LOGIN~KAI~
I don't run, not really. I just keep walking until the tunnel spits me out behind the rink, into the loading bay where the Zamboni lives and the snow piles up against the chain-link fence. Cold bites my face. My lips still burn from Jax's mouth. My hoodie's twisted wrong, one sleeve half-up my arm like I got dressed in the dark. I lean against the brick wall. Breathe. Try to make it normal. It doesn't work. My phone buzzes. Once. Twice. I don't look. I know who it is. The third buzz is a text preview that lights up the screen anyway. Jax: 'You left your bag in the tunnel.' I close my eyes. Fuck. There is another buzz. Jax: 'Milo grabbed it. He's looking for you.' Of course he is. I shove the phone in my pocket. Dig my palms into my eyes until I see stars. The taste of blood and cedar is still in my mouth. My throat feels raw from the things I didn't say. From the things I let him do. I should go home. Lock the door. Pretend the last fifteen minutes were a bad dream. Instead I slide down the wall until my ass hits the frozen concrete. Knees up. Hood pulled low. Minutes pass. Maybe ten. Maybe twenty. The cold seeps in slow, like guilt. Footsteps crunch snow. I don't look up. I already know the rhythm. Milo stops a few feet away. Doesn't crowd. He never does. "You forgot this." He sets my bag down between us, gently. Like it might break. I stare at it. "Thanks." He doesn't leave. He just stands there in his team jacket, hands shoved in pockets, breath fogging the air. The bruise on his cheek from last week's practice is fading yellow. He looks tired. Not angry. Just... tired. "You okay?" he asks again. Same soft voice. Same question. I laugh once. It was short and bitter. "Do I look okay?" "No." Milo's always honest when it hurts. He shifts his weight. Snow creaks under his boots. "I saw the marks," he says quiet. "On his neck." My stomach drops. "You left them." I don't answer. He exhales, fog curls. "Kai." "Don't." "I'm not mad." "You should be." "Maybe." He crouches then, slow, eye level. "But I'm not." His eyes are steady. Brown. Warm. The opposite of Jax's dark burn. I hate how safe they make me feel. Hate it more because I know what he did. Or didn't do. Four years ago. Tyler's party. Basement stairs. Jax's hand on my wrist. Dragging me into the bathroom. Door clicking shut. Milo was there. In the hallway. Leaning against the wall with a red cup. He saw Jax pull me past. He heard the lock. He didn't knock. He didn't yell. He didn't do anything. He just stood there. I found out later—overheard him telling someone it "wasn't his business." That I had been laughing earlier. That I had wanted it. I never confronted him. I never said the words. Because saying them would make it real. Now he's looking at me like he's waiting for permission to speak. "I should've stopped it," he says. His voice cracks on the last word. "Back then." My chest tightens. "Yeah." "I thought..." He trails off and swallows. "I thought if I pretended it didn't happen, it wouldn't." "Smart plan." He flinches. Small. But I see it. "I'm sorry," he says. The words hang there, cold and deep. I want to tell him it's fine. That it's old news. That I forgave him years ago. I can't. Because it's not fine. And forgiveness feels like another lie. He reaches out, hesitates. Then touches my knee, just fingertips. It warm through my jeans. "I don't want you to get hurt," he says. "Too late." His thumb moves once. In small comfort circle. I don't pull away. But I don't lean in either. We sit like that. Snow falling soft. Rink lights buzzing behind us. Then headlights cut across the lot. A black Jeep. Jax's. He doesn't get out right away. Just sits there. Engine idling. Watching us through the windshield. Milo's hand stills on my knee. Jax kills the engine. His door opens. His boots hit snow. He walks over slow. Hands loose at his sides. No gear now—just hoodie, jeans, that bruise under his eye looking worse in the sodium light. He stops a few feet away. Looks at Milo's hand first. Then at me. "You left," he says. "Needed air." "You needed to run." I shrug. He glances at Milo. "You good?" Milo doesn't answer. Just looks up at him. Something passes between them—old, ugly, wordless. Jax's jaw ticks. "Take