LOGINJace’s POV
My lungs burned as I dashed off the face-off dot, I dug my stick blade into the ice, the puck snapped back to me clean. I dropped my shoulders low, and drove hard. I carried it through the neutral zone, faked left, cut right, and ripped a wrist shot that whistled past the goalie’s glove. The net rattled, my teammates banged their sticks against the boards.
I didn’t celebrate, I skated back to center ice, my jaw tight, already signaling for the next drill. My shoulders felt heavy under the pads even though practice had barely started. This was my job as the Captain; The one everyone looked to when things got messy, I had to be the example.
Mike tapped my shin pad as he lined up beside me. “You’re on another level today, man.”
I gave him a quick nod but didn’t answer. Words took energy I didn’t want to waste. Instead, I focused on the cold air biting at my face, the way my skates gripped the ice when I pushed off. Every stride had to be perfect and every decision sharp. Because if I slipped, even a little, it gave Dad another reason to point it out later.
We ran drill after drill, I won every face-off, threaded passes through tight gaps and blocked shots that should have beat me. My legs screamed after the third suicide sprint, but I kept my face blank. Captains aren't supposed to show it hurts. I circled back, called out adjustments to the defensemen and tapped gloves when someone made a good play. On the outside I looked in control. Inside, my mind wouldn’t shut up.
By the time the coach blew the whistle I was drenched in sweat, my jersey had clung to my back. I pulled off my helmet and dragged a hand through my wet hair. The arena lights felt too bright as they stabbed my face. My shoulder twinged; that same dull ache that had been there for weeks but I rolled it once and ignored it.
"Good effort today, Carter” Coach said as we headed off the ice, “keep leading like that.”
I forced a half-smile. “Thanks.”
In the locker room the guys were loud, joking about weekend plans, parties and chirping each other about missed shots. I sat on the bench in front of my stall and unlaced my skates slowly. The laces felt rough against my fingers, my hands were steady but my mind kept replaying every small mistake from practice. That one backcheck where I’d been half a stride late, the pass that could have been harder, all the things Dad would definitely see.
My phone vibrated on the shelf above my stall. I stared at it for a few seconds and hesitated before picking it up, the name on the screen made my stomach drop.
It was Dad.
I stepped out into the hallway near the arena exit, away from the noise. The concrete floor felt cold through my socks. I leaned against the wall, my thumb hovering over the answer button, then I pressed it.
“Hey, Dad.”
There was a pause; the kind that always meant trouble.
“Jace.” His voice was flat, like he was reading stats off a sheet, “I watched the footage your coach sent over…what exactly am I supposed to be looking at here?”
I paced the narrow hallway and flexed my free hand at my side, my socks slid a little on the smooth floor. “I scored four times and controlled the tempo the whole practice. The guys were following my lead on—”
“You were half a step slow coming back on that power play,” he interrupted,“and left a soft spot in the slot. I ran those same systems better at your age with worse players around me. The scouts are going to notice that hesitation, they always do.”
My throat tightened. I stopped near a water fountain and gripped the edge of it, staring at the metal drain. The ache in my shoulder flared again as I gripped harder, I loosened my fingers but didn’t let go.
“I adjusted after that,” I said, keeping my voice even. “We ran it clean the next three times.”
“Adjusting isn’t enough when you’re the one wearing the C,” he replied. “You’re supposed to set the standard, not catch up to it. I didn’t raise you to be average, Jace. I won two championships by twenty-one. People still talk about those runs, what are they going to say about yours if you keep playing like this?”
I closed my eyes for a second, the hallway felt smaller. My breathing sounded too loud in my own ears, I opened my eyes and stared at the painted cinder block wall until the texture blurred.
"I’m trying to lead them the right way,” I muttered,“the team’s undefeated. We’re ranked top five nationally.”
Silence stretched on the line. I could picture him sitting in his office back home, probably shaking his head the way he always did.
“Trying doesn’t win rings,” he finally said. “And undefeated doesn’t mean shit if you fold when it matters. Fix the gaps in your game and stop wasting time on things that don’t move the needle. I expect the next footage to look like a captain actually earned that letter.”
The call ended with a soft click.
I lowered the phone and stood completely still for a long moment, my hand stayed wrapped around the device until my knuckles ached.
My mind kept looping through his words; half a step slow, average and not enough. I pressed my forehead against the cool wall and just breathed In through my nose, out through my mouth, the way I did before big games. It didn’t stop the tightness spreading across my chest but it helped
As I stood there, the memory from earlier flashed back.
That girl in the quad.
She had come around the corner fast, head down, earbuds in. My shoulder had collided with hers. She stumbled, and for a second she fell right into me. My hands had caught her arms automatically.
She was slim, lighter than I expected. Her palms had pressed against my chest through my jacket. Her skin was warm, smooth where my fingers had wrapped around her upper arms. When she looked up, her expressive eyes were wide; not just from surprise, but something sharper. Maybe fear, like she was already pulling away even while I held her steady.
For that brief moment, something had shifted, quiet pull. The way her breath caught, the way my own grip had lingered a second longer than necessary before I let go. She smelled faintly like coffee and something clean, like fresh laundry. Then she stepped back quickly, muttered something, and hurried away.
I shook my head, pushing the memory aside. My shoulder throbbed again. I rolled it carefully.
I couldn’t afford distractions right now. Not with Dad watching, not with the team counting on me and not with everything riding on how I performed.
But the feel of her in my arms for that one second wouldn’t leave me alone.
I thought about the guys in the locker room laughing right now. They saw the captain who scored and led drills but they didn’t see this version; the one standing in an empty hallway trying not to crack because his dad’s voice still lived rent-free in his head no matter how many goals he scored.
