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"Fast-paced, vivid and true-to-life, Patricia
McLinn's The Games captures the personal drama and
compelling stories of the greatest sports event on earth."
~Christine
Brennan, USA Today sports columnist
Excerpted from:
THE GAMES
Patricia
McLinn
Delphi
Books
ISBN 978-0-97651850
OPENING CEREMONIES
“Mesdames et Monsieurs,
l'equippe Olympic des Etats Unis!”
“Ladies and gentlemen, the United States Olympic team!”
Red, white and blue, they marched through an archway that
vibrated with their eagerness, then burst into the open
floor of the oval stadium. A roar rose, the sheer volume
of it enough to set a sea of hand-held flags fluttering.
All for them.
In return, they spilled into the frosting night the essence
of themselves. Youth, exuberance, skill, endurance, dedication,
determination, hope, anxiety, excitement. Stirring and stirred.
Energy crackled through each movement as voices admonished
them to “Keep those lines straight!” with little effect.
Lines? Lines sat as static, dull things. This burned with
motion and emotion.
A culmination of years distilled into the first of a handful
of moments. Moments that would flash past at speed beyond
sound, yet would cover a world, and last a lifetime.
Emotions.
Rikki
Lodge figured some scientific machine ought to exist to
chart the waves of emotion swirling around her. Maybe the
gadget that measures electrical flow. Lord knows, she felt
the current. The Olympics! At last. If she wasn't
the grand old lady of her contingent, she might give into
the urge to do a cartwheel just for the joy of it. Come
to think of it, that might be the only way the TV cameras
would zero in on a biathlete. Even at the Olympics.
The Olympics.
A shiver skipped up her backbone, and she grinned at herself.
You'd think someone who'd competed as long as she had and
at as many dots on the world map wouldn't react to one more.
But how could anyone ignore all the reminders that this
was different, this was special. If the hometown sendoff
and the team outfits hadn't reminded her, there'd still
be these other athletes from all the other sports and countries.
She wasn't even rooming with biathletes, so how could she
possibly pretend this was just another meet?
The American team curved around the track's first turn.
Behind her, and to the left she caught sight of the men’s
hockey team. A few faces she'd recognized from newspaper
and television coverage when she saw them two days ago while
they all got accredited and outfitted. The dark, intense
face that stayed well behind the youthful group of players
mugging for a TV camera, belonged to Lanny Kaminski.
They'd never met, yet from what she’d read, Rikki Lodge
felt an affinity with him. Like her, he was the oldster
on a team of youngsters. A man who'd clung to his dream
long after most his age—their age—embraced more ordinary
lives. And now here they were with one, final, shot.
Good luck, Lanny Kaminski, she thought. We're both going
to need it....
Luck.
It came
to those who touched the Olympic flag. Even non-believers
didn't scoff at the superstition. As the rippling field
of white with rings of yellow, blue, green, red and black
passed just above the athletes' section, they stood. Stretching
arms, straining fingers, climbing on seats, for a touch
before the flag rose out of reach.
Kyle Armstrong's
arm dropped to her side; her fingertips' contact with the
silky material had been so brief she doubted it had happened.
She had always counted on luck as her companion. Now, she
felt deserted. Not alone, no never alone. Not as long as
other members of the ski team surrounded her. She didn't
even have to think about where she was going, she could
just go follow the force of their flow. Kyle had skied with
these people, traveled with them, eaten with them, lived
with them. Even when she wanted to she couldn't be alone.
Never alone with Rob Zemlak watching her.
She looked up. And slammed directly into Rob's stare. His
mouth smiled at the exuberance around him, but his eyes
scowled. At her. He knows. Oh, God, he knows!
She sat abruptly, but controlled the fear with will-power
honed through years of hurtling down mountains. He couldn't
know. No one here did except her. And he didn't watch her
any differently than he watched the rest of the skiers he
coached.
Keep it in perspective, Kyle. If she could get through
the next sixteen days....
Sixteen days.
The flame,
brought from Greece by hand in honored stages, would burn
over the stadium for sixteen days, as it had over another
stadium so long ago. From her spot in the stands, Tess Rutledge
watched this Olympic flame flare to life. Memories of another
one flowed into the present seamlessly, dangerously.
Remember your reason for being here. No longer Tess
Rutledge The Skater, she had come here to coach Amy through
her first Olympics and to help the team. She searched the
section where the American athletes sat. She recognized
the distinctive auburn hair of Rikki Lodge and a momentary
shifting of the crowd showed her Kyle Armstrong's straight
back. Tess sat taller, looking over heads, and there sat
Amy Yost—as bright and vivid and alive as the red, white
and blue she wore. She was the reason Tess once more sat
in a stadium watching the Opening Ceremonies, listening
to the pomp, and forming a minute part of the pageantry.
The reason she had come back to all the reminders. Had come
back, after years of meticulous avoidance, not to a place,
but to a moment in her life.
That's
what she had to guard against. She'd known he'd be here.
If they should meet—and they would—she had to have a firm
control on all this. To keep the years and the memories
clearly separated. Because if she saw him—
Fate could
be as cruel as people. She learned that anew in the instant
she caught sight of the man staring at her. A man from another
world, another time, sitting close enough now that she could
see the winter night's breeze ruffling his blond hair, his
too-long-remembered blue eyes piercing into her. Andrei
Chersakov.
Let the Games begin.

THE
DAY BEFORE
— FRIDAY
“Isn't this great? When they said we were in a 'pod' I thought
gross, but this is just like an apartment.”
At the sound of the youthful voice, Rikki Lodge straightened
from folding newly washed clothes into the dresser in her
room. Across the hall, the voice was accompanied by thumps
of luggage hitting the bed and floor. That had to be Amy
Yost.
Three nights ago Rikki had found a
namecard “Rochelle Lodge—Biathlon” tacked to a room door
and moved in. Alone in the apartment, she'd wandered
from door to door and checked namecards.
A large room with a double bed, a desk and an arm chair
had a single name on its card, but when Rikki read “Tess
Rutledge—Ladies Figure Skating/Asst. Team Leader” the special
accommodations didn't surprise her. Tess Rutledge had been
a familiar name for close to two decades, first as the darling
of figure skating, then as a pro and most recently as an
emerging coach.
What was surprising was that she was staying in official
housing at all. Rikki would have figured Tess Rutledge for
luxury hotels.
The other large room had two beds and two names: “Kyle
Armstrong—Women's Alpine Skiing/Nan Monahan—Women's Alpine
Skiing.” More familiar names, at least to a winter sports
fan — that duo had ranked as among America's best on the
international ski circuit for several years now.
Across the hall the final card read “Amy Yost—Ladies Figure
Skating.”
Rikki had heard that name, too, but only in the past month
as U.S. figure skating's surprising third Olympic qualifier
in ladies singles. The media had loved the story of the
late-comer to skating bursting onto the scene while remaining
what so many referred to as fresh. She supposed that might
explain Tess Rutledge’s presence in these pedestrian surroundings,
since Amy Yost was her protégé, and this was her first Olympics.
Give the kid another four years and she’d probably be like
most of the top figure skaters, who jetted in before competing,
stayed in luxury accommodations, and departed immediately
afterward. Their Olympic experience was almost entirely
what happened in front of the cameras.
Amy had a mirror image of Rikki's train-compartment room.
Rikki didn't mind the size. For the luxury of a private
bath she would sleep in a closet. Come to think of it, she’d
slept in spaces the size of the closet without a
private bath.
After reading all the cards, Rikki had whistled to herself
and wondered how she'd gotten into such exalted company.
Women's biathlon had only reached the Olympics in 1992 at
Albertville;
the United States didn't rank among the top teams and Rikki
Lodge couldn't even claim to be the top U.S. competitor.
Just the one with the most longevity.
Now, after two days of wondering, she was about to meet
the people behind the names on those cards.
As Rikki reached the hall, Amy Yost disappeared through
another door. She reappeared almost immediately.
“That's a double room.” Amy tossed the news over her shoulder
without looking back as she plunged deeper into the apartment.
At first she seemed a blur of long blonde hair and even
longer limbs, but Rikki saw the teenager couldn't be more
than five-three, her slenderness creating the illusion of
height. “Oh, and Tess, there's a living room with a big
window and a fireplace!”
Rikki looked back toward the hall door, and saw Tess Rutledge
emerging from the room marked with her name.
“Amy— Oh. Hello. You must be Rochelle Lodge. I'm Tess Rutledge.”
Even caught in surprise Tess Rutledge's voice flowed as
smooth and graceful as the woman did on ice. A clip held
dark hair drawn back at her nape, the style's severity a
counterpoint to the soft lines of a face that hadn't seemed
to age in the fourteen years since it had captured the world
as Olympic champion.
“Rikki. Everybody calls me Rikki. It's an honor to meet
you.”
“Tess! There's— Oh, hi! I'm Amy. You're one of our pod roommates?
Pod! Can you believe they call it a pod? Pod roommate sounds
like something from a sci-fi flick, doesn’t it? Which one
are you? What event are you in? Have you been to the
Olympics before?”
“Amy—”
“Rikki Lodge. Biathlon. First Olympics.”
“Biathlon? That's cross-country skiing and, uh....”
“Target shooting.” Rikki grinned. “You're ahead of
most people. Just the other day someone said, ‘Oh, that
must be hard with swimming and running.’ ”
Having won a laugh from Amy and smile from Tess Rutledge,
Rikki went on. “What I don't understand is how we got put
together. I thought they assigned housing by sport. And
in dorms. Not apartments like this.”
“They usually do, but—”
The entry door swung open with enough force to hit the wall
and bounce back on its way to reclosing.
“Damn!” A U.S. team suitcase was propelled across the threshold
to prop the door open. “Where are the bellhops?”
