Mile High (Windy City Series Book 1) By Liz Tomforde NovelM80078 Mile High (Windy City Series Book 1) Chapter - 3
Mile High (Windy City Series Book 1) Chapter - 3
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Mile High (Windy City Series Book 1) By Liz Tomforde
Throwing my suitcase on the opposite bed in my hotel room, I plug my charger into the wall, powering my phone. I forgot to charge it last night, so it died halfway through the flight to Denver.
As Iām waiting for it to light up, I strip off my god-awful uniform, hang it in the closet, and dig out my comfiest sweats. Iām all about comfort. Give me sweatpants, leggings, and oversized flannels every day for the rest of my life, and Iāll die a happy woman.
The polyester/wool mixture of my flight uniform is stiff and unflattering, and my first mission after every flight is to get it off as quickly as possible.
My phone dings on my nightstand, and without looking, I already know who it is. Itās the only person I canāt go a day without speaking toāmy best friend. Ryan is the only person who chooses me first, above everyone else, day in and day out.
His name with the twin dancing emoji next to it confirms who I already knew it was.
Ryan: How was your first flight?
Me: It was good! Hockey boys are niceāfor the most part.
I leave out the fact that Iām working for the NHLās biggest diva this season.
Ryan: Those Canadians, am I right? But you know you miss flying basketball.
Me: Idk Ry, have you seen a hockey manās ass?
Ryan: Proud to say I have not and never will.
Me: Speaking of basketball, are you ready for your game tonight?
Ryan: Absolutely. Gonna miss having you in the stands, though. I need my good luck charm.
Ryanās basketball season and my flying season have always overlapped, and now that Iām working with hockey, their schedules are the same. I havenāt made too many of his games since he went pro, but I always make sure to watch him however I can. Iām his self-proclaimed good-luck charm, but seeing as the Chicago Devils havenāt had a winning season in three years, I donāt think my charm is working too well.
Me: Iāll be watching. Thereās a sports bar a few blocks away. Iām sure theyāll have it on TV.
Ryan: Or you could watch it from your hotel roomā¦alone.
A laugh slips from my lips. Ryan knows he has no control over who I spend my time with, but he may be the most protective brother of all time.
Me: Too protective.
Ryan: Iām your older brother. Itās my job.
Me: Three minutes older.
Ryan: Still counts. Gotta get to the arena. Be safe. Love you, Vee.
Me: Love you. Kick ass.
As soon as I exit out of our messages, I redownload my Tinder app. I never use the apps when Iām home, but one of the perks of spending a good amount of time on the road is the casual hookup with a stranger.
I feel more confident in bed when itās someone I know Iāll never see again. I donāt worry too much about how my body looks or how soft I feel under someone random. I get to let loose and feel good with the sole purpose of getting off, knowing theyāll never lay eyes on me again.
I swipe right on a few attractive men, but I swipe left on even more who are too handsome for their own good. And Denverās men seem to be more beautiful than other cities I visit, so I swipe left on more than usual, making sure I donāt get connected with someone I find to be too attractive.
I deal with enough insecurities on my own that Iām working to overcome. I donāt need to add batting out of my league just to get laid.
So, I stick to men I find attractive enough, but not so much so that their typical type are girls who may as well be on the covers of magazines.
Within a matter of minutes, almost everyone I swiped right on matches with me, giving me a boost of confidence. Shopping through my options, I land on a guy who lives outside of the city, with his bio reading, āJust looking for a hookup.ā
I love the honesty, and thatās precisely what Iām looking for too.
As Iām drafting my extremely charming and witty opening line, thereās a knock at my hotel room door.
Dropping my phone on the bed, I throw a sweatshirt over my head before squinting through the peephole, finding my other new coworker, Tara, on the other side.
āHey.ā I swing my door open with a smile.
āCan I come in?ā she asks without much expression on her face, which makes me worried. But also, I just worked an entire flight with her, and not once did she smile unless it was directed at one of our passengers.
