: Chapter 2
The Risk (Briar U)
Itâs nine thirty-ish when I get home. The two-bedroom condo I share with my teammate Brooks Weston is nothing I could ever afford on my own, even with the sweet rookie contract I signed with the Oilers. Weâre on the top floor of the four-story building, and our place is ridiculousâIâm talking chefâs kitchen, bay windows, skylights, a massive rear deck, even a private one-car garage for Brooksâs Mercedes.
Oh, and itâs rent-free.
Brooks and I met a couple of weeks before the start of freshman year. It was at a team event, a âget to know your teammates before the semester startsâ dinner. We hit it off immediately, and by the time dessert was served, he was asking me to move in with him. Turned out he had a second bedroom in his Cambridgeport condoâfor free, he insisted.
Heâd already received special permission to live off campus, a perk of being the filthy rich son of an alum whose donations would be sorely missed if the school didnât keep him happy. Brooksâs father pulled a few more strings, and I was given a pass from the dorms, too. Money really does pave the way.
As for the rent issue, at first Iâd balked, because nothing in life is free. But the more I got to know Brooks Weston, the more apparent it became that for him? Everything comes free. The guy hasnât worked a day in his life. His trust fund is huge, and he gets whatever he wants handed to him on a silver platter. His parents, or one of their minions, secured this condo for him, and they insist on paying the rent. So for the past three and a half years, Iâve been given a glimpse into what itâs like to be a rich boy from Connecticut.
Donât get me wrong, Iâm no moochâI tried to give him money. Brooks wonât have it and neither will his parents. Mrs. Weston was aghast when I raised the subject during one of their visits. âYou boys need to focus on school,â sheâd clucked, ânot worry about how to pay the bills!â
Iâd choked back laughter, because Iâve been paying bills for as long as I can remember. I was fifteen when I got my first job, and the moment I held that first paycheck in my hand, I was expected to contribute to our household. I was buying groceries, paying for my cell phone, gas, our cable bill.
My family isnât poor. Dad builds bridges and Momâs a hairdresser, and Iâd say we are solidly between lower and middle class. We were never rolling in the dough, so experiencing Brooksâs lifestyle firsthand is jarring. Iâve already secretly vowed that once Iâm settled in Edmonton and hitting all the incentives in my NHL contract, the first thing Iâm going to do is write a check to the Weston family for the three years and counting of unpaid rent.
My phone buzzes as I kick off my Timberlands. I fish it out of my pocket and find a text from my friend Hazel, who I had dinner with earlier in one of Briarâs fancy dining halls.
HAZEL: You make it back ok?? Itâs raining like crazy out there.
ME: Just walked thru the door. Thanks again for the grub.
HAZEL: Anytime. See u Saturday at the game!
ME: Sounds good.
Hazel sends a couple of kissy-face emojis. Other guys might read more into that, but not me. Hazel and I are completely platonic. Weâve known each other since grade school.
âYo!â Weston shouts from the living room. âWeâre all in here waiting for your ass.â
I shrug out of my wet jacket. Brooksâs mother sent a decorator over when we first moved in and made sure to purchase everything that guys donât think about, like coat racks and shoe racks and dish racksâapparently men donât give much consideration to racks, outside the tit variety.
I hang up my gear in our separate entryway and then duck through the doorway that leads to the main room. The condo has an open-concept layout, so my teammates are scattered in both the living room and dining area, and a few have taken up residence on the stools at our kitchen counters.
I glance around. Not every guy on the roster has shown up. Iâll let it slide, considering I called this meeting last minute. On the drive home from Hastings, I was stewing over Brennaâs taunt about the Frozen Four and worrying about how sheâs distracting McCarthy. Which led to a mental investigation of all the other distractions that might be hindering the team. Since Iâm all about action, I sent a mass text: Team meeting, my place, now.
The majority of our startersânearly twenty of usâfill up the space, which means my nostrils are greeted with the combined scent of various body washes, colognes, and the BO of the assholes who decided not to shower before they came.
