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The Hot Shot(38)

By:Kristen Callihan


A few surfers are enjoying an evening ride. I know some of them, but  thankfully they haven't yet recognized me. I need a few moments alone.

Which is why I didn't invite Chess along, even though I want her to see this place.

I know what her lips feel like now. We've kissed. If you even really  call what we did kissing. It was PG-13 stuff, quick pecks on the lips.  And fuck if those stolen touches, the almost frantic fumblings with her,  wasn't the hottest thing I've done in recent memory. First touch of her  lips and I was hard. The second, I'd wanted inside her. I'd needed it.                       
       
           


///
       

Crazy thing is, it had been so unexpected-her kissing my cheek, me  snatching a little taste of her mouth in return-that I'd been coiled  tight as a spring, unable to move or do anything but steal a few more  kisses like a greedy, horny bastard afraid of having the whole  opportunity ripped away from him.

And then it was. She pretended the whole thing was just for show.

Bullshit.

Question is, what do I do about it? Call her on it? Let it ride?

I've never been struck by indecision before. In football, you hesitate,  you're done. We train, run drills, practice until reaction is muscle  memory and instinct. There is comfort in that. Hell, there's comfort in  knowing that you're one of the best at something. I know I'm not the  best quarterback in the world. Not yet. But I'll get there. Perfection  in this sport comes with experience and finding your groove.

But with Chess. I might as well be in the peewee leagues. I'm bumbling  around, not knowing the plays or how to read a line. It's frustrating as  fuck. And I cannot fuck up. Not with Chess. She's too important.

I'm at a crossroads here.

A small voice inside me is whispering to cut and run while I still can.  That's the easy solution. No failure there. I can back off, treat Chess  as a casual friend. The kind I call every couple of months when I have  some free time and nothing to do.

That was Dex's advice, and the man is a master strategist.

Leave Chess alone. Go back to being alone.

I watch a surfer paddle out, calling to his buddy. Their voices are thin  on the air, the surf crashing to the shore. Sun glitters off the curve  of a wave, turning it murky, turquoise blue.

I feel old. Not yet thirty, not yet in the full groove of my career, and  suddenly I feel so fucking old. Apart from everything. I could have  been a dad.

Would she have had my eyes? Would she have hated green peas like I do?

My fingers dig into the sand. It's cold and rough just below the surface.

The sound of my phone ringing has me dusting off my hands.

I reach for it, expecting Chess. "Hey, I'm down at the beach."

"Ah, okay."

It isn't Chess.

"Britt?" I actually look around as if expecting her to pop out of the sand.

"Yes, it's me." She pauses. "You thought I was someone else?"

Well, obviously. But I don't say that. "What's up?"

I have no idea why she's calling, but I don't like it. It feels like one  of those woman traps that end with her crying and me generally feeling  like a heel.

"I … ah … " She clears her throat. "Look, I don't like how we left things."

This is why I'm terrible with women. Because I have no fucking clue what  she means. She asked me if my mom had invited to spend the holidays  with us. I told her no. What else is there?

My silence must be too long because she makes that sound again, as if  she's trying to push her words past some blockage in her throat. "There  were things I wanted to say, Finn. But I got distracted, upset." A soft,  half laugh escapes her. "It was difficult seeing you again."

Again, I feel like a shit for rushing her out. I pinch the bridge of my  nose. A headache is coming on. I need to get back to my parent's house.  I've been gone too long, under the guise of making a wine run.

"I know it's hard," I tell Britt as gently as I can. "I was …  I was just thinking of her."

A lump rises swift and painful in my throat, and I swallow convulsively.

"You do it too," she whispers thickly.

"Sometimes." My fingertips press against the hot skin of my eyelids. "At random moments."

"The other day, it hit me that she would be old enough to eat baby food  now." Britt's voice trembles. "And I had to pull over my car and cry."

"I'm sorry." I don't know what else to say.

The beach is cold now. I get to my feet. I don't want to be here anymore. I need to get home.

