The suicides felt endless. Each sprint down the ice tore at my lungs, my skates carving desperate lines into the glassy surface with jagged screeches that bounced off the empty rafters. Sweat traced fiery paths down my spine, soaking through my jersey until the fabric clung cold and heavy against my skin. Every pivot burned. Every breath tasted like exhaustion and memory.
I was fifteen again in those flashes—stealing ice time after the boys’ league finished, skating alone under dim lights because my coach had told me I wasn’t ready for advanced drills. “Girls don’t hit the same, Danica. You’ll just slow them down.” So I stayed late, night after night, until my toes went numb and my lungs tasted metallic. I took illegal checks from players twice my size who wanted to teach the intruder a lesson. I went home with split lips and bruised ribs, hiding the pain from my mother so she wouldn’t pull me out. But I always returned. Pain on the ice had never broken me—it only sharpened my edges.
Now the pain was different. It wasn’t bruises or split lips. It was the constant, aching awareness of the man circling the team like a storm front.
Caleb Ruiz commanded the ice with merciless precision. His voice cracked like a whip across the arena as he pushed us harder, faster. His eyes found me in fragments—never lingering, but each glance carried weight. Heavy. Unreadable. Loaded with the midnight kitchen memory we both refused to name. The almost-touch. The way the air between us had trembled. The way we had both pulled back at the last second.
“Jones! Faster!” he barked. “If you’re coasting, you’re losing.”
I dug in harder, legs screaming, vision narrowing until the blue lines blurred. When I finally slowed, bent over with hands on my knees and breath sawing in my chest, the ice vibrated beneath me. He was there before I could straighten.
His gloved hand settled on the small of my back—firm, steady, not quite supportive. The pressure forced me to feel the difference in our strength, the controlled power in his arm. He didn’t speak right away. He simply stood close enough that his body heat cut through the arena’s chill.
“Your form breaks when you’re tired,” he said quietly, voice low so only I could hear. “You lean too far forward. You expose your neck. The Wolves will see it. Kane Harlow especially. He doesn’t just chase the puck—he hunts weaknesses.”
The name sent ice sliding down my spine.
I had faced Kane Harlow once before. Two years ago in an exhibition game. He was everything I had learned to fight against—tall, powerful, cruelly handsome, and utterly convinced the ice belonged only to men like him. He had pinned me against the glass and whispered things meant to humiliate before driving me into the boards so hard the world had gone white for days. I had answered later with a clean hip check that left him limping, but the message was clear: he saw me as an insult to the game.
Caleb’s hand shifted slightly, adjusting my posture under the pretense of correction. The touch lingered a second longer than necessary. His fingers pressed through my jersey with deliberate care, as though memorizing the line of my spine against his will.
“He messaged the captains’ group,” Caleb continued, voice rough. “Said he can’t wait to test the new addition. To see how long the ‘glass doll’ lasts.”
Anger flared hot in my chest, mixing with the burn of exhaustion. “Let him try. I’m not fragile, Caleb. I’ve taken harder hits than anything he can deliver.”
For a heartbeat his mask cracked. His eyes darkened, silver swallowed by something deeper—frustration, protectiveness, a reluctant respect that looked almost painful. He wanted to shield me. He also wanted me gone. The contradiction hung between us like frost in the air.
“Prove it tomorrow,” he said, pulling his hand away. The sudden loss of contact left me colder than the ice. “If you hesitate, if you give them any reason to doubt you… I’ll have no choice. The team comes first.”
He skated off without another word, but the brand of his touch stayed on my skin.
The locker room afterward felt heavier than usual. I changed quickly and stepped into the showers with my back to the room, letting hot water beat against my aching shoulders. Whispers drifted through the steam—muttered comments about “distractions” and “changing the culture.” I kept my head down, jaw tight.
“Eyes on your own gear,” Caleb’s voice cut through the mist, sharp and authoritative. Silence fell instantly.
I finished as fast as I could and wrapped a towel around myself. When I stepped out, most of the team had cleared out. Caleb remained. He leaned against the lockers opposite mine, fresh from his own shower, towel slung low on his hips. Water traced slow paths down the defined lines of his chest and abdomen, catching the light. His hair was damp, dark strands falling across his forehead.
His gaze wasn’t cold anymore. It burned—raw, conflicted, unguarded for once. He waited until the last footsteps faded down the hall before pushing off the lockers and crossing to me.
“You really believe you can take a hit from someone like Kane?” he asked, stopping close enough that I caught the clean scent of his soap.
His hand rose slowly. His fingers brushed the faint jagged scar along my collarbone—a reminder from a brutal youth game where I had refused to back down. The touch was gentle, almost reverent, his thumb tracing the old mark with surprising care. My breath caught.
“Every scar has a story,” I whispered. “They’re proof I belong here.”
He didn’t pull away. His thumb drifted lower, hovering just beneath the edge of the towel, not quite touching the curve beneath. The almost-contact sent heat blooming across my skin. My pulse thundered in my ears. I watched the muscle in his jaw flex, saw the war in his eyes—captain’s duty clashing against something far more personal, far more dangerous.
“What if I don’t want you collecting more scars?” he murmured, voice low and strained. “What if the thought of Harlow putting his hands on you makes me want to tear this whole rivalry apart?”
The confession landed softly, devastatingly. It wasn’t a threat. It was a crack in his armor—vulnerability wrapped in frustration. For one endless moment we stood suspended in the steam-filled room, hearts hammering, the space between us alive with everything we couldn’t afford to feel. His gaze dropped to my lips. Mine to the rapid rise and fall of his chest. Neither of us moved closer. Neither pulled away.
His phone shattered the silence, buzzing sharply on the nearby bench.
Caleb closed his eyes, exhaling like the sound physically pained him. He stepped back, the wall of professional distance slamming back into place. “Coach. Meeting about tomorrow. Harlow just tagged you in another post—highlighting his last big hit.”
He grabbed his clothes, shoulders rigid. Before he left, he looked back once. The look wasn’t cold. It wasn’t a warning.
It was a promise that this tension between us is just getting started —and that tomorrow’s scrimmage might break more than just bones.
I stood alone in the emptying locker room long after the door closed, heart still racing, skin still humming from the ghost of his touch. The Wolves were coming. But the collision I feared most wasn’t on the ice.
How was I supposed to face a rival determined to break me when the man I lived with—the man I couldn’t stop thinking about—was already dismantling every defense I had left?