When star hockey player Jack Reynolds tosses divorce papers at his wife Emma, he believes he's trading up for a more glamorous model who "understands his lifestyle." What he doesn't know: the quiet, supportive woman he's discarding is the secret heir to an $18 billion fortune – and the granddaughter of the man who owns his hockey team.For eight years, Emma Mitchell hid her true identity, supporting Jack's career while secretly learning the business from the ground up. Now, with her grandfather's health failing and the Boston Blades facing financial crisis, Emma is poised to step into her rightful role as majority owner.*Some men have to lose everything to realize what they had. Some women have to lose a husband to find themselves. In this game, the most dangerous plays happen off the ice.*
View MoreEmma Carter's butt had gone numb from sitting in the same cushioned seat for three hours. Not even the luxury boxes at Boston Arena had chairs comfortable enough for the marathon that was playoff hockey. The crowd roared as the final buzzer sounded—Boston Blades 3, Montreal 2.
She stood and stretched, watching as her husband Jack scored the winning goal in overtime. The fans stomped and chanted his name, their hero on ice. Emma smiled, genuinely happy for him despite everything else.
"Mrs. Reynolds? Would you like me to call your car?" the suite attendant asked, already gathering her empty water bottles.
"Not yet, thanks. I'm heading down to congratulate the team." Emma grabbed her purse, a simple leather tote that clashed hilariously with the designer outfits of the other hockey wives.
The attendant's smile tightened. "Oh, I believe there's a private team celebration tonight. Players only."
Emma's phone buzzed with a text from Jack: Don't wait up. Team party at Murphy's.
She read between the lines. Don't show up. Don't embarrass me. Again.
"Right. Of course." Emma forced a smile. "I'll take that car now."
Three hours and two unanswered calls later, Emma sat cross-legged on their king-sized bed, laptop open to a spreadsheet that tracked the household budget. Jack made millions, but old habits die hard. Her grandfather had taught her to watch every penny, even when you had billions of them.
The front door slammed downstairs. Emma closed her laptop and took a deep breath.
"Em? You still up?" Jack's voice echoed through their too-big house, slightly slurred.
"In the bedroom," she called back, slipping on her glasses like armor.
Jack appeared in the doorway, still in his game-day suit, tie hanging loose around his neck. At thirty-two, he was in his hockey prime—six-foot-two, shoulders like a coat hanger, jawline that could cut glass. He'd been gorgeous when they met in college. Now he was sculpted.
"Helluva game, huh?" He grinned, running a hand through his dark hair. "Did you see that last goal?"
"It was amazing." Emma smiled genuinely. "That spin move was insane."
"Coach said it's going on the season highlight reel." Jack loosened his tie further but didn't move to take it off. He just stood there, swaying slightly.
Emma's stomach knotted. Something was wrong.
"You okay?" she asked.
"Yeah. No. I mean—" Jack reached into his inside jacket pocket and pulled out an envelope. "I need to talk to you about something."
"What's that?" Emma nodded toward the envelope, though she already knew. The same dread she'd been feeling for months crystallized into something solid and cold.
Jack tossed the envelope onto the bed. It slid across the comforter and bumped against her knee.
"Divorce papers," he said, his voice oddly flat. "My lawyer drew them up last week."
Emma stared at the envelope. Her name was typed on the front in cold, official letters. She should cry, she thought distantly. She should be shocked. Instead, she felt like she'd been watching this train approach for miles.
"Were you going to discuss this with me first, or just throw legal documents at my face?" The words came out calmer than she felt.
Jack had the decency to look uncomfortable for about half a second.
"Look, we both know this isn't working." He gestured between them. "You're... you, and I'm..."
"You're what, Jack?"
"I'm Jack Reynolds now." He squared his shoulders. "I've got endorsement deals. Magazine covers. I need someone who understands this lifestyle."
Emma laughed, she couldn't help it. "This lifestyle? You mean the one where I've supported you through three team changes and two injuries? Where I've moved cities four times in six years? That lifestyle?"
"See, this is what I mean." Jack pointed at her accusingly. "You're always keeping score."
"I'm a numbers person. Sue me." Emma picked up the envelope but didn't open it.
"The thing is," Jack continued, pacing now, "I've met someone who gets it. She understands the demands, the spotlight."
Emma's laugh turned hollow. "Wow. So there's already a replacement. Who is she? Let me guess—one of those I*******m models who's been commenting on your photos?"
Jack's silence was answer enough.
"How long?" Emma asked.
"Does it matter?"
"It matters to me."
Jack sighed dramatically. "A few months. It just happened."
Emma stood, suddenly unable to have this conversation in the bed they'd shared for eight years. "Things don't 'just happen,' Jack. You make choices."
"Fine. I chose someone who makes more sense for me now." He threw his hands up. "I'm not the same guy who married you in college. I need..."
"More?" Emma supplied.
"Different." Jack softened his tone, as if that made it better. "You're smart, Em. Too smart for this world, honestly. But you don't fit anymore. You hide at games. You wear Target when everyone else wears Prada."
"I like Target," Emma said, knowing how ridiculous this argument was becoming.
"The settlement's fair," Jack continued, nodding at the envelope. "The house, a million cash, alimony for two years while you 'find yourself' or whatever."
Emma clutched the envelope tighter, crumpling it slightly. She thought about all the things Jack didn't know—about her family, her grandfather, the trust fund she'd never touched, the shares she owned in companies whose names would make his head spin.
Her phone rang, cutting through the tense silence. Her grandfather's photo lit up the screen.
Jack rolled his eyes.
Emma snatched the phone. "I should take this."
"Of course you should." Jack grabbed a duffel bag from the closet—already packed, she noticed. "I'll be at the Ritz until I find a place. My lawyer's number is in there. Don't make this messy, Em."
As Jack headed for the door, Emma called after him: "Jack?"
He turned, hand on the doorframe.
"Your career high record is twenty-eight goals in a season. My grandfather made twenty-eight million dollars last week." She smiled sweetly. "Just keeping score."
Jack's face contorted in confusion as she answered the phone.
"Hi, Grandpa," Emma said, watching her soon-to-be-ex-husband walk out. "Yes, I saw the game. Listen, I think I'm ready to take you up on that job offer after all."
The job Jack thought was just some entry-level position at Mitchell Industries—owned by her grandfather, Franklin Mitchell, billionaire and majority owner of the Boston Blades hockey franchise.
As the front door slammed shut, Emma finally opened the envelope. Beneath the legal jargon was one simple truth: Jack Reynolds had just made the biggest mistake of his career.
Emma stood in the middle of their living room, surrounded by boxes, watching Charlotte try to "help" pack by putting her stuffed animals in random containers."Not the dishes box, sweetheart," Emma laughed, rescuing a soggy elephant from a box of wrapped china."Ellie wants to help too," Charlotte explained seriously.Three weeks had passed since Seattle, and they were deep in preparation for the Toronto move. The six-month timeline felt both generous and impossibly short, depending on the day."How was the Toronto call?" Alek asked, appearing in the doorway with Frankie on his shoulders."Interesting." Emma sealed another box, marking it "FRAGILE" in large letters. "The sports network wants to offer me a hosting role, not just consulting.""Hosting what?""A weekly show about women's hockey. Interview players, cover games, build the sport's profile." Emma tried to gauge Alek's reaction. "It would be a bigger commitment than I originally planned.""But also a bigger opportunity.""Exa
"Mama!" Charlotte's delighted squeal echoed through the apartment as Emma and Alek walked through the door.Emma dropped to her knees, catching her daughter in a fierce hug. For a moment, holding Charlotte's warm, solid little body, the grief felt manageable."Dada!" Frankie toddled over, arms outstretched for Alek, who scooped him up immediately."We missed you two so much," Alek said, his voice thick with emotion.Katie appeared from the kitchen, taking in their exhausted faces and the way they stood closer together than they had in weeks."How are you?" she asked Emma quietly."Getting through it," Emma replied honestly. "One hour at a time."Katie nodded, understanding without needing details. "The kids were perfect angels. Well, mostly perfect. Charlotte may have convinced Frankie to help her paint the bathroom wall.""With what?" Emma asked, alarmed."Finger paints. Don't worry, it all washed off."Emma felt a laugh bubble up unexpectedly. After two days of hospitals and grief,
