Dirty Lover Excerpt

CHAPTER ONE

@HamiltonSteelhawks Happy birthday to our own personal Killer, defenseman Jayden Kelly! #GoHawksGo

@killerwallofsex Si-i-i-i-i-i-i-gh. Hope you’re celebrating in style.

Kelly’s Irish Pub, Stockwood, Ontario, May 7

In an ideal world, Jayden Kelly would miss his birthday party. But the world was far from an ideal place, a lesson he’d learned young, and his hockey team, the Hamilton Steelhawks had bowed out of the playoffs in round one. Although they’d taken Florida to six games, two weeks later, the defeat still stung.

So, he plastered a smile on his face and strode into the private party room at the back of his parents’ pub to a chorus of birthday greetings from various friends and relations. Handshakes, slaps on the back, a few “sorry about the playoffs.” Jayden could only concur in his mind and grin a bit harder.

His sisters had decorated with the usual balloons and streamers—in red, black for the Steelhawks, of course. A hand-painted banner complete with a metallic silver hawk with a hockey stick in its talons proclaimed “Happy Birthday” across the end wall. The bar in the main dining room kept everyone supplied with limitless beer, and a giant slab of birthday cake complete with twenty-seven candles stood ready on a side table.

His two kid sisters backed through the swinging doors from the kitchen bearing platters of nachos and chicken wings. While they set the bounty on the buffet table and hustled back to the kitchen, Jayden went to hug his mum. Although she colored over the gray on a regular basis, her mid-fifties were starting to show about her blue eyes, especially, in deepening creases. Tall for a woman, she still had to reach to plant a kiss on his cheek.

“Sit,” she insisted, shoving him toward the head table. From somewhere, possibly a deep pocket in her green bar apron, she produced a beer, and pressed the cold bottle into his hand. “You look better without all that hair.”

He rubbed his chin. She’d commented on every possible occasion since he’d come home, but he knew why she was commenting now. He’d shaved the playoff beard two weeks ago—the morning after the Hawks had been eliminated—and his skin was having trouble adjusting to the insult. This morning he’d left his razor on the sink, and given it up for a lost cause. “It grows back, you know.”

She wrinkled her nose.

He pulled at his beer. “Why don’t you sit, Mum?” For once.

“In a minute. I’ve got a few more things to check first,” she added before disappearing into the office.

A minute to her could easily turn into an hour or more.

Another body pushed through the kitchen doors and grabbed a beer out of the ice buckets on the food table. Cook’s jacket half unbuttoned over a white-tee shirt, his sister Maisie collapsed onto the banquette next to him, her head and upper back coming to rest on his shoulder. She pulled the black bandana off her dark brown hair and wiped her reddened face with it before tipping the bottle to her lips and swallowing a quarter of the contents in one go. “Shit, what a day.”

Jayden chinked his bottle against hers. “Hello to you, too.”

Maisie was probably as drained as their mum, as drained as Jayden himself might have felt after his last playoff game, but at twenty-one the fatigue didn’t weigh on her features as much. “You haven’t had to deal with some idiot sending his dinner back five times over nit-picky shit. Dad’s redoing it now.”

“Does he need a hand?”

“As if he’d let you anywhere near the stove.”

That was the problem. Dad didn’t let anyone near the stove—other than Maisie, and that was only because she’d shouldered her way into the kitchen like an opposing d-man trying to push Jayden off the puck. Not even Mum was allowed to spell him for more than a few minutes.

“How’s he doing, really? Is everything all right?” He hated asking the question, but being on the road for the better part of the year made that necessary. Between the restaurant and giving him all the opportunities as a child that had allowed him to pursue a professional hockey career, their parents had made a ton of sacrifices. A wave of guilt washed through him merely thinking about it, but at least he was home for the summer now. He’d do whatever he could to help.

Although, in his parents’ view, help might translate into nothing more than cheering his younger sisters on at their summer soccer league games. Since Quinn had turned sixteen, they wouldn’t even need to rely on him for rides anymore.

“You mean besides the demanding asshole who doesn’t know the difference between a small family operation and some high-end place in Toronto?” She’d probably meant that as a mood-lightener but the way her lips pressed together…

“What’s up?”

She took another long pull on her beer. “Same old shit, really.”

Same old shit being working long hours six days out of seven with no break in sight. But that was what happened when you couldn’t let go.

Another door opened, the one leading to the dining room this time, and yet another sister burst in. Rachel, his closest sibling in age, was dressed in the Kelly’s uniform. Her completely predictable green tee-shirt featuring a shamrock near her left shoulder fit her rangy body loosely over a pair of jeans and running shoes. She headed straight for the kitchen doors. “We’ve got a situation.”

Maisie leapt to her feet. “Don’t go in there. Dad’s already in a mood because he’s had to remake that plate three times now.”

Wait, what? “You said the customer sent it back five times.”

“That doesn’t mean Dad remade it every time.”

Rachel blew a loose strand of dark hair out of her face. “It’s the same party. He wants the manager, and he’s refusing to leave until he talks to someone in charge.”

