LOGINHate. Oh yes, I fucking hate Chase Hartley. I mean he's... cocky, a college hockey star, and to top it all, he's my soon-to-be stepbrother. Because my dad decided to get married and have me trapped under the same roof with him for the entire summer. But everything changed the day we kissed. Everything turned forbidden. WARNING: THIS NOVEL IS SPICY. LESS HOCKEY. MUCH SEX
View MoreSLOANE
I was halfway through a very important scroll when my bedroom door swung open without so much as a courtesy knock. “Oh my god, Dad—what the hell?” I yanked the sheet up to my chin, though my silk camisole and tiny sleep shorts had already betrayed me by riding up in all the wrong places. Dad never barged in. Ever. He was the king of polite knocks and awkward small talk. “Sorry,” he said, averting his eyes like I’d caught him stealing. “Thought you were asleep. I have news. Big news.” I sat up, smoothing my hair like that would restore dignity. “If this is about another one of your ‘conferences,’ spare me.” He grinned—actually grinned—and held up his left hand. A new ring glinted on his finger. “Victoria Hartley. We’re engaged.” The word hit like a slap. Engaged. I blinked. “You’ve known her for… what, six months?” “Long enough to know she’s it.” He sat on the edge of my bed, looking happier than I’d seen him in years. “She’s kind, smart, beautiful. She’s going to be good for us.” Us. Right. “Congrats,” I said flatly. “So when’s the wedding? Tomorrow?” “End of August.” Three months. My brain did the math and hated the answer. “You’re rushing this like you’re on a timer. Is she pregnant? Terminal? Blackmail?” He laughed. “None of the above. We just… don’t want to wait.” “Of course you don’t.” I crossed my arms. “You’ve spent the last six years sampling every twenty-something in a ten-mile radius. I thought the drought was divine intervention. Turns out it was just… strategy.” “Sloane—” “I heard everything, Dad. Every ‘oh god yes’ through the walls when I was thirteen. Fourteen. Fifteen. You weren’t exactly subtle. Then poof—six months of silence. I figured you’d finally discovered therapy or celibacy. Nope. Just upgraded to fiancée.” He rubbed the back of his neck. “I honored your mom for a while after she passed.” “A year. You lasted a year. Then the parade started again.” I shrugged. “Whatever. She’s amazing, she’s perfect, she’s a mother figure. Got it.” “There’s more,” he said carefully. “Victoria wants us to spend the summer at her place in Eastlake. All of us. Bonding.” I stared. “You want me to ditch my internship at Cornwell, my friends, and my entire life to play happy family in some stranger’s mansion?” “It’s not a stranger. It’s my fiancée. And her son.” Son. My stomach twisted. “Let me guess. He’s twenty, plays college hockey at Dalton, scouts drooling over him for the NHL. Cocky, abs for days, the whole arrogant-jock package.” Dad’s eyebrows shot up. “You’ve done your homework.” “I Googled him the second you said ‘engaged.’” I grabbed my phone from under the pillow, pulled up Chase Hartley’s I*******m, and tilted the screen toward Dad. Shirtless gym selfies. Lake days with girls draped over him. Comments screaming heart-eyes and thirst. “He’s literally a walking red flag with a stick.” “He’s a good kid, Sloane. Driven. Respectful.” “Sure. Until he’s not.” I tossed the phone aside. “I hate hockey players. They’re all the same—arrogant, entitled, built like Greek statues because apparently god hates me personally.” Dad stood. “You’re coming. End of discussion. This house is mine, and if you keep fighting me, I’ll start charging rent.” “Wow. Low blow.” “You’re eighteen. Act like it.” “Fine.” I flopped back against the pillows. “I’ll go. But only because you’ve suffered enough bad decisions in your life. And maybe because watching your perfect new family implode up close will be excellent writing material.” He paused at the door. “Thank you.” “Don’t thank me yet.” I stared at the ceiling after he left, the I*******m feed still burned into my brain. Chase Hartley’s smirk. Those stupid perfect abs. The way girls threw themselves at him like he was the last lifeboat on the Titanic. I muttered to the