INICIAR SESIÓNNobody warned Avery Kane about Knox Callahan. Not the grocery store strangers who mentioned his name like a caution. Not the group chat that exploded the second she arrived. Not even her father — the man who uprooted her entire life to coach a hockey team in a Minnesota town she'd never heard of — who watched the whole thing happen from behind a whistle and a clipboard and said absolutely nothing useful. Knox is the team captain. The local legend. The boy with the full scholarship offer and the smile that should require a permit. He is also, as of November, Avery's boyfriend — which would be perfect if he weren't already leaving. Then there's Finn. Steady, warm, dangerous in a completely different way. Then there's a photograph of her mother. Twenty years old. Laughing at a Minnesota lake. In a town her mother swore she'd never been. Then there's Theo — quiet, ink-stained, annoyingly perceptive — who sits down next to her in a library and asks the one question that changes everything. Avery came to Evergreen to survive senior year. She didn't expect to find out she'd been here all along.
Ver másDad was making eggs when I came downstairs Monday morning, which meant one of two things: he was in a great mood, or he was about to deliver news I wasn't going to like. The man only cooked when he needed something from me."Morning, kiddo." He slid a plate across the island without turning around. Scrambled, with the little bit of hot sauce I liked. Definitely news.I sat down slowly, pulling my sleeves over my hands. "What did you do?""Nothing." He finally turned, spatula in hand, wearing the exact expression he used when he was about to bench someone for their own good. "I enrolled you at Evergreen High. You start today."I stared at him."I know," he said, pre-emptively."Dad.""The district needs thirty days notice for late enrollment and I already used them. You've been here a week, Avery. You can't sit in the bleachers doing homework forever.""I wasn't doing homework. I was observing. Anthropologically."He pointed the spatula at me. "You were watching Knox Callahan run drill
I stared at Finn's text until the screen went dark, then lit it up again, then let it go dark a second time like toggling a light switch was going to help me think straight. It didn't.Knox or Finn.The words sat in my chest like a puck lodged against the boards—stuck, vibrating, refusing to move cleanly in either direction.I typed back the safest, most cowardly response in the history of romantic entanglements: Probably just Knox and me tomorrow. But thanks for the marshmallows. Seriously.Three dots appeared. Disappeared. Appeared again.Understood. Have fun, California. Layers, remember.No wink emoji. No teasing. Just that quiet, even warmth that made Finn Henderson somehow more dangerous than the guy who'd kissed me breathless against a pickup truck in a snowstorm. At least with Knox I knew where I stood—unsteady, sparking, tilted slightly off-axis. With Finn I felt steady, and steady was its own kind of terrifying when you'd spent four days in a place that already felt like it
The bonfire felt like a distant memory by the time I made it home, but the cold had nothing to do with the Minnesota wind. My boots left wet tracks across the kitchen floor as I shrugged off my layers, each one heavier than the last. Dad was still awake, sitting at the island with a lukewarm mug of coffee and a playbook open in front of him like it could solve every problem in the universe.“You’re back early,” he said without looking up. “Bonfire not your scene?”I dropped onto the stool across from him, cheeks still stinging from more than just the cold. “It was… eventful.”He finally glanced at me, coach instincts kicking in. “Eventful how?”I hesitated. Telling my dad that the team captain had almost kissed me—twice—before his ex dragged him away for a family emergency felt like volunteering for a benching. “Knox had to leave. Something with his dad.”Dad’s expression softened. “Yeah. Callahan’s been dealing with that for a while. Heart issues, I think. Kid’s carrying a lot.”I no
The bonfire roared like it had something to prove, flames licking the night sky while half the town huddled around it in puffy coats and scarves. I’d layered up like a paranoid onion—thermal, hoodie, jacket, gloves—and still felt the cold biting through my boots as I picked my way across the snowy field behind the old mill. Music thumped from someone’s truck speakers, a mix of country and whatever playlist Finn had screamed was “fire.” Literal and figurative.Knox found me before I even reached the flames. He was wearing a green Eagles beanie pulled low, cheeks already pink from the cold, and the second he spotted me his whole face lit up like I was the goal he’d been waiting to score.“You came,” he said, breath fogging between us. “I was starting to think you’d chickened out and gone back to reading about dragons.”“Dragons don’t require frostbite,” I shot back, but I was smiling. Stupidly. He took my gloved hand without asking and tugged me toward the circle, his grip warm even thr
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