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Five

Author: Lovely
last update publish date: 2026-05-28 01:06:27

ATHENA

Crossing my arms over my chest, I shifted my weight and looked dead at Jeremiah Ashford. The air in the gritty hallway of the facility felt thick, smelling faintly of stale ice shavings and floor wax.

"I’m not doing this for revenge, Ashford," I said, my voice cutting through the quiet.

His dark brows pulled together, creating a deep crease between them. He looked genuinely confused, tilting his head slightly. "You don't want to get back at the guy who just humiliated you in front of the entire campus?"

"He’s dead to me." The words tasted like ash, but I forced them out with conviction. "That’s the past. I’m doing this for my future. So, if we’re actually doing this, I want that national development camp spot guaranteed. In writing. Before I blow a single whistle."

Jeremiah studied my face. His dark brown eyes tracked over my expression, searching for a bluff, a crack in my armor, or maybe just seeing if I would back down. I didn't blink. Slowly, he nodded, a quiet respect settling into his posture before he turned to his manager.

"Talia," he said. "Draw it up."

Leaning against the wall, Talia didn't even look surprised. She tapped her pen against her clipboard. "Already drafting it. Give me twenty-four hours."

"Perfect." I dropped my arms, feeling a sudden, exhausted adrenaline crash.

Stepping back, Jeremiah gave me enough space to pass. "Meet me tomorrow to sign. We’ll talk strategy."

I nodded once and turned to walk away, gesturing for Tessa to follow. My brain was already running a mile a minute, calculating plays, roster changes, and how the hell I was going to pull this off.

That distraction cost me.

My sneaker hooked violently on the curled edge of a thick rubber floor mat. Gravity grabbed me instantly, pitching me forward with terrifying speed. I threw my hands out, bracing for the inevitable, humiliating smack of my face against the concrete.

Before I even dropped a full foot, a large hand clamped like a vise around my waist. Another hand gripped my upper arm, fingers digging into the fabric of my jacket. With zero effort, Jeremiah hauled me backward and upright, his strength so absolute it ripped a short gasp from my throat.

Suddenly, I was pressed flat against him. My hands, acting purely on survival instinct, had splayed wide against a solid, unyielding chest.

Everything stopped.

The scent of sharp spearmint and freezing rink air hit my senses, overpowering the stale hallway smell. Looking up, my gaze crashed directly into the sharp cut of his jawline, tracing a frantic path up to those dark brown eyes that were suddenly entirely too close. A heavy, rapid pulse beat steadily at the base of his throat, right above the collar of his hoodie.

Neither of us moved. My lungs forgot how to work.

From a few feet away, Tessa cleared her throat. Loudly.

Jolting backward, I scrambled for balance, my boots squeaking awkwardly on the rubber mat as I aggressively smoothed down the front of my jacket. My face burned hot enough to melt ice.

"Uh. Thanks," I stammered, strictly avoiding his gaze. "For the catch."

Jeremiah rubbed the back of his neck, looking weirdly flustered for a guy who usually wore arrogance like a second skin. "Yeah. Have a good trip. I mean—shit." He squeezed his eyes shut for a second. "Safe trip. Going home."

A surprised, entirely genuine laugh ripped out of me.

Hearing it, Jeremiah cursed under his breath, shaking his head at his own stupidity, but a faint, crooked smile cracked through his usually stoic expression. It transformed his face completely, making him look dangerously human.

Turning on my heel, I marched toward the exit before I could make a bigger fool of myself.

Once we hit the blinding sunshine and started walking toward the parking lot, Tessa violently nudged my shoulder.

"Have a good trip? Really?" she mocked, her voice pitched high. "The big bad Ashford captain is out here glitching over you."

"Stop," I snapped, pulling my sunglasses down over my eyes. "It was just a reflex. He was keeping me from breaking my teeth."

"Girl, you were staring at him like he was the last slice of pizza. I saw the chemistry. It was giving very much 'enemies to lovers' energy and I am seated for it."

"Absolutely not," I said, hitting the unlock button on my key fob. "I am entirely done with the male species. No guys. No distractions. I'm staying single until my knees give out. Period."

Walking across the Westbridge quad the next morning felt like marching to my own execution.

The LA morning was disgustingly gorgeous—cloudless blue sky, warm breeze rattling the palm trees, students lounging on the manicured grass. I kept my chin locked parallel to the ground, my eyes fixed straight ahead.

It didn't stop the whispers.

Everywhere I stepped, conversations seemed to pause. Near the library steps, a girl in a bio-sci hoodie explicitly pointed at me, leaning over to whisper into her friend's ear. Off to my right, three guys from the lacrosse team tilted their phones in my direction, snickering.

I ignored the violent burning in my cheeks. Gripping the straps of my backpack until my knuckles turned a bruised shade of white, I kept my pace steady. Let them look.

Stepping into Athletic Director Hayes’s office building offered a brief escape from the sun, but none from the tension. The space was a stark contrast to the gritty, lived-in reality of the Ashford rink. 

