Sin Bin (Blades Hockey Book 2)

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Sin Bin (Blades Hockey Book 2) Page 1

by Maria Luis




  Sin Bin

  Blades Hockey Novel

  Maria Luis

  Alkmini Books, LLC

  Contents

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  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Epilogue

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  DEAR FABULOUS READER

  Sneak Peek of Say You’ll Be Mine

  Sneak Peek of Say You’ll Be Mine…

  Acknowledgments

  Also by Maria Luis

  About the Author

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  Interested in joining The Beat, my bi-monthly newsletter that’s a magazine feel? By joining, you’ll receive all Writerly updates, exclusive contests and giveaways, and also sneak peeks into my future works.

  Want more information? Check out the back of Sin Bin for all the details – I’ll see you on the other side!

  Okay, you’re allowed to proceed now ;)

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Copyright © 2017 by Maria Luis. All rights reserved.

  No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.

  Published by Alkmini Books, LLC.

  Cover design by Najla Qamber Designs

  Editing by Indie Editing Chick

  Proofreading by Tandy Proofreads

  Created with Vellum

  For Danielle,

  My Greek partner-in-romance-writing-crime. Who knew that one author retreat would give me such a close friend? Thank you for your endless support, your laughter, and our mutual love of hot cops, all things Greek, and, most of all, alpha betas.

  Chapter One

  BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS

  I am the Queen of Bad Decisions.

  Now, before you start thinking that I’m overly dramatic, let it be known that, boy, do I wish that was the case. But no—I have a problem that’s otherwise known as “no self-control.” See the following:

  My freshmen year at the University of Michigan, when I drunkenly professed my love for my English teacher via email. The recipient of that email? My professor. Naturally. The next day, I found myself on a transfer list to another class.

  My ex-boyfriend, Mark, who apparently had a bad habit of humping his next door neighbor whenever I worked overtime. Discovering them together on our anniversary was just the cliché icing on the cake, and so was the way I stealthily slashed his tires the following evening, à la Carrie Underwood.

  Andre Beaumont. Sorry, but we’re not even getting into this one. I’ll only mention that because of my . . . indiscretion—big muscles and silky smiles that hint at bed sheets and panty-dropping sex are always my downfall—my life has been one downward spiral for the last three-hundred and forty-two days.

  But all that changes today. Here. Right now.

  I flash a bright smile at the CEO of Golden Lights Media. Golden Lights is Boston’s premiere entertainment marketing empire, and hopefully my next place of work. Believe it and you will achieve it. That might as well be my tagline. “I can’t say thank you enough for asking me in for a second interview, Mr. Collins.”

  “Zoe.” Mr. Collins utters my name the way some might say “Satan,” like he’s worried he might catch my plague just by sitting opposite me.

  My smile slips, just a little. Think of the job, Zoe. Think. Of. The. Job. “Yes, Mr. Collins?”

  Heaving a big sigh, Walter Collins drops back in his seat to study me with stoic brown eyes. “Zoe. Miss Mackenzie.”

  This cannot be good.

  I gird myself for the worst, flipping my folder up against my chest like a body shield. It’s packed with my résumé, cover letter, and three letters of reference. It’s also packed with my hopes, which are seconds away from shattering, if the CEO’s expression is anything to go by.

  “Listen, Miss Mackenzie,” he says again, scrubbing a hand over his bearded jawline. “You’ve got the right qualifications for the position . . .”

  I know what’s coming. The urge to scream is overwhelming. I bite down on my lower lip and count to ten. One . . . two . . . three . . .

  “But while I’d love to welcome you onto our public relations team, I’ve done a little research since our preliminary interview, and what I’ve found . . . . Well, I can’t say that I’m all too impressed with your professional conduct.”

  I’m sure he’s putting that mildly, just as I’m sure he practiced that exact line in the mirror this morning. His words have a pre-orchestrated feel to them, and he delivers them somberly, in the same tone that my former employer oh-so-graciously gave me the news that I was fired. You’d think someone had died the way that he’d—oh, wait, that was my career.

  Slowly I meet Mr. Collins’s gaze, and I make the decision that I have nothing to lose. Not my pride or my dignity, nor am I harboring any longstanding too-high expectations. I know what the score is, and I’m willing to play to this CEO’s fiddle, as long as I come out with a job on the other side.

  “Mr. Collins,” I say carefully, “I understand your reservations. But I can promise you that what occurred a year ago won’t be repeated.” Nervously I tap my fingers against the folder, internally debating how to approach the situation. I straighten my shoulders. “After my . . . transgression last year, I’ve had quite a while to think over my faulty decisions.”

  Mr. Collins does not look impressed.

  Panic enters my body. After almost a year of applying to jobs in my field, Golden Lights Media is my last hope. My last hurrah. I’m twenty-seven years old and living with my dad and step-mom. If my dad has it his way, I’ll be working at his restaurant full-time like a good daughter, while also babysitting my half-sister on my off-days.

