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The Girl who changed the Game
The Girl who changed the Game
Author: Ruby's write

Chapter one

Author: Ruby's write
last update publish date: 2026-06-12 07:30:31

I have a list of things I swore I would never do at Harlow University.

Number one: live in the athletic dorm. Done that, first week, because the regular dorm assignment system apparently doesn't account for people who need a five AM alarm and zero social consequences for it.

Number two: take a sports media elective to fill a credit gap. Done that too, starting this Thursday, because apparently "Introduction to Broadcast Journalism" was the only thing left that didn't conflict with practice.

Number three  and this one I held onto the longest, this one felt sacred  never, under any circumstances, get assigned a profile piece on a hockey player.

The universe, as it turns out, has a fantastic sense of humor and zero respect for my list.

"Zara." Professor Hendricks held up a folder across the seminar table like she was presenting evidence. "You've got the men's hockey program. Specifically, you're profiling their starting center."

Twenty-two students looked at me. I smiled the smile I'd been perfecting since I was twelve, the one that said totally fine, completely on board, the one that had gotten me through regional championships and a stress fracture and one very bad Thanksgiving. "Great," I said. "Love hockey."

I do not love hockey.

I love figure skating, which I have done since I was four years old, which is how I ended up at Harlow on an athletic scholarship, which is also and this is the part nobody tells you at recruitment visits why I have complicated feelings about hockey players specifically. Hockey players share our ice. Hockey players have, on three documented occasions this semester alone, left ruts in the resurface pattern that my coach describes using language I won't repeat. Hockey players operate on the assumption that the rink is primarily theirs with figure skating as a polite inconvenience scheduled around them.

I am not biased. I am informed.

The profile subject's name was in the folder: Declan Mercer, 20, Sophomore, #11.

I Googled him in the elevator on the way out. His university athletics photo showed someone with brown hair that was doing whatever it wanted and the general bone structure of a person who had never once struggled to get a table at a restaurant. He was grinning at the camera like the camera had said something funny.

I closed the tab.

His first practice I could observe was at six in the morning, which, given that I was already up at five for my own ice time, felt less like a scheduling conflict and more like a personal attack from the universe, which had clearly decided this semester was content.

The rink at six AM smells like cold and ambition and someone's forgotten equipment bag. I know this rink the way I know my own apartment every board, every light, the specific place near the penalty box where the Zamboni always leaves a slightly rough patch. I was standing at the glass with my notebook when the team came out, and I was looking for number eleven, and I found him almost immediately because he was the one doing something baffling.

He was skating backward.

Not in a drill. Not with any apparent purpose. Just backward, slowly, in a wide circle near the blue line, looking up at the ceiling of the rink like he was reading something written there. His teammates were warming up around him and he was drifting, serene, in the wrong direction, like a boat that had very peacefully lost its captain.

I wrote: subject appears unaware of surroundings.

Then the puck came out of nowhere  a teammate's stray shot, fast and low  and without looking, without breaking the backward drift, Declan Mercer redirected it with one casual flick of his stick toward the net, where it hit the back corner so cleanly that the goalie didn't even flinch in time.

The team responded with the specific noise of people who have seen this before and are annoyed they're still impressed by it.

He hadn't looked down once.

I crossed out appears unaware of surroundings.

I wrote: is aware of everything, apparently.

He found me at the glass twenty minutes later, during a water break. Skated over with the easy, swaying gait of someone for whom blades are just feet, and stopped with a precision that sent a small spray of ice toward the board. He was taller up close, which was genuinely inconvenient.

"You're the journalism student," he said.

"And you're the hockey player," I said.

"Zara, right?" He didn't wait for confirmation. "Hendricks sent me an email." He pulled his helmet off and his hair did the exact same thing as the photo: whatever it wanted. "Said you're profiling me for the semester project."

"That's correct."

"Cool." He took a drink from his water bottle. "You skate?"

I looked at him. "I'm on the figure skating team."

Something shifted in his expression a quick recalibration. "Huh," he said.

"'Huh' meaning what, exactly?"

"Meaning I've probably seen you skate and didn't know it was you." He tilted his head. "We share the rink on Tuesdays."

"I'm aware," I said, in a tone that communicated a great deal without technically saying anything.

He looked at me for a second with an expression I couldn't immediately categorize  not defensive, not apologetic, something more like interested, which was somehow worse. "The rut thing," he said. "Near the east wall."

I said nothing.

"That was Kowalski," he said. "For what it's worth."

"It's worth very little," I said. "It's still your program's rut."

He almost smiled. Not quite. "Fair." He put his helmet back on. "Interview Monday? I've got a free block after two."

"Monday works."

"Try not to hate us too much before then." He skated backward away from the glass  the same easy backward drift, like gravity worked differently for him  and rejoined the drill without looking where he was going.

He didn't bump into a single person.

I stood at the glass with my notebook and wrote: insufferably competent.

Then I underlined it.

Twice.

