“Strong-minded?” He laughed softly.
“Yes. What’s funny?”
“Nothing.” He turned on his side, cringing from the pain in his ribs, and leaned up on an elbow. “You know he and I will work this out, right?”
“Why would you even want to? Look what he did to your face.”
“Babe, I get beat on all the time. That’s hockey. We settle shit with our fists. That fight between Liam and me needed to happen.”
Bennett’s eye was still swollen and purple. I couldn’t understand why he wasn’t bothered by Liam’s low opinion of him. Or, apparently, his trip to the police station today and the community service he now had to do.
“He owes us both an apology.”
“For standing up for his sister?”
My eyes bulged with anger as I sat up in bed. “I didn’t need standing up for, Bennett!”
“I know that. But that’s how Liam is. He cares about very few people, but the ones he loves, he loves with everything.”
“He thinks you’re not good enough for me.”
“You’re his sister. No one’s good enough for you in his eyes. And since your dad split when you guys were young, he probably feels a fatherly responsibility to look out for you.”
I had to ask him the question that was nagging at me. “Does he know something I don’t? Do you see other women on the road?”
“No. There haven’t been any other women since you.”
I exhaled with relief. “So what are you saying? That I should just forget what he did today?”
“No, but you should forgive him for it. He’s my best friend and I know him well. He shoots from the hip. Hell, I kind of like that about him. And life’s too short for holding grudges.”
His expression was earnest. I sensed a deeper meaning to what he was saying, but I didn’t want to push. I liked knowing Bennett was opening up to me because he wanted to, not because I was forcing him to.
“Okay,” I said. “I’ll think about it.”
“How many people in this world do you love?”
“Is that a rhetorical question?”
“Nope. How many? Would you need both hands to count them?”
I thought about it for a second. There was my mom, Liam, the baby, and maybe . . . Bennett. Not that I was ready to admit that. I cared for other people, but love was a strong word. My mom had no family other than me, Liam, and her husband. My circle was small.
“I could count them on one hand,” I admitted.
“Then don’t let this come between you and one of those people. I think we’ve got something great going, and I don’t want this clouding our relationship.”
I smiled and met his eyes. “We have a relationship.”
“I know, right? I can call you my girlfriend now.”
“I’m still calling you my baby daddy.”
“Hey, works for me.”
I leaned down and kissed him gently. “I’ll call my brother tomorrow and make nice.”
“Thanks.”
I switched off my bedside lamp and snuggled my back against Bennett’s chest.
“What a day,” I said. “A marriage proposal, a fistfight, and a trip to the police station. If I didn’t feel weird going to the shooting range while pregnant, I’d have relieved some stress there earlier.”
“And I thought today’s excitement would come from finding out the baby’s sex,” Bennett said, wrapping an arm around my middle.
“We’ll just have to wait a little longer.”
“I like Wren, by the way.”
“Yeah?” I said. “She’s great. A little intimidating at first, but great.”
“Hey, when Riley asked you to marry him, did you tell him you’ve got a man?”
“I did.”
“Good.”
I snuggled closer against him and he made a low groaning sound.
“You keep rubbing your ass against my dick like that and I’m not letting you go to sleep.”
I smiled, my eyes drifting closed. “Tonight, I’m too tired. But I think we should find out if morning sex is our thing in about eight hours.”
“It’ll be our thing.”
“You think?”
“I know.”
Bennett
Vereshkova was a beast. He played hard but also seemed to take everything in stride.
“Your wrist okay?” he asked during a water break from ice time.
“Yeah, it’s wrapped.”
“Orion’s gonna kick my ass if you hurt it worse than it already is.”
“I won’t.”
He held his water bottle over his face and squeezed, letting the cool liquid run down his cheeks and into his hair.
“Your mechanics are great,” he said. “What’s holding you back?”
I pulled away the towel I was wiping my face with and gave him a confused look. “Isn’t that what you’re supposed to tell me?”
“It’s nothing to do with your game. I think it’s mental.”
“Mental?” I couldn’t keep the defensiveness from my tone. “I’ve never wanted to make it to the next level so much. I’ve got a kid on the way.”
“Maybe that’s it. Too much other stuff on your mind to stay focused on your game.”
“I’m focused.”
He smiled. “Where’s the fire, man?”
“Excuse me?”
“Some motherfucker called me unfocused, I’d clock his ass.”