Clipped by Love (Bellevue Bullies #2) Read online



  “Attagirl!” I holler as we hug up tightly. “Let’s do it again.”

  “That won’t happen again, bitch,” one of the players says as he passes by us. “I’ll be damned if I’m going to get beat by some cunt,” he adds, and Jace laughs.

  “The only cunt I see is you.”

  “Yeah, and if you haven’t noticed, she’s scored on you twice now. So really, who’s the bitch-ass cunt?” Markus says, skating toward him, venom in his eyes.

  “Fuck all of you,” he spits at us as he skates toward the bench.

  Like her bodyguards, they wait until he is on the bench before they start skating again. Going to the face-off, Baylor laughs. “You guys do know I can speak for myself, right?”

  “Shut up, Moore,” they both say, and I chuckle as I drop down, my blade on the ice.

  She may be able to speak for herself, but when those two, or even me, are around, she doesn’t need to. This is the way it’s been for a while now, and I don’t know why she is surprised by it. They are the three amigos, as everyone has started calling them. They are extremely close, and sometimes I get a bit jealous. Who wants their girl to be best friends with two dudes? Not me, but then I know they won’t try anything. They love her as a sister, nothing more, and plus, I know she loves me and only me. No, she hasn’t said it yet, but with each day that passes, I know she’s about to say it. I’m pretty damn sure, and I know she almost told me last night when I suggested we go away before the draft. Her eyes got so big and bright and full of happiness, but instead of saying it, she told me I was great.

  Great.

  Okay.

  Besides the fact she won’t admit it, I know that we need a vacation. I want us to clear our heads and go to Paris since my birthday is two weeks before. I get my trust fund that day, and after I pay some shit off for my mom, I want to take a trip. Who better to do that with than Baylor?

  Winning the puck, Baylor sends it back to Kuntz, who holds onto it as they get in position. Sending it up to Markus, he moves around the defense, shooting but getting denied. Baylor then shoots, missing, and when Jace tries, he misses too, and again on his second and third attempt. Finally, Vandy has possession, coming toward me and Kuntz. When they try to dump it in, I grab it out of midair, throw it down, and pass it up to McCarthy, who is rushing the goal. He pulls the goalie left, and then at the last second, shoots it over his catcher hand.

  I don’t like the dude, but I like when he scores. Tapping his helmet, we head off ice as the next line goes on. I sit next to Jace and he looks over at me, grinning through the cage of his helmet.

  “I’m fucking killing, dude,” he says, and I nod before squirting some Gatorade in my mouth. “The scouts love me.”

  “Don’t jinx yourself,” I say cautiously. “But you are playing your best game.”

  He grins then before looking out at the ice. When I think I’ve almost caught my breath, Coach calls their line, and Jace jumps over the boards, getting set up for the puck as Baylor skates to the far right, waiting for the defense to come up. When they go into the zone, the one player who was calling Baylor names is on her like white on rice. He throws his stick in her back, but she must not be bothered because she is basically taunting him with the puck. But then he gets a piece of the puck, sending it up to a forward. They split our defense, and when the puck goes to the back of the net, I slam my fist against the board.

  Fucking shit.

  “What the hell, Moore! Trying to get fancy and look what happens. Get your head out of your ass and shoot to win, not to impress! McMinn, what the hell? You’re playing too deep,” Coach starts, and then he is just screaming at them as I shake my head.

  “Well, someone isn’t getting laid,” Markus whispers to me, and I scoff.

  “Or that play was shit?” I suggest, and he nods.

  “Or both,” Jace adds in, and we all nod as the puck drops.

  My teammates shoot a few times, getting some really great looks, but nothing goes in. When Coach calls our line, we all hit the ice, taking the places of our teammates, but unlike them, we’re gonna score. I feel it in my bones. Taking the puck from Kuntz, I skate behind the goal as everyone lines up, ready to go. When Baylor cuts left past Jace, I send it up to her and she spins around the player who doesn’t like her—well, one of many—before sending it to Jace, who drops it to Markus, and he shoots quickly. The goalie blocks it with his right leg pad, giving up one hell of a rebound, but when Baylor goes for it, I see that the one guy is coming straight for her and he means to take her out. I can see it in his eyes.

  Before I can even move, to try to do who knows what, Jace cuts in front of him and the guy sends Jace through the air before he comes down hard on the ice. When he cries out, my chest feels like it’s caving in and I’m frozen in place. Holding onto his shoulder, he tries to get up but then withers to the ground again. He stands though as I reach him, his arm hanging loosely from his body, and I know it’s not good.

  “What hurts?” I pant, trying to figure out what to do.

  “My shoulder,” he cringes as a medic reaches him. “Fuck, Jay, it’s bad.”

  He then looks over at me, his eyes full of tears, and we both know the truth.

  His chances for the draft, at least for this year, are more than likely done for.

  When Jace and Jayden come home later that night from the hospital, everyone is waiting up for him to find out what happened. His arm is in a sling, and he looks drugged up as he slowly enters the house. Everyone has said he’s out, but I believe he’s okay. He has to be okay. I can’t have that on me, because if he’s out, it’s my fault. The guy was going for me, and Jace, he got in the way. I know it’s his choice, and he did what he thought was best, but if he’s out, then that’s it. He won’t go into the draft, and I will forever blame myself.

  “Verdict, Sinclair,” Markus calls out as he comes into the kitchen, leaning his hip to the counter.

  Shrugging his one shoulder, he cringes before saying, “Broken clavicle, out for three to six months.”

  My heart just sinks as everyone goes to shake his good hand and wish him well. I stay back though, against the counter as I watch, trying to figure out what I’m going to say. Is sorry even enough? He hasn’t looked at me, and I know that has to mean he is mad at me. He looks downright pathetic, his poor eyes red and his body visibly in pain. I feel horrible and I, no shit, want to trade places with him. It isn’t fair.

  When the kitchen starts to clear out, Jayden comes over to me and taps my hip. “Hey, you got my phone?”

  I nod, swallowing past my sobs as I reach in my back pocket to pull out his phone and keys that I had grabbed for him since he had gone with his mom and Jace midgame.

  “Thanks,” he says, taking them from me. “We won?”

  “Yeah,” I answer, blinking back my tears.

  “Hey,” he says then steps in front of me. “You okay?”

  No. Not even a little bit. Not only do I have this on me, but my dad reamed me, saying that I am distracted, that I don’t have my mind in the right place and I won’t make the draft with my game play. Mr. Fisher is coming to our next game, and if I don’t have my shit together by then, no telling what is going to happen. My interviews have gone well, they have, and some of them I felt really good about, but everyone is hesitant. I can see it on their faces.

  No one wants to take a chance on the girl.

  Ugh, my fucking lady parts. While I do not want a dick, I wish people would stop worrying about what is between my legs and on my chest and focus on how I fucking rock on the ice. That I can shoot harder than most boys. That I’m quicker, smarter, and that I am better. I know it, my dad does, and even my teammates know it, but still scouts and owners are nervous. It’s so frustrating, but I can’t worry about all that right now. Not with the bomb Jace just dropped on us.

  “Just upset,” I say, my throat thick with emotion. “It’s my fault.”

  Looking at me, puzzled, he asks, “Say what?”

  “It’s a