Page 82 of Broken Play


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“Do you want to talk about it?”I ask.

Her lip trembles.She doesn’t look at me.“Not really.”

“Okay,” I murmur.“Then we won’t talk.”

She deflates like that was the right answer.Like she needed permission to not explain her pain.

We sit like that for a minute.Two.Her fingers curl around the glass like she’s afraid to let go.Then, quietly, like she’s confessing a sin:

“I hate that he still gets to do this to me.”

My blood goes cold.“Who?”

She shuts her eyes, wincing at herself.“I shouldn’t have said that.”

“You can say anything,” I whisper.“I’m not going anywhere.”

Her breath stutters.She lifts her drink to take another sip, but I gently touch her wrist.

“Hey,” I say softly.“You’re shaky.Maybe let me take that?”

She hesitates.

Then she nods and lets the drink go.

She’s letting me help her.

That alone feels like the kind of trust I don’t deserve.

I slide the glass away from her before she can change her mind.When she looks back up at me, the bar lights catch her eyes — brighter from alcohol, glossy with emotion she’s fighting hard to hide.

“You’re...nice,” she murmurs.

I laugh, but quietly.“Pretty sure that’s the first time a woman has told me that in a bar.”

“No, you are,” she insists, a tipsy conviction softening her tone.“You’re safe.”

The words hit me harder than anything on the ice ever could.

I swallow, feeling heat rise in my throat.“I’m glad you feel that way.”

Her fingers drift toward mine on the bar top.She stops herself before touching me, like she’s afraid she’s crossing a line.

I bridge the distance for her.

I lay my hand gently over hers, giving her a chance to pull away.

She doesn’t.

She lets out a tiny breath — relief, maybe — and her shoulders sink.

“Can you stay for a little?”she asks quietly.

I don’t hesitate.“As long as you want.”

Her head tips slightly until it rests against my shoulder.Light.Careful.Testing.

I go still.