“So let me get this straight,” Alexis ran her fingers through her
perfect dark curls as she rolled her blue green eyes, “despite the fact that he was lame
in the sack you’re going to go out with him again?” Posey poked at the plate of
pasta in front of her and shrugged one shoulder.
“Yeah, he has room for improvement but he also bought me breakfast
in the morning,” she pointed out to which her friend snickered before downing
the remainder of her Mai Tai.
“An overpriced bagel from Starbucks does not count as buying breakfast.”
Posey shoved the disappointment away that continuously threatened to force her
to agree with Alexis’s dim view of her Penguin.
“I believe in second chances,” she added firmly as she pushed her
plate away. This discussion had caused her to lose her appetite. She had wanted
to feel euphoric in the aftermath of bedding Beau Bennett, had wanted to enjoy
her roses and be able to walk around the city with a secretive grin on her
face. She felt that was the way a young woman should feel after being bedded by
one of the most eligible bachelors in the city. Still, despite feeling robbed
of that ‘walking on air’ feeling she still thought it was possible. “It might
not have been just him. I mean…, I’m not the most experienced woman in the
city,” she added in a hushed tone. Alexis sighed, her shoulders rising and
falling as she shook her head.
“You know enough to know he wasn’t much interested in making sure
you had a good time and that kind of selfish crap is not something that should
be encouraged.” She raised an eyebrow at Posey across the table as if she were
challenging her to disagree.
“He can learn,” Posey offered, now toying with the umbrella in her
margarita. “I could have…directed him. I didn’t. I could next time,” she added,
gazing into the yellow orange slush in the glass before her. Mango margaritas
usually made everything better. This time she was missing out the brain freeze
buzz because she’d only sipped at it. Being bedded by the poster boy for all
American good looks should have made her drink taste better instead everything
seemed to turn to ashes in her mouth.
“Darlin', we both know you are not going to be a sex therapist any
time soon,” Alexis reached across the table for her hand but Posey withdrew
hers’ and placed it firmly in her lap. She did not want to be comforted like a
child that had lost her favorite teddy bear. “I should be encouraging you to
see him again so you can take me out on another date with all those sexy pieces
of man meat,” Alexis added brightly and Posey knew her friend was doing her
best to lighten her mood but she didn’t feel like being buoyed up. She felt
like reveling in her own dark mood. She felt like ordering an ice cream sundae
and diving head first into it. “I worry about you, that’s all,” Alexis added
softly. Posey shrugged.
“Seeing him again can’t do any harm.” When she said it she wondered
if she was trying to convince her friend or herself. She’d been telling herself
that since she’d got his text just before lunch. He was in Toronto and there
was a part of herself that was thrilled that even though he was in another
city, that even though he was practicing on a strange sheet of ice and probably
giving interviews to strangers that he was thinking about her. How could a girl
resist that?
“No, you’re probably right,” Alexis agreed as she signaled the
waiter to bring another round of drinks. Posey felt certain she was right. He’d
bought her flowers. She’d never had a man buy her flowers before. Things could
always improve in the bedroom. Everyone deserves a second chance.
______________________________________________________________
“She’s different every time I see her.” He could hear the
wistfulness in his own voice as he marveled at the grip the tiny girl in
Veronique’s arms had on his index finger.
“I think that every time I wake up in the morning,” Vero sighed as
she looked down at her daughter, a sort of glow in her features. Sidney looked
over at his friend, the Pens’ goaltender, who was watching his wife and
daughter with a bemused smile.
“She poops and eats and sleeps,” Marc shrugged as if bringing
another life into the world wasn’t some kind of a miracle. Sid knew Flower was
enthused about being a parent but terrified as well but he was still impressed
by the goaltender’s placid calm. That was also something he admired about the
lean Quebecois when he was between the pipes.
“She’s beautiful,” he said again. He probably said it every time he
saw little Estelle.
“You’ll be doing this too, one day soon, you wait and see,”
Veronique insisted as if it was a foregone conclusion that the Pens’ captain
would miraculously find that person he could trust with his heart, his finances
and his privacy at any moment. As if that person was right around the corner,
or existed at all.
“Just being a godfather is good enough for me,” he assured his
friend’s pretty wife as she tilted her tiny daughter up to her shoulder and
began rubbing the baby’s back in a cyclical motion.
“I should get you to change her diaper then, so you know what to do
if the worst happens,” Veronique grinned. Sid shoved his hands into the front
pockets of his jeans, a nervous gesture that made Vero laugh.
“I…I’m pretty sure if something bad happens it will be with both me
and your husband on a plane or a bus, you won’t be there,” he assured her as
she shook her head.
