The strategy meeting stretched into the evening, the film room thick with stale coffee and unspoken tension. Kane Harlow’s latest taunt glowed on the projector screen—our roster with my name circled in violent red. “Ruiz added a cheerleader. We’ll have her crying by the end of the first. Weak link incoming. Watch us break her.”
No one spoke. The rookies shifted. The veterans glanced sideways. Caleb sat at the head of the table like carved stone, knuckles white where they gripped the edge. He offered no defense. No words of support. Just that stony silence that cut deeper than any insult from our rival.
By the time I reached my temporary dorm, old ghosts walked with me. Sixteen years old, standing in a cold hallway while the boys’ varsity team voted to bench me for “team chemistry.” College recruiters laughing at my stats before looking at my face. Talented, but a liability. Every battle of my life had been the same war.
A neon-yellow notice waited on my door.
Housing Assignment Update: Dorms at capacity due to emergency repairs. Immediate relocation to 114 Oak Street – Room 212.
The hockey house. Caleb’s house.
I packed in a numb haze and dragged my duffels across campus. Riot met me on the porch with his easy grin and helped carry everything upstairs. “Small room, temperamental plumbing,” he said lightly, dropping my bags. “But hey—Captain’s right next door. Convenient for… whatever.”
The door clicked shut behind him. I stood in the center of the tiny space, heart hammering. The walls were paper-thin. I could already hear him—Caleb—pacing in the next room, heavy footsteps vibrating through the floorboards straight into my bones.
I changed quickly, peeling off damp practice clothes and slipping into soft silk sleep shorts and a thin ribbed tank. The fabric felt too revealing, too fragile against skin still buzzing from the day’s tension. The house gradually quieted, but sleep stayed far away.
A firm knock sounded on my door.
I opened it to find Caleb filling the frame. Shirtless. Gray sweatpants slung dangerously low on his hips, revealing the sharp cut of his pelvis and the trail of dark hair disappearing beneath the waistband. A faint sheen of post-workout sweat still clung to his skin. His grey eyes dragged over me—slow, deliberate—tracing the bare length of my legs, the way my n*****s tightened against the thin top, the rapid rise and fall of my chest.
“You’ve got to be f*****g kidding me,” he muttered, voice low and rough.
“Trust me, I didn’t request this either,” I shot back, stepping aside.
The moment he crossed the threshold, the room shrank. He closed the door with a soft click that sounded final. The latch might as well have been a gunshot.
“Ground rules, Jones,” he said, advancing. “You stay out of my space. No walking around the house like that. And if Kane so much as breathes in your direction tomorrow, you tell me. Immediately.”
I folded my arms, trying to steady my breathing. “Since when do you care what the Wolves do to me? I thought I was just a liability.”
Caleb erased the distance in two strides, backing me against the wall. His body caged mine without fully touching—close enough that the heat rolling off him made my skin prickle. Woodsmoke, ice, and clean sweat filled my lungs. My back met cool drywall while every inch of me burned.
“Because the only hands that get to touch you in this house,” he growled, voice dropping to a dangerous velvet, “are mine.”
His right hand rose. Fingers wrapped around my throat with deliberate care—not squeezing, but possessing. The weight of his palm sent a rush of liquid heat straight between my thighs. His thumb stroked slowly over my racing pulse, feeling every frantic beat. My lips parted on a shaky exhale.
“I’ve watched you fight your whole life,” he whispered, leaning in until his forehead rested against mine. His breath mingled with my own. “Never quitting. Never backing down. It’s f*****g infuriating… and it’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen on ice.”
The confession cracked something open inside me. This wasn’t just anger anymore. It was raw, reluctant need—the kind that hurt. His free hand settled on my hip, fingers digging into bare skin beneath the hem of my shorts. He pulled me flush against him, letting me feel exactly how hard he was through the thin fabric of his sweats. Thick. Heavy. Pulsing against my lower stomach.
A broken sound escaped me.
Caleb’s forehead pressed harder against mine. His hips rolled once—slow, deliberate—grinding his length along my abdomen in a torturous drag that made my core clench with empty want. “You feel that?” he breathed against my lips, voice wrecked. “That’s what you do to me every time you look at me. Every time you refuse to break. I hate it. I hate how much I want to ruin that perfect fight in you.”
His thumb brushed my lower lip, tugging it open. For one agonizing second I thought he would kiss me—finally close the last devastating inch. Instead, he dragged his mouth along my jaw, teeth grazing my throat where his hand still held me. The scrape of stubble against sensitive skin sent sparks racing down my spine. I arched into him, thighs pressing together against the growing ache.
“Caleb…” His name came out hoarse, needy.
He groaned softly, hips rolling again, slower this time, pressing the thick ridge of his c**k right where I needed friction most. The silk of my shorts did nothing to dull the sensation. I was soaked, slick heat coating my thighs, and he knew it.
A sharp buzz cut through the heavy air—his phone lighting up on the floor where he’d dropped his hoodie.
Caleb froze. His eyes closed, jaw tight enough to crack. Another notification. Another taunt from Kane, no doubt. The reminder of tomorrow’s scrimmage slammed reality back between us.
He released me slowly, fingers lingering on my throat a heartbeat longer than necessary. The sudden absence of his heat left me cold and trembling against the wall.
“Get some sleep, Jones,” he said, voice raw and distant once more. “Tomorrow Kane comes for you. And I’m not sure whether I’ll stop him… or finally let myself do what I’ve wanted since the moment you stepped on my ice.”
He left without looking back, the door closing softly behind him.
I slid down the wall until I sat on the floor, legs weak, body throbbing with unfulfilled need. Through the paper-thin barrier, I heard his bed creak. Then the low, frustrated rhythm of his breathing—ragged, restrained, unmistakably tense.
The scrimmage was only hours away. Between a rival who wanted to humiliate me publicly and a captain who wanted to claim me in private, I wasn’t just fighting for my roster spot anymore.
How was I supposed to survive tomorrow when the man sleeping three inches away already owned every dangerous, aching part of me?