LOGIN
The locker room door slammed open.
“Turn on the screen,” Marcus Vale said, breath sharp, eyes wild. I was halfway through untying my skates. Ice still clung to the blades. My body hurts from practice, sweat cooling on my skin. I didn’t look up. “If this is about the press” “Just turn it on.” The TV above the lockers flickered. The sports channel logo spun once, then the headline cut across the screen in bold white letters. LEAGUE’S BIGGEST RIVAL JOINS FROST GIANTS My name followed under it. Adrian Cruz traded in a late-night deal. The room went silent. Too silent. I stood slowly. “That’s fake.” No one answered. The clip rolled. My face filled the screen last season’s highlights in my Stormhawks jersey. Goals. Fights. Wins. Then the Frost Giants’ logo burned across it like a brand. “They can’t do that,” I said, voice low. Marcus swallowed. “It’s done. Papers signed. League approved.” My stomach dropped, heavy and cold. The Frost Giants. Out of every team in the league, it had to be them. I grabbed my phone from the bench. Thirty-two missed calls. My agent. My mom. Two from unknown numbers. A message from the league office. And one text that made my chest lock tight. Welcome home. J. I hadn’t seen that single letter in three years. Jaxon Reed. Captain of the Frost Giants. The man I swore I would never stand across from again unless it was through a wall of ice and hate. I shoved the phone into my pocket. “This is a mistake.” Marcus shook his head. “It’s not.” The coach walked in then. He didn’t look at me at first. He looked at the floor. “They moved fast,” he said. “Ownership pushed it through.” Ownership. A cold thought slid into place. The Frost Giants weren’t just any team. They were owned by Nolan Pierce. Billionaire. Ice-cold smile. The kind of man who made deals like he was moving chess pieces. He had been sitting front row at our last game. Watching me. “No,” I said under my breath. The coach finally looked at me. “Your flight leaves in four hours. They want you at their morning press conference.” “They?” My laugh came out harsh. “They can want all they like.” The coach's jaw tightened. “Check your contract.” My heart thudded once. Hard. I pulled the folded copy from my locker bag. My agent had gone over it with me last year when I signed the extension. I trusted him. I flipped to the back pages. Small print. Fine lines. Words packed tight. And there it was. Clause 14B: In the event of ownership-approved trade, player waives right to refusal under rival transfer conditions. Breach of compliance results in full contract termination and financial penalty equal to total remaining value. My fingers went numb. “That wasn’t there,” I said. “It was,” Coach replied quietly. “Buried.” The total remaining value of my contract sat in bold on the front page. Forty-eight million dollars. If I refused, I didn’t just lose the team. I lost everything. “They knew,” I said. “They knew I’d never agree to this.” The coach didn’t answer. Because he knew why. Because everyone in this room knew why. Three years ago, Jaxon Reed and I had been more than teammates on a junior squad no one cared about. We had shared ice, shared dreams, shared a small apartment with cracked windows and bad heat. Shared a bed. It had been simple then. Late-night talks. Stolen kisses after wins. The promise that we’d both make the league and stay side by side when we did. Then the draft came. He went to the Frost Giants. I went to the Stormhawks. And something broke between us before we could fix it. He stopped answering my calls. I saw him on TV smiling in a new jersey like I had never mattered. Like we had never happened. I learned to hate him. It was easier than missing him. Now I was being sent straight into his locker room. Forced to stand next to him. Forced to pretend I felt nothing. Marcus stepped closer. “You okay?” “No,” I said. “I’m not.” The TV replayed the headline again. League’s Biggest Rival Joins Frost Giants. The sports anchor spoke fast, excited. “This is a career-defining move for Cruz. Paired with captain Jaxon Reed, the Frost Giants may be unstoppable.” Paired. The word felt like a bruise. “They planned this,” I said slowly. The coach's eyes flicked toward the screen, then away. “There’s more.” My stomach tightened again. “What.” He hesitated. “The trade wasn’t even requested by their coach.” Silence. “It