LOGINJaxson
The locker room of the Eastern University arena was usually a sanctuary of loud music, terrible hygiene, and aggressive banter. But tonight, forty-eight hours before the season opener, the atmosphere was as tense as a wire. "Hey, Reed," Miller, one of our junior forwards, called out as he taped his stick. “Saw the preview for the show on TikTok. Nice kiss in the courtyard. Didn't know you liked the nerdy ones." A few guys chuckled, but it was hollow. Everyone knew the stakes. "Leave it alone, Miller," I said, pulling my shoulder pads over my head. "It’s a PR assignment. Focus on your power play." "Is it an assignment?" A voice sneered from the corner of the room. I didn't need to look up to know it was Derek Vance—the athletic director’s nephew and the team’s backup defenseman. Derek had been gunning for my starting spot since freshman year, and he had been dropping subtle hints to the coaches that my "legal troubles" made me unfit to wear the Captain's C. "Because it looks to me like you're using a scholarship girl as a human shield," Derek continued, standing up and slamming his locker door shut. “We all saw the video from the diner. You lost your mind over some townie. Now we’re all getting dragged into a reality TV circus because you can't keep your fists to yourself." I froze. The locker room went dead silent. The only sound was the low hum of the industrial ventilation system. I slowly stood up, stepping out of my stall. I was a full three inches taller than Derek, and I used every bit of it, looming over him until he had to tilt his chin up. "If you have something to say about my play on the ice, Vance, say it to the coach," I said, my voice dangerously low, vibrating with the anger I’d been suppressing for days. “But if you mention Summer Brooks again, or if you imply she’s a shield, we’re going to have an entirely different conversation in the parking lot. And your uncle won't be there to protect you." Derek’s face flushed red, but he backed down, sliding back onto his bench with a muttered curse. "That’s enough!" Coach Miller’s voice boomed as he walked into the room, holding a whiteboard. "Lineup changes for Friday night. Listen up." I sat back down, my heart hammering against my ribs. The anger wasn't just about Derek; it was about the claustrophobia of my entire life right now. I was trapped between an NHL dream that was slipping through my fingers, a reality show that felt like a permanent noose, and a fake girlfriend who looked at me like I was a criminal. An hour later, after a brutal, high-intensity practice that left my lungs burning, I walked out to the parking lot. The sun had already set, leaving the campus draped in a chilly, violet twilight. Standing under the flickering halogen light of the athletic center entrance was Summer. She was wearing her oversized denim jacket, her arms crossed, shivering slightly as she checked her phone. "What are you still doing here, Brooks?" I asked, throwing my heavy gear bag over my shoulder. "Filming ended three hours ago." She looked up, her expression guarded. "Sarah wanted me to wait for you. They need a 'candid paparazzi' shot of us leaving the facility together for the morning sports blog update. Apparently, we need to show the world we’re inseparable." "Right," I muttered, feeling a sudden wave of exhaustion hit me. "The script never sleeps." I started walking toward my beat-up sedan, expecting her to follow at a distance. Instead, she fell into step right beside me, her small boots matching my longer strides. "You look tired, Reed," she said quietly. "I just spent two hours getting checked into the boards by guys who want my job, Brooks. I'm not exactly feeling like a cover model." "I heard about your sister," she said, her voice dropping to a level that was entirely devoid of her usual journalistic edge. I stopped dead in my tracks. My grip on my gear bag tightened until my knuckles turned white. “Who told you that?" "It doesn't matter," Summer said, stopping too. She turned to face me, her dark eyes reflecting the amber glow of the parking lot lights. “I just... I didn't know. I thought you were doing this show because you loved the attention. I didn't realize what was actually on the line for you." "I don't need your pity, Brooks," I snapped, the defensive walls slamming back up around my chest. “I don't need you writing some human-interest piece about my family to make yourself feel better about selling out for tuition." Summer didn't flinch. She just looked at me, her expression remarkably steady. “It's not pity, Jaxson. It’s perspective. We’re both trapped in this room. We might as well stop pretending the other person is the monster." For the first time since I’d met her, I didn't have a comeback. I just stared at her, the cold wind whipping between us, realizing that beneath the sharp words and the cynical armor, Summer Brooks was the only person on this entire campus who was actually looking at me—not the jersey, not the scandal, and not the ratings.SummerThe rain was pouring down in sheets on Saturday night, matching the bleak, suffocating blackness that had taken over my life. I was sick to my stomach. The Eastern University arena was glowing like a massive, silver spaceship in the dark, the parking lot packed with thousands of cars for the National Championship game against State. The noise from inside was a muffled, rhythmic thrum—the sound of ten thousand fans waiting for the final showdown.I sat on the concrete stairs of the communication building across the quad, my knees pulled tightly to my chest, my denim jacket soaked through with freezing water.My tuition was paid. My New York contract was confirmed. My future was perfectly secured on paper. I had everything I had spent four years starving for. And I had never felt more completely dead inside.A lot was going through my mind. I didn’t realize when Chloe walked up to me. "Summer?"I looked up through the curtain of wet hair to see Chloe standing there, holdi
JaxsonThe locker room on Friday morning didn't have any music playing.Usually, the walls would be vibrating with heavy bass, guys shouting over the noise, equipment slamming, and the raw energy of a team forty-eight hours away from a national title. But when I walked in at seven-thirty, my gear bag over my shoulder, the atmosphere was like a morgue.Nobody looked at me. The usual morning chatter died instantly. The guys were all huddled around Miller’s locker in the corner, their faces grim, staring down at a single smartphone screen."What's going on?" I asked, dropping my heavy bag onto the wooden bench. The metallic clink of my skates felt too loud. “Did the line changes drop? Is someone scratched?"Miller looked up, his face pale, his eyes full of a sudden, deep pity that made my stomach instantly drop into a cold, dark pit. He looked like he was about to tell me someone had died. “Jax... man, I'm sorry. You need to see this. It dropped on the HypeTV app ten minutes ago."
