โYou boys are looking good this season.โ
Leaning back on the brown leather couch, I lace my hands behind my head. โIt feels like we finally have all the right pieces
in place to make a real run at it.โ
โEliโs game-winning goal last night,โ Eddie, our mutual therapist, begins. โBoy, that was pretty.โ
โYeah, he made sure to show me the replay more than a few times over drinks last night.โ
Maddison always plays better at home than on the road, so itโs no surprise heโs leading the league in points after our two-week home stand. But Eddie knows Maddison as well as I know my best friend, so thereโs no need to spell it out. Heโs always on top of his game when his family is in the arena.
I, on the other hand, thrive on the hate from visiting stadiums. Iโve become accustomed to being my own support system in every aspect of my life, hockey included.
โHow are you feeling about Christmas?โ
That question causes me to pause. Iโve tried to avoid thinking about the dreaded family holiday, but of course, Eddie was going to ask. Heโs been my therapist for almost a decade now. Our weekly sessions are typically just a conversation between two friends, but Eddie being Eddie, always knows when to find the root of something deeper going on. And him knowing every single sordid detail of my family history, itโs no surprise he brought this up with Christmas around the corner.
But I made a promise to him and myself eight years ago that I would be nothing but honest in our sessions. Brutal honesty has translated into every aspect of my life, and Iโve got to say, itโs incredibly freeing. Itโs whatโs helped me to overcome a lot of the inner demons I was battling when I was younger.
โIโm dreading it. I donโt even know what weโll talk about. Lindsey wonโt be there to act as a buffer, and I wish I wouldโve bailed and made up some excuse instead.โ
โThis could be a good chance for you and your dad to talk, Zee. Heโs clearly making an effort by visiting you.โ
โThatโs what Logan said.โ
โYeah, well,โ Eddie laughs. โLogan should probably rethink her career and join my field.โ
Since we were in college, Maddison and I have shared the same therapist, and Eddie has jokingly offered to pay half his salary to Logan for keeping our heads on straight when we arenโt in his office.
โWhatโs holding you back from having an honest conversation with your dad? You do a great job at it with everyone else in your life.โ
โIโm not angry at everyone else in my life.โ โWhy are you angry with your dad?โ โEddie, you know why.โ
โRemind me.โ His favorite tactic. He knows exactly why and doesnโt need recapping. He just wants to see if I remember why.
โBecause he abandoned me the same way my mother did. At the same fucking time. He buried himself in work, and I was left alone with no one.โ
โHave you ever asked him why he did that?โ
โI donโt need to ask. I know why. He didnโt love me enough to be the dad I needed.โ
Eddieโs inhale is deep and resigned. โWhat do you think, since the two of you will be alone this weekend, you ask him about what happened in those last years of high school?โ
Quickly shaking my head, I tell him no. โI donโt care anymore. Iโve distanced myself from the situation, and I love myself enough that I donโt need his love or anyone elseโs for that matter.โ
โZee.โ Eddieโs head falls back against the gray headrest of his chair. โFor the love of God, please tell me that after eight years of us working together, you realize thatโs not true.โ
Silence overtakes the pristine counseling office thatโs been my safe haven for years now.
โDo you not think youโre worthy of love?โ Eddie pushes his rimless glasses up the bridge of his nose, his ankle slung over the opposite knee, and his hands folded together. If you opened up your dictionary to the word therapist, Iโm pretty sure youโd find a picture of Eddie in his fucking sweater vest.
Clearly, Iโm avoiding his question.
โDo you not think youโre loved?โ he rephrases.
โI think a few people love me. Maddison, Logan, my sister. But I donโt know if anyone else would love me if they saw the real me.โ
โWho is the real you?โ Again, Eddie knows this answer.
Rolling my eyes, I remind him. โSomeone who cares about his best friends. Someone who is mentally strong because Iโve worked hard for that. Someone who only gets in fights on the ice because Iโm protecting my people. Someone who actually spends more time being an uncle than I spend with all the women people think Iโm with.โ
Eddie continues to nod, all the while scribbling notes on his pad of paper, just as he has for the last eight years.