“It's the Olympics, Nan, not the Ritz.”
Rikki identified the second voice as well-bred Eastern boarding
school, no doubt well-accustomed to bellhops and other considerations.
From what she knew of her two remaining roommates that had
to be Kyle Armstrong, of the Delaware Armstrongs, discreetly
moneyed and influential for generations. A most unlikely
gene pool to produce a world-class skier.
“Here, let me.” Amy flew past Rikki and Tess, tugging the
suitcase.
“Thanks! Here.”
Amy took a second bag from the curly-haired woman who’d
lamented the lack of bellhops and passed it to Tess. Rikki
received another and in seconds suitcases, overnighters,
oddly shaped totes, bulging shopping bags, a wrapped tray
of cheeses and fruit and five women clogged the narrow hallway.
“I guess you're right, Kyle, I am a pack rat,” said the
curly-haired woman, not much taller than Amy, but considerably
more compact. She had the high-contrast coloring of Irish
ancestry—black hair, fair skin, blue eyes, bright cheeks.
She reached across to shake hands. “Hi, I'm Nan Monahan.”
Rikki grinned back, then turned to meet the last of her
roommates. Kyle Armstrong brought together subtle variations
on a theme, light brown hair tinged with red, honey skin,
pale brown eyes flickering to hazel.
Names and introductions came in a flurry. All the while,
Rikki watched the faces. Amy was thrilled. Tess was classy.
Nan was a dynamo. Kyle was ... what? Maybe an enigma. The
same as the rest, she yet seemed separate, the smile never
reaching her eyes.
“I've been dying to get here,” pronounced Amy with
full dramatic emphasis. “I can't wait to meet everybody.
C'mon, the living room's great and—”
“Slow down, Amy.”
“But, Tess—”
“We've all just arrived—all except Rikki and it looks as
if she's in the middle of something, too. Give us time to
get organized, then we'll get to know each other.”
“They said we're an experiment within an experiment,” Tess
told the rest of them after they'd settled in with mineral
water and
Nan's
cheese and fruit basket.
“They're housing some athletes in these 'pods' that will
become apartments after the Games. With us, the idea
is to see how it works mixing people from several sports
in one pod instead of dividing up by team. Even though that
will mean longer trips for practices and events for everyone
except Amy.”
She looked at the people who would share these rooms for
the next sixteen days. Not only had the organizers mixed
sports, they'd mixed ages, looks, backgrounds, circumstances
and, unless she missed her guess, personalities.
Lord, please, no problems. She'd been promised her
title of assistant team leader was strictly nominal.
For no reason she could name, Tess's gaze went to Kyle Armstrong,
silently looking out the window, her face expressionless.
Despite experts' cautions that Kyle needed more experience,
great things were expected of her at these Olympics. Kyle
looked almost too delicate to carry that expectation much
less the physical demands of her sport, tall but quite slender
and with less color in her face than Tess would have expected
from someone outdoors so much.
“In other words, they ran out of room to keep the various
teams together and we're the leftovers, so they threw us
together.” Rikki Lodge's dry voice held amusement as well
as a clear-eyed realism.
Tess liked that. Rikki Lodge impressed her; she felt
almost a kinship with the biathlete. Maybe because the information
sheets listed Rikki as the one closest to Tess's age, thirty-one
to her thirty-six. “Exactly.”
“Then I'm glad to be a leftover, because this is great,”
said Amy. “The whole thing's been like a miracle.”
“That's what the papers called it, too,” said Rikki, interest
glinting in her blue-green eyes. Tess had always heard a
temper went with red hair, but she suspected curiosity went
with Rikki Lodge's auburn. “One writer called you a miracle
of enthusiasm on the ice.”
Amy giggled—thank God, she still giggled at compliments.
Her impish grin appeared. It was one of the things Tess
most loved about Amy – that she was satisfied to remain
a girl at fifteen, and only rarely lapse into sophisticated
ennui. Having spent most of her youth playing rowdy team
sports with her brothers had definitely helped. “That's
not what Tess called it when she was making the arrangements
for all this after Nationals.”
Tess shook her head. “You can laugh. But it was a month
of unadulterated craziness. Then, on top of the arrangements
to come here and the interview requests for Amy, plus keeping
a practice schedule, they pressed me into service to help
the team leader.”
She hadn't really minded. There'd been less time to think
that way. Less time to remember.
“The first person who'd agreed to help had a car accident
last week and broke both legs,” said Amy, brutally
cheerful. “So they needed somebody fast, somebody already
coming. Everybody knows Tess won't play favorites even though
she's my coach. And everybody likes her.”
“I've always said it was dangerous to be likable.”
Rikki shook her head. “See what happens? They ask you to
be a team leader and when you're too likable to say no,
they put you in a pod with a bunch of strangers. Why are
they calling these things pods instead of apartments, anyway?”
“These aren't the final apartment layouts. After the Games
they'll reconfigure them,” Tess said.
“Ah, I'd wondered about four bathrooms per apartment.”
“Well, at least they picked a fun group for our ‘pod,’ right?”
Nan Monahan lifted a chunk of cheese in salute.
“Absolutely.” Amy's response reminded Tess how certain a
teenager's certainty could be. And how wrong.
“I intend to have all the fun I can,” Amy added. “I don't
get to skate until the Olympics are practically over— and
there's no way I'm going to spend all that time sitting
around worrying when there's all this fun stuff going on.”
“My sentiments exactly,” Nan said. “I've got to wait ten
days to ski the GS—giant slalom,” she interpreted for the
non-skiers. “Then three more days before the slalom. Kyle
gets to start Tuesday, with the combined—that’s half downhill,
half slalom. So, Tuesday she’ll do downhill for the combined,
finish up with the slalom run Wednesday, and she'll already
have an event under her belt. Probably a medal, too.”
Tess watched for Kyle's reaction, but her gaze out the window
didn't waver.
“That's another reason I intend to have all the fun I can
this time.” Amy’s enthusiasm nearly covered Kyle’s lack
of response. “If I get to the Olympics again, I'll want
a medal. Everybody will expect a lot of me. So this time
is to have fun. And if there's a next time, that's to be
serious.”
Nan shook her head slowly, but her lips curled up.
“This kid is frightening. Truly frightening.”
“Sounds wise to me,” said Rikki.
“That's what I mean.”
Kyle had stared out the window so long her voice startled
Tess a little. “She must have had a good teacher,” she said
to Tess.
Memories of her own painful lessons, learned when she was
not all that much older than Amy, telescoped into a blink,
and for a moment, Tess couldn't answer.
Nan covered the silence, by design or accident, Tess didn't
know. “Yeah, boy, I wish I'd had somebody who'd told me
those kinds of things. I sure could have used that kind
of wisdom when I was fifteen.”
“You could use that kind of wisdom now,” said Kyle, affection,
truth and teasing braided in her voice.
And then she smiled, and Tess understood why the media had
dubbed Kyle Armstrong the sweetheart of skiing.
Before that smile faded, Rikki raised her glass, saying,
“Here's to wisdom for all of us, then. That would be my
idea of a most successful Olympics.”
Tess looked at the faces of the others, the three women
she'd just met and the girl she knew so well. Would these
Olympics bring them success of that kind or any kind? Would
they bring them happiness? Or would they return some day
to the Olympics, as she was returning, trying not to be
defeated by the memories?
“Right,” piped up Amy. “Here's to us. The five peas in the
pod.”
DAY 1 — SATURDAY
An hour
after the Opening Ceremonies ended, the main Olympic Village
recreation center was a babble of languages and laughter.
Colors splashed it like confetti, adrenaline frothed the
air.
Tables and chairs filled the center, retrofitted into an
industrial area made over for the Olympics. Through an arch
to the left, they could see an open area with couples dancing
to international rock and pop songs. Opposite their spot
at the entrance another arch opened to a food court.
And to the right flashes of light and occasional whoops
of triumph promised a video arcade.
Yet, amid all that confusion, Rikki became aware of the
prickling sensation of being watched, once removed. One
pair of eyes had zeroed in on Tess Rutledge, who sat next
to her.
Rikki picked out the watcher easily—blonde, blue-eyed, probably
in his late-30s. By age, he was probably a coach or an official,
but as well-built as the athletes. She'd seen him before.
But no name came to mind.
She scanned his companions and recognized two as Russians,
including the male half of the pairs figure skating team
she'd heard called a medal favorite. Nobody else at that
table showed interest in the newcomers, but this man's eyes
hadn't left Tess. Sure, Tess was recognizable, but
this seemed extreme.
Curious, Rikki turned to question Tess. And shut off the
words immediately.
Tess's smooth skin had turned a shade paler. Her wide brown
eyes tightened in strain. Her graceful body was stiff. She
stared sightlessly in the opposite direction from where
the man sat.
“Oh, look, there's Vladimir Metroveli. Gorgeous,” Amy announced,
pointing to the skater Rikki had already recognized, the
one sitting next to the man Tess so carefully ignored. Tess
was so taut, Rikki thought the older woman might hum any
second.
Nan bustled in behind them. “Oh, good, I caught you before
you got lost in the crowd.”
“Where's Kyle?” Amy asked.
“She decided not to come. She wanted to rest. She's been
feeling a little punk the past week or so.”
“Maybe I should go check on her—”
“No need, Tess, she said she wants to be alone. She's just
fighting a bug of some sort.” Nan's tone dismissed
anything more serious, but Rikki thought she caught uncertainty
in the skier's eyes.
Was she getting imaginative in her old age, or were there
really all these undercurrents in this small group?
“Somebody's waving to you, Rikki.”
