Iâm not vibing with these prompts for my creative writing classâs short-form fiction assignment. Invisibility potions; monsters swimming beneath ships; finding a genie in a bottle. One of the things I like about writing is that I get to pick what itâs about. Being fenced in like this makes me strangely resentful. Theyâre all sort of science-fiction, adventure, or thriller themed, too. Couldnât one of them at least leave room for me to include a little romance? I suppose monster romance is a thing. Maybe I could do thatâ¦
The front door slams, and I glance up from my laptop eagerly.
Tyler steps inside a moment later, crossing the room to me. Heâs dressed in head-to-toe training gear like he has been all week, not even bothering to change into street clothes. Just clean sets of training clothes in steady rotation like itâs the literal only thing on his mind.
Drawing closer, he plants a kiss on the top of my head. âHey, Ser.â
âHi.â I move to close the laptop, but before I can, heâs already halfway out the room. Not sure why I expected otherwise; he gave me a thorough rundown of his schedule for the week.
Iâm not part of it.
He didnât directly say that. He didnât need to. Thereâs no free time left between all his off-ice coaching, team practices, studying, and extra training heâs crammed in there in advance of this hockey invitational heâs attending this weekend.
Heart aching, I lean back against the leather couch and re-open the homework I was working on. This week has been awful. One for the record books in the worst possible way. My friendship with Abby is finished, which means I have one less friend here, and I didnât have all that many to begin with. Even if she sucked, she made my life look better on paper.
Iâm also still waiting on the BRCA test results. Enough said.
Then Chase gave me a speech about how I shouldnât have lied to him and hid things from him for so long. It came from more of an, âIâm not mad, Iâm disappointedâ angle, and somehow that made me feel a million times worse than if heâd been angry with me.
And, as evidenced by what happened two minutes ago, Tyler has been distant all week. Heâs hardly initiated texts, doesnât seem present when weâre together, and all-around seems, well, disinterested in me. Maybe itâs more distraction than lack of interest, but itâs been several days, and itâs hard not to take it personally at this point.
When I try to talk about it, he claims itâs about hockey. How can I believe that when he wonât elaborate beyond that?
I thought being outed in front of everyone would make being with him easier, not worse.
Maybe thatâs where I went wrong. Technically, Iâm not âwithâ him in the first place.
Not long after, Tyler is out the door again, this time with Dallas and Chase for team practice. Bailey and Siobhan have come over for a movie night, but itâs pretty clear my mind is somewhere else. We pause the movie halfway through and end up talking instead.
Itâs mostly me talking. And crying.
Bailey inclines her head sympathetically. âHeâs on a losing streak, Sera. I donât think he intends for it to be personal.â
I sniffle, wiping my nose with a tissue. âIt feels personal.â Shouldnât he want me to be there for him if something is wrong? He opened up so much to me about hockey before and now, heâs like a vault. That heâs pushing me away makes me feel like there has to be something more to it.
âIâm sorry.â Shivâs hand lands on my arm, rubbing. âFor what itâs worth, Iâve seen the way he looks at you and let me tell you, that man is obsessed.â
âHa. Doubtful.â Adding my crumpled tissue to the mountain beside me, I reach for my bowl of popcorn. Might as well drown my feelings in food. Though at this point, itâll take an Olympic swimming poolâs worth of snacks to make a dent.
âNot to brag,â she says, âbut my people-reading skills are top notch. I knew something was going on between you guys long before I caught you.â
I pause with a handful of popcorn in my hand, and one falls back into the bowl. âYou did?â
âOf course. Even at Chaseâs birthday, Tyler was staring at you all night.â Siobhan waves her Twizzler at me as if to emphasize. âEvery time I came over, I noticed the same thing. He looks at you like youâre the only person in the room.â
Itâs not lost on me thatâs exactly how Iâd describe the way my dad used to look at my mom.
âShivâs right,â Bailey chimes in. âEven I had started to think something was up after Valentineâs Day. Chase mentioned it to me once or twice, too. He thought Tyler had a crush on you, but he didnât realize something was actually going on.â
My stomach churns because I want to believe what theyâre saying but Iâm scared to let myself. If what theyâre saying is true, he certainly isnât showing it.
Then again, why should he? It isnât like he owes me anything.
Even worse, I created this mess by telling him we should âjust have fun.â My ability to separate sex from emotion has fallen woefully flat when it comes to him. Now Iâm tangled in a web of feelings Iâm not sure he returnsâor is even capable of returning. Heâs made it more than clear hockey is his priority.
Suddenly, an email pops up on my phone. Thinking itâll be my latest creative writing grade, I swipe into it.
What? Oh my god. They didnât call me. Does this mean they just went ahead and booked me in? My test results must be back.
Blood roars in my ears as I look at the screen. Tuesday. Iâll know by Tuesday.
âGive him some time,â Siobhan says, snapping my attention back to her. âSometimes it takes people awhile to realize their taxi cab light has turned on.â