โSomeone whoโs afraid to lose the image portrayed for him because people love that guy. I donโt know if theyโll love the real guy, and I donโt know if Iโm willing to find out.โ
โYouโve always been my most honest client, Zee, but youโve been lying to the entire world about who you are. For someone who never lies, thatโs a pretty big one.โ
โEddie,โ I awkwardly laugh. โItโs Wednesday morning. Getting pretty heavy for a Wednesday morning.โ
โItโs therapy. What did you expect?โ Of course, he wonโt let me deflect with humor. He knows me better than that.
โDo you want to be loved?โ
Damn. Heโs hitting with all the hard questions today. I havenโt had enough caffeine for this. Hell, I havenโt had enough whiskey for this.
โI think I took that option off the table for myself a long time ago.โ โZee, youโre twenty-eight. You could be eighty-eight, and still change
directions. Do you want to be loved?โ Silence.
โDo you want to be loved?โ
Outside street noises fill the quiet office as I stay mute. โZee, do you want to be loved?โ
โYes! Fuck.โ Throwing my head back on the couch behind me, I close my eyes, scrubbing my palms over my jawline.
Eddie isnโt a typical therapist, at least not to me. Heโs kind of like a life coach at this stage in our relationship, and itโs real fucking annoying.
But the truth is, I do want to be loved, and thatโs scary to admit. Itโs a lot easier to say you donโt want to be loved when no one loves you.
โDo you want to be loved for who you are or for who people think you are?โ
โFor me.โ
โThen why havenโt you let anyone know who that is?โ
โBecause Iโm scared.โ And there it is. The root of it all. Iโm fucking terrified for my fans or anyone else to see the real me. The persona Iโve worn for the last seven years in the league has signed my massive checks. Iโm afraid to lose it. Iโm afraid to lose my contract. Iโm afraid to be released by the team and city where my best friends live.
My own parents didnโt love the real me enough to stick around. Why would I expect anyone else to?
โBeing vulnerable and authentic is scary, man. Terrifying. But to the people who matter to you, the ones youโve shown your true self to, they love you unconditionally. Why not let others love you unconditionally too? At least give them a chance to.โ
Damn, my chest feels tight. And not like a โpanic attackโ tight, but like a โthat hit me like a ton of bricksโ and โI know heโs rightโ kind of tight.
โYouโre right.โ
โGod, that feels good to hear.โ Eddie wears a satisfied smile. Smug bastard. โHow about this week you work on being your authentic, vulnerable self with someone who only knows the mediaโs version of EZ and not the real Zee. Maybe your dad?โ
โNot my dad.โ
โOkay.โ Eddie puts his hands up in surrender. โBut someone. Someone who thinks they know the real you but has no clue. Show them who you really are.โ
โAnd if they donโt like the real me?โ
Eddie ponders a moment. โThen Iโll double my donation to Active Minds, and Iโll donate four sessions a week to your kids instead of just the
two I planned on.โ
โDeal,โ I say quicker than he could take his words back.
If being vulnerable with someone gives me a chance to add four more weekly sessions to the quickly growing hours weโve gathered from doctors and therapists around the city, then I will.
The clock on the far wall reads ten after the hour. โWe went over again.โ
Eddie shrugs his shoulders. โYou can afford it.โ
Standing, we hug each other. As I said before, weโve been doing this shit for eight years. Eddie is an integral part of my life and a real friend. Heโs family, which is why he calls me by the name the most important people in my life use, and not by the one my parents gave me.
โYouโre coming to the gala next month, right?โ
Eddie walks me to the office door, opening it. โOf course. I couldnโt be prouder of you and Eli. I remember when you two were just a couple of arrogant little shits in college. Now, look at you.โ
โNow, weโre two arrogant grown-ass men.โ โI wouldnโt miss it for the world.โ
โBlack-tie,โ I remind Eddie, pointing an accusing finger at him.
The black-tie dress code was my idea. But fuck it. I love having an excuse to dress up. Not to mention, I look fine as hell rocking a tux.