Rikki looked in the direction Amy indicated and saw several
members of the biathlon team, who had come into the main
Village for the Opening Ceremonies. With the biathlon venue
among the farthest away, the rest of the team was headquartered
in a smaller Olympic Village near the course. She waved
back, but didn't respond immediately to their gesture to
join them.
“They want you to go over there,” Amy pointed out.
“Yes,”
she said slowly. “But I thought I might stick with you guys
for a while, if you don't mind.”
Odd to feel protective of Tess, a woman who’d been in the
spotlight more than half her life, yet Rikki did.
“Please do.” Under Tess's politeness, Rikki thought she
heard real relief.
“Sure, stick around, we'll show you a good time,” added
Nan. At twenty-five Nan Monahan had a reputation for having
a good time. Also a reputation for letting that interfere
with her skiing.
“Good. Let's try that direction.” Rikki gave a final wave
to her teammates, then started Amy and Nan weaving between
tables, in the opposite direction from the unknown watcher.
At least unknown to her. She'd bet the ranch—if she'd had
one—that he was known to Tess Rutledge, and that it wasn't
her imagination that he was staring, that Tess knew it and
fully intended to ignore it.
“Baby Amy! Amy Yost!”
Before they could do more than turn in the direction of
the bass shout, a burly figure engulfed Amy in a bear hug
that nearly eclipsed her slight figure.
“Mikey! Mikey Sweet! How are you?”
“Mikey Sweet?”
Nan's
astonished murmur echoed Rikki's reaction to the incongruity
of that name for a young man with the face and build of
a barroom bouncer. And perhaps a not entirely successful
one, since his nose looked as if it had done some bouncing.
She met Nan's eyes, looked away to try to avoid laughing,
connected with Tess's equally amused look and lost the battle.
Amy excitedly performed the introductions, filling them
in that she'd known Mikey Sweet since she really was
a baby, and he and her older brother had attended hockey
camps together. But the hockey player saw their reaction.
“With a name like Mikey Sweet, I started playing hockey
in self-defense,” he said with a shrug and half smile. “I
didn't hear you'd made the Olympic team until I called home
last night, Amy. We've been training and playing exhibitions
for weeks and I kinda forget there’s another world outside.
C'mon, sit down, meet the guys,” he invited them all, pulling
out two empty chairs from a rectangular table, “while I
catch up with the half-pint here.”
Leaving Amy and Tess to take those seats, Rikki and Nan
took the only other empty chairs, which were at the far
end of the table and bracketed a pair of men bent over a
paper napkin where one diagrammed something. Rikki recognized
the diagrammer as Lanny Kaminski.
He barely looked up when she sat next to him. His younger
companion showed considerably more interest in Nan's arrival.
If Rikki's ego had been the type to feel that as a slight,
it would have quickly been salved by the reaction of the
player to her right. Flirting for all he was worth, he introduced
himself as Dan Christopher and made his admiration obvious.
She supposed that could be considered something of a coup
since he was attractive and a good eight to ten years younger
than her. But she found his attention more sweet than exciting.
I must be getting old.
With a mental sigh, she answered his questions—what’s your
name, where are you from, what’s your event—though a slice
of her attention lingered on the oblivious man to her left.
Kaminski kept his head bent, the thick, slightly wavy hair
masking his expression. He spoke only to the player next
to him, too low amid the din for Rikki to hear anything
more than a murmur.
“You want something to drink?” asked Dan, her right- side
companion.
“Thanks. A mineral water would be great.”
He disappeared on his mission, and with the blank wall of
Lanny Kaminski's indifference on her other side she was
left to look around.
At the other end of the table, Amy's hands moved in animated
accompaniment to her conversation, while Mikey Sweet grinned
indulgently. Tess's lips also curved, but without any meaning
behind the smile.
Rikki slued around in her chair and leaned to the side.
Just as she thought, the blond, blue-eyed man still focused
on Tess. His face expressionless, almost wooden. The
very lack of emotion seemed to indicate an intensity that
prickled Rikki's backbone.
Now what was that all about?
Straightening, she glanced again at Tess. One look, and
she concluded that she wouldn't be getting the answer to
this mystery from that source any time soon, so there was
no sense fretting about it.
Her gaze skimmed the faces of the other hockey players at
the table. How young so many of them seemed.
If that thought brought a twinge, it disappeared as she
focused on the vignette down the table. Nan had the full
attention of the player to her left. She also had a good
portion of the attention of the player to her right, though
Lanny Kaminski doggedly hung on to the rest as he continued
diagramming.
His blunt-tipped fingers guided a pen tip into emphatic
lines and arrows. A broad palm dwarfed the shaft of the
pen. Without looking away from the other player, Lanny reached
his right hand to grab a napkin off the top of the stack
next to his drink. Dark hair sprinkled the back of his hand,
then disappeared under the cuff of his Team USA shirt. Veins
and knuckles strained against the tough skin. Joints
on his middle and little fingers were misshapen, preventing
the little finger from straightening completely. The
white line of a scar sliced across two knuckles then slipped
out of view around the softer web of skin between the thumb
and index finger.
Looking away from that evidence of hard use, Rikki saw that
the player being tutored had taken advantage of Kaminski's
second of interrupted concentration to turn to
Nan.
Kaminski reared back slightly, as if taken by surprise,
then spoke a single, stern word.
“Tonetti.”
The player named Tonetti frowned, but turned back to Kaminski.
“Here you go.”
Dan placed a glass in front of her and one in front of his
spot. Rather than pulling his chair out, he swung one leg
over the back and slid down into the seat. He'd almost made
it when his solid thigh connected with the underside of
the table. The resulting earthquake set off tidal waves
in the two full glasses, slopping over the sides.
Instinctively, Rikki snatched from the napkin stack and
started mopping.
“What the fuck—!” Lanny Kaminski's outrage from her left
drowned out Dan's mingled curses and apologies from her
right.
She grabbed more napkins, containing the flood within a
circle of soggy paper.
“Hey, I need those napkins.” Kaminski's voice, with a distinctive
thread of
Boston,
came as stern as when he'd called Tonetti to order. Maybe
he didn’t know any other tone.
She slanted a grin at him, just to annoy him. She tucked
away the observation that his eyes were a soft, deep brown.
“My need was greater. And more immediate.” She made a third
raid on his dwindling cache despite the frown that drew
his dark brows into a straight, uninterrupted line.
Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Tonetti had wasted
no time in turning to Nan. Rikki's grin widened. She drew
the circle of wet napkins smaller. “You can get more later.”
His frown tightened, but before Kaminski said anything,
Dan scraped back his chair. “I'll get more for you, Kam.
It was my fault. I'll be right back.”
With Kaminski busy frowning at Rikki, Tonetti and Nan stood
up and started away.
Happy to be an accomplice, Rikki took the last of the dry
napkins and put them to use.
“Want my shirt, too?” Kaminski muttered darkly, moving the
already diagrammed napkins out of her reach.
“You think I need it?”
He ignored that, turning his shoulder on her in preparation
for reeling Tonetti back in.
But all that was left of Tonetti was an empty chair and
a glimpse of his retreating back as he and Nan headed for
the dance floor.
Rikki laughed, and Kaminski spun back to face her. His gaze
—with the softness gone—slammed into hers. Her laughter
hitched, then mellowed to a chuckle.
“Looks like your captive audience went over the wall.”
“Think that's funny?” The Boston in his voice grew wider.
“So will the Czechs when we play them tomorrow. Yeah,
they'll get a real kick out of it when they go against Tonetti,
because he's nowhere near up to speed on this. They'll
think it's a damned good joke all right.”
“Oh, come on. It's not as if Tonetti catching a dance instead
of looking at one more napkin diagram is going to decide
the fate of the world.”
“How about the fate of a team.”
His dourness rubbed her as raw as criticism. “These are
supposed to be games, you know. Olympic Games. Or
aren't you—”
“Oh, I see you've met Kam.”
Dan's return snapped her strangely testy mood. “Not officially,”
she said sweetly, because that seemed most likely to irk
Kaminski. She held out her hand. “Hi. I'm Rikki Lodge. Biathlon.”
He looked down at her hand, then into her eyes. “Lanny
Kaminski.”
He met her hand, but didn't shake it. Just engulfed it with
his big, rough one. Letting her own unpampered, no nonsense
hand absorb the sensation of heat and the friction of calluses
and scar ridges.
She swallowed, trying to clear the way for words that would
be light, funny. Nothing came. She was grateful he
didn't look up from where his hand enclosed hers.
“Well now that the introduction's official, you want to
dance with me, Rikki?” asked the voice behind her. She turned
to the younger athlete.
“Sounds great.” Gratitude to Dan for the unintentional excuse
infused extra warmth in her voice.
Lanny Kaminski released her hand and turned back to the
fresh pile of napkins Dan had provided, apparently content
to dismiss her with a mumbled “See you.”
But as she danced with Dan, then with Mikey Sweet, Tonetti
and other members of the team, she did notice Kaminski watching
her once.
She hadn't counted how many times she'd glanced at him.
"THE
GAMES accurately portrays the emotional roller coaster an
athlete rides in pursuit of … Olympic Glory.
~
Michael
Weiss, U.S. Olympic figure skater and three-time U.S.
Men's Champion
DAY 2 — SUNDAY
Even before the descent, the mountain brought Kyle Armstrong
peace.
Enclosing herself in the familiar armor against the cold.
Contemplating strategy, reviewing what had already been
learned that day, anticipating the course's next lesson.
Being conveyed sedately up the incline she soon would make
her private domain for one final time today. Beneath
the babble of voices, listening to the silence of stretching
nerves, even now, when it was only a training run.
It was her haven, always.
