LOGINPOV: Ava Carter
I did not even blink. "It belongs to a girl I am seeing," I said. Kai looked at me for a long moment. The locker room was almost empty now. Just the two of us and the hum of the lights and the hair tie sitting in his open palm between us. "A girl," he said. "Yeah." "You are seeing a girl." "Is that a problem." He looked down at the hair tie again. Then back at me. His expression was completely unreadable which was somehow worse than if he had looked angry or suspicious. He just looked like someone doing very careful math. "No," he said slowly. "It is not a problem." He held it out to me. I reached for it and his hand moved before I could stop it. His fingers closed around my wrist gently. He looked down,I also do the same. My wrist in his hand. His thumb resting against the inside of it where my pulse was currently doing something embarrassing and frantic. His hand was big and mine looked small inside it. Too small. I had strong hands from years of stick work but they were not Noah's hands and we both knew it and the silence in the room was so loud I could hear my own heartbeat. His eyes came up slowly and met mine. Neither of us spoke. I pulled my wrist back carefully and he let me. I closed my fingers around the hair tie and pushed it into my pocket and turned to my locker and stared at the back wall of it and breathed. "See you at warm up," I said. He said nothing. I walked out first and did not look back and told myself the feeling crawling up my spine was just nerves about the game. I was a very good liar. I was getting worse at lying to myself. +++++++ The arena was packed. Every seat was filled and the noise was a living thing that bounced off the rafters and pressed against your chest. I could see the scouts in the third row from the ice. Six of them. Clipboards and quiet eyes and nothing on their faces that told you anything. The kind of people who had watched hundreds of players and would decide your future in ninety minutes without blinking. I strapped my helmet down tight and stepped onto the ice and let the noise wash over me. Across the rink the Eagles were warming up. Liam caught my eye and raised his stick once. A greeting. Normal. The way he always acknowledged Noah before a game. But his eyes stayed on me one beat too long and I looked away first. Kai pulled up beside me during warm up circles. His shoulder nearly touching mine. "Play clean," he said. "I always play clean." "You play like you have something to prove," he said. "Tonight do not prove anything. Just play." I looked at him sideways. His jaw was set and his eyes were forward and he looked like he was saying something that was harder to say than it sounded. I did not know what to do with Kai Bennett when he was almost being kind. "You too," I said quietly. He pushed off and was gone. +++++ The first two periods were brutal. Liam was everywhere. Fast and physical and carrying the Eagles on his back the way captains do when they want something badly. He scored once in the first period and the Eagles bench erupted. Kai answered it four minutes into the second with a goal so clean the arena went quiet for a second before the Falcons side exploded. They kept finding each other on the ice. Not just competing. Hunting each other. Every collision between them was harder than it needed to be and the referees were watching both of them closely. I stayed in the middle of it and did my job and tried not to think about the scouts or the hair tie or Kai's thumb against my wrist. Third period. Three minutes left. Score tied. The puck came loose in the neutral zone and I picked it up on pure instinct. I was already moving before I thought about it. My legs found their gear and the ice opened up in front of me and I went. One defender. I cut inside and left him behind. The goalie came out to cut the angle. I saw the top left corner. Small window. Tight. I took it. The puck hit the back of the net and the arena detonated. I did not plan what happened next. I was not thinking. Three months of pressure and fear and pretending exploded out of my chest all at once and I threw my arms up and screamed and spun around on my skates and the momentum was too much. My helmet clipped the boards. The strap gave. It came off. My hair fell out around my face. Not long but long enough. Long enough to not be Noah. Long enough to be exactly what I was. The arena noise died immediately. Not slowly but Instantly Like someone cut the power to every voice in the building at the same time. I stood on the ice and did not move. Coach Merritt was on his feet behind the bench, his face completely white, staring at me like I had just appeared out of nowhere. Kai was ten feet away. Completely still. His eyes wide and fixed on my face with an expression I had never seen on him before. Not anger. Something worse. Something that looked like every test and every question and every moment of watching finally clicking into place all at once. I looked at Liam. He was staring at me from the blue line. His chest heaving. His stick hanging at his side. And on his face was something that broke a piece of me quietly. He looked betrayed. Not surprised but betrayed to the highest core. Like some part of him had known and had chosen not to look and now he had no choice. The referee's whistle cut through the silence like a knife. His voice carried across the whole arena, flat and final. "Carter. You are off the ice." I stood there under every light in the building. Thousands of eyes staring at me, I feel like I could just enter the ground.. but they was no where to go, no where to hide. Just me. Finally, completely, terrifyingly me..I stood in my room, fumbling with the buttons of my pajamas.No matter how many times I tried, my injured arm made even the simplest things frustrating.Just as I gave up with a sigh, there was a knock on my door.“Come in,” I called.The door opened, and Liam stepped inside.“I made dinner,” he said. “Come and eat.”Then his eyes fell on me.He sighed.“Why don’t you ever call me whenever you need help?”“I was just about to finish,” I muttered.He raised an eyebrow.“About to finish?”He walked toward me.“That’s a lie.”I looked away.“You weren’t even close.”He stopped in front of me before gently taking the loose buttons between his fingers.“You can’t even button your pajamas by yourself right now.”His voice wasn’t mocking.It was patient.Careful.Without another word, he slowly fastened each button for me.We were standing so close that I could feel his warm breath.Somehow…That had become normal.Or maybe it hadn’t.Because every single time Liam stood this close to me, my
I waited until Liam finished practicing before getting up from the bench.The moment he reached me, he smiled faintly.“Let’s go.”He bent down and picked up my bag before I could even touch it.I didn’t bother arguing anymore.There was no point.I had never won an argument against Liam.We slowly made our way toward the reception building. The evening breeze was cool, and after hours of sitting, my leg felt stiff, forcing me to walk even slower.Just as we reached the entrance, someone suddenly wrapped their arms around me.“Oh my God!”I almost lost my balance.“Where have you been?” Camilla exclaimed, squeezing me into a tight hug. “I missed you so much! I wanted to come and see you, but school has been so busy.”I laughed softly despite the pain.“I missed you too.”While she was still hugging me, I looked over her shoulder toward Liam.Our eyes met.He leaned closer and whispered quietly, “I’ll head back. Call me when you’re done.”I nodded.“Okay.”But…His eyes weren’t as brig
“Liam, please.” I grabbed his hand before he could take another step. “Please, let’s not enter class like this.”He sighed impatiently. “Then what do you want?”“Give me my bag.”“Noah, you’re sick.” He frowned. “I’m helping you. Don’t you understand?”“I do understand you’re helping me,” I said quietly. “But you’re also making it harder for me. Everyone is going to stare at us.”“Let them stare.”Before I could argue again, he walked into the classroom, leaving me standing outside.I sighed and slowly followed him inside. My right arm was wrapped in a cast, and my leg was still in a plaster brace. Thankfully, the doctor had said my leg wasn’t badly injured—it just needed support for a while.I thought Liam had already gone to his seat, but when I stepped through the doorway, I found him waiting for me. Without saying a word, he gently rested his hand on my shoulder and walked beside me all the way to my desk.Whispers immediately spread across the classroom.I couldn’t blame my class
By the time Blake and the other students returned, the atmosphere between Liam and me had completely changed.I couldn’t even bring myself to meet his gaze anymore. Every time I looked at him, guilt twisted painfully inside my chest. All this time, it had been such a simple misunderstanding between us.“Do you want some water? Juice?” Liam asked as we returned to the tent.I offered him an awkward smile.“Yeah,” I replied quickly.Honestly, anything that got him away from my side for a few minutes sounded good.He nodded and stood up before disappearing outside.A moment later, Blake stumbled into the tent looking completely exhausted. He dropped down beside me, panting heavily.“That was horrible,” he groaned. “Thank God you didn’t come. Honestly, I wish we could just go home tomorrow. I’m tired.”Then he turned toward me.“And you? How are you?”“I’m okay.”His eyes narrowed.“Wait.”He leaned closer.“Your eyes are red.”My heart skipped.“And your hand—”He grabbed my injured wris
Noah’s POVI woke up groggy and drained, my head still throbbing from the music I’d blasted through my headphones the entire night. Those sounds raw, unrestrained moans echoing through the walls had burrowed under my skin in ways I didn’t want to examine. I sighed heavily as I opened my door, the hallway quiet for once. Liam hadn’t mentioned anything about groceries, and though I planned to buy my own soon, hunger gnawed at me now. My first class wasn’t until after lunch, so I padded toward the kitchen, hoping to whip up something quick before the “lover birds” emerged.I cracked a couple of eggs into a pan, the sizzle filling the small space. Just eat and go, I told myself.Suddenly, a voice behind me made me tense. “Morning.”I turned. It was the girl from last night . She was adjusting Liam’s oversized shirt over her shorts, looking far too comfortable.“Liam’s bad for real,” she said with a light laugh. “He didn’t tell me we had a guest.”I forced a smile. “I’m his new roommate.”
Blake sat down beside my chair like he wasn’t sure he had the right to be there.“Hi, Noah,” he said softly.I turned my head toward him. “Hi, Blake.”For a second, neither of us spoke. The air between us felt different now—less sharp than yesterday, but still careful, like we were walking around something fragile.“How did you know where I stay?” I asked.He exhaled slowly, eyes dropping to his hands.“Camilla,” he said. “She told me.”Of course she did.He leaned back slightly, as if the weight of what he was about to say made his shoulders tired.“I didn’t sleep well,” he admitted. “I’ve been thinking about how I acted yesterday… I was really bad to you. I’m sorry, Noah. I was angry because—” he stopped, shook his head. “It doesn’t matter. I shouldn’t have spoken to you like that.”I looked at him for a moment, then sighed lightly.“It’s okay.”And I meant it.Because I couldn’t fully blame him. Not when I had stirred things in him too—twisted things without meaning to, especially
Ava’s pov The days after that I gave everything I had to the art of not looking at him.In class, at meals, in the corridors — I developed a precise awareness of exactly where Kai was in any given room so that I could position myself in the opposite direction. I was angry and I knew I was angry an
“That’s not happening, Coach.”Merritt looked at me with the amused patience of someone who has decided not to take this personally. “You’re so cold, Noah. But fine — you played beautifully. That’s what matters.”I moved away from Kai’s side and settled near Miller without looking back. The rest of
Kai’s POVThe moment Noah walked out I felt it.Not relief. Not vindication. The opposite of both — a quiet, immediate hollowness that arrived before I had even finished watching the door close.Hanna’s hand was still on mine.I looked at it.She had been saying it for days — quietly, persistently,
I walked back to the academy with the anger sitting high in my chest, bright and hot and looking for somewhere to go.We were friends. I had believed that. I had let myself believe it — the grapes, the late nights, the hot water bottles, the assignments done in borrowed handwriting, standing on an







