Sugar Rush (Offensive Line #1) (13 page)

BOOK: Sugar Rush (Offensive Line #1)
3.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

His alarm buzzes in his pocket, warning him of the hour.

The smell of burning sugar fills the room, warning me the donuts are destroyed.

Life is calling, telling us it’s time to say goodbye. It’s time to put an end to this night. To this kiss.

But not yet.

CHAPTER SIXTEEN

COLT

 

November 13th

Charlie Windt Stadium

Los Angeles, CA

 

“You look like shit,” Tyus says sharply. “You sick?”

I shake my head, sweat pouring off my forehead into my eyes. I feel like I’m underwater. Everything sounds muffled, my vision is blurred. My reflexes are shot. I’m running through pudding out here. Hibbert almost outpaced me on that last play, and that fat fuck can’t outrun his own ass.

“I’m tired,” I croak. “That’s all.”

“You need a Snickers?” he asks sarcastically.

I chuckle, leaning with my hands on my thighs to spit into the turf. “Fuck no.”

“Why are you so tired?” He looks downfield to where the cheerleading squad is gathered under the goal post. “You didn’t see Nikki again, did you?”

“No, I’m not stupid.”

Tyus snickers, but he’s a good enough friend not to point out the other times I’ve said that exact same thing. “So if you didn’t stay up all night with her, why are you so tired?”

“I hung out with the girl from the party,” I tell him. “Lilly.”

“You ‘just hung out’ with her?” he asks skeptically.

“I kissed her, but that’s it.”

“Right, right,” he muses, running his hand over his mouth. Across his smile. “So you’ve been alone with this girl twice and you still didn’t seal the deal. And now here you are tired and sick looking. You’re getting old, baby. Losing your touch.”

“I could pull more ass right here, right now than you could even dream about, bitch.”

He smirks. “I believe it, because right here on a football field full of dudes, the ass is all you’re going to get. And you can have all of it far as I’m concerned.”

“You know what I mean,” I growl, feeling frustrated and foggy.

“You better hope I do. You gonna see her again?”

“Who?”

“Who?” he snorts. He slaps me on the side of the head roughly. “The girl you’re tripping over. Who are we talking about, man?”

“Lilly,” I remind him, swatting his hand away. “And yeah, I’m gonna see her again. She’s coming to the party tomorrow.”

“I’m not.”

“Where the fuck are you gonna be?”

“It’s a Saturday, man. I’m going on a date. You’re not the only one with game, bitch.”

“Bring it in!” Trey calls, calling for a huddle.

“You better get your shit together,” Tyus tells me as we jog with the rest of the offensive line toward Trey. “You come to another practice looking like this and you won’t be starting any games any time soon.”

“Yeah, I know. I know,” I mutter, pulling up to a stop on the thirty.

Trey looks at me funny where I’m lagging at the back of the crew. I’m usually front and center, first to arrive. “Colt, you okay, man?

Tyus grins at him. “He’s tired.”

“Seriously?”

“Long night?” Kurtis asks from my right.

I look him solidly in the eyes. “I couldn’t sleep. You know how it is.”

“That’s rough.”

“Brutal.”

Olynyk shoves me roughly in the shoulder. “Tonight we’ll all come over and sing you a lullaby.”

“Can I get a warm milk?”

He chuckles, nodding to Hibbert. “Eric will breastfeed you.”

Hibbert smiles, lifting his jersey up over his massive, white belly, heading for his man boobs.

“No, no, no!” we all cry together.

“Is this a huddle or a strip club?!” Coach Allen barks from the sidelines. “Get your asses in gear!”

Hibbert lowers his shirt, blowing me a kiss. “We’ll talk later, baby.”

I reach for a pithy comeback.

A funny one liner.

Maybe a retort of any fucking kind?

I got nothin’. My brain is closed for business, all non-essential functions shut down. I’m lucky I’m still walking and breathing.

The guys line up for the play, facing off with our defensive line. I take my place to the right of and behind Trey. I’m not touching the ball in this play so I bounce on my feet lightly, trying to wake up. Killing time. We’re three hours into practice. Less than one more and I can go home. Forget the showers, I’m going to pass out in my bed with my stink on strong. Maria will have to forgive me when she changes the sheets. I wonder what she’s making for lunch. Am I even going to have the energy to eat any of it?

Nah, screw it. I can always eat. I might even stop on the way home. Swing by the Mad Batter and grab—

“Colt!” Trey shouts at me. “What the hell are you doing?!”

The line crashes together ahead of me, but Trey is holding onto the ball screaming at me. He shuffles back, his red jersey flapping in the wind like a flag.

I check the formation. It’s not the one I thought it was going to be. I was thinking of the wrong play.

“Fuck!”

