: Chapter 29
The Risk (Briar U)
Every player prepares differently for a game. Some guys are obsessive about their superstitions, like Dmitry, who got a paper cut once and went on to shut out the opposing team, so now he gives himself a paper cut before every game. Or Chilton, who needs his mom to say, âBreak your leg, Coby!ââthose exact words, because in high school it won his team a state championship.
Me, I just need my trusty beaded bracelet and some silence. I need to sit quietly and get my head ready, because hockey is as mental as it is physical. It requires laser focus, the ability to react mentally to any situation, any obstacle. And thereâs no room for self-doubt on the ice. I have to trust my brain, my instincts, my muscle memory, to create opportunities and bring on a desired outcome.
This entire season, I havenât given any pep talks. The guys donât expect it of me. They know that when Iâm hunched over on the bench, not looking at them, not saying a word, itâs because Iâm mentally preparing.
Everyone stands to attention when Coach strides into the locker room. He sweeps his gaze over the uniformed bodies crowding the space. âMen,â he greets us.
We tap our sticks on the floor in a hockey salute. We need to get out there for our warmup skate, but Coach has a few words to say first.
âThis game is the single most important game you play this season. We beat Briar, we go to the national tourney. We beat Briar, weâre one step closer to bringing home a national title.â He rumbles on for another full minute, pumping us up, telling us we need to win, growling that the title belongs to us, that we need to bring it home. âWhat are we gonna do?â he shouts.
âBring it home!â
âCanât hear you.â
âBring it home!â
Coach nods in approval. Then he throws me a curveball. âConnelly, say a few words.â
My head jerks up in surprise. âCoach?â
âYouâre the captain, Jake. Say something to your team. This could be the last game of the season. Hell, your last game at Harvard.â
Fuck, I donât like that heâs messing with my ritual. But I canât object, because unlike nearly every other athlete in the world, Coach doesnât believe in luck or superstition. He believes in skill and hard work. I suppose I admire that philosophy, butâ¦respect the rituals, dammit.
I clear my throat. âBriarâs good,â I start. âTheyâre really good.â
âGreat speech!â Brooks breaks out in hearty applause. âStanding ovation!â
Coby snickers loudly.
âCan it, Bubble Butt. I wasnât done.â I clear my throat. âBriarâs good, but weâre better.â
My teammates wait for me to go on.
I shrug. âI was done that time.â
Laughter rings out all around me, until Coach claps his hands to silence everyone. âAll right. Letâs get out there.â
Iâm about to shut my locker when the phone I left on the shelf lights up. I crane my neck to take a peek, and a satisfied smile tugs at my lips. Itâs a message from Brenna, wishing me good luck. Thereâs also one from Hazel, offering the same sentiment, but Iâd expect it from Hazel. From Brenna, itâs unprecedented.
âCoach, my dadâs calling,â I lie as I catch Pedersenâs attention. âProbably wants to wish us luck. Iâll just be a minute, okay?â
He gives me a suspicious look before muttering, âOne minute.â
As he and my teammates lumber toward the tunnel, I call Brenna. But I donât get the greeting I expect.
âWhy are you calling me?â She sounds outraged. âYou should be on the ice warming up.â
I chuckle. âIâd think youâd be happy to hear that Iâm not out there.â
âWait, is everything okay? Youâre still playing, arenât you?â Concern echoes over the line.
âYes, Iâm still playing. But I saw your text and I wanted to make sure youâre not in danger.â
âWhy would I be in danger?â
âBecause you said good luck. I assumed someone was holding a gun to your head.â
âOh, donât be a brat.â
âSo you were seriously wishing me good luck?â
âYup.â
âDid you mean it?â
âNope.â
âWhoâs the brat now?â I hesitate. âLookâ¦whatever happens tonight, I donât want to stop seeing you.â Then I hold my breath and wait, because I genuinely donât know what sheâll say.
I know what I want her to say. I want her to say that she hasnât been able to get me off her mind since we slept together, because I havenât gotten her off my mind since we slept together. The sex was unreal. So goddamn amazing. And that was our first time. If itâs that good when we donât even know each otherâs turn-ons yet? When we donât know exactly how to get each other off? Means itâs only going to get better. That blows my mind.
âI want to keep seeing you,â I press when she still hasnât answered. âDo you want to keep seeing me?â
Thereâs another delay. Then she sighs. âYes. I do. Now get out there so we can kick your ass.â
A smile cracks my face in half. âYou wish, babe.â
I shut the locker and turn around, flinching when I spot Coach in the doorway.
Shit.
