The second the buzzer goes off to signal the end of the first period, I jump out of my seat. So does Summer, but I rest my hand on her shoulder. âTheyâre not going to let you in.â
âHow do you know?â she demands.
âBecause I know my father. Hell, he might not even let me in. But if anyone has the chance, it will be me. I promise Iâll text you the second I know something.â
âOkay.â Summer looks shell-shocked, and the expression isnât unique to her. Everyone around us is still beyond stunned.
Nobody knows what the hell happened down there, except that the game turned into some sort of bloodsport. Hunter left before the period ended, cradling his arm. So did Nate and one Harvard player whose name and jersey number I didnât catch.
For the rest of the first period, we were missing two of our best players, but we somehow managed to hold Harvard off until the buzzer. There are two periods left and I have no idea whatâs going on. Neither the referees nor the announcers up in the media booth revealed why those players left. In college hockey, fighting is not allowed. It can get you ejected. Except, Hunter didnât start the fight, nor did he fight back. And I have no clue why Nate got involved. Heâs usually more levelheaded than that.
I hurry out of the rink in search of answers. Other people are also leaving, so I elbow my way through the crowd as I walk toward the locker rooms. Dad always gives me a pass, just in case. It doesnât guarantee entrance into the actual locker room, but it means I can access any off-limits areas. I flash my pass to a security guard and turn down another corridor.
Another guard stands near the visiting teamâs locker room. âHey,â I greet him, holding up my lanyard. âIâm Coach Jensenâs daughter and the team manager.â The second part is a lie, but Iâm hoping it aids my case.
It does. The man quickly steps aside.
I open the door in time to hear my fatherâs voice. It sounds deadly as fuck. âWhat the hell did you have to go and do that for, Rhodes?â
I donât hear Nateâs mumbled response.
I slowly creep toward where the players are gathered. Nobody notices me. Why would they? Iâm hidden in a sea of big bodies that all tower over me.
âWell, Davenportâs out. Heâs getting x-rays, but the team doc says she doesnât need the scans to tell her the wrist is broken.â
My stomach drops. Dad doesnât sound at all happy, and I donât blame him. Hunter is out of the game.
âAnd Rhodes, youâve been ejected for your part in the scrum.â
Holy shit. Nateâs out, too? Theyâre our best players!
âOn their side, we have Jonah Hemley getting ejected. Which is no big loss to them.â Dad sneers. âThe kid was filling in for Coby Chilton, who mightâve pulled a hammy. Except he didnât pull a damn hammy, and now the power line is back in business.â
My God. This is a travesty. Panic weakens my muscles, becauseâ¦we might actually lose now.
My father doesnât vocalize my fear, but I know heâs thinking it, too. And he sounds enraged as he addresses his players. âWhat the hell went on down there?â
Thereâs a long, fearful silence. Fitz is the one who finds the balls to speak up. âFrom what I gathered, Hunter slept with Hemleyâs girlfriend. Unknowingly,â Fitz adds.
âIs this a fucking joke? And if youâre going to screw one of their girlfriends, it couldnât have been Connellyâs?â Dad growls. âAt least then we wouldnât have to worry about him.â
Even though Iâm upset for my team, I have to swallow a wave of laughterâbecause I donât think Dad would be endorsing anyone having sex with Connellyâs girlfriend if he knew it was me.
Not that Iâm Jakeâs girlfriend, but I am the girl in his life, andâno, I canât think about this right now. Weâre in crisis mode.
âJesus, Rhodes. What were you thinking!â Dad is clearly livid at his captain.
Iâm not too thrilled with him, either. What happened to being the better man? Nate was so adamant about taking the high road after the whipped-cream incident, ordering Wilkes not to retaliate. And now he goes and loses his cool on the ice? Retaliating against Hemley for the attack on Hunter? Itâs completely unlike him.
Nateâs tone tells me that heâs as angry and disgusted with himself as my father is. âI snapped,â he says shamefully. âThat asshole broke Hunterâs wrist, Coach. And then he had the balls to say Hunter deserved it. It was the most sickening thing Iâd heard, andâ¦I snapped,â he repeats. âIâm sorry, Coach.â
âI hear you, kid. But an apology ainât gonna put you back in this game.â
AKA, weâre utterly screwed.
I edge backward and leave the locker room. âDoesnât sound good in there,â the security man says sympathetically.
âItâs not.â
I hurry back to our seats, where I file a report with Summer and the others. âLooks like Hunter is out, and so is Nate.â
Summer gasps
So does Rupi, who as usual is dressed like a walking J. Crew ad. Or a super-prissy American Girl doll. I wonder how many girlie, collared dresses she actually owns. Thousands, probably.
âThis is a disaster!â Summer moans.
âYup,â I say morosely, and weâre not wrong.
When the second period gets underway, you can see the difference in Briarâs game almost immediately. Itâs like watching an Olympic sprinter crush the first heat of the 100-meter dash, only to come out for the next heat to find that there are spikes on the track. Without Nate, the captain of the team, and Hunter, our best forward, weâre struggling right out of the gate. Fitz and Hollis canât carry the entire team. Our younger players arenât fully developed yet, and the best ones, Matt Anderson and Jesse Wilkes, are physically incapable of keeping up with Connelly.
My eyes track Jake as he scores early in the second. Itâs a beautiful shot, a work of art. Now Harvard is leading 2â1. And two minutes before the end of the period, Weston gives Harvard a power play by drawing a penalty from Fitz, who rarely visits the box.
Summer drops her face in her manicured hands. âOmigod, this is awful.â She finally glances up, seeking out her boyfriend. âHis head looks like itâs about to explode.â
Sure enough, Fitz is stewing and simmering in the penalty box. Red-faced and clenching his jaw so tight, the muscles there are actually quivering.
Harvard takes advantage of the penalty Weston the asshole provoked. And just because I played Scrabble with the guy and he helped me out with Eric doesnât make him any less of the enemy right now. Right now I loathe him. Maybe a couple days from now we can play Scrabble again, but right now I want him erased from the face of the planet.
Unfortunately, Briar is shorthanded, and Weston is the one who ends up scoring the power-play goal. Then Fitz is back and weâre able to breathe easy again.
Weston tries the same thing on Hollis during his next shift, but Hollis doesnât fall for it, bless his puppy-dog heart. Instead, the refs catch Westonâs dirty hit and he takes a two-minute minor, and weâre all on our feet screaming ourselves hoarse when Briar scores.
3-2 now.
The second period is over. âYou can do it,â I whisper to the boys as they disappear in the chute toward the locker rooms. Hopefully my dad gives them a Miracle-worthy speech and we can come back, tie it up early in the third, and then score again and win the damn game.
âWe still have a chance, right?â Summerâs eyes glimmer with hope.
âOf course we do. We got this,â I say firmly.
Weâre on our feet again when the third period starts. Itâs scoreless for almost six minutes, until, in the middle of a shoving battle in Harvardâs zone, Jesse Wilkes gets a shot off that careens right between Johanssonâs legs. Itâs a total fluke, but Iâll take it. The Briar fans go insane as the scoreboard switches to 3â3.
I canât believe everyone is still maintaining the same level of speed that kicked off the game. They must be exhausted after two grueling periods. But both teams are still playing like the entire season is on the line. Because it is.
Iâm mesmerized as I watch Jake do what he does best. Heâs impossibly fast and I canât help imagining him in Edmonton next year. Heâs going to have a hell of a season if he plays even half as well as heâs playing tonight.
âHeâs so good,â Summer says grudgingly, as Jake literally dekes out three of our boys to charge the net.
He takes a shot. Luckily he misses, and Iâm ashamed to say I experience a spark of disappointment when Corsen thwarts Jakeâs attempt.
Oh God. Where do my loyalties lie? I want Briar to win. I truly do. And I hate what that Harvard player did to Hunter and Nate.
