LOGINThe truck's headlights died, and the abandoned rink swallowed them whole.
Damian sat in the passenger seat, still barefoot, still wearing nothing but his sweatpants and the hoodie he'd grabbed before leaving the locker room. His feet were filthy from the parking garage, and he could feel the dried blood from his earlier scrapes cracking with every small movement. He hadn't looked at Sebastian once during the drive. He didn't need to. He knew exactly where they were going the moment Sebastian had said abandoned rink.
The south side rink. The one with the broken windows and the chain-link fence and the memories that had lived inside Damian's chest like splinters for fifteen years.
"I'm not going in there," Damian said. His voice sounded small, even to himself.
Sebastian killed the engine. The silence that followed was thick and heavy, the kind of silence that only exists in places where people have stopped coming. "You said you wanted to stop being afraid."
"I changed my mind."
"No, you didn't." Sebastian turned to look at him. The dashboard lights were off, but the moon was almost full, and it painted half his face silver. "You've been running from this place your whole life. Every time your father hit you, every time you lost a game, every time you felt like you weren't good enough—you were standing right here in your head. Weren't you?"
Damian's hands started shaking. He shoved them between his thighs to hide it.
"I'm not a therapist, Sebastian. I'm a hockey player who just lost the championship. I don't need you to psychoanalyze me."
"Then think of it as a command." Sebastian's voice dropped. Low. Steady. The voice he used on the ice when he wanted to get inside Damian's head. "Part of the bet. You do what I say, when I say it. Remember?"
Damian remembered. One night. No rules. No safe word.
"This is where you want to take me? A dead rink in the middle of nowhere?"
"This is where you need to go." Sebastian opened his door and stepped out into the cold. The wind carried the smell of rust and wet leaves. "I'll be right behind you. You're not doing this alone."
Damian sat in the truck for another thirty seconds. Then he opened his door and followed.
The hole in the chain-link fence was just big enough to squeeze through. Sebastian went first, holding the sharp edges apart so they wouldn't cut Damian's arms. The back door of the rink was unlocked—the lock had been broken for years, judging by the rust on the hasp. Sebastian pushed it open, and the smell hit Damian like a fist.
Mold. Old sweat. Frozen dirt. The particular smell of a building that had been dying for a long time.
Sebastian pulled out his phone and turned on the flashlight. The beam cut through the darkness, illuminating dust motes and crumbling concrete. They walked through a narrow hallway, past offices with broken windows, past a concession stand that had been gutted, past the equipment room where Damian had once hidden from his father for three hours until the old man got tired of waiting.
Then they stepped into the rink.
The ice was still there.
That was the thing Damian hadn't expected. He thought it would be melted, cracked, gone. But someone—kids, maybe, or squatters—had been flooding it. The surface was rough and gray, pitted with skate marks and scattered with debris, but it was ice. Real ice. Cold enough that Damian could see his breath the moment they stepped inside.
The boards were still up, though the glass was shattered in places. The stands rose on either side, empty and dark. Above them, the scoreboard hung crooked, its face blank. And the ice stretched out in front of Damian like a grave.
He couldn't move.
Sebastian set his phone on the boards, the flashlight aimed at center ice. Then he turned to Damian.
"Strip."
Damian blinked. "What?"
"You heard me." Sebastian's voice was calm. Not cruel. Not angry. Just certain. "Clothes off. Everything."
"We're in an abandoned rink. It's freezing."
"I know."
Damian wanted to argue. Wanted to turn around and walk back through the tunnel and never think about this place again. But his hands were already moving, unzipping his hoodie, pulling it over his head. The cold hit his bare chest like a slap. He shivered violently, his nipples tightening, his breath coming in short gasps.
His sweatpants followed. His boxers. He stood there, naked and shaking, on the edge of the ice where his father had once made him skate until his legs gave out.
Sebastian looked at him. Not with hunger. Not with judgment. Just with something that looked like recognition.
"Skate," Sebastian said.
"There are no skates."
"Then skate in your socks." Sebastian pointed to the ice. "You wanted to stop being afraid. This is how you start."
Damian looked at the gray surface. It stretched out in front of him, cold and patient and terrible. He could already feel the ghost of his father's hand on the back of his neck, shoving him forward. Again. Faster. You call that skating?