Even tomorrow when she would forfeit the relative privacy
of this workout with her team. When the official training
run for Tuesday's downhill half of the combined would bring
a U.N. of television cameras to cause confusion as they
jockeyed for set-up shots they would use to explain Alpine
skiing to viewers in Tampa and Taiwan, Boston and Brazil,
Albuquerque and Australia.
Kyle Armstrong loved it all.
Each mountain was different, individual. Yet this was the
same. She loved her moment in the start shack, totally alone,
inside herself, with only herself and the mountain.
She loved the jangle of the bell that released her with
a heart-jolting burst of adrenaline. She loved the twist
and flow of the movement. She loved the calm reason of the
notations and reminders her mind issued. She loved the undertow
of fear.
And it was almost as if it all loved her back.
“Okay, Kyle. Course is clear.”
Now. Her moment. The second of release. The pushoff. The
first, clean swoop down the mountain like a bird diving
after prey.
Speed. She felt it. The wind her own body stirred, the spinning
away of the snow she slid over.
Fear. She didn't mind this kind of fear. It was the other
fear, slow and gnawing that rattled her. What am I going
to do?
Ski. That's what she was going to do. Just ski. And not
think.
Last year, in a World Cup, she'd skied well on this mountain,
on courses set by the same designers, but there would be
changes since then. Minor, true. But a hair's- breadth of
balance split disaster from victory. So the coaches had
set up this training run as close as possible to what they
expected the race courses to be, so every nuance could be
traced, noted, filed as she sped through the curves, scanning
the turns so they would be recorded in her muscles' memories.
And then it was over. In a blink. Less.
Frowning, she started tugging her goggles off even as she
curved to a stop.
No huge electronic scoreboard flashed her time at her as
it would on the race course, but she didn't need one to
tell her. The run had gone by too fast. Way, way too fast.
Never a good sign. In some perverse rule of skiing, when
she was really on, really concentrating, really flying,
every ridge of snow, every inch of mountainside seemed to
linger in crystal clear slow motion.
She flicked loose her skis, automatically propping them
against her shoulder with the brand name forward, even with
no TV cameras to focus on her. Turning, she came face to
face with Rob Zemlak, holding the clipboard he never seemed
to be without despite its almost nostalgic old-fashionedness.
“What was that?” His dark brows clashed over the bridge
of his straight nose in a frown that turned his gray eyes
steely.
She turned so she didn't look directly at him. “Training
run. Didn't you read the day's schedule you're always yapping
at us about?”
He glared, but said nothing about her tone. Still,
he got his digs in.
“Pretty shitty training run.”
“Thanks for the support, Coach.”
His jaw tightened. That seemed to be the only way his jaw
operated. Always tighter. Never looser. As tight as she'd
seen his jaw get over the past fifteen months, he'd never
let loose.
“Your start was barely acceptable, but you could have made
it up if you’d had your head on. Instead, it looked like
you took a side trip to another planet. I thought you were
heading off the side of the mountain. And the end—”
“A training run. I simply used it as a training run.
Checking the course, working on sections, honing technique.
You know, all those things we're supposed to do on training
runs.”
He ignored that too—ignoring her was one of Rob Zemlak's
best honed techniques—and finished his sentence. “The end
looked mechanical. Like some expensive windup doll.”
That jerked her back to face him.
Standing toe to toe, she stared at him, too angry to fully
realize it was probably the first time in more than a year
they'd made direct eye contact. And too angry to wonder
about the change in his gray eyes. But he went on, as always.
“That's not going to get you a medal. Nowhere near.
And combined's your best shot, much better than GS or slalom.
You used to want a medal more than anything, Armstrong.
Don't you want it anymore? Have you gotten bored with all
this? Tired of working so hard for a bit of precious medal
you could have bought with a week's allowance when you were
eight years old? Want to leave all this behind and run away
to Daddy's Caribbean hideaway and—”
She shoved him in the chest with enough force to make him
take a step back and started past him.
“Kyle! Rob! Just who we were looking for.” Nan hurried up
to them with a man in tow. Her mouth smiled, but her brows
knit in warning. “This is Benton Harbor of the Washington
Observer. You know, a reporter.”
The color-coded tags hanging around the zipped up collar
of the man's painfully new parka gave that away.
“How do you do, Mr. Harbor.” Automatically Kyle extended
her hand and smiled, pushing down the sudden clutch deep
in her belly.
“Actually, it's Harrison. No relation to the town in Michigan.”
He smiled as they shook gloved hands. He wasn't one of the
regulars they encountered on the ski circuit.
“Oh, I'm sorry. Harrison. I'm really sorry. I'm always getting
names mixed up.”
Kyle looked at Nan, who rarely confused names or faces.
But even as she continued the introductions, Nan's attention
focused somewhere over Harrison's shoulder.
Kyle shifted to see what Nan was looking at. Another man
stood about six feet away, his shoulder to them but the
wind flipping around tags to match Harrison's. Oil, natural
or artificial, darkened his hair. He didn't look at them
and his posture was of complete nonchalance. He was trying
his damnedest to eavesdrop.
How long had he been there? Had he heard her dispute with
Rob?
“And this is Rob Zemlak, our coach. He's the one you should
ask those questions about today's training runs.”
“Of course. I just wanted to ask Kyle—”
“Nan's right, you really should ask me,” interrupted Rob,
firm but with the anger gone. That he saved for her.
He took the reporter's arm and turned him toward one of
the buildings at the base of the run. “I think I saw Stephen
Carlisle, our head coach, just go inside over there, so
we can get warm and you can hit both of us at the same time.”
Benton Harrison didn't protest, but he did glance at Kyle
again as he let Rob lead him away.
The other man darted a look toward Kyle and Nan. They looked
back. He displayed a momentary intense interest in the mountain,
then sauntered off behind Rob and Benton Harrison.
Nan watched them go and gnawed on her lower lip. “That’s
not the last of him. Harrison’s going to be back.”
“So?” Abruptly, Kyle felt exhausted. And the grip on her
lower belly tightened.
“So? So, he got a good look at you and Rob going at it and
he'd have to be blind and stupid not to see you two were
pissed at each other, and I don't think he's either.
And that other guy—who knows what shit he heard. He was
busy sidling closer to you two when we came up.”
Kyle started to shrug, then stopped when it threatened to
turn tightness into outright pain.
“Do you want to be asked a lot of questions about why you
and Rob Zemlak don't get along?” Nan demanded. “What is
with you two anyway? You've never been buddy-buddy, but
it looked as if you'd like to put poles through each other's
hearts.”
“I don't know what you're—”
“Don't lie to me, Kyle.” Nan's sharpness brought Kyle's
head up in surprise. It was so unlike Nan. By her next words
it had disappeared. “You don't want to tell me what's going
on with you and Rob, fine, don't tell me shit. That's
your business. But don't lie to me, Kyle. Not if you want
me to stay your friend.”
Kyle looked away, to the top of the mountain, where she'd
left her peace.
Nan sighed, but said with her usual cheer. “C'mon.
Let's head back for hot showers, massages and some food.
And forget about that pile of rock and ice.”
******
“Don't worry about the triple lutz, Tess. I'm gonna land
it from now on. I can feel it.” Amy grinned at her with
utter confidence. “Just like at Nationals. Those falls in
practice were a fluke. I'm gonna nail it. I can feel it.”
“I know you will.” Tess smiled, wishing she could bottle
that confidence and feed it back to Amy whenever the girl
needed it down the road.
Although this wasn't a bad time for a dose of confidence.
They stood in the “Kiss and Cry Area,” to one side of the
entrance to the ice where, in a few days, Amy would wait
for the scores from her first Olympic competition. Although
today's skate officially qualified as practice, it was different
from sessions at the practice rink. Amy wore full competition
warpaint—costume, matching tights, hair styled, makeup—because
the scores that flashed on the electronic board and across
the world the night she competed would start to be earned
in the next few minutes.
One of figure skating's arcane little idiosyncrasies:
the judges judged practices. They sat among the spectators
for these official practices, and they familiarized themselves
with routines and skills, built expectations of what should
be done and how. The final scores would be a measurement
of how well the skater lived up to those expectations under
the spotlight.
In fact the process of stockpiling those expectations began
much earlier, certainly as the season progressed through
the fall and into the winter, but also from the skater’s
past years of competition.
But Amy didn’t have past years of competition before these
judges.
For Amy, this was a critical debut. She'd jumped from juniors
to top-level international competition earlier than anyone
had expected, including Tess. And though these judges would
have heard of her success, she'd entered a new world.
The major leagues.
They would watch her carefully. In the next few minutes
her reputation would start to form, her place in the international
hierarchy begin to be established.
Tess felt her stomach tighten, a dampening of sweat on her
palms and under her arms despite the ice-cooled air.
“There. That finished the music for the last pairs,” Amy
announced as a classical piece blaring over the loudspeakers
ended with a flourish.
No skaters got the ice to themselves. They practiced in
pre-assigned groups, shifts of men's singles, ice dancing,
pairs and ladies’ singles. But every entry's music
played during the session for a complete run-through of
the routine. With the last session of pairs wrapping up,
the first group of ladies, including Amy, prepared to take
the ice for their short-program practice.
Tess adjusted a fold on the shoulder of Amy's costume to
keep her hands busy as the pairs slowly filed off, pausing
to slip on skate guards as they were greeted at the entrance
by their coaches.
“Mmm, Vladimir Metroveli.”
Tess stiffened just as Amy's murmur reached her, for she,
too, had seen Vladimir Metroveli and Radja Rastnikova come
off the ice and join their coach. A man with hair as blond
now that he was forty as it had been just past twenty. His
eyes as blue, and as direct in their survey of her as they
had been last night.
Andrei.
She jerked her eyes away. “Ready, Amy?”
“Ready.”
“Remember—”
“I know, I know. Remember to have fun. I will!”