For fuck’s sake. Signs warning of the early closing tonight for a family event had been posted on the doors for weeks now, if Jayden knew his mum. Not that their regulars needed the heads-up. Most people in town were well aware of Kelly family birthdays. Those were the only reason his dad ever locked the front door before midnight, although the family would occupy the restaurant until well past then.

He pushed to his feet. “Let me handle it.”

“Be careful,” Rachel warned. “He’s big.”

Jayden bit back a laugh. His six-four, two-thirty frame intimidated most opposing players so much he didn’t even have to fight—most nights. Not that he’d hesitate to cross-check the shit out of a guy if the ref wasn’t watching. Or drop them if someone nursed a death wish. His teammates didn’t call him Killer for nothing. “Like I’m not?”

He marched past his sisters into the main dining room, the jumble of dark wooden tables empty now, because the locals had a semblance of respect. Only the bar that lined the far wall was occupied—a customer, broad back and muscular shoulders facing the room. Yeah, that was big but nothing more than he faced on the ice on any given night. The guy was shoving what looked like a red fifty-dollar bill down the bartender’s rack.

Jayden only had a second to take her in, but some part of his brain registered a sheet of blonde hair, blue eyes, and a tight, cap-sleeved version of the Kelly’s tee-shirt that hugged some impressive curves. Absolute promise, absolute sin. Who the hell was she? Obviously, a new hire, because he would have remembered that. Shit, although she wasn’t his usual type, that luscious body would have tempted any man to make an exception.

What he mainly noted was her stance, though. Tense. Held in place, like she was forcing herself to remain compliant. Fuck it, no tip was worth that shit.

His hands tightened into fists. “This is a family establishment. You want to do that, go to Hooters.”

The guy at the bar turned. Holy fuck. The stupid highlights in his dark hair should have been Jayden’s first clue. That and the aviator glasses tucked into the pocket of his dress shirt.

Dalton fucking Nash.

The last time Jayden had seen him was on the ice in LA. He’d dropped the gloves then, but only because Nash had run the Hawks’ goalie—which had earned Nash an extra two for his idiocy. Hawks had scored on the ensuing power play to tie it up. Jayden’s bullet of a point shot to win it had only been icing on that particular cake. Still, what a way to come, just because that goal had eliminated Nash’s team from playoff contention.

That instance, though, was only the most recent bout of bad blood. Jayden and Nash went way back—all the way to juniors.

Nash stood. “I asked for the manager.”

“I guess you got me instead, dipshit.” Jayden advanced across the hardwood floor. “Want something comped? You’ll have to take it out of my fists.”

Nash crossed his arms and hiked his chin up, squaring off like they were on the ice. “Like you’d actually hit me.”

The blonde behind the bar gasped, the hissing sound bringing back to life the image of Nash shoving money down her cleavage. If that had been one of his sisters… and he knew deep down they, too, put up with shit like that for a little extra cash. Or at least Rachel did. Maisie would probably have head-butted the creep already.

Still, it was all kinds of wrong. He’d taught his sisters a thing or two about defending themselves against morons spurred on by too much beer. Perhaps he could do the same for this new girl. Yeah, he’d be down for that.

Later.

First, he had an asshole to deal with.

Jayden stepped closer, enough that he could look down on Nash, close enough to grab his shirt front if he wanted. Yeah, I’m bigger than you, what are you going to do about it? “Don’t push me.”

Nash paled under his California tan but his lips stayed curled in a smirk. “I’ll give you one-star reviews all over Yelp.”

Jayden bit back a laugh. “I always knew you were a pussy. If it keeps shitheads like you out of here, that’s a win in my books. But I guess you haven’t been winning much lately to know the difference.”

The moment that last sentence left his mouth, he regretted it. Under normal circumstances, he wasn’t one to rub an opponent’s nose in it once he had them down. But something inside had urged him to dig the knife in a little deeper.

Nash drew himself up. Maybe if he stood on his tiptoes he could look Jayden in the eye, but he didn’t press things quite that far. Instead, he dusted off the front of his shirt in long, exaggerated strokes. “We’ll see who wins here.”

He cast his gaze around the dining room, taking in the flat-screen TV that normally broadcast all the Steelhawks games, Jayden’s framed jerseys on the walls, first goal pucks, Pee Wee trophies, his hockey career to date summed up in a few knickknacks. Probably memorizing details for his one-star reviews.

But then he added, “Someone mentioned investing in the restaurant business. Just might be a good idea.”

“What the hell is that supposed to mean?” Jayden asked. Too late. Nash had already gone through the front door.

“Jayden?”

He turned back to the bartender. She had her phone in hand, no doubt ready to dial 911. “Wha—wait, how do you know my name?”

The answer to his question was obvious. Local boy makes good at hockey and all, on the flat-screen TV all winter, jerseys on the wall. Still, the way she said it felt awfully familiar, as if she knew who he was on a different level entirely.

