Delayed Penalty (Crossing the Line, #1)

"I'm from a small town in Oregon…Lebanon."

Callie nodded. She had no idea where that was. "I'm from here. Born and raised in Chicago."

"So have you always been a Blackhawks fan?"

"Yep." Callie gave another nod before taking a drink of her beer. "Been coming to the games since I was just a kid. My dad is a broadcaster." She gave an uninterested roll of her eyes to the glass high above the United Center where the press were.

A guy two rows behind us yelled Callie's name, apparently she knew him, and they talked for a few minutes. When they finished, she rolled her eyes. "His parents are assholes."

"He seemed nice," I offered, laughing at how laid back she was. I was feeling at home with her and could see myself being friends with her.

"Yeah, he is nice. His parents are still assholes, though." She gazed back at him for a minute. "His looks make up for it."

"He's…attractive." He was. It wasn't a lie. Not really my type, but he was cute.

"Killer body, yes, but his face would be better if it was framed by my thighs." Callie sighed.

"Do you know all the players with the Blackhawks?"

"Yeah, I know the starting four lines pretty well." She winked. "Some better than others. I know Leo, Remy, Travis, Cage and Evan. All good guys."

"So what's Evan like?" I enjoyed getting this answer from different people and was relieved to know they all had the same response.

"Evan is…well, he's an all heart type of guy." I knew that from his mom. "He'll stand up for his friends, but since I've known him, he hasn't really been outgoing like Leo. He's much more quiet and content with keeping to himself, eerie quiet sometimes. You'll never see him offering up interviews, and the media is lucky if they can get him to talk. He's a homebody. His first season in the NHL he spent a lot of time flying home to see his family. His only problem is women these days. They see him like a shiny prize, but he's far from that. He'd rather stay in the shadows."

That I could understand. Hell, I didn't even know he was a hockey player for the longest time.

"Oh," I said, feeling slightly uncomfortable that Callie knew him so well.

"Are you friends with Leo?"

"Yeah, and Remy, too. We all hang out quite a bit. I've been with both on a few drunken occasions." Callie chewed on her lip for a minute. "It's not like I had a relationship with either though. Remy isn't that type of guy, and Leo, well, we're too much alike. I'm afraid we would kill each other. He pisses me off sometimes."

The screams of those around us intensified as the players came on to the ice forming two circles on either side of the rink, one a mass of red, black, and white, the other white and blue. I looked out over the ice to where the players were now taking turns shooting pucks at the net. With the heavy pads and plastic masks over their faces, it was hard to tell who was who.

"The size of the skate doesn't match up with that one." Callie said, as if there was nothing wrong with dishing details on the team. She pointed to Colby Bentz, the guy skating past the glass with his stick raised over his head in what appeared to be some sort of stretch. "And that one, she pointed to number twenty-two with the name Gains on his jersey. "He's a biter."

"A biter?"

"Yeah, little fucker bit the inside of my thigh one night, and it looked like someone had suction cupped my thigh." Her eyes lifted from the action on the ice to mine. "The worst part was I had a vag appointment the next day. My gyno got a good look at the bite mark on the inside of my thigh. I'll never touch Tyler again."

"What did your doctor say?" I whispered, amused that she was talking about this.

Callie waved her hand around, spilling her drink on the kid in front of us, as if this wasn't embarrassing to talk about. "She doesn't judge me."

"Mase has been distracted lately," a man in front of us said. "His head isn't in it."

Callie shifted in her seat, her hips pushed forward, and she kneed the man in the back. "Oh, sorry," she said, clearly not sorry.

The man glared, undeterred by her.

I flitted my gaze over the players, trying to read the names on their jerseys as they moved, finally landing on number five: Masen. He was facing away from me, waiting for his turn at the net and casually passing a puck back and forth with his stick. When his turn came, he took off like a flash, crossing the ice smoothly, passing the puck from one side of his stick to the other, before launching it at the goalie. As he circled around that back of the net and toward the end of the line, he looked my direction, winking, as he skated lazily back and forth in the line.

Whenever I thought about Evan, the image of him naked was never far from my mind. And damn if that image wasn't there while watching him. It was so disturbing that I found myself squirming around in the seat, trying not to think about him.

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