Heated Rivalry: Part 3 – Chapter 19
Heated Rivalry (Game Changers Book 2)
âDid you hear about Rozanov?â
Shane stopped tying his skate and looked at the bench across from him, where Gilbert Comeau and J.J. were chatting in French.
âWhat about Rozanov?â Shane asked, also in French.
They both looked at him, surprised, no doubt, by the slight panic in his voice. Comeau shrugged. âHe didnât fly to Nashville with the rest of his team today.â
âHe flew separately?â Shane asked stupidly.
âNo,â Comeau said, looking at Shane like he was a little bit dumb. âHe isnât in Nashville.â
âHe didnât get hurt last night,â J.J. said. âNot that anyone noticed, right?â
âI donât think so,â Shane said, quickly replaying the last few minutes of the game. Ilya had seemed fine. He hadnât left the ice in pain at any point during the game.
âMaybe heâs sick,â Comeau said. âIâm sure weâll find out. Right now ESPN is just saying that he didnât go to Nashville.â
âRight,â Shane said quietly.
He ran through a number of alarming scenarios in his head before he finally stood up and grabbed his phone off the shelf above his head.
Are you ok? he texted.
He didnât get a reply. There was still no reply by the time the team left the dressing room to go warm up. When he returned to the dressing room afterward, he quickly checked his phone. Still nothing.
, he ordered himself.
Heâd probably learn what had happened after the game. He was sure it would be mentioned during the broadcast of the Boston vs. Nashville game.
Shane did not play the best game of his life. Probably one of the worst games of the season for him, but his team managed to win anyway. Shane couldnât remember ever being so eager for a game to be over. When they got back to the dressing room, he shucked his gloves off and immediately checked his phone.
Nothing.
Shane sat down hard on the bench, staring at his phone. He opened his web browser and searched âIlya Rozanov Nashvilleâ to see if any more information had been released. He found fans speculating on social media, and he saw an official ESPN story that just said âundisclosed reasonsâ and that there was no word whether Rozanov would be joining his team in Tampa Bay for their game in two daysâ time.
This whole thing was very strange. Shane couldnât in public without the hockey sites reporting that he was deathly ill and how that should affect your sports betting. Ilya Rozanov, one of the biggest stars in the league, just disappeared with no explanation and no reporters seemed to be digging very hard. Or offering possible reasons.
Which meantâ¦they must the reason. And they were respecting Bostonâs likely request for discretion.
Which meantâ¦absolutely nothing good that Shane could think of.
Shane got showered and changed faster than he ever had in his life. He found a private corner of the hallway outside the dressing room and did something heâd never done before: he called Ilya Rozanov.
He wasnât expecting him to answer, but he wanted the missed call to at least be recorded on Ilyaâs phone. He wanted Ilya to know he was concerned.
But Ilya did answer.
âHollander?â
âYeah. Hi.â
There was a long silence.
âAre you okay?â Shane asked finally.
He heard Ilya huff out a humorless laugh. âI donât know.â
âWhere are you?â
âHome.â
âIn Boston? Are you sick?â
âNo. Home. In Moscow.â
Shane wasnât expecting .
â
Did something happen? Oh, shit. Your father?â
âYes. Dead.â
âIlya, Iââ
âWhat are people saying about me?â
âNothing! The media has been very secretive about it. The Bears must haveââ
âGood. I will be back by end of week,â he said stiffly.
âYou should take more time.â
Ilya snorted. âYouâd like that, wouldnât you?â
âStop. Iâm being serious.â
More silence.
âIâm so sorry, Ilya.â He didnât know what else to say.
Ilya didnât reply, but Shane could hear a sharp sniff, and then a tight, throaty noise.
âIlyaââ
âI will be back in a few days. I should go.â
âAll right.â
âGoodbye, Hollander.â
âWait,â Shane said, way too loudly.
Ilya waited.
âJustâ¦call me, all right? If you need to talk. Or text me. Whatever. But⦠Iâll listen. I want to help, if I can.â
Ilya was silent for a moment. âYou did. Thank you.â
He ended the call.
