Total pages in book: 114
Estimated words: 106346 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 532(@200wpm)___ 425(@250wpm)___ 354(@300wpm)
Estimated words: 106346 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 532(@200wpm)___ 425(@250wpm)___ 354(@300wpm)
“I was shocked also,” he says. “You can thank Claude. He said he didn’t want you sitting on his bench.” I laugh.
“Did you give them my demands?” I ask him.
“Please, you think I’m a rookie?” he asks. “I’ll let you know if they approve.”
“I’ll be on the ice,” I say and disconnect. When I get to the rink, I walk in and say hello to a couple of kids who see me and then I walk into Caroline’s office. She is sitting behind her desk typing away on the computer, and her eyes come up when I walk in her office. I smile when I think about her here with me.
“Hi,” she says, smiling at me, and I walk over to her, turning her chair and kissing her on the lips. “It’s not my lunch break,” she says and wipes off the lip gloss that is now on my lips. “How’d it go?”
“It went the way it was supposed to go,” I say, not telling her anything yet.
“Well, do you think they will still suspend you?” she asks, and I shrug. When I made the decision about quitting the team, I made one phone call and then decided not to tell her until the end. I didn’t want her to think this was another thing I did for her. In reality, I wasn’t doing it for her; I was doing it for us.
“No clue,” I say, and I kiss her again.
“You look really sexy in a tie,” she says. Twirling the tie between her fingers, she looks around. “Maybe tonight I can take it off you.”
“Sweetheart,” I say, looking around. “If you don’t stop, I’m going to close the blinds on your window, lock the door, and then fuck you on this desk.” I lean in now. “All while wearing the tie.” She shudders in her chair. “That isn’t helping.” I’m actually thinking about how mad she would be if I did that when my phone beeps in my pocket.
“Saved by the bell,” she says and pushes me away from her. “Now go teach hockey stuff so I can work.”
“Fine,” I say, kissing her one more time and then taking my phone out of my pocket and seeing it’s a message from Carey.
Carey: Deal accepted. I’ll send over the contract.
I look back now. “Change of plans tonight. The three of us will have dinner.”
“The three of us always have dinner,” she says, laughing.
“I mean out. Let’s get pizza,” I say, and she just shrugs.
“Whatever you want,” she says, and I have to say in the past three weeks she’s grown into her own. She’s also started hanging around my sisters more, which makes it worse for me. You see, after everything that happened, they decided to spend the whole summer in Canada with me.
I don’t get on the ice that day. Instead, I watch from the stands and pick ten kids who I want to extend the program for. I had to choose, and it was the perfect day to do it.
When we finally decide dinner everyone agrees that we should just go home. Dylan starts talking about the weekend and how he wants to go to the cabin we went to last week and try fishing again.
“We can,” I say. “I’m sure everyone is going again.”
“Michael said he’s going,” Dylan tells me, and Caroline just looks at me.
“So,” I start, and she looks at me. “I had a meeting with my team today.”
“Are they still mad at you?” Dylan asks, and I look at him. He was very upset when some of the kids said I got kicked off the team. I had to explain to him that sometimes you get in trouble, and this was my time-out, which just made him even madder since he didn’t understand any of it.
“No,” I answer, and then I look at them both. “I’m mad at them.”
Caroline just looks at me and waits. “Why?” Dylan asks me.
“Because when you are with a team, you expect them to have your back and be on your side,” I tell him. “On that team, on the ice, they are your brothers.” He just nods, and I decide I’m just going to have the rip off the Band-Aid moment. “I told them I was not getting on the ice in Edmonton anymore.” Dylan opens his mouth, and Caroline gasps.
“What does that mean?” she asks quietly.
“It means that tomorrow, the whole world will know that I’ve been traded,” I tell them, and Dylan starts to cry. “What’s the matter, buddy?”
“You’re going to move away from us,” he says, “and you are going to get another family.”
I decide that maybe doing this during dinner was not a good idea, and I get off my stool and take Dylan in my arms. “Let’s sit on the couch.”
I carry him to the couch, and Caroline walks behind me, her own tears hidden when she sits down and just holds Dylan’s hand.