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End Game_Bellevue Bullies Series

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by Toni Aleo




  Contents

  Before you get Started!

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Epilogue

  Preview of Not the One

  Also by Toni Aleo

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  End Game

  Bellevue Bullies Series

  Toni Aleo

  Copyright © 2018 by Toni Aleo

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. End Game is a work of FICTION!

  Editing by: Lisa Hollett of Silently Correcting Your Grammar

  Proofing by: Jenny Rarden

  Cover Design: Jay Aheer of Simply Defined Art

  Photo by: Regina Wamba of Mae I Design

  It’s not every day you get to meet your favorite gymnast.

  I’m raising mine.

  I love you, sissy butt.

  You make my world brighter with just a smile.

  Thank you for being the best inspiration an author could get.

  Before you get Started!

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  Chapter One

  Ryan

  “Aren’t we a little old for a themed Halloween?”

  I glance to the oldest of my cousins and shrug. “You tell that to them.”

  We both look to my mom, my uncle, and my aunt as they snap pictures left and right, oohing and aahing over all of us. They act as if we’re all babies, instead of in our teen years—well, except me. I’m almost twenty-one. I don’t think they realize that, though. Or maybe they just don’t care.

  I want to say I’m embarrassed by the fact that I’m standing in a full-on Gandalf getup as my sister and cousins follow the Lord of the Rings theme, but I’m not. I only act like I am since I’m the oldest. But I actually very much enjoy being Gandalf. He’s a cool dude, and who doesn’t love being the leader of a bunch of hobbits, a dwarf, an elf, and Aragorn?

  My sister, Amelia, doesn’t seem pleased with her tights or her fake, long yellow hair that is braided to perfection. My girl cousins, Shelli and Posey, are still a little butt-hurt they had to be Frodo and Sam. I have to admit, it’s hard to keep a straight face when all I see is their hairy feet. Since they’re the thickest out of all of us, it only made sense they would be the stockier hobbits. The twins, Owen and Evan, are Pippin and Merry with really hilarious curly wigs. And the baby, Quinnie, he’s digging his large sword and heavy suit of armor with an over-the-top long mane of dark hair, which is different from his very clean style with his shaved head.

  It’s easy to say my aunt and my mom go all out for Halloween. I think we’ve been doing matching Halloween costumes since Shelli was born. It was so long ago, but we’ve been everything. From Disney characters to Marvel to the Wizard of Oz, to even hockey teams. The Nashville Assassins, of course, since my aunt Elli owns the hometown team, and my uncle Shea is a local legend.

  “I still say I should have been the Elven queen,” Amelia adds, and Shelli blows her bushy eyebrows out of her eyes before she scoffs.

  “You mean Sméagol?”

  Amelia smacks Shelli and glares. “I was talking about me, not you, asshole.”

  “Language!” Aunt Elli hollers at us, and Amelia holds her hands out to her.

  “She called me Sméagol!”

  “You are the smallest out of us,” Posey says, making a face as she moves the pots and ladles that hang from her waist. “With freakishly long legs. You sure ain’t no damn Legolas. You should have been the dwarf.”

  “Hey! I am a fabulous Legolas, thank you,” Amelia points out, her finger out in front of her and her eyes narrowed. “And these long legs got me a fantastic gymnastics scholarship to college.”

  “No, really? I had no clue,” Posey snaps back, rolling her eyes while Amelia glares and Shelli snickers. “You only tell us daily about your amazing scholarship.”

  “Every damn day,” Shelli complains, and I laugh.

  “Jealous, much?” Amelia asks, and Shelli gives her a look.

  “Please, we all know I’m the most successful out of all of us.”

  “Oh, spare me,” Amelia throws back at her. “Look at me, I’m Shelli Adler, and my mom got me a part on Broadway. And by the way, I don’t get to go by myself. My mommy and daddy have to go because I’m only a baby.”

  I have to say, Amelia’s impression of Shelli is spot-on.

  “And I’m Amelia Justice, with weirdly long legs that make me look like Sméagol, who is going to college on a scholarship for gymnastics, when we all know I’m only going for the hot guys so I can get laid since my boyfriend left me.”

  Damn, low blow. We all know Amelia is upset about her dumbass ex, but I have to give it to Shelli… Her impression was also pretty damn good. I could have gone without the mental image of my sister hooking up at the same college where I’m finishing my senior year.

  “Shelli, your language! Your brothers!”

  Shelli gives her mom an exasperated look. “Momma, they know what sex is. We aren’t in elementary school.”

