Slap Shot Read online




  More Praise for Alicia Hunter Pace

  Check out USA Today bestselling author Alicia Hunter Pace’s entire collection:

  NASHVILLE SOUND series:

  Face Off: Emile

  CROSSROADS series:

  Misbehaving in Merritt

  Misunderstood in Merritt

  Mistletoed in Merritt

  “I absolutely love Alicia Hunter Pace’s books. They have such a quirky sweetness, and the characters always ring true and make me cry!”—Linda Howard

  BEAUFORD BEND series:

  Forgiving Jackson

  Nickolai’s Noel

  Reforming Gabe

  Redeeming Rafe

  Heath’s Hope

  “ . . . much more than boy meets girl. Crisp dialogue . . . [and] supportive secondary characters add to the solid story line.”—Library Journal

  “ . . . [an] engaging story of healing and discovery.”—Heroes and Heartbreakers

  “Whether you like sports-themed romance, small town settings, family and tradition, or compelling characters, there’s something for just about everyone . . . ”—The Romance Reviews

  “Pace’s writing is so real that you experience it. There was one argument in the novel when I could actually hear the characters yelling at one another.”—4 stars, Pure Jonel

  “A story that will both lighten your heart and pull on it at the same time, this one is well worth your time.”—Eat, Sleep, Read Reviews

  “For a short story to warm you on a cold night, take a trip to Beauford Bend. Plus, there’s a cool bonus at the end of this book. Don’t miss it!”—LAS Reviewer

  LOVE GONE SOUTH series:

  Sweet Gone South

  Scrimmage Gone South

  Simple Gone South

  Secrets Gone South

  “For a sweet and fun romance that will make you laugh and enjoy from beginning to end, Scrimmage Gone South by Alicia Hunter Pace is a great choice.”—Harlequin Junkie

  “ . . . a heartwarming, sweet and entertaining read that will keep you laughing and sometimes even have you shed a tear or two.”—Harlequin Junkie

  “What a story! Pace has nailed writing emotions into her stories . . . She definitely had me jumping for joy and bawling like a baby more than once . . . This was a thoroughly enjoyable read that I couldn’t put down.”—Pure Jonel

  Thank you for downloading this Simon & Schuster ebook.

  * * *

  Get a FREE ebook when you join our mailing list. Plus, get updates on new releases, deals, recommended reads, and more from Simon & Schuster. Click below to sign up and see terms and conditions.

  CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP

  Already a subscriber? Provide your email again so we can register this ebook and send you more of what you like to read. You will continue to receive exclusive offers in your inbox.

  Slap Shot: Bryant

  Nashville Sound, Book 2

  Alicia Hunter Pace

  Avon, Massachusetts

  Contents

  Cover

  More Praise for Alicia Hunter Pace

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  ‘Misbehaving in Merritt’ Excerpt

  Copyright

  Guide

  Cover

  Contents

  Start of content

  In memory of John Wesley Baxter

  Chapter One

  “Have you ever noticed how big Krystal Voleck’s feet are? Do you think she’s a clown?”

  Gabriella Charbonnet almost knew that voice, but only almost. She turned from the Eat Cake pastry shop work counter to look into eyes every bit as blue as the crystallized pansies she had used to decorate the white chocolate and Swiss meringue buttercream cake she was working on.

  Bryant Taylor had a big head, but you didn’t notice it so much because of those cobalt eyes and that choppy, chin-length hair that was at least twenty shades of blond, from French vanilla to honey caramel.

  But what was he doing in Beauford? She doubted if he’d driven from Nashville for a cookie, though Eat Cake was the finest bakery in the state. Garden & Gun Magazine said so.

  Bryant was a defenseman for the Nashville Sound and Gabriella’s brother’s teammate and best friend. As a goalie, Emile valued a good D-man above most things in life, and he said Bryant was one of the best in the NHL. Bryant had been on Hot Nashville’s most eligible singles list last year, probably in part because—big head, or not—he was absolutely walking physical perfection. It had been said that he was the best looking player on the team, maybe in all of professional hockey. Gabriella might have even said it herself. She particularly liked the little scar above his right eye that made it seem like the eyebrow was perpetually raised just a hair higher than the left one.

  If Gabriella had a talent beyond turning sugar, butter, and flour into an edible masterpiece, it was the ability to get a date without having to do the asking. And she dated steadily but no one steady, hardly ever anyone more than twice—at least not since the pastry chef from Nashville she’d been involved with for about six months moved to New York. That had been almost two years ago.

  Since then, it had been coffee with tourists, dinner with bakery supply reps, late night drinks with semi-somebody musicians—but no physical relationship. She wasn’t one for casual sex, but casual dating was easy. She smiled, they asked, and she said either yes or no. She might have worked her magic on Bryant if he were anything other than a hockey player.

  She didn’t date hockey players, ever. For one thing, it would send Emile into big-brother-hell-no orbit. He didn’t ask much of her, but he did ask that, claiming that interfamily dating made for bad team dynamics.

