Mag-log inI didn’t think at all about the consequences because thinking had only gotten me a hollow chest and a front-row seat to my own humiliation.
The air between us was charged, thick with the smell of the ice and the salt on Michael’s skin. He was still talking, his lips moving, probably dropping another polished insult designed to make me crack, but the sound had cut out. All I could hear was the blood rushing in my ears, a rhythmic, violent thud that matched the pulse in my throat. I looked past his shoulder one last time. Liam was laughing now, his hand sliding up Chloe’s waist, his eyes scanning the ice until they found me. He gave me a slow, deliberate nod, a victor acknowledging the defeated. Something in me snapped. It wasn't a clean break; it was a total collapse of the walls I’d spent years building. "Shut up, Rossi," I growled. Michael’s eyebrows shot up, a smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. "Make me, Thorn—" I didn't let him finish. I dropped my stick, the heavy composite clattering against the ice like a gunshot. My hands, still encased in my bulky gloves, came up and seized him. I grabbed the collar of his jersey, the fabric bunching in my grip, and yanked him toward me. Because he was on skates, he slid forward easily, his chest slamming into mine with a dull thud of padding meeting padding. And then I kissed him. It wasn't a sweet kiss but it was intense as hell. I shoved my mouth against his, hard enough that I felt his teeth scrape against the inside of my lip. I wanted to bruise him. I wanted to erase the image of Chloe and Liam with something so shocking, so fundamentally wrong, that the world would stop spinning. Michael froze. For a heartbeat, he was a statue, his hands hovering near my waist as if he were about to shove me across the rink. I expected a punch. I expected to be tackled. Instead, I felt his fingers curl into the fabric of my jersey. He didn't pull away. He leaned in. His mouth opened under mine, a low, guttural sound vibrating in his chest that I felt more than heard. It wasn't the kiss of an enemy; it was the kiss of someone who had been waiting for a reason to bite back. Rossi's tongue slipped inside my mouth, his teeth grazing against my lip, his stubble scratching my chin. I shuddered, a whine rising in my throat as Rossi took my chin in one hand and kissed me hard and deep, his tongue exploring my mouth, so damn confident and forceful it quickly overwhelmed me. I didn’t like it one bit. I didn’t like how emasculated the kiss made me feel, as though I were some kind of girl, a virgin girl, who’d never kissed anyone. It was too intense and strange, Rossi’s stubble making it glaringly obvious that I was being kissed by a man. But it felt like my body was melting, my knees going weak and limbs boneless The stadium, which had been a roar of post-game celebration, went unnervingly quiet. It was that specific kind of silence that happens right before a riot breaks out. I squeezed my eyes shut, my gloved hands moving from his collar to the back of his neck, pulling him closer until there wasn't a single inch of cold air between us. I wasn't thinking about the fact that I was straight. I wasn't thinking about the fact that this was the man I’d hated for three hundred and sixty-five days. I was only thinking about the way Liam’s smirk must have vanished. I was thinking about the way Chloe’s jaw must have dropped. I was using Michael Rossi as a shield against my own pain, and the terrifying part was that he was letting me. He pulled back just an inch, his forehead resting against mine, his breath coming in jagged, shallow hitches. His dark eyes were blown out, the pupils swallowing the iris until they were almost entirely black. "Thorne," he whispered, his voice wrecked, stripped of all that usual arrogance. I didn't answer. I couldn't. My heart was trying to kick its way out of my ribs. I let go of his neck, my hands trembling so violently I had to hide them by my sides. I didn't look at the stands. I didn't look at my teammates, who I knew were staring at us like we’d both grown second heads. I just turned on my skates and headed for the tunnel, my vision blurred and my skin feeling like it was on fire. I had given them something to talk about. But as I cleared the ice, the realization of what I’d just done hit me like a blindside hit to the kidneys. I hadn't just kissed a guy. I’d kissed that guy. And Michael hadn't fought me. He’d kissed me back. The silence of the tunnel was a lie. Behind me, the arena was finally waking up from the shock, the low murmur of thousands of people beginning to swell into a roar of confusion and frantic chatter. But in the concrete hallway leading to the locker room, the only sound was the rhythmic, hollow thud-scrape of my own skates. I didn't look back. If I looked back, I’d see Michael. I’d see his expression, or worse, I’d see the look on Liam’s face, and I wasn't sure if I’d throw up or start swinging. I hit the heavy double doors of the Knights' locker room and shoved them open so hard they bounced off the rubber stoppers with a loud crack. I stumbled inside, my breath coming in short, panicked bursts. I needed to get this gear off. It felt like it was shrinking, crushing the air out of my lungs. I ripped the Velcro straps of my gloves off with my teeth and flung them across the room. They hit the far wall and slumped to the floor. "Axel?"INTERVIEWThe Setting: A slightly cramped, dimly lit studio office. I am sitting behind a desk piled high with notebooks and coffee cups. Michael and Axel are sitting on a worn-out leather sofa across from me. Michael is leaning back, looking entirely too relaxed, while Axel is trying to adjust his scrubs and look professional.Me (The Writer): "Listen, I am only doing this because my editor forced me to, and quite frankly, I am still recovering from the stress you two put me through. You kept me up until three in the morning for months, Michael, and I haven't forgiven you for that stunt at the press conference. Try to keep the PDA to a minimum, or I swear I will write a scene where you both get food poisoning from that pizza you love so much. Am I understood?"Michael: [He smirks, leaning an arm along the back of the sofa, looking at me with pure amusement.] "You’re the one who put us in these situations, aren't you? If anyone should be apologizing for the stress, I think it’s the pe
