WE FUCKING LOST.
It was inevitable. The record for longest streak in the history of the league is seventeen. Did I really think my stupid superstition would somehow break that?
No.
Was I using that stupid good-luck-charm stuff as an excuse to keep sleeping with Anton without any consequences? You bet.
But there are consequences. Like being forced to either play it off or lay it all out there that I want to keep doing what weâre doing because I like being with him.
Iâm half out of my hockey gear, my jersey and chest pads off but my hockey pants still on, and I stare at my phone for the inevitable call Iâm dreading. Iâm in no mood to talk to my fatherâor anyoneâand itâs not just about the game.
This is the inevitable moment I never saw coming. Or, I didnât want to see. Because I knew it would make me sit back and evaluate everything. And what I see, I donât like.
I mean, I really do like it.
I like the way Anton makes me feel.
I love getting along with him, but weâve never lost that spark between usâthe one that made us want each other in the first place. Itâs lust and snark rolled into an intense sexual connection ⦠and then so much more. Iâve never cared about someone elseâs happiness more than my own. Iâve never wanted to spend every moment with someone. Iâve never wanted to be vulnerable and feel safe with one person while protecting him with everything I have.
But telling him that and having him say this is still nothing? A lump gets stuck in my throat at the thought. I donât think I could handle that kind of rejection after the loss weâve endured.
Maybe Iâm more like my father than I realized because when it comes to feelings, itâs hard for me to express myself.
âExpecting a call?â Anton asks.
I flinch at his voice and find him sitting on the bench in front of his cubby, watching me.
âYou know I am. Any minute now, this will start ringing, and Iâll be reminded how all those years of private coaching were put to waste, and Iâll never make a name big enough to be in the hall of fame. Iâll never win the Cup if I donât step up. All the fun things I love to hear when Iâm down.â
âSo maybe donât answer it?â
âI may as well get it over with. If I ignore it, I get it twice as hard the next time.â And there will be a next time. Because superstition sex isnât the key to winning the season. No matter how much I wanted to try to convince myself that it was the key to holding this team together.
âAre you okay?â Anton asks.
I huff. âDid you really just ask that?â
âWell, shit. Sorry for checking in.â
Fuck. Iâve somehow reverted back to asshole Ezra, and Anton hasnât even done anything but see if Iâm all right.
Way to go, fuckboy.
I go to apologize when my phone lights up. I take a deep breath and answer. âHey, Dad.â
âWhat happened out there?â
âWhy donât you tell me, seeing as you always know how to play my game better than me.â Maybe I shouldnât have answered.
âIt was my game first. I know what Iâm talking about.â
âEven if Iâve been playing for longer than you ever did?â
âNot at this level.â
Yet. Come next year, I will have met his five years in the NHL.
âYou were sluggish on the ice tonight. What has your diet been like?â
I want to yell that Iâm not a kid anymore and that one bad night on the ice doesnât mean Iâm neglecting my diet or the exercise regime the team sets for me.
âApart from the thousand calories on Thanksgiving dinner last night, I stick to team-approved diets. You know that. Even during the off-season, I tend to watch what I eat.â What I drink and who I sleep with, however, that could go either way. I donât say that though.
âThanksgiving and Christmas and any other holiday doesnât give you the excuse to slack off.â
âYouâre not telling me anything the coaches havenât already reamed me for, so what do you want from me?â Heat rises up my neck and floods my face.
Iâve never felt so out of control of my emotions in my life.
âYou might be a screwup and an attention whore off the ice like your mother, and I let your antics slide, but when it comes to hockey, you canât be half-assed about it. You need to put in more of an effort and take the game seriously.â
The comparison to my mother, calling me out for the public antics that Anton also hates about me, and insinuating I donât take my career very fucking seriously is too much. Even for him.
âIf you think I donât take hockey seriously, you havenât been paying attention. Maybe if you actually saw the good in me and not the traits you claim I got from Mom, maybe you wouldnât treat me like the mud under your shoe.â
âI donâtââ
âYou do. You always have, and Iâm sick of it.â What am I doing? Yelling at my elders? I send up an imaginary apology to my grandmother in Poland, whose heart just twinged and she doesnât know why. But now that Iâve started, I canât stop. âYou only call when you want to feel superior. Like putting me down makes you feel better about yourself and your career. I know what Iâm doing. Iâve already made it to more playoffs than you ever did.â
Dad goes silent for possibly the first time ever, but then he mutters the one thing that just digs the knife in deeper. âI shouldnât have wasted all my time and money on you. Youâre a disappointment.â
âPierdol siÄ.â
. Thereâs some Polish I do know. I hit the End button and throw my phone in my cubby.
âWhat happened?â Anton asks.
I shake my head. I canât do this now. Not after that. I just ⦠canât. âNothing. Itâs not important. Iâm going to go shower.â
I strip off the rest of my gear, grab a towel, and walk away. Iâm usually good at itâwalking away. But this time, it feels wrong.
My heart wants me to stay, to put myself out there, but my mind is telling me to run instead.