came straight from Pierce’s office.” Nolan Pierce. The owner himself. A man who had never hidden that he liked control. “Why would he care about me?” I asked. The coach didn’t answer. Because this wasn’t about stats. It wasn’t about points or assists. This was personal. I felt it in my bones. My phone buzzed again. Unknown number. I answered without thinking. “What.” A calm, deep voice filled my ear. “Mr. Cruz. I hope you’ve seen the news.” I didn’t need to ask who it was. “Pierce.” “I prefer Nolan.” “I don’t.” A soft chuckle. “You’ll fit in just fine.” “What do you want?” “I want championships,” he said. “And you, Mr. Cruz, are the missing piece.” “You had twenty-nine other teams to trade for me.” “Yes.” A pause. “But only one would hurt enough to make you play like your life depends on it.” My hand tightened around the phone. “You don’t know anything about me.” “I know quite a bit,” he replied smoothly. “I know you and my captain have history. I know you haven’t spoken in years. I know tension creates fire.” “This isn’t your business.” “It is now. You signed the contract.” My breath came slowly. “You trapped me.” “I offered you an opportunity. Don’t waste it.” The line went dead. I stood there, phone still pressed to my ear. He knew. He had known about me and Jaxon. He had used it. Marcus stared at me. “Was that” “Yes.” “And?” “He wants me to be angry.” “Are you?” I thought of Jaxon’s text. Welcome home. J. Home. The Frost Giants’ arena had been our old junior team’s practice ground. Same city. Same cold streets. Same diner we used to go to after late games. Home. “He doesn’t get to call it that,” I said. But my chest ached in a way anger alone couldn’t explain. Four hours later, I stood at the airport gate with a single bag and a head full of ghosts. Reporters had already started posting. My face was everywhere. Fans were split. Some are furious. Some are thrilled. My old teammates hadn’t said much. Just stiff handshakes. Avoided eyes. Like I was already gone. On the plane, I closed my eyes. I told myself this was just hockey. Just another team. Just another season. But my heart knew better. This was Jaxon. The last time I saw him in person, we were in his kitchen. Rain hitting the window. My draft papers in my hand. “You’ll forget me,” I had said, trying to sound like I didn’t care. He had grabbed my wrist. “Never.” Then he let go. And he did. Or at least, that’s what it felt like. The plane landed just after midnight. A black car waited at the curb. No team logo. No driver in uniform. The door opened before I reached it. Nolan Pierce stepped out himself. Tall. Perfect coat. Calm eyes that missed nothing. “You didn’t have to come,” I said. “I wanted to see your face when you arrived.” “Enjoying the show?” “This isn’t a show,” he said softly. “It's a strategy.” He studied me like I was an investment. “You think putting me next to him will win you a title?” “I think unresolved feelings are powerful,” he replied. “Hate. Love. Regret. They all push a man past his limits.” My jaw tightened. “You’re playing with people.” “I’m building a dynasty.” He stepped aside and gestured to the car. “Your captain is waiting at the arena. He insisted.” Of course he did. The ride was quiet. The city lights blurred past the window. Familiar streets. Familiar cold. When the arena came into view, my chest tightened. The Frost Giants logo glowed bright above the entrance. Inside, the building was empty. Dark. Quiet. Except for one strip of light coming from the ice. I walked out slowly. The rink stretched wide and pale under the overhead lamps. And there he was. Jaxon Reed stood at center ice, stick in hand, helmet off. He looked the same. And completely different. Broader shoulders. Harder eyes. A small scar above his brow I didn’t recognize. He didn’t smile. I stopped a few feet away. Neither of us spoke at first. The silence felt heavy. Thick. “You got my text,” he said finally. “Don’t call this home.” His jaw flexed. “It is.” “You lost the right to say that.” A flash of something crossed his face. Pain. Anger. I couldn’t tell. “You think I asked for this?” he shot back. “Did you?” He took a step closer. “We don’t get to choose everything, Adrian.” “No,” I said. “But you chose to disappear.” His breath hitched. Just for a second. “That’s what you think happened?” The air between us felt charged. Too tight. I