âHey,â I greet the guys. âThanks for coming.â
That gets some nods, several âno probs,â and general grunts of acknowledgement.
One person who doesnât acknowledge me is Josh McCarthy. Heâs leaning against the wall near the brown leather sectional, his gaze glued to his phone. His body language conveys a hint of frustration, shoulders stiffening ever so slightly.
Brenna Jensenâs probably still tugging him around by the cock. I battle my own sense of frustration at the notion. This kid shouldnât even be wasting his time. McCarthy is a sophomore and heâs decent looking, but no way does he belong in Brennaâs league. The girl is a smoke show. Hands down, sheâs one of the hottest women Iâve ever laid eyes on. And sheâs got a mouth on her. The kind that needs to be silenced every now and then, maybe with another mouth pressed up to itâ¦or a dick sliding between her red lips.
Oh fuck. I push the thought aside. Yes, Brenna is gorgeous, but sheâs also a distraction. Case in point: McCarthy hasnât even lifted his head since I entered the room.
I clear my throat. Loudly. He and the other handful that were still on their phones swivel their heads toward me. âIâm gonna make this fast,â I tell the room.
âYou better,â Brooks drawls from the couch. Heâs wearing black sweatpants and nothing else. âI left a chick in my bed for this.â
I roll my eyes. Of course Brooks was banging somebody. Heâs always banging somebody. Not that Iâm one to talk. Iâve had my share of girls over at our place. I feel sorry for our downstairs neighbors, having to deal with the parade of footsteps marching up and down the stairs. Luckily for them, we donât throw many parties. Hosting a party sucks ballsâwho wants their house to get trashed? Thatâs what the frat houses are for.
âArenât you special,â Dmitry, our best defenseman, cracks to Weston. âI left my bed too for this meeting. Bed, period. Because Iâm goddamn exhausted.â
âWe all are,â a junior left-winger named Heath pipes up.
âYeah, D, welcome to the tired club,â mocks Coby, one of our seniors.
I cross the room toward the kitchen, where I grab a bottle of water. Yeah, I hear them. This last month has been intense. Every Division I conference is balls deep in their tournaments, which means a solid month of the most competitive hockey youâll ever see. Weâre all vying for auto-bids into the national tournament, and, if that fails, hoping for a good enough record to be selected to the finals. Entire seasons are on the line here.
âYes,â I agree, uncapping my bottle. âWeâre tired. I can barely keep my eyes open in class. My entire body is one big bruise. I live and breathe these playoffs. I obsess over strategy every night before bed.â I take a slow sip. âBut this is what we signed up for, and weâre so close to reaping the reward. This matchup against Princeton will be the toughest one weâve faced all season.â
âIâm not worried about Princeton,â Coby says, smirking arrogantly. âWe already beat them once this year.â
âVery early in the season,â I point out. âTheyâve picked up steam since then. They swept the quarterfinals against Union.â
âSo?â Coby shrugs. âWe swept our series, too.â
Heâs right. Last weekend we played some of the best hockey weâve ever played. But weâre in the semifinals now. Shit just got real.
âThis isnât best two out of three anymore,â I remind the guys. âThis is single elimination. If we lose, weâre out.â
âAfter our season?â Dmitry says. âWeâll get selected to the national tourney even if we donât make it to the conference finals.â
âYouâd bet our entire season on that?â I challenge. âWouldnât you rather have that guaranteed bid?â
âWell, yeah, butââ
âBut nothing,â I cut in. âIâm not gonna hang our hopes on the possibility that our season might be deemed good enough to move forward. Iâm gonna bet on us kicking Princetonâs ass this weekend. Got it?â
âYessir,â Dmitry mumbles.
âYessir,â some of the younger guys echo.
âI told you, you donât have to call me sir. Jesus.â
âYou want us to call you Jesus?â Brooks blinks innocently.
âNot that, either. I just want you to win. I want us to win.â And weâre so damn close I can practically taste the victory.
Itâs beenâ¦fuck, I donât even know how many years itâs been since Harvard won the NCAA championship. Not during my reign, anyway.
