Find Me on the Ice: Chapter 1
Find Me on the Ice: Hockey Romance (Nighthawks Book 2)
Reality is a devil. No one can outrun it. It always catches up to you.
âNikki? Nikki?â a young man calls from behind the counter, scanning the small crowd waiting for their orders.
My eyes read his name tagâ
. I wonder what Jeffâs life is like. Does he have a family? A girlfriend? A boyfriend? Does he ski? Does he secretly have an obsession with serial killers? Does heâ
âNikki?â he calls out once more before my brain finally registers the name.
You would think that after all this time, I would be better at responding to that name, but here I am, looking like an idiot as I approach the counter. Grabbing the pizza from Jeff, I offer a smile that Iâm sure shows my embarrassment.
But he brushes me off without a glance or a word, grabbing the next order to hand out. Everyone else might be offended or upset to be forgotten so easily, but not me, never me. A ghost is what I became all those years ago and a ghost I will remain.
Hiding in the background is a skill that I acquired after three years of practice. And I walk out of the pizza parlor with the same permanent sinking feeling that lives in my gut, one that will stay with me until the day I die. Or the day does.
Because every face has eyes. Every shadow has profile, figure. Every laugh is an echo of the past. Every scream is my voice, and every minute of my future is stolen.
One day, no matter how hard I resist, death will come, and he wonât come knocking. He will come with rage and fury that would make the Devil jealous, and when he sees fit, he will kill me and bottle up my screams as a keepsake.
My feet carry me out of the building in precise steps, one after the other. Taking a deep breath, I turn toward my shop, Nikkiâs Coffee. My free hand slips into my pocket and grabs my keys, fiddling until it wraps around the one I need.
As I approach the door, my phone starts ringing, and I slide the key into the top dead bolt and unlock it, ignoring the sound going off in my pocket. I repeat the same steps on the next two dead bolts and let myself inside. My phone quiets at the same time the door seals shut.
Silence envelops me, calm, reassuring, silence. Most people canât stand it. They have to sleep with a TV on, a radio on. They have to have some form of buzzing around them to drown out their thoughts. It gives them a sense of comfort. But is my comfort.
Silence is my friend. It protects me.
I walk toward the restrooms and unlock the door to my loft, pulling out my phone. Chloeâs name pops up next to Missed Call.
Chloe is my best friend, my little trust fund baby, who moonlights as my hero. I got out of Oregon as fast as I possibly could. I drove to what I thought would be the quietest town I could get to at that day and time. I watched her enter her house alone and thought she might be able to point me to the homeless shelter or at least give me a place to crash for the night.
But when I showed up on her doorstep, quite literally, bruised black and blue, she didnât bat an eye, and she immediately took me under her wing. She seemed to sense my fear and desperation, and she saved me. She is the sole reason for me being where I am right now, both physically and mentally.
She didnât hesitate; she ushered me inside and refused to let me leave until I opened up to her. Trust me, I tried to leave. I was terrified that I couldnât trust her, that she might know him. That she would believe him because of who he was. But she didnât, and she didnât care who he was or the power and position he still held. She risked everything to help a stranger she owed nothing to. She became a stranger I would owe everything to. She gave me a chance at life again.
After I enter my loft, I lock the door, which takes longer than you might imagine. I start at the top with the chain lock, moving downward to two dead bolts, a swing bar, then a custom barrel boltâten inches in lengthâand last but not least, the open bar barricade. Which is a fancy term for a two-by-four, held in place by two metal brackets.
. My phone rings in my pocket. It is Chloeâs text, which always follows a missed call.
She is a bit older than me. Sheâs twenty-nine, and Iâm twenty-two. Our relationship bounces between a mother and daughter to sisters to best friends, depending on the situation. At times, it can be confusing, but I swallow the discomfort because I owe her . This coffee shop might have my fake name on the door, but it has her real one on the lease.