âBabe, eh?â Coach mocks. âYou call your father âbabeâ?â
I release a weary breath. âIâm sorry I lied.â
âConnelly.â He grabs my shoulder when I reach him. Even with my padding on, I can feel the steel in his grip. âThat girlâ¦whether or not youâre serious about herâ¦you have to remember, sheâs Jensenâs daughter. You need to consider the possibility that sheâs playing mind games with you.â
Hazel said the same thing. But I think theyâre both being paranoid. Brenna doesnât play games. âIâll take that into consideration.â I force a smile. âDonât worry, it wonât affect my performance on the ice. We got this.â
We donât got this.
From the second the puck drops, the game is a complete clusterfuck. Itâs speed and aggression. Itâs two teams that arenât competing for a win, but competing to fucking kill each other. The hits are brutal, and I suspect the refs are letting a lot of calls go because of the high intensity of the game. Itâs hockey the way itâs meant to be played. With absolute abandon.
The fans are losing their minds. Iâve never heard the arena this alive. Screams, cheers, and boos crash together in a symphony that fuels the adrenaline coursing through my veins.
Despite all that, Briar is outplaying us. Theyâre fast, particularly Davenport. And Nate Rhodes? I donât know what heâs been putting in his Wheaties, but holy shit. He gets the first goal of the game, a bullet that Johansson has absolutely no chance of stopping. Even Iâm impressed by it, but one look at the fury reddening Coachâs eyes and I know I canât let that slide.
âYou gonna let them do that to you?â Coach roars at us. âYou gonna let them do that to you in our house?â
âNo sir!â
The adrenaline kick sends me diving over the wall with Brooks and Coby. Itâs our power line, and thereâs a reason we call it that. Brooks is the Incredible Hulk when heâs on the ice. He delivers body checks that are bone jarring. Coby has a mean elbow and can battle against the boards better than anybody. I win the faceoff, but rather than pass, I deke out Fitzgerald and skate forward. I wait for the others to cross the blue line before sending a pass back to Coby, close to center.
He skates around the net, stops for a second, then flies out. He shoots and misses. Davenport almost gets his stick on the rebound, but I give him a shove and itâs my stick that connects with the puck. I shoot and miss. The puck bounces toward Brooks, who shoots and misses. A deafening roar goes through the stands.
Jesus fucking Christ. Three fucking shots, denied, denied, denied, and since when did Corsen get this fucking good? Iâm growling in frustration when Coach calls to change it up, and off the ice we go.
Breathing hard, I sit on the bench next to Brooks. âWhat the hell is going on here?â
âI donât know,â he mutters. âCorsenâs not usually that fast with the glove.â
âJust gotta keep hammering him, tire him out.â
Brooks gives a grim nod.
Coach appears behind us, clamping a hand around Westonâs shoulder. âGet us a power play,â he orders.
I tense up, because any time Coach encourages Brooks to draw a penalty, thereâs real potential for tempers to fly. Our line returns to the game, and Brooks is immediately out for blood. In the faceoff, he starts taunting Davenport, whoâs crouched to the right of Nate Rhodes. Mike Hollis is at Rhodesâs left.
Iâm too focused on the puck to register what Brooks says, but whatever it is, it summons a feral growl from Davenport. âGo fuck yourself,â the sophomore spits out.
âEnough,â the ref shouts.
Once again I win the faceoff. I snap the puck to Brooks, who muscles his way into Briarâs zone. He snaps it back to me, but I donât have a shot. The D-men are protecting Corsen and the net like the fucking Kingsguard in Game of Thrones. I need an opening. I needâ
The whistle blows. I didnât see what happened, but I turn to find Hollis shouting something at Weston.
Itâs a high-sticking call, and Hollis is hauled into the penalty box. Brooks and I exchange a look. He did his job. Now itâs time to do mine.
Our line stays out for the penalty kill, but we donât need much time. Briar is a man down, and although they manage to ice it right off the faceoff, the moment we get the puck back? Stick a fork in them cuz theyâre done. I deke out Davenport and release a shot that even Corsen and his new glove skills canât stop. The lamp lights and relief ripples through me.
The score is tied.
âGood job,â Coach says when I swing over the wall.
I pop out my mouth guard, a piece of equipment that isnât mandatory, but I value my teeth, thank you very much. My breathing is labored, chest sucking in and out, as I watch my teammates speed by. That was exhausting. My shift lasted more than three minutes, which is unheard of.
âGet your shit together,â I hear Heath growling to Jonah.
I glance down the bench, frowning deeply. âWe got a problem?â I call to the younger guys.
âNah, itâs all good,â Heath says.
Iâm not convinced. Jonahâs angry gaze is glued to the action in front of us, but I canât quite pinpoint where his anger stems from. Maybe he took a dirty hit and is pissed at the player who got away with it.