Emma woke to the sound of hushed voices in Jack's kitchen. For a moment, she forgot where she was and why everything hurt. Then reality crashed back - the miscarriage, the hospital, the terrible fight with Alek."She's been sleeping for about two hours," Jack was saying quietly."Thank you for taking care of her." Alek's voice was rough with exhaustion and emotion.Emma sat up slowly, her body aching in ways that had nothing to do with flying. Through the doorway, she could see Alek and Jack standing awkwardly in the kitchen, two men who shared a complicated history with the same woman."Emma?" Alek noticed her movement immediately. "I'm here."He crossed the room in three quick steps, dropping to his knees beside the couch. His hair was messy, his clothes wrinkled from the flight, and his eyes were red-rimmed with worry."I'm so sorry," he whispered, pulling her into his arms. "About the baby, about our fight, about everything."Emma melted into his embrace, feeling safe for the firs
Emma gripped the hospital bathroom sink, trying to stop shaking. The cramping had gotten worse since landing, and the bleeding wasn't stopping.She needed to see a doctor. But first, she had to find Jack.The pediatric ICU was a maze of beeping machines and worried parents. Emma found Jack slumped in a chair outside Room 314, still in yesterday's clothes, his normally perfect hair disheveled."Emma." He stood up immediately, pulling her into a grateful hug. "You came.""Of course I came." Emma held him tight, drawing strength from giving comfort even as her own world crumbled. "How is he?""Pneumonia. Severe, but treatable." Jack's voice was hoarse from worry. "They have him on antibiotics and oxygen. The doctors think he'll be okay, but...""But he's so little," Emma finished.Jack nodded, tears threatening. "I keep thinking about all the times I was traveling, all the games I prioritized over bedtime stories. What if I'd missed this? What if something happened and I wasn't here?"Em
Emma lay in the guest bedroom, staring at the ceiling at 2 AM. Alek was in their room, and neither had spoken since their fight six hours ago. Her phone buzzed with another text from Lisa about the Netflix deadline, but Emma couldn't bring herself to care.She'd ruined everything. Alek's career, their marriage, their future. All because she couldn't keep her mouth shut.A soft knock on the door interrupted her spiral of self-pity."Emma?" Katie's voice was gentle. "Can I come in?"Emma sat up as Katie slipped into the room, carrying two cups of tea."Couldn't sleep either?" Katie asked, settling on the bed."Did we wake the kids with our fighting?""No, they're fine. But you two aren't." Katie handed her a cup. "Want to talk about it?"Emma found herself spilling everything - the board call, her outburst, Alek's anger, the impossible choices ahead."He's right," Emma finished miserably. "I tried to help and made everything worse.""Did you?" Katie asked quietly."Of course I did. Now
Emma threw up twice before noon, which didn't bode well for her plan to handle both meetings. She sat in the Netflix offices, trying to look professional while fighting waves of nausea."Mrs. Mitchell-Volkov?" A young assistant appeared. "They're ready for you in Conference Room A."Emma checked her phone. 1:45 PM. Perfect timing to dial into Alek's board call first.But when she connected to the NHL conference line, the conversation was already heated."Commissioner Volkov," a gruff voice was saying, "your personal situation is becoming a distraction from league business."Emma's stomach clenched, and not from morning sickness."With respect," Alek's voice was tight, "my family situation hasn't affected my performance—""Hasn't it?" another voice interrupted. "The Toronto relocation was supposed to be finalized weeks ago. Instead, we're dealing with media speculation and sponsor concerns."Emma pressed the phone closer to her ear, trying to follow the conversation while Netflix execu
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