LOGINRiley
The Rink Bar was everything I hated about hockey culture crammed into one sticky, overheated room. Blue and gold jerseys clashed everywhere I looked, Falcons and Eagles pretending to be civil while shooting daggers at each other over red plastic cups. The music was too loud, the bass vibrating up through my boots, and somewhere in the back, someone had already broken a glass. Laughter erupted, sharp and mean. I pressed closer to Marvel, his arm around my shoulders feeling less like comfort and more like a leash. "Don't move," he said, already pulling away. "I'm grabbing us drinks. Stay right here." He didn't wait for my answer. Just walked off, swallowed by the crowd of his teammates. His team had lost tonight, and the Eagles were drowning their disappointment in cheap beer and forced celebration. Stay right here. Like I was a child. Like I'd wander off and get lost. I leaned against the sticky bar, wrapping my arms around myself. The Eagles jersey I'd worn to support him felt like a target now, bright gold in a room full of Falcons who'd just won. A few of them glanced my way, their gazes sliding over me with something between curiosity and contempt. Coach's daughter wearing the enemy's colors. I could see the thought forming behind their eyes. And then I felt that prickle at the back of my neck. The sensation of being watched so intently it was almost physical. I looked up. Across the bar, leaning against the wall like he had all the time in the world, Ray Collins was staring directly at me. My stomach did something complicated. His arms were crossed over his chest, making the muscles in his forearms stand out. The dim light caught the sharp line of his jaw, the shadows under his cheekbones. He wasn't looking at me the way guys usually did, not like I was something to approach or conquer. He was just... watching. Studying. Like I was a play he was trying to figure out. I looked away fast, my cheeks heating. What is his problem? I scanned the crowd for Marvel. Found him at a high-top table with his teammates, jaw tight, a bottle already in his hand. He wasn't looking for me. Of course he wasn't. He was too busy drowning the loss, replaying every mistake in his head behind those angry eyes. "Riles! Hey, girl!" I turned to find Jessica, my roommate, weaving through the crowd with a grin. She was wearing Falcons colors, which was either brave or stupid, but Jess didn't care about hockey politics. "Thank God," I breathed as she reached me. "Please tell me you have somewhere else to be." "Just got here!" She linked her arm through mine. "Why do you look like someone stole your puppy?" I glanced back at Marvel's table. He was doing shots now. "It's Marvel. He's been weird all night. Controlling. Distant. Both at the same time, somehow." Jess followed my gaze, her smile tightening. "He looks... drunk." "Drunk, miserable, and leaving me alone at the bar like a coat he forgot." The words came out bitter. "I don't know what's going on with him. He lost, so now I'm just supposed to stand here and wait until he's ready to acknowledge me?" "Maybe he's just processing. Guys are stupid about emotions." She squeezed my arm. "Want me to stay and be a buffer?" Before I could answer, a voice cut through the noise behind us. "Well, well. If it isn't the princess herself." I turned. A guy I recognized from the Falcons, Kowalski, I think, was swaying in front of me, beer sloshing over his knuckles. His eyes were glassy, his grin ugly. His team had won, and he was celebrating hard. "Marvel's girl," he clarified, like I might not know. "And Coach Hartwell's little daughter, right? Slumming it with the losers tonight?" He gestured at my gold jersey and laughed. "Wrong side of the scoreboard, sweetheart." Jess stepped forward. "Back off, Kowalski. She's not here for you." He ignored her completely, stepping closer to me. The smell of beer and sweat rolled off him in waves. "What's a nice girl like you doing in a place like this? Daddy know you're hanging with the team that just got their asses handed to them?" "Go find somewhere else to be," I said, my voice flat. I'd learned that tone from my father, the one that meant I am done with this conversation. Kowalski laughed. "Ooh, scary. The coach's princess thinks she's tough." He leaned in, his face too close to mine. "You know what I think? I think you're here 'cause you like the danger. 'Cause being a good little daddy's girl gets boring. You wanted to see what it's like on the losing side for once." "Hey—" Jess started. Kowalski cut her off, his hand landing on the bar next to me, caging me in. "I think you want someone to show you what real rebellion looks like. Someone who actually knows how to win." My heart raced. The room felt smaller, hotter. I looked around for Marvel, for anyone, but the crowd was a blur of indifferent faces. His teammates were too busy drinking their sorrows away to notice their girl getting cornered. "Get away from her." The voice came from behind Kowalski. Low. Flat. Absolutely cold. Kowalski turned, and I saw Ray Collins standing there, close enough to touch. He wasn't leaning against anything now. He was fully upright, shoulders back, his gray eyes fixed on Kowalski with an expression that made my blood run cold despite the heat of the room. Kowalski blinked, momentarily thrown. "Collins. This doesn't concern you. Go celebrate your win somewhere else." Ray didn't move. Didn't blink. Just said, "Walk away. Now." Something passed between them, a silent conversation I couldn't read. Kowalski's bravado flickered. He looked at me, then back at Ray, then muttered something under his breath and stumbled off into the crowd of celebrating Falcons. The space he left felt huge and empty. Ray's eyes found mine. For a long, suspended moment, neither of us spoke. His gaze dropped to my hands, I hadn't realized they were shaking until I saw him looking. Then it came back up to my face, softer now. Questioning. "You okay?" His voice was different. Not the cold command from before. I nodded, not trusting my own voice. He held my gaze for another heartbeat, then gave a single, sharp nod and turned, disappearing into the crowd as if he'd never been there. Jess exhaled beside me. "Okay. What the hell was that?" I didn't answer. I couldn't. Because I had no idea what had just happened, or why my heart was still racing, or why it felt less like fear and more like something I didn't have a name for.POV: RileyThe skating placement review notice sat on my phone screen for exactly ten seconds before I acted on it.Not with panic. With the specific cold efficiency of someone who has been managing a performance for three days and understands that every move the other side makes is information. I photographed the notification. Sent it to Naomi. Sent it to the woman on the phone. Then I set my phone face down on the coffee shop table and looked at Amara."He's moving through the skating program now," I said. "My placement is under review.""When was the notice sent," Amara asked.Ray checked his phone. "Eight forty-two.""Twenty-five minutes after Preethi's fellowship was flagged," Naomi said through the phone speaker between us. She had called in when the notification came through, her voice tight and precise. "He's not reacting to one thing. He's running a sequence.""A prepared sequence," Amara said. She said it quietly, the way you say something you have been dreading confirming.