  I love Tia, but even my love for my twelve-year-old half-sister can’t make up for losing out on my dream—permanently.

  Mr. Collins doesn’t know it yet, but he’s about to offer me this gig as the new Public Relations Coordinator for his firm.

  I plant the folder down on the desk with the flat of my palm. “Let’s do a trial run.”

  “Beg pardon?”

  Bam. Stifling the abrupt pleasure of throwing the CEO off his game, I say, “A trial run. You want to hire me, but you’re not sure if it’s a good idea. I’m convinced that you won’t regret it. As you told me in our first meeting, Mr. Collins, my résumé intrigues you. I’ve worked for all sorts of mainstream celebrities, including some of Detroit’s biggest sports stars.”

  Brown eyes narrow on my face. “Including Andre Beaumont.”

  My knee-jerk reaction to hearing that name is to throw something. Maybe pound back a bottle of Jose Cuervo, because there is nothing I would like more than to forget the feeling of Beaumont between my legs, as he proves once and for all that multiple orgasms are a thing.

  Or, rather, a thing that can happen with men.
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  (To be fair, my vibrator does a solid enough job on its own.)

  But I digress.

  I clear my throat, awkwardly reaching for a small glass of water and downing half for fortitude. “Yes,” I murmur, “my former list of clients does include Mr. Beaumont.”

  Mr. Collins studies me, his brown eyes unblinking. “Let me make sure I’m understanding you correctly, Miss Mackenzie. You would like for me to give you a trial run.” He scratches at his perfectly manicured beard. “Does this entail assigning you a client? Do I hold you to the same standard as the other publicists on my team?” He drops his elbows to the desk and leans forward. “Do I draw up a contract that reaffirms that you are not allowed to sleep with a client just to be certain that we’re on the same page?”

  My cheeks burn with embarrassment, and the words die on my tongue. It was only one time.

  It just so happens that the “one time” was also caught on camera. Then shared across the Internet.

  I promise you, until the day that your step-mom texts you to say that she never knew about the birthmark on your butt, you’re not living life hard enough.

  When silence steals my tongue, Mr. Collins turns to his computer. His fingers fly across the keys, tap, tap, tapping away with all the speed of a Tasmanian devil on speed. He clicks the mouse, another click, two more, and then he swings back around to face me.

  “All right, Miss Mackenzie.” He folds his arms across his chest and stares me down over the bridge of his nose. “I’ll go along with your trial run.”

  My heart drops clear down to my feet. “You will?”

  Way to sound confident, Zoe.

  “Yes,” Mr. Collins murmurs, “I will. I’ll give you one month, as you suggested. And one client.”

  I’m not sure whether I ought to cry with relief or laugh at the fact that my desperate ploy is working. I do a little bit of both, and Mr. Collins gives me such a stern side-eye that my sobbing laughter dies an awkward death in my throat.

  Straightening my shoulders again, I realize that I’m preening. Down, girl, down. I drop my shoulders—lift my chin instead. “Thank you, Mr. Collins. Thank you so much.”

  Finally, finally, I’m catching a break. The first professional break I’ve been given since the entire world found out that I slept with Andre Beaumont, NHL superstar. The former right wing for the Detroit Red Wings. King Sin Bin, as raving hockey fans like to call him, thanks to his lethal skill set on the ice—a skill set which regularly lands him in the penalty box.

  Maybe, if I play my cards right, I’ll shed the dreadful nickname the media gave me—Moaning Zoe.

  Maybe, if I play my cards right, I can finally get my life back on track.

  “I promise that you won’t regret this,” I say, reining in the urge to gush. “Whoever you assign to me will be perfect, and I guarantee that Golden Lights Media won’t have seen a better PR Coordinator.”

  There’s a knock on the closed office door. I don’t turn around.

  Everything that I want is at this desk. My hands itch to sign whatever contract my new boss might have stashed away in the drawers. My heart stampedes in my chest, overjoyed with the fact that after three-hundred and forty-two days, I finally have the chance to prove myself.

  I’m not just the woman whose career took a hard tackle.

  I’m not just the woman crashing on her parents’ couch, and watching the Disney Channel every night with her sister.

  I’m not just the woman who threw everything away for thirty minutes of hot sex with the sexiest hockey player in the NHL. A hockey player who had no interest in talking to the media on my behalf. No, the jerk quietly accepted his trade to the Boston Blades and never looked back.

  “Miss Mackenzie,” Mr. Collins says, recapturing my attention. “You’re in luck. My assistant, Gwen James, just signed a new client, and we’re pretty eager to get him settled in with an agent who will keep him in line and ensure that his public reputation remains scandal-free.”

  “Scandal-free is my middle name, sir.”

  Okay, slight exaggeration. But it used to be my middle name, you know, before the whole thing went down with Beaumont. And it might as well be my first name now, since I fled Michigan to Boston six months ago in a life do-over.

