Icebound: Chapter 10
Icebound (Boundless Players)
â
ey, old man! Did you forget how to block in your eighty years playing hockey or what?â
Cruz yells over the roaring stadium. He makes a cawing noise while waving his arms like a pigeon.
âWhy donât you keep fucking yelling âcause I play better when you yell at me!â I shout around my mouthguard.
âWatch me.â He skates past the crease. âNineteen keeps dangling the puck in front of me, clever fucker.â
The opposing player, Nineteen, skates up to Cruz and winks like a jackass before crossing the blue line back to the defending zone.
Cruz cups his gloves around his mouth, calling after him. âYou got the skinniest legs in the League or what?â
âWhy donât you stop fucking chirping and focus,â I shout.
âWhy donât you take your stick out of your ass and use it to block?â he yells before skating off.
Iâm annoyed as hell with Cruz. Weâre already on a penalty kill, and he keeps losing his damn temper.
Straight to the sin bin every time.
Cruz throws his stick at Nineteen, so we get another two-
minute penalty. Just what we fucking need when weâre already getting slaughtered. Letâs hope Cujoâs not watching from his Canadian throne because this is a damn mockery.
Passes are off. Weâre missing the net. Not blocking the shots.
Apparently, we forgot how to play hockey because when we change lines, we get another penalty for having too many men on the ice. Whoâs counting? Not us, clearly. The ref can fuck right off even though he called it right.
Weâre clawing for every inch. Cincinnatiâs hustling hard, making all kinds of strong attacking plays. Thereâs a lot of traffic since theyâre swarming the net.
They came to win.
Simple as that.
My gaze bounces between players as they skate and slam into each other. I dart my eyes across the ice, tracking the puck as it moves between sticks.
Nineteenâs picking up speed like heâs about to make a breakaway, but at the last second, he winds back for a blistering slap shot.
The puck zips toward me, a black blur against the white ice.
I calculate the trajectory in milliseconds, and before the crowd can even gasp, I drop down into butterfly. A sharp pain ignites in my groin. Damn, that hurts. My knee pads hit the iceâa nanosecond too late.
The puck goes right in my net.
âFuck!â
The buzzer howls in the arena, and the stadium erupts in cheers because weâre in Cincinnatiâs barn.
Cruz skates up to Nineteen and shouts in his face. âHey, fucksie, you been in the minors for how long? Huh? You a pretender or what? What?â
âAw, donât be mad, you big dumb animal,â Nineteen sneers .
âHey, I have a question,â Cruz yells, shoving him. âWhy do you suck at hockey?â
âLook whoâs talking,â Nineteen shouts. âBetter get home to those roller hockey championships, Twelve.â
Cruz pushes him again. âYou think youâre the only guy that can hit? Letâs-fucking-go! You canât even stand out here!â
âI ainât scared of you, Twelve. Not scared at all.â Nineteen pulls back his clenched fist and slams it into Cruzâs jaw, which gives him the excuse he needs to tackle him to the ice. They attack each other like savage wrestlers.
In a rush, I skate over, ice chips flying past my shins, and lift Cruz off him. âHey, simmer down. Save it for the third.â
âHeâs a fucking motherfucker!â
He spits on the ice and gives the guy a face wash, rubbing his nasty-ass glove in Nineteenâs nose before I yank him away to the locker room. His chest pads heave in short gasps, but Cruz skates off the ice with me. Our heavy steps thump down the hall like a funeral procession.
No one says it, but we all feel it.
Weâre off today, every last one of us, and we have been ever since I ended things with a certain woman, noâgirl.
The girl I canât get out of my head.
But none of that matters because Iâm too old for her. Sure, I might be attracted to a twenty-two-year-old, but Iâm not going to be a dick and act on those feelings when I know it wonât go anywhere. It doesnât matter how good she made me feel.
Thereâs no chance Iâll touch her again.
âFucking hell!â Cruz bangs his fist against the wall as we settle on the benches. The state-of-the-art space smells like a mix of sweat, deodorant, and ass. Tension reeks in the air as we tape our sticks. I sit down on the wooden bench. Cruz follows suit, then Patty.
