The Face-Off (Colorado Coyotes #5) Read Online Brenda Rothert

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Chick Lit, Sports Tags Authors: Series: Colorado Coyotes Series by Brenda Rothert
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Total pages in book: 50
Estimated words: 49239 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 246(@200wpm)___ 197(@250wpm)___ 164(@300wpm)
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“We’ll see. But you can’t go with anyone in a higher grade than you, and I’m driving you.”

“Mom.” She glares at me. “It’s the whole middle school. I might get asked by someone who’s not in sixth grade.”

No. My twelve-year-old is not going on a “date” with a fourteen-year-old boy.

“Okay, well, you’re welcome to take someone from a lower grade but not a higher grade.”

She vocally gasps. “Mom! I can’t take a third grader to my school dance.”

“I suggest you find a sixth grader, then, or go with your friends.”

“You’re so mean.”

I glance at Cam and she covertly gives me a thumbs-up, letting me know I’m right. I knew the day would come when I had to deal with her liking boys. It’s about as much fun as I expected. Cam and I grew up with parents who trusted us to make our own decisions, and I got pregnant at fifteen years old. That’s only three years older than Hannah, who still occasionally likes to play with Barbies. I’m going to do everything in my power to keep her from making the same choices I did about boys and sex.

“Where’s Dom?” Tate asks, watching the hockey game Cam brought up on the TV using YouTube.

Cam squints at the screen. “He’s not out on the ice right now, but that’s his team.”

Hannah finishes her food and stomps upstairs, and Dom comes up shortly after, sitting down next to me on the couch with a sigh.

“How’d it go?” I whisper.

“I don’t know. I told him I’m a huge idiot and I’m really sorry.”

“Did you tell him it’s a bad idea to hit on teachers?”

One corner of his mouth quirks up in a grin. “I did mention that, yeah.”

“How did he seem? Is he mad?”

Dom shrugs. “He’s pissed at me for the shitty advice, which I get. And embarrassed about the whole thing.”

“There you are!” Tate yells, pointing at the TV screen. “That’s you, Dom!”

“Hey, it is me. What game is this?”

“Just a random one I found online,” Cam says. “The boys wanted to watch hockey since they’re going to a game.”

“How was the food?” Dom asks.

“Delicious,” I say. “Everyone loved it.”

“Why did they stop the game?” Sam asks Dom.

Dom checks the screen. “Time-out.”

“What are you guys talking about?”

“Our coaches are telling us what plays to run. How to score, that kind of stuff.”

“Do you score lots of goals?”

Dom smiles. “I try to.”

Tate comes over to the couch, where I’m sitting in the middle and Dom is sitting on one end. Instead of sitting on my other side, he says, “Aunt Tess, can you scoot down?”

As soon as I’m out of the way, Tate jumps onto the couch between me and Dom.

“Does it hurt when the puck hits you in the face?”

“We wear masks so it doesn’t hit us in the face.”

“Do you ever hit people with your stick?”

Dom considers, looking amused. “I mean, during games, people sometimes get hit by them, but we get a penalty if we just start hitting someone to be mean.”

“What’s a penalty?”

Dom spends the next hour and a half explaining hockey to my nephews, and he does it with immense patience. By the time the game is over, Sam is sitting on the arm of the couch on Dom’s other side.

“Are you Aunt Tess’s boyfriend?” Tate asks as Cam looks for something else to watch.

Dom grins. “I don’t know, you should ask her.”

Both boys look at me. My cheeks are warm as I say, “We’re going out on our first date soon. So he can’t be my boyfriend until we’ve at least gone on a date.”

“You kissed him, though.”

“I’m just a kissable dude,” Dom says, saving me. “Unfortunately, I have to go because I have an extra early morning tomorrow and I promised my dog I’d take him on a walk before bed tonight.”

Tate’s eyes widen. “You have a dog?”

“Yeah, you want to see a picture?”

He scrolls through photos on his phone and I don’t see a single nude—bonus. When he stops on a picture of a beautiful Great Dane, both boys make adoring sounds.

“That’s Boni. You guys should come over and meet him sometime.”

“Can we come over now?” Tate asks.

Cam laughs. “No, we have to study math and you guys need baths. It’s a school night.”

“Sometime soon,” Dom promises.

I walk him out to his car, both of us pausing next to his driver’s side door.

“Thanks for letting me come over. I had a great time.”

Though my instinct is to make a comment about how much fun he could really have explaining hockey to two eight-year-olds, I don’t. He’s been over several times and he knows the deal—small house, lots of kids, but he still asked to be here.

“I’m glad you came.”

He smiles down at me. “Thanks for not punching me in the face.”

I laugh, remembering how angry I was at him when Zane told me Dom was the one who told him to use that awful pickup line. “I kissed you instead. What does that say about my resolve?”


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