youâre honest.â
Depends what you ask me. âIâll drink first. Will that help?â
Dimaâs partnerâAlex, I thinkâmakes his shot. I hesitate for a second and then down the beer. Damn, these cups are way too full.
Finley gives me a pat on the back. âWell done. Maybe that can be your job?â
I hold the ball in my hand, and Iâm nervous all of a sudden. Itâs just a stupid-ass drinking game, but I canât get my fatherâs voice out of my head. You play something, you sure as hell better win.
âI recommend the arch technique,â Finley says. âNice and easy, big arch.â
I look at her and smile. Sheâs completely serious. Somehow, this takes the pressure off me. Like if sheâs worried, I donât have to be. âThe arch.â I nod. âNice and easy.â
âYou got this, Eddie,â Finley says.
And for a second, the world is at my fingertips. Then I realize no, I donât got this. The ball taps the inside of a cup and then hits Dima right in the crotch.
I scratch my head and avoid looking at Finley. I need to get out of my own damn head. âSorry.â
âItâs okay. Next time.â
Luckily, Dima misses his shot. Finley goes for the bounce shot this time and sinks it again, earning her a cheering section of four or five people now. Alex picks up that cup to drink, then passes the second to Dima.
The Ivy League girl points a finger at Dima. âDo not get him drunk. We have an 8:00 a.m. flight.â
Like Finley, Alex makes his second shot. I offer to drink the beer, but Dima stops me. âShe has to drink. Thatâs the rule.â
âYou just want her impaired,â Ivy League girls says. âIf you arenât considering weight or metabolic rate, itâs hardly fair to make everyone drink the same amount.â
Dima spreads his arms out wide. âAnd this is why I donât allow Ivy League players. None of that shit in this game. Keep it simple. Otherwise, Iâll get a fucking headache.â
âHeâs right.â Finley picks up the cup, staring it down even longer than I had. âRules are rules.â
She chugs the beer like a champ and tosses the empty cup aside. When itâs my turn again, I focus more on my shot, less on all the noise in my head. Maybe all this newfound inner peace will kick in. Right. About. Now.
âYes!â Finley shouts. She spins to face me. âThat was beautiful. Perfect arch.â
Iâm about to thank her, but the animal-noise girl distracts me. Sheâs making some kind of gesture that Iâm pretty sure would be in the crude category, but itâs hard to tell. âUh, what is sheâ¦?â
Finley turns around, and her cheeks and the tips of her ears turn bright red. âSummer. Stop.â
Summer. The bitchy one.
âTouretteâs,â Finley says to me. âShe doesnât like to talk about it.â
And Finley Belton. The sweet one.
She jumps into a deep explanation of why my last shot was so great, and her words start to blur together in this hypnotic way that relaxes me, makes me forget about anything outside of Finley and her jeans, hugging her ass perfectly. And the tank top straps that keep shifting, exposing more bare skin.
âWhat do I like to do for fun?â Finley says, tossing the ball in the air and catching it again. I shake my head. I missed something. âThis is what I should have said.â
âWhat? Parties?â I ask.
âThat stupid casting guy,â she says, rolling her eyes. âWhat do you like to do for fun?â She mimics his voice perfectly. We must have had the same casting today. âI should have said Iâm a beer pong champion.â
âAnd you play poker and scratch your balls a lot,â I suggest.
She nods. I think the beer is working its magic. âYes. That. Probably ride a Harley too.â
âSo what did you tell them?â