Knock Me Up, Boss: A Bad Boy Office Romance

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Knock Me Up, Boss: A Bad Boy Office Romance Page 86

by Juliana Conners


  “You still pining for Chelsea?”

  I put my helmet on, both so that my facial expressions can’t reveal my true feelings for her, and also so that I’m protected if Coach decides to throw any more footballs at my face.

  “I just don’t understand what happened,” I tell him.

  I hadn’t gone into great detail about everything. I like to leave some things private, and even though Christian is my only good friend here so far, I’ve really only just met him.

  “Well, just let it go,” he tells me, with a shrug. “She’s just a cock tease. That much is obvious.”

  There’s something sinister in the way he talks about her that makes me want to defend her, even though I know I shouldn’t give a damn. I decide to change the subject, because I don’t want to give myself away.

  Plus, I can’t really defend her, anyway. I hadn’t told him we’d had sex, so I can’t exactly point out that she’s not a cock tease.

  “Thanks for your help with that algebra test,” I told him. “I was never taught that way to do it. I can’t believe no one ever told me about it.”

  “Well, you do come from a school where they focus more on sports than academics,” Christian smirks.

  “Very funny.”

  “But no problem,” he says. “Glad I could help.”

  It’s the offense’s turn to take the field, so I hurry out there to avoid any accusations from Coach Thompson that I’m being too slow or that my head is still in the clouds.

  I try to concentrate on practice, but it’s not even Chelsea over-shadowing my thoughts now. It’s Coach Thompson, and trying to figure out what the hell I did to get into hot water with him.

  Chapter 40 – Wesley

  I knock on the open door of Coach Thompson’s office after practice, and he motions me in, without looking up from his desk and says, “Just come in, Reynolds. You don’t have to knock. Have a seat.”

  He looks ragged, and I realize that maybe his anger was a cover for something else. Peering into his face, I guess disappointment maybe. Sadness?

  I take a seat on the opposite side of his desk and he slides over the piece of paper he had been looking at.

  “Reynolds, I took a big risk on you, when I agreed to let your dad pull some strings to allow you to come here. And quite frankly, so did the director of athletics, and even the dean of the school. Our division funding could depend on this. You told me you would behave, and keep your grades up.”

  “I have been, Coach! I swear.”

  “Well, this letter says otherwise,” he says, nodding down at it, silently instructing me to read it.

  I look at the letter. It’s from the dean.

  This correspondence officially notifies you that Wesley Reynolds failed his algebra exam and is currently failing the class. Further, he’s been absent from class…

  “What the—?” I sigh, and shake my head. I push the paper back to him as if it’s on fire. “This can’t be true.”

  “Well, are they making this up?” he asks. “Your algebra professor? The dean?”

  “I mean, I guess not,” I tell him, my head swirling in disbelief. “But I studied hard for that test. Sure, I didn’t understand the concepts at first and I had missed one class that covered them. But that was the only class I’d missed all semester.”

  And it was to chase your daughter around the cafeteria when she didn’t want to talk to me, I almost add.

  I had been so distraught that Chelsea wasn’t returning my texts or calls, or coming to meet me at our spot, that I’d skipped class to catch her off guard at the cafeteria, where I knew she always ate with Taylor on Mondays before her philosophy class.

  A lot of good my persistence did me. Apparently she thinks I’m a stalker, creep, and player. And now I’m in further trouble for trying to prove her wrong.

  “But, anyway, I worked hard to learn the concepts and I did learn them,” I continue. “You can ask Christian. He helped me learn the method. I’m sure I aced the test, based on how he taught me a way to solve the problems that I had never known before. He said the professor taught it on the one day I was absent. And that way was simpler than I’d ever imagined.”

  “Hmmm,” says Coach Thompson, rubbing the stubble on his chin. He’s usually always clean-shaven, so it must have be bothering him. In fact, he looks rough— like he’s gone one too many nights without sleep. “Maybe that’s because it was too simple.”