âWhen was the last time the Crimson won the Frozen Four?â I ask Aldrick, our resident statistics guy. His brain is like an encyclopedia. He knows every piece of trivia there is to know about hockey, however miniscule.
â1989,â he supplies.
ââ89,â I repeat. âThatâs almost three decades since we called ourselves national champions. Beanpot games donât count. Conference finals donât count. We keep our eye on the ultimate prize.â
I conduct another sweep of the room. To my irritation, McCarthy is checking his phone again, and not at all discreetly.
âSeriously, do you even know what was being done to my dick when you texted about this meeting?â Brooks gripes. âChocolate syrup was involved.â
A few of the guys hoot.
âAnd all you wanted was to give us the speech from Miracle? Because, yeah, we get it,â Brooks says. âWe need to win.â
âYes, we do. And what we donât need are any distractions.â I give Brooks a pointed look, then direct the same sentiment at McCarthy.
The sophomore is visibly startled. âWhat?â
âThat means you, too.â I lock my gaze to his. âStop playing games with Chad Jensenâs daughter.â
His expression turns stricken. I donât feel bad about outing McCarthy to whoever didnât know, because Iâm pretty sure everyone and their mother already knew. He wears his hookup with Brenna like a badge of honor. Heâs not sleazy about it by engaging in locker-room talk, but he also canât shut up about how beautiful the girl is.
âLook, Iâm not one to usually tell you guys what to do with your dicks, but weâre talking about a few weeks here. Iâm sure you can keep it in your pants for that long.â
âSo nobody is allowed to hook up?â a junior named Jonah pipes up, aghast. âBecause if thatâs the case, then Iâd like for you to call my girlfriend and tell her that.â
âGood luck, captain. Viâs a sex maniac,â Heath says with a snicker, referring to Jonahâs longtime girl.
âAnd wait a secâdidnât you leave the bar with a hot redhead the other night?â Coby demands. ââCause that doesnât sound like youâre practicing what you preach, bruh.â
âHypocrisy is the devilâs crutch,â Brooks says solemnly.
I smother a sigh and hold up a hand to silence them. âIâm not saying no hookups. Iâm saying no distractions. If you canât handle the hookup, donât do it. Jonahâyou and Vi fuck like bunnies and itâs never affected your performance on the ice. So keep fucking like bunnies for all I care. But youââ McCarthy receives another stern look. âYouâve been screwing up in practice all week.â
âNo, I havenât,â he protests.
Our goalie, Johansson, speaks up. âYou missed every shot on goal during the shooting drill this morning.â
McCarthy is dumbfounded. âYou stopped all my shots. Iâm getting shit because youâre a good goaltender?â
âYouâre our top scorer after Jake,â Johansson replies, shrugging. âYou shouldâve gotten a couple of those in.â
âHow is it Brennaâs fault that I had an off day? Iââ He stops abruptly and glances at his hand. I assume his phone buzzed with a notification.
âChrist, youâre proving Connellyâs point,â a forward named Potts grumbles at McCarthy. âPut your phone away. Some of us want this meeting to be over so we can go home and crack open a beer.â
I swivel my head toward Potts. âSpeaking of beer⦠You and Bray are officially banned from all frat parties until further notice.â
Will Bray balks. âCome on, Connelly.â
âBeer pongâs fun, I get it, but you two need to abstain. For fuckâs sake, youâre starting to get a beer belly, Potts.â
Every set of eyes in the room homes in on his gut. Itâs currently covered by a thick Harvard hoodie, but I see the dude in the locker room every day. I know whatâs under there.
Brooks makes a tsking noise at me. âI canât believe youâre body-shaming Potts.â
I scowl at my roommate. âIâm not body-shaming him. Iâm simply pointing out that all those beer pong tournaments are slowing him down on the ice.â
âItâs true,â Potts says glumly. âIâve been sucking.â
Someone snorts.