âWhat the fuck happened out there?â Cruz says. âYou hesitated, and itâs gonna cost us the game. Coach should pull you and get some more offense on the ice.â
I grind my teeth so I donât yell at the kid. Not a lot of people grasp the mental strength it takes to be a goalie. I have to bear the brunt of everyoneâs disappointment because my mistakes draw the most attention. Iâm the only player on the ice for the entire game, which takes a toll on my mind and body, and my patience is thinning.
âWhat about your bad timing on those pinches that led to Forty getting a breakaway in the first period, huh?â I say. âYeah, I fucked up, but this isnât all on me. Weâre a team.â
âSave it for the ice,â Patty interjects. âBut heâs right. We win as a team, and we lose as one.â
We sit in silence, hunched over in our sweat-soaked gear. Normally, weâre blasting some obscure country album everyone hates that Patty always picks, but today, the atmosphere is deader than a cemetery.
Coach Watson strides into the locker room with a menacing frown on her lined face.
She gives each one of us a look, and I swear my balls shrivel. âI donât think I need to say much. Weâre better than this. I know it, you know it, and the fans know it. Right now, weâre not playing to our potential. Weâre making mistakes we shouldnât be making. Our passing needs to be sharper, andâ¦â
Everyone listens intently to Coach, but when sheâs done with her pep talk and walks out, Cruz throws his visor on the ground. âWhat the hell is happening? This is a massacre. Who wants to tell me why I signed with the shittiest team in the League?â
âFuck off!â someone yells.
âHey, enough of that.â I grip Cruzâs shoulder, pushing my irritation with him aside. âListen to me. Youâre a hell of a player, but youâve got a tendency to get in your head when youâre pissed.
Just because weâre playing like shit doesnât mean weâll keep playing like shit. We can turn it around.â
âHow? Theyâve got three goals on us,â Cruz shouts. âYou gonna fart out a damn miracle?â
Patty throws his protein drink in the trash. âAll our luckâs run out ever since your girl ended things, Tremblay. She messing with your head?â
âSheâs not my girl,â I grit out, ripping my phone from my locker to find a string of texts.
MORGAN You didnât answer my call last night.
MORGAN Iâm coming to your game against Seattle in March.
MORGAN I want to see you, please.
MORGAN Call me. I miss you.
I jerk toward the screen at the last message.
NINA I forgot to tell you that you left your beanie at my place. Need me to bring it to you?
I drop my phone, snatching my navy beanie in the stall. I always pack it for away games. Otherwise, itâs bad luck. Yeah, itâs ridiculous, but itâs more of a comfort thing.
I was wearing it the day I got my first shutout, so I always carry it now. I quickly flip the fabric inside out, searching for that signature stitch from my mom. May all of your dreams be as wild as you. Itâs not there .
âShit,â I mutter, tossing the useless beanie in the stall. âHowâd I forget?â
âWhat is it?â Patty asks.
âI left my lucky beanie at Ninaâs place.â
The moment the words leave my mouth, the atmosphere in the locker room shifts. The air thickens with tension as everyone exchanges uneasy glances. No one dares to challenge me, but they all move uncomfortably in their gear like one wrong word will tip the scales of luck.
Cruz looks me dead in the eyes. âYouâre talking about that navy beanie your mom stitched? The one you almost punched me for touching? The one you pack for every away game because itâs good luck? That beanie?â
âYeah. I gave it to Nina because she was cold and left it there.â
Cruz grabs me by my jersey, getting all up in my face. âYou need to call her and see if she can bring you your beanie. Thatâs why youâre playing like shit.â
âTone it down. Iâm not playing like shit because I donât have my beanie. Iâm just off today.â I push him back, but heâs got a strong hold. âIâm not calling her. Weâll be fine.â
âCall her.â His grip tightens on me. âCall her right the fuck now or I will.â
âNo,â I grit out. âIâm not doing that.â
âWhy not?â he asks. âWho cares if sheâs not a doctor? Yeah, sheâs way too young for an old man like you, but itâs cool as shit that she does pottery. Call her.â
I flinch at Cruzâs comment. âI know Iâm too old for her. You donât need to tell me.â
Ninaâs probably out partying and sleeping with strangersâas she should be doing in her twenties. I was the same. There are plenty of women in this world.
