LOGINHis Sister's Boyfriend Cole Ashford is rich, ruthless on the ice, and used to getting what he wants. The one thing he can't have? His sister's boyfriend. Jay Menisa works double shifts, designs logos for scraps, and doesn't owe anyone a smile. He's dating Maya sweet, trusting, wonderful Maya. But from the first dinner, Cole and Jay lock into something that isn't quite hate. It's stares that last too long. Sarcasm that masks hunger. Accidental touches that leave both of them breathless. Cole tries to bury it. He's a hockey captain with an NHL future. He can't want a man. He can't want her man. But every time Jay laughs, every time those calloused hands wrap around a coffee cup, Cole's resolve cracks a little more. Jay knows better. He's not rich. He doesn't
View MoreChapter One :Cole pov
I hated him before I even sat down.
Maya texted me his name that afternoon Jay Menisa and my jaw clenched. Not because I knew anything about him. Because I knew Maya. She falls fast. She falls hard. And I’m the one who scrapes her off the pavement every time. So when I walked into Salt & Ember, I already had my guard up. He was already there. Early. Confident. Leaning back in his chair like he owned the restaurant. Dark jeans, gray sweater, sleeves pushed up. No designer tags. Just a regular guy who didn’t seem to care that my family owned half the street. His hands were resting on the table. Calloused. Strong. Not gym hands work hands. I noticed them immediately. I hated that I noticed. “Cole! Over here.” Maya waved like she was flagging down a rescue helicopter. Jay turned. Our eyes met. Brown, warm, but with something sharp underneath. Like he was already laughing at a joke I hadn’t heard. He didn’t look away first. “So you’re the famous brother,” he said. No handshake. No nervous smile. Just a slow once-over that felt like a weigh-in. “Famous?” I dropped into the seat across from him. The chair scraped. “That’s a strong word.” “Maya talks about you a lot.” He picked up his water glass but didn’t drink. “Hockey this, captain that. Thought you’d be taller.” Maya choked on her sparkling water. I didn’t laugh. “Thought you’d be funnier.” Jay’s eyebrows went up. The corner of his mouth twitched. Not a smile. A scoreboard. “Okay,” he said. “I like you. You’re mean.” “I’m not trying to be liked.” “I noticed.” That was the first exchange. By the end of dinner, I had watched him do three things that made me want to punch a wall. First: He made Maya laugh. A real laugh. The kind that made her snort and cover her mouth. She hadn’t laughed like that since our mom died. I hated him for it because I hadn’t been able to do that in years. Second: When the bill came, Maya reached for her card. Jay reached over, took it out of her hand, and slid his across the table. “My treat. You got the last one.” Maya blushed. Jay didn’t even look at the total. Third: He called me out. We were talking about hockey or rather, Maya was talking while I stared at his hands. Then Jay looked at me and said, “You know, most people just say ‘nice to meet you’ instead of doing the whole rich‑boy intimidation thing.” The table went dead quiet. “I’m not doing anything,” I said. “You’re leaning back with your arms crossed like you’re about to fire me.” He tilted his head. “Relax, Ashford. I’m not applying for a job at your dad’s company.” Maya looked between us. “Jay…” “What? I’m just saying. He’s been staring at me like I’m a problem to solve.” I uncrossed my arms. Then crossed them again. “Maybe you are a problem.” Jay smiled. Actually smiled. It changed his whole face. Softer. Younger. Almost pretty. “Fair enough,” he said. Maya went to the bathroom. The silence stretched. I could hear forks on plates, wine pouring, a woman laughing too loud. But at our table, nothing moved. Jay spoke first. “You don’t have to hate me just because I’m dating your sister.” “I don’t hate you.” “Could’ve fooled me.” I leaned forward. “I don’t trust you. There’s a difference.” Jay didn’t lean back. His eyes stayed on mine. “What’s not to trust? I’m a barista. I design logos. I work two jobs so I can afford rent. I don’t want your money, Cole. I just want her.” Something in my chest went tight. It wasn’t jealousy for Maya. It was jealousy of her. I didn’t say that. I just stared at his hands again. The callouses. The way one knuckle was bruised like he’d punched a wall. “You work construction too?” I asked. Jay looked down at his hand. Laughed quietly. “No. Fell off my bike last week. Graceful, right?” “No,” I said. “Not graceful at all.” He looked up. Something flickered across his face. Surprise, maybe. Maya came back. The moment broke. We walked out together. Cold air hit my face. Jay put his arm around Maya’s shoulders. She leaned into him like it was the most natural thing in the world. He looked at me one more time over her head. “See you around, captain.” “Hope not,” I said. He laughed. Actually laughed. Like I was the funny one. I watched him walk away with my sister. Watched the way his hand stayed on her lower back. Watched until they turned the corner. Then I stood alone on the sidewalk and realized: I was already in trouble.Chapter