âYouâre not sucking,â I assure him. âBut yeah, you could afford to lay off the beer for a couple weeks. And youââ Itâs Westonâs turn. âTime for abstinence on your part, too.â
âScrew that. Sex gives me my superpowers.â
I roll my eyes. I do that a lot around Brooks. âIâm not talking about sex. Iâm talking about the party favors.â
His jaw instantly tightens. He knows precisely what I mean, and so do our teammates. Itâs no secret that Brooks like to indulge in a recreational drug or two at parties. A joint here, a line of cocaine there. Heâs careful about when he does it and how much, and I suppose it does help that coke only remains in the blood for forty-eight hours.
This is not to say I tolerate that shit. I donât. But telling Brooks what to do is about as effective as talking to a brick wall. One time I threatened to tell Coach, and Weston said go ahead. He plays hockey because itâs fun, not because heâs in love with the game and wants to go to the pros. He could give it up in a heartbeat, and threats donât work on someone who isnât afraid to lose.
Heâs not the first to dabble in the occasional drug, and he wonât be the last. It does appear to be purely recreational, though, and he never does it on game day. But the after-party? All bets are off.
âIf you get caught with it or fail a piss test, you know what happens. So congratulations, youâre officially going clean until after the Frozen Four,â I inform him. âYou feel me?â
After a long, tense beat, his head jerks in a nod. âI feel you.â
âGood.â I address the others. âLetâs focus on beating Princeton this weekend. Everything else is secondary.â
Coby flicks a cocky grin in my direction. âAnd what are you giving up, captain?â
My brow furrows. âWhat are you talking about?â
âYou call a team meeting. You tell poor McCarthy he canât use his dick anymore, you take away Westonâs party favors, and you deprive Potts and Bray of their beer pong championship title. What are you going to do for the team?â
A hushed silence falls over the apartment.
For a second Iâm speechless. Because is he for real? I score at least one goal a game. If someone else scores, itâs usually with my assist. Iâm the fastest skater on the Eastern Seaboard, and Iâm a damn good captain.
I open my mouth to retort when Coby starts to laugh.
âBruh, you shouldâve seen your face.â He grins at me. âRelax. You do plenty. Youâre the best captain weâve ever had.â
âAye, aye,â several of the guys call out.
I relax. But Coby does have a point. âLook, I wonât apologize for wanting us to be focused, but I am sorry if Iâm being harsh on you guys. Especially you, McCarthy. All Iâm asking is for us to keep our heads in the game, can we do that?â
About twenty heads nod back at me.
âGood.â I clap my hands. âYou can all take off now. Get some sleep and bring your A-game to morning skate tomorrow.â
The meeting adjourns, the group dispersing. Once again, our neighbors are forced to suffer through the footsteps, this time the heavy stomps of two-dozen hockey players thudding down the stairs.
âDad, may I please go back to my room now?â Brooks asks sarcastically.
I grin at him. âYes, son, you may. Iâll lock up.â
He flips up his middle finger as he dashes toward the bedrooms. Meanwhile, McCarthy lingers by the front door, waiting for me.
âWhat am I supposed to say to Brenna?â he asks.
I canât tell if heâs angry, because his expression reveals nothing. âJust tell her you need to concentrate on the tournament. Tell her you guys will get together after the season.â
Theyâll never get together again.
I donât voice the thought, but I know itâs true. Brenna Jensen would never condone being âput on holdâ by anyone, let alone a Harvard player. If McCarthy ends it, even temporarily, sheâll make it a permanent split.
âBriar has won three national championships in the last decade,â I say flatly. âMeanwhile, weâre over here, winless. Thatâs unacceptable, kid. So tell me, whatâs more important to youâgetting mind-fucked by Brenna Jensen or beating her team?â
âBeating her team,â he says immediately.
No hesitation. I like that. âThen letâs beat them. Do what needs to be done.â
With a nod, McCarthy walks out the door. I lock up after him.
Do I feel bad? Maybe a little. But anyone can see that he and Brenna arenât destined to be together. She said as much herself.
Iâm simply speeding up the inevitable.