Lawson (Bangor Badgers #1) Read Online Samantha Whiskey

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Contemporary, Forbidden, Sports Tags Authors: Series: Bangor Badgers Series by Samantha Whiskey
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Total pages in book: 87
Estimated words: 80045 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 400(@200wpm)___ 320(@250wpm)___ 267(@300wpm)
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We start walking our separate ways, and she laughs as she waves at me before disappearing down the hallway.

An hour later, sweat beads beneath my leggings and sweatshirt despite the chill of the ice in the practice rink. My first group had risen to the occasion, mastering the drills I laid out for them today, and I was almost dreading my final group as they lined up before me.

There’s a massive change from when we started before the preseason to now, and I daresay I have a bunch of pride building in my chest for these NHL players who mostly accepted me and what I have to offer them. Most of them were already leaps and bounds ahead of where they started, and I only struggled with a few who continued to roll their eyes at the fact that a figure skater is teaching them skate techniques to improve their game.

My heart does a little flutter thing that’s signature to whenever Lawson is in my presence, and I do my best not to show my full smile as he unabashedly grins at me where he forces his way to the front of the lineup.

I flash him a chiding look, knowing that isn't the best teammate manners. He shrugs, and gives me a wink, his hazel eyes silently communicating things that aren't work appropriate at the moment, and I blow out a breath, trying to remember exactly what drills I planned to introduce to this group.

I force myself to focus and to remember the job I’m paid to do—one that I love and that I'm lucky as hell to have. I do that thing where I compartmentalize my emotions, shoving my downright giddy sensations into a box with Lawson's name on it. I'll open that up when we see each other after practice, but right now Coach Wren needs to make sure these boys are ready to stand against the Seattle Sharks, who we play next.

“The Sharks are in the top five best NHL team ranks for a reason,” I say just like I had with my groups prior. “Not only do they have a hell of a coach, they have a powerhouse of a team. Their defensemen somehow find their opponents on the ice before we even know they're skating toward us and their forwards can skate like lightning. They steal pucks and they score goals, and they work together like a unit who has been playing together for years. They anticipate each other's moves, and they adapt if one of their teammates tries something new. None of them are fighting for individual fame and they operate like they have the collective win as their sole motivation.”

“Sounds like you're working for the wrong team, figure skater,” Jake Waller, a rookie who loves to give me shit, says from the middle of the group.

I bite back the smart response that’s on the tip of my tongue and shift my focus to him.

He's glaring at me in his normal I don't want to be taught anything by a girl way, but I've gotten used to it by now.

“It’s advantageous to understand your opponent and their strengths. It helps you better exploit them when you go up against them. Not doing your homework on who you're playing is lazy. Expecting me to hand-feed you these facts is too.”

Waller sneers at me, but keeps his mouth shut, so I move on with the lesson, dividing them into smaller groups of three and showing them the balance and power drills I’ve assigned for them today.

Waller scoffs, but doesn't verbally express how ridiculous he thinks the exercise is—lifting one leg while holding still on the other to start with a set of twenty-five reps per leg. I then move them on to perfect the explosive crossover start followed by power focus in order to help their speed. I demonstrate every exercise a handful of times before asking them to do it themselves, wanting to show them that I'm not asking them to do anything that I wouldn't do myself.

“Waller,” I call out after a half hour into the power exercise. “You're using the wrong edge, and it's slowing you down. Try shifting to the free leg, and then⁠—”

“I'm moving faster than half of these guys⁠—”

“No, you're not,” I say, waving a hand toward the other guys. “They’ve consistently outskated you every single time and it's because you're not listening. I don't know if you're doing it on purpose or if you just can't feel it.”

I demonstrate what he's doing, and then show him the correct way to do it. “Try this exercise and it will help give you an edge when you face the Sharks. If you keep doing what you're doing, they’ll overtake you every time⁠—”

Waller skates over to me, grinding to a stop right in front of me, cutting my words off with the move. He's not small, and he towers over me as he looks down at me with that same glare he's always given me. I force myself to hold his gaze even though every instinct is firing at me to skate backward a few feet.


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