  “I’m sorry, what?”

  “Oh, Reynolds,” he says, with a long sigh and then a tsk-tsk-tsk of his tongue against the roof of his mouth, as if I’m a kindergartner he’s scolding. “Did you ever hear the saying, ‘If it’s too good to be true, it probably is?”

  “Yes,” I tell him. “Of course…”

  “And did you ever stop to think that certain people might be jealous of you? That they might want to destroy your success?”

  “Are you saying that Christian…?”

  “…is purposefully trying to sabotage you?” Coach asks.

  I look at him, bug-eyed. He shrugs.

  “I can’t say for sure,” he continues. “But I just think it’s mighty convenient that he supposedly taught you an easy way to ace a test that you apparently failed very badly.”

  “But, why would he be jealous of me? He plays a different position, so it’s not like he’s missed out on opportunities by my presence, unlike some of the other quarterbacks. And I’ve been helping the team win games, which would just boost his prestige, I would think…”

  “Reynolds, for someone who comes off as a tough badass, deep down you’re actually way too nice.”

  I just look at him and blink, not sure what exactly he means or what to say back.

  “You give everyone the benefit of the doubt,” he says. “There doesn’t have to be a specific reason someone is jealous of you. Maybe they just don’t like people who do better in life than they do. Maybe it doesn’t matter if the star player helps their team win— they still want to take that star player down, just for being a star.”

  I nod. It makes sense, when he puts it that way.

  “Sure, Christian wasn’t the quarterback, but he was the star player on the team before your arrival,” Coach Reynolds continues. “I don’t want to disparage any of my players, but suffice it to say we both know the former quarterback sucked. So Christian was really the only one to shine, before you showed up.”

  “Hrmph.”

  I have nothing to say. I’m dumbfounded. Coach Thompson is making some good points that I can’t argue against.

  “And maybe it’s not even related to football,” Coach continues. “There could be something— or someone— else that Christian is jealous about.”

  I meet his gaze, and he’s looking at me with an expression that says he knows more than he’s letting on.

  “I wasn’t born yesterday,” he says. “And I have put a lot of trust in you, in more ways than one. I feel like you’re letting me down left and right, never mind whether Christian is behind it or not. You have to be smarter than this.”

  I just gulp, and I don’t say anything to confirm or deny what I think he’s hinting at— that he knows that Chelsea and I were dating, and now we’re not. I wish I could explain, and even ask him what he thinks happened, to try to gain some insight into what’s going on in Chelsea’s head.

  But I don’t want to confirm it if it’s just a suspicion he has. Maybe it’s a test, which could get me, or, worse— Chelsea— into trouble if I admit that it’s true.

  And besides, that’s not even the most pressing matter at hand. I need to figure out what’s happening in Algebra and if there’s any way to save my ass.

  I’m so overwhelmed at the possibility that Christian would do this to me that I can’t think too clearly about how to fix the problem of my failing grades. I don’t want to think that my only friend would shit on me like this, on top of everything else that’s gone wrong. The only thing going right is football, and that might be in jeopardy.

  “So
what exactly does this letter mean, Coach?”

  “Well, I’m not quite sure. It’s just one exam, and even though it was a doozy of a failure, it’s not the end of the semester yet, so I think you might still have time to turn this around.”

  “I understand, and I know I can do that,” I tell him.

  “I’ve been looking around for a good tutor,” Coach says. “And I think that if I tell the dean you’re putting extra time and effort into this class, and that if you can really learn the right method— and not whatever crap Christian Lewis intentionally or unintentionally taught you— then we might have some hope.”

  Whew.

  “Okay good. Thank you, Coach.”

  “I’m going to try to talk to your professor and see if you can re-take the test. If not, even if you can manage to get a good grade on your next test, so that it would pull up your final grade, then I think you might still be okay to keep playing.”

  “Okay Coach, I can do that.”

  “I hope so. Because you know what’s on the line here.”