your hand off him." Milo doesn't move it right away. He just looks at me. Waiting. I don't tell him to stop. But I don't tell Jax to fuck off either. The Silence stretches. Intense. Jax steps closer, Crouches on my other side, mirror of Milo. Two walls and no way out. He doesn't touch me, not yet. He just watches. "You're shaking," he says quietly. "Cold." "Liar." He reaches out. Slow. Tucks a strand of hair behind my ear. Fingers linger on my neck. Right over the spot he bit earlier. I flinch. He smiles, small and dangerous. "Still sensitive." Milo's hand tightens on my knee. Jax notices. But doesn't comment. He just keeps looking at me. "I'm not going anywhere," he says. Like it's a promise. Like it's a threat. "I know." "Good." He leans in. His forehead to mine. His breath warm on my mouth. "You can hate me tomorrow," he whispers. "Tonight you're coming with me." My heart slams. Milo's fingers dig in. I close my eyes. The snow keeps falling. It was quiet, unavoidable. I don't say yes. I don't say no. I just stand up, and when Jax offers his hand, I take it. Milo lets go. He doesn't speak. He just watches us walk away. Jax Headlights flare again, the door slams, and the engine growls. And I let Jax drive me into the dark. Knowing I'm not safe. Knowing I never was.THE WAIT~KAI'S POV~The apartment was already spotless.I knew that. I had spent the last two hours scrubbing every surface until my hands ached. But I straightened the throw pillow anyway. I moved the remote two inches to the left, then moved it back. I stood in the middle of the room, my heart beating against my ribs, feeling like the walls were closing in on me.I walked back to the bathroom.The perfume was still sitting on the edge of the sink where I'd left it. I'd stood there for three full minutes earlier, debating whether to spray it or not.In the end, I'd sprayed it three times.I checked my reflection again. I fixed my hair, then gripped the edge of the sink, staring at my own face. I looked like a man who was losing an argument with himself.When did this start? When did Jax Carter become the reason I checked the mirror twice? I didn't have an answer, and I didn't want one.I turned off the light and went to sit on the couch.7:43 PM.Nothing. No message, no call, no
WHAT THE PAST COSTS~KAI'S POV~The morning after should have felt wrong.It didn't.That was the problem. I stood in my kitchen in yesterday's shirt and bare feet, watching Jax move around my space like he'd owned it for years. He knew exactly which cabinet held the mugs. He knew I took my coffee with too much sugar and almost no milk. The whole domestic ease of it was terrifying. It felt normal. It felt like a future I didn't dare to want.Jax grabbed his keys off the counter in one smooth, alpha move. He turned to me, and that striking mouth curved into a slow, unhurried smirk—the kind that knew exactly how to make my knees go soft."See you later, honey," he rasped. His morning voice was a low vibration that traveled straight to my gut.My jaw tightened. "Don't call me that."Jax leaned his head, his dark eyes tracking the pulse jumping in my neck. He leaned in, his scent—cedar and skin—filling my head until I couldn't think."But you do like it." His voice dropped to a filthy
THE THING THAT STAYS~KAI'S POV~The smell of coffee hit me before I even opened my eyes. It was heavy and dark, a clear difference from the chilly morning air in the room.I lay there for a moment. I looked at the ceiling. It was a dull light.The heater was clicking in the corner. My body felt tired and heavy, every muscle still remembering Jax's weight from last night.Then I heard it. Movement in the kitchen.A cabinet door creaked. Someone picked up my cereal box. I heard a bowl clink.I sat up, my skin prickling.Jax was still here.I stood in the doorway and watched him. I didn't say a word. I just stood there, my breath hitching as I took him in. He was wearing the same jeans from yesterday, hung low on his hips, and one of my t-shirts that looked two sizes too small on his muscular frame.The fabric strained across his broad shoulders. His bare feet were planted on the cold tile. He was leaning against the counter, a bowl of cereal in one hand and his phone in the other.