But I also want Jake to succeed. Heâs magnificent.
Weâre still tied, and the clock is winding down. The possibility of overtime worries me. I donât know if we have enough juice left to hold them off. Especially Corsen. Heâs good in the net, but heâs not the best.
Johansson, on the other hand, Iâd definitely rank in the top three of college goalies. He stops every shot like a pro. He didnât enter the NHL draft when he became eligible, but I hope he tries to sign with someone after college. Heâs too good not to.
âCome on, guys!â Summer screams. âLetâs do this!â Her shouted encouragement is drowned out by the shouts of everyone around us.
My ears are going to be ringing hardcore after this game, but itâs worth it. Thereâs nothing better than live hockey. The excitement in the air is contagious. Addictive. I want to be able to do this for a living, not as a player, but a participant. I want to cheer for these athletes, talk to them while theyâre still hopped up on whatever it is that makes them come alive on the ice. Adrenaline, talent, pride. I want to be part of that, in whatever capacity I can.
Three minutes left, and the score remains 3-3.
Jakeâs line is back. Brooks is up to his usual tricks, except no oneâs falling for them anymore. I think itâs pissing him off, judging by the hard set of his shoulders. Good. He deserves it. It wonât be dirty tricks that win Harvard this game. Itâll have to be skill. Unfortunately, theyâre drowning in skilled players
Thereâs exactly two minutes and forty-six seconds left when Jake gets a breakaway. My heart is torn, sinking when he gets the puck, and yet soaring when he nears our net. He winds up his arm to take a shot, and itâs another work of art. A gorgeous bullet. When the announcers shout, âGOALLLLLL!â my heart is somehow caught in both a tailspin and a steep climb. Iâm surprised I donât vomit from the nauseating sensation.
Harvard is in the lead now, and weâve only got two and a half minutes to try to tie it up again. The Briar fans in the arena are screaming. The clock keeps ticking.
Two minutes left.
A minute and a half.
Briar scrambles. Fitz gets a shot on net, and a collective groan rocks half the stands when Johansson stops it. The goalie holds on, and the whistle blows.
I cup my mouth with both hands. âCome on, boys!â I shout as they line up for the faceoff. They have one minute and fifteen seconds to make something happen.
But Coach Pedersen is no fool. He puts his best guys on the ice for the last minute, treating it like a penalty kill. Itâs the A-Team: Will Bray and Dmitry Petrov on defense; Connelly, Weston, and Chilton filling the forward slots. And theyâre so fucking solid. The puck remains in their possession the entire time. Harvard is on the attack and Corsen is like a ninja, fending off shot after shot after shot. And although it helps us, this is not what we need to be doing. We shouldnât be stopping bullets, we should be unleashing our own.
Ten seconds to go. Disappointment forms in my belly. I peer toward the Briar bench, seeking out my dad. His face is completely expressionless, but his jaw holds a lot of tension. He knows whatâs about to happen.
BUZZZZZ!
The third period is over.
Briar loses.
Harvard wins.
âI canât believe this.â Summer tucks a strand of golden hair behind her ear as she and I stand in one corner of the lobby. âI feel so bad for Fitzy.â
âMe too. And for the rest of the guys.â
âWell, of course. Them, too.â She rests her head against my shoulder, her glum gaze fixed on the entry to the corridor. Weâre waiting for the players to come out, and weâre not the only ones. Fans and puck bunnies alike loiter in the cavernous space, ready to offer support and comfort to both the winners and the losers. At least most of the Briar guys will get laid without much effort tonight.
Since itâs an away game, my father and the guys have to ride the bus back to campus. Some Harvard players trickle out first, and the girlfriends and groupies swarm like bees. Jake and Brooks appear, both looking undeniably fine in their dark suits. I love whoever came up with the after-game dress code. Their suit jackets stretch across impossibly broad shoulders, and my heart does a little flip when I notice Jakeâs hair is still damp from the shower. Which plants in my head the image of a naked Jake in the shower. Which is delicious.
