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JULLIETTE.
Here’s the thing no one tells you about hockey: locker rooms smell like a crime scene. Not blood, exactly, but sweat and leather and whatever unholy combination of protein shakes and desperation fuels professional athletes. So, literally that was where I was sent on day one. The Blackridge Wolves—the NHL’s golden boys, reigning champs, and a PR nightmare wrapped in skates. But this was my dream job. My ticket to the big leagues. My parents had cried when I got the offer. My friends had thrown me a champagne party. And me? I had spent the past week pep-talking myself in the mirror: You are a professional. You will not let a bunch of overpaid jocks intimidate you. Then I opened the door and twenty conversations died mid-sentence. Silence. Thick enough to choke on that I felt it coating my lungs. Every head turned. Broad shoulders, sweat-damp hair, towels slung low around waists. And eyes. So many eyes. I froze. For one horrifying second I wondered if I had walked into the wrong room, maybe the wrong sport entirely. But no, these were hockey players. Big, bruised, mean-looking. And they were staring at me like I was—well. Like I wasn’t supposed to be there. I adjusted the strap of my bag, pasted on my best bright smile. “Hi. I’m Julliette Mercer, your new sports therapist.” My voice came out cheery. Too cheery. Like a kindergarten teacher meeting parents on open house night and I realized too late that I sound too wrong. No one said a word. Great start, Mercer. Really commanding the room. “Coach said I should check in with you all before drills.” I cleared my throat, gesturing at my clipboard for emphasis. “So. Hello. And, uh, don’t worry, I have seen worse than whatever you are hiding under those towels.” A few players chuckled. Tension eased just slightly. Good. Humor was my coping mechanism. That, and copious amounts of coffee. Then one of them stood. The air felt different instantly like power sizzling around, believe it or not. Even the ones laughing shut their mouths, eyes snapping to him like iron filings to a magnet. Captain Bryan Maddox. I knew the name. Everyone did. He was the Wolves’ franchise star, the kind of player who filled highlight reels and broke records like it was a personal hobby. Six foot three, built like a battering ram, jaw sharp. Dark hair clung damply to his temples, his jersey half-unzipped, revealing chest and muscle that did not come from casual gym visits. And when his gaze landed on me, I understood why the room had gone silent. It wasn’t attraction. Not exactly. It wasn’t even hostility. It was… possession. Like he already knew I didn’t belong here. Like he was deciding whether to let me leave alive. I told myself I was imagining it. That it was just first-day jitters. That his eyes weren’t actually flickering gold when the fluorescent lights hit them. “Mercer,” he said. His voice was gravel, low and condescending. The kind of voice that made you straighten your spine whether you wanted to or not. “That’s me.” I forced a smile. Don’t flinch, don’t fold. “Nice to meet you, Captain Maddox.” His gaze dragged down, then back up again, slow and deliberate. When our eyes met, my stomach tightened. “You shouldn’t be here,” he said. Excuse me? “I think my contract says otherwise,” I shot back, words out before I could second-guess myself. His mouth curved, not in a smile, but in something that seemed deadlier. A warning disguised as amusement. “Coach should’ve warned you.” “About what? That hockey players bite?” The way the locker room stilled again, the way Bryan gaze darkened, it felt like I had said the wrong thing. Very wrong. For one split second, I thought he might step closer. Thought he might prove me wrong. Instead, he turned his head slightly, breaking whatever chokehold he had the room on. “Back to it,” he barked, and just like that, the room roared back to life. Sticks clattered. Someone made a crude joke. The spell shattered, and I was just the awkward new hire again. But my skin still buzzed, every nerve alight. I dropped into an empty corner, pulling out rolls of tape and ice packs with hands that were steadier than my heart. Professional. Detached. Untouchable. That was my mantra. I repeated it until my breathing slowed. Of course, that didn’t stop the stares. I caught them, quick flicks of attention—curious, amused, hungry. The Wolves didn’t bother to hide it. If anything, they seemed to revel in it. Except Bryan. He didn’t look again. He didn’t need to. He had already planted the warning like a burning fire between us. Later, when the room emptied for drills, I gathered my supplies and started down the corridor. The arena was colder than I expected, the kind of cold that sank into your bones, but my skin was still hot. Still humming. Footsteps followed. Heavy. Steady. I didn’t need to turn to know. He overtook me easily, stepping into my path. The hallway was narrow, shadows stretching long across the walls. He blocked the light without even trying. “You need to understand something,” he said calmly and it felt like the deadliest storm. He was an embodiment of power but I won’t cower. Juliette wasn’t made to cower, if anything I bite back. “I understand plenty.” I crossed my arms, refusing to let him see me rattled. “Your knee ligaments, your scar tissue, the chronic shoulder damage you’re hiding from the trainers. Want me to keep going?” Something flickered in his eyes. Not surprise. Interest. Like I had earned half a point in a game I didn’t realize we were playing. “This isn’t about injuries.” He stepped closer, and God help me, I didn’t back away. “It’s about survival.” “Mine or yours?” His lips twitched. Almost a smile. “Both.” The way he said it sent a shiver down my spine. Not because I believed him, but because some traitorous part of me wanted to. I forced a laugh, sharp and brittle. “You know, most captains welcome new staff. You might try it sometime. Could work wonders for team morale.” “This isn’t about morale.” His voice dropped lower, intimate, dangerous. “You don’t belong here. And if you’re smart, you will leave before we make you ours.” We? My breath caught. He didn’t mean it like a flirtation. He meant it like a threat. But my body, idiot traitor that it was reacted anyway. Heat flushed my cheeks, my pulse kicking fast. I tilted my chin, refusing to show it. “Thanks for the pep talk, Captain. But I’m not going