  The boys all nod, and Elli throws her hands up in a fit. Shea looks proud, while my mom looks two seconds from having a breakdown. Probably because the girls are all sticking their tongues out at each other like a bunch of babies, and the boys are getting restless. Which leaves me, stroking my long white beard as I inhale deeply. This is nothing new. This is actually mild considering the usual ruckus of getting all the Adler and Justice kids together.

  When Quinnie looks up at me, his eyes full of the annoyance we’re all feeling, I send him a grin. “We’re almost done.”

  “All they do is argue. Like, all the time.”

  “And then some,” I add, and he looks away, sighing like he has the weight of the world on his shoulders.

  “Girls. It’s how they are,” Evan adds as his twin, Owen, nods. “Always complaining about something. Especially our girls. They’re dramatic.”

  “All the time. Just wait till you’re in high school, Quinnie. Girls are nothing but trouble.”

  The girls, for obvious reasons, don’t like that much. “Says the guy who couldn’t get a date if he was the last guy on earth,” Amelia s
narls at Owen.

  “Yeah, you wouldn’t even know what to do if a girl talked to you,” Posey adds, and Shelli nods.

  “Loser.”

  “Please, the ladies love me. I’m Owen Adler. I’m a legend.”

  “And I’m Evan Adler. We’re basically the hottest guys in school.”

  Oh, to be young and full of myself again.

  Thankfully, they have an older and wiser cousin to knock them down a few pegs. Holding my hands up, I send the twins, who are more trouble than anyone ever in recorded history, a dry look. “Whoa, pump the brakes. We all know who the legend is.”

  They all look up at me, and I can’t help but smile. I grew up very close with my five cousins and, of course, my sister. We are more like brothers and sisters than cousins. All part of the perks of growing up in the same town, only minutes from each other. Because of it, there isn’t a memory I have that my cousins aren’t involved in. We’re one huge family, and I love each of them for who they are. While they get on my nerves like younger and even older siblings do, they are mine and nothing could ever come between us.

  Looking at each of their faces, I press my hand to my chest since my other hand is holding my pretty badass staff. “Me.”

  With that statement comes the groans and the eye rolling, at least until my uncle Shea yells out, “Guys, look over here. We all know this is the last year we can do this.”

  The last year.

  That statement wipes the grin off my face. Caught up in the awesomeness of my beard, I had forgotten this would, in fact, be the last year. It’s my last year at Bellevue University, and hopefully, this is my year to be drafted. I haven’t had much luck the last three years, but surely this is my year. Everyone says it is, and I have to keep the faith. Since I’m going to be drafted, I won’t be home for next Halloween or most holidays. Also, Shelli will be in New York for a stint on Broadway she was lucky to snag, so she won’t be home next year either. Man, she’s crazy talented—hell, we all are. Posey and the boys all play hockey, pretty damn well, while Amelia is insanely good at gymnastics.

  That’s why she got a full ride to Bellevue University to help start their new gymnastics program that’s just gone wheels up. She’s excited; we all are. I’m a little nervous for her to be around the guys at school, but then, she’s a tough girl, and I’ll be right there. I’ll kill anyone for her. Hell, for any of them.

  But damn, I’m gonna miss this.

  Wrapping my arm around Amelia and then Shelli, I pull them in as I grin at my mom, aunt, and uncle. The others take note and cuddle up as we all grin for pictures.

  “Okay, let’s do an animated one!” Elli exclaims in her thick country accent I adore. I want to shake my head at her craziness, but then my mom joins in.

  “Yes, like you guys are running!”

  Shea rolls his eyes.

  Thankfully, I hold back. I can’t speak for everyone else, though, and they’re already groaning and complaining.

  “No, they’re good—”

  Shea’s words trail off when he’s met with two very stern looks from the most amazing women in my life. My mom, she’s stellar. The best mom in the world, always there for me and always pushing me, but I’m also lucky enough to have an aunt who loves me as her own. While they both love with all their hearts, they are tough and don’t take shit from anyone. Which is why Amelia, Shelli, and Posey are as strong as they are. I think the phrase is “It takes a village to raise a child,” and let’s just say, the Adler/Justice village did a lot of raisin’ with us seven kids. Through the years, my uncle has become a smarter man; he doesn’t go up against his wife or his twin sister. Especially when they present a united front.

  So it’s easy to say that I turn without prompting, lifting my staff into the air as I call out, “Go, you fools!”