  He stares at me. I sure do know.

  Our championship games and any post-season games, if we make it that far, don’t happen until the beginning of next semester. So if I get benched for bad grades or kicked off the team for bad conduct and therefore for breach of my contract, there’s no way I can play in the games that matter the most.

  And if that happens then there’s no way I can get back to Huningdale, where now I want to be more than ever. I don’t have any friends here— only enemies pretending to be friends. I don’t have Chelsea. And if I don’t have football, I don’t have anything.

  I also get the sense that Coach Thompson isn’t just talking about football. Although I heard Chelsea very clearly say to leave her alone, her father’s hints reveal that something further might still be able to exist between us. And I don’t want to screw that up, either.

  Looks like it’s Operation Relearn Algebra for me. Whether or not anything can work out with Chelsea, I’d better do the best I can for Coach Thompson. And for my last chance to keep playing football. If I have any chances left.

  Chapter 41 – Wesley

  “Wesley Reynolds?”

  “Yes?”

  I’m sitting on the patio of the campus cafeteria a few days later, waiting to meet my new algebra teacher that Coach Thompson lined up for me. I was sure it’d be some nerdy dude with horn-rimmed glasses and a stutter.

  But this tutor has a female voice. And when I turn around to face the voice who called my name, I’m greeted with something altogether different than the tutor I’d imagined.

  She’s model-pretty: tall, slim, and with a smoking hot body. But she’s dressed a little inappropriately for a tutoring session, in a low cut tank top that reveals her stunning cleavage, and tight fitting short shorts that show off her ass.

  I can’t help but think it’s nothing compared to Chelsea’s ass. She has a naturally curvy ass, with an hourglass body to boot.

  While this girl is definitely very attractive, and I wouldn’t have hesitated to hit on her pre-Chelsea, it’s like Chelsea messed up my brain. Now I can’t even look at another girl without comparing her to Chelsea.

  “Yes?” I ask again, incredulous that this could really be the tutor assigned to me. Perhaps she’s here for some other reason.

  “I’m your algebra tutor,” she says to me, putting her hands on the table and leaning over, giving me a further glimpse of her ample cleavage. “I heard you were in need of some motivation in the… math department.”

  “Uhhh, yeah, I guess,” I tell her, knowing that I sound like a damn idiot.

  I’m sure she’s used to guys falling all over themselves for her, but my amazement comes at the fact that she’s been assigned as my tutor. Right when I’m still crushing on a girl who doesn’t even fucking want me.

  Life can be so unfair.

  “No one told me you looked like this,” she says bluntly, staring me up and down.

  My thoughts exactly.

  Normally I’d be jumping all over the fact that she looks ready to jump all over me. But I need to stay on the straight and narrow, for the sake of my football contract.

  Besides, I just don’t feel like pursuing anything with her. She’s definitely not giving me any kind of a chase.

  And she’s definitely not Chelsea.

  When I’m honest with myself, I know that the old me would have taken the risk and returned her flirtations at the very least. But the new me only wants to risk going out of bounds with one person, and that person doesn’t tutor math. Unfortunately.

  “Well, let’s get down to work,” my new tutor says, and sits down on the same side of the picnic table bench that I’m on.

  I look around. Everyone is staring at us.

  The last thing I need is for this to get back to Chelsea. If I have any chance left with her, this obvious scene would totally blow it.

  “Shouldn’t we, like, go to the library or something?” I ask her.

  “Or maybe my house?” She looks at me through thick, long lashes she’s batting at me.

  She even puts her hand on my thigh.

  “I… ummm…”

  “Just kidding,” she says, and lays her head on my shoulder as she opens my algebra textbook with her other hand. “I think better when I’m outside. And I need more breaths of fresh air after finding out that my new student is a total stud.”

  I try to scootch over a bit, but her not-Chelsea ass quickly follows.

