Brutal Obsession: Chapter 18
Brutal Obsession: A Dark Hockey Romance (Hockey Gods)
I wake up to my phone buzzing next to my face. I lift my head off the pillow and make out my motherâs name on the screen. My shock wakes me up a bit, and I swipe to answer it.
âAh, so you are alive.â My voice is hoarse and rasping. About time she decided to check up about Mia Germainâitâs unlike her to curb her curiosity.
Well, I suppose itâs more like her nowadays, and I just hadnât caught up to the new her. But sheâs calling now, and thatâs the important part. Right?
âYou signed an NDA,â my mother hisses. âWhat the fuck were you thinking?â
I rear back from my phone. Not quite the response I was expecting.
âUmâ¦â I scramble to catch up. Did Greyson release the video? I thought it was blackmail⦠I thought I did what he wanted. Panic stabs through me, ice-cold, and I throw the covers off my legs. The scar on my shin stands out in sharp relief against my pale skin. âCan you fill me in?â
âThe Times . Look at the fucking Times .â She moans. âOh, our lives are over. How could you do this to us?â
I donât answer, putting her on speaker while I grab my laptop and type in the newspaperâs website. Itâs a local Crown Point paper that runs print and digital. I think my mom gets their emails just in case I ever did anything impressive enough to warrant a screenshotâor, worse, for her to find a printed copy and carefully cut out the article or photo that mentioned me.
That was a lifetime ago, though.
Now, itâs Greysonâs picture thatâs spread across the front page.
I scroll down, my heart in my throat. The headline says: Crown Point Universityâs rising hockey star has a torrid past.
I canât breathe. Mom is still talking about how Iâve ruined us, how theyâre going to come after both me and her. I tune her out and scan the article. It lays out an accusation without real evidence: that Greyson was involved in an accident, driving drunk, and it was swept under the rug.
âI didnât do this,â I say weakly.
âOf course not,â Mom snaps. âThatâs exactly what weâre going to say.â
The story goes on to talk about what happened to me. They found a photo of me outside the hospital in a walking boot. One I posted to my Instagram, if Iâm not mistaken.
A chill goes through me. Did they do their research on me? Did they just look at my social media, or did they actually try to get in contact with me? It doesnât seem like anyone wanted a quote. No missed calls or emailsâ¦
Farther down, thereâs another photo of Greyson on the ice in his CPU jersey, skating along the wall. His expression is serious. The writer goes on to say how all is well in Crown Point, with his past transgressions seemingly swept under the rug.
It mentions us. Me and him. Thereâs a photo of us together, with Steele blurred out in the background. In his apartment? Who would have taken a picture of that?
I stare at the words on my screen, which go blurry after a minute. Violet and Greyson seem to have no problem moving on. Perhaps they agree that mutual destruction is the way to go. Either way, Crown Point citizens should know who theyâre rooting for when Greyson Devereux steps on the ice every weekend.
âAre you still there?â
I flinch. âYeah.â
âWell?â
âUm, sorry, I didnâtâ¦â I clear my throat. âIâm not quoted. Thereâs no proof that I said anything at allâbecause I didnât.â
Mom scoffs. âOf course not. I said, donât talk to anyone. This is libel, and Iâll be contacting the newspaper immediately. This is absolutely ridiculous. To think, this piece had to be approved to go to print.â
My stomach drops. âItâs in print?â
âFront-page news,â she says, her tone conveying her continued disgust.
Oh god.
Heâs going to kill me. Heâs going to release the video that already proves I broke the NDA, and wrap it up with this article, and deliver both to his father. And then Iâll be well and truly fucked.
âLet me know.â I hit the end button, not bothering to say goodbye.
Sheâll either make headway or she wonât. Simple as that. And until then, Iâm not going to be seen in public. No chance of that. I can afford to miss my Monday classes exactly twice before I fall behind.
I can already picture how pissed Greyson is going to be and what heâll do to retaliate. This was already a game to him, but itâs getting worse. The stakes are inching higher and higher, and Iâm afraid Iâm not going to like where he takes this.
The ballâs in his court⦠Or is it?
What if I act first, for once? What if I set the record straight with him and make him understand that I had nothing to do with this?
Before I can lose my nerve, I text him.
He texts back a second later.
I narrow my eyes. He knows?
