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Chapter no 62 – JAMIE

Behind the Net (Vancouver Storm, #1)

THAT EVENING,ย the arenaโ€™s energy is tense. The players, the coaches, the fansโ€”everyoneโ€™s on edge, including me.

Heย textedย her. The memory of Pippaโ€™s face this morning replays in my head, and my blood pounds with fury. Pippa isย mine, and he has the fucking audacity to reach out to her.

Before the game, she reluctantly showed me the list of attendees. Heโ€™s going to be at the gala, and I know itโ€™s because of her.

You donโ€™t have to go, I told her. My attendance is mandatory, but hers isnโ€™t.

Instead of cowering, her nostrils flared, she tilted her chin up, and determination flashed in her eyes.ย Iโ€™m going, she said.ย Iโ€™m not going to let him scare me away.

My fucking heart. Pippa has it in the palm of her hand.

On the ice, the other goalie catches the puck and the whistle blows. My shoulders tense as I watch Miller and Volkov exchange heated words.

I donโ€™t know what Calgaryโ€™s coach is playing at, but our team has been taking nasty hits all night. The refs donโ€™t seem to notice, which only fires up the fans and our team even more. Millerโ€™s back to his usual cocky, fight- provoking self.

The bad energy hangs in the air like a mist. Thereโ€™s going to be a fight, I can feel it.

One of Calgaryโ€™s defensemen crosschecks our third line forward long after he passes the puck.

Still no whistle.

Volkov yells something at the other teamโ€™s player, and the tension bubbles into a boil. Miller skates between them, grinning like a sly cat, but thereโ€™s no humor on his face. Heโ€™s different tonight. Colder. Unhappy. Pissed off.

He looks like his dad, whoโ€™s a rich, miserable asshole, and as I watch Miller get in Volkovโ€™s face, I wonder how much of that got passed on.

Play resumes. Our team tries to get the puck in the Calgary net, but Miller wedges his stick between Owensโ€™ legs. The fans are on their feet, booing and calling for a penalty.

The whistle blows as Calgaryโ€™s goalie catches the puck, and I turn to get a drink of water, locking eyes with Pippa behind the glass. She smiles and gives me a small wave, and I nod at her, spraying water through my mask, thinking about how good she looks in that jersey. My jersey. My chest pulls tight at the sight of her, here, supporting me, wearing my name proudly.

This girl is everything to me.

The players line up to resume the game, and I get into the ready position. The whistle blows, and Miller trips one of our guys.

Itโ€™s like heโ€™s not even trying. Like he doesnโ€™t care about hockey. When he cares, heโ€™s unstoppable, and thatโ€™s probably why heโ€™s still on the fucking team. The spark he used to have for the game is gone, though.

Finally, heโ€™s thrown into the penalty box, and the arena hollers and jeers. People slam their fists on the glass, and he shakes his glove off before flipping them the bird.

I inhale sharply. I see it now. He used to pull this shit when we were teenagers. His dad would say something to upset him, and heโ€™d hit the ice in a mood. He antagonizes players, he fires up the fans, he makes himself the villain so everyone will see him like he sees himself. The guy hates himself, and heโ€™s flailing out here, hoping someone will give him what he deserves.

When his two-minute penalty is over, he skates back into the game, capturing the puck immediately and heading straight to my net. He slaps the puck at me. It pings off the pipeโ€”fucking luckyโ€”and a moment later, he crosschecks me.

My temper ignites, and my blood whooshes in my ears. The whistle is distant because fans roar around us, rattling the glass.

โ€œWhat the fuck?โ€ Owens bites out, getting in Millerโ€™s face.

Millerโ€™s eyes challenge me. The energy cracks around us, sparking and buzzing with tension.

โ€œWhatโ€™s the matter, Streicher?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re in a fucking mood tonight.โ€ I tap Owens, indicating for him to move out of the way, and he skates back, watching us. The rest of the players are circling, waiting, watching.

โ€œFight, fight, fight,โ€ the fans chant from behind the glass. The fight I felt in the airโ€”itโ€™s me and Miller.

Weโ€™ve only fought once. We were sixteen. He showed up for practice in a foul mood after something his dad said, and he pulled all the same shit he pulled tonight.

โ€œWhat?โ€ He cocks an ugly, hateful grin at me. โ€œYou going to hit me? You, up in your ivory tower? Jamie Streicher, the most responsible guy in the room.โ€

The noise around us fades away as I glare at him, