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The Other Game by J. Sterling (6)

The past four weeks had been fun to watch. Jack and I talked about the things he could do to prove to Cassie that she could trust him. Hell, I even wrote down a list of ideas, but he didn’t need it. He’d already known what needed to be done when it came to her. It was weird, but he had these spot-on instincts about her.

The day after their first date, he stopped eating at his normal table. His legion of fangirls practically whined themselves to death when they noticed him not only eating at another table, but doing so with a girl. One girl.

I thought one of them might faint at the sight, but thankfully they all remained upright. That didn’t stop the girls from throwing themselves at Jack every chance they got. He could barely walk through the student union without girls grabbing him, trying to pin him down with questions.

Jack used to tolerate the madness when he was single, but now that he was chasing Cassie, he had no patience for the fangirls. His body language completely changed, more closed off, and he got a little meaner.

He’d also started spending more time at Cassie’s apartment, which meant that both Cassie and Melissa saw my brother more than I did. I wasn’t too upset, though, because I saw how happy he was, and I’d never seen him like that before.

On campus, the four of us became pretty much inseparable. At lunchtime in the student union one day, I saw Jack putting an overfilled tray of food on the table that we shared, and I made my way over with my own lunch tray to join him, Cassie, and Melissa.

Before I could get there, a sorority girl named Andrea stopped me with a hand on my arm. “When is your brother going to dump that girl?”

I pulled away from her. “Hopefully never,” I said with a smirk before walking away. I’d never understand these girls.

As I neared the table, Jack was saying, “Cass, I don’t ever want to hurt you, but I can’t promise you that I’ll never screw up or make you mad.”

“He’s good at pissing people off. Isn’t that right, big brother?” I smirked down at Jack, and he took a halfhearted swipe at me before I set my tray down next to him.

“That’s the rumor.” He nodded with a smile, but Cassie didn’t look pleased.

“Plus, if he pushes you away, then you won’t be the one who left him. He’ll be the one who made you leave,” I added a little too helpfully.

Jack glared at me before looking back at Cassie. My insight into his motivations clearly struck a nerve.

“I don’t plan on going anywhere,” Cassie said as she looked into his eyes. “So don’t try to make me.”

Melissa frowned at both of them. “Jesus, I’ve never met two people more scared to let someone love them than the two of you.” Her gaze pinged between them, making her ponytail swing from side to side. “And don’t even try to deny it. You’re both all messed up from your stupid parents.”

She lifted her hand in Cassie’s direction. “Cassie here, with her dad’s constant lies and inability to follow through on even the simplest, most mundane thing, has been disappointed and let down most of her life.”

Then she pointed at my brother. “And you, with your mom up and leaving, telling you it was your fault because you were a bad kid. You’re convinced that no one will ever stick around, that eventually they’ll leave you too. And somewhere in your twisted, screwed-up psyche, you probably think you deserve it.”

And me, I just sat there slack-jawed that Melissa had the guts to bring up something so private in such a public place, and then throw it in my brother’s face. Apparently I wasn’t the only one stunned into silence; no one else said a word.

Thank God this wasn’t my fault. Jack told me that Melissa had dragged our story out of him late one night, and that he had felt okay with her knowing. I wondered if he was regretting that decision right about now.

Melissa took a quick breath and then delivered her final assessment. “You’re both so screwed up alone, that together you’re like the perfect mess.”

I sat there absorbing her words, even though they weren’t meant for me, and wondered how much of what she said might be true.

Will I behave the same as Jack when I give my heart away?

Cassie recovered first, but her feelings were clearly hurt. “That’s an attractive analogy. Thanks for saying I’m screwed up,” she snapped.

Jack reached for Cassie. “I’ll be the perfect mess with you anytime.”

She quickly swiped under her eye and leaned her head against his shoulder. A deep sigh escaped her. “Melissa just doesn’t know anything about having messed-up parents. Hers are perfect. She can’t relate.”

“Hey! It’s not my fault I won the parent lottery.” Melissa eyed Cassie. “Plus, we both know I’m not strong enough to deal with the shit you’ve dealt with. I would’ve had a nervous breakdown by now. I could never handle everything your dad’s put you through.”

Cassie released a small laugh, but it was enough to ease the tension at the table. I was thankful for the reprieve.

“I don’t know if it’s because I’m strong or because I’ve gotten really good at turning off my emotions,” she added in a low voice.

“It’s definitely both,” Melissa said before turning toward my brother again. “And, Jack, I’ve never seen anyone completely shut off the way this one can.” She nodded in Cassie’s direction. “If you push her too far, she’ll flick off like a light switch. It’s scary.”

“Really? That’s impressive,” he teased, and I stayed quiet, taking it all in.

“You won’t feel that way if she does it to you,” Melissa said, her face the scary kind of serious. “Trust me.”

“Well, I hope I never have to see it.”

“If I didn’t compartmentalize, I’d never be able to function,” Cassie said hotly. “It’s the only way I can survive without being a total basket case.”

“I get it, Kitten. Still impressive.”

Jack smiled at her with what looked like love in his eyes, and I found myself desperate to change the subject.

“So, when do you leave for Texas?” I asked Jack, then took a bite of my cheeseburger.

“We fly out Thursday morning. Why?”

“Just wondering,” I mumbled around my bite.

Cassie straightened up and turned to Jack. “What do you do when you’re there? Like, how does it work? Do you practice? Do parents go?”

I laughed at Cassie’s intense curiosity. I’d seen her on more than one occasion ask Jack a million and one questions at a rapid-fire pace when she didn’t understand something.

Jack snagged one of my fries and popped it into his mouth. “Well, we typically fly in the day before our games start. We check in at the hotel. We’ll have practice and work out, and have dinner as a team. Some parents go, but not many.”

“Does everyone get their own room?”

“No.” Jack laughed. “We share rooms.”

“Do you have like bed checks and stuff?”

Melissa leaned forward, clearly interested in this topic of conversation, and I leaned toward her.

Jack nodded before taking a bite of his pizza. Once he’d swallowed, he said, “We do. Usually Coach comes by and makes sure everyone’s in their rooms by ten.”

Cassie breathed out in what looked like relief. “Any other rules?”

“No girls and no drinking.” Jack raised his eyebrows and glanced at me as Cassie shoved against his shoulder, almost pushing him over.

“I’m sure those rules never get broken, huh?”

“Nope. We’re all complete angels when we’re on the road.” Jack’s gaze darted between Melissa and Cassie, before stopping on me in some sort of silent dare.

I burst out laughing. “Angels, my ass.”

“No, wait wait wait!” Cassie’s voice broke through the chorus of laughter. “Do you guys sneak girls in your rooms? Like random strangers?”

Her gaze was focused solely on Jack. She wouldn’t settle for any less than the truth, and I glanced at him, wondering how he would handle this.

“Yeah.”

She rolled her eyes.

“Kitten. The eyes.”

Cassie rolled her eyes a lot, and Jack had taken to giving her shit about it each time she did it. It didn’t make her stop, though, and I believed he secretly enjoyed that side of her.

“You’re such a pig.” She shook her head.

“This isn’t news! But I’m a changed man, Kitten. I swear it.”

I had to suppress a smile at the sight of my brother pleading with his girlfriend, who was clearly disgusted at the news of his old road-trip behavior.

“We’ll see about that.” She stared back at him, her tone cautious.

“Care to make a wager?” Jack offered.

She narrowed her eyes at him. “Please, tell me you don’t need a bet to stay faithful. I swear to God, Jack.”

“He doesn’t need a bet to stay faithful, Cassie,” I said, trying to help my brother out of the hole he’d apparently dug himself into. Although being faithful and in a relationship was completely new to him, even I had to admit that he’d been doing a damn fine job so far.

“It sounds like it to me,” Melissa chimed in, but to me, neither of our opinions was helping.

I glanced at Melissa. “Maybe we should leave them alone.”

“I have to get to class, anyway.”

She picked up her things, and my heart sank. That wasn’t what I had in mind. Not at all. I watched as she walked away, my eyes focused on her ass again.

“You love her,” Jack said in a singsong voice, and I socked him in the shoulder.

“Shut up.” I cast Cassie a sideways glance, and she laughed.

“I think it’s cute,” she said, her mood suddenly lighter now that the focus wasn’t on her and Jack.

“I don’t know what either of you are talking about,” I lied.

Jack shook his head and let out a snort. “I see the way you two look at each other. I don’t know what you two are waiting for.”

“It’s not me. She knows I like her. She just doesn’t like me back.”

Cassie’s face twisted into a frown. “It’s not that. I don’t know what it is. She hasn’t said anything to me, but I think she’s scared.”

“Of me?”

“I don’t know, Dean. She’s weird when it comes to boys sometimes.”

“But Dean’s not just any boy. He’s a Carter. And my little brother. She should want to go out with him,” Jack said, talking me up, and I sat up a little straighter at his praise.

“I agree,” Cassie said. “But she’s stubborn. More stubborn than I am.”

Frustrated, I grabbed my bag and hiked it over my shoulder. “If we’re done discussing my lack of a love life, I’m gonna take off.”

Before they could say another word, I left.