Tess concentrated all her thoughts on the lithe form that
went flying across the ice like a bird set free. She followed
every move, every breath, refusing to let the past or the
sensed departure of the blond man intrude.
She eased a little as Amy's music queued up third.
Skating the program was easier for Amy—and her coach—than
the waiting.
Tess gave the two minutes fifty seconds of the short program
her total attention, evaluating the elements all the skaters
had to incorporate into this program while displaying individuality
of style. The short program scores would account for one-third
of Amy's final result, with the other two-thirds from the
long or “free” skate, though it, too, had required elements
now.
In the end Tess was satisfied. It wasn't flawless, but close
enough for now. She would mention a few points...but not
until later.
Tess breathed in deep satisfaction. Amy had taken a first
step—a solid, respectable first step. Not too flashy to
raise false expectations, not too staid to let anyone dismiss
her.
And she had nailed the triple lutz.
Relaxing enough to let her focus widen, Tess sensed an air
of heightened expectation. She saw Xing Li poised at center
ice for the next music to start, and Tess understood.
The young woman from China had burst onto the international
scene just a year ago and now ranked as a medal favorite.
A remarkable ascension, even more remarkable because China’s
production of top-level skaters was relatively recent.
The music started, and the other skaters slowed their workouts,
unabashedly watching the slender, dark-haired figure. The
tapes Tess had seen didn't do justice to Xing Li’s flowing
movement. She seemed to glide equally over the ice or through
the air. But the skater also emanated a tension Tess hadn’t
sensed in the tapes she’d watched.
The music echoed into stillness and the lone skater came
to a stop in a position that seemed to beg the skies for
sympathy. The arena let out its collective breath and the
other skaters resumed spins, footwork and jumps with new
vigor. The Chinese girl, summoned by a peremptory gesture,
skated, head down, to where five unsmiling official-looking
types in team parkas stood just outside the wall. Breathing
deeply from exertion, she listened wordlessly as each of
the five had something to say.
Tess felt a pang of sympathy. Being the favorite could be
a terrible burden; Tess knew that from experience.
How much worse under Xing Li's conditions?
She watched the slender figure skate back into the maelstrom
of activity on the ice, her shoulders drawn up tightly,
her mouth a straight, stern line.
Automatically, Tess's eyes went to Amy. In four years, if
all went well, Amy Yost could be the favorite.
I won't let it be like that for
you, Amy. I swear.
“She has your joy, but not your grace.”
Tess swung around to the voice, unable to stop herself.
Andrei stood next to her, leaning his forearm on top of
the wall. He was close enough for her to see the fine lines
at the corner of his eyes. Close enough to watch the cadence
of his breathing. Close enough to smell the slight spiciness
that cut through the chill air.
But not as close as she'd so often dreamed.
She turned back toward the ice, found Amy, and made her
eyes follow the girl.
“You look away from me always. Now you will not talk to
me, Tess?”
Even and calm, almost placid, yet the words tore at something
in her. Maybe it was only memories, scarred over and buried
deep.
Without taking her gaze from the figure on the ice, she
started slowly.
“She has great athletic potential. More than I ever hoped
to have. Look at that—” Amy landed a double axel with ease
and grinned. “The grace will come. She'll grow into
it. The athleticism's already there.”
She didn't turn away from the ice, so she didn't see Andrei's
reaction, but she heard a slow breath escape him.
“They can jump, these children. But there is more to the
skating.”
“Of course there is.” She said it with something like enthusiasm.
She'd given so many interviews on the subject she hardly
had to think. Exactly the state she desired right now. “And
that's where the coaches are so important, making sure the
young ones don't jump their knees into J-ello, and teaching
them the grace and artistry. Especially with the school
figures gone. Mastering those used to slow everyone down
enough that the skaters were more mature before they tried
competing on this level. It was a less flamboyant, more
disciplined sport in the old days, back when—”
She'd almost achieved the laugh she often used to punctuate
that point, the laugh meant to emphasize how long she’d
been away from competing before anyone else could. But this
time the laugh died abruptly.
“When we skated, Tess? When we competed in the Olympics?
When we met?”
Silence was her safeguard.
Still soft, his voice was relentless. “So now you will talk
to me, but not of me. Not of us.”
Silence couldn't stand up to anger.
“There's no us. There probably never was. There certainly
hasn't been since you— So there is nothing to say. Nothing.”
“Tess—”
“They're coming off the ice. I have to go.”
She started past, but he caught her, large hands wrapped
around her upper arms. Through the layers she wore against
the rink's chill she surely couldn't feel his touch. Yet
there was warmth there.
He'd made it so she couldn't look away and she wouldn't
look down.
She met his eyes, trying to bleed everything out of her
own—the memories, the pain, the warmth where his hands touched
her.
“There is nothing to say,” she repeated.
“There is much to say. But you will not listen. Not now.
But I will be there when you will listen. I will be there,
Tessa.”
He released her and she moved away, pulling a smile from
somewhere for Amy as she came off the ice, bubbling and
panting.
“Did you see that? Did you see that?”
“I saw. You were great.”
As she hugged Amy, she saw Andrei standing where she'd left
him, watching her once more.
*****
“ A magic
touch … Multiple storylines cross and connect, bringing
the characters to life.” ~ Huntress Reviews
“Pride,
excitement, disappointment, relationships, doubt, relief,
joy and all of the pressures … all come to a head at the
Olympic Games."
—
Michael
Weiss, U.S. Olympic figure skater and three-time U.S. Men's
Champion
“Tess! Thank God!” Ron Sheffield, the team leader, caught
her as she followed Amy to the women's locker room.
Used to his dramatics, and perhaps grateful for the distraction
from her own thoughts, Tess took things in order. “Go on
ahead, Amy. Get your shower. I'll be in soon. Hello, Ron.
How are you today?”
“Now that I've seen you, I might survive. Finding you is
an absolute godsend. You've got to take over for me in the
interview room.”
“But, Ron—”
“It's not arduous duty, I swear. One pair's done. there's
just two more to go. We wouldn't need anybody, but this
is the big interview session for the pairs before they start
competition tomorrow, and we don't want anyone upset.
It used to just be the American media that wanted this and
we could get the kids in and out. But now all the reporters
want access and it’s getting bigger and bigger, so we have
to ride herd on them. It's just to have someone there, making
sure there's water in the glasses, helping out our kids
if they get asked a real doozy of a question. And, of course,
whisking them away if they start chanting Satanic rites
and making hex signs.”
“But Ron—”
“I know, I know. I promised you I'd handle everything. But
honest, Tess, I need your help. Unless...” His crafty
smile immediately roused Tess's instinct for self-preservation.
“Unless you want to handle this other little matter.”
“What other little matter?”
“A small scheduling snafu. Just a tiny—”
“Oh, no. No way, Ron. I don't do scheduling snafus.
I didn't think I did interview rooms, either, but I definitely
don't do scheduling snafus.”
“Wise choice,” he said with a sigh. “I'm trying to convince
the organizing committee official that putting up a notice
at noon that the ice dancers' practice time has been moved
to two this afternoon instead of nine o'clock tomorrow morning
is not fair, conducive to good feelings or even practical
since the whole crew disappeared into town for a free afternoon.
At the same time I'm trying to stop the various coaches
from having hysterics or starting an international incident
by assaulting a member of the organizing committee. If I
can just find the French and Japanese team leaders... They're
in the same predicament, and if we present a united front...”
“All right, I'll take the interview room—”
“Bless you, Tess. Here—” He shoved a schedule sheet printed
in four languages into her hand. “It should only be another
hour or so. Thank you, thank you.”
“You're welcome,” she called out to his back in the crowded
hall. “But I can't guarantee I'll recognize Satanic chants
if I hear them.”
She could tell who among the skaters, officials, coaches
and technicians littering the hall understood English—they
were the ones who turned around and stared at her. A couple
laughed.
An hour and a half later, remembering Sheffield's “or so”
tacked on to the promise of another hour, she could have
used the laugh. Amy had come in, freshly showered and dressed,
and departed to watch another practice session, and still
the interviews droned on. Leaning against the back wall
listening to the international media question a pairs team
from France she wanted to tell them all to lighten up.
My Lord, this didn't concern nuclear war or an assault on
the environment or human rights. Although maybe there should
be an international commission to study cruelty to skaters.
The first people investigated should be the reporters. Not
the ones who asked questions that revealed they didn't know
the difference between an axel and an edge— they were merely
ignorant. It was the ones who asked skaters such as this
stiff-jawed young man and his big-eyed partner what it felt
like to have the world watching their every move and a nation
counting on them to perform better than they ever had before
for the greater glory of France— those were the dangerous
ones.
A merciful fate saved the young skaters—time was up.
An organizing committee member and their coach shepherded
the slightly dazed pair from behind the linen-draped table
forested with microphones.
Uh-oh, were Americans next? Tess belatedly scanned the schedule
sheet. No, the final American pair came second-to-the-last,
damn Ron's hide. Still two to go. First—
“Ladies and gentlemen, Radja Rastnikova and Vladimir Metroveli
of Russia, reigning world champions and bronze medalists
in the last Olympics. Mesdames and Messieurs...”
As the introduction continued in the languages of the Olympics,
Tess spotted Andrei.
He stood at the front, broad shoulders braced against the
door frame to the hallway, unobtrusive but situated so he
could survey the field of journalists, yet make eye contact
with his skaters if they sought him out.
So different from that interview she'd seen him give eighteen
years ago.
He'd sat next to his partner, Tatiana Serginova, flanked
by their coach and three members of Soviet officialdom.
She'd stood in the back, as she did now, listening to Andrei's
voice, so devoid of life she'd hardly recognized it, and
catching glimpses of his wooden face between the shoulders
of journalists and hangers-on. She'd seen life in
his eyes only once, for an instant, when he'd caught sight
of her, and then it had been gone.