“Don’t think you’re getting out of diaper duty,” she threatened,
narrowing her eyes at him.
“Oh he can do it, he just doesn’t want to. Remember how much younger
Taylor is,” Marc smirked before taking another sip of Steelers Schwarzbier.
“Then maybe you can because you’re daughter’s starting to smell a
little…ripe.” Vero wrinkled her nose. Marc rose and set his bottle aside and
reached out to take his tiny daughter in his arms.\
“C’mon mon Capitaine, you can help.” Sid followed a few steps behind
his friend. He’d be there for emotional support but he didn’t really want to
get in on the action. He liked the other parts, the feeding and the snuggling
but he was pretty sure there was something about the genetics of your own child
or at least your own family that made this particular task more tolerable.
“It’s not toxic,” Marc chuckled as he gently placed his daughter on the
changing table and then reached up to turn the light on above them.
“Pretty sure it might be,” Sid hung back and did his best to get
downwind as Marc unsnapped the pink and yellow fuzzy onesie and set it aside. He
wrinkled his nose and took another step back when Marc took off the soiled
diaper and dropped it into the diaper genie. “Yeah, that stuff probably could
peel paint.”
“You know you can’t wait to have one of your own. I’ve seen the way
you look at her, at all the kids at the family skates. You’re jonesing for a
whole mess of ankle biters,” Flower added, lifting the tiny feet of his
daughter and dusting her cute little heinie with baby powder.
“I don’t know,” Sid shrugged, reaching out to tap at the Winnie the
Pooh mobile above Estelle’s crib, setting it turning. A tinny version of little
black rain cloud played as the miniature stuffed versions of the beloved
characters swung lazily over the matching sheet and bumpers. “Sometimes I do
and sometimes I think I’m just too focused on hockey to be able to spend enough
time to be a good parent and I don’t want to suck at that.”
“Because you must trés parfait at everything,” Marc chuckled as he
began to swaddle his daughter in a soft looking receiving blanket. One of a
pack that had been in a giant basket of baby stuff that he and the rest of the
guys had put together as a gift to the new parents.
“I just keep thinking that things will…y’know, kind of ease up soon,
that the media will be all over Nathan Mackinnon for a change and leave me
alone so I’ll have time to do stuff like this,” Sid replied honestly, maybe as
honestly as he had ever been on the subject.
“You’re always going to be Sid the Kid,” Flower told him, holding
his daughter towards Sid like a wrapped package, ready for delivery. This part
always worried him. He was certain he’d hold her wrong, drop her, break her.
She weighed nothing in his arms and he knew he could hold her in one hand if he
wanted to but carefully cradled her nearly full head of dark hair in one hand
while the rest of her tiny body was held in the crook of his arm. “There, you
see. You look like you almost know what you’re doing,” Marc added, patting his
friend on the back before leading the way back out to the living room.
Sid followed, staring daggers at his friend’s back. He was almost
sure he was doing it right. If he wasn’t going to give constructive criticism
there was no need to be sarcastic.
___________________________________________________________________
Posey tried not to look at her watch. She knew he was late but she
didn’t really want to see exactly how
late he was. The last time she’d looked it had been thirty minutes and that was
already too long.
She opened the fridge and stared inside. Shutting it again she
decided against opening the bottle of white wine that was calling her name. It
wasn’t going to help to drink as the minutes ticked away. If she got drunk
she’d only call him and, at least for the moment, she still had enough pride
not to do that.
She contemplated calling Alexis but tossed her phone back into the
bowels of her purse. Her friend would mean well but she would only tell her that
she’d told her so and she wasn’t ready to hear that. Not yet.
Pacing the tiny living room of her apartment Posey tried not to look
out the picture window for the tenth time to see if his car had pulled up
outside yet. The last time she’d looked some old man walking his dog had
hurried past as if she was spying on him or maybe she was some kind of
psychotic sniper, taking out her neighbors just for shits and giggles.
She considered taking off her heels because of the noise they made
as she paced the parquet floor. The old lady down stairs was actually very
sweet and sometimes gave her fresh baked rolls and cinnamon buns. Posey didn’t
want to annoy her but her legs looked so damn good in the black stilettos with
the pointed toes that she didn’t want to risk his shoeing up and seeing her
little toe sticking out of her tights.
Vacillating between fury and hurt, one minute she was telling
herself that it wasn’t what it seemed, that she hadn’t been stood up. That
there was some perfectly reasonable explanation why he hadn’t shown up and that
he would, any minute. The next minute she was promising herself that even if he
did she wouldn’t answer the door. A girl had to have some kind of standards.
After all he had a phone and as far as she knew his fingers weren’t broken.