I break into a sprint toward Trey but I’m too late. He’s had the ball for too long. Maybe four seconds, but anything beyond that is an eternity behind the line. No matter how good the O line is, any defensive lineman remotely worth his bloated paycheck is going to get through a crack.

I’m halfway to him when Trey gives up on me. The pocket is closed. Gone. He has to throw. He spots Anthony downfield and launches a spiral dead center into the guy’s chest. Tyus wraps his arms around it tightly as his coverage closes in.

They take him down easily, almost gently. No one is looking to injure anyone today. It’s why Trey is wearing the red jersey while the rest of us are in white. It screams at us to keep our hands off the merchandise. The quarterback is too valuable to lose to a mistake in practice.

A running back, on the other hand…

I feel the collision coming the way you know when someone is standing behind you. They’re in your space when they shouldn’t be and it gives you the creeps. Only this doesn’t freak me out, it knocks me on my ass. I sprawl out on the turf with the sun in my eyes and the air forced from my lungs.

“Wake up, bitch!”

I blink, coughing roughly. “I hate you, Conlin. I hate you so damn much.”

He laughs as he runs away to line up with the defense.

I roll over on my side, pausing to take a breather. To refill my collapsed lungs.

A pair of Kodiak cleats step in front of me. “You want a hand?”

I nod to Andreas, reaching for him. He grunts as he helps pull me up. He’s not a big guy. Kickers don’t have to be. I’m sure lifting my two hundred plus pound butt off the ground is a real treat for him.

“What’s Conlin’s problem?” he asks when I’m vertical.

“I puked in his shoes once. He’s into my ex. Oh, and he’s a piece of shit.”

Andreas grunts before heading back toward the sidelines. “You better get in formation,” he tells me. “Maybe the correct one this time.”

“Yeah, fuck you very much, man.”

He flips me off over his shoulder, his head down.

After the wakeup call from Conlin I keep my head on straight. The rest of practice passes in slow motion, but when it’s finally over I hit the locker room only long enough to tell the guys about the party I’m throwing and get my gear.

I even tell Matthews, but I know he won’t come. Andreas either. They’ll stay home and sit in the dark staring at their walls, eating mac and cheese. Maybe get a hooker. Macramé a dreamcatcher.

I honestly don’t know what other people do in their spare time. Weird shit, I assume.

I’m halfway home when my phone rings through the car speakers. I glance at the caller ID, grinning when I see her name.

“I was just thinking about you,” I answer.

“I don’t doubt you were thinking about a girl, Colton,” my mom acknowledges drolly, “but you most certainly were not thinking about me.”

“You know me too well.”

She hums in solid agreement. “How was practice?”

“Long. I’m worn. I’m heading home now to get some sleep.”

“How’s the knee?”

“It’s strong.”

“What does the doctor say?”

She doesn’t believe me. She never does. Not when it comes to this.

I suppress a sigh. “He says it’s strong.”

“Can I see it in writing?”

“You want a doctor’s note?”

“I wouldn’t turn it down.”

I chuckle, turning down my street. “I’ll have him fax you one.”

“It’s not nineteen ninety-two. Have him email it to me.”

“Yep.”

“Are you doing your exercises?”

“Every day.”

“And night?”

“That’s what I meant.”

“It’s not what you said.”

I slide into my parking spot in front of my building, knocking the car into park. “What’s with the third degree, Mom? What’s going on?”

“I want to make sure you’re taking care of yourself,” she answers unapologetically. “You’re on the other side of the world—“

“Country.”

“—and it’s not easy watching your blood getting beat out of your baby every week.”

“Are you talking about the Seahawks game? They barely touched me.”

“Anderson Cooper was talking about PTSD symptoms in NFL players who have had brain injuries.”

Ah fuck. Here we go.

“I’ve never had a brain injury,” I remind her patiently.

“It got me thinking about that hit you took in college.”

I drop my head back hard against the seat. “It got you worrying, you mean.”

“Those boys broke your knee and knocked you out.”

“I was stunned. I was never knocked out. You know that.”

“I’m starting to wonder what we know and what we don’t.”

“You’ve gotta stop watching Cooper. He doesn’t know shit.”

“He knows how to dress.”

“The gays always do.”

“He’s not gay,” she protests hotly.

“He came out,” I tell her mercilessly. “He has a boyfriend. Deal with it.”

“Stop it or I’ll tell you that Megan Fox is gay.”

“Go for it. You’ll make a million fantasies come true for me.”

I hear her laughing over the line. It makes me smile.

It makes me homesick.

“Are you ready for the Panthers this week?” she asks.

“I’m ready for anything.”

“Even their blitz heavy defense?”

“Especially that.”

“Good. I’ll put money on you at church.”

I chuckle in disbelief. “You know that betting ring is illegal, right?”

“Pfft! It’s not illegal. It’s for charity,” she insists. “I only keep half the winnings.”

