TackledP: A Sports Romance(72)
I set down the knife on the counter and clench my hands. "Leave it alone, Tank."
"But I'm not seeing how a girl like her did something to mess things up," Tank says. "Did you fuck a cheerleader and make her think it was her fault?"
"You fucked a cheerleader?" my mother asks.
I push Tank hard. "I didn't screw anyone except her. So fuck off."
Tank pushes me back, sending me stumbling backward across the kitchen. "She told me not to kick your ass tonight."
"Screw you, Tank," I spit. "You think you know anything about her because you're fucking her roommate?"
"I know you're here acting like a shithead and she's over there crying and saying she loves you. I don't need to know any more than that."
She loves me.
The statement stops me in my tracks for a second, but I quickly shove that thought aside.
"You don't know shit," I spit back, a flood of anger bubbling up inside me from somewhere that I can't seem to contain. I'm pissed off at my mother for not letting up about Cassie. I'm pissed off at Cassie for not telling me about her thesis – and for assuming she knows jack shit about football players. Or me. And I'm pissed off at Tank for fucking walking in here and dropping that little bombshell like it's no big fucking deal when I'm pissed off at her.
She loves me.
I'm not sure why I lunge at Tank, but I do, and then he pushes me backward hard against the door and it cracks loudly.
"Boys, not before dinner," my mom yells.
We stumble outside and Tank pushes me. "Quit being a dick," he says. "You want me to hit you or what?"
"Bring it on, Tank," I yell. "Since you want to run your big fucking mouth all the time."
A blast of water hits us.
My mother stands a few yards away, holding the garden hose. "Cut it out, both of you," she says calmly. "Now the two of you can fix the kitchen door you broke."
"Yes, ma'am," Tank says, giving me a dirty look before walking toward the house.
I follow him, still irritated but not as much now. My brother and I used to fight all the time, and my mom used to spray us with the hose or dump a pitcher of water – complete with lots of ice cubes – over us. Sometimes she'd walk up close to us and blast an air horn in our ears. It's a fucking wonder I don't have hearing loss.
"Fix that door and both of you get to peeling me some potatoes."
38
Cassie
"Oh, God, what is that pounding sound?" I ask, peeling my face off the sofa to look around.
Throb. Throb. Throb.
Oh hell. That's my head pounding.
Sable is passed out on her back on the loveseat, her mouth open and snoring loudly. A half-empty bottle of tequila and a cutting board with lime wedges and salt are scattered across the coffee table, along with open bags of snacks.
My stomach lurches just looking at the food.
Knock, knock, knock.
Shit, it wasn't my head making that sound. "Just a second," I yell.
"Huh?" Sable asks, sitting up and rubbing her eyes. "Why is it so fucking bright in here?"
"It's not," I say, stumbling to the door.
It's Colton's mother.
Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.
I stand there staring at her, because frankly I can't think of what to say with my head throbbing like it is.
"You girls look like death warmed over," Doreen says, pushing herself past my arm without waiting for an invitation to come inside.
"Tequila," Sable says, her hand on her forehead. "I'm never drinking it again."
"Jonathan said as much," Doreen says. "Go take showers and I'll make you some coffee and pancakes. You need something in your stomachs to soak up the alcohol."
"Doreen, I –" I start, then stop.
"Go," she says, waving me in the direction of the bathroom. "Now."
After I brush my teeth and sit on the floor of the shower with hot water beating down on me for twenty minutes, I feel considerably more life-like than I did before.
When I come out of the bathroom, Sable is in her bathrobe, her hair wrapped up in a towel, sipping coffee. The bags of snacks and tequila have disappeared from the coffee table, and the house smells like bacon. Doreen is in the kitchen, humming to herself.
The fact that she's here right now cooking us breakfast makes me feel worse than ever.
"Take this," she says, thrusting a cup of coffee into my hands when I walk into the kitchen. I sip it, grateful for the caffeine and for something to focus on other than the fact that Colton's mother is standing in my kitchen. "Go sit down," she orders. "I'll bring you girls food."
A few minutes later, she sets plates of bacon and pancakes down on the table, and Sable pops a piece of bacon in her mouth, munching happily. Doreen sits down at the table with a cup of coffee and takes a slow sip.