That night, when he'd escaped all his handlers and they'd
slipped off alone together, he'd told her never to come
to one of his interviews again. At first, she'd thought
he didn't want her to see that side of him, the cold, public
face she thought of as his Soviet identity. Later,
she'd wondered if he'd already known he was going to choose
that identity and betray her trust, her heart.
“Oooh, isn't he gorgeous?”
Tess started, disoriented for an instant before she realized
Amy had returned and that she didn't refer to the Andrei
Chersakov who existed only in Tess's memory, but to Vladimir
Metroveli.
But Amy hadn't needed an answer. “Look at those eyes. And
that smile.” She paused to contemplate each attribute. “And
that hair.”
Vladimir pushed back a thick lock of hair from his forehead
and Amy let out an appreciative breath. Tess thought he
needed a good haircut. God, she was getting old.
“And of course he's a fantastic skater. Nobody does lifts
like he does. Though his footwork could be smoother leading
up to the side-by-side toe loops in their short program.”
Maybe this infatuation didn't run as deep as she had feared
if Amy could be dispassionate about his skating.
No sooner had that hopeful thought crossed Tess's mind than
Amy gave an odd little giggle and added, “But he does look
great in that costume.”
“Amy—”
“Shhh!”
They'd been talking softly, but not softly enough for some
of those trying to listen to the interview. Tess started
steering a resistant Amy toward the rear door to the hallway.
They really had to talk about this.
When Amy's resistance abruptly evaporated, Tess looked back
and saw the interview had broken up. Vladimir said something
to Andrei, who put his arm casually around Radja and walked
between his two skaters, through the door and out of her
sight as the next pair came in. He had not glanced once
in her direction.
“C'mon, Tess.”
Now Amy tugged her into the hallway. They arrived in time
to see Andrei and his two skaters turn a corner and go out
of sight.
“Amy—” But they couldn't talk about this here, with journalists
exiting and entering the interview room, skaters and coaches
crossing paths as one practice session ended and another
began and officials going every which way.
“What?”
“Uh, what are you going to do this afternoon?”
“How much longer do you have to stay here?”
“A couple more interviews. But you don't have to stay. We
can go into town another day. You could go back to the apartment
and rest if you'd like.”
“No, that's okay. I'll wait.” Amy sighed, but Tess didn't
mind that sound of impatience. She was too grateful Amy
wasn't lobbying to go into the unfamiliar city by herself.
“But I'm gonna watch some more practice. That's not as boring
as this....”
Tess was unprepared for the elbow that dug into her side,
and gave a soft “oof.” “Amy, what—”
“Shh. Don't look, but that man right there, the one coming
this way, that's Vladimir Metroveli's coach, isn't it? If
I could meet him then maybe ...”
Amy wouldn't make much of a spy. She never took her eyes
off Andrei's approach as she whispered to Tess. But in this
case she didn't need subterfuge. Vladimir Metroveli's coach
stopped directly in front them. “Hello, Tess. This must
be your pupil, the celebrated Amy Yost.”
Amy turned rosy. More amazing, she seemed tongue-tied.
Tess gave in to the inevitable. “Yes. Andrei, this is Amy
Yost of Dayton, Ohio. Amy, this is Andrei Chersakov of St.
Petersburg, Russia.”
“It's very nice to meet you, Mr. Chersakov.”
“It is a pleasure to meet you, Amy Yost. Please, call me
Andrei.”
“I didn't know you knew Vla—” Amy turned even rosier as
she bit back what she'd almost blurted to Tess. “I didn't
know you knew each other.”
Tess didn't look at Andrei. “We met when we were both competing.”
Less easily she added, “My first Olympics.”
“And my last,” Andrei murmured. Those soft words brought
Tess's eyes to his face. But he looked at Amy. “Did
you know that your coach and I once skated together?”
“You did? But she was always a singles skater.”
“Not for that one night.”
I want to skate with you. I want to hold you on the ice,
and kiss you. And then, every time I skate, I will hold
you again. In my heart.
But what if someone sees us. What if they tell—
It won't matter. I will have you in my heart.
Amy saved her from the memories.
“I didn't know that.” Her eyes opened wide, the way they
did when she wanted to get something. “I thought it was
really different back then, when there used to be the Soviet
Union and skaters weren't allowed to even talk to Americans.
Not like now, when we can meet each other and get to know
each other, even the really top skaters like you coach and
newcomers like me.”
Andrei looked at Amy, who looked back at him, transparent.
Tess detected no visible sign of the amusement she was certain
he felt.
“You are right, Amy. It is very different. Would you like
me to introduce you to the really top skaters I coach?”
“Would you?”
“I would be honored. Perhaps tomorrow morning when there
is the brief practice for the pairs before they have their
first competition in the evening. I am sure Vladimir and
Radja would be most interested to meet the lovely Amy Yost.”
“Great! That's great! Thanks. Thanks a lot, Andrei. I'll
see you in the morning.” She edged away, as if afraid the
promise might be retracted, or Tess might object. “I'll
be back when that interview's done, Tess. 'Bye.”
Tess frowned, watching her rapid retreat through the mostly
emptied hallway, yet clinging to Amy as a distraction from
the man who faced her. “Oh, great.”
“You do not want her to meet Vladimir and Radja?”
“It's not Radja I'm worried about.” Dryly, she added, “She
likes the way Vladimir fills his costume.”
Andrei made a noise, a sort of muffled bark, and she could
see him struggling not to laugh out loud.
She remembered that laugh. A deep-throated sound that had
once swamped her senses. The skin at the back of her neck
prickled.
“Do not look so worried, Tess. It is a girl's crush.”
“Sure, you can laugh.” Pretending annoyance was better than
that prickling awareness. She crossed her arms at her waist.
“You didn't promise her parents you'd look out for her.
She's fifteen years old.”
“And Vladimir is twenty-four years old, accustomed to young
girls adoring him, generally most kindly to them and about
to marry a woman he loves very much—” He touched his fingertips
to the back of her hand. Warmth. “—Radja, his partner.”
Tess flinched.
Andrei jerked away, not just his hand but his whole body
tensed at her instinctive reaction. His eyes seemed to go
blank, his face immovable. As if a switch had been thrown
and the human being inside had evaporated.
She remembered that face from eighteen years ago. The face
he'd worn at that interview. The face he'd worn around anyone
from his country. The face she'd come to think of as his
public face; the gap between them in visible form.
She'd forgotten how much she'd hated it.
It struck her now— she'd been able to forget that because
she hadn't seen it these past few days. She'd been so ready
to fight off the memories he stirred she hadn't noticed
the changes in him. Not until she'd caused this retreat
behind his old facade.
Her breath came out in a hiss of pain. Squeezing her eyes
shut, she wished with all her might that it wasn't so, even
as she accepted that she still couldn't bear to see Andrei
Chersakov like this.
She opened her eyes and said in as normal a tone as she
could manage, “A crush? A girl's crush, that's all you think
it is?”
Life returned to his face, though not the laughter.
“For your Amy, now, yes. A girl's crush only.”
She let herself be reassured without acknowledging any distinctions
he might be implying.
“Your English is very good.”
“I have had a long time to practice it. And I have worked
hard at it.”
“And you've had a lot of opportunities to use it these past
few years with your skaters doing so well.”
He met her breezy tone with brief solemnity. “Yes.”
“From eighth at the worlds just five years ago, to the Olympic
bronze, and then last year world champions...that's quite
a climb.”
“Worlds, Olympics, other competitions—I looked for you always,
Tess.”
“Oh, I haven't had any international caliber skaters before
Amy. Since I retired from the pro circuit, I've been very
content to be a small-time coach. Amy's the one who's pulling
me back into all this. And Amy's far ahead of where I thought
she would be at this—”
“Not Amy, you. I looked to see you. Everywhere I went. Always.”
“Don't—”
It hurt to breathe, each draw into her lungs a burn right
down to her heart. How could he expect to open the door
he'd slammed so resoundingly? Didn't he know how hard,
how painfully she'd worked to build the brick wall that
covered it on her side?
She looked around, through the half-opened door she saw
the two skaters behind the table start to rise, and went
light-headed with relief.
“I have to go. I have to be there when Americans are interviewed
to— Well, just in case. I have to. Goodbye.”
He allowed her to go.
It worried her to know that it was a matter of allowing.
******
“Some lazy Sunday brunch, huh?”
Rikki and the two other biathlon team members at their cafeteria
table groaned at Sharon Wagner’s comment.
They'd been out by seven to “school the loops,” a twice-a
day exercise of covering the course to learn its idiosyncrasies
so well that they were second nature in a race. Then they'd
done a light workout and some shooting to stay sharp before
watching a women's cross-country race, cheering on American
skiers they often trained with. Then back on the course
for another loop before returning to the
Athletes
Village for lunch.
Rikki ate with three team members who were housed together
here in the Olympic Village closest to the course. For the
first time it hit her how much she enjoyed not rooming with
the people she trained, competed and ate with every day.
“If you think the altitude at this course is bad, you should
have seen at Soldier Hollow – the Salt Lake Games,” Lois
Welthur said to Rikki and the fourth member at their table,
Jane North, as if they wouldn’t recognize the venue from
the previous Olympics, even though they hadn’t been there.
“Especially
after Nagano, we thought they had mixed us up with the Alpine
skiers. Didn't we, Sharon?”
Not too bad, Rikki thought. Only the second reference to
previous Olympics by Lois during the meal. She didn't let
anyone forget that she'd competed in those Winter Games—and
Rikki hadn't.