āOf course.ā I usher her in. She takes a seat in the chair at the desk as I plop myself back on the edge of my bed.
āHow was your first day?ā Tara asks.
Oh, okay, so she is being nice. āIt was great. Everyone seems really cool.ā
āI heard youāve worked with professional athletes before.ā
āYeah, I was flying a basketball team out of Charlotte the last few seasons, but this is my first time working for a hockey team.ā
I assumed that would start a conversation about my past work experience, as most people flip out with excitement when they learn I worked for a professional basketball team, but instead, it leads her into the real reason sheās hereāto try to intimidate me.
āWell, this isnāt your last job, so I want to reiterate some rules.ā
And here we go.
āFirst of all,ā Tara begins. āIām the lead flight attendant, which means this is my airplane, my crew, and my hockey team. I donāt care that you have experience in the athletic charter business. Iām the one in charge here.ā
āOf course,ā I respond without a second thought. I know these types of girls. Iāve worked with them before. They want to be seen, they want to be known by the clients, and Iām not one for a power struggle. I couldnāt care less whoās in charge on the airplane. Iām just here to do my job. Get in, get out, and get paid. Thatās all this is to meāa job.
āIāll be up in the front with the coaching staff all season while you and Indy run the back of the plane with the players. But I want to reiterate. There will be no fraternizing with any of our clientsāplayers, coaches, or staff. If you do, youāll be fired. Do you understand?ā
āYes,ā I confidently state. Sheās trying to intimidate me, but thatās not going to work.
āIām in charge here,ā she continues. āAnything the team needs goes through me.ā
āSounds good.ā
āI donāt know how your last job worked, and I donāt care. Anything goes down with you and someone on board, especially a player, youāre fired.ā
Does she not realize she already said that? Also, why is she so worried about me? Theyāre not my type, and Iām not theirs.
āGot it.ā
āGlad weāre on the same page.ā She stands from the desk and begins to head towards my door. āOh, and Stevie.ā She turns back to face me, her expression filled with the most faux concern Iāve ever seen. āMaybe think about getting a bigger uniform. The one you wore today was awfully tight, and I donāt want the guys on board getting the wrong idea.ā
A lump in my throat forms as she exits my room. I know it was tighter than I wanted it to be, but thatās just because my weight fluctuates all the time. I wasnāt doing it on purpose. I wasnāt trying to wear a body-hugging outfit in an attempt to lure in some attention. But my body isnāt a size two, and everywhere you could possibly find a curve, Iāve got some.
On the other hand, Taraās uniform was tailored to hug her narrow frame, and the top couple buttons were unnecessarily undone, causing the cleavage from her pushup bra to be front and center. It was especially noticeable when she would bend forward in front of someoneās seat to ask what they wanted to eat or drink, but you donāt see me saying anything to her.
Regardless, Tara throwing my biggest insecurity in my face puts a damper on my night, and I suddenly have no desire for anyone to see my naked body, regardless of the fact Iāll never have to see them again.
An alert pings on my phone. A message from that guy on Tinder asking what my plans are for the night, but I donāt respond. I delete the app entirely, over the whole idea.
Instead, I change into a pair of leggings, an oversized thrifted tee, and a flannel, finishing my outfit off with my Air Force Ones. I grab my purse, sling the strap across my body, and head out the door to the bar I found a few blocks away so I can watch my brotherās home opener of the season. All while I am scarfing down on a burger and a beer.
Two beers.
Probably three beers.
Fuck it, letās not put a limit on it. However many beers itāll take to make me forget about how shitty I feel.
The walk is nice with Denverās October breeze blowing my curls away from my face. This bar is unexpectedly packed tonight. Itās a Monday night, and none of Denverās teams are playing, so I didnāt expect a sports bar with wall-to-wall TVs to be as crowded as it is. But I thankfully find a solo seat at the bar and sidle up, making myself comfortable to spend the next three or so hours watching my brotherās game.
āWhat can I get you?ā The bartender leans forward a little more than necessary. But heās easy on the eyes, so I let it slide.
