I was smashed up against the plexiglass, and threw an elbow back, pushing the guy off me. He grunted. âYouâre toast, Styles. We gonna burn your ass up.â The ref hit his whistle, skating over, waving to the penalty box.
It was a good call, but the crowd booed.
âWhatever.â
âPenalty!â The ref went over to identify the actual call, but the guy, number 25, was already heading to the box.
Labrowski came over. âYou okay?â
âYeah.â I turned to glare. It was our opposing teamâs enforcer whoâd come after me. Heâd been going at me hard all night long, ever since Atwater went after their teamâs lead scorer. Tit for tat, but I was getting sick of it.
âYou good?â The ref came back, and I nodded, my ego more bruised than anything. He gave a nod and headed back to where heâd drop the puck. âLetâs play then.â
Labrowski patted my shoulder pad, nodding to the bench. âLine change.â
Fuck. It was early, but we headed over, jumping in as the others climbed over the wall and got onto the ice. The game was going a few seconds later. âStyles.â Atwater tossed me a water. I caught it as I sat down, squeezing the bottle, the water spraying through the cage and into my mouth.
The coach came over, leaning down. âHow are you doing?â
I eyed him, giving him a quick nod. âIâm fine.â
âHeâs been going at you all night.â
I was aware. âIâm good, Coach.â
He gave another brisk nod before moving on, hitting me briefly on the shoulder with his coachâs tablet. Atwater sat in the space he just cleared out of and bent forward. âDonât worry. Keysâ got your back.â
Our enforcer and his enforcer. Theyâd been trading their targets all night long. Sometimes we didnât use our enforcer, but tonight was a different matter. The whole game was worse than the others, but Sacramentoâs team was living up to their reputation. They were rough and to fight dirty.
Rules were stricter in college than in the NHL, but these refs didnât seem aware of that. They were letting too much go.
We were in our third period. They were trying to go hard on me this first game, tire me out for the second game. I gritted my teeth, knowing I couldnât let it work.
âGo!â It was time for another line change.
The third line went out. We had the fourth still, and then itâd be my turn.
A few minutes later, we were on the ice.
I didnât wait around.
Skating over, I stole the puck and off I went. The harder they went at me, the harder I played. I needed to remind them of that fact.
Keys went to the left wing so I used his shield, moved around to their center. Around their center. Their defense was coming up, and I zipped around one, back through, and there was an opening.
Labrowski was behind me.
I deflected, hoping heâd catch this fast enough.
I feigned with my stick, but tapped the puck back with my skate, right to Labrowski, and GOAL!
He saw my pass, having seen it eighteen other times this season.
The goalie had moved with me, so the goal was wide open.
The light lit up, and as I was circling behind the net, their enforcer was glaring at me.
I glared right back.
Two minutes later, the end of the game sounded.
Weâd won, by our teeth.
My phone rang as I was walking into the hotel. Iâd stayed late for an extra soak and rubdown. I needed it. The coach told me to head in earlier the next morning for another one. Iâd need that too, though the most I needed right now was sleep.
Still, I answered, going to the corner and sinking down in a chair. âHey, Mom.â
âHow are you feeling?â She was chirpy, but concerned.
I winced. âMy body feels like a lump of blue cheese, all curdled up into one big bruise.â
âBlue cheese?â
I sank lower in my chair. âBlue cheese.â
âHe really went after you tonight.â
âWeâre nearing playoffs. Itâs expected.â
âI watch your games, Cruz. The other teams arenât like this one.â
I was just so tired. My head felt heavy, and I rested back, closing my eyes. âI know, but I canât do anything except not let them win.â
âTheyâre trying to slow you down for tomorrowâs game.â
âYeah.â
She was quiet on her end for a beat. âI canât give you any advice, so Iâm just going to tell you that I love you, Cruz. I have your back. Titi too.â
âThanks, Mom. I love you too. Howâs Titi?â
She was quiet again.
I sat up, some of the tiredness starting to fade. âMom?â
âOh.â She laughed, a little abruptly and cut herself off. âSorry. IâI wasnât sure if I should even tell you or when to tell you, butââ
I sat farther up. âMom? Whatâs going on with Titi?â
âNothing like that. Sheâsâsheâs perfect. Sheâs fine. But Sabrina Burford reached out.â
âWhat?â I clipped out. âShe has no reason to be reaching out.â
âWell, thatâs not totally true, Cruz.â My mom was speaking in her mom-voice, all authoritative. âShe expressed that she wants to make amends to Titi.â
âSheâs got noââ I growled.
âShe does, Cruz. She was in the car tooââ
I shoved up from my chair and began pacing. âYeah. She was in the car. She didnât stopââ
âYou know how Sissy could be.â
âI donât like this, Mom. I donât want Burford anywhere near Titi. Sheââ
âTitiâs asked about her.â
I stopped dead in my tracks. âWhat?â
This shit, right here.
I kept it separate. No one knew. Burford hadnât talked when she came to college, but why would she? It wasnât exactly a shining moment of glory for her, and the only other guy from our school was a science nerd but weâd never crossed paths. We didnât come from a large town, though I knew there were others who mightâve known. If I got into the NHL, one day this would get out, but when they saw Titi, I hoped the sight of her would stop any reporter from going forward with the story.
âShe saw her at your game, and she asked about Sissyâs friend. Iâ¦â A sob slipped out from her, her voice choking up. âI donât have it in me to lie to her. No matter anything thatâs happened, Titi still adores her big sister.â
My other sister. The reason Titi was in her wheelchair.
âMom.â I sank back down to my chair, sitting on the edge. âI told Sabrina to stay away from both of you. She shouldnât have reached out.â
âThatâs not your place.â
âMomââ
âListen.â
I knew my mom. I didnât need to see her to know that she was wiping the tears from her face as she forced out her take-charge Mom tone, a whole resolved look coming over her. What she said meant business, and I needed to pay attention.
She said further, âIâve decided to let Titi see her, or let Sabrina see Titi. I talked to her on the phone. She is apologetic, but she always was back then. WeâmeâI couldnât handle hearing her out back then. Not that I had any anger or blame for her, but the pain was too much to go through at the time. Iâve come a long ways now, and Titi is asking. I wanted you to know so you werenât blindsided, but sheâs driving here tomorrow. Sheâs going to have lunch with us.â
âMom, donât do this.â
âI think she just needs to apologize to Titi herself. The girl sounded tortured on the phone. IâI donât want anyone to be like that.â
âDonâtââ
âEnough, Cruz. Iâve made up my mind.â She added quickly, softening, âI love you, honey. You played a great game tonight. I know youâll do just as amazing tomorrow.â
âMomââ
She ended the call. Goddammit.
Fucking Burford. I told her to stay away.
I went through my phone and hit Burfordâs number.
It rang, then went straight to voicemail.
Sheâd declined my call.
A text came through a second later.
I tried sending another text, but sheâd blocked me.
Fuuuuuck.
I couldnât drive there myself.
I expelled a ragged breath and hit dial on Maraâs name.
She answered a second later, loud music blasting from her side. âHey!â
God. She sounded happy.
âHey.â
âHold on. I canât hear you. Let me find somewhereâone second.â She was at some party. Then, it went quiet and her voice came back louder. âHey. Hi. Sorry. My roommates had people over to watch your game tonight. Please tell me youâre going to beat the shit out of that guy from their team? I wanted to knee him in the balls. Taz has been offering to call in favors from people she knows. Donât ever ask her about those people. Sheâll go on and on about them for hours.â
âYou knowââ
What was I doing here?
âHey, what is it? You never call like this. Whatâs going on?â
âItâs nothing. For real. IâmâHow are you?â
She didnât answer right away. âIâm good, but are you sure youâre okay?â
âYeah. Itâs nothing. Do you want to study on Sunday?â
âSure.â She said it slowly. âWe can do that.â
âAwesome. Talk to you then.â
I hung up before I said anything more. Mara my girlfriend. Iâd been about to treat her like she was. She had her own stuff, and Iâd been about to lay even more on her.
Damn.