”

“I want to know more about him.”

Patrick’s eyes flickered back and forth between the picture and Ben. Suspicion thinned his lips. “Why?”

“I know his mom, Hailey.”

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