LOGINOne punch turned the campus “Ice King” into a national pariah, and now the only person who can save his career is the girl who wants to see him fail. Leo Thorne had it all: captaincy, NHL scouts, and a reputation as untouchable. But when a rival player targets the one wound that never healed, Leo snaps. The viral footage labels him violent, unstable, and dangerous, and suddenly the future he built on the ice begins to collapse. Maya Ellison, a sharp-tongued film student, wants nothing to do with athletes, especially Leo. To her, he’s arrogant, spoiled, and worshipped for all the wrong reasons. But when her scholarship and senior project funding are threatened, she’s forced into an impossible deal: direct a reality-style redemption series designed to fix Leo’s image. The catch? The university announces that Maya is Leo Thorne’s secret girlfriend. Now they’re trapped in a fake relationship built for cameras, clicks, and damage control. Between staged dates, scripted interviews, jealous rivals, and producers hungry for drama, Maya and Leo spend more time fighting than flirting. “I can’t stand you,” Maya snaps after another disastrous shoot. Leo smirks, stepping closer. “Funny. I was about to say the same thing.” But somewhere between the lies and the spotlight, the act starts feeling dangerously real. Maya begins to see the grief Leo hides behind the Ice King mask, while Leo realizes the only person who refuses to worship him might be the only one who truly sees him. In a world where every touch is staged and every kiss is content, falling in love could ruin them both. Or it could be the one thing that finally saves them.
View MoreLeo The day after a playoff victory always felt strangely disconnected from the game itself, because the adrenaline disappeared long before the consequences did, while bruises became more noticeable, exhaustion settled deeper into muscles, and every player suddenly had time to think about mistakes they had ignored during competition, creating a dangerous window where pressure could become louder than hockey if you weren’t careful about what occupied your mind.Unfortunately my mind had plenty to occupy itself with.The argument with Jax remained unfinished.The draft rankings remained disappointing.The conference finals remained far from over.And somewhere beneath everything else lurked the familiar threat of another migraine waiting for the wrong moment to strike.The morning began with recovery sessions and medical evaluations, while trainers moved through routines that had become increasingly important as the
Maya The deeper Northridge pushed into the conference finals, the less the season resembled a university hockey campaign and the more it felt like a pressure chamber designed to expose every weakness hidden beneath confidence, because exhaustion had become permanent, expectations continued rising with every victory, and the entire program seemed trapped beneath a spotlight that refused to move elsewhere, while cameras followed every development and scouts evaluated every shift, creating an atmosphere where players were no longer simply competing for championships but also fighting for futures they had spent years trying to build.By Game Four, nobody looked rested anymore.Not the players.Not the coaches.Not the staff.Even the media seemed exhausted.The series had become physical enough to leave visible evidence behind, while bruises appeared beneath sleeves, movement became slightly slower during practices, an
Leo Winning playoff games was supposed to solve problems, or at least that was the version fans preferred to believe, because victories created celebrations, generated headlines, and gave the impression that everything inside a locker room was functioning perfectly, while the reality was often far messier, especially during championship runs where pressure magnified every disagreement and success only increased the stakes of whatever came next, creating situations where tension could continue growing even while a team remained alive in the postseason.The morning after practice began badly and somehow continued getting worse.Everyone felt it.The coaches felt it.The players felt it.Even the trainers seemed aware that something inside the room had shifted.Not broken.Not yet.Shifted.The conference finals had become a grind, while exhaustion accumulated faster than recovery and every
Maya The further Northridge advanced through the playoffs, the more difficult it became to remember what normal life had looked like before hockey consumed the university, because every hallway conversation eventually returned to the team, every social media feed seemed dominated by playoff coverage, and every public appearance generated attention that felt larger than the event itself, while the continued obsession surrounding my supposed relationship with Leo transformed ordinary activities into public spectacles that neither of us had ever agreed to participate in.At first the attention had been manageable.Annoying.Invasive.Occasionally ridiculous.Still manageable.Lately that had changed.The problem was no longer curiosity.The problem was entitlement.Somewhere along the way people stopped acting like observers and started behaving as though they deserved access to private mome
Maya The first thing I noticed when I walked into the rink that afternoon was not the noise, the drills, or even the tension hanging over the team after another difficult stretch of games, but the fact that Leo Thorne was standing with the second line during warmups whi
Maya By the time I moved back into my dorm two days later, Northridge had fully lost its mind. Someone had taped printed screenshots of me and Leo across the journalism building hallway like we were celebrities instead of victims of a badly managed public relations stunt. One photo showed him le
Maya By the next morning, the internet had apparently decided I belonged to Leo Thorne.I opened one video and instantly regretted it. Someone had edited slow-motion clips of Leo looking at me at the café, adding soft music and dramatic captions like we were characters in some tragic sports docume
Maya POV “Chloe, wait!” I pushed through the library doors hard enough for them to slam against the wall, the sound chasing after her down the corridor. She didn’t slow, didn’t turn, just kept walking like stopping would break something she was barely holding together. “Please,” I said, catchi






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