Willow bursts into my room, her phone in her hand. âVioletââ
I motion to my computer, open on my lap, and make a face. âI got a call from mother dearest, accusing me of breaking the NDA.â
She gasps and comes to sit beside me. âYou didnât.â
âI know.â I narrow my eyes. âBut someone obviously found out about it.â
She reels back. âYou think I had something to do with it?â
Oh god. I grab her hand to keep her from getting too far. âOh, hell no. Girl, my trust in you is absolute. But Iâm wondering if Greyson mentioned anything to⦠someone else.â
Relief flows across her expression, quickly chased by confusion. âI doubt it. The whole point was to pretend it didnât happen, right?â
âNo chance of that,â I mutter.
Willow checks her phone again. âWait.â
âWhat?â
âScreenshot the page,â she orders. âI think they just pulled it.â
I do, making sure to get the headline and all the images, too. I refresh the page, and the headline has been replaced by something else. An abandoned mall being converted into an indoor dog park later this year. I type in Greysonâs name into the search bar and get an error.
I meet Willowâs gaze. âHow many people do you think saw that?â
She winces. âI found it because the headline and first image were in my inbox.â
Shit. Fuck.
No doubt thatâs going to raise questions, whether or not theyâre able to read the full article. Actually⦠at least that puts me in the clear. Iâm not mentioned until the second half. But Greyson?
âHis dad was in town last night,â she says.
I pause. âWhat?â
âHis dad. The senator. They were photographed getting dinner together, hugging, the whole thing. The senatorâs social media was making a big deal about visiting Crown Point to see the mayor and the president of CPU.â
âProtecting his investment. Isnât he coming back for some charity thing next month, too?â
Willow grunts her affirmation. Paris had mentioned itâbragged about how her parents are coming in specifically for it.
I pace beside my bed. âOkay, so this article mightâve been planned for a while, or it couldâve been a spur-of-the-moment thing. All we know is that I didnât say anything, and I canât imagine Greyson wouldâve either. Obviously.â
âSuspicious timing, for sure.â
I suck my lower lip between my teeth and think about everything thatâs happened this semester. It just feels like everything is unraveling. Not just school but my life.
âDo you think it has to do with the break-in?â
Her face brightens, then falls. âWhat if it does? Thatâs fucking creepy.â
I grimace, then grab my phone again. I took a picture of my photo wall as evidence, and now I pull it up. The word whore is still harsh to read, but I block it out and zoom in on the prints.
âWhat are you looking for?â Willow rises on her knees and peers over my shoulder. âThatâs awful, by the way. Still.â
âYeah. Iâm checking to see if there was a picture of my mom and I outside the hospital. Itâs kind of like the one I posted on Instagram, but weâre both frowning in the one the paper used.â I shrug. âItâs just a hunch.â
âDid you have the frown printed out?â
I sag. âNo idea.â
She chuckles and shakes her head. âOkay, Detective Reece. Letâs just⦠I mean, if itâs taken down, thatâs not a bad thing. Itâs actually probably good, theyâll just see the headline and the first paragraph in the email and think itâs⦠I donât know, propaganda from a rival team or some shit. You know how everyone gets competitive when it gets close to the end of the regular season.â
Right. Itâs barely seven oâclock in the morningâthereâs a chance no one saw it.
Against my better judgment, I get ready for school with Willow. My muscles ache, and I find more than one bruise when I get dressed. I donât particularly mind it. In fact, I think I like the reminder. I experiment by pressing on one of the bruises like Greyson probably would.
Never mind the bite marks he left on my neck and breast that have only just begun to fade.
The man is possessive with a capital P .
Anyway, we go to school, and all is fine for the first half of the day. Two people ask me about it, but I feign confusion and they leave it alone.
At lunch, Paris marches up to me with a scowl marring her face. She looks like hellâher makeup is full throttle, per usual, but itâs smudged. She needs another coat of gloss on her lips, and her hair has been hastily put up in a high ponytail.
Not bad, just not her style.
Clue number one that sheâs pissed.
Willow makes a noise in the back of her throat.
Clue number two? She has what appears to be the photo they used of Greyson farther down in the article, of him on the ice, on her screen.
âHowâd she get that?â I ask Willow out of the corner of my mouth.
Weâve been sitting at our table with Jess, Amanda, and a few other dance team girls for twenty minutes.