But what if they were? What if he’d been rushing to pick her up and
got into some kind of horrific accident? What if, right now, his blood was
creeping across the pavement somewhere and a paramedic was working furiously
just to keep him alive? What if she turned on the news to find out that Beau
Bennett, rookie forward for the Penguins, had died in a head on collision on
one of the many bridges in Pittsburgh?
Posey reached for the bottle of red wine she’d opened to let it
breathe on her kitchen counter. Forgoing the glass she took a swig directly
from the bottle. If he was dead on the side of the road somewhere it could
possibly be all her fault. It could have been one of the twenty texts she’d
sent him that had caused it. It only took one time, one glance down at his
phone and BAM!
She was possibly the worst
girlfriend ever. She’d been slagging him off all week and now he was dead and
it was all her fault and she was going to go straight to hell.
With bottle still in hand she walked towards the tv, picked up the
remote and aimed it at the blank black screen. She watched the blue power light
blink to life and then waited for the screen to follow. She thumbed the buttons
to switch the channel to the local news station. A quick glance at her watch
told her they’d be nearly at the sports highlights which always came in the
last ten minutes of the evening newscast. Surely, if his bones were crushed and
nothing short of a miracle could bring him back to life that would lead the
sports news.
Instead there was Sidney’s smiling face. He was answering some
question about Kris Letang. She didn’t really hear what he said. Most times it
wasn’t really worth listening to what Sid said because it was just some line,
some comforting but inane terms anyone who followed any team sport would have
heard a thousand times or more. It was always worth watching Sid though, especially
when he ducked his head to the side and tried not to giggle because he knew
everyone thought that his laugh sounding like it was coming from twelve year
old girl.
She whirled when she heard the knock at the door, the remote flying
from her hand to skip across the parquet floor before it came sliding to a stop
right in front of the grinning young god she had just been so certain was lying
dead in a ditch.
“You look great,” he purred as if a compliment could make up for
being over an hour late to pick her up. She knew she should admonish him for
his tardiness, for making her wait and worry but instead she closed the gap
between them at a jog and leaped at him, throwing her arms around his neck and
her legs around his waist, burying her face in his neck and nearly sobbing in
relief. “Well now that is what I call a greeting.”
“You’re here,” she gasped, pressing quick kisses to the corners of
his eyes, his mouth, his cheeks. He laughed and kicked the door closed behind
him.
“You’re an eager bunny aren’t you baby?” he cooed, striding through
the living room and directly into the bedroom. Posey thought about asking about
the dinner reservations, if he’d made any at all but as her back hit the bed
and he kneeled on the mattress beside her and began tugging at his tie she let
the words die on her tongue. He had a hold of the crotch of her tights and,
seemingly with no more effort than a simple tug, he had ripped them asunder.
Something akin to a ‘huh’ and ‘wow’ went through her head but she
was rendered utterly speechless as she watched him slowly drag the remainder of
her tights slowly down her thighs and then over her knees and then, lastly,
tugging them off her feet before tossing them aside. Mesmerized she continued
to watch him as one hand slid leisurely down the back of her calf and towards
the inside of her thigh.
Posey front teeth dug into her bottom lip as his fingers slid
beneath the silky fabric of her panties. Maybe, she thought as his thumb began
to move in lazy circles over her clit, he wasn’t such a lost cause after all.
____________________________________________________________________
Sidney looked up at the red light as he drummed his fingers on the
steering wheel in time to an old Roxy Music song that was playing on the radio.
He didn’t know the words to the song but he liked the melody. Not that he would
have sung along if he had known the words. That was all he needed, someone
recording him on their phone rocking out in his car and posting it on all those
social media sites he avoided like the plague.
Hence his being alone in the car
driving home to a dark, empty house.
Being ‘Sid the Kid’ was a lot like living in a fishbowl. It was
something he had…well…gotten used to didn’t seem the right way to put it as he
put his foot back on the gas. It was more something that he’d learned to live
with, had figured out how to live in a kind of bubble that didn’t really
protect him but provided enough of a barrier that he could have a life, at
least some of the time.
The fact that he didn’t want to foist his life in the spotlight onto
some unsuspecting woman didn’t mean he liked his solitary life and it really
didn’t mean he didn’t want to have a family. The smell that still clung to him,
baby powder and sour milk, reminded him that he did want a family, maybe a big one, possibly a whole mess of kids
to greet him at the door when he got home from a road trip. Or maybe that would
have to wait until after hockey, after he’d hung up his skates.
That thought made him shudder. He couldn’t image life after, not
yet. He didn’t have a plan for that. Maybe he’d be a coach, maybe a GM but he
couldn’t see himself leaving hockey, not entirely. Of course if he had kids
maybe that would change things. Maybe then he’d just want to go their hockey
games in the morning, maybe coach a pee-wee team be on a Parent Advisory
Council and take his daughters to dance class.
