The puck leaves the refâs hand, and my stick is already motion. Northpointâs center is slower than me, swiping across the ice a split second too late. Iâm already charging toward their zone, the roar of the crowd fading as I focus on nothing except the red pipes in front of me and the goalie between me and the netting. Between me and him, thereâs nothing but a stretch of smooth white.
I fly across the blue line after the puck, debating on whether I circle and pass or try to capitalize on this breakaway. Weâre up by two goals with five minutes left in the third period, which is a pretty comfortable lead.
Three goals sound better.
I shoot, the satisfying sound of the siren blaring through the arena as soon as the puck finds the back of the net.
âHell yeah, Hart!â Hunter pounds the top of my helmet, his voice jubilant and excited.
The fans packing the bleachers are excited. My teammates are excited. I even catch a glimmer of a smile beneath Coachâs bushy mustache as I skate along the bench, tapping gloves to celebrate my goal.
I think the one person in this rinkâaside from those affiliated with Northpointâwhoâs excited isâ¦me.
Sure, I see the excitement. Hear it. Understand it.
But I donât it.
Itâs like checking a task you have to complete off a list.
Score goal, .
Four minutes and fifty-four seconds later; win game, .
I shake hands with Northpoint on autopilot. Walk into the locker room on autopilot. Listen to Coachâs gruff congratulations on autopilot. Shower and change on autopilot.
Aidan and Hunter are bickering about where to get dinner as we walk down the hallway and into the lobby. I donât care what kind of food we get, so I stay silent.
Iâm trying to revel in how itâs January and weâve only lost one game this entire season. That doesnât sound as impressive as undefeated, but itâs a whole lot better of a record than anyone expected us to still have. And it means I might actually get that championship.
The last item on my list.
Win championship, .
âYou gonna chime in, Hart, or keep up with the zombie impression?â
âIâ¦â My voice trails as soon as I spot him.
The lobby is close to cleared out by now. The game ended at least thirty minutes ago, so the only people remaining are purposefully staying behind.
Hugh Garrison is standing in almost the exact same spot as the last time he was here, right by the spot on the wall where my plaque for the Caddell-Spade Award hangs.
His expression shifts to apprehensive as soon as he recognizes Iâve spotted him, possibly waiting for me to walk away again.
âOne sec,â I mutter to Aidan and Hunter. We drove here together, so they have no choice but to stick around, or else walk.
My fatherâs face is chaotic with emotion as I approach. Heâs never chosen to hide any of his feelings around me. Back when I had a schedule of going over to his house, anytime I made an excuse not to he would tell me, âConor, Iâm disappointed.â But he would look it too, have that disappointment written across his face. It would make me feel guilty. And then Iâd be angry about feeling guilty. His obvious emotions encouraged me to hide my own, to shut down rather than react. Something I still do.
But, for the first time, I donât resent Hughâs openness. I can read the pride and excitement in his expression, and itâs a relief, almost, that the Edgewood game wasnât the only time my father saw me play hockey.
âHi, Conor.â
âHey.â My grip tightens on the strap of the bag thatâs slung across my shoulder, but I donât otherwise react.
âThat was an incredible game. Youâreâ¦â He shakes his head. âYouâre one hell of a hockey player.â
There was a time when I would have snapped in response. But Iâm tired of lashing out. Tired of being angry and bitter.
âIs Harlow okay?â I blurt, instead of a more appropriate response, like .
Heâs a link to . If Harlow was in a plane crash, they would call the Garrisons, not me. Iâm desperate for any connectionâfor any informationâat this point. I donât even care that Hughâs the source.
âSheâs fine.â
I exhale, relieved. Iâve written dozens of texts to her, then deleted them without sending.
Thereâs so much I want to tell her.
Random shit, like how I watched an orca documentary the other night because I was thinking about her. How I gave Aidan and Hunter the tickets she got me for Christmas because I couldnât stomach going knowing it was something sheâd planned for us together. How I drove down to the Sound on Saturday morning to watch Samâs boat head out without her, too much of a coward to go say hi to the guy because he told me to take care of her and I didnât.
Important shit, like how I love her.
I have no clue how to say any of it.
âFine might not be the right word, actually,â Hugh continues. Heâs studying me closely, and I shift under his scrutiny. âSheâs clearlyâ¦down about something.â
I break eye contact. For the first time, I feel ashamed, standing in front of my father. Iâve been uncertain and uncomfortable, but never ashamed. That was always his role in my mind.
âIâm impressedâproudâConor. Everything youâve accomplished with hockey, with so many things.â
âThanks.â
Hugh nods. âI knew it would impact your life, Conorâthe poor decisions I made. Knew youâd have hard questions, that theyâd maybe lead to some uncomfortable conversations. Worried how to ensure you and Landon both felt like you were priorities to me. But I neverâ¦I never thought is where weâd end up. Not talking for years. All I know about you is that youâre a terrific hockey player. And that you light up the woman I love like a daughter in a way Iâve never witnessed. I glanced out my living room window and saw Harlow playing basketball in the driveway, looking happier than Iâd seen her in years. Maybe ever. Iâve known that girl her entire life. Allison threw her motherâs baby shower. Sheâs sweet and polite and considerate. And do you want to know what she told me, when I asked what you were like?â
I stay silent. Because, yeah, I want to know.
âShe told me âYou missed out.â And she was right. I know she was right. Iâll tell you Iâm sorry a thousand times, Conor. Sorry about what happened with your mother, sorry how it resulted in us not having a relationship. I never thought my mistakes would affect your life this way, would impact the relationships you have with other people. I donât know what happened between you and Harlow. She wouldnât talk about it. But if it had anything to do with her living with us, I feel like I owe you another apology for that.â
âI fucked it up on my own,â I tell him.
Nothing in Hughâs expression lightens.
âThe worst thing you can experience as a parent is seeing your child repeat your mistakes. Realize theyâll carry your regrets. And Conor, if thereâs one thing I say to you that you take the time to listen toâother than that I love youâitâs to fix things before itâs too late. Before something happens that you canât take back. Make different choices than me, Conor. I pushed the woman I loved away. Tried to forget her by meeting someone else. I was lucky that woman was Allison. That we grew to love each other. But there will always be a part of me living an alternate life. That wonders if your mom still plays Christmas carols at Thanksgiving and wishes that Iâd been the one to buy you your first pair of skates.â
I swallow, trying to clear the lump in my throat.
He holds out a piece of paper.
âHereâs Harlowâs flight information for tomorrow. If you decide not to pick her up, my number is at the bottom. And if thereâs ever anything else you need, Iâll always answer.â
He turns to leave.
âIâm not sure if Iâll ever get over it. What happened with you and Mom. What happened with you and me.â
Hugh looks back. âYouâll always be my son, Conor. Whether or not you let me be your father is your choice. And I realized I stopped asking you to make it. So Iâll be here, every home game for the rest of your season. Whether you want to talk when Iâm here? Your choice. I can be another face in the crowd, cheering you on. Cheering for my son.â
He stares at me, and I stare back.
âOkay.â
âOkay,â he repeats, then walks out of the lobby.
I stand, watching the door swing shut behind him. Then head back toward where Aidan and Hunter are waiting by the side exit that leads straight into the parking lot.
âWas that Harlowâs dad?â Hunter asks.
I never answered his question, last time. I just stormed off.
âNo. That was mine.â