Paris gets closer, and her eyes laser into mine.
Belatedly, I realize she has a blue drink in her hand.
Iâve never seen her drink anything other than water or vodkaâsheâs on the clear liquid diet, she saysâand I gulp.
âYou bitch,â Paris snarls, stopping at the head of the table.
Then, in a fashion very similar to Greyson, she turns the cup over on my head.
The blue liquid crashes down over my hair, immediately soaking into my white graphic t-shirt. Itâs ice-coldâactually, she did put ice in it. The cubes slide down my hair and under the collar of my shirt, catching in my bra and lap.
Itâs so fucking cold, I canât move for a moment.
The dining hall goes from loud to silent in an instant.
I stand slowly, brushing the ice chips and loose liquid off me. The faint plinks of the ice hitting the floor are the only noises.
âObviously you have a problem with me,â I snap.
She sneers. âI wish I had half the balls you do, to be so bold and desperate as to try and hook up with my boyfriendââ
I whip my hand out before my reasoning can take over. My palm cracks against her cheek, and her head snaps to the side. My palm fucking stings, but I mask it. I canât believe I just slapped her, but Iâm so annoyed, I donât have time to regret it.
âIâm so sick of your shit,â I tell her. âNow get the fuck out of my way.â
Paris turns back slowly, her eyes narrowing. I can see the thoughts that run through her head. Sheâs thinking of retaliation. Sheâs thinking through what the worst possible thing she can do to me is. Without another word, she pivots and stalks back the way she came.
She makes a beeline for the far corner of the room, where the hockey table sits.
My stomach knots.
âI didnât see them,â Willow says, suddenly at my shoulder.
Thereâs a rustle of movement throughout the dining hall as people shift to watch where Paris is headed. Sure enough, she zeroes in on Greyson the same way she did to me. Minus the blue drink. Instead, she grabs the front of his shirt and slams her lips to his.
From our table, I have the perfect view.
It sears into my mind how he doesnât push her awayâhe pulls her onto his lap. He kisses her like he shouldâve kissed me last night. Their mouths open, and he dominates her. Itâs clear in the way he holds her ass and her arm, in the way she gives in to him, even though sheâs above him.
Iâm going to be sick.
âVioletââ
âDonât,â I whisper.
I have two options. I could run away, or I could walk out with my head held tall. Always with the dignity, I take my time grabbing my jacket and shrugging it on over my wet shirt. I flip my hair over my collar, ignoring the way the liquid still drips down my back.
I start to take my tray, but Amanda reaches out and covers my wrist.
âWe got it,â she says.
My gaze lifts again. Thatâs the worst part. I actually look up and over at Greyson and Paris, who are still locked in an embrace.
But his eyes arenât closed, and theyâre not on her. Heâs watching me out of the corner of his eye. We donât have a conversation. Itâs not like the movies where I can know what the fuck heâs thinking from his eyes, across the room, while he makes out with another girl.
Fuck no.
All I can hope is that I translate my anger.
This isnât over. I thought I was doing the right thing by telling him I didnât have a part in it. Iâve been continually pushed into the dirt by him, over and over and over.
No more.
This is the straw that breaks my back.
I wonât be that person who caves to pressure. No fucking way. Under the right circumstances, pressure can turn coal into a diamondâand thatâs exactly what Iâll become.
Tougher than he could ever imagine. Stronger, too.
I take one last look at Willow and mouth an apology. My phone is safe in my jacket pocket, and I take a deep breath. No one makes a noise as I stride toward the exit.
I donât know if they can feel my energy. How Iâve accepted that this is happening, and while itâs so far from okay it isnât funny⦠I can handle it.
But then someone claps. I wonder if itâs Willow, spitting mad at Greyson and cheering me on the way she can. Itâs contagious, though. The whole dining hall just saw a spectacle they werenât expecting, and now theyâre picking me over him.
They nod at me.
I nod back.
More clapping. It follows me out the door. Not everyone, of course. Not the people who think, for some crazy reason, that Iâm the one coming between Greyson and Paris, or Greyson and hockey. It takes me by surprise that people support me at all. Heâs the hotshot, heâs the one whoâs going to bring the school a hockey championship.
But Iâm the one whoâs been here longer.
Maybe that matters to some of them.
I make it all the way outside before I let my expression drop.