  “Okay, I know you’re a bright guy who can catch on to these concepts,” she tells me, as she points to a problem in the book. “And I know I’m just the girl who can offer you extra motivation to do so…”

  She reaches her hand close to my dick, as if she’s about to grab it, and I practically slide off the end of the fucking bench.

  “Look, umm…” I realize I didn’t even ask her name. “Miss.”

  It sounds so formal, but I don’t know what else the fuck to call her, and perhaps formal is good in this situation.

  “You’re right, I’m a bright guy,” I tell her. “And I don’t really need a math tutor. I just need to not let my supposed friend teach me the wrong way to solve these problems.”

  “You need me for your football scholarship…” she sings out, in a gloating tone.

  I stop in my tracks, realizing she’s right. What will Coach Thompson do when he hears that I ditched my very first tutoring session, which is part of the plan to save my ass?

  He definitely won’t think I’m taking the plan very seriously.

  “What?” she asks, sensing my weakness. “Do you have a girlfriend or something?”

  “Or something,” I answer her, as I walk away. “Something like that, yes.”

  I’ll just have to take my chances with Coach Thompson. I hope he’ll understand, even though I have no idea what to tell him. She was too hot to be my algebra tutor? She sexually harassed me?

  I’ll figure it out. I just couldn’t stand that woman’s touch.

  This is not the Wesley Reynolds I used to be.

  What’s happened to me?

  Chelsea Thompson has ruined me.

  Chapter 42 – Chelsea

  My growling stomach forces me to skip class— which I almost never do— and head to grab some food instead.

  At least extreme hunger is the excuse I tell myself as I walk up the sidewalk leading to the cafeteria.

  I haven’t eaten much ever since my last encounter with Wesley, and I’m finally hungry for once.

  But maybe I happen to be hungry right now because I know that it’s Wesley’s lunch break. Maybe part of me wonders if he and I are really over.

  Or maybe, I realize with horror, as I stop in my tracks, I’m just a glutton for punishment.

  Because there, yards away, with his back to me, is Wesley, and he’s with yet another woman.

  I can only see the back of her, and her profile as she leans over to whisper in his ear, but she is super beautiful. Even more so tha
n the last one. And she’s obviously really into him, with her hand on his thigh and her head resting on his shoulder.

  As she makes a move— in public, in broad daylight— for his package, I turn around and walk in the direction I was just coming from, as fast as I can.

  I thought that a blow job under an abandoned amusement park ride was risqué, but this woman is obviously way more forward than I am.

  I guess I was just one girl in a long string of girls who like to do forbidden things with the star football player.

  I can’t take one more time of running into Wesley with random women. He might claim the last one wasn’t a date, but he can’t get out of this one. She was all over him. And she was gorgeous.

  And why would he need to get out of it? I remind myself, hearing his voice in my head, from the last time we had talked.

  If you could call fighting “talking.”

  You two are over. You told him to leave you alone.

  But we had never really started to begin with. Not officially.

  It’s time I realize that not only were we over, we never had a real beginning. That’s probably my fault as much as his, but there’s no going back and fixing it.

  Wesley was right— I have no right to try to stake a claim to him. We were just sneaking around having fun behind my dad’s back. Nothing more.

  I’m so upset that I had gone and let myself have hope yet again. I can’t talk to Taylor because she’s in class. And she’s probably sick of hearing about my trials and tribulations with Wesley Reynolds, anyway.

  I stop when I get to the duck pond. I’ve come here partly because I have nowhere else to go— my appetite is gone again and I’m not about to walk past Wesley and his Flavor of the Week to enter the cafeteria— and partly because it feels peaceful. Water always calms me down.

  I sit under a tree, watching the ducks and the other students who are feeding them and tell myself to let it go. After my mom died Dad made me go to a shrink, who wasn’t very helpful.

  But the one helpful thing she told me was that sadness and worries and all other negative feelings are just thoughts like any other thought. She told me that whenever I was stuck in grief, I should imagine myself sitting by a river and putting each thought on a leaf and watching it float by.

 

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