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Thin Ice and Thinner Excuses

Author: Teriel panny
last update publish date: 2026-06-07 16:09:05

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 was rearranging your entire life.

I buried my phone under my pillow and told myself I was going to sleep.

I stared at the ceiling for two hours instead.

Sunday morning arrived gray and insistent, the kind of pale Minnesota sky that looked like it was thinking very hard about snowing but hadn't committed yet. Dad was already gone by eight—early morning tape review with the assistant coaches, because apparently rest days weren't a real thing in hockey—which left me alone in the blue two-story with nothing but a pot of lukewarm coffee and my own overthinking for company.

I opened my laptop. My dragon-riding librarian manuscript blinked back at me, cursor blinking on chapter twelve where I'd abandoned my protagonist mid-sentence three weeks ago, somewhere between San Diego and the end of my old life. She was standing in a doorway. Couldn't decide whether to go in.

Same, Elowen, I thought. Same.

I typed exactly one sentence before my phone buzzed.

Knox: Still on for tonight. Seven sharp. Dress warm or I'll literally wrap you in a blanket myself.

Me: Threatening me with comfort items is not the intimidation tactic you think it is.

Knox: Who said anything about intimidation?

I put the phone face-down. My protagonist stared up at me from the doorway, waiting. I closed the laptop.

He picked me up at 6:58, which felt deliberate. He was leaning against the truck when I stepped outside, hands shoved in the pocket of a dark green jacket that matched the Eagles colors like he'd planned it—which, knowing Knox Callahan, he absolutely had not. He just always looked like that. Effortlessly, annoyingly like that.

"You're early," I said, pulling the door shut behind me.

"I'm exactly on time." He pushed off the truck and reached for the passenger door before I got there. "You're just surprised I showed up."

"I'm surprised you're not still half in shoulder pads."

He grinned—that warm, crooked grin that was slowly dismantling my better judgment piece by piece. "Give me a little credit, Kane."

The drive out of town took fifteen minutes, past the gas station with the broken M on its sign, past the high school with its angry-bird-on-skates marquee (GO EAGLES – REGIONALS OR BUST), past the last streetlight and into the kind of dark that doesn't exist in cities. Minnesota dark. The kind where the stars don't compete with anything.

Knox drove with one hand on the wheel and the radio low—something old and acoustic that I didn't recognize but didn't want to interrupt with a question. The heater hummed. Outside, pine trees scrolled past, thick and black against the indigo sky.

"How's your dad?" I asked, because it had been sitting on my tongue since practice.

His jaw moved. Not quite a wince. "Stable. Same as yesterday. They're running a stress test Tuesday." He exhaled slow through his nose. "He keeps telling me not to worry about it. Which is exactly what someone says when you should absolutely be worrying about it."

"I'm sorry."

"Don't be." He glanced over, and in the low light his face was softer than usual—less captain, more just *person.* "It's not your thing to be sorry about. I just… I needed tonight. Something that wasn't practice or hospital waiting rooms or Sophia's mom calling to offer casseroles."

The name landed between us like a puck to the boards. Neither of us flinched, exactly, but we both felt it.

"For what it's worth," I said carefully, "the casserole thing sounds genuinely awful."

He laughed—unexpected, real. "Margaret Reyes makes this tuna noodle thing. It's—" He shook his head. "It's a punishment dish, Avery. It is seasoned with obligation."

I burst out laughing and couldn't stop, and the tension that had been sitting in my sternum since the bonfire cracked loose. Knox was still grinning when he pulled the truck onto a gravel track I would have missed entirely, cutting between two pines so close they scraped the mirrors.

The lake opened up in front of us like someone had laid down a mirror.

I'd seen frozen lakes in movies—always dramatic, always foreboding, all creak and fracture. This was different. It was still. Perfectly, impossibly still, a flat pale expanse that reflected the sky back at itself in shades of dark blue and silver. The pines ringed it in a dense black border. Overhead, the stars were outrageous. The kind that make you feel small in the specific way that also feels like relief.

"Okay," I said quietly. "I take back approximately forty percent of my complaints about Minnesota."

"High praise." Knox cut the engine. "Come on."

He grabbed a blanket from the back seat and a thermos that did not, he confirmed with pointed significance, come from Finn. We picked our way down to the bank, boots crunching on the snow-crusted shore, and he spread the blanket over a flat rock that looked like it had been used for exactly this purpose many times before.

I sat. He sat beside me, close enough that our shoulders touched, and poured two cups from the thermos. Hot chocolate—real, thick, not from a packet—with the faintest edge of something warm that turned out to be a drop of peppermint extract.

"Did you make this?" I asked.

"Don't sound so shocked."

"Knox. You made hot chocolate from scratch."

"My mom's recipe." He said it simply, no performance. "She used to make it after every home game, win or lose. Said it was the only way to guarantee the night ended on a good note." He turned the cup in his hands. "She passed when I was twelve, so now I just… make it sometimes. When I want the night to end right."

The stars blurred for a second before I blinked them back. I wanted to say something worthy of that. Instead I just leaned my shoulder into his and let the silence hold it.

He let it.

After a long moment he said, "You're not going to ask me anything about her?"

"Not unless you want me to."

He looked at me sideways. "Most people ask. Or they do the I'm so sorry face for the next twenty minutes."

"I'm sorry you lost her," I said. "But I don't want to make tonight about sympathy. You said you needed something that wasn't hospital waiting rooms." I gestured at the lake with my cup. "So."

Knox studied me for a moment with an expression I couldn't fully decode—something between surprised and careful, like he was recalculating. Then the corner of his mouth lifted. "How are you real?"

"California mutation. Something in the salt air."

He laughed, and this time he didn't pull the laugh back in. It went all the way up to his eyes, and he tilted his head toward the sky, and I watched his face open up in the starlight and thought, completely involuntarily: Oh no. Oh no, this is the worst possible development.

Because this wasn't the Knox from the rink—all sharp edges and team-captain charisma. This was the version underneath. The one with his mom's hot chocolate recipe and the shadow behind his eyes when his phone rang. The one who drove out here when things got heavy because the lake didn't ask anything of him.

I was in serious, irreversible trouble.

We stayed for two hours.

I told him about Elowen and the dragon manuscript and how I'd abandoned her in the doorway because I didn't know yet what she was brave enough to choose. He told me about his first game after his dad's diagnosis—how he'd scored a hat trick and stood on the ice afterward feeling nothing, just hollow, because his dad was watching from the upper section instead of behind the glass where he always stood. We talked about college—him torn between a hockey scholarship two states away and wanting to stay close to home, me not knowing yet if I even wanted a home here or if Evergreen still felt like a place I was visiting.

At one point I asked about the Eagles' playoff chances, and Knox looked so genuinely pleased that I'd asked that I had to look back at the lake before my face betrayed me entirely.

The cold crept in around eleven. I was on my second cup of hot chocolate and my third attempt at identifying a constellation when Knox reached over and pulled the edge of the blanket tighter around my shoulders, his arm settling along my back like it lived there.

"Warmer?" he asked.

"Marginally," I said, which was a complete lie because I was suddenly approximately one thousand degrees.

He ducked his head, and I turned mine, and we were close—the way we'd been in the parking lot, forehead to forehead, breath mingling in small white clouds.

"Avery." His voice was quieter now. Careful.

"Don't say anything complicated," I said, before I could stop myself. "Just—give me one more minute where this is still simple."

He stilled. Then, slowly, he pressed his lips to my temple instead. Warm. Soft. Nothing like the parking-lot kiss—not desperate, not proving anything. Just present.

"Okay," he murmured against my hair. "One more minute."

I closed my eyes and listened to the ice settle with its low, resonant groan across the lake, the sound of something solid holding its own weight, and tried very hard not to fall any further.

Spoiler: completely unsuccessful.

He walked me to the door at midnight, thermos under one arm, and we stood on the porch in the kind of comfortable quiet that should have taken months to earn.

"The bonfire stuff," he said finally. "Sophia. My dad. All of it—I know it's a lot to walk into."

"It is," I agreed. "But I'm still here."

Something in his expression shifted, settled. He reached out and tucked a strand of hair back under my beanie with one finger, careful and deliberate.

"Text me when you're inside," he said.

"It's my house, Callahan. I'm not going to get lost."

"Humor me."

I rolled my eyes and went in. Leaned against the door in the dark. Pulled out my phone.

Me: Inside. Still thawed. Zero percent eaten by wolves.

Knox: Excellent outcome. Sleep well, California.

I was halfway up the stairs when the second message came through.

Knox: For what it's worth—Elowen should go through the door.

I stopped on the third step.

Me: You remembered her name.

Knox: I remember everything you tell me.

I sat down on the stair and stared at that sentence for a full minute.

Somewhere in the kitchen, the fridge hummed. Outside, Minnesota was dark and cold and enormous.

And I thought: maybe forty percent was too conservative.

I was revising my complaint retraction all the way up to seventy-five.

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  • Puck Around And Fall   Chapter 6

    Dad 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

  • Puck Around And Fall   Thin Ice and Thinner Excuses

    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

  • Puck Around And Fall   Frozen Hearts and Burning Questions.

    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

  • Puck Around And Fall   Sparks, Shadows and Secrets

    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

  • Puck Around And Fall   Hot Chocolate and Hockey Heart Attacks

    I followed Knox out of the rink like a girl who definitely wasn’t already replaying his wink on loop in her head. The cold slapped me harder outside, wind whipping through the parking lot like it had a personal grudge against California transplants. My boots crunched on the salted sidewalk, and Knox—still half in pads, helmet tucked under one arm—looked like he’d just stepped off a magazine cover titled “Hot Guys Who Don’t Own Coats.”“Truck’s this way,” he said, nodding toward a beat-up black pickup that screamed small-town hockey royalty. Stickers plastered the back window: EVERGREEN EAGLES, a cartoon bird flipping the bird (ironic), and one that read “I brake for slapshots.”I hesitated. “You’re not driving me anywhere until you lose the shoulder pads, Callahan. I have standards.”He grinned, teeth flashing white against the dusk. “Fair. Gimme two minutes.” He popped the tailgate, yanked off his jersey right there in the parking lot—because of course he did—and swapped it for a hoo

  • Puck Around And Fall   The puck stops Here (sort of)

    I never planned on falling for a guy who smelled like frozen sweat and bad decisions. But here I was, standing in a hockey rink that felt like the inside of a walk-in freezer, watching my life implode in real time.My name is Avery Kane, and until three weeks ago, I lived in sunny San Diego where the only ice I dealt with came in my iced latte. Then Dad got the dream job: head coach of the Evergreen Eagles, Minnesota’s junior hockey powerhouse. Translation: pack up everything, say goodbye to my friends, my beach reads, and my dignity, and move to a town where the high school mascot is literally an angry bird on skates.“Ready to see the boys in action?” Dad asked, clapping me on the shoulder like I was one of his players. He was already in coach mode—whistle around his neck, clipboard in hand, hair sticking up from the static of his beanie.“Define ready,” I muttered, shoving my hands deeper into my pockets. My boots squeaked on the rubber mats as we stepped inside. The air hit me lik

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