LOGINJulian woke up the next morning and knew something was wrong.
His knee had been hurting for months. It started after a hard hit in last season’s playoffs. At first he ignored it, the way hockey players always do. Put ice on it, wrap it up, take pain medicine, and get back on the ice. That was the rule. That was what his father had taught him. You do not sit out unless you cannot stand. And even then, you find a way to stand. But lately the pain had become sharper. In the morning it made him wince when he put weight on the leg. During games he moved a little slower and turned a little wider than before. This morning, when he tried to get out of bed, his knee gave out. He grabbed the nightstand to stop himself from falling. A glass of water fell over. The pain shot up his thigh and down his calf. It was bright and hot. He sat on the edge of the bed, breathing hard, waiting for the pain to pass and for his body to work again. It took longer than it should have. He had a doctor’s appointment that afternoon. It was a normal check-up the team required every few months. --- (The doctor's office was cold.) Julian sat on the examination table, paper crinkling under his legs, his left knee propped up on a pillow. The room smelled like antiseptic and something else, something clean and sharp that made his stomach turn. He had been here before, many times. Injuries were part of hockey. You got hurt, you healed, you got back on the ice. But this time felt different. Dr. Chen walked in with a clipboard and a face that told Julian everything he needed to know before she said a word. He had learned to read doctors over the years. The ones who smiled were the ones with good news. The ones who looked serious were the ones who were about to change your life. "How bad is it?" Julian asked. Dr. Chen sat down on the stool across from him. She set the clipboard on the counter and folded her hands in her lap. "The MRI shows a partial tear of your MCL. That is the ligament on the inside of your knee. There is also damage to the cartilage and some bone bruising." Julian nodded. He had felt it, the way his knee buckled during games, the way it ached after practices, the way it swelled up at night when he tried to sleep. "How long?" "With proper rest and physical therapy, six to eight weeks. But Julian, this is the second time you have injured this knee in two years. The first time, you came back too soon. You did not let it heal completely. That is why it tore again." Julian's jaw tightened. "I had a season to finish. I could not sit out." "I understand. But now you have a choice. You can rest it properly, let it heal, and come back stronger. Or you can keep playing, and risk permanent damage. The kind of damage that ends careers." The words hung in the air. Julian stared at the wall, at the poster of the human knee, at the different colored ligaments and tendons and bones. He had never thought about his body like that before. He had always just pushed through, ignored the pain, trusted that his body would do what he asked of it. "What does permanent damage mean?" "It means arthritis. Chronic pain. Loss of mobility. Possibly the inability to play at a professional level." Dr. Chen's voice was gentle, but her words were not. "You are young, Julian. You have a long career ahead of you if you take care of yourself. But if you ignore this, you might not have a career at all." Julian's hands were cold. He pressed them between his knees, trying to stop them from shaking. "My father cannot know." Dr. Chen frowned. "Your father?" "He will pull me from the team. He will say I am weak, that I cannot handle the pressure, that I should quit hockey and go work for his company." Julian's voice was flat, the way it got when he was trying not to feel anything. "I cannot let that happen." "Julian, your health is more important than." "My health is my business. Not his. Not yours." Julian stood up, put weight on his knee, felt the familiar ache. "Write me a prescription for physical therapy. I will do the exercises. I will rest when I can. But I am not telling anyone about this. And I am not sitting out." Dr. Chen looked at him for a long moment. Julian could see the conflict in her face, the part of her that wanted to argue, to fight for his health. But she also knew who his father was. She knew the pressure he was under. "I will write the prescription," she said finally. "But I want you to promise me something." "What?" "If the pain gets worse, if you feel anything shift or give out, you come back immediately. No excuses. No hiding." Julian nodded. "I promise." He left the office with the paper in his pocket and a secret heavy on his chest. --- The physical therapy was hard. Julian went three times a week, always early in the morning, before anyone else was awake. He did the exercises in silence, pushing through the pain, counting the reps, watching his knee get stronger and weaker at the same time. The therapist was a young woman named Mia who did not ask questions. She just handed him the weights and told him to keep going. "How does it feel?" she asked one morning. "Fine." "It is not fine. I can see you limping." Julian looked at her. She was watching him with sharp eyes, the kind of eyes that saw things you did not want to share. "It hurts," he admitted. "But I can play through it." "You can play through it. But you should not. Your knee needs rest." "I do not have time for rest." Mia shook her head. "That is what they all say. The young ones. They think they are invincible. And then one day, they are not." Julian did not answer. He finished his reps, iced his knee, and drove to practice. --- The first game after the diagnosis was against Seattle. Julian played well, better than he had in weeks. He scored a goal, assisted on another, and blocked a shot with his knee that made him see stars. He got up, skated to the bench, and pretended nothing was wrong. But something was wrong. His knee was swelling, the ice pack in the locker room doing almost nothing. He sat in the corner, away from the other players, and wrapped his knee in a compression sleeve. "You okay?" Julian looked up. One of his teammates, a veteran named Marks, was standing over him. "I am fine." "You are favoring your left leg." "I said I am fine." Marks held up his hands. "Okay. Okay. Just checking." He walked away. Julian sat there, staring at his knee, feeling the weight of the lie. --- The weeks passed. Julian kept playing. He kept going to physical therapy. He kept hiding the pain, the swelling, the way his knee buckled when he made sharp turns. He told himself it was temporary. He told himself he would rest in the off season. He told himself his father would never find out. But his father always found out. The call came on a Tuesday night. Julian was at his apartment, icing his knee, watching game film. His phone buzzed. Richard Frost's name flashed on the screen. "Dad." "I heard you are injured." Julian's heart stopped. "I am not injured." "Do not lie to me. One of the trainers mentioned you have been favoring your knee. What is going on?" Julian closed his eyes. He could see his father's face, the way it got when he was disappointed, the way his mouth tightened and his eyes went cold. "It is nothing. Just a strain. I am taking care of it." "A strain. That is what you said last time. And the time before that." "Because that is what it is." Richard was quiet for a moment. Julian could hear him breathing, could feel the weight of his silence. "If you cannot play, I need to know. I have investors who are counting on you. Sponsors. Contracts. This is not just about you, Julian." Julian's hand tightened on the phone. "I can play." "Then prove it. The game against Vancouver is in two weeks. I want to see you on the ice. I want to see you win." Richard hung up. Julian sat there, the phone pressed to his ear, the dial tone buzzing in his ear. He looked down at his knee. The compression sleeve was soaked with ice water, his skin pale underneath. The pain was a constant now, a low hum that never went away. He would play against Vancouver. He would win. And he would keep hiding, the way he had been hiding his whole life. --- The night before the game, Julian could not sleep. He lay in bed, staring at the ceiling, his knee throbbing beneath the blankets. The doctor's words echoed in his head. Permanent damage. The kind that ends careers. He thought about his father's voice. I want to see you win. He thought about Sebastian, the way he would look at him across the ice, the way he would hit him like he was trying to break something. He thought about the camp. The lake. The stars. The kiss. He had been carrying that memory for seven years. It was the only thing that kept him going some days, the only thing that made the pain worth it. Sebastian did not remember. Sebastian might never remember. But Julian remembered. And that had to be enough. He took a painkiller, wrapped his knee, and closed his eyes. Tomorrow, he would play. Tomorrow, he would hide. Tomorrow, he would pretend everything was fine.The morning after Mack’s confession, Eli woke up angry. Not the explosive anger he had felt in the locker room years ago. This was cold, quiet, suffocating. Mack had lied to him aain. Not about being his brother but about Daniel, the investigation and evidence. Eli lay in bed, replaying every conversation, every moment of trust. Mack had known everything. He had let Eli spiral, let him panic, let him suffer, all while holding the proof that could have ended it sooner. Eli got up, dressed and walked past the couch where Mack was still sleeping. He just left without waking him up or leaving a note behind. At practice, Eli ignored Mack completely. He did not look at him, did not pass to him during drills or acknowledge him when Mack spoke. The other players and coach noticed, the tension was thick enough to cut. “Park, Hale,” Coach Marshall called out. “Stay after, we need to talk.” When the rest of the team filed off the ice, the two of them stood at center ice, facing ea
The kiss on the roof should have been a beginning. Instead, it felt like an ending. For three days after, Mack barely looked at Eli. He was polite, professional, distant. He answered questions about drills, helped during practice, and then disappeared. No coffee. No late‑night talks. No almost kisses. No nothing Eli tried to catch him after practice but Mack always had somewhere else to be. On the fourth day, Eli waited by Mack’s car. Mack walked into the parking lot, saw him, and stopped. “You are avoiding me,” Eli said. Mack did not deny it. “I am trying to protect you.” “From what?” “From me.” Eli stepped closer. “That is not your choice to make.” Mack’s jaw tightened. He looked at the ground, then back at Eli. His eyes were red, tired. “There is something I have not told you,” Mack said. “Something I did.” Eli’s stomach turned. “What?” Mack took a breath. “After I found out about Daniel, after I started gathering evidence, I got scared. Scared that the police would n
The days after the press conference were strange. Eli expected backlash. He expected hate mail, cruel comments, teammates looking at him differently. Instead, something unexpected happened, people were kind to him. Fans sent messages of support and encouragement. Other players reached out to share their own struggles. The league issued a statement praising Eli’s courage. His parents called not to disown him, but to ask if he was okay. His mother cried. His father was quiet. But neither of them hung up. “We did not know,” his mother said. “Why did you not tell us?” “I was scared,” Eli said. “Of us?” “Of losing you.” She was silent for a long time. Then she said, “You will never lose us. You are our son.” Eli cried after that call. He cried for a long time. Mack was not there but Eli wished he was there with him. ~~~ Game Two was four days later. The Thunderbirds were down 0-1 in the series. Lose this one, and they would go to Edmonton facing elimination. The p
The morning after the panic attack, Eli woke to a storm of notifications. His phone would not stop buzzing, texts from teammates, missed calls from his agent, emails from reporters he had never heard of. The headline was everywhere "Thunderbirds Goalie Collapses on Ice, mental Health or Something More?" Eli stared at the screen. His hands were cold, his chest tight again. He wanted to throw the phone across the room. But Mack's voice echoed in his head. We need to get ahead of it. He called his agent. "Eli, thank God," the agent said. "The team wants you to do a press conference today, try and control the story." Eli's stomach dropped. "What do I say?" "The truth. You have been under pressure, your brother has been blackmailing you. You had a panic attack. People will understand." "They will also judge me." "Maybe. But it is better than letting them guess." Eli closed his eyes. "Okay. Set it up." ~~~~~ The press conference was scheduled for noon. Eli arrived a
Game One of the playoffs was the loudest thing Eli had ever heard. The arena was fully packed and the crowd was screaming. Every hit, every shot, every whistle echoed like a gunshot. Eli stood in his crease, his heart pounding, his gloves sweating. The Oilers were fast and aggressive. They crashed the net every chance they got. Mack was on the ice, clearing bodies, blocking shots, doing everything he could to protect Eli. But the pressure was suffocating. Daniel’s words echoed in Eli’s head. You are going to need luck. His brother had not texted today. That was worse. The silence meant he was watching and waiting. The first period was scoreless. Eli made twelve saves. His hands were steady, his breathing was controlled. The second period started. The Oilers came harder. A defenseman crashed into Eli’s crease, knocking him off balance. Mack shoved him away and took a penalty. The Oilers scored on the power play. Eli let the goal in. It was a soft goal. One he should have stopp
The days after Mack’s confession blurred together. Eli went through the motions, practice, meals, sleep but nothing felt real. His mind kept circling back to the same impossible truth: Mack was his brother. Half‑brother. The man who had outed him, who had apologized, who had almost kissed him, shared his blood. He did not know how to feel. Angry? Betrayed? Relieved? All of it, none of it. Mack gave him space. They still trained together, still shared hotel rooms on road trips, but the easy rhythm was gone. Mack did not push. He did not bring up the confession. He just waited for him. Eli was grateful, furious and confused. ~~~~~ The Thunderbirds clinched a playoff spot on the last day of the regular season. The locker room erupted. Players hugged, shouted, sprayed champagne. Coach Marshall stood in the corner, smiling, his arms crossed. Eli stood in the middle of the chaos, a bottle in his hand, his teammates slapping his back. But his smile did not reach his eyes. Across th
That night, Eli drove to Mack’s apartment with his hands gripping the wheel and his heart in his throat. The street was dark and empty. He had not told anyone where he was going, he had not answered Daniel’s texts and he barely ate anything. His mind was a storm of questions, and only Mack had the
The bus arrived in Seattle just after midnight. Players filed off, dragging their bags, their faces tired and blank. Eli moved with them, invisible, his hood pulled low. Mack was somewhere ahead, swallowed by the crowd. Eli did not try to find him. The parking lot was cold and dark. Eli’s car was
The morning after the police station, Eli woke with a heavy chest and a sour taste in his mouth. He had not slept well. The hotel room was dark, the curtains drawn tight, but a thin line of grey light crept through the gap. Mack was already awake, sitting in the chair by the window, his phone in
The morning light was pale and cold. Eli woke slowly, his mind still heavy with sleep. For a moment, he forgot where he was. Then he saw Mack sitting in the chair by the window, watching the sunrise. He had been there all night. Eli sat up, his face was stiff from crying. His eyes were swolle