hated that my pulse reacted to his voice. That my body still remembered the shape of him. “You don’t get to rewrite it now,” I said. “I’m not trying to.” His eyes held mine. Dark. Unsteady. “But we’re on the same team now.” “Forced.” “Maybe.” A beat passed. “You still skate on the left side?” he asked quietly. The question hit harder than it should have. “Yes.” “Good.” His voice lowered. “I know exactly where you’ll be.” My stomach twisted. This was what Pierce wanted. Tension. Fire. Two men who never finished their story, trapped in the same locker room, chasing the same cup. Jaxon stepped even closer. Close enough that I could see the faint shake in his hand. “You can hate me,” he said. “But when we step on that ice, you play with me. Not against me.” I swallowed. “And after the game?” His eyes searched mine. “That depends on you.” Footsteps echoed behind us. Reporters were starting to gather at the doors. Morning would come fast. The headline would spread wider. I looked at Jaxon one last time. “You better hope this works,” I said. “For who?” he asked. “For you,” I replied. Because if I was trapped here, if Pierce thought he could use our past like fuel He had no idea what he had just set loose. And as the arena lights flickered brighter, I couldn’t stop one question from rising above all the rest. Why did Nolan Pierce really want us together? And what did he know about that night three years ago… that I didn’t?“Are you two together?” The question slices through the press room like a blade. No one laughs. No one pretends they didn’t hear it. Every camera zooms in. I feel Damon is still beside me. Flashes burst, white and blinding. The Kings logo looms behind us on the backdrop, repeated over and over like a reminder of what’s at stake. We just signed identical five-year extensions. Same day. Same numbers. Same clause structure. The media already called it unprecedented. Now they want something else. A headline bigger than hockey. I adjust the mic in front of me. It screeches softly. My goal today was simple. Shut down trade rumors. Reassure sponsors. Talk about leadership, culture, championships. Not this. Damon leans back in his chair, jaw tight but controlled. He’s better at hiding nerves than I am. Always has been. But I know him. I see the pulse ticking in his throat. The reporter doesn’t back down. “You live in the same building. You vacationed together during the
The buzzer screams.For a split second, I don’t understand what I’m hearing.Then the red light flashes.Gloves fly.The arena explodes.We won.Game Seven. Overtime. Championship.I’m still on my knees in front of the crease, lungs burning, sticking half out of my hand. The puck is in the net behind the goalie behind both of us.Because Damon and I were both there.Both hacking at it.Both refusing to lose.And when it slipped through the smallest opening between skate and post, neither of us knew whose stick touched it last.It doesn’t matter.We won.Bodies crash into me from behind. Teammates pile on. Someone shouts my name. Someone else is crying. The ice smells like sweat and metal and victory.But through the chaos, I’m looking for him.Damon.He’s a few feet away, on his back, staring up at the rafters like he’s not sure this is real.For a heartbeat, everything fades except the two of us.We did it.Together.They said we couldn’t.Two captains. Two egos. Two stars fighting f
Empty net!”The shout tears through the noise just as the puck slides onto my stick.Their goalie is sprinting to the bench.Six attackers are coming.Thirty-two seconds left.We’re up by one.I cross center ice and see it the wide, open goal at the far end of the rink. No goalie. No defender was close enough to stop me.If I shoot now, it’s over.Championship sealed.Legacy cemented.The commentators have been saying it all week. If I win this Cup, with this roster, after this season, the debate ends.Greatest of all time.The shot that defines everything.The arena is on its feet.My skates carve over the blue line. The puck feels light on my blade, almost weightless. Like it knows what it’s about to become.A goal.A headline.A statue one day, maybe.Behind me, I hear Damon’s stride.Fast. Controlled. Close.He’s open to my left.He doesn’t call for it.He doesn’t need to.Three years ago, we were drafted into the same franchise and told we’d never work together.Too competitive.
Drop the puck.”The referee’s voice barely cuts through the roar.Game Seven.Championship night.The winner takes the Cup.Loser takes the silence.I lean forward at center ice, skates biting into the surface. The arena lights burn white overhead, too bright, almost cruel. Across from me, Damon Vale adjusts his grip on his stick.Boston blue.Not ours.Not anymore.For a second, the noise fades. It’s just the two of us in the circle like it used to be in practice trash talk under our breath, shoulders bumping, fighting for control.Only now, there are twenty thousand people watching.And the Cup waiting behind the glass.“You good?” he asks quietly.The audacity almost makes me laugh.“You?”His mouth tilts. “Always.”Liar.The puck slams down.We both lunge.His stick clashes with mine sharp, violent. He wins the draw by a fraction, batting it back to his defenseman.The crowd explodes.The game begins.This is what it’s come to.After the trade. After the buyout war. After the owne
Don’t sign it.”Damon’s voice cuts across the conference table just as the pen touches paper.Every head in the room snaps toward him.Victor Hale doesn’t look up. “This meeting doesn’t concern you anymore.”“It concerns him,” Damon says, stepping fully into the glass-walled boardroom. “And he hasn’t signed yet.”My hand freezes.The contract in front of me is thick. Final. A revised extension that locks me into the Kings for five more years. After last week’s press conference stunt, this was the compromise public reconciliation, private control.Sign, and the investigation talk “goes away.”Refuse, and I’m benched indefinitely for “conduct detrimental.”Simple.Clean.Calculated.Victor finally lifts his gaze. “Security let you in?”“I didn’t ask security.”Damon looks different in a suit. Sharper. Harder. Boston blue traded for charcoal gray. But his eyes are the same steady, storm-dark, fixed on me.My goal is simple.Protect my career.Keep playing.Keep fighting from inside.But
“Turn the cameras back on.”The media director freezes mid-whisper.We’re supposed to be done. The press conference ended thirty seconds ago. The reporters are already half-standing, shuffling papers, checking their phones for quotes.I’m supposed to walk off stage. Smile. Say we’ll “come back stronger next season.”Instead, I lean back into the microphone.“I’m not finished.”The room stills.Flashes start popping again.At the far end of the stage, Victor Hale slowly straightens in his seat.Owner of the Chicago Kings. Billionaire. Untouchable.The man who traded Damon in the middle of the playoffs and called it strategy.The man who thinks he owns everything.Including me.The coach mutters under his breath, “Don’t.”Too late.I look straight into the cameras.“You all want to know why we lost the championship?” I ask.A ripple of movement spreads through the reporters. They love this. Blood in the water.Victor’s voice is calm beside me. “Adrian.”A warning.I don’t look at him.“
Wait”The shout came too late.A flash exploded in my face.Then another.And another.Blake’s hand tightened around mine as we stepped out of the side entrance of the restaurant straight into chaos.Cameras.Microphones.Voices yelling our names.Goal right now?Get to the car.Say nothing.Don’t
“Say it again.”Her voice shook, but her chin was lifted like she refused to fall apart in front of me.We stood in the empty practice rink. Midnight. Lights low. Ice untouched.I had asked her to meet me here.Neutral ground.Honest ground.Goal right now?Tell the truth. All of it.Even if it bur
“Open it.”I didn’t look up from my phone.“Blake, it’s two in the morning.”“Open the damn door.”Something in his voice made my chest go tight.Not anger.Not this time.Fear.I unlocked the door.He pushed inside, hair wet from rain, hoodie half zipped, breath uneven like he had run all the way
“Tell me this is fake.”My phone hit the table between us.The headline glared up in bold black letters.Anonymous Source: Star Teammates Were Secretly Involved for Years.Blake didn’t touch the phone.He just stared at it.Goal right now?Contain it. Control it. Kill the story before it kills us.