POV: RileyHer voice was calm the way deep water is calm.Not still. Not shallow. The kind of calm that has pressure underneath it, that has been moving for a long time beneath a surface that does not show the current. I had been expecting something... urgency, relief, the particular brightness of a person who has been waiting a long time for a call that finally came. Instead Amara sounded like someone who had already done the waiting and come out the other side of it into something quieter and more resolved."I was wondering how long it would take you to call," she said."You knew I would.""I knew when Preethi's fellowship got flagged at eight-seventeen that you were already in that building," she said. "Which meant you were moving faster than I anticipated. Which meant I needed to be ready.""Are you on campus?""Coffee shop on Garfield. Off campus. Quieter.""Give me twenty minutes," I said."I'll be here."I looked at Ray. He was already picking up his jacket.Naomi stayed with P
POV: RileyWe moved Preethi in eleven minutes.Not her belongings, not her life. Just the folder. The fourteen months of documentation she had been carrying in the bottom drawer of a filing cabinet under archive equipment, waiting for the right person to ask the right question. I called Ray while Preethi put her coat on and he was outside the building in four minutes, which meant he had been close already, which meant he had been doing the same thing I had been doing — staying near rather than far, operating on instinct rather than plan."Fellowship paused," I told him the moment he appeared in the doorway. "Eight-seventeen this morning. Three minutes after I knocked on her door."His jaw tightened. "Someone is watching the archive room.""Someone is watching everything," Preethi said from behind me. Her voice was steady but her hands on the folder were not entirely still. "I assumed the archive role gave me cover. My work is archival, routine, completely unremarkable to anyone who do
POV: RileyPreethi was in the digital archive room at eight-fifteen in the morning.I knew she would be because I had been paying attention since September in ways I had not understood were useful until now. She arrived before anyone else, stayed later than anyone else, and worked through her lunch hour on the days when the archive backlog was heavy. She was the kind of person who treated other people's work with more care than she treated her own comfort, and watching her do it from across the photography storage room back in September I had thought: I understand that. I had not understood yet that the system she was caring for had been partially funded by money stolen from her.I knocked on the archive room door at eight-twenty. She looked up from a monitor covered in thumbnail images and her face moved through something when she saw me... not suspicion exactly, more the careful stillness of someone who had learned not to open doors too quickly."Riley," she said. Neutral."Do you h
POV: RileyThe address was two hours away and I needed forty minutes to think first.Ray watched me read the message. Naomi watched Ray watch me. The library hummed its quiet fluorescent hum around us and I sat with the phone face down on the table and let the weight of the last hour settle into something I could actually carry."Talk to me," Ray said. "Out loud. All of it.""He's corrupt," I said. "Not just afraid. Not just controlling. Corrupt." The word tasted different from the others I had been using. Harder. More permanent. "He stole graduate student research funding for eight years. Eight years of students who came to this university believing their work was going to be supported, who received approval letters and disbursement confirmations and sat across from my father in his office while he smiled at them and used their research grants to pay for the system he built around me.""Riley...""I'm not spiraling," I said. "I'm being accurate. There's a difference." I looked at him
POV: RayShe picked up on the first ring."Financial compliance office," I said. I was still standing on the steps. The cold had worked its way through both layers of my jacket and was sitting against my ribs. "Declan went in with a thin folder and came out with a thick one. Twenty minutes inside. Second floor directory lists Research Grant Oversight."Silence. The particular kind."You already knew," I said."I knew about the grants," she said carefully. "I didn't know Declan was moving today.""How long has the compliance office been investigating."A pause. Long enough to tell me the answer was something she had been sitting on."Six months," she said.I breathed out slowly. Six months. The semester was four months old. Which meant this investigation had been running before Riley arrived on campus, before Hartwell hired me, before any of us understood we were inside something that had been in motion far longer than we knew."You need to tell me everything," I said. "Right now. Not
RileyI had done exactly one thing in my entire life without my father’s approval, and I was determined not to mess it up.Figure skating.It was my secret rebellion, planned and saved for in silence. While my father graded papers and muttered about “frivolous pursuits,” I watched old Olympic routi
Ray's PovI should have said no.The second Professor Hartwell asked me to babysit his daughter, I should have walked out. But I didn’t. I just sat there, in the worn leather chair across from his desk, trying to figure out what game we were playing.I’d been in his office plenty of times. Usually,
POV: RayMonday came like a punishment. I stood outside the athletics media room with my hands in my jacket pockets, telling myself I was calm. I was not calm. I'd barely slept. Every time I closed my eyes I saw the photograph on Hartwell's desk, the girl with the laughing eyes and the swinging hai
Riley's Pov Marvel,” I said, the word coming out as a relieved sigh.He didn’t smile. His eyes, usually so warm when they landed on me, were hard. “What’s going on?”“I was looking for you. I came down to… I saw the end of the game.” I took a step toward him, wanting to bridge the gap, to get us a