The same goes for my car, my phone, my debit cards. I donât exist. I am merely an extension of Chloe Dupont.
It was her idea for the coffee shop. She wanted a business adventure of her own, outside of what her family does, and I was the perfect built-in worker.
The Duponts are filthy rich. They own Zonama, the largest online retailer. Iâm not talking millions. Iâm talking billions. They influence the entire economy with their platform. Itâs equal parts impressive and intimidating.
Why they had picked Duluth to headquarter in surprised me. Why not pick, like, California or a major US city? But Chloe said that her dad wanted to keep it in a smaller town, and no one questioned his decision. Apparently, he had spent a lot of time here when he was younger and wanted to move back.
Iâve only met her parents one time. They were nice and incredibly down-to-earth despite the empire they had built and the wealth they had both been born into.
. The follow-up reminder that, two minutes ago, I got a text.
Chloe: Hi! Did you eat tonight?
I type out a quick response.
Me: I just got home with pizza! ð
Chloe: Good. Get some rest. Iâll see you in the morning! XO Without sending a response, I lock my phone and set it on my kitchen counter. No other texts or calls will come through tonight. Unless theyâre from Chloe. I know that for a fact. Because there is only one contact saved in my phoneâhers.
I pour myself a glass of water, quickly scarf down three slices of my pizza, and then store the rest in my fridge for later.
My bed is calling to me like a siren. With my mug of water, I swipe my phone from the counter, and in less than five steps, Iâm at the edge of my bed, pulling the comforter back and climbing in.
I donât think the loft was ever intended to be used for a living space, but Chloe had a vision when she saw the place and turned her vision into a reality.
Her brother, Derek, is a surgeon. He works constantly, but he still managed to find time to do the majority of the physical labor while Chloe decorated the small studio apartment with the softest hues in pale and earth tones. Red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purpleâshe picked every color of the rainbow. And somehow, it still looks put together and simple.
She was also the one who insisted I dye my hair the pale pink it is right now. My natural color is comparable to the brown hues of dark chocolate. And I had never done a color outside of going a little lighter or darker brown, outside of my one slipup. So, going pale pink is something Trey would never expect, so different from my usual routine.
It took much longer than Iâd expected to get from my dark brown to this shade of pink. And I vividly remember the anxiety and bone-deep fear that coursed through me as Chloeâs hairdresser dyed my hair. The fear that he had instilled in me if I broke any of his rules.
Iâd made the mistake of shaking things up when I was still with him, opting for a red hue in my hair.
I paid the price for that mistake. I learned two lessons that day: Trey Roark didnât want to love me; he wanted to own me, shape me, and mold me into whatever he desired. And I learned to never make the same mistake twice.
What if he hates it?
done this slapped Iâm so sorry, honeybee. I didnât mean to go as far as I did. I never want to hurt you. I love you. I hope you can see that. It will never happen again.
That was one of the many lies he told.
Because it did happen again. It happened when he hit me so hard that I went unconscious, when he kicked me so hard that it broke some of my ribs, when he grabbed my hair so hard that it ripped skin from my scalp, when he threw me down the stairs and I ended up in the hospital from the terrible âaccident.â
Lie. Lie. Lie. Endless lies.
Which was why I had to get out, escape. And there was only one way he would let me leave.
His own words were, âYou are mine. Always mine. No one else will love you or touch you. Till death do us part.â
So, I died in every sense that mattered.
My parents buried an empty coffin, but they didnât know that. They thought I was inside, starting to rot away. They mourned me, as did Trey in his own sick, twisted way. My friends cried and then eventually moved on with their livesâI assume at least.
Everyone in my life thought I had died, everyone but me. No loose ends. That was the only way it would work. And it did. It worked.
But I canât take a chance. One slipup, and heâll find me. I know for a fact that if I had stayed or if he ever found out that I was alive, he would kill me.
The day they buried my coffin, Nikki Satinn was born, and Morgan Dove died.
And that is the way it will stay.