The room was aggressively minimalist—a sleek, transparent glass desk, expensive brass accents on the shelves, and warm, ambient gold lighting that made the place feel like a high-end spa rather than a college sports hub.

Director Hayes, a polished woman in her late forties with razor-sharp blonde hair and a tailored blazer, didn't even look up from her iPad when I stopped in front of her desk.

"Have a seat, Miss Cole," she murmured, swiping down on her screen. "Be right with you."

I sat down in one of the rigid leather guest chairs. It squeaked slightly under my weight.

Then, total silence.

For two agonizing, calculated minutes, I sat there while Hayes slowly scrolled, occasionally tapping the screen. The only sound in the room was the soft hum of the central air conditioning. 

It was a blatant power play, designed to make me feel small before she even opened her mouth.

Finally, she set the iPad face down on the glass and folded her hands perfectly on the desk.

"It’s about accountability, Athena," Hayes began, her voice smooth and devoid of any real empathy. "Athletics at this level... erm... they require a certain bulletproof mentality."

She leaned back in her ergonomic chair, staring up at the modern acoustic ceiling tiles like she was recalling a fond memory.

"Ah... reminds me of a goalie we recruited back in '18," she mused. "Brilliant kid. Reflexes like a cat. But she let her personal life bleed onto the ice. Started missing curfews, dating a rival forward... erm... the focus just shattered. It always ends the same way."

I clenched my jaw, my teeth grinding together. I saw exactly where this was going, and the sheer hypocrisy of it made my blood boil.

"We can't afford a circus," Hayes continued, finally dropping her gaze back to me. "Throwing a championship game over some teenage heartbreak? It shows a distinct lack of mental fortitude. You embarrassed the program. We have boosters calling, sponsors asking questions."

My temper snapped. The guilt I had carried into this room evaporated, replaced by a cold, sharp fury. But when I spoke, I kept my voice deadly quiet and perfectly leveled.

"I made a massive mistake, Director. But I didn't lose my talent overnight. I carried this team on my back for two years. You’re cutting your best scorer because you’re scared of a campus blog."

Hayes's perfectly lined eyes narrowed. "Watch your tone. You breached our conduct policy in the most public way possible. This is a mutual agreement to part ways so we don't have to formally expel you from the athletic department. It saves you the stain on your official record."

"Nothing about this is mutual," I said.

Pushing the leather chair back so hard it screeched against the hardwood floor, I stood up. I towered over her seated form, refusing to let her have the last psychological edge.

"You're throwing me under the bus," I stated cleanly.

Hayes simply picked up her iPad again, dismissing me entirely. "Best of luck with your academics, Miss Cole."

Turning my back on her, I marched toward the glass double doors. I pushed them open, letting the heavy doors slam shut behind me. As the outdoor air hit my face, the final thread of my patience completely severed.

"Cunt," I muttered under my breath, adjusting my backpack and walking away from Westbridge Athletics forever.

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  • Rejected by my team, Claimed by the Rival   Fifty Six

    ATHENAFrost coated my eyelashes, sealing them together with heavy, frozen crusts.My only goal right now was surviving the next sixty seconds. The Los Angeles night outside was supposed to be warm, but inside the Ashford arena, the industrial HVAC system roared like a jet engine. Sub-zero air blasted directly from the overhead vents, chewing through my thin jacket and biting directly into my bones.Dragging my body across the dark rubber matting, the friction scraped the skin completely off my knees. I needed shelter. The open hallway was a wind tunnel of freezing death.Hitting the wooden edge of the home team penalty box, I hauled my dead weight over the low bench.Curling into a tight ball on the floorboards, violent, uncontrollable shivers wrecked my entire body. My teeth cracked against each other. The darkness swallowed everything, broken only by the tiny, useless green standby lights on the overhead jumbotron.Clack. Clack. Clack.The sharp sound of hard-soled dress shoes hitt

  • Rejected by my team, Claimed by the Rival   Fifty Five

    JEREMIAHI ripped the athletic tape cleanly off the roll, the sharp sound echoing off the concrete walls.Sitting in the corner stall of the Ashford locker room, I wrapped the blade of my composite stick. The room smelled of fresh sweat, floor wax, and intense, quiet focus. Friday’s qualifier was barely forty-eight hours away. My singular goal was keeping this roster completely insulated from the academic warfare currently trying to swallow our coach whole."Carter," I called out, tossing a spare roll of black tape across the room. "Your gap control on the penalty kill is sloppy. Close the neutral zone faster today."Catching the tape one-handed, Carter nodded. "Got it, Captain. Sub-three second transitions. Coach Cole will run us until we vomit if we miss the mark again."A heavy, metallic thud echoed from the entrance.The double doors swung open, hitting the rubber stops with enough force to rattle the hinges.Three men walked into the locker room.Arthur Ashford led the pack. Wear