Shane leaned back against the wall and blew out a breath.
Shane hadnât really been expecting to hear from Ilya again. He was surprised when, after his game in Buffalo, he received a text.
Lily: Are you alone?
Shane stood up, mumbled a hasty reason for leaving to Hayden, and went out to the stairwell.
Shane: Yes.
Lily: Can I call you?
Shane: Yes.
His phone rang and Shane answered it immediately. The stairwell was silent and empty. He leaned against the wall of the landing below his floor.
âHow are you doing?â he asked, not even bothering with hello.
âI feel like⦠I donât know. Bad.â
âHowâs your family treating you?â
Ilya gave a dark laugh. âLike I should not be here.â
âThatâs ridiculous. He was your father.â
âYes, well.â There was a pause and Shane waited. âI am paying for everything, so that makes meâ¦of use.â
âHowâs yourâI mean, howâs his wife?â
âUpset. But not about my father. Everybody thinks so, but no. She is scared for herself.â
âBecause thereâs no money?â
âYes. That.â
âWhat about you? Are youâ¦upset?â
Ilya sighed. âI donât know. Maybe about the wrong thing.â
âYou wish things could have been different?â Shane guessed.
âI wish⦠I wanted him to⦠I donât know.â He sighed again. âEnglish is too hard today.â
âIâm sorry. I wish I spoke Russian.â
âYou could probably learn it in a week,â Ilya grumbled. âPerfect. No accent.â
Shane laughed. âI donât think so.â He was about to ask if Ilya had anyone there in Moscow that he could talk to, but it was pretty obvious that he didnât. Why else would he be calling Shane?
âWhere are you right now?â he asked instead.
âWalking. A park. I needed to get out.â
âCold?â
âFucking freezing.â
Shane was suddenly struck by a ridiculous idea. Or maybe it was a brilliant idea. He decided to share it before his brain had a chance to figure out which.
âTell me everything you want to say,â he said. âIn Russian. I wonât understand butâ¦maybe it will help?â
There was a silence that was long enough for Shane to physically cringe at himself. He was about to take it back, when he heard Ilya quietly say, âOkay.â
The next several minutes were filled with Ilyaâs voice, sounding more animated and flustered than Shane had ever heard him. He was used to Ilya saying more with a teasing smile or a calculating look than with actual words. But now it was like a dam had burst, and Shane sat himself on the stairs and let it wash over him.
Without the ability to translate any of it, Shane could just enjoy the sound of Ilyaâs voice, which he barely recognized now. The words were so quick and confident, unrestricted by Ilya having to carefully piece together his sentences like when he spoke English. It felt intimateâlike they were somehow sharing a bigger secret now than when they slept together.
And there was something undeniably sexy about hearing Ilya speak so fluidly in his mother tongue.
When he was finished, Ilya gave an embarrassed-sounding little laugh and said, âI am done.â
It was jarring to hear him switch suddenly back to English.
Shane felt his head clear like he was waking from a dream.
âFeel better?â he asked.
âYes. Thank you.â
Shane lowered his voice and said, âMaybe you could teach me Russian someday.â
âOnly useful phrases,â Ilya said. Shane could practically his crooked smile. Then Ilya purred something in Russian.
âWhat does that mean?â Shane asked.
âGet on your knees.â
âOh.â Shane quickly scanned the stairwell again to make sure he was still alone. He was already more aroused than he should be after listening to Ilya pour his heart out. âAnd what other useful phrases could you teach me?â
Ilya laughed. âI can think of many, Hollander.â
Shane shifted on the stairs. âI wish you were here now.â
Shane couldnât believe he had actually allowed himself to say that out loud. They didnât to be together. They reluctantly hooked up when they were in the same city because it was something to do.
He felt his mortification melt away when Ilya said, in a low voice, âMe too.â
Something occurred to Ilya after he ended the call with Shane: maybe Shane had recorded that call and was going to run it through some sort of translating app later.
But Shane wouldnât do that, would he?