Iâll find someone else after the ¡Vamos! event. Iâm committed to Nina until then, but Iâm not talking to her more than necessary. I already canât stop thinking about the way she was grinding all over my dick, but every time I remember her age, I wince a bit.
Patty and Cruz exchange a glance like theyâre plotting something. In an instant, Cruz lunges at me. I jolt, but Patty grabs my elbows, holding me in check.
âWhat the hell?â I shout, struggling against Pattyâs vice-like grip. Damn, heâs still got it, and here I thought having a kid would nudge him into dad bod territory.
âSorry, Tremblay, but this is too important. You know not to mess with the rituals,â Patty says, lowering his voice. âAlso, I want to meet this girl you canât stop talking about.â
âI donât talk about her,â I cut out, struggling in his grasp.
Patty rolls his eyes. âYou spent three hours in the hotel last night researching her pottery fellowship, and then telling me all the details, but sure, you donât talk about her.â
âI was just curious about it.â
Iâm sure all this is lust, and she might not be a doctor, but that fellowship is damn impressive. I know how hard it is to work toward a dream, and I admire her for going after what she wants, even if I am too old for her. Yeah, she lied, but she owned up to the fact, and didnât try to cover it up, which takes courage.
âOkay, same. I want to meet this girl.â Cruz picks up my phone and types in my passcode. How does he know my birthday? Nosy fucker.
âGive me my phone, Cruz. Now.â
He scrolls through my texts. âDonât worry, I wonât look at your nudes. Iâve already seen your mutant cock, anyway. I donât need a repeat.â
âWhatâs wrong with your cock, Tremblay?â someone shouts in the locker room.
âYou havenât seen it?â Cruz scrolls my phone. âItâs girthy as fuck.â
I struggle in Pattyâs firm hold, ignoring their comments. âDonât call her, Cruz. Iâm serious.â
âI wonât. What do you think I am? A grandfather like you?â I go limp with relief in Pattyâs grip, but then, Cruz smirks. âIâm FaceTiming her, obviously.â
I lurch forward, but Patty holds me back. âSorry about this, Tremblay, but you know itâs important. This is high stakes. Do or die. Cruz is right. We need you to have your lucky beanie or the hockey gods will curse us forever.â
Patty canât stop laughing to himself, so I know heâs only doing this because he wants to meet Nina.
âYou realize sheâll think youâre insane, right, Cruz?â
âI donât give a shit what anyone thinks. Iâll be a perfect gentleman,â Cruz says as the phone pings. âIn fact, Iâll be so gentlemanly, she might want to climb on top and ride my horse.â
Patty grimaces. âThatâs a really weird analogy, man.â
I look down at my white knuckles balled into fists. With a forced effort, I slowly uncurl my fingers, but the urge to put my fist through a wall is hard to shake off. Cruz sleeps with anyone, and I donât want him going there with Nina.
âListen to me, Cruz. Do not fuck around with Nina. I mean it.â
Patty hisses in a breath. âDamn, look at Tremblayâs face. You probably shouldnât have said that.â
âIâm not scared of Gramps over there. Whatâs he gonna do? Throw his dentures at me?â
The phone stops pinging.
âRhode?â
All of us go rigid. My chest tightens at the sound of Ninaâs throaty voice. Cruzâs eyes widen when he looks at the screen. âHot damn. Phil? Is that you? What the hell are you doing answering Tremblayâs call?
â
Every muscle in my body locks. Does Cruz know her?
âMicah Cruz?â Nina says, and dammit, it sounds like sheâs smiling, but I canât see her. âWhy are you calling me from Rhodeâs phone? Also, how many times did I tell you in high school not to call me Phil? You know I hate it.â
High school?
âNo, you donât,â Cruz says. âYou secretly love that we have our inside joke.â
They have inside jokes?
âOkay, fine. Maybe a little.â
âAtta girl, Phil.â
âYou two know each other?â I demand.
