Pucked Read Online Free Page B

Pucked
Book: Pucked Read Online Free
Author: Helena Hunting
Pages:
Go to
Waters holding a pack of matches.
    “ Are you following me?”
    He shrugs and gives me a grin that could obliterate my panties. If I were dumb enough to allow myself to be affected in such a way. I’m not. Mostly.
    “ I thought you might like some company.” He flips open the matchbook and tears one free.
    I purse the cigarette between my lips. Alex strikes the match and curves his palm to protect the flame. He watches while I inhale, the embers burning orange as I take a shallow drag and cough.
    “ Shit!” Tears spring to my eye as I eye toke the smoke. Swearing like a sailor, I cover my eye with my palm.
    “ You’ve got a dirty mouth, eh?”
    “ Only when I try and smoke with my eyeball,” I say between coughs.
    Alex tosses the matches on a table and pats my back until I stop hacking up a lung. “Butterson doesn’t seem too happy.”
    Through the window I spot Buck and the Beave. She’s not pulling the selfie business, so he doesn’t seem to mind her hanging off his arm while he glares in our direction. He’s being a colossal douche tonight.
    “ Screw Buck.” I take a fake drag of my cigarette.
    Dimples appear in Alex’s cheeks as I exhale a cloud of smoke and choke back another cough.
    “ Do you even smoke?”
    I debate lying and decide against it. “Not really. I do it as a way to escape awkward social situations.”
    “ So you came out here to get away from me?”
    “ Not you in particular.”
    His tongue peeks out to sweep across his bottom lip. He’s got a nice mouth, even with the split in the corner. Remembering the way he took out the Atlanta guy makes me warm all over. Thoughts such as these are bound to get me into trouble. Hockey players are bad news. Especially ones as hot as he is.
    He’s looking at me expectantly. Dammit. He must have asked a question. My mind is wandering like a squirrel on Red Bull.
    “ Sorry, what?” I flick the ash on my cigarette.
    “ You were reading during the game—what book?” He sounds genuinely curious and a little offended.
    “ Tom Jones . I have to finish it for my book club on Tuesday.”
    Wow. Do I ever sound like a winner. He must have been watching me while he was in the time-out box.
    “ Fielding at a hockey game? Kind of cerebral with beer and violence, isn’t it?”
    I blink as if I’ve been high beamed with a flashlight. Alex knows who wrote Tom Jones , and he’s used the word cerebral in the appropriate context. I was right; he did get my Shakespeare reference. Alex Waters has singlehandedly obliterated my misapprehension regarding the inferior intellect of hockey players—with one sentence. In doing so, he’s become infinitely hotter than he was five seconds ago.
    “ You’ve read Fielding?” I take a step closer. My voice is low, as if I’ve switched into phone-sex operator mode.
    “ I-I-I—”
    It’s adorable. He’s wearing an expression I’m familiar with: panic merged with fear. I sport the same one when I inadvertently revealed my extreme nerdiness. Most nights I would much rather be at home curled up with a book or playing solitaire than out at a bar. Hence the excessive beer consumption and the fake smoking crutch.
    “ I think literacy is sexy,” I whisper.
    “ Me, too.” His dimples make an appearance.
    I have one of those rare moments where my brain fritzes and I do something completely out of character. It’s so outside of my personal code of conduct that I’ll probably relive the incident over and over trying to figure out what flipped the switch. For the time being, I’m blaming the beers, jetlag, and his accurate literary references.
    I grab Waters by the shirt and pull his face to mine.
    His mouth is soft and warm. The stubble on his chin scratches my skin, and I like it. I shove my tongue into his mouth. Well, that’s not true. I slide it across his bottom lip, touching the barely healed split, and he parts for me. Soft, warm, and wet meet more soft, warm, and wet. He tastes like chocolate and, more

Readers choose

Anna Wilson

Joanna Connors

Clara Parkes

David Brin

Dana Fredsti

Jan Karon

José Saramago

Adam Thirlwell and John K. Cox

Mary Elizabeth Coen