Chapter 11
CHAPTER ELEVEN
“Casillas!” Gardner yelled.
I stopped, just like that, in the middle of the game I was in. The ball was right by my feet after I’d taken it away from one of the defenders I was playing against. Said defender was now on the ground.
Things had gotten a little intense.
I held my hand out to the girl and helped pull her to her feet.
She knew there were no hard feelings. She’d gone for the ball at the same time I had, and obviously only one of us was going to get it.
Needless to say, we both really wanted it.
With only a few days left before the start of the season, we all thought we were Highlanders.
At one point when I had been the one knocked to the ground, I mouthed to Jenny, “There can be only one.” She didn’t even bother trying to be discreet when she burst out laughing.
But it was true, mostly.
When Gardner didn’t get to the point, I yelled, “What is it?” He held up a hand before turning around, discussing something with the German.
He was standing a few feet to the side and behind the head coach, facing the field I was on.
Gardner’s posture changed, and he leaned forward a little bit as they spoke, his hand occasionally jabbing backward for emphasis.
I rolled the ball onto the top of my toes and tapped it into the air, bouncing it up and down.
Out of the corner of my eye, I spotted the special edition RK running shoes coming toward me. I looked up so quickly I lost control of the ball and let it drop. Those light-colored eyes were focused in on my face, making me so incredibly self-conscious.
How the hell had I gone from someone who didn’t really pay a lot of attention to my looks, to suddenly asking myself if I should start slapping some makeup on?
Wait. Poop. Poop. Poop.
We’d been squatting right next to each other when he “changed” my tire, and that was close enough to see pores.
If I could go without makeup 90 percent of the time in front of practically everyone, I could do it in front of him. Easy. I might not be the one on the team with a cosmetics deal, but I wasn’t a troll either. And if I was, so what?
Okay, so maybe I wasn’t that above petty things, but beauty was way down the list of characteristics in life that really mattered to me.
I was a good soccer player and a pretty good person.
I repeated that to myself a few times before holding my head up a little higher.
That mattered more to me than whether or not I had a line of men who wanted to date me.
At least that’s what I kept telling myself.
I took a deep breath in through my nose and took in those hazel-green orbs straight on. “Yes?”
He tipped his head down at the ball, still looking me dead-on. It wasn’t the first time I’d talked to someone who looked at others so intensely; I’d been around high-strung self-confident people who didn’t know how to communicate in any other way. “It’s better if you do this….”
Kulti toed the ball to himself and started to move around me, making his way toward the goal as he spoke in a low voice that conveyed how tedious he found talking to be.
It made sense, even if it sounded like the words were getting ripped from his throat.
What he was saying and explaining made total sense.
When he was finished, he kicked the ball back toward me and walked off like nothing happened.
Reiner Kulti had just dribbled the ball around me effortlessly, despite not being able to land a few PKs recently.
I’d be a liar if I said that the hairs on my arms hadn’t responded to what I’d just witnessed.
Having him yell your shortcomings was one thing, but actually getting on the field and participating… Jesus Louise-us.
I rubbed my tongue over my teeth and took it all in for a second.
“Thanks!” I called to his retreating back. Was there a response? Of course not.
“What’s that look on your face for, Sally?” Harlow asked as she walked by.
“He just helped me.”
She gave me an impressed look. “Your bratwurst?”
I nodded.
“How about that? Maybe he’s finally getting his head out of his big ass and really pitching in around here.”
The fact that Harlow both noticed and commented on Kulti’s big, sculpted butt amazed and amused me. I snorted, and then I snorted again as we both took a quick peek at his retreating buns. They were pretty perfect. Time and gravity hadn’t affected them at all.
When we both looked back at each other a good fifteen seconds later, we shook our heads and said at the same time, “Nah.”
Some things were too good to be true.
ONE WEEK and two preseason games later, the man formerly known as Silence of the Lambs had branched out to make exactly three other demonstrations.
The second time had been again with me during another three-on-three minigame, and the other two times had been with two of the younger forwards on the Pipers.
The girls had stood there and just nodded as he moved around them.
It wasn’t like I’d done much better; I shouted out a “Thanks!” awkwardly both times.