He stepped onto the ice.
The cold bit through the thin fabric of his socks immediately. He took a step, wobbled, caught himself. Another step. The ice was rough, uneven, nothing like the smooth surface he was used to. His feet slid and caught, slid and caught. He pushed off awkwardly, gliding a few feet, then stumbling.
"Keep going," Sebastian said from the boards.
Damian pushed again. Harder this time. His socks were already wet, the cold seeping into his toes, his arches, his heels. He could feel the ice crystals forming on the fabric, stiffening it, making each step a little more painful.
"Faster."
Damian obeyed. He didn't know why. Some part of him—the part that had spent fifteen years trying to earn his father's approval, even when his father didn't deserve it—recognized the voice. Not Sebastian's voice. The voice of authority. The voice that said you will do this because I told you to.
He skated faster. His feet slid and scraped across the ice. The rough surface was starting to abrade his socks, then his skin. He could feel the sting of it, the first hint of blood.
"Faster."
Damian's breath came in ragged gasps. His legs burned. The cold was everywhere now—in his chest, his fingers, his face. He couldn't feel his toes anymore. He couldn't feel anything except the scrape-scrape-scrape of his bare feet on the ice and the growing wetness that he knew was blood.
He thought about his father. About the way the old man used to stand at center ice, arms crossed, face like stone. You're weak. You're soft. You'll never make it. He thought about all the nights he had lain awake, running his hands over his own bruises, telling himself that the pain meant he was getting better.
He thought about Sebastian. About the way Sebastian had looked at him in the locker room—not with contempt, not with pity, but with something that looked like understanding.
Damian's legs gave out.
He collapsed onto the ice, knees first, then hands, then his cheek pressed against the cold gray surface. The impact knocked the air out of his lungs. He lay there, gasping, shivering, his naked body curled on the ice like a wounded animal.
His feet were bleeding. He could see the dark smears on the ice behind him, a trail of footprints leading back to the boards. His socks were shredded, hanging off his toes in wet strings. The blood was warm against the cold, a strange contrast that made him dizzy.
Sebastian walked onto the ice. His footsteps were slow, deliberate, each one crunching softly on the rough surface. He knelt beside Damian, close enough to touch, and didn't.
"Say 'stop' and it ends," Sebastian whispered.
Damian's eyes were closed. His whole body was shaking—from cold, from pain, from the weight of everything he had been carrying for fifteen years.
He could say it. One word. Stop. And Sebastian would take him home. And they would pretend this night had never happened. And Damian would go back to being the Iceman, frozen and untouchable and safe.
But safe meant alone. Safe meant never letting anyone see the cracks. Safe meant another fifteen years of pretending.
Damian opened his eyes. Sebastian's face was inches from his own, illuminated by the distant glow of the phone light. His expression was unreadable—waiting, patient, terrified.
Damian closed his eyes again.
"…Don't."
Sebastian's hand hovered over Damian's shoulder. Not touching. Not yet.
"If I keep going," Sebastian said slowly, "I won't be able to stop. Not tonight. Not ever. Is that what you want?"
Damian opened his eyes. Looked up at the man who had spent three years pretending to hate him. "That's what I've always wanted," Damian whispered. Sebastian's hand finally made contact—warm, solid, real.
"Then God help us both."