He smiled to himself as he turned his car into his driveway.
Daughters or sons; it didn’t matter to him. A few of each would be perfect. He
wanted the rough and tumble along with the soft and sweetly scented. He wanted
to build forts out of blankets and chairs and doll houses. He wanted to go to
early morning hockey games with a TimmyHo’s double double in his hand and watch
his kid play whether his laces where white or her laces were pink.
His smile faded as the garage door closed behind his Land Rover and
he found himself in utter darkness. Had there been someone in the house waiting
for him to come home there would have been a light on. He never remembered to
leave one on for himself. There might have been tea brewing and she would meet
him at the door with a soft kiss and ask him how their friends were.
Sid sighed as he pulled the keys from the ignition and opened the
car door. If he could only find someone he could be sure of, that could ignore
the media scrutiny and didn’t care if he made fifty thousand dollars or five
million. The trick was finding her.
He couldn’t go on Match.com or whatever other single networks there
were. He couldn’t go on Tinder or even hang out in singles bars and he was tired
of the women that well meaning family and friends set him up with. That didn’t
feel natural. It was always forced and then there were the inevitable questions
afterwards that made him feel like he was being checked up on, like he had to
write a book report and all the facts had to be right because of course they’d
be checking them against the story they got from the girl.
As he made his way through the lengthening shadows of his home he
wondered what she’d add to the living room. Would there be more candles? Would
she banish his framed Olympic jersey to his office or keep it above the mantle?
There would probably be fashion magazines on the coffee table and probably
fresh flowers in the kitchen.
They’d have a dog. Of that he was certain. He didn’t have one now…well,
not a full time dog, not in Pittsburgh. His parents had a Lab that he loved but
as much as he loved having her in the summer it wasn’t the same as having a dog
bouncing and wagging its tail as it greeted you at the door. He wondered if she’d
want a big dog or one of those yappy little things you could carry around in a
purse? He hoped she’d want a big dog. They were better with kids, sturdier, and
a better guard dog too. He’d want that for the nights he wasn’t home.
As he climbed the stairs he ran his hand along the blank wall. One
day he hoped the entire wall would be full of family photos. First steps,
graduations, first cars and family vacations. By the time he’d reached the top
stair his heart felt heavy. He knew he was missing out on so much. He just had
no idea how to fill that void.
______________________________________________________________________
The red digital letters on the clock radio sitting on her bed side
table read three am. Posey blinked at it, rubbed her eyes and read the numbers
again. With a yawn and a languid stretch of muscles overused and places more
tender than usual she swung her legs over the side of the bed. She needed to
pee in the worst way but couldn’t remember where her robe was.
Normally she’d have had a shower before bed. She hadn’t done that so
it would still be hanging on the back of the bathroom door, which did her no
good at that particular moment in time. She admonished herself with a smile,
shaking her head as she got to her feet. His tongue had been in places
unmentionable and she was worried about walking to the bathroom naked?
She glanced over her shoulder and found the bed empty. There was a
crease in the pillow where his head had been when she’d watched him fall asleep
but there was definitely no one there now. Leaning over she ran her hand along
the sheet where his muscular body had been tangled in her quilt and found the
bed cold.
So he’d gone and it had been a while ago when he’d left. The
slightly amused smile that had been on her face only a moment ago was suddenly
gone, replaced by a frown. Did he have an early morning flight she’d forgotten
about?
Posey picked her phone up from beside the clock radio and thumbed
the indentation at the bottom of the screen. She typed in her password, opened
the Pens app and scrolled to the schedule.
There was a home game…tomorrow. Posey tossed her phone onto the bed
and swore under her breath. First he’d been late and now this? She stomped into
the bathroom and flipped up the lid on the toilet. She was sitting, knees
together, glaring at the wall when something caught her attention, right at the
corner of her vision.
There was a note leaning up against the mirror over the sink. She
flushed and did the necessaries and then reached over for the note.
Starving. Couldn’t find
anything good in your fridge. Be back soon. BB
That smile crept back onto her face. That boy was full of surprises.
Folding the note, carefully creasing it down the middle, she slid it
into one of the drawers of the vanity. Still shaking her head she pulled back
the curtain around the tub and stepped in. She turned the water to hot and
turned her face up into the spray. By the time he came back, energy
replenished, she would smell of vanilla and lavender and not of sex and maybe
he could try again to make her call his name while his tongue was between her
legs.
Bad Sunshine! Bad! I actually DO want to swat him with a rolled up newspaper!
ReplyDelete