But the point no one was missing was: he was helping. It was only a little, but something was something.
Were things still weird? Yes. No one really spoke to him except the staff—Grace hadn’t said anything to him since that argument they’d gotten into after Kulti had been ugly with the two Pipers. Mostly everyone gave him his distance and went about their way.
But it worked. We won all of our preseason games and life kept going for each of us.
“SEE YOU LATER!”
Jenny winked at me just as her phone rang and she took off toward her car.
I rubbed a hand over the back of my neck with a sigh.
Marc was already waiting for me at our next job, and I was incredibly tired.
Insomnia had kicked me in the ass hard the night before, and I’d stayed up way too late watching half a season of Supernatural.
Grabbing my bag off the grass, I swung it over my shoulder, ignoring the pain that shot through me at the movement.
Most of the girls had left already after practice finished, but I’d stayed and talked to Jenny about having dinner and a movie on Saturday.
We hadn’t spent too much time together off the field since practices had begun, and I couldn’t remember the last time I’d hung out with another girl outside of practice.
Maybe when I’d gone to the mall with Ceci almost two months ago?
I was busy trying to remember the last time I’d spent time with someone who wasn’t Marc or Simon, my brother’s other childhood friend, when I came up to the tall man standing at the curb in the parking lot.
It didn’t take more than a single brain cell to recognize who it was, but for the life of me I couldn’t figure out what the hell he was doing.
He ignored me as I walked past him. To be fair, I didn’t make an effort to say anything to him either on the way to my car.
But I dropped my stuff off in the trunk and got inside, still watching the German at the curb as he looked at his phone and then held it up to his face, over and over again.
In between he looked around the lot and went right back to the phone again.
I pulled out of the spot and thought about whether I’d feel bad if I kept going or not when he could have needed help.
How many times had someone helped me when I needed it, damn it?
Nerves squeezed my stomach as I pulled up alongside the curb and rolled the passenger window down, leaning over the center.
“Do you need help?” I asked, hesitantly.
Kulti looked up from his phone, the skin between his eyebrows already wrinkled in either annoyance or confusion that someone had stopped to do something so preposterous as to ask if he needed help.
Once he saw that it was me, he just blinked.
His eyebrows didn’t smooth out or anything like that, but with one last glance at his phone, he looked at me again.
I widened my eyes but kept my gaze on him. “Yes? Or no?”
He gave me a look I couldn’t interpret. “Could you give me a ride?”
Could I…?
An extra-nice person wouldn’t have asked where, but I had to get to work. “Where to?” I asked slowly.
“I believe it’s called Garden Oaks” was his answer. “Do you know where that is?”
Of course I did. Marc and I worked there every other week usually.
Garden Oaks was a nice neighborhood not exactly too far or too close by, and it was just that: a neighborhood.
A quiet sort of expensive neighborhood—at least for my taste, and the exact area where I’d picked him up from the bar.
It wasn’t where the superwealthy resided.
On my income, there was no way I could ever afford to live there unless I had five other roommates.
I smiled in response and nodded, pushing away my curiosity at what exactly he was doing in Garden Oaks. “Okay. Come on.”
He gave me a curious look but didn’t ask anything. Instead he got into the passenger seat, wordless and stiff. As soon as he was in, I was pulling out of the parking lot.
Was I taking him home?
The only answer to my mental question was silence, obviously. I hadn’t used the radio in forever and hadn’t plugged in my phone to the car’s stereo system in the distraction of having Reiner Kulti in my car. My dad was probably going to shit his pants when I told him.
Damn it. Poop. Poop. Poop.
I cleared my throat and made sure to keep my eyes on the road. “Do you need to call a towing company or something? I have a service on my phone in case of car trouble you could use.”
His attention was focused on the view outside the window. “No.”
All right. “Are you sure? I don’t mind.”
“I said no,” he replied forcefully enough that I felt it in my chest.
Jesus freaking Christ. All I was trying to do was help. What a prick.
Suddenly angry with myself for making an effort to be nice to someone who obviously didn’t want it, I clenched my mouth and kept my eyes forward.