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  • The Girl who changed the Game   Chapter Thirteen

    Saturday morning at Harlow had a different quality than every other morning.Weekday mornings had urgency, the alarm, the training gear, the specific momentum of a day that knew where it was going. Sunday mornings had recovery slower, quieter, the campus doing something close to breathing out. But Saturday mornings existed in a gap between the two, and the gap had a texture I'd come to rely on: enough structure to feel purposeful, enough space to feel human.My Saturday routine was mine in a way that nothing scheduled could be. No Dmitri. No program run throughs. Just the rink at seven, open freestyle session, whatever I wanted to do with the ice for ninety minutes. I'd been doing it since October and it was the closest thing I had to the floor and tea ritual translated into motion.I was lacing up at the boards when I heard the door.Not hockey. Not the team. Just one person, carrying a single stick and a bucket of pucks with the unhurried energy of someone who had also claimed this

  • The Girl who changed the Game   Chapter Twelve

    What happened with the media restriction on the hockey assignment?I held very still. "The athletics department""I know what the official reason was," she said. "I'm asking if you know the unofficial one."I looked at her plants."The assistant coach," I said carefully. "Ashford. He knows my previous training program.""And?""I think he had concerns about" I pause "conflict of interest. In journalism."Hendricks was quiet for a moment. She put my outline down. "Ryan Ashford worked at the Crestfield Academy from 2019 to 2023," she said. "During which time he was assistant to the head coach."I looked at her."I looked it up," she said, simply. "When the restriction came through. I research things. It's a professional habit." She tilted her head. "I'm not asking you to tell me what happened at Crestfield. That's yours." She held my gaze. "But I want you to know that if something in your history is being used to manage your present, that's not a conflict of interest problem. That's som

  • The Girl who changed the Game   Chapter Eleven

    "I didn't choose it," Camille said. "Yuen assigned pairs alphabetically. Kowalski, Camille. Kowalski, Ryan." She paused. "I've considered legally changing my name.""To what?" Sofía said.Camille thought about it. "Something starting with Z," she said. "Put myself at the opposite end."I looked at her, at the precise wrapper folding and the flat delivery and the careful, observant quality that reminded me, at an angle, of someone else. The kind of person who noticed things from a distance and processed them privately and only reported them when they'd confirmed the pattern."You should sit with us more," I said.She looked at me."If you want," I said. "The chair wobbles but the corner is good."She looked at the wobble with the expression of a person who had already clocked it twenty minutes ago and made peace with it."Okay," she said. "Thank you."Sofía looked at me with the specific satisfaction she reserved for things she had engineered to appear spontaneous.I made a note to ask

  • The Girl who changed the Game   Chapter Ten

    He was at the center of the ice, hands in his jacket pockets, looking at me with the open expression I'd catalogued across five weeks of early mornings and terrible coffee and conversations that kept going somewhere I hadn't planned for."The moment where you commit and it's not undoable anymore," he said. "That's not only a Lutz problem."I held my skate bag."I know," I said.He nodded once. He turned back to the ice.I walked out into the corridor and stood in the cold for a long moment with my heart doing something I had absolutely no structured routine for, and I thought about the essay, and the jump, and the very specific courage required to leave the ice before you know how the landing goes.I thought about what it meant to commit to something undoable.I thought about how I was writing an essay about coming back and I hadn't yet fully considered the question underneath that one.Coming back to what, exactly.I walked home in the February dark and didn't have an answer.But for

  • The Girl who changed the Game   Chapter Nine

    Declan stopped just inside the entrance."Hey oh." He had his skates over one shoulder and a coffee in each hand and the expression of someone who has walked into a room and immediately understood they've walked into something. "Practice ended early," he said. "I thought you'd be""I'm just finishing up," I said.He looked at me. Then on the ice. Then back at me."You okay?" he said."Fine," I said.He walked to the boards and set both coffees down on the ledge. He didn't say anything else. He sat on the bench and started lacing his skates, slowly, with the patience of someone who had nowhere particular to be and was not going to perform urgency to fill silence.I skated to the boards and picked up one of the coffees. Terrible vending machine. I didn't ask how he knew I'd want it. He didn't explain."The Lutz?" he said, without looking up from his laces.I wrapped both hands around the cup. "Entry work," I said. "Not the jump.""But you pulled out.""Three times."He finished lacing. H

  • The Girl who changed the Game   Chapter Eight

    I have a pre competition routine that has not changed since I was fifteen.The night before anything important, a competition, a significant practice run, a session where I'm attempting something I haven't fully landed yet, I do the same things in the same order. I lay out my training clothes. I review the program in my head from start to finish without skipping the hard parts. I make chamomile tea that I don't actually like but that my first coach swore by, and I drink it sitting on the floor of wherever I'm living because I started doing it on the floor of my childhood bedroom and the floor part stuck.It's not superstition. It's architecture. The routine builds a container for the nerves so they have somewhere to live that isn't my body.I was sitting on the floor of my dorm room at ten PM on Wednesday with my chamomile tea and my program notes when Bria came in from the library, dropped her bag, looked at me, and said: "Floor night.""Thursday's a big practice," I said."The Lutz?

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