LOGINMaya POV
Morning in the Thorne Estate didn’t feel like morning. It felt staged.Light poured through the tall windows in clean, expensive lines, landing on polished floors that looked like no one had ever walked on them without permission. Even the silence felt curated. Controlled. Like if I said the wrong thing, the walls would report it. My phone didn’t stop buzzing.I dragged it off the nightstand and squinted at the screen. Notifications stacked over each other until I couldn’t see the time anymore. The Spill had posted again.A photo filled the screen before I could even brace for it. High resolution. Perfect timing. Leo’s hand on my waist, my body angled toward him as if I belonged there. His head dipped just enough to suggest something private, something soft and real. [Northridge Spill]: THE ICE KING’S FORTRESS OPENS. Leo Thorne brings Maya Ellison home. Is this the real deal or the heist of the century? I let out a short laugh that didn’t sound like mine. “It’s a heist,” I muttered, tossing the phone onto the bed. “And I’m the one being robbed.” A knock cut through the quiet. Not polite. Sharp. Measured. “Get dressed, Ellison.” Leo’s voice came through the connecting door, low and already irritated, as the day had personally offended him. “We’re doing a ‘candid’ breakfast. Thirty minutes.” Of course we were. I pushed myself out of bed, the cold floor biting at my feet. Somewhere between last night and now, this had stopped feeling temporary. The contract sat in my bag like a ticking clock. By the time I stepped out, dressed and already exhausted, Leo was waiting in the hallway. He looked… composed. Too composed. Like nothing about this situation touched him. Hoodie. Dark jeans. Hands in his pockets. The “Ice King” off the ice still knew how to wear control like skin. “Try not to look like you hate me,” he said without looking at me as we walked. “I don’t have to try.” He glanced at me then, brief, sharp. “Yeah. That’s the problem.” The campus café was glass on all sides. A fishbowl. The second we stepped in, the noise shifted. Not silence exactly. Just… attention. Like a hundred conversations tripped over themselves at once. Leo didn’t hesitate. His arm slid around my shoulders like it had always been there. I stiffened. “Relax,” he murmured, lips barely moving. “Or we’re dead in ten seconds.” “I am relaxed.” “You look like you’re being held hostage.” “I am being held hostage.” His grip tightened just slightly. Not enough for anyone else to notice. Enough for me to feel it. “Order,” he said under his breath. “Now.” “Caramel macchiato. Extra foam. Cinnamon.” He nodded once and walked to the counter, leaving me at the most visible table in the room. Of course he would pick that one. Phones were already out. Not even subtle. A girl near the window pretended to scroll while her camera stayed pointed straight at me. I stared at the table, counting the seconds. When Leo came back, he didn’t just hand me the drink. He placed it down carefully, like it mattered. “Caramel macchiato,” he said, just loud enough. “Extra foam. Cinnamon.” A pause. Then, softer, like it was just for me. “Right?” A ripple moved through the room. Not loud, but there. Recognition. Speculation. Confirmation. I looked at the cup, then at him. “You memorized it.” “I listen,” he said, sitting down. It sounded simple. It didn’t feel simple. His hand slid over mine on the table. Warm. Steady. Like last night never happened. Like none of this was fake. “You’re a good actor,” I whispered. His eyes flicked to the window again before returning to me. “I’m not acting.” Something in the way he said it didn’t sit right. Before I could push, a voice cut through everything. “Maya. A word. Now.” I didn’t have to turn to know who it was. Chloe. Leo’s hand slipped away immediately. Gone like it had never been there. “Go,” he said quietly. “I’ll handle this side.” Handle it. Like I wasn’t about to lose my best friend over a lie I couldn’t explain. I stood, every step toward Chloe feeling heavier than the last. She didn’t wait. Just turned and walked toward the back hallway near the library. I followed. The second the door shut behind us, the air changed. No cameras. No audience. Just damage. “How long?” Her voice shook, but not weak. Controlled anger. The kind that cuts deeper. “How long have you been lying to me?” “Chloe” “No,” she snapped, stepping closer. “Don’t do that thing where you act confused. I’m not stupid.” “I know you’re not.” “Then explain it.”I opened my mouth.Nothing came out.Because the truth wasn’t mine to tell. “I had a crush on him,” she said, quieter now, but worse somehow. “You remember that? Freshman year? I told you everything.”I did remember.Late nights. Stupid jokes. Her going on about how Leo wasn’t as cold as everyone thought.And me laughing it off. Dismissing it. Saying he wasn’t worth it. “I told you he was different,” she continued, eyes locked on mine. “And you said he was arrogant. That he didn’t deserve anyone’s time.” “I meant it.” “Did you?” Her laugh was sharp. “Because this?” She gestured vaguely, like the whole world outside the door. “This doesn’t look like hate, Maya.” “It’s not what you think.” “Then what is it?”I stepped forward. She stepped back.That hurt more than anything she’d said. “I didn’t plan this,” I said, forcing the words out. “I swear to you.”She searched my face like she was trying to find something familiar. “I thought you were honest,” she said finally. “With me, at least.” “I am.” “Then why does it feel like I’m the only one who didn’t know?” I didn’t have an answer that wouldn’t destroy everything. Her expression shifted. Not anger now. Something worse.Disappointment. “You’re a better liar than I thought,” she said. “Chloe”She shook her head. “I just didn’t think I’d be the one you practiced on.” My phone buzzed in my pocket.I almost ignored it.Almost.Unknown Number: Friends keep secrets. Enemies keep bodies. Which one are you, Maya?Maya If somebody had told me at the beginning of the semester that a fake relationship with the most frustrating hockey player on campus would eventually become one of the biggest stories in college sports media, I would have laughed directly in their face and walked away before they could continue the conversation, yet somehow that ridiculous prediction had become my reality because Northridge’s playoff run had transformed every aspect of public attention surrounding the team, while Leo’s growing national profile, the documentary’s unexpected popularity, and the internet’s unhealthy obsession with our supposed relationship had combined into something so overwhelming that I could no longer open a social media application without seeing my own face staring back at me beside his.The situation grew worse with every playoff victory because success attracted attention and attention attracted money, while sponsors who had never cared about college hockey suddenly
Leo The celebration from securing playoff advancement lasted less than twenty-four hours before reality returned with all the force of a body check against the boards, because success in college hockey never stayed comfortable for long and every victory simply created another expectation, another headline, another conversation about whether you could do it again when the pressure doubled and the margin for error disappeared, which was exactly why I found myself standing outside Coach Reynolds’ office early the next morning with a headache building behind my eyes and a feeling in my stomach that had nothing to do with excitement and everything to do with knowing that nobody called a private meeting after a playoff series unless there was something unpleasant waiting on the other side of the door. The office smelled faintly of coffee and old game tape when I stepped inside, and Coach barely looked up from the stack of papers spread across his
Maya By the time Game Seven arrived, Northridge had stopped feeling like a university hockey team and started feeling like the center of an entire city’s attention because every conversation on campus somehow led back to the playoffs, every television screen seemed to display sports coverage, and every social media platform overflowed with predictions, analysis, arguments, and increasingly ridiculous discussions about both the team and the fake relationship that refused to stop generating attention, creating an atmosphere where the biggest game of the season felt less like a sporting event and more like a cultural event that nobody wanted to miss.The attention surrounding Leo and me had somehow reached another level despite everything that had already happened throughout the year because sports outlets continued treating our fake relationship as part of the playoff narrative, while entertainment sites discussed hockey games as though they were episodes of a
Leo Nobody needed Coach to explain what was at stake before the game because every player in the locker room already understood the reality facing Northridge, while the playoff bracket hanging throughout the facility and the endless media coverage surrounding the series had made the situation impossible to ignore, creating an atmosphere where every conversation, every preparation routine, and every quiet moment carried the same unavoidable truth that one more loss would end the season, end months of sacrifice, and send everyone home wondering what might have happened if they had found a way to be better when it mattered most.The strange thing about elimination games was that they often stripped away distractions because arguments that felt important a month earlier suddenly seemed insignificant compared to the possibility of losing everything, while personal frustrations, rivalry, media narratives, and individual agendas gradually faded into the background b
Leo Playoff hockey had a way of exposing every weakness a team wanted to pretend did not exist because the further a season progressed the fewer places remained to hide mistakes, while confidence that looked unshakable during the regular season could disappear over the course of a single bad week, creating an environment where momentum shifted quickly and narratives changed even faster, and after Northridge followed its overtime loss in Game One with another frustrating defeat that left us trailing in the series, it felt as though every criticism that had gone quiet during our winning streak suddenly returned at the exact same time.The locker room after Game Two carried a completely different atmosphere from the one that had existed only a few weeks earlier because playoff victories had briefly united everyone behind a common purpose, while losses reopened every old wound and invited every lingering doubt back into the conversation, creating a tension that n
Maya The deeper Northridge advanced into the playoffs, the more obvious it became that everyone wanted something different from the documentary because players wanted their sacrifices respected, coaches wanted distractions minimized, media executives wanted ratings, sponsors wanted marketable stories, and Cassandra wanted emotional drama that could be packaged into viral content, while I found myself increasingly determined to tell a story about hockey pressure, identity, leadership, and the reality of life inside a program carrying championship expectations, creating a conflict that had slowly been building for months and was finally approaching a point where neither side could pretend compromise remained possible.The tension surfaced during a production meeting held two days after Northridge’s overtime loss when Cassandra entered the room carrying several pages of audience analytics and engagement reports that she immediately placed on the conference table
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
Maya POVThe SUV door slammed shut, and just like that, the noise outside disappeared. Inside, it was all leather, silence, and the faint, sharp smell of adrenaline that hadn’t settled yet. My ears rang anyway, like the crowd was still there, still shouting.Leo didn’t let go of my hand. His grip w
Maya POVThe contract was still warm in my hands. My phone vibrated, then again and it didn’t stop. I frowned, shifting the contract under my arm as I pulled my phone out. Notifications stacked on top of each other so fast that the screen lagged for a second.Northridge Spill. I opened it.[EXCLUSI
Maya “Did Leo just punch Hayes?” Chloe’s voice cut through the noise. One second, Northridge was roaring chants, skates, sticks, and the next, silence. “No,” I said, adjusting my camera. “He just ended his career.” Through the viewfinder, everything sharpened to Leo Thorne. Captain, the Ice K