The morning light filtered through the glass windows of our kitchen, and the soft glow illuminated my heavy nursing textbooks. I sat at the marble island with a steaming mug of coffee, and I focused on the complex diagrams for my final board exams.The house felt very peaceful, and the only sound came from the distant hum of the dishwasher in the next room. I took a slow sip of my drink, and I felt a sense of calm that I never managed to find during my college years.I heard the familiar thumping of footsteps in the living room, and I looked over my shoulder to see Michael sitting on the fabric sofa. He wore a pair of comfortable gray sweatpants, and he held a cold ice pack against his right knee."How does the knee feel after that professional game last night?" I asked him, and I pushed my thick textbook aside to focus on his recovery. "You played very hard, and I watched the final period until the clock hit zero.""My knee feels a lot better today, because the ice helps reduce the s
I knelt on the carpeted floor of the quiet hallway, and I held the small velvet box up to the man I loved. Axel stared at the silver ring shining under the overhead lights, and hot tears spilled down his flushed cheeks.He covered his mouth with his shaking hands, and he let out a loud sob that echoed in the empty corridor. I waited for his verbal answer, and my heart beat fast inside my chest."You are an absolute idiot for doing this today, Michael," Axel cried out, and he wiped the wet tears from his face. "You told the national sports media about our private life, and you almost gave me a heart attack in that crowded room.""I wanted the whole world to know you belong to me, and I did not want to wait another day," I answered him. "I love you a lot, so please tell me your final answer.""Yes, I will marry you," Axel spoke through his happy tears, and he nodded his head several times to confirm his choice. "I will marry you, but I am still mad at you for the public surprise."I let
His final word echoed through the large media room, and my brain stopped working for a few seconds. I stood frozen near the heavy wooden doors, and I felt a bright red blush cover my warm face.The quiet room erupted into loud chaos, and the sharp noise hurt my ears. The sports journalists gasped out loud, and they typed fast messages into their laptop computers.They twisted their bodies in their metal folding chairs, and they turned around to follow Michael's loving gaze. A dozen bright camera flashes pointed toward the back of the room, and the photographers took pictures of my blue medical scrubs.The reporters started shouting new questions at the wooden podium, and they begged Michael for more details about our relationship. They wanted to know the date of the wedding, and they asked about my identity.I felt very overwhelmed by the unexpected attention, and I wanted to hide my red face behind my hands. I did not know how to handle the national sports media, and I felt very scar
A young man in the front row suddenly stood up from his metal folding chair, and he held a yellow notepad in his hand. He did not wait for permission to speak, and he pulled the silver microphone close to his mouth.The loud reporter stared at Michael with a challenging look, and he decided to ask a very personal question. The room grew very quiet, and the other journalists stopped typing on their keyboards to listen."My sources claim you rejected the initial rookie offer during your first meeting with the front office last month," the reporter shouted into the microphone. "Is it true you almost gave up this draft pick to stay in-state with your partner?"I stopped breathing for a second, and I felt a cold chill run down my spine. The question felt very intrusive, and I worried the media would try to spin our private lives into a negative scandal for the public.The team manager stepped forward with a deep frown on his face, and he reached out to grab the microphone away from the pod
I started my morning orientation at the Seattle hospital very early, and the large medical center felt very intimidating. I walked through the busy emergency ward, and I introduced myself to the senior nursing staff.The medical equipment looked very advanced, and the clean hallways smelled like fresh antiseptic. I carried my heavy textbook under my arm, and I took careful notes during the training sessions.I wanted to prove I deserved the transfer spot, and I answered all the medical questions with quick confidence. The doctors treated me with respect, and they did not care about the viral sports videos from last month.They only cared about my practical skills, and I demonstrated my ability to handle stressful situations with ease. I checked the vital signs of a few patients, and I helped the team organize the supply closets before lunch.The head doctor praised my gentle bedside manner, and he told me I possessed a great instinct for medicine. I felt very validated by his kind wor
Staring across the small living area at my roommate, I let out a long, completely exhausted breath because I simply did not have the necessary energy to construct another elaborate lie. Miller stood near the kitchen counter with his arms crossed securely over his chest, and he waited patiently for
The quiet atmosphere inside the heavy sports car felt completely suffocating while I tried to process the explicit question Michael had just asked me. My mind raced through dozens of humiliating options, and my body hummed continuously with the unresolved sexual tension he had deliberately built du
The air in the secluded corner of the restaurant felt incredibly thin, and I stared across the wooden table at the man who had completely derailed my life over the past few weeks. He wanted a full confession, and my stubborn pride was currently losing a massive battle against the severe physical ac
Walking back across the crowded dining room required a monumental amount of physical effort because my knees still felt incredibly weak from the intense bathroom encounter. Smoothing my hands down the front of the expensive charcoal suit, I took a deep, steadying breath before sliding back into the