  That wasn’t the main reason she steered clear of hockey players, though. For all that Gabriella was a people pleaser and wanted to please Emile above all others, she would not let him dictate who she dated if she didn’t agree. But she did agree—emphatically.

  Gabriella’s father had been a hockey player, though not a very good one even in the dead-end minor league he’d last played for. If watching him beat the hell out of Emile on a regular basis hadn’t been enough to make Gabriella’s mind up about getting involved with a hockey player, clutching a broken arm at the top of the stairs while her mother lay dead at the bottom would have certainly sealed the deal.

  Intellectually, she knew that most hockey players left the violence and aggression on the ice, but she wasn’t taking any chances. She was never going to be at the bottom of those stairs, never going to have to be the shield between her child and a fist. She unconsciously rubbed her arm.

  Bryant Taylor—Swifty, his teammates called him—smiled and winked, charm oozing from every inch of his being like it was his job to make the whole universe fall at his feet. But just because she wouldn’t touch him with a ten-foot
whisk didn’t mean she couldn’t enjoy the view.

  And what a view.

  He dropped his long-lashed eyelids at half-mast and spoke again. “And if Krystal is a clown, do you think she’s a freelance clown or actually works for a circus?”

  “I have no reason to think she’s a clown.” Gabriella thought the team was a little too hard on their teammate Jan Voleck’s wife. So what if she had been a notorious puck bunny and was seven years older than Jan? If they were happy, who cared? Sometimes Gabriella thought those hell-raising, woman-chasing, beer-swilling men were worse than a bunch of Regency era Almack’s patronesses who just sat around looking for reasons to deny debutantes permission to waltz.

  Bryant cocked his head to the side. “No? I wouldn’t have taken you for Alice in Wonderland, but there you are.” He gestured to her blue dress and white pinafore.

  “It’s my Halloween costume.”

  He looked around and let his eyes light on the jack-o’-lanterns and Halloween cupcakes and cookies in the front window. “Is today Halloween?” He didn’t look happy about it. What was that about? What was to dislike about Halloween?

  “Yes. And tonight is the Beauford Harvest Festival.”

  Located about forty minutes from Nashville, Beauford was a small artisan boutique town with some of the best master craftsmen in the country. People came from all over to buy handmade one-of-a-kind goods. Gabriella had been lucky to land a four-year master baker/pastry arts apprenticeship with June Champion, who owned Eat Cake. After two years of junior college, Gabriella had gone to work at Eat Cake and begun her apprenticeship a year later. Now, at twenty-five, she was due to finish her apprenticeship in the spring.

  “Harvest Festival?” Bryant looked around. “Just where did you harvest all these cakes from? A Candy Land game?”

  Gabriella laughed. Bryant did have a way about him. Her father had been an incredibly good-looking man, and there had been a time when Gabriella had steered clear of men with Bryant’s kind of looks, but she’d gotten past that. Too bad Bryant wasn’t an accountant or a lawyer. But if she’d learned nothing else in life, she’d learned that hockey players would always be hockey players—even when their bodies failed them. It was a mentality.

  “You have your sweets mixed up. You can’t harvest pastry from a Candy Land game.”

  He grinned. “Candy corn? Can you harvest that?”

  “Absolutely. All you need is a candy corn picking basket and a ladder. The best candy corn grows in the tops of the trees, you know.”

  “I would have thought it grew on stalks.”

  “That’s regular corn. Candy corn is different.”

  “Will there be any candy corn trees at this festival?

  “Absolutely. You should stay around and check it out. It starts in about an hour. All the shops stay open late. Everyone serves refreshments and has candy for the trick-or-treaters. There’ll be games, and Jackson Beauford is going to perform a little later. He’s big country star and Beauford’s most famous resident. He owns Beauford Bend plantation.”

  Bryant cocked his head to the side and grinned. “I know who Jackson Beauford is. You know—since I don’t live under a rock.”

  “Oh, right,” Gabriella said. “I forget that all hockey players aren’t like Emile. He knows not one thing about pop culture.”

  “Emile is unique for sure. Too bad I didn’t know about this festival. I would have worn my vampire suit. You can’t show up at a harvest festival without your vampire suit.” He gave her a smile that, if sold, would buy and sell Bill Gates. “I hate to miss a cornhole game. I’m good at it.”

  “Not to mention all that candy corn. If not the Harvest Festival, what brings you all the way to us from Sound Town?” Sound Town was the area of downtown Nashville informally called so because of the location of the Sound practice rink and the number of players and team-connected people—including Emile—who lived there.

  “No practice today. I came to watch some game film with Glaz.” Nickolai Glazov was the Sound team captain and was married to Beauford artisan quilt maker, Noel, who owned Piece by Piece. “Your brother was supposed to join us, but I gather he’s somewhere in Georgia chasing Amy.”

  “Hmm.” It was true, in a sense. After a huge mess, most of it of Emile’s own making, he’d almost lost Amy. But happily, he’d called last night to report that she had accepted his engagement ring and that Amy would call her later. But Gabriella wasn’t telling. That was Emile’s news to deliver. Besides, it gave her a warm feeling that she knew what others didn’t, and she wanted to hang on to the secret a little longer. “He’s coming back tonight.”