âHell yeah.â Cruz grins, and I want to wipe the smile off his face. âPhil and I were both Crimson Valley Vipers. Stay Violent!â he whoops.
âItâs stay violet,â Nina interjects.
âMy wayâs better. I even asked her to homecoming,â he continues. âPhil turned me down to go with Damon fucking theatre boy, even though I told her sheâd have more fun with me, but listen, as much as I want to play catch up, weâve got a real serious question for you, pretty girl.â
Thatâs itâI canât listen to this.
âSorry, Patty.â I jam my elbow back into his ribs.
He grunts, loosening his grip, and I slide out from beneath his arms. Springing forward, I rip the phone from Cruzâs hands and look at Ninaâs cute face. I shake my head. No, not cute.
Young.
Her hazels widen on the screen. I zone in on her, perched on a bar stool like a queen with some pink drink in her hand. Sheâs probably drowning in shots.
Good for her.
I clench my phone.
Her glasses are lopsided, and her hairâs a mess. She looks every bit the student in her university crewneck, and I hate that I find a twenty-two-year-old so fucking pretty.
It makes me worse than my father.
I stare at Ninaâs freckles over her nose, gritting my jaw when I realize she doesnât have any wrinkles around the corners of her eyes like me. But there it isâsheâs wearing my lucky beanie. The sight of her in my clothing tugs me closer to the screen, so I jerk myself back.
âHey,â I mumble.
Brilliant, Tremblay.
She takes a long sip of her drink before answering. âWhy is my old high school friend FaceTiming me from your phone, Rhode?â
Cruz pops his head into the screen, knocking against my temple. âAw, come on, we were more than friends. You kissed me under that arch thing.â
What the hell? She kissed him? Something hot and grating slithers under my skin. I shove him, but Cruz doesnât budge because our centerâs made of bricks.
Patty sticks his head on the other side so all our sweaty cheeks are squished together. His beard is real damn itchy.
âNo,â Nina counters. âYou kissed me, with too much tongue, I might add.â
I grind my jaw hard enough to crush my molars as a white-hot shot of jealousy bursts through me. Cruz knows what she tastes like, and Iâll never find out.
âWe both know it was the best kiss of your life, Phil. Anyway, we gotta go. Can you bring Tremblayâs beanie to our next game or mail it or some shit? Itâs the one on your head. Weâre losing âcause he packed the wrong one, and he needs it for every game.â
She blinks like sheâs trying to translate another language. âWhat? That makes no sense.
â
âWeâre hockey players,â Cruz says. âWe donât fuck with the rituals. Trust me, if I didnât have to go commando for every game, I wouldnât.â
âIâm not even going to ask about that,â she says.
I pinch the bridge of my nose, taking a deep breath as I watch the timer tick down on the locker room clock. âSheâs right, Cruz. Iâm not asking her to do this. Weâll be fine.â
âI can drop it off at your apartment when you get back on Friday?â Nina offers.
The question has me straightening. Nina doesnât owe me a damn thing, but here she is, willing to give me something. In a world where coaches, fans, journalists, pretty much everyone demands things from me, her question feels like a gift.
âYeah, have her bring it to family dinner,â Patty adds, wiggling his brows. Heâs worse than Rowyn, meddling in my life.
âAlright, fine,â I say, watching the clock. Weâve only got five minutes. âThatâd be great, thanks.â
âFucking hell,â Cruz mutters, grabbing his stick. âWeâre gonna lose this game now, arenât we? Come on, letâs go get railed.â
My teammates start filing out of the locker room, and Nina shifts her focus to me, softening. âDonât let Micah get to you. Iâve seen you play. You donât need a good luck charm to win. You got this, Rhode.â
And with that piece of encouragement, she clicks off the phone. I stare at my screen, waiting for it to light up with her name again. Now that I know sheâll be watching, my senses sharpen, each nerve buzzing as I channel the adrenaline thrumming through my veins.
âI like her already.â Patty slaps my back. âYouâre in so much trouble with that one.â
I grab my helmet, feeling the familiar weight in my hands. âYeah. Donât I fucking know it.â