Ilya stopped into a coffee shop and ordered a cappuccino. While he waited for it, he tried not to imagine scenarios where Shane would somehow translate every word that Ilya had just said.
Mostly he had just been ranting about his family, but he had included an admission that he wished things could have been different with his father. That he had stupidly always hoped that his father might tell him that he was proud of him.
That admission would have been embarrassing enough, but Ilya had also slipped in an It was saying those words out loud, even more than venting his frustrations about his family, that had truly made Ilya feel lighter.
It was a secret he had been carrying for far too long, locked away so deep inside that he had even been keeping it from himself. But as soon as he let himself acknowledge it, and now say it, he felt relieved. Not because he could do anything about these feelings, but at least he had allowed himself to accept them. And he had, in the most cowardly way possible, said them aloud to Shane.
Shane wouldnât translate anything. That wasnât why he had asked Ilya to unload on him in Russian. He was being a friend.
Sure, Ilya could admit that he and Shane were friends now. He had certainly been the only person Ilya could think of when heâd decided he needed to talk to someone today.
He walked out of the shop with his cappuccino and reluctantly headed in the direction of his fatherâs house. The funeral was the next morning. After that, he could leave what was left of his goddamn family behind.
Shane had barely gotten in the door of his apartment before he texted Ilya. He had been thinking about him all day.
Shane: How are you doing?
He wasnât sure if Ilya would reply or not. He might be busy. His fatherâs funeral had been that morning. It was late in Moscow now, after ten oâclock at night.
Lily: Fantastic.
Shane waited.
Lily: A little bit drunk, actually.
Shane: Can I call you?
Lily: Yes.
When Shane heard Ilyaâs voice, he sounded more exhausted than drunk. âHollander.â
âHow are you holding up, Ilya?â
âGreat. Wonderful.â Shane heard him sigh. âIs quiet here.â
âAre you alone? Where are you?â
âMy condo. I have one here. In Moscow. For the summers, you know.â
âRight.â Shane didnât like the idea of Ilya being alone right now.
âIf you are wondering if I will be back in time for our game in Montrealââ
âI donât give a shit about that, Ilya. You know thatâs not why Iâm calling.â
Another sigh.
âShould you really be alone right now?â Shane asked.
âI am not alone,â Ilya said. âYou are here now, yes?â
Shaneâs hand flew to his chest to make sure his heart was still beating; he could have sworn it had just melted into a gooey puddle. He wished he could warp to Moscow. Just instantly appear in Ilyaâs apartment and hold him and tell him it was all right to be conflicted about his fatherâs death. That he didnât owe his family anything. That he should leave them all behind because they made him miserable and he doesnât need them anyway.
Instead he said, âYeah. Iâm here.â
âAnd where else are you?â Ilya asked.
âIâm home now. Montreal.â
Shane heard mattress springs squeak as Ilya presumably settled himself on his bed. âTell me about your home, Hollander,â he said in a tired voice. âWhat does it look like? I try to imagine itâ¦â
âYou do?â
âYou will not let me see it.â
âThatâs notâ¦â Shane grimaced. âItâs not because I donât want you here. You know that.â
âI know nothing. What does it look like?â
âItâs, I donât knowâ¦it has big windows.â
âWhat can you see out of them?â
âBuildings, mostly. A bit of the water.â
âFancy kitchen?â
Shane laughed. âYeah. Too fancy, probably. I barely use it. I could probably get by with a toaster and a blender.â
âWhat is your favorite thing about your home?â
âI dunno. Itâs close to the practice rink?â
Ilya snorted. âFigures.â
âItâs private. Good security. Hey, I made a donation to the Alzheimerâs Society of Canada. For your father.â
Ilya was quiet a moment. âThat is nice of you. Might be good for me. Can beâ¦what is the wordâ¦passed on?â
âHereditary?â
âYes. Hereditary.â
Neither man said anything for a moment.
âListen, Ilyaââ
âWhat about your bedroom? What is it like?â
Shane didnât want to talk about his stupid bedroom, but he understood what Ilya was doing. He left his living room and headed for the bedroom.