He studied her more closely. Her face, idiot. Look at her face. Because goddamn, that body was a distraction. Most perfect pair of—Don’t finish that thought. Yeah, and that was definitely disappointment hiding in the depths of her eyes. She’d expected recognition. Long, golden-blonde hair that would make Nash and all his California surfer wannabe boys jealous, light blue eyes. But yeah, the particular tilt of that nose, the way her chin pointed, he’d seen that before.

“Caitlyn?” God, yes. Caitlyn Mackenzie, Rachel’s BFF from middle school. The last time he’d seen her, she’d had a mouth full of braces, and her complexion hadn’t done her any favors. No problem there now. Her skin presented a fresh-faced glow, enhanced only by the barest touches of makeup. It almost begged him to raise his fingers and test its softness for himself.

He curled his hand into a fist. No matter how good she looked—and she looked fucking good—she was one-hundred percent off limits.

He preferred his women older and experienced for good reason. Being burned did that to a man. No way he was about to allow himself to play with fire a second time, no matter if that fire was tempting as fuck.

#

Cait watched as recognition dawned and tamped down a wave of disappointment. Shit, no. She shouldn’t care. She was over him. She’d been over him for years. And just maybe she should be relieved he hadn’t recognized her on the spot. Her thirteen-year-old self had been nothing more than a bundle of awkwardness, too-long limbs, horsey teeth, and a face full of zits. That Cait would have drifted home all swoony over the way he’d just rescued her from that asshole.

Well, maybe thirteen-year-old Cait had a point.

When he’d left home to play junior hockey at the age of sixteen, Jayden Kelly hadn’t finished growing yet. Still, those blue eyes and wavy dark hair curling down to his collar had been enough to fuel hundreds of adolescent fantasies. He still possessed that same square jaw—only now it was darkened with a day’s worth of stubble.

Standing before her—no, he didn’t just stand. He loomed. He imposed. He filled the space with his presence. That alone was enough to make her throat dry, her palms tingle, and her thighs clench. God, and she’d thought watching his games on TV from behind the bar had been bad. Pushing and shoving with other guys after a whistle. Delivering a vicious cross-check. Smashing some other player into the boards. None of that had anything on being in the same room with him.

And he’d come running to her rescue like some hero…

Stop it, Cait. Say something. Just don’t say anything stupid. Because he made her feel stupid. He always had. Stupid and tongue-tied. Wasn’t she supposed to be all grown up and assured now?

She tucked her phone into the back pocket of her jeans and concentrated on wiping the counter. “He was fun.” Maybe she could hide the awkward moment behind a shield of flippancy. “Who was that, anyway?”

“Just some asshole. He plays for LA, but he lives around Toronto.”

“Well…. Thanks for coming to my rescue.”

“Whatever.” Shit, she was used to guys not looking her in the eye, but his gaze was fixed somewhere straight over her head. “It was nothing.” Then he grunted. Grunted. The sound projected her back in time ten years to that awkward thirteen-year-old whose crush had no idea she was alive.

Arrogant jerk. The younger version of Cait would never have thought that, at least.

“Everything all right in here?” Rachel called from the door to the back room.

“Yeah,” Jayden replied. “He’s gone now.”

“Good.” She advanced across the floor. “I’ll lock up then. Cait, leave that. Come back and join the party.”

She paused in the middle of putting that idiot customer’s empty beer glasses into the plastic tub to take into the kitchen. “I can clean up here. It won’t take long.”

Rachel turned the open sign over to closed and turned the key in the lock. “Yeah, and then you’ll sneak out and go home. Come join the party,” she insisted.

Without a further word, Jayden turned and went into the other room. Cait glared after him. “Are you sure?” None of the other non-family staff was in attendance, after all. “I don’t exactly feel wanted here.”

“Oh, him.” Rachel plucked the rag out of Cait’s hand and put it in the tub with the dirty glasses. “He’s been in a mood ever since his team was eliminated. Dealing with this idiot probably didn’t help. Don’t let it bother you.”

“If you say so.”

She followed Rachel into the party, grabbing herself a beer from a handy ice bucket. Jayden occupied a seat at the head table surrounded by his other sisters. He took a long pull from a brown bottle. Rachel steered her over to their table, where Cait gratefully sank into a chair. Damn, but it felt good to get off her feet.

“I saw that guy,” fourteen-year-old Harper was saying. Like the rest of the Kelly family, she was tall with dark hair and blue eyes. “He was smoking.”

Cait couldn’t disagree there. He had been, in an arrogant, assholish, knows-he’s-hot-shit kind of way. Like Jayden just now. Why did she have to be attracted to that?

“Hey.” Jayden leaned forward. “I don’t want to hear stuff like that from you.”

Harper stuck out her tongue. “It’s not like I’m ten anymore.”

“Yeah, well, older brothers don’t like those kinds of reminders.”

Harper eyed said older brother. “I’ve seen what your fangirls call you online. Wall of sex.”

A red flush crept up Jayden’s cheeks. “Stay off social media!”

Wall of sex. What an image that conjured. Cait could almost see what he looked like under his dark blue polo shirt, all hard muscle, pecs dusted with hair, a six-pack. She shook the thought away, because even a wall could be a complete jerk.

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