LOGIN
The ice cracked beneath me. A sharp, splintering sound that shot straight through my chest as I launched into the jump. The arena lights were blinding, hot against my skin, the crowd a blur of faces leaning forward in anticipation. My blades sliced the air as I spun, faster, tighter, the world narrowing to a single point…
Then everything tilted. My balance slipped. My rotation faltered. My stomach dropped. I came down at the wrong angle, my blade catching the ice with a violent scrape. Pain exploded up my leg, white‑hot and immediate. The crowd gasped, one collective inhale that echoed through the rafters as I crashed onto the ice.
My shoulder hit first Then my hip. Then my head bounced lightly against the cold surface. I slid across the rink, helpless, the overhead lights smearing into long streaks of white. My breath caught in my throat. I tried to inhale, but the cold wrapped around me like a fist, squeezing tighter and tighter.
Someone screamed my name. Skates carved toward me. Voices blurred into static. The ceiling spun. The boards spun. Everything spun.
And then, a jolt. A hiss of brakes. A voice cutting through the panic. “Miss? We’re at the station.”
My eyes flew open. The ice vanished. The arena vanished. The pain vanished. All that remained was the weak air conditioning of the bus blowing against my cheek and the thundering of my heart trying to punch its way out of my chest.
I blinked hard, forcing the lingering shards of the fall to dissolve. Outside the window, a familiar sign slid into view:
Welcome to Silver Ridge — Home of the Silver Wolves.
Home. The word felt foreign on my tongue. Passengers shuffled around me, grabbing bags and stretching stiff legs. I pulled my duffel into my lap, fingers trembling just enough to annoy me. The fall always felt too real, like my body hadn’t figured out it was over.
I stood, slinging the bag over my shoulder, and stepped off the bus into crisp early‑spring air. The station looked exactly the same: the old brick building, the flickering streetlamp, the vending machine that probably still ate quarters.
And there he was. My dad stood beside his truck, hands shoved in his coat pockets, scanning the crowd until his eyes landed on me. His whole face lit up. “Lena!” He crossed the pavement in a few long strides and wrapped me in a hug that squeezed the breath right out of me. He smelled like cedar, coffee, and home.
“Hi, Dad,” I murmured into his jacket.
He pulled back, studying me with that quiet, worried look he thought he hid well. “Long trip?”
“Long enough.”
He didn’t push. He just took my bag like it weighed nothing and opened the passenger door for me. As we drove through Silver Ridge, past the diner, the high school, the frozen pond where kids still skated after school, I felt the weight of everything I’d left behind settle over me.
The rink was only a few blocks away. I didn’t look at it. Not yet. Dad glanced at me. “We’re glad you’re home, sweetheart.”
I nodded, staring out the window. “Yeah. Me too.”
But the truth sat heavy in my chest. I wasn’t just coming home to heal. I wasn’t just coming home to train. I was coming home to the ice that broke me… and to the boy who once knew me better than anyone.
The loud one. The bold one. The one I wasn’t ready to face.
Evan Hart.
And in a town as small as Silver Ridge, avoiding him would be impossible.
Something is off with Lena. Not in the obvious ways, she still smiles when she sees me, still leans into my side when we sit together, still texts me good luck before every practice and game. But there’s a tightness in her shoulders. A hesitation in her voice. A distance she thinks she’s hiding. She’s keeping me at arm’s length again. Not because she wants to. Because she’s trying to protect me. Protect us.With playoffs breathing down my neck and her next competition two weeks away, she doesn’t want more attention. Not after the Sabrina mess. Not after the kiss that went viral in under an hour. I get it. But I also know her. And something is wrong. She brushes it off every time I ask.“Just tired.”“Just stressed.”“Just a long day.”But her eyes tell a different story. So before I have to leave for our next game, I drive to the rink early and find Daniels in his office, hunched over a clipboard like he’s trying to solve a murder.He looks up when I knock. “Hart. Shouldn’t you be on
The rest of the afternoon feels like a blur, a loud, bright, dizzy blur. Everyone is talking at once. Everyone is hugging me. Everyone is smiling. And Evan? He never leaves my side. Not once. His arm stays around my waist as we walk through the arena. His hand finds mine every time someone pulls me away for a picture. When we sit down for dinner with both our families, he rests his hand on my knee under the table, steady, warm, grounding.Every time I look at him, he’s already looking at me. Like he can’t believe I’m real. Like he doesn’t want to miss a second.After dinner, after the congratulations and the photos and the endless retelling of the jump, he drives me home. Chicago fades behind us, the highway stretching out in front of us, the sky turning dark.It’s quiet in the car, not awkward, just… full. I watch the lights blur past the window before finally asking the question that’s been sitting in my chest since the podium. “So,” I say softly, “about the kiss.”He glances at me,