“What charity is it going to? I’ll send them a check.”

“You already do. Every month.”

“That’s generous of me.”

“I raised you right.” I hear the familiar creak of her old recliner as she sits down. I can picture the living room around her, modern and bright from the remodel I funded for Christmas last year, and that old, ugly brown chair is parked in the middle like a dump on the floor. She’s had it for ten years and she wouldn’t let me get rid of it. I hate it. So did the designer. We had it on the curb for an hour before she dragged it back inside and locked us out for the day. I slept in the garage the way I used to when I came home past curfew and found the house sealed tight.

“You did,” I agree, stifling a yawn. “I gotta get inside and get some sleep. I’ll talk to you on Sunday, okay?”

“Sure, sounds good. ‘Bye, baby.”

“Bye, Mom.”

“I love you.”

“Love you too.”

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN

COLT

 

 

I can’t sleep. I’ve been laying in this bed for over an hour with Kat curled up by my feet and the blackout curtains pulled tight, and still I can’t get there.

I look to my right at the dull green glow of my alarm clock.

It’s one in the afternoon. It feels like one in the morning.

I’m in that weird place where I’m tired but I’m not ready to sleep. I want to be, I’d kill to be, but my brain isn’t having it. It’s insomnia at its worst, a problem I’ve struggled with my entire life. That’s the downside to being ‘on’ all the time; you struggle to learn how to be ‘off’. To be still.

I reach for the clock, my fingers fumbling blindly for the buttons. I count them from the left. One, two, three, four, frogs. The sound machine kicks on, the echo of frogs in the rainforest filling the room. I feel Kat shift at the end of the bed. She listens for a few seconds before huffing petulantly and flopping back down against my leg.

Kat doesn’t care for frogs.

I try counting sheep on the backs of my eyelids. Then I try Lions. Jets. All of the opponents we still have to face this season. The ones standing between us and a Super Bowl ring. The biggest one for me is the Chiefs. We’re away at Kansas City in December. My mom is coming to the game with Charlie and Makenzie, driving six hours from Galena to be there. I’m putting them up at the Sheraton, the same hotel the team is staying in, even though Charlie isn’t thrilled about the idea. He’s a big football fan but not a fan of football players around his daughter. Bringing her to a hotel full of them is his worst nightmare. Knowing Makenzie, he definitely should be worried. But me? I couldn’t care less what or who she does. I’ll sleep like a baby either way.

Just not today.

My phone pings on the nightstand, the room momentarily glowing faint blue before dropping back to black. I groan as I reach for it, my tired bones protesting, but inside I’m racing and revving. I’m thinking about Lilly, hoping it’s a message from her. I’m thinking about being with her. About how mellow she makes me and how much I could use that feeling right now. I could have fallen asleep a hundred times last night when we were together, but I fought against it, determined not to miss a minute with her. Now a minute doesn’t go by that I don’t miss her. I could call her now, hear that sexy rasp in her voice. Ask her to tell me a story. I don’t care if it’s about how ostriches like anal, I’d listen to it for hours. I’d fall asleep smiling.

And I’d have the strangest, most sexually confused dreams of my life.

“Damn,” I mutter when I see the message. It’s not from her. It’s The Hotness.

I uploaded the new events to your calendar. Monday at the children’s hospital is locked. Check the time, then check it again. Try not to be late.

Am I late or is everyone else early?

You’re impossible is what you are.

Are you gonna be there?

Trey and I both will be.

Why is Trey going?

Because he loves me and WHEN, not IF, you’re late he can buy some time by signing some shit.

Tell him not to steal my thunder.

Trust me, you have plenty to spare.

Talk to Tyus’ agent. See if you can get him to show up too. If all three of us are there we can ask DQ to send ice cream for the kids.

Please wear clothes.

Please call Tyus.

He’s your friend. Why don’t you ask him to show?

Because it’s not my job, Hotness. It’s yours.

Fuck you, fine. I’ll call him.

I love you.

I follow that up with a GIPH of a unicorn farting a rainbow.

I do not get a reply.

When my phone goes dark again, taking the room with it, I stare up at the nothing above me. The ceiling is there somewhere, tall and open with exposed ducting and beams. My mom hates it. When she was decorating the apartment downstairs she insisted we cover it up with drywall. I told her the place cost what it did because of the exposed areas.

“Well, your granddad has a barn back in Kansas with exposed beams too,” she told me frankly, glaring at the ceiling, “and I wouldn’t pay half a million for it.”

“It’s closer to seven point five.”

“Stop it, Colton,” she scolded sternly. “You’re hurting my heart.”