āDo you have an IPA on draft?ā
He gives me an impressed glance. āSanitasā Black IPA. Twelve or sixteen ounces?ā
What kind of question is that? āSixteen, please.ā
As he comes back with my perfectly poured beer, he places it on a coaster and leans over the bar once again. āWhere are you from?ā A flirtatious smile plays on his lips.
I look over my shoulder, not entirely convinced the hot bartender is talking to me.
Finding no one behind me, I turn back to him, his blue eyes locked on mine. āChicago currently. Just in town for work.ā
āOh yeah? How long are you in town for?ā
āOnly the night.ā
His shy smile is now a full-on devilish grin. āGlad you found my bar top for your one night in town. Anything you need, Iām your guy. Iām Jax, by the way.ā He puts his hand over the wooden countertop to shake mine.
āStevie.ā I place my hand in his, noting the veins and muscles of his forearms that continue up under the sleeve of his black button-down shirt.
Suddenly my original plan for the night doesnāt sound all that bad.
āActually, I do need something from you, Jax.ā
āAnything.ā His eyes twinkle with mischief.
I lean forward, crossing my arms on the bar top and bringing my most flirtatious grin, wearing my mask of confidence once again. āCan you put that TVāāI gesture to the large screen directly behind himāāon the Devils and Bucks game? Itās on ESPN.ā
His eyes narrow, but his lips tilt even more. āBeer and basketball girl, huh, Stevie? What do I have to do to keep you at my bar top all night?ā
āDepends how many beers you pour me.ā
He lets out a deep, sexy laugh. āYour glass will never be left empty.ā
The skin around my eyes crinkles with satisfaction. This is what I neededāa little attention from a cute guy, my brotherās game on the screen, and a beer in my hand. I feel better already.
āAnd Iāll take a burger when you get a chance.ā
āDamn, Stevie,ā Jax exhales. āStop making me fall in love with you.ā
He shoots me a wink over his shoulder before redirecting his attention to the computer where he places my food order.
My food has taken a little longer than I thought it would, but I donāt mind. The bartenderās attention and the first quarter of the basketball game keep me plenty occupied. Not to mention my second beer.
Taraās little remark about my uniform is less so at the forefront of my mind, though I realize now why it bothered me as much as it did. Itās not just because thatās an insecurity of my own, but how she said it was very similar to how my mother talks about my body.
Itās never direct. Itās always backhanded because how dare a Southern lady speak so directly. They donāt do that. I understand that my mother is a perfect Southern belle with an overactive metabolism, but thatās not me. And itās never been me. Iāve got big tits, a big ass, and an even bigger desire never to become the kind of woman she is.
I love her, but sheās judgmental. Iāve never felt like enough in her eyes. I grew up playing with the boys because my twin brother was my best friend, and he was much more fun than any debutant ball or pageant my mother was so adamant about me participating in.
When I was in college, I refused to rush a sorority, which almost did her in. Itās big in the South, and my motherās entire side of women have all attended the same University in Tennessee and rushed the same sorority. Iām a legacy. It wouldāve been easy for me, but I donāt want to be anything like them.
And once she realized she lost the battle of me being a real proper Southern woman, her attitude towards me quickly shifted to disappointment. Her attention was no longer focused on how great Iād be in Southern society and instead, how different my body looked from hers.
Unfortunately, itās become ingrained in me, making me believe some-thing is wrong with me. My shape became more womanly the older I got. But my mom, sheās not used to curves, and in her mind, Iām overweight, simply because we donāt share the same proportions. But I donāt know what she expected. Her husband, the other half of my DNA, looks nothing like the ginger hair, freckled, thin-framed side of my momās family.
My parents couldnāt be more different. Sure, thereās the physical disparities. My dad is a black man, and my mom is a white woman. But more than that, their personalities are polar opposites. My dad is funny and kind, nurturing. My mom is cold, distant, and outright mean sometimes.
I want to be proud that Iām half of a remarkable man, but itās hard to be proud of anything when my own mother is disappointed in everything I do. And for some reason now, it seeps in more than it used to.