anywhere.” Something flashed in his gaze then—gold again, quick and impossible. I blinked, and it was gone. He stepped back, shadows swallowing him as he turned away. But his voice lingered in the air between us, heavy and certain. “Then you’ve already made your mistake.” And just like that, he was gone, leaving me alone with the echo of his warning and the pounding of my heart. That night, I told myself I wasn’t afraid. The problem was, fear wasn’t the thing keeping me awake. He was.Juliette’s POV:It started with a gentle kiss, his soft lips on mine, seeking permission, which I easily granted. My hands on his chest, he smelled like soap and shampoo.. who knew shampoo could smell so delicious? The kiss grew from gentle to deep, passionate and hungry. I wanted, no, I needed more.His hands moved to grip my ass, then suddenly without any warning, he picked me up without so much as breaking the kiss. I instinctively wrapped my legs around his waist, the coolness from the still locker on my back.My fingers tangled in his hair, trying to pull him closer, our tongues danced in a heated rhythm.“Juliette,” he moaned into the kiss. His voice, low, rough, hoarse and filled with desire.I could feel his heart pounding against my chest, mirroring my own frantic heartbeat. “We sho..uldn’t be d..doing thi..is” i manged to say without breaking away. “Fuck J.. I need you..” his words.. made me melt even more. I broke the kiss, trying to salvage what little restraint I had
JullietteThe following morning felt wrong, very wrong. It was neither loud, nor the least bit dramatic, it was just.. off. It felt as though the world itself had shifted half an inch whilst I wasn’t paying any attention. Dorian hadn’t said a single word to me since that one night. Not in the locker room, not even during treatment or even in passing, nothing. Just silence. He went back to moving like a shadow- silent, unapproachable and very unreadable, yet again. It was as though the whole bar scene had been nothing but a mere fever dream, birthed by intense exhaustion and maybe one too many bad cocktails. Except of course, it hadn’t been a dream. It had been real. I could still feel it, the specter of his big, strong hand on my smaller one. I could still feel the warmth of his soft lips whenever I closed my eyes. It made focusing on work insanely impossible.Every little sound had my nerves on edge. From the clang of sticks, the padding of footsteps all around me, to the low h
Julliette. Bars were basically a test of human endurance, and I was failing. Miserably. I had always suspected that humanity collectively agreed to invent them just to ruin nights for people like me—people who preferred walls to small talk, and strategy to slapdash flirting. And yet here I was, perched on a stool in a dim corner, nursing a drink that promised regret in liquid form and surveying the room with anything but ease. I had hoped foolishly, as it turns out that tonight I could be invisible. Just Julliette Mercer: quiet, competent, unobtrusive. No chaos, no brooding hockey players. I didn’t know I would meet him here. He was quiet—so quiet I thought at first he might be a figment of my exhaustion-addled brain. Shadowy in a way that made the dim lighting his personal stage, sitting at a table alone with a calm that could have been mistaken for smugness if I weren’t hyper-aware of every second of the day. Something about him made the bar feel smaller, heavier. My pulse spe
Julliette. The training room smelled like dirty socks and sweat, and for a second, I considered whether I had actually been hired to be a therapist or a firefighter. There was Luka, stretching with a focused intensity that made me pause. He was young, yes but not timid. Not awkward. He moved with the kind of controlled confidence that made every shift of his muscles look purposeful, calculated, and annoyingly… magnetic. “Hold still,” I said, kneeling by his ankle, adjusting the tape. My fingers brushed his skin, but instead of a rookie’s nervous twitch, Luka just grinned at me, fully aware of the charge in the air. “Hard to hold still when the therapist keeps looking like she’s judging my form,” he said lightly, teasing. “I’m a professional athlete, you know. I expect a professional treatment.” I blinked, momentarily flustered not by the words, but by the easy way he teased, the confidence that radiated off him in waves. Invisible, Julliette. Invisible. I told myself, even as
Julliette. The thing about rookies? They either shut up and blend in, or they try way too hard. Luka Simpson definitely wasn’t the first kind. I had clocked him since day one — younger than the others, still soft around the jaw despite the muscle, with this restless energy that made it feel like the air around him buzzed. Puppy energy, I told myself. Cute. Manageable. Like one of those golden retrievers who licks your face even when you’re trying to scold it. Except this puppy was six-foot-two, moved like a predator, and smiled like he had never once been told no. I was re-taping my kit bag when he plopped onto the bench across from me after practice, sweaty, grinning, and way too close. “Hey, Julli.” He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, dripping water down his neck like some kind of discount Gatorade commercial. “You got a minute?” “No,” I said automatically, eyes still on my bag. Rule number one: Do not encourage the puppies. They follow you home. He laughed. “Good one. I
Julliette. The first thing they drill into you at sports therapy seminars, besides “ice is your best friend” and “for the love of God, don’t flirt with players” is the golden rule: Hands stay professional. No lingering. No straying. No letting your touch wander into “oops, did that feel good?” territory. You’re the calm. The fixer. The invisible one. And invisible had worked just fine for me. Invisible had paid my bills. It had kept me sane. Until Caleb Archer swaggered into my training room like sin in hockey tees. He hopped up onto the table with the smooth ease of someone who had been performing for an audience since birth. Shirtless. Smirking. Every muscle flexing like he had practiced in a mirror. “Mercer,” he said, stretching his arm toward me like it was an offering. “Do me a favor?” His wrist was red, swollen. Actual injury. Which should’ve been my cue to zone out, tape him up, and send him on his merry, cocky way. Instead, I got caught staring at the faint trail of