The heat kicks on with a
whoosh.
I can hear it in the ducts. I wouldn’t be able to if they were buried under walls, or if there were other noises in the apartment. Someone in the kitchen or the living room cooking and watching TV. Coming and going through the front door, calling out to me to tell me they’re home. Crawling into bed with Kat and I to scratch her ears and talk to me about their day.

Suddenly the silence is deafening, surrounding me and suffocating me.

I check the time. It’s only two. It’s still early. I can’t call her. She’s probably sleeping. I need to let her sleep.

I need to kiss her again.

Lilly was like fire in my hands this morning when I finally got to touch her. I’d thought about it all night and when I couldn’t take it anymore, when she gave me the greenlight, I wasn’t ready for the way it felt. Hot and slow. A low burning flame that licked at my veins and made me sweat everywhere her skin touched mine. It made me think of the rest of her skin, all of it, all of
her
under my hands. My mouth. My tongue.

She tasted like sex. The arduous kind. The kind you gotta work for, the kind that wears you out.

The good kind.

Great,
I think glumly.
Now I’m half-hard in the dark
.

I have two options here. One will feel weird with the dog in the room and the other could make matters worse. I’m willing to take that chance.

I dial Lilly’s number, waiting eagerly as it rings. And rings. And keeps right on ringing. I’m waiting for the voicemail to kick in, debating whether or not I’ll leave a message, when she answers.

“Hello?” she mumbles groggily.

Fuck me,
I think painfully. Her voice. Her sleep slurred, husky voice is almost too much. It makes me wonder if I made a mistake calling her.

“Hey,” I reply, feeling like I’m fumbling. “Were you asleep?”

“Mm-hmm. You should be too.”

“I can’t. I tried.”

“So you called me to make sure I couldn’t either? That’s so sweet.”

“I called to beg you to talk to me.”

She yawns. “What about?”

“The baking time for a soufflé? I don’t care. Anything.”

“Twenty-five minutes.”

“I didn’t know that. Can I ask you something else?”

“Sure.”

“What the hell is a soufflé?”

Lilly chuckles quietly. “It’s a French egg dish.”

“Is it sweet or savory?”

“It can be both.”

“Will you make it for me?”

“Not right now,” she laughs.

I smile into the dark. “My party is tomorrow. Can you make it?”

“The soufflé or the party?”

“Party.”

“No.”

“Really?”

“No.”

“Are we playing this one again? The tell-Colt-no-to-everything game?”

“No,” she teases, her voice quivering with quiet laughter.

“Will you come to my party?” I push gently.

“Rona wants to go, so yes. I will be there.”

“Only because Rona wants to go?” I prod.

“Yep. It’s my only reason. See you then.”

“You’re leaving me? In my hour of need, you’re ditching me?”

She groans dramatically. “I thought you were nice. Why are you being mean to me?”

“Because you were mean to me first. Besides, I like talking to you,” I answer honestly. “Will you stay on the phone with me?”

“You’re asking but it doesn’t feel like I have much of a choice.”

“You could hang up. Are you going to hang up on me, Hendricks?”

She grunts faintly. I can hear the sound of cloth rubbing across the phone. Probably a blanket brushing it as she shifts in her bed. I imagine her brown hair splayed across a purple pillow, a blanket pulled up close around her neck. Her eyes hooded. Sleepy. Sexy. Her lips that perfect pink color that’s either lip gloss or life granting her an unfair advantage. I imagine them pursed. Swollen from kisses I can’t stop giving her, taking from her.

“The store was busy again today,” she tells me quietly, giving in. “Tons of people came in this morning saying they saw you on ESPN talking about us. We sold out of your footballs.”

“I knew you would. People love my balls.”

“I never said I wouldn’t hang up,” she warns me, but she’s smiling. I can hear it from here.

I chuckle, settling deeper under my comforter. “What are we making tomorrow morning?”

“I can’t pull another all-nighter like last night,” she warns me.

“We won’t. I have another early practice. You have to be at the store by four-thirty again, right?”

“Yes.”

“Meet me there at four.”

“Why would I want to go in any earlier than I have to?”

“Because you want to see me. You want to spend time with me.” I drop my voice low. “Because you want to
eat
with me again.”

“You’re making some wild assumptions here.”

“Tiramisu, Lilly. You know you want it.”

“Remember how I said it’s slow?”

“Did I go fast this morning?”

“No,” she admits softly. Fondly. “You went very, very slow.”

“And you liked it.”

“Ass-umptions,” she pronounces carefully.

I grin. “I’ll see you at four?”

Lilly sighs light and smiling. “Yeah. I’ll see you there at four.”

Other books

A God and His Gifts by Ivy Compton-Burnett
Clammed Up by Barbara Ross
Sparks by Talia Carmichael
Restless Spirits by Shyla Colt
Storm in a Teacup by Emmie Mears
Nine Lives Last Forever by Rebecca M. Hale
CorporateTemptress by Stacey Kennedy