: Chapter 39
The Risk (Briar U)
Iâm alone in the locker room, me versus my thoughts. Voices echo beyond the door, laughter and chatter and the general hum of activity, but Iâm good at blocking all of it out. My ritual of silence doesnât require actual silence. I just need to quiet my brain. Meditate on what needs to be done.
Coach gave me permission to make my own way to Worcester today. Itâs unheard of, but I think my less-than-stellar performance at practice these last three days genuinely shook him up. Heâs worried I might lose us this game. And heâs right to worry. My concentration is shot. Breaking up with Brenna wrecked me.
I made a mistake.
I made a mistake, and I knew it the moment she left my apartment. Ending it was the stupidest thing Iâve ever done. I acted out of fear, not logic, and it backfired on me, because now my head is even further away from where itâs supposed to be.
Itâs ironic. All that bullshit I spewed about needing to rid myself of distractionsâwhich was a total lie to begin withâresulted in creating an even bigger disruption in my brain. Brenna wasnât a distraction, but this breakup sure as hell is.
So Coach gave me a pass and I drove to Worcester on my own. I found a diner and fueled up with a big, greasy breakfast. At some point I realized I forgot my phone at home, but I donât need it. Nothing is allowed to exist today beyond this one game. We win this, we progress to the Frozen Four. Itâs enough pressure to make a weaker man choke, but Iâm not that man. I mightâve been weak about my relationship with Brenna, but Iâm not weak about hockey. Never have been, never will be.
Loud footsteps thud out in the hall. For a second I think the rest of the team has arrived early, until I hear evidence of a scuffle. More footsteps, a thump, and an outraged male shout.
âI told you, you canât go in there!â
âWe just need a minute,â someone insists. âSeriously, what the hell do you think weâre gonna do in there? Murder the guy?â
I donât recognize the second voice. I assume the first one is security.
âSorry, not happening, kid. I canât let you in there.â
âCome on, Hollis,â urges a third voice. âWeâll track him down later.â
Hollis? As in Mike Hollis?
I jump up from the bench and sprint to the door. âWait,â I say, flinging it open. âItâs cool. I know them.â
The security guardâs hawk-like gaze sweeps over me. âNobody else is supposed to be in here.â
âWeâll keep it quick,â I assure him. âTwo minutes, tops.â
He steps aside.
A few seconds later, Iâm in the locker room with the last two people I expected to see today. Mike Hollis has his arms crossed tight to his broad chest. Colin Fitzgerald is more relaxed, with his arms at his sides. Heâs wearing a V-neck sweater with the sleeves rolled up, and thereâs ink peeking out from under his collar and his cuffs. Dudeâs totally tatted up, I realize.
âHow did you know I was here?â I ask the Briar players.
âThe goon told us,â Hollis says.
âThe goon?â
âWeston,â Fitzgerald supplies, grinning. âMy girlfriend Summer texted him.â
âAh.â
âAre we done with the small talk?â Hollis asks politely.
I fight a laugh. I wonder if theyâre going for a good cop, bad cop approach. âSure, I guess weâre done.â I make a gracious gesture toward him. âWhy are you here?â
âBecause we wanted to beat some sense into you.â
âPlease donât we this,â Fitzgerald objects. âI just drove you here.â
Hollis glares at his teammate. âYouâre saying you donât give a shit that he broke Jensenâs heart?â
I suck in a breath. I broke her heart? Did she tell them that?
Hollis spins toward me again. âYou are such a dumbass, Connelly. You made the biggest mistake of your dumbass life when you broke up with Brenna.â
âI know.â
âFirst of all, sheâs gorgeous. Itâs almost disgusting how gorgeous she is. Sheâs smart and witty and hilarious andâwait, what do you mean, âyou knowâ?â
Shrugging, I lower myself onto the bench. They remain standing, and I suddenly feel like Iâm a kid being scolded by my two dads.
âI mean I know,â I say unhappily. âIt was a huge mistake. One Iâm going to rectify the second we beat Michigan.â
âIf you knew it was a mistake, then why didnât you rectify it days ago?â Hollis demands.
âBecause I have a game to play.â
Because Iâm fucking terrified of facing her.
Thereâs no way Iâm admitting that to these two boneheads, but itâs the truth, the real truth.
I suppose I could take the easy way out and blame Hazel for my actions. She was the one who induced my panic by hammering me with all those questions, asking if I was ready, warning how hard it was going to be, how impossible long-distance relationships are. Every point sheâd raised created more and more pressure inside my chest until I couldnât breathe. The walls started closing in on me, and I felt like I was suffocating.
I know she wasnât doing it on purpose. Those were all things I shouldâve already been thinking about, issues I shouldâve been anticipating.