Westonâs face lights up when he spots Summer. âDi Laurentis!â He saunters over and opens his arms for a hug.
She glowers at him. âDonât you dare. No hugs tonight.â
âCome on, donât be a sore loser.â He widens his arms.
After a moment, she gives him a quick hug.
Jake winks at me from over Westonâs shoulder and Summerâs head.
My lips curve slightly. âGood game, Connelly.â
I see him fighting a smile. âThanks, Jensen.â
Summer steps out of Westonâs embrace. âSo,â she tells him. âLooks like your penalty provoking didnât work too well in the second and third.â
âYeah, the refs got meaner after the Jonah thing.â
âThe Jonah thing?â she echoes, poking Brooks in the center of his chest. âIt was more than a âthingâ! He broke Hunterâs wrist!â
âIt was an accident,â Brooks protests.
As they argue, a familiar face catches my eye. Itâs the girl from the Coffee HutâJakeâs friend. Hazel, was it? Sheâs moving through the crowd, scanning faces until her gaze suddenly collides with mine. Then she notices Jake standing two feet away from me, and a frown mars her face.
I tense in anticipation of her approach, but for some reason she stays rooted in place. Interesting. Didnât she proclaim herself Jakeâs closest friend and confidante?
I arch a brow in her direction. Her frown deepens.
As I break the eye contact, my peripheral vision snags on another familiar figure. I turn to see my father emerging from the corridor. Unfortunately, his arrival is perfectly timed with that of Daryl Pedersen.
Uh-oh.
The two coaches exchange a few words as they fall into step with each other. Dad is stone-faced, as per usual. He nods at something Pedersen says. I can easily guess their exchangeâthe usual good game, thanks, some fake camaraderie. But as they get closer, I distinctly hear Pedersen say, âNice try.â
Iâm not sure what he means, and I guess Dad is also stumped, because rather than walk away, he stops. âWhat do you mean by that?â
âYou know exactly what I mean. Solid effort with the tricks.â Pedersen chuckles. When he notices me standing near Jake, his eyebrows flick up, and a little smirk forms on his lips.
A sick feeling swirls in my stomach.
Since my father doesnât think rationally when it comes to the Harvard coach, he digs his feet in, his stance aggressive. âWhat tricks?â he asks coldly.
âIâm just saying, your plan to distract my star player didnât work.â
From the corner of my eye, I see Jake frown.
âI didnât expect that of you, though.â Pedersen shrugs. âNot the Chad I know, thatâs for sure.â
Jake steps closer to me, and it feels almost like a protective gesture. My father doesnât notice, however. Heâs too busy glowering at Pedersen. The interaction has drawn a small audience, mostly comprised of Briar players.
âI donât know what youâre talking about,â my father says irritably.
âIâm sure you donât.â Pedersen laughs again. âBut itâs nice knowing youâre not above pimping out your own daughter.â
Oh my God.
Silence descends, like dead air in a live newscast. My pulse races, and Iâm pretty sure my blood pressure has dropped, because Iâm feeling light-headed.
Dad glances at me for a second, before directing a glacial stare at his nemesis. âAs usual, Daryl, youâre talking out of your ass.â
The other man cocks a brow. âTo be honest, it was extremely satisfying being proven right. Iâve always suspected youâre not the honorable, rule-abiding martyr you present yourself as. The pillar of honesty and integrity, right?â Pedersen rolls his eyes. âAlways thought it was an act. And while Iâm glad to know the level youâll stoop to, for chrissake, Chad. Your daughter setting up a honey trap for Connelly? I get that you hate me, but come on, that move was beneath you.â
Pedersen stalks off, leaving my father and the rest of our audience to absorb the impact of his accusation. Several seconds of silence pass.
Summer is the first to address the issue. âBee?â she says uncertainly. âIs that true?â
And suddenly all eyes are on me and Jake.