My shoulder throbbed again. I rolled it carefully, testing the pain. It had been getting worse for weeks, but telling anyone meant questions. Questions led to weakness, and weakness led to more talks like this one.
I straightened up, shoved the phone into my pocket, and walked back toward the locker room. My steps felt heavier than they should after practice. The noise of the team spilled out into the hall as I got closer to laughter, trash talk and someone blasting music. I paused just outside the door, rested my hand on the frame and forced my face into the version they expected. Calm, In control and ready.
Because that’s what captains did.
I pushed the door open and stepped inside.
Jace's POV I walked into the campus café the next afternoon, my hands shoved deep in my hoodie pockets. The place was busy with students grabbing drinks between classes, but the back corner table we’d agreed on was still open. My shoulder ached from yesterday’s game, but I ignored it. The real reason my stomach felt tight was simpler; Ariana had actually shown up for the study session yesterday, and now we were doing this again.I spotted her already sitting there, notebook open, hair tied back in that neat ponytail she always wore. She looked focused and guarded. Like she was ready for this to be strictly business.I pulled out the chair next to her and dragged my seat close to hers, close enough that our arms brushed when I sat down. “Hey, you beat me here again.”She glanced up, her expressive eyes meeting mine for a second before she looked back at her notebook. “I had a free period and figured we should make it look real.”I nodded, setting my bag on the floor. “Yeah. That’s the
Ariana's POV I sat at the back corner table in the library, notebook open, pen tapping against the page. My mind kept drifting back to last night’s game; Jace on the ice, the way he had looked up at me after scoring, the brief touch when we left the arena. My fingers tightened around the pen. Jace walked in a few minutes later. Hoodie on, hair messy like he’d run his hands through it. He spotted me and gave a small nod, weaving between tables until he reached mine. He pulled out the chair right next to me instead of across, close enough that our arms almost brushed when he sat down. “Hey,” he said quietly, setting his bag on the floor. “Sorry I’m a little late. Practice ran over.” I shifted in my seat, trying to create a bit more space between us. “It’s fine. People are already looking, so… good timing I guess.” He leaned in slightly, voice low. “Yeah. That’s the point, right? Make it look real.” We both opened our notebooks at the same time. Our elbows bumped. I pulled mine b
Jace’s POVThe arena lights beat down on the ice as I skated out for warm-ups. My skates cut clean lines, but my mind was somewhere else. Dad’s voice from yesterday still rang in my ears; sharp, disappointed, demanding focus. And now she was here. Ariana. Sitting in the stands as my “girlfriend” for the first time.I glanced up toward the section Mike had pointed out earlier. She was there, in a simple gray sweater, hair tied back, looking small among the crowd of fans in team colors. Our eyes met for a second. She gave a small, awkward wave. I lifted my stick in response, forcing a smile that felt too wide.Mike skated up beside me, tapping my shin pad. “She actually came, you good?”I nodded, but my stomach was tight. “Yeah. Just… weird seeing her here like this.”The crowd noise swelled as more fans filled the seats. I pushed off, taking a few hard laps to warm my legs. Every stride sent a dull ache through my shoulder, but I pushed through it. The game mattered. Scouts were here,
Ethan Carter's POVI sat in my office, the TV playing highlights from the latest college games on low volume. The screen flickered with familiar images of young players skating hard, chasing the dream I once lived. My fingers tapped the desk in a steady rhythm, the same rhythm I used to count seconds on the ice.My phone buzzed. I glanced at it, expecting another scout report. Instead, it was a message from an old teammate who still followed the university circuit.Saw your boy in the papers. New girlfriend? Looks cozy. Hope it doesn’t mess with his game.I opened the link. A photo filled the screen. Jace and some girl sitting close at a campus café. Her hand near his. His head tilted toward her like they were sharing something private. The caption read something about the hockey captain finally settling down.My jaw tightened. I set the phone down slowly, but my fingers stayed curled around it. The tapping on the desk stopped. The room felt smaller.I picked up the phone and dialed J
Ariana's POV I pushed open the dorm door, still replaying the conversation with Jace in my head. My bag slipped off my shoulder and landed with a thud on the floor. Becca was already sitting on her bed, legs crossed, phone in her lap, but the second she saw me she dropped it.“Ariana Brooks,” she said, eyes wide. “You better sit down right now and tell me what the hell is going on.”I froze halfway to my bed. “What do you mean?”Becca pointed at her phone screen. “Maya made a post now everyone is talking about you and Jace Carter.But this time it looks way too real. You went on a date with him? A real one?”I sat down slowly on my bed, my hands gripping the edge of the mattress. My heart was still racing from earlier. “It wasn’t a real date. It was… part of the arrangement.”Becca crawled closer to the edge of her bed, leaning forward. “Arrangement? Girl, start talking. From the beginning. Because from what I’m seeing online, you two looked pretty cozy at the café.”I rubbed my face
Ariana's POVI stared at my phone for what felt like the hundredth time that evening. The dorm room was quiet except for Becca’s soft breathing from her bed. I had been thinking about it all day; the café “date,” and the article meeting. The way Jace had looked at me when our hands brushed, the strange comfort I felt when he actually listened to me when I talked about my article.It scared me.But we needed to talk. Before this whole thing got any more confusing.I typed the message quickly before I could change my mind.Ariana: Can we meet somewhere private tonight? We need to set some real boundaries.His reply came faster than I expected.Jace: Yeah. The bench behind the old library? 20 minutes?I took a deep breath, grabbed my hoodie, and slipped out of the dorm quietly.He was already there when I arrived, sitting on the wooden bench under the dim lamplight. His broad shoulders were slightly hunched, hands clasped between his knees. When he saw me, he straightened up but didn’t s