SummerThe production trailer smelled like stale coffee and ozone when I walked in on Thursday afternoon.Sarah Sterling was sitting behind her desk, the room dark except for the harsh, blue glow of her editing monitors. She didn't look up when the door clicked shut. Her expression wasn't her usual manic, ratings-driven smile; it was cold, clinical, and completely devoid of humanity."You wanted to see me, Sarah?" I asked, a cold prickle of unease starting to form at the base of my neck. “Chloe said it was urgent regarding the pre-championship package.""Sit down, Summer," Sarah said, her voice flat.I took a seat on the leather stool, my muscles tightening."You've done a wonderful job this season," Sarah said, finally turning her chair to face me. @The audience loves you. The redemption arc is a triumph. But as I told you before... stability is a plateau. And a plateau is death for a network finale.""The season is almost over, Sarah," I said, my voice steady despite the rising
SummerWe were dating for real now, but our reality had become a double-edged sword.It was a strange, covert existence. Every morning, we would meet on set for Beyond the Ice, hitting our marks under the hot studio lights, delivering our required date segments, and letting Sarah Sterling believe she was a genius producer directing a masterpiece of modern television. We held hands when the red lights blinked, we smiled for the b-roll packages, and we let the social media managers curate our "wholesome, grounding romance."But when the directors yelled cut, and the crew packed up the cameras, the real story began.We spent our nights in the back corner of the twenty-four hour campus diner—the same diner where Jaxson's scandal had started. We sat in the high-backed vinyl booths where the light didn't quite reach, sharing a single plate of cheap, greasy fries while the neon sign outside buzzed a low, rhythmic hum against the glass. I would sit with my laptop open, editing my broadcas
JaxsonThe production trailer was silent as the door slammed shut behind us.Sarah Sterling wasn't inside. She was still in the main ballroom, frantically managing the fallout with the University President and the Athletic Director after security dragged Derek Vance out of the gala. The sudden transition from the deafening roar of the ballroom to the narrow, sterile walls of the trailer felt like stepping into an airlock.Summer stood in the center of the narrow walkway, her breathing heavy, the midnight-blue silk of her dress slightly rumpled from the chaos. She was shaking—not from fear, I realized, but from pure, raw adrenaline. Her hands were clenched into tight fists at her sides, her knuckles pale beneath the harsh fluorescent lights of the trailer."Are you okay?" I asked, my voice rough as I ripped off my bow tie, throwing it onto the counter. My knuckles were still stinging from where I’d pinned Vance against the pillar. The metallic taste of anger was fresh in my mouth
SummerStanding on the sidelines of a crowded ballroom while the boy you're pretending to date dances with his beautiful ex-girlfriend is a special kind of hell.I stood by the ice sculpture display, an untouched glass of champagne in my hand, watching Jaxson and Vanessa move across the floor. The cameras were right on them, tracking every shift of Vanessa's emerald dress as she leaned in entirely too close, her lips moving near his ear. Jaxson looked like a statue—his face completely expressionless, his body rigid as he executed the bare minimum movements required to finish the song."He looks miserable," Chloe said, appearing at my elbow with a headset slung around her neck."He looks like a professional," I said, my voice tight as I forced myself to look away, focusing on the bubbles rising in my glass."Sarah is losing her mind in the truck," Chloe whispered, a small gleam of satisfaction in her eyes. “Vanessa keeps trying to whisper sweet nothings to get a reaction out of him,