Not making the Olympic team her first try had been a disappointment,
not making the team the next two times had been much, much
worse. But she’d never get anywhere if she hadn’t learned
how to keep disappointments from getting her down. Even
with Lois dredging them up.
“This course is high enough for me,” said Sharon.
“So, what's everybody doing this afternoon? Shopping?”
“I'm going back to the room,” Lois said firmly. “I'm not
going to waste energy tramping around shopping.”
“The U.S. is playing a hockey game this afternoon. I think
I'll go to that. They did say we could get tickets for events
with our athlete passes,” said Sharon, as if Lois hadn't
spoken. “How about you guys?”
“Hockey? I love hock—”
“That's crazy,” Lois interrupted Jane. “It’s all the way
back to the city. It'll be packed. You'll just expose yourself
to a lot of germs. You could get sick, and for what?”
“For the experience of being at the Olympics, that's what,”
said Sharon. “I focused so much on the competition my first
time, I hardly even knew I was at the Olympics and not in
training camp. I really regretted it. I vowed that if I
got back, I'd do it differently. I had a ball at Salt Lake,
and I intend to again this time. Starting with hockey this
afternoon. What about it, Jane? Want to go shout U-S-A,
U-S-A?”
“Sure.”
“How about you, Rikki?”
She smiled slowly. “A hockey game could be very interesting.”
*******
They'd guessed at the starting time and got to the hockey
center early, finding seats not far behind the USA bench.
While they waited, Jane gave Sharon and Rikki a crash course.
“How do you know all this about hockey?” Rikki asked her.
“My four older brothers all played. One went to the Calgary
Olympics. I skated, too, as a kid, then went into skiing.
And from there into biathlon.”
Applause from the crowd still filing in brought Rikki's
attention to the American team, which had appeared for warm-ups.
The heavily padded uniforms and helmets made the players
as indistinguishable as kindergartners in identical snowsuits.
She started to reach for the program she'd tucked into her
bag. And stopped.
One player lifted his head and she looked right into the
dark eyes of Lanny Kaminski. She didn't need a program to
know they were his eyes.
He didn't wave. He didn't smile. He didn't blink.
He just looked. And she looked back.
Then a teammate jostled him and he turned away. And never
looked her way again.
Had he even seen her? Maybe the trio of U.S. team jackets
had caught his eye and he hadn't seen her at all.
Or maybe it had been one of those unintentional stares that
indicate a total internal focus.
When he started to play, she became convinced her second
“maybe” was right.
He seemed attuned to every move on the ice and nothing beyond
it. He barreled down the length of the rink like a freight
train. He crashed into an opponent with an impact that took
away her breath as well as the other player's. Then
he stole the puck with an agile swipe that would please
a cat, and immediately passed off to a teammate.
Once an opponent checked him and he couldn't stop his momentum,
tumbling over the other player's shoulder and landing on
his back in a flip. The play never stopped. Before her stomach
finished somersaulting, he got to his feet and went after
the puck.
When his line came off the ice to let the next shift on,
he prowled the bench area, exhorting and instructing his
teammates. He spent a lot of time with the player with “Tonetti”
across his back, but satisfied himself with a clap to Sweet's
shoulder. He swallowed some water, then yanked off his helmet
and poured the rest over his matted hair and sweat-streaked
face, never taking his eyes off the game. Each time
he returned to the ice, he seemed to leap into the play
with fierce pleasure. Even after he'd caught an elbow to
the face that let loose a stream of blood from a cut over
his eye.
“You okay, Rikki?” Sharon asked sometime in the third period.
“Fine. I'm fine.”
“Really? You've been squirming around in that seat like
it had tacks on it.”
“I'm fine.” She avoided the urge to shift again. That
hadn't relieved the strange edginess she'd been feeling,
anyhow.
Lanny Kaminski controlled the puck less often than several
other players, yet Rikki found she followed him instead
of the play. Even before the crowd's roar she knew each
of the three times the U.S. team scored by his reaction.
But even in the game's waning seconds, with a three-to-one
lead, he remained just as intense.
The final horn sounded, and the U-S-A, U-S-A chant went
up.
“That was great! Wasn't it great, Rikki?” Jane shouted across
Sharon, still standing and hollering.
“Yeah, great.” She smiled at Jane, consciously relaxing
her muscles.
What else it had been she wasn't at all sure.
******
"Patricia
McLinn wins gold with this sparkling romance! "
~
Carla Neggers, New York Times bestselling author
“Every
few years, the world is held spellbound by the spectacle
of the Winter Olympics. Yet, for all the daring displayed
on the ice and snow, the true drama happens behind the scenes.”
~
Huntress Reviews
******
“I'm sorry, Amy, I have that coaches' meeting at eight tonight.
By the time I get back from that, it'll be too late. You
have an early morning.”
“But, Tess, I promised to meet Mikey Sweet there, and I
don't want to go alone.”
“But if you're meeting Mikey, you won't be alone.”
Amy just gave her a look. Apparently it didn't matter if
you were one of the top figure skaters in the country, possibly
the world. At fifteen, you didn't want to enter a roomful
of strangers alone.
“How about if I go with you, Amy?” Rikki Lodge offered.
“I wouldn't mind getting out for a while.”
“That's great. Just give me fifteen minutes.” Amy dashed
out.
“Is that okay?”
Tess smiled at Rikki. “Of course. Thank you.”
“I take it Mikey Sweet's to be trusted, but are there any
other rules? I'm not used to dealing with fifteen-year-olds.”
Tess had found time this afternoon to place a call to the
Yosts, which confirmed her impression of Mikey Sweet's reliability.
“Amy's parents have no trouble with her being with Mikey,
especially here in the Village. So that's the major rule—staying
here in the Village. As for dealing with fifteen-year-olds,
I'm feeling the way myself.”
Nan wandered in from the kitchen, munching a piece of cheese.
“I bought more stuff at the little shop just outside the
Village. I can't help it. I haven't been anywhere with a
kitchen in so long, my nesting instinct is going nuts. I
even bought dish towels. Did I hear you talking about teenagers?”
She didn't wait for an answer. “My mother used to
say the trick with teenagers was to close your eyes when
they hit thirteen and don't open them again until they're
twenty-one.” She grinned devilishly. “I thought it
was a great plan.”
Tess groaned. “Don't tell Amy that, please!”
“You want to come with us to the rec center, Nan?”
“No thanks. The Austrian ski team's hosting a get-together
and we're going over.”
“Kyle, too? Where is she?”
“She's in the room, getting ready.”
*******
Kyle Armstrong had made the biggest mistake of her life
four weeks ago tonight.
She'd made mistakes on the course; no skier hadn't made
a mistake or two. You tried to keep those to a minimum,
though, because the wrong one could kill you.
This mistake hadn't come on the course. And it couldn't
break her neck or leg. Just her life.
She was pregnant.
She couldn't even claim she didn't know what had possessed
her to sleep with Brad Lorrence, darling of the men's downhill.
She'd always been fond of him. He was easy to be with, because
he never demanded anything of her and accepted whatever
surface she chose to present. And he made her feel desirable—something
she'd sorely needed of late. He'd chased her, in his
desultory way and with frequent distractions for other conquests,
for years. Despite the media casting them as America's Olympic
sweethearts, though, she'd had no inclination to let him
catch her.
Not until that night four weeks ago at the party to celebrate
being named to the U.S. Olympic team. She could still taste
the blended exhilaration and despair.
She was headed to the Olympics. A dream realized.
Rob Zemlak was her direct coach. A nightmare to be lived
through.
Of course Rob had been around before; he'd been an assistant
ski coach for the U.S. women's team for nearly two years.
But not in such close quarters. And not when she should
have felt only the thrill, without this rock of hurt in
her gut.
She'd needed warmth that night, and Brad had offered it.
She hadn't made a conscious decision to let what happened
happen. But she had let it happen.
And she could rail at the fates all she wanted that it was
only one time, and she had insisted he use a condom so how
could she possibly have gotten pregnant? It didn't change
that she was.
And now she had the consequences to face.
The door banged open and Nan entered talking. “Hey, Kyle.
C'mon. Let's go. The Austrian team issued invitations left
and right, there won't be room left to breathe if we don't
get there soon. Let's go.”
“I think I'll stay here after all, Nan.”
“Oh, no you don't. You said you'd go, and I'm holding you
to it.”
“I'm really not in the mood.”
“You haven't been in the mood for weeks. I barely got you
to go to the Opening Ceremonies and you missed out last
night when we all went to the rec center. C'mon, this is
the Olympics! You only get one go-around unless you're Alberto
Tomba.”
“No, really—”
“Are you sick?” The sharp look more than the question raised
Kyle's defenses. “I heard you in the bathroom this morning.”
“Oh, that.” Kyle tried to make it sound like nothing.
“You know I react that way sometimes to jet-lag. And
nerves.”
“Jet-lag? We've been in this time zone for weeks.
That would have to be the longest case on record. But for
the nerves, a little partying is just the cure Dr. Monahan
prescribes.”
She wanted to refuse, Lord, she wanted to refuse. To be
left alone, to slip into the oblivion of sleep where she
didn't have to face consequences or regrets. But she couldn't
afford to rouse Nan's suspicions any more.
“All right. Let me wash my face.”
With the bathroom door closed behind her and the water running,
a pain splintered through her abdomen, making her clutch
the sides of the basin.
She'd been prepared for the nausea, but these pains the
past several days were something else.
The nausea had started almost immediately. Otherwise she
might not have suspected for quite a while. Like a lot of
athletes, her periods were more erratic than cyclical.
She wouldn't have thought anything of missing a period,
if it hadn't been for being nauseated so much.