I slam the locker room door so hard the metal rattles. There is no way this happened. No way Lena Merritt, shaky, panicky, washed‑up Lena, beat me. ME. How the hell did she beat me? I pace back and forth, nails digging into my palms, heart pounding so loud I can barely hear myself think. Third place. She got third place. My spot. I should be on that podium. I should be the one everyone’s cheering for. I should be the one Evan is looking at like she hung the moon. But no.Lena skates one decent routine, one, and suddenly the whole world is acting like she’s some miracle comeback story. I grab my skate bag and throw it against the bench. It hits with a dull thud, not nearly satisfying enough.“How?” I hiss under my breath. “How did she fucking beat me?”Her jump wasn’t even perfect. She practically fell out of it. And the judges still scored her higher. Why? Because she’s the tragic little ice princess who had a meltdown on camera? Because everyone feels sorry for her? It’s pathetic. An
I’ve played in packed arenas. I’ve played in hostile ones. I’ve played in playoff games where the noise rattled my bones. But nothing, absolutely nothing, makes me as nervous as sitting in the stands of a figure skating competition.PR thinks it’s good for me to be here. “Show support for Lena,” they said. “Humanize your image,” they said.Whatever. I was coming anyway. We knocked Philly and New York out of the playoffs, and Coach gave us the weekend off before the final game. One more win and we’re in the Stanley Cup.But right now? Hockey feels a million miles away. Right now, all I care about is Lena. I sit between my mom and Mason, with my dad, Gabe, and Lena’s parents filling the rest of the row. It’s weirdly comfortable, like our families have been doing this forever.The arena is buzzing. Skaters glide across the ice, music swelling, blades slicing clean lines. It’s… peaceful. Calming. Like watching ballet, but colder. I get why people love this. I get why she loves this.Gabby
The arena is louder than I expected. I knew competitions drew crowds, but after months of training in quiet rinks and frozen ponds, the noise hits me like a wave. People are everywhere, parents, coaches, judges, little kids with posters, other skaters stretching in the hallways. And somewhere in the stands… Evan. I try not to look for him. I fail. He’s easy to spot, tall, broad‑shouldered, wearing a Wolves hoodie and sitting with my parents, his parents, Mason, and Gabe. They’re all talking like they’ve known each other forever. My stomach flips.Daniels notices. “Eyes on me, Merritt.”I snap my gaze back to him. “Sorry.”He gives me a small smile. “You’re fine. Nerves mean you care.”Nerves also mean I might throw up, but I don’t say that. The last few weeks have been brutal, early mornings on the pond, afternoons in the rink, drills until my legs shook, jump attempts until I wanted to scream. My jump is better now. Not perfect. But landable. If I don’t psych myself out.Skaters from
Philly is cold in a way that feels personal. We flew in two days early, coach wanted us settled, rested, and practiced before the playoff game. The hotel is decent, the rink is fine, and the guys are buzzing with that pre‑game energy that’s half adrenaline, half boredom.Mason is sprawled across the foot of my bed like he owns the place, scrolling through his phone with a smirk that tells me he’s about to start trouble.“So,” he says without looking up, “how was your little date with Lena?”I throw a rolled‑up sock at him. He dodges it without even trying.“It wasn’t date,” I say.“Right,” he says, finally glancing up. “You took her to a diner. Walked her to her door. Almost kissed her. Totally not a date.”I glare. “You’re annoying.”He grins. “And you’re in denial.”I shake my head, but I can’t help the smile tugging at my mouth. “It wasn’t like that.”“Uh‑huh.” He sits up, leaning forward. “The forehead kiss? Dude. That’s leading man shit right there. And the movie moment, you call
I knew things were getting bad. But I didn’t realize how bad until I watched Sabrina’s press conference. I’m sitting in my office, laptop open, coffee going cold, listening to her spin lie after lie with a straight face. Blaming Lena. Blaming Evan. Blaming “heartbreak” for her second‑place finish.
It’s been almost a week since the article dropped, and honestly? I’ve never felt more… powerful. Everywhere I go, people are whispering. In the rink. In the locker room. In the stands at the competition today.Some of them look at me with sympathy, poor Sabrina, betrayed by Evan Hart. Others look a
Practice ends on a high note, fast, clean, sharp. Exactly what we need heading into playoffs. I’m grabbing my water bottle when Coach Hartman’s voice booms across the rink. “Hart! Office. Now.” Not a request. Not even close.The guys all wince like I’m walking into a firing squad. Mason mutters, “G
I can’t breathe. I’m pacing my room, replaying the shopping trip over and over until the humiliation burns behind my eyes. Lena’s mom. Mrs. Hart. That little girl. All of them ganging up on me like I’m the problem. Like I’m the one who doesn’t belong. They treated me like I was invisible. Like I wa