THE DRIVE BACK~KAI'S POV~Mr. Williams smiled.It was that same fake smile I'd seen since I was nineteen. It never reached his eyes. It was an act he wore so well he'd forgotten how to be human."Kai." His voice was friendly, but it felt broken off. "It's been a long time."His eyes traveled down my body, then back up. It was a slow, oily look that made my skin crawl. He didn't see me as a person; he saw me as a box to be checked. I felt like I was nineteen again, trapped and small.My heart slammed against my ribs."Yeah," I managed to say. My voice was even, but it took everything I had. "And my day just got worse seeing you."Mr. Williams' smile only widened. He didn't care what I thought. He had decided a long time ago that caring was for the weak.His eyes shifted to Jax.He looked at him for a while, thinking. I could almost see him remembering Jax's face, saving it for later. Then he looked back at me."We should catch up sometime, Kai. Don't be a stranger."He turned and w
CITY HOSPITAL~KAI~He still hadn't moved.I looked at the broken phone on the floor, the call timer still running like a countdown. That voice was still coming from the speaker—calm, relaxed, and really in charge.Jax walked across the kitchen quickly. He bent down, grabbed the phone, and hung up without saying anything. He put it on the counter and looked at me.He didn't ask if I was fine. He didn't have to. He just saw the mess on my face."Get your jacket," he commanded.The drive was just gray streets and quiet.I sat in the passenger seat, holding my bag in my lap and pressing my hands on my thighs. I looked at the city go by, but I didn't really see it.Jax didn't push. He didn't fill the space with useless questions. He just drove with one hand on the wheel, his eyes locked on the road.Halfway there, my hands curled into fists. The guilt felt heavy in my chest."I didn't send the money," I whispered. My voice felt empty, like it was someone else's. "She texted me two days
MORNINGKAI'S POVI woke up at 6 a.m., before my alarm could even think about going off.Light grey morning rays were coming through the blinds, making long shadows in the room.The radiator was making a clicking sound in the corner, but I didn't feel cold. I couldn't. Jax's strong arm was over my waist, holding me down on the bed.It felt really strong and warm—like he had been sleeping there forever. I didn't move. I just lay there, feeling nervous as I listened to him breathe. Jax was deep in sleep, his breath slow and steady against the back of my neck. In the light of morning, he looked like a fallen god—strikingly handsome, his sharp jawline softened by sleep.He looked younger this way. The alpha guard he always wore was gone. I could see the bandages around his ribs and the butterfly strip on his jaw where he had been hurt at the track. My heart pounded in my chest. He had risked everythingfor me last night. I carefully lifted his large, hot arm, moving it an inch at a tim
SCORPION~KAI'S POV~The knock came at 9 p.m.I had been sitting at my desk for two hours, just staring at a blank screen. Milo's words were sitting in my chest like something that wouldn't digest. 'He will hurt you. You're a target.' I wasn't writing anything; I was just letting the fear turn ove
OUTSIDE IN THE SNOWKAI'S POVI didn't go to class. I didn't set an alarm. I hadn't slept for a single fucking second.I just lay on my bed and stared at the ceiling, my mind replaying that locker room shower on a loop. Every time I closed my eyes, I felt it all over again—the freezing water, the
NO GOING BACK KAI'S POVThe rivalry game was the ugliest one of the whole season. It was brutal from the very first drop of the puck. There were high hits and late calls, and two fights broke out before the first period even ended. It felt so personal, like everyone on the ice hated each other.
WHAT YOU SAW KAI'S POVI told myself I wasn't jealous.I was standing in the hallway outside the gym, just watching. It was my job to observe Jax Carter, but seeing that girl's hand on his muscular chest made my stomach twist into knots. She was laughing and touching his arm, and Jax just stood t