Chess had gone off to take a nap, jet lag catching up to her. But she'll be awake now.

"Could we meet for lunch or something when you come back?" Britt asks, pulling me back to the conversation.

Fishing my keys out of my pockets, I rest the phone on my shoulder,  holding it in place with my cheek. "You're still in New Orleans?"

"Yes. I'll be here for a while."

It makes no sense. Britt's home is in London.

"I'm out for the week."

"I'll be here next week," she says.

When I don't say anything, she presses again. "I want to see you. And I … I'd rather not talk about it over the phone."                       
       
           


///
       

I don't point out that she called me. This feels off. No, it feels like  she's working her way up to asking me out. "Britt, I don't … "

"We share something, Finn. There is no one else in our lives who  understands it the way we do. I don't have anyone else to talk to."

The desperate pain in her voice is too much for me. With a sigh, I turn  on the jeep and pull out of my spot. "All right. Text me next week and  we'll set something up."

As soon as I hang up with Britt, I toss the phone on the car seat. I'm  not looking forward to that meeting at all. Sharing with her doesn't  make me feel better. There's only one person who does that. I turn onto  the main road and head for Chess.

I can't let her go. It's too late for that now. But I can give her space.

Either she takes that distance and pulls away. Or she'll find it as  unnatural as I do now. Instinct tells me it will be the latter. I  fucking hope so.





Chapter Fourteen





Chess



* * *



It is fairly horrifying to realize how well Finn Mannus can play me. For  the rest of the day, and into dinner, he keeps his distance. He isn't  cold or anything. Hardly that. He's a great host. Solicitous, including  me in conversations, making sure I have enough to eat.

And that's the problem. He's treating me like a guest. Gone are the  light touches, as if he can't keep his hands off me. Gone is the way he  somehow always manages to be standing close enough that our arms brush.  And gone are the teasing glances that dare me to reach for more.

I hadn't noticed he'd been doing these things until he stops.

The result being, I seek him out. I'm the one finding ways to stand  closer, to touch his wrist or the curve of his biceps. And though he  doesn't say a word about it, I know he'd predicted with unnerving  clarity how I would react.

I don't know if I should admire his skills or be annoyed.

Both, is the answer.

My annoyance grows when he gives me space and heads out to get wine for  dinner without inviting me to come along. He's gone for over an hour.

I realize I'm pissed at myself. For being a coward where he is  concerned. For pretending that what we are to each other isn't evolving.  I know he cares about me. He makes certain I feel his care every day.  He won't hurt me. Not intentionally.

And I need to apologize because how I acted was hurtful and unfair. But I  don't get the chance. Between Finn distancing himself and his family  intent on being good hosts as well, we are never alone.

Before dinner, Finn and his dad settle down in the den for a game of chess.

"I didn't know you played," I say to Finn as I sit next to him on the couch to watch.

"We never really got to the ‘hey, by the way, I love playing chess' stage of our relationship," Finn says with a sly wink.

I nudge his shoulder. "Smart ass." God, I'm doing everything I can to be close to him. It's ridiculous.

Even more so when my heart gives a little leap as he nudges me back, softly chuckling. "You play chess, Chess?"

I resist sticking my tongue out at him since Sean is watching with avid interest. "No. I admit, it's over my head."

"Then watch and learn, my friend."

"I'll watch, but all I ever see are pieces being moved around, seemingly at random."

With a snort, Finn hunkers down and studies the board. The stern,  absorbed expression on his face is adorable, and frankly hot. It's even  sexier when I realize he's actually good, really good.

I lose track of time as he and his dad play with the intensity of men at war.

Eventually, I end up reclining on the couch to read. Without taking his  attention away from the board, Finn puts my feet in his lap and rests  one warm hand over my ankle. I keep reading, but I love it. I love that,  ever so often, his thumb strokes my skin in an absent-minded but tender  caress. Whatever is going on between us, I know that he isn't angry at  me. And some of the tension flows out of my body.