โIโll send you the bill for that too.โ
The small cafรฉ below Eddieโs office is my typical stop on a Wednesday morning. After our sessions, Iโm always drained. I grab my usual black coffee with two sugars and continue the short walk back to my apartment complex.
The late November chill hits me as soon as I walk outside, so I pull my beanie lower to cover my ears. The streets of downtown Chicago are bustling with bodies, needing to get from point A to point B, and thankfully, with the combination of keeping my head down and them being too busy to notice, I go unrecognized.
Turning the corner two blocks from my place, I stop in my tracks, causing the traffic of people to have to move around my body as I take up plenty of space on the sidewalk.
And Iโm rooted in place because just ahead, thereโs a head full of chestnut curls, though today theyโre thrown in a bun with a yellow bandana
wrapped around them. Stevie is sitting on the chilly cement curb, knees to her chest and head in her hands.
The amount of space that girl has been occupying in my head lately is a bit concerning. What I thought was going to be a one-night stand has turned into me endlessly hoping for a repeat round, but over the last few weeks and the few short road trips weโve had since I saw her on delayed Halloween, Stevie has kept her distance.
Itโs annoying.
Even from a block away, I can see her back slightly vibrate before she looks up and frantically wipes her cheek.
No, no, no. I donโt do crying. CorrectionโI donโt do chicks crying. Especially ones that Iโve been with before. Comforting adds to the intimacy factor Iโd like to stay away from, but apparently, no one told my feet that because without realizing it, theyโve carried me right to the sad flight attendant sitting on the curb.
Stevieโs head is buried back in her arms, not knowing Iโm standing next to her as I eye the ground in contemplation. My pants cost more than some peopleโs weekly salary, but here I am, sitting my ass on a disgusting curb in the middle of disgusting downtown Chicago.
โYou following me?โ Nudging my shoulder into hers, I hope the humor will dissipate whatever the hell is going on right now.
It doesnโt.
Stevie looks up from her folded arms, her blue-green eyes rimmed in red. Her freckled nose is swollen and pink, and the sadness sheโs wearing couldnโt be more obvious.
โOh God.โ She turns away from me, using the sleeve of her oversized flannel to wipe her nose and cheeks. โYou should go. I donโt need you to see this.โ
โAre you okay?โ
โYep.โ She inhales a deep breath, trying to compose herself, her face still turned from me. โTotally fine.โ
โWell, thank God. Because how embarrassing would that be for you if I caught you crying on a curb.โ
Bringing my coffee to my lips, I hide my smile as she turns back to look at me, the two of us sharing a laugh. And her laugh sounds nice. A lot better than the sniffling she was trying to hide.
This time itโs my knee nudging into hers. โWhatโs going on?โ
She readjusts the tiny gold hoop in her nose that got messed up when wiping it on her shirt sleeve. โA dog died.โ
โYour dog?โ My heart drops a bit for her.
โNo.โ She shakes her head, throwing a thumb over her shoulder.
Craning my neck around and upward, I read the sign on the run-down building behind us. SDOCโSenior Dogs of Chicago.
โI volunteer here, and one of our dogs died. He was twelve, and it was time, but it makes me sad that he was here and not at home with someone who loved him.โ
Oh, fuck. This isnโt good. Stevieโs nickname is ironic because sheโs never shown a sweet side to her. Not once. And now, sitting on this curb, she decides to tell me sheโs actually a total sweetheart? I donโt know if Iโm ready for that to be true.
โWell, did you love him?โ
โOf course. But itโs not the same. He deserved his own home with a warm bed and an owner who loved him. They just want someone to love unconditionally, but instead, theyโre stuck here.โ
Unconditional love. Whatโs going on with the universe today that those two words are being thrown my way twice before noon?
โHave you ever been in love?โ Stevieโs eyes are wide and curious, her question completely sincere.
Suddenly my chest feels tight, and words have evaded me because the topic of love should not be up for discussion with the last chick I had sex with.
โNot that kind of love.โ Stevie playfully rolls her eyes. โWe all know youโre already in love with me.โ
There she is. A bit more of her wild energy takes over, the sadness leaving from the air around us.