The knife clattered across the ice, spinning in a lazy circle before coming to rest against the boards. Alex lay face down, his arms twisted behind his back, Sebastian's knee pressed between his shoulder blades. The whole thing had taken less than three seconds—the lunge, the deflection, the disarm, the pin. Sebastian's body had moved on instinct, the same instinct that had kept him alive on the ice for a decade.Damian stood frozen, his arm bleeding, his heart hammering. The paramedics had bandaged him, but the gauze was already soaking through, crimson blooming against the white."Don't move," Sebastian said to Alex. His voice was low, steady, dangerous. "Don't even breathe."Alex wasn't moving. He wasn't breathing. His face was pressed against the ice, his eyes squeezed shut, his whole body shaking with silent sobs. The knife was ten feet away, gleaming under the moonlight.Police sirens filled the air. Red and blue lights flashed through the broken windows. Doors slammed. Boots po
The door to the abandoned rink slammed shut, but Alex didn't leave.Damian heard his footsteps on the concrete floor, slow and deliberate, circling back toward the ice. Sebastian's arms were still around Damian, holding him upright, but his body had gone rigid. His eyes were fixed on the shadow moving along the boards."Alex," Damian said again. His voice was hoarse, broken. "Please. Just go.""I can't." Alex's voice echoed off the walls. He stepped into the moonlight that streamed through the shattered windows. His face was pale, his eyes wild, his hands still shaking. "I've been watching you for years. Waiting for you to see me. And you never did."Damian pulled away from Sebastian. He stood on his own, his legs unsteady, his heart pounding. "You rigged the vote."Alex's jaw tightened."You bribed the ref."Alex didn't deny it."You hired the journalist. You sent the bullet. You kidnapped Sebastian." Damian's voice rose with each accusation. "You tried to destroy us."Alex's face cr
The hospital discharged Sebastian on a Tuesday.The doctors had done all they could. The swelling on his brain had gone down. His memory was still patchy—gaps here and there, moments that didn't connect. He remembered Damian's name. He remembered the championship game. He remembered the stick splintering. But he didn't remember the blood oath. He didn't remember the abandoned rink. He didn't remember the night Damian had begged him to hurt."He needs triggers," the neurologist had said. "Places, smells, sounds—things that might unlock the memories trapped in his temporal lobe."Damian had nodded. He had thanked the doctor. He had helped Sebastian into the car and driven him home.The apartment was the same. The same couch. The same kitchen. The same bed where they had slept together for months. Sebastian walked through the rooms like a stranger, touching things, trying to remember."This is ours?" Sebastian asked."Yes.""I don't—" He stopped. His brow furrowed. "I don't remember livi
The first day was the hardest.Damian sat in the plastic chair beside Sebastian's bed, watching the rise and fall of his chest. The machines beeped. The IV dripped. The bandages on Sebastian's head were white and clean, stark against his pale skin. His eyes were closed. His breathing was shallow.The doctors had done their tests. CT scans, MRIs, cognitive assessments. The verdict was the same each time: moderate traumatic brain injury, swelling on the temporal lobe, temporary memory loss. The word temporary was the only thing Damian held onto."He may not remember recent events," the neurologist had said. "The memories could come back in days, weeks, or months. Or they might not come back at all."Damian had nodded. He had thanked the doctor. He had walked back to Sebastian's room and sat down in the plastic chair and not moved for six hours.Sebastian's mother brought coffee. Alex brought food. Detective Morrison brought updates—no leads on the kidnapper, the bullet, the note. Damian
The ice felt like quicksand under Damian's skates.He couldn't move fast enough. Every step was a struggle, every breath a battle. The crowd was screaming. The security guards were shouting. The police were running. But Damian's legs wouldn't cooperate. He was stuck in a nightmare, watching the world spin without him."Sebastian!" he screamed again.No answer.The tunnel. The tunnel was the only way in or out of the ice without going through the stands. Damian pushed off, his skates digging into the frozen surface, his body moving on instinct. He reached the tunnel entrance and stumbled inside.The lights were still off here—emergency backups flickering weakly, casting long shadows on the concrete walls. The air was cold and smelled of stale beer and fear."Sebastian!"A sound. Faint. A groan.Damian followed it. The tunnel curved, opened into a wider hallway near the locker rooms. A utility closet door was half open. A body lay on the floor.Sebastian.Damian dropped to his knees bes
The police returned the next morning with news that made Damian's blood run colder than the ice he played on."Ballistics confirmed it," Detective Morrison said. She was a tall woman with short gray hair and eyes that had seen too much. "The bullet you received matches the gun used by Paul Vance—the journalist who shot at you in the parking lot."Damian leaned against the kitchen counter. Sebastian stood beside him, his hand on Damian's lower back. "But Vance is in jail," Damian said."He is. Has been for weeks. No visitors. No phone calls except to his lawyer." Detective Morrison flipped through her notebook. "Someone else has his weapon. Someone who got to it before the police did.""A accomplice," Sebastian said."Or someone who paid off the right people." Detective Morrison looked at them. "We're investigating. But I need to ask—do you have any idea who would want to hurt you?"Damian and Sebastian looked at each other."Damian's father," Sebastian said."His lawyer," Damian added