  • Rejected by my team, Claimed by the Rival   Fifty Four

    ATHENAWe'd fucked for hours. My pussy was still sore.And now, lying in the center of the bed, the heavy duvet draped over our bare legs. The digital clock on the nightstand glared a harsh red: 3:14 AMMy head rested on Jeremiah’s chest. His heartbeat pulsed steadily against my cheek, a slow, grounding rhythm. His arm wrapped tightly around my waist, keeping me flush against his side even in sleep. Total, utter exhaustion pulled at my eyelids. For the first time all week, the anxiety vibrating in my ribs vanished.BEEP-BEEP-BEEP-BEEP.A piercing, high-decibel shriek violently shattered the quiet.I jolted upright, my heart instantly slamming into my throat. "What is that?""The perimeter alarm." Jeremiah rolled out of bed with terrifying, immediate speed. The sleepy lover vanished, entirely replaced by the lethal protector. "Someone breached the back patio gate."The keypad in the hallway continued its deafening, rhythmic screaming.Jeremiah shoved his legs into a pair of gray sweatp

  • Rejected by my team, Claimed by the Rival   Fifty Three

    ATHENAStaring at the boy who used to be my entire world, the leftover adrenaline from the dance floor instantly curdled into pure, venomous disgust. The neon pink lights of the hallway cast harsh, ugly shadows across his face.Jeremiah shifted his weight. The muscles in his arm coiled like thick steel cable. He didn't speak, but his massive frame angled forward, completely ready to tear Luca apart with his bare hands.Reaching back, I pressed my hand flat against Jeremiah’s chest. *Stand down.*"You are bargaining with a felony, Luca," I stated, keeping my voice entirely dead and flat."I’m offering you a lifeline," Luca corrected, stepping closer. The smell of cheap tequila radiated off his crimson Westmore jacket. "Sienna paid a TA to plant that midterm. She set the trap, not me. I have the text messages on a burner phone. I can hand them to Dean Hayes tomorrow morning and clear your name entirely.""And the price is me.""The price is us going back to the way things were," he insi

  • Rejected by my team, Claimed by the Rival   Fifty Two

    ATHENAHeavy bass vibrated through the floorboards, rattling the soles of my boots.The Bruce mansion sprawled across the edge of a Hollywood Hills cliff, a massive monument to excess. Neon lights bathed the crowded living room in harsh shades of magenta and electric blue. The air tasted incredibly thick, choked with the smell of cheap beer, marijuana smoke, and cloying, expensive perfume.Hundreds of bodies crushed together. Shouting voices competed with the deafening rap music blasting from ceiling-mounted speakers.Standing near the massive marble kitchen island, I held a red plastic cup filled with lukewarm water.Tessa leaned against the counter next to me, wearing a tight black dress, her eyes scanning the chaotic room like a sniper."Okay, the hostility in this room is literally tangible," Tessa shouted over the music. "I’ve counted at least twelve Westmore hockey players glaring at us since we walked through the door.""Let them glare." I took a sip of the water. "We aren't he

  • Rejected by my team, Claimed by the Rival   Fifty One

    ATHENAThe heavy mahogany door clicked shut, sealing the suffocating heat of the Los Angeles morning out in the hallway.Dean Hayes slid a thick manila folder across the polished wood. It stopped directly in front of my folded hands. The stolen biology midterm rested on top of the stack, the university seal glaring bright red under the harsh fluorescent lights of the administrative boardroom. My singular goal today was walking out of this room with my academic record intact."The evidence is entirely conclusive, Miss Cole," Dean Hayes stated. She adjusted her silver-rimmed glasses, leaning back into her high-backed leather chair. "Campus security recovered this exact document from your personal athletic locker at seven o'clock this morning. Felony academic theft carries an immediate, non-negotiable expulsion."Sitting directly beside me, Jeremiah shifted his massive frame. The leather of his chair creaked sharply. He wore a dark button-down shirt, his shoulders rigid, completely dwarf

  • Rejected by my team, Claimed by the Rival   Seventeen

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  • Rejected by my team, Claimed by the Rival   Sixteen

    AUTHOR’S POV.The moment she violently through the heavy glass doors of the massive lecture hall, Sienna instantly adjusted her expensive designer tote bag on her shoulder. Slipping on a pair of oversized Prada sunglasses to block out the blinding midday LA sun, she merged into the crowded campus w

  • Rejected by my team, Claimed by the Rival   Fifteen

    ATHENAThe second I slammed the heavy office door shut, the quiet of the room instantly suffocated me. The heavy thrum of the facility’s massive AC unit vibrating through the floorboards was the only sound left in the building. Tessa had taken her car and left to cool off, leaving Jeremiah and me a

  • Rejected by my team, Claimed by the Rival   Fourteen

    ATHENAStanding completely still on the painted blue line, I pulled the collar of my jacket up against the chill. The air inside the Ashford arena was freezing, biting sharply at my nose, but the energy humming across the ice was entirely electric.I tracked the offensive line as they ran the newly

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