โCome on, Armani.โ She stands from the curb, holding her hand out for mine. โYouโre going to fall in love today.โ
โThese pants are Tom Ford, sweetheart.โ I put my hand in hers, letting her believe sheโs helping me up, but sheโs not doing shit as I stand from the curb on my own.
โWell, they could be from Walmart for all I care. It doesnโt matter the brand name. Theyโre about to be covered in dog hair.โ
Typically, thatโd be a hell no for me, but instead, I find myself wearing too big of a smile and following the curly-haired girl into the run-down
building behind us.
The small entryway is bright and cheerful, each wall a different color. But you almost canโt see the paint due to the countless Polaroids overtaking the wall. New owners with their new dogs, smiles as big as could be, reminding you of the happy times this building has seen.
A large desk sits at the end of the entryway, and when I turn the corner, my eyes widen in shock. The next room over is littered with dogs. Some big, some small, some sprawled out on the countless dog beds, others being playful with each other.
But the thing I notice most of all is the way Stevie lights up when she opens the small gate separating the entryway from the pups. When she steps inside, her smile overtakes her face as a handful of older dogs come right to her, sniffing and licking, tails wagging.
They clearly love her as much as she loves them.
โYou okay?โ An older woman stands on the far side of the room. When Stevie nods, the lady shoots her a half-smile before taking off behind a door, leaving us alone.
โCome on, fancy pants.โ Stevie opens the gate for me. โThey arenโt going to bite.โ
Them biting me is not what Iโm worried about. Iโm a big and commanding guy. Most dogs fear me, not the other way around.
What I am worried about is seeing this sweet side to Stevie. Iโm not sure if Iโm ready to know this part of her exists. Iโve already been too distracted by her body that I canโt get enough of, not to mention her smartass mouth. I donโt know that I can handle finding her soul attractive too.
Setting my coffee down on the front desk, I enter the large room full of dogs. The space is bright and eclectic, with all different colored rugs covering the floor. Big pillows are thrown about, and even more dog beds are positioned around the room. The far wall is lined with crates, where a couple of pups have decided to chill, regardless of their crate doors being open for them to come out and play.
A few dogs rush me, sniffing my legs and shoes. Not as many as the number surrounding Stevie right now, but still more than I assumed. I thought theyโd be intimidated by my commanding presence. But it seems like theyโre just excited to have a visitor.
โThatโs Bagel.โ Stevie motions to the Beagle sniffing my Louboutins. โBagel the Beagle? Genius.โ
โHe got here last month, but he already has a new home.โ Stevieโs voice drips with excitement and pride. โHe gets picked up tomorrow.โ
Plopping herself on one of the plush floor pillows, she sits crossed- legged as dogs rush her face, licking and sniffing, tails moving at a mile a minute. She doesnโt shoo them away. Instead, she embraces all their love and gives it right back to them in the form of belly rubs and scratches behind their ears.
Once theyโve settled from the commotion, most of the pups leave, going back to whatever they were doing before we walked in. Stevie turns my way, lifting a questioning brow when she notices me standing still by the gate before she motions to the ground.
Fuck it. This entire outfit is either going to need to be thrown out or dry- cleaned anyway. Stevieโs secondhand flannels and baggy jeans are making a whole lot more sense right about now.
I take a seat across from her with enough room between us that I can stretch out my long legs. A couple of dogs sniff my ears and head, but theyโre unbothered by my presence for the most part.
โSo.โ Looking around the brightly colored room. โWhat is this place?โ
A small white dog finds its way onto Stevieโs lap, curling up between her legs. โThis place is a rescue shelter for senior dogs. Well, itโs for all dogs, really. But we advertise for senior dogs because theyโre usually not chosen first, and we want them to be.โ
โHow often do you come here?โ
โWhenever you guys are playing at home. I try to come here as much as possible when we arenโt traveling.โ
Looking up from the dog sheโs snuggling, she shoots me her most genuine smile. Her freckled cheeks arenโt as flush as they were when she was crying outside, and her blue-green eyes are much more bright and clear.