But I wasnât, because I was still living my Solo Jake life. In that life, I get to be selfish. I get to blow off dates for hockey. I get to concentrate on kicking ass in the NHL. I get to have one priority: myself.
Relationship Jake is required to be there for someone other than himself. Or rather, to be there for someone along with himself. The realization scared the shit out of me. Iâve never had to be there for anybody else. What if Iâm bad at it? What if I let Brenna down in some way? I canât promise to be there for her every second of the day, and the way Hazel was going on about it, it was like I wouldnât have a single second to myself ever again.
Iâm really not blaming Hazel. But the anxiety attack that began at the diner followed me all the way home. When I saw Brenna, the panic spilled over.
I found myself grasping for the first excuse that came to mind, the tried-and-true reason I used to give girls who demanded more of my time: hockey. I told her I needed to be there for my team, because in that moment I was terrified of the responsibility of being there for her.
It only took an hour, maybe two, before my anxiety passed and I was able to clearly process my thoughts. I am capable of being there for Brenna. Havenât I already done that for more than a month now? I was there for her with the Ed Mulder charade, rescuing her ex-boyfriend, advising her about her issues with Coach Jensen. She was staying at my house, and other than one late practiceâwhich makes a total of three in the past seventeen yearsâI was perfectly capable of balancing hockey and a girlfriend.
I donât expect next season to be a breeze. Iâll be traveling a lot, Iâll be exhausted from working my butt off, and I wonât get to see Brenna half as much as Iâd like to. But itâs only one year. We can survive that. Then sheâll graduate, and maybe consider moving to Edmonton, if Iâm still playing there.
Annnd Iâm getting way ahead of myself right now. First I need to convince her to take me back, and then we can worry about her moving to another country for me.
âAre you gonna talk to her after the game?â Hollis asks expectantly. âOr do we need to bring out a shotgun andââ
âRelax, you donât have to make me talk to her at gunpoint,â I say with a chuckle.
âWhat?â His expression is puzzled. âI was going to say weâd clock you in the back of the head with the shotgun, knock some sense into you.â
I turn to Fitzgerald, who shrugs and says, âHis brain operates on a level us mortals canât comprehend.â
Hollis looks pleased. âDude, thatâs the nicest thing youâve ever said to me.â
The unexpected visit from the Briar guys is nothing compared to the shock I receive when I leave the locker room to find a vending machine and instead find my parents standing in the corridor. For a moment I think Iâm hallucinating, until my mom blurts out my name.
âJake!â Relief floods her face. âYouâre here? Rory, heâs already here.â
âI can see that,â Dad says dryly.
I shake my head in confusion, then glance over at Hazel, whoâs next to my mother. She offers a slight smile, as if to say, Look what the cat dragged in, right?
âYeah. Iâm here. I showed up early.â
âWhy werenât you answering your phone?â Mom asks.
âI forgot it at home.â I stare at my parents. âWhy are you guys here?â
âWe came to support you,â Mom replies.
Dad claps me on the shoulder. âThis is a big game for you. And if Iâm being honest, your mother and I felt bad about not making more of an effort to attend your games. Now that youâll be in the pros, your parents will be expected to make an appearance, right?â
âI donât think anybody cares if some random rookieâs parents are in the box or not, Dad.â
âRandom rookie?â he echoes. âNo way!â
âYouâre going to be a superstar,â Mom reminds me, a big smile on her face. âAnd weâre so very proud of you.â
My eyes suddenly feel hot. Damn it, I canât tear up right now. Got a game to concentrate on.
âThank you,â I say, and, yeah, my voice is a bit hoarse. I clear my throat. âI know you guys donât care about hockey much, but I appreciate that you came today.â
âWe might not be hockey fanatics, but weâre Jake fanatics,â Mom declares.
Hazel snorts. âThat was so lame, Mrs. C.â
âWe should take our seats,â Dad says. âItâs really filling up in there.â
âGood luck, sweetie,â Mom says.
I find myself enveloped in a warm bear hug, followed by a less dramatic but equally warm side hug from my dad.
âIâll join you in a minute,â Hazel tells them. âI want to talk to Jake first.â
Once theyâre gone, I raise a brow at my friend. âI canât believe they came. Did you know about this?â
She nods. âYour mom called me to get them tickets. They wanted to surprise you.â
I slide my hands in my pockets and glance at the door behind me. The team will be arriving soon. âI should head back in and do my mental prep.â
âCool.â Hazel seems to hesitate.
âYou okay?â
âIâm fine.â But her face is a bit pale, and when she smiles it doesnât quite reach her eyes. âHave a good game, Jake.â