The day she should have started and didn't, she'd taken
a bus to the next town over from where the ski team had
been staying. It had taken two tries to find a pharmacy
that had one of those home pregnancy tests. It had a layer
of dust on it and instructions in six languages, but that's
all she found.
Locked in the bathroom, with Nan off being Nan, she'd carefully
followed the directions. There it was, big as life,
exactly the way the pamphlet said it should look for someone
who was pregnant.
She'd sat on the cold tile floor for hours.
Finally, she'd placed a trans-Atlantic call to her old family
doctor. He said to tell the team doctor. She'd refused.
He pointed out that if she were selected for the drug tests
at the Olympics, which she surely would be if she medaled
as everyone said she would, they could easily find out anyway.
But she'd figured they would be looking for steroids or
other banned substances, not pregnancy.
Besides, the tests were done after the races. And after
the final race, Rob Zemlak would have no right to know.
And she wouldn't have to see his face when he found out.
So the old family doctor, too wise to suggest telling her
parents, had sighed deeply, told her the tests weren't one
hundred percent accurate but to use common sense. She was
perfectly healthy and chances were her pregnancy would be
perfectly normal. Call if she had any questions.
She hadn't called back when the pain started. Maybe this
was normal. And if it weren't, he'd just argue more
about her telling the team doctors.
Who would tell Rob Zemlak.
The doctor had also told her that vigorous exercise would
do absolutely no harm, with the mother accustomed to expending
that level of energy.
And that she was. For fifteen years. Day after day, week
after week. All to get here. All for a shot at the bit of
medal that Rob had said she could have bought with her allowance
as an eight-year-old. But that she could only earn now,
as a twenty-three-year-old. All for this.
The pain subsided enough for her to straighten and splash
the tepid water on her face.
“Hurry up!” Nan ordered from the room. “And while you're
at it, put on some makeup. You've been looking all washed
out lately.”
*******
Mikey Sweet claimed Amy at the door.
“I've been telling the guys what a pinball wizard you are,
kid. And I've bet the Italian goalie you can beat him, so—
God, I hope you haven't lost your touch, have you?”
“Of course, not.” Amy's haughtiness would have done a snooty
matron proud. “I'll need a game to get the feel of the machine.”
“All right! C'mon, Rikki. This ought to be something to
see.”
But Rikki had already seen something. In the dim light beyond
the group of hockey players clustered around the pinball
machines, one figure sat alone before a video game, maneuvering
the control with complete concentration.
“Thanks, but I see some friends over there. You guys have
fun.” She caught Mikey's arm a second and said quietly,
“I may not stay long. Keep an eye on her and get her back
at a decent hour.” He nodded, and she headed toward some
French cross-country skiers she'd met. They were on the
opposite side of the room from the intense, solitary figure
by the video game.
Half an hour later, after dancing with a Finnish speed skater
and talking to a Canadian ski jumper, she found herself
near the video games. Amy still reigned at the pinball
machines, but Lanny Kaminski was nowhere to be seen, not
even in the shadowed corner he'd occupied earlier.
Curious, she sat at the game he'd been playing, and dropped
in a token. After one game she didn't know much more than
that it had something to do with guiding a Viking ship through
fjords and past other dangers.
She put in a second token.
Her second ship was sinking—she'd gotten too close to the
fjord wall—when she heard a low voice behind her.
“That's pitiful. Sinking already, and you didn't even get
out to open sea to run into a real iceberg.”
Not bothering to turn around, she dropped in another token.
“So how far did you get, Kaminski?”
“A lot farther than you're getting. Do you even know the
object of the game?”
“Loot ancient Britain?”
“I bet you didn't even read the instructions.”
“Nope.”
“Why don't you—”
“It's just a game, Kaminski. I don't need a consultant to
draw diagrams on napkins for me.”
He lapsed into silence, but he didn't move. She heard his
occasional sounds of disapproval at her haphazard play,
and she could feel his presence behind her.
The more he restrained himself, the worse she felt for her
churlishness. She'd sunk another ship and another token
before she spoke, though.
“Good game this afternoon, Kaminski. Nice to get that first
win.”
“Yeah.” He hesitated long enough to make her wonder if that
was all. “I saw you there.” He sounded puzzled and not entirely
happy.
She shrugged. “I thought it might be fun for a change. I
don't usually go to hockey games.”
“Was it?”
“Was it what?”
“Fun for a change.”
Fun? Not quite the right word. “Let's say interesting.”
And a little unsettling.
“Yeah, it was an interesting game for me, too.”
“I'll bet. Would you have stopped if the referee hadn't
made you? Or would you have just gone on adding color to
the ice?”
“I don't ever notice when I'm bleeding.”
She nodded as if she understood him totally. “Not the noticing
sort, huh?”
“I guess not. I don't ever notice people in the stands,
either.”
He said it so flatly it took her a moment. Then she looked
up at him. His dark brows were drawn down in a frown and
his eyes were intense. But not with the same emotion she'd
seen in them this afternoon at the hockey rink.
The game beeped at her, waiting for her next move.
He leaned over her.
“If you hold it this way you can get better leverage.”
Annoyance and amusement warring in her, she turned to give
him a glare over her right shoulder. “I'll hold it however
I want, Kaminski. I can...”
The words died under the burning light of intention in his
eyes and the weight of realization that his mouth practically
touched hers. She was drawing in breath when he kissed her,
craving sense-restoring oxygen and instead drawing in his
scent and leaving herself slightly light-headed.
It was a brief kiss, a shifting of lips against lips, a
fleeting fluke of proximity. And it rocked her.
He lifted his head. Still half leaning over her, his one
hand rested on her back, the other around her neck. She
held on to that wrist, with her other hand caught between
her shoulder and his chest.
They stared at each other, stunned and wary.
“Holy shit.”
She wanted to be amused, but his profane mutter too aptly
fit her own reaction.
His expelled breath across her dampened lips made her shiver.
He saw it, and swooped down to kiss her again. No
fluke, nothing fleeting. A smoldering fuse of a kiss that
parted her lips and welcomed his tongue to light dynamite
deep inside of her.
Ka-boom!
She shifted to free her hand. Slipped it around the back
of his neck to explore the texture of his hair—softer than
she would have expected—and pull him closer. He tightened
his hold on her, drawing her up from the chair. She
could feel his hip against her abdomen as he shifted so
one of his legs slightly parted hers. Instinctively, she
moved against that pressure.
“We're getting out of here.”
She heard his words above the ringing in her ears.
Felt the tug on her hand and accepted it as he led her directly
across the dance floor and out the door. Felt him drawing
her parka around her shoulders, guiding her arms into the
sleeves, and she accepted that, too. But the slap of cold
air against her face brought her back some, and turned down
the volume on the ringing. Or maybe his gloved hand on her
parka sleeve didn't allow for the skin-to-skin contact that
had set off that ringing. Either way, sanity made a comeback.
She should welcome that, not regret it. Because this was
crazy. Lunatic.
She needed a moment to catch her breath. To think.
To slow everything down.
“Lanny.... Wait.” She tugged back on his hand.
He stopped, turning to face her. “What?”
“Just wait a minute.”
“Why?”
That struck her as a reasonable question, which scared the
hell out of her.
“Where are we going?”
A stupid question. She knew where they were going, at least
in general terms. He could have said that in so many words.
He could have demonstrated with an embrace she knew she
would have returned with full enthusiasm.
He just looked at her.
“This is crazy!” Was she appealing to herself or him?
“Crazy isn't the half of it.” He sounded almost grim.
“I don't do things like this.”
He gave a bark of laughter that sent a shiver of awareness
through her already thrumming body. “Me, either, Rikki.
Shit, me either.”
“What if it's too fast? We need to stop and think about
this.”
“No we don't.”
She shook her head, trying to clear it, not disputing his
words. He didn't try to pull her closer. Only their gloved
hands connected, their arms stretched to full length.
“I have a roommate,” he said, “but he owes me. I'll call
in the favors.” Artificial light caught the bones of his
face, inking the shadows, making a tough face look even
tougher. “Hockey's fast, Rikki. If you stop to think, the
play's already past you. You have to trust yourself, and
go for broke.”
They stared at each other. But instead of catching her breath
she felt it coming harder, felt her heartbeat speeding.
She couldn't think; she didn't want to slow. If that was
going for broke, she was going.
She started past him, tugging his hand again, but to draw
him on not to hold him back. “My room. I have a single in
an apartment. No roommate to kick out.”
He halted her progress, by the simple expedient of refusing
to budge.
“What?” she demanded
He didn't answer, instead bundling her backwards into a
dark alcove between a building and what she suspected was
a dumpster. It didn't matter, because he immediately followed,
pressing his body into her. His mouth covered hers, and
it was dynamite all over.
“What are you...?”
He deserted her mouth, and used his teeth to draw off one
glove. His hand tunneled under her parka, under her sweater
and up her back, the cold air pouring in as his arm lifted
the material. But his hand burned against her skin.
He unhooked her bra with one jerk, and his hand found her
breast immediately under the loosened material. She pushed
her upper body closer to his touch. In response his hand
tightened on her breast, and his other hand dropped to her
fanny to rock her pelvis against his.
My God. My God.
Her mind couldn't formulate more. But her body wanted more.
Wanted the feel of his bare skin under her hands, wanted
him inside her. Now.
And he knew it. He backed off enough for them to lock eyes.
“Sure?”
Rochelle Lodge, who didn't do things like this —ever— who
believed in caution and gradual, met his look.
“Yes.”
…
Fourteen more days to go in the Winter Olympics that will
change Tess, Andrei, Kyle, Rob, Rikki, Lanny, Nan and Amy
forever …
To read
the rest of Patricia McLinn’s THE GAMES,
click here to order
your copy or
ask your book store
to order it.
The Games
Delphi
Books
ISBN 978-0-97651850
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