âItâs nice. Pretty basic. I mean, itâs enormous. Big windows. But not much in it.â
âWhat color is your bed? The blanket?â
âBlue. Like, navy blue.â
âI knew it.â
Shane smiled and sat on the bed.
âDo you have books? In your room?â
âA few.â
âWhat are you reading? What one is beside your bed?â
âA book about the 1972 Canada/Russia series, actually.â
Ilya laughed. âDo you read books that are not about hockey?â
âSometimes,â Shane said.
âI mean, no. Not very often.â
âYou are obsessed.â
âOf course I am. Arenât you?â
âMaybe. In a different way.â
Shane picked up the book and flicked the end of the bookmark with his finger. It had been nestled between pages forty-one and forty-two for over a month. âHockey has always been everything to me. For as long as I can remember.â
âIt has been for me as well. Butâ¦more as likeâ¦an escape. Is that right to say? My brain is not good right now.â
âYes,â Shane said quietly. âAn escape. Thatâs right. It was never an escape for me. It was just what I loved to do.â
âI love it also,â Ilya said. âHockey isâ¦fun. And I am very good at it.â
Shane laughed. And Ilya laughed.
âIs wild how much money they pay me to play this game,â Ilya said.
âTell me about it,â Shane agreed.
âI donât want to come back here.â
Shane was confused by the sudden topic change. âTo Russia, you mean?â
â
. I want to become American. Or Canadian. But I am in America, soâ¦â
In that moment, Shane wished like hell that Ilya played for a Canadian team.
âYou should,â Shane said. âHave you looked intoâ?â
âWe should get married,â Ilya said.
â
â Shane flushed right down to his toes.
âNot to each other,â Ilya said. Then he started laughing and couldnât stop.
âI you didnât mean to each other,â Shane lied.
When Ilya finally stopped laughing, he said, âI can marry an American girl. You should get married, Hollander. You want children, yes?â
âIâve already told you⦠I donât want to marryâ¦anyone.â
âThere is a nice Russian girl in Boston. American, I mean. But from Russia. Svetlana. I like her. I could marry her, I think.â
âOh.â
âShe isâ¦what is word?â¦sensible. Marriage would be like business deal, yes? Just until I am citizen.â
âYou donât love her, then?â
âNo,â Ilya said quietly. He sounded like he was falling asleep. âNot her. No.â
Shane knew he should end the call, let Ilya get some sleep. But instead he blurted out, âYou should come to the cottage this summer.â
âCottage? What are you talking about, Hollander?â
âMy cottage. In Ontario. Youâre not going back to Russia, soâ¦come to my cottage with me. Itâs quiet, and beautiful andâ¦private.â
For a moment, Ilya didnât say anything, and Shane thought he really had fallen asleep.
âI will think about it,â Ilya said finally.
âOkay.â
âI am tired.â
âYeah, I can tell. Get some sleep, all right?â
âYes. Goodnight, Hollander.â
They ended the call and Shane sat on his bed for a while after, not moving. It occurred to him that theyâd just had an entire conversation that hadnât been about sex at all, and was barely about hockey.
It also occurred to him that his heart was beating like he was in the middle of a run, and his mouth was dry. He had just invited Ilya to his cottage! The fact that he had even done that was absurd, but what if Ilya actually accepted?
What if he had Ilya all to himself at Shaneâs favorite place in the world? If there was no one to interrupt them, no one to hide from, no one to remind them of all the reasons they shouldnât want each otherâ¦
It would be too much. Shane would never be able to hold back everything he had been trying to pretend he didnât feel. He would blurt something out that he would never, ever be able to take back.
.
Oh god. That what Shane wanted, wasnât it? He didnât just want to be Ilyaâs dirty secret. He didnât want their relationship to be nothing but sex. He wanted to comfort Ilya when he was sad, and talk to him on the phone, and snuggle together on the couch and watch movies. He would take the short phone call they had just shared over any of their sexual encounters.
Well, any of their sexual encounters.
Shane groaned and fell back on his bed, covering his face with his hands. He was fucked.