empty room, “This summer is going to be a disaster.” And deep down, a tiny, traitorous part of me was already curious how big of a disaster it might be.SLOANEThe ski resort was a postcard someone had tried too hard to make perfect.Thick snow draped every pine bough in glittering layers. The main lodge glowed warm and golden against the steel-gray sky, chimney smoke curling lazily into the freezing air. Kids in colorful puffy coats dragged sleds up a gentle hill while parents shouted warnings that went completely ignored. Fairy lights twinkled along balconies, ice sculptures caught the weak afternoon sun, and distant skiers carved elegant lines down the mountain.It should have been magical.Instead, I stood in the parking lot with my duffel bag frozen to my glove and my stomach tied in knots so tight I hadn’t eaten since breakfast.“Sloane!” Dad waved from the check-in office, breath pluming white. “We’re in Cabin 14. End of the row. Grab your stuff!”Cabin 14.I’d known this was coming. Victoria had announced the “family ski trip” with the kind of forced cheerfulness that suggested she was desperately trying to pretend everything
SLOANE**CHASE: Parking lot. Now.**For a split second, the words blurred on the screen while the Winter Formal unraveled behind me.Ava sat slumped by the refreshment table, napkins pressed to her bleeding hand, her face ghostly under the gym lights. Ethan hovered over her, suit jacket shoved to his elbows, guilt and panic etched across his features as a chaperone tried to coax her into a chair. Nora was sobbing. Priya spoke in low, steady tones to a teacher. Leah stood frozen with her phone out. Jake looked ready to physically block the rest of the school from getting closer.Then Riley was beside me, fingers brushing my elbow. “Sloane?”I locked my phone so fast my thumb slipped. “Yeah?”Her eyes narrowed. Riley had always been terrifyingly good at seeing through me. “What was that?”“Nothing.”“That was not a *nothing* face.”“I need air,” I blurted. It was the first excuse my brain could grab. “I’m fine. Just… stay with Ava. I’ll be right back.”“Sloane—”“I’m not leaving.” The l
CHASE I became captain on a Saturday night.That should have been the whole story. The only thing worth remembering. Coach Reynolds's hand heavy on my shoulder, the locker room erupting, Marcus's palm cracking against my back hard enough to shift a rib. I wore a black suit—alumni banquet dress code, the annual charade that we were something more than animals on ice.Captain.The *C* wasn't stitched on yet, but I felt it anyway. A brand pressing into my sternum. Responsibility. Pressure. Proof that all the damage had been worth something.For exactly five minutes, I let myself want it.I stood in the team lounge while the guys swarmed. Marcus hoisted his phone like a documentarian with a whiskey problem, lens inches from my face."Say something inspirational!"I deadpanned into the glass. "Don't let Marcus near open flames or emotionally vulnerable women."The room detonated. Marcus posted it before I could stop him—of course he did—and within fifteen minutes it was everywhere. Story.
SLOANEMy fingers went numb.The phone slipped from my hand and hit the gym floor with a sharp, ugly crack. The sound cut through the music like a slap—too loud, too final.“Shit,” I whispered, dropping at the same time Ethan did.“I’ve got it,” he said.Our hands reached for the phone together. Our fingers brushed first—his knuckles warm against mine. Then my shoulder bumped his. Then I turned my face to apologize at the exact second he turned his.And our mouths touched.Barely.A soft, accidental brush. Not a kiss. Not really.Just one impossible second of contact that should have meant nothing.Except Ethan froze.So did I.The music kept pulsing. Bodies swayed around us. Lights spun slowly over the polished floor. But all I could feel was the sudden, electric stillness between us. Ethan’s breath caught. Mine disappeared entirely. We were crouched too close, his face inches from mine, my phone lying forgotten between our hands with Riley’s message still glowing on the screen.**Ch
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