Dmitryâs line manages to hold Briar off. When McCarthy flops down beside me, I pound his shoulder with my glove. âGood hustle,â I bark.
âThanks.â He blushes at the compliment, and I know heâs trying hard not to grin. I donât throw out praise haphazardly, so my teammates know that when I praise them, I really mean it.
His obvious happiness brings a rush of guilt to my throat. Brooks got in my head the other night about âdoing the right thingâ with McCarthy. Iâd already made the decision to tell him that Iâm seeing Brenna, but Iâm waiting until after the game. I didnât want to take the chance that the news might distract him from the finals.
Coach changes up the lines again. Now itâs me and Brooks, and Cobyâs been swapped out for Jonah, a right-winger whoâs excellent at taking advantage of rebounds. Thereâs almost an immediate offsides call. At the whistle, I skate over and get in position.
The faceoff is a disaster from the word go. The bullshit starts, but this time itâs not courtesy of Weston. Itâs from Jonah.
âDavenport,â he barks.
The Briar player spares him a glance before focusing on the ref.
âIâm talking to you, asshole. Stop pretending you canât hear me.â
âNot pretending anything,â Davenport snaps back. âI just donât give a shit about what youâre saying.â
The puck drops. I secure it, but Jonah is still distracted from the exchange and he misses the pass I flick his way. Davenport intercepts and takes off on a breakaway. We chase after him, but itâs Johansson who saves us from that potentially costly mistake. He stops the shot and passes the puck off to Brooks.
âUnacceptable,â I hiss at Jonah as I skate by. That kind of screw-up isnât typical of Jonah Hemley. âKeep your head in the game.â
I donât think he hears me. Or maybe he doesnât care. When he and Davenport are tangled up against the boards during our next shift, Jonah starts up again. âThursday night,â heâs growling. âWhere were you?â
âFuck. Off.â Davenport elbows Jonah hard and wins the battle for the puck.
I hit Davenport with a crosscheck and steal the puck, but once again Jonah is too caught up in whatever the hell this is. He doesnât drive forward like heâs supposed to, and weâre offsides again. The whistle blows.
I donât know whatâs happening, and I donât fucking like it.
The next faceoff is to the left of our net. As we line up, Jonahâs interrogation resumes. âThursday night, asshole,â he spits out. âYou were at the Brew Factory.â
âSo what?â Davenport sounds annoyed.
âSo youâre not denying it!â
âWhy would I deny it? I was at the bar. Now shut the hell up.â
âThe redhead you left withâyou remember her?â Jonah demands.
My stomach drops, and I pray that the puck drops, tooânowâbecause Iâve figured out where this is going, and it needs to be squashed. Now.
âWho? Violet? What do you care who I stick my dick in?â
âThat was my girlfriend!â
As Jonah heaves himself forward, he knocks over the referee, who goes sprawling on the ice in a tangle of limbs.
Fuck. Fuck fuck fuck!
âHemley!â I thunder, but Jonahâs not listening.
He tackles Hunter Davenport, and his fists start flying. When Jonahâs gloves come off, anger sizzles up my spine, because dammit, this is cause for ejection. I try to haul him off our opponent, but heâs strong. He screams at Davenport for sleeping with Vi, while whistles blast all around us.
Davenport sounds genuinely confused. âShe didnât tell me she had a boyfriend! Jesus! Get off me!â Heâs not even fighting back.
âI donât believe you!â Jonahâs fist slams down. The whistles keep blowing.
Blood pours from the corner of Davenportâs mouth. He still has his gloves on, and he hasnât thrown a single punch. If anyone gets kicked out of this game, itâll be my guy and not Davenport.
I once against attempt to calm Jonah. Nate Rhodes, my rival captain, skates over and tries to give me a hand. Together, we succeed in yanking Jonah to his feet. Heâs still beyond pissed. âHe fucked my girlfriend!â Jonah shouts.
Another whistle blows. Itâs chaos. Davenport manages to get up, but my teammate escapes the hold I have on him and lunges at the Briar player again, slamming him into the boards. Once again they fall to the ice.
Only this time, itâs accompanied by a loud grunt of pain.
I pull Jonah up again, but the agonized sound hadnât come from him.
Davenportâs helmet comes off. He drops his gloves and cradles one wrist, pressing it against his chest. And heâs swearing up a blue streak, the pain in his eyes unmistakable. âYou broke my wrist,â he snarls. âWhat the hell is wrong with you?â
âYou fucking deserve it,â Jonah spits out, and suddenly thereâs a blur of motion and Nate Rhodes lunges and drives his fist into Jonahâs jaw.
Other players spill onto the ice, and chaos becomes catastrophe. The whistles keep blowing and blowing as the refs try to regain control. But the control train left the station a long time ago.