To be honest, in the couple of months Iโve known her, Iโve never seen her this happy. She sure as hell doesnโt look this excited to be on the airplane with us.
โWhy donโt you work here full-time? You clearly love it.โ
And why am I suggesting that? As much as I wanted her off the plane two months ago, I canโt imagine traveling without her to drive me insaneโ in more ways than one.
โBecause unfortunately, adulthood costs money, and they canโt afford to pay me here. They can barely afford to keep the doors open.โ
I tried to avoid lingering my stare on the cracks forming on the walls or the water spots in the corner of the ceiling, but Iโd be lying if I said I didnโt notice them. Not to mention the baseboards that could use a fresh coat of paint or the squeaky hinges on the front door that should probably be replaced.
โNot enough adoptions going on?โ
โWe survive off donations. Our adoptions donโt cost much because we donโt want to deter people from adopting. But even so, I donโt think many people know this little building is even here. Or if they do, it seems like theyโd still rather buy a puppy than bring an older pup home.โ
A big yellow lab mix comes over, licking my ear. Itโs pretty gross, but instead of wiping it away, I scratch his wiry hair under his collar, pulling a content groan from the big guy.
โThatโs Gus. Cheryl, the woman who was in here earlier, sheโs the owner of the shelter, and thatโs her dog.โ
โHeโs a big guy.โ
โHeโs a lazy guy,โ Stevie laughs.
โHow many do you have at home?โ
Her pretty smile falls slightly. โNone. My brother, the one I live with, heโs allergic.โ
โWell, thatโs a shame. I figured the only reason you keep wearing those disgusting sweatpants is because youโre at home cuddling with dogs all day.โ
โHa ha.โ Stevieโs forced laugh is followed by a small genuine one.
Her cute giggle draws the attention of a black and tan Doberman who was sleeping in their crate. The giant dog, which admittedly looks a bit scary even to me, exits their crate, pulling a deep stretch, ass in the air.
The Dobermanโs pointy ears and piercing eyes fixate right on me, and Iโm not going to lie, for a moment, it looks aggressive as hell, like it wants to bite my head off. And Iโm not sure being on the ground, face level, is the best idea.
Stevie follows my line of sight. โThatโs Rosie. Donโt let her fool you. Sheโs the sweetest thing in the world. She just looks intimidating, but sheโs not. Sheโs a marshmallow.โ
Rosie takes two small steps, her head slightly surveying the room.
her.
โAnd Iโm her favorite.โ Stevie opens her arms for Rosie to come greet
Instead of going to her, Rosie takes a few slow intimidating strides
towards me.
She walks right between my open legs. Her yellow-brown eyes are determined and focused, staring lasers at my own. I donโt care what Stevie said about her not being intimidating. Rosie is intimidating.
That is, until she falls into my lap, burying her head into my thigh before flipping over onto her back, legs flailing in the air, asking for belly rubs.
I canโt help but laugh as both my hands massage her belly. โYouโre her favorite, huh?โ
โI hate you.โ
Rosieโs big head turns to look up at me, her intimidation tactic wholly gone. She looks a little in love, and I think I might be too.
โHow long has she been here?โ
โAlmost a year. Last Christmas, she was dropped off when her owners had a baby, and they decided to give Rosie up. Said they were worried about her being around kids, which is total bullshit. She would never even hurt a fly.โ
Snaking my arm under her, I wrap Rosie up like a baby. She uses my bicep as a pillow while I give her scratches until she eventually falls asleep.
Big softie. Her previous owners are assholes. โShe is a marshmallow.โ
โSheโs kind of like you,โ Stevie notes, pulling my attention back to the curly-haired flight attendant. โYouโre pretty soft on the inside too, Mr. Zanders.โ
โPlease. Iโm scary as fuck.โ โSure thing, Elsa.โ
Looking back at the giant Doberman sleeping in my arms, I canโt help but wonder who the hell wouldnโt want this dog and why the fuck sheโs at a shelter. Sheโs perfect.
โHey, Zanders?โ โHmm?โ
โThatโs what it feels like to be loved.โ