One Hundred Seventeen : Jay pov The morning after Viktor's suspension, I woke up to the sound of rain hitting the window. The sky was gray. The streets were wet. The apartment was cold. Cole was still asleep next to me, his arm around my waist, his breath warm on my neck. I didn't move. Didn't want to wake him. I just lay there thinking about everything.Viktor. The suspension. Twelve games. It wasn't enough. It was never enough. Men like Viktor didn't stop because of a suspension. They stopped when they were broken. Or when they were dead.Cole stirred. His arm tightened around my waist."You're awake," he mumbled."I'm awake.""You're thinking.""I'm always thinking.""Too loud."I smiled. "Go back to sleep.""Can't. Too awake now."He pulled me closer. Buried his face in my hair."I love you," he said."I love you too."The phone rang at 9am. Richard."Jay," he said. "How are you?""Good. Tired. Cole is still sleeping.""He deserves the rest. The suspension is a good thing
Chapter One Hundred Sixteen : Cole pov The morning after the Detroit game, I woke up to the sound of rain hitting the window. The sky was gray. The streets were wet. Our apartment was cold. Jay was still asleep next to me, his arm around my waist, his breath warm on my neck. I didn't move. Didn't want to wake him. I just lay there thinking about everything.Viktor. The game. The hit. The look in his eyes when he skated past me. The way he looked at Jay. Like he was planning something. Like he was waiting."You're awake," Jay mumbled."I'm awake.""You're thinking.""I'm always thinking.""Too loud."I smiled. "Go back to sleep.""Can't. Too awake now."He pulled me closer. Buried his face in my hair."I love you," he said."I love you too."The phone rang at 9am. Maria."Cole," she said. "How are you?""Good. Tired. Jay is still sleeping.""I've been thinking about Viktor.""What about him?""He's not going to stop. He's going to try again.""I know.""The restraining order is still
Chapter One Hundred Fifteen :Jay pov The morning after Viktor was released on bail, I woke up to an empty bed.Cole was already up. I could hear him in the kitchen. Coffee brewing. Dishes clinking. The soft sound of him moving around. I lay there for a while, staring at the ceiling, thinking about everything.Viktor. The letters. The restraining order. The bail. The six months until trial. The way Cole's jaw tightened when he talked about him. The way his hands shook when he read the letters.I got out of bed. Walked to the kitchen.Cole was standing by the window. Coffee cup in his hand. Looking out at the street."Morning," he said."Morning.""You're up early.""Couldn't sleep.""Thinking about Viktor?""Thinking about everything."I walked to him. Put my arms around his waist."We're going to be okay," I said."You don't know that.""I know. Because we've been through worse.""Have we?""David Chen. The trial. The threats. We survived."Cole turned to face me. "That was different
Chapter One Hundred Fourteen : Cole pov The envelope arrived on a Tuesday. No postmark. No return address. Someone had slid it under the door of the apartment while we were asleep. Jay found it first. He was barefoot, still in his sleep clothes, coffee cup in his hand. He picked it up like it might bite him."What is it?" I asked."I don't know.""Open it."He opened it. A single sheet of paper. Typewritten. No signature.You think you're safe. You're not. I know where you live. I know where you sleep. I know who you love. Stay away from Viktor Petrov. Or your artist won't be painting anymore.Jay's hands were shaking."Give it to me."He gave it to me. I read it twice. Three times."Viktor," I said."It has to be.""He's been quiet for weeks.""He's been waiting."I called Maria."Another letter," I said."Read it to me."I read it."Don't touch it," she said. "I'm sending someone to collect it.""When?""Today.""He knows where we live.""I know.""He knows where we sleep.""I know
Chapter One Hundred Thirteen : Cole pov The next game was in Chicago again. Viktor Petrov's home ice. The crowd was hostile. They booed every time I touched the puck. They chanted his name every time he hit someone.I didn't care.I played hard. Fast. Focused. Viktor was everywhere. Chasing me. Hi
Chapter One Hundred Twelve :Jay pov The morning after the Chicago game, I woke up to an empty bed.Cole was already up. I could hear him in the kitchen. Coffee brewing. Dishes clinking. The soft sound of him moving around. I lay there for a while, staring at the ceiling, thinking about everything.
Chapter One Hundred Five : Cole pov The flight home from Berlin was quiet. Jay was asleep. His head was on my shoulder. His hand was in mine. The plane was dark. The engines hummed. I stared out the window. Watched the clouds. Thought about everything.The girl. The painting. The curator. The solo
Chapter One Hundred Three :Cole pov The arena was loud. Playoffs were coming. Every game mattered. Every shift mattered. Every mistake mattered.I was on the ice. The puck was on my stick. The net was in front of me. I shot. The goalie saved it. I shot again. The goalie saved it again. I shot a th
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