As the bartender places my burger down in front of me, a quick regret paces through my mind. The more I think about my mother, the less appealing this food sounds. Maybe I shouldāve ordered a salad with the dressing on the side. Maybe my uniform will fit a little better tomorrow if I eat that instead.
āIf you donāt start eating that burger, Iām gonna scarf it down myself,ā Jax, the bartender says, pulling me out of my self-doubt trance.
āI donāt share food,ā I tease, pulling my plate closer to me.
His chest heaves in a laugh as he pours me another IPA, placing it next to my previous one thatās still half full.
This guy is good. And thereās a good chance heās going to get lucky tonight. If not from me, then by one of the beautiful women filling this bar and desperate for the attention of the hot bartender. But at this rate, I wouldnāt mind it being me.
My eyes stay glued to the game on the screen as Ryan starts the second quarter. Heās leading the team in assists tonight, as he should. Heās the point guard and the best playmaker in the league.
The Devils run a motion offense on their first time down the court as Ryan gets open for a three in the corner. His teammate kicks the ball to him, and he sinks the shot.
āFuck yes, Ry,ā I ring out, much louder than I intended.
āDevils fan, huh?ā Jax asks, his eyes panning to the TV then back to me. āStevie, I hate to break it to you, but this might be the end of our love affair.ā
I laugh mid-chew. āYou donāt have to be a Devils fan. Just a fan of number five.ā
āRyan Shay? Who isnāt a fan of Ryan Shay? Best point guard in the league.ā
āDamn right he is.ā I pop a fry in my mouth. āAnd heās my brother.ā
āBullshit.ā
I continue to eat, not needing to convince him one way or another.
āAre you for real?ā
Before I can respond, someone in my peripheral view holds an empty glass in the air for a refill, drawing my attention.
My gaze immediately falls on two guys from the plane. The one holding his glass up is the player with dark curly hair who promised a peep show next time he changed on board. Rio, I think his name is. And the other one is the person I was happiest to see get off the plane.
Evan Zanders.
I unintentionally roll my eyes.
Fully dressed up to the nines, he probably took three times longer than I did getting ready as he brings his whiskey glass to his full lips, resting them on the rim before he takes a drink. He doesnāt see me, and heās not doing it to be seductive to anyone in particular, but the guy naturally oozes sex.
Itās really fucking annoying.
I immediately turn back to the bartender. āI need my check and a box, please.ā
āWhat?ā he asks, confused, his eyes darting back to my full beer.
Taraās warning of fraternization rings through my mind. The idea of finishing my food, beer, and ending my night with this hot bartender between my legs sounds fantastic. But not as fantastic as keeping my job.
If it were anyone else from the plane, I might stay and hide in the crowd while I finish watching the game, but the fact that itās Evan Zanders, of all people, makes me want to leave even more. He was exhausting all flight, ringing the call light for absolutely anything he could think of, and if one of the other two girls went to see what he needed, he always sent them back for me.
Heās going to make my season on the plane a living hell. I donāt need him intruding on my time off too.
āI need to get going,ā I tell Jax. āCan I get the bill?ā
āIs everything okay?ā Heās clearly confused, and I donāt blame him. I spent the whole time flirting with him, both of us having an unspoken hope of where our night would end once heās off work.
But heās an attractive guy with a bar full of women. Heāll be just fine finding a warm body for the night.
āJust gotta get going. Sorry,ā I finish with an apologetic smile.
Jax brings me a box and my check, leaving off all my drinks from the bill. I quickly transfer my food and hand my credit card off to be swiped, but itās too late.
Before my card makes it back to me, two large hands land on the bar top on either side of my body, caging me in. His fingers are long and slender, decorated with gold rings. Every knuckle is tatted, including the back of his hands, and his nails are cleanly manicured. I keep my eyes glued to the ridiculously expensive watch on his wrist as he leans down behind me with his lips close to my ear.
āStevie,ā Zanders says in his smooth velvety voice. āYou following me?ā