  My cousins and sister follow suit as our moms squeal out in delight, my uncle chuckling softly. That’s the last of the pictures, and the boys run off before anyone can stop them, ready to go trick-or-treating. Being the oldest, I’m taking them, but what the girls don’t know is that they’re coming too, especially since my mom is going. It’s better than her staying in the house, from what I’ve been told by Elli and Shea. I agree with them. I almost didn’t want to stay in the Bullies’ house this year, the hockey fraternity on campus, because I knew my mom was having a hard time, but she insisted. Especially since Amelia will be staying on campus too. Mom wanted me to keep an eye on her.

  When all three of the girls pull out their phones to text or Instagram or whatever it is they do, I say, “We’re leaving in ten.”

  They all glance to me, confused, as Amelia asks, “What?”

  “We’re all going,” I say simply as I walk away, despite their arguments. I don’t care, though; we’re doing this as a family. From the look on my mom’s face, I think she needs this. Going to her, I wrap my arm around her shoulders as she uploads all the pictures of us to her Facebook. She leans into me, exhaling.

  “You guys look amazing.”

  I beam. “The handiwork of Elli Adler and Grace Justice.”

  She looks away, but I don’t miss the wobble of her lip. It guts me. “I wish he were here to see this. The last year of you seven together as a group.”

  My heart is heavy as I lean into her, my hand squeezing her bicep. “Me too, Mom, but it really isn’t the last year. We’ll do it again.”

  She looks up at me sadly. Unlike her, I was not jinxed in the height department. With a twin as huge as my uncle, you would think my mom would be tall too, but she isn’t. I take after my uncle—and my dad, both very tall men. But I look just like my mom, black as night hair and the brightest blue eyes that she says can stop a man straight in his tracks. Just like they did with my father. Given how hard the last three years have been, I know she’s aged, but my mom is by far the most beautiful woman I’ve ever seen.

  Grabbing my beard, she tugs it softly so it doesn’t yank off. “You’re twenty years old, Ryan, almost twenty-one. You’re about to go off and do big things. You’ll probably be drinking soon—”

  “I already do that.”

  “Legally,” she goes on without missing a beat. “You’ll be getting married sooner rather than later, and then—”

  “That’s all beyond my thinking right now. NHL first, Mom. And eventually, you’ll have a new set of kids to dress up.”

  Her lips quirk, even while the thought of a wife and kids gives me the heebie-jeebies. I’m a kid; I mean I’m dressed as Gandalf, for fuck’s sake. I’m too focused on getting into the NHL. Girls aren’t on my radar right now. She knows this—hell, everyone knows.

  “Yeah, but nonetheless, this would have been your dad’s favorite year.”

  I look down at the picture on her phone that she’s still looking at. We look amazing, all seven of us, and I know she’s right. My dad would have loved this. Lord of the Rings was his jam, the reason all of us love it. Like her, I wish we had dressed this way sooner.

  Before we lost him.

  Squeezing my mom once more, I kiss her forehead. “He sees us.”

  She beams up at me, her eyes a bit watery as she nods. “Yeah, he does.”

  “You guys okay?”

  Glancing to my uncle, I smile. My mom waves him off as she wipes her face. “We’re fine.”

  He doesn’t look convinced, but that’s my uncle for you. He and Mom share some weird twin thing, which used to annoy my dad and Elli. But I think, over time, they got used to it. What my dad never got over was the fact that Shea Adler has always been my hero. I feel bad for that now, but it wasn’t like I didn’t love my dad. He was my hero too, but in a different way. He raised me to be kind and compassionate, while Shea raised me to be fierce and strong. Shea never let me give up on my dream of going into the NHL, while my dad was fine with me going into real estate like he had.

  They were night and day, and I love them both so much.

  But now, all I have is Shea.

  And I wish like hell I had my dad back.
r />   “Yeah, we’re good. We’re heading out. You sure you don’t want to come wrangle your kids?”

  Shea laughs. “A night with my wife without my hellions, or go with the hellions… I pick my wife,” he says as if we didn’t already know the answer.

  “Whatever,” I groan playfully, which he laughs at as I head for my truck. When I call for the girls, they all protest, but they come anyway since they see my mom is, and I’m thankful for that. I don’t want to argue with them. Though, I know the night is young, and I probably will anyway.

  But then, that is my family.

  Chapter Two

  Sofia

  Glaring at the bars that stand sturdy and tall in front of me, I unlatch my grips and then latch them back. I do it two more times, the sound of the Velcro on my grips music to my ears as I go through my routine. I see it all. My jumps, my giants, and even my dismount that has been a pain in my ass since I changed it.

  But I had to change it.

  I have to be the best.

  I was brought to Bellevue to be the best. I didn’t come all the way from Nevada to be mediocre. No. I came to kick ass and take names. This may be only a practice routine, but at practice is where I perform. And the meets my team goes to, well, that’s where I get my medals.

 

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