  “Coming here? Or back to Nashville?”

  Good question. “I assume back to Nashville.” Though it was possible he would stop off to see her. Emile liked Halloween and would, no doubt, want to share more of his news in person.

  “Is Amy coming with him?” Bryant asked.

  “That remains to be seen.” That was technically the truth too. Emile had morning skate tomorrow before leaving for a road trip, so he had to hurry back, but Gabriella didn’t know if Amy would be with him or if she would spend some more time with her family.

  “Maybe I can catch him at home tonight. I wanted to hear about him beating the hell out of Cameron Snow Saturday night.”

  Ah, yes—the very public, televised fight Emile had had two nights ago with Amy’s former boyfriend. Cameron Snow had stolen everything she owned—including several million dollars—and abandoned her. What had made the fight especially remarkable, other than that Emile never fought, was that his opponent wasn’t a hockey player and the brawl had occurred in the tunnel after the game.

  “You probably know more than I do,” she said. “I’ve talked to him once briefly since then. You were there, and didn’t you help pull Emile off him?”

  Bryant nodded. “Thor, Jarrett, and me. I’ll tell you a secret.” He smiled and leaned on the counter. His teeth were very white. “We let it go on a couple of minutes longer than we had to. The son-of-a-bitch had it coming. Thor wanted to join in.”

  “Figures.” Did anyone ever have a beating coming? Gabriella supposed if anyone did, it was Cameron Snow. And Snow had thrown the first blows. Emile had already been bleeding before he retaliated. But Gabriella had never liked the fighting in hockey. Bryant wasn’t in the same class with the Sound’s big, old-school enforcer, Lars “Thor” Eastrom, but he tangled with his opponents on a regular basis. Gabriella always looked away when a fight broke out.

  “Can I get you something?” Gabriella gestured to the pastry case.

  Bryant nodded. “I’d like an ice cream cone.”

  “You’re kidding, right?”

  “Why would I? Ice cream is serious business.”

  “Bryant, you’ve got your sweets mixed up again. Are you aware you are in a pastry shop?”

  He nodded. “Said so right there on the sign. But I figured a place with cake was bound to have ice cream.”

  “No. We don’t. I’m sorry. How about an éclair? Or some tarte tatin? And this is the last day for our October limited edition cake—apple cider cinnamon. It’s really good.”

  “No. I need an ice cream cone.”

  She sighed. Why did she always feel like such a failure when she had to tell someone no? Even if it was out of her control?

  “Then you need to go around the corner to Scoops and Sprinkles. It’s in the middle of the block on Lee Street. It’s all organic and made in-house. Of course there’s also the Dairy Barn out by the high school, and The Apothecary next to Noel’s quilt shop has a soda fountain.”

  He shook his head and leaned on the counter. “You mean to tell me that in this entire emporium dedicated to decadence and tooth decay, there’s not even one small spoonful of ice cream? No pint of Ben & Jerry’s or Häagen-Dazs that you have squirreled away for your own use?”

  She hesitated just long enough that he read the struggle in her eyes.

  “Ah ha!” He fist pumped. “What is it? Chunky Monk
ey? Coffee Toffee Bar Crunch?”

  “Neither. I don’t have any ice cream squirreled away for my own use. And neither does anyone else who works here.”

  “There’s ice cream here. I smell it. I smell it from the look on your face.”

  “There isn’t any ice cream here,” she said firmly. There was, however, the candied chestnut gelato she’d made this morning, but that was for a special order—a chocolate caramel chestnut cheesecake that was to be picked up tomorrow at noon.

  He shook his head. “I don’t believe you, Gabriella.”

  “Even if there were, there are no cones.” And that was the gospel truth.

  He pointed to the pastry case. “What’s that?”

  “Puff pastry cornucopias with pumpkin chiffon.” She brightened. “Would you like one of those?”

  He grimaced. “No! I rate pumpkin slightly above stinky cheese and below liver. But you can put the ice cream in one of those cone things. I know you’ve got some in the back.”

  “We don’t have ice cream.”

  His eyes bored into hers—blue pansy eyes. The last light of day shone through the window, bouncing off his blond hair and creating the illusion of an aura. He looked like an angel.

  “We only have a bit of gelato, intended for another use. And you wouldn’t like it. It’s chestnut flavored.”

  “What’s gelato?” he asked.

  Damn, damn, damn. Why did she always do this? Try so hard to please everyone that she told more than she should?

  “Gelato is . . . is like ice cream. Only not. More milk than cream. And it’s churned slower . . . ”

  “Is it cold? Sweet? Sign me up. That’s what I’ll have. In one of those cornucopia things.” He smiled and she was lost—and not because of his smile, his eyes, or any part of his angel looks. She was lost because she was weak and a pleaser.

  She merely nodded and went to the kitchen. She should have saved herself the time and given it to him to begin with. Maybe if she only gave him a small scoop there would still be enough for the chestnut layer of the cheesecake.