  If Mr. Collins picks up the irony in my words, he doesn’t mention it. “One month, Miss Mackenzie. We’ll be coming back around to this in thirty days. But I’m telling you right now—if I hear one sliver of gossip about you, your so-called “trial run” will become null and void. Do you understand?”

  Do I understand?

  Hell to the yes, I do. “Absolutely. You can be confident that I’ll be on my best behavior.”

  “Brilliant.” He gives one short nod, then presses a buzzer on his desk.

  The door swings open as I turn around, and a woman with voluminous red hair waltzes in with a spring to her step. “Walter, I’ve got our new client here.”

  Her wide-eyed gaze lands on me. Oh crap, I know that look. It’s the one I get when people recognize me. And by that, I mean, they’ve seen the banana-shaped birthmark on my ass, as well as a quick glimpse of my face from the security camera video.

  Kill me now, please.

  “Miss Mackenzie,” she says, coming over to shake my hand. “My name is Gwen. It’s great to have you. Walter already let me know that you’re on board. I . . . well, let me introduce you to our newest client.”

  I try not to let my hopes lift. Golden Lights Media is the top public relations company in Boston. From actresses to sports heroes to politicians, Golden Lights has backed anyone who’s anyone in the Bay State.

  My gaze flicks from Gwen to the empty doorway. Who have they paired me with? I’m hoping for someone awesome like Mark Wahlberg. Maybe Matt Damon. Hey, a girl can dream, right?

  When a shadow fills the doorway, an acute sense of dread settles in my stomach. That shadow is familiar and that body even more so. I tilt my head, squinting against the afternoon glare from the sun for a better look.

  Leather shoes slip against the marble flooring as the shadow enters Mr. Collins’s office. Inch by inch, the body emerges as my sight readjusts. Dark jeans cling to muscular thighs, and a white T-shirt is halfheartedly tucked into the pants.

  Something about this isn’t right.

  I shift in my chair, wishing that I could see his face. I so want to reach into my purse for my sunglasses. Unlike Gwen, who pranced right into the light like a beam of sunshine, this person hugs the darkness.

  “Miss Mackenzie,” Mr. Collins says, interrupting my thoughts, “might I introduce to you our newest client?”

  And that’s when The Day from Hell is replaced.

  Because out from the shadows emerges Disastrous Mistake Numbers One through Infinity.

  “Hello, Zoe.”

  Andre Beaumont, the Devil himself.

  Oh, hell no.

  Chapter Two

  He looks exactly the same.

  For all of his faults (and there are many, trust me), Andre Beaumont is certainly not lacking in the looks department. Perfectly disheveled dark hair is swept back from his face. Dark eyes the color of Italian espresso travel up the length of my body, starting at my no-nonsense red pumps and working all the way up to my equally no-nonsense black dress. That hard gaze pauses at my breasts—not that there’s much to speak of, considering that I’m “willowy” at best—before landing on my face.

  He doesn’t even have the good grace to look ashamed for his thorough once-over.

  My hand itches to leave my side and flash him the bird, and I sit on my fingers to keep from giving in to temptation.

  Speaking of temptation—it’s overrated. Officially.

  The sound of Mr. Collins clearing his throat breaks my death glare. “Miss Mackenzie,” he says, coming around his desk to greet Andre with a handshake, “I trust that you recall Mr. Beaumont?”

  Sarcasm. It’s like music to my ears.

  Swallowing a hot retort, I smile blandly at my new boss, as well
as at the man responsible for my downfall. “Yes, of course.” Brushing invisible lint from my dress, I stand and walk over to the two men.

  The two couldn’t be more opposite. While a gray suit encases Walter’s thin frame, “casual” is the name of Andre’s ensemble. He’s completed the look with a black leather jacket—the same buttery-soft jacket that I remember pooled on the floor as I slipped my fingers over his ribbed abs.

  Do not go there, Zoe.

  I hold my hand out stiffly, still faking a welcoming smile that might crack my cheeks. “Mr. Beaumont, it’s nice to see you again.”

  Andre takes my hand. Instead of shaking it like a normal person, he gives a sharp tug and pulls me close: so close that I can’t help but remember firsthand that his irises and pupils are one synonymous black hue; so close that the fading bruise on his cheek, no doubt from a fight on the ice, catches the light and glimmers purple and yellow; so close that when he drops a brief kiss to each of my cheeks, I catch the scent of sandalwood off his skin. “It’s been too long, Zoe.”

  “Or, not long enough,” I mutter under my breath.

  “What was that, Miss Mackenzie?” Mr. Collins stares me down, and it’s so fierce, so intimidating, that I have to physically push back my shoulders to avoid withering like a dejected wallflower.

  Right. Must be on good behavior.

  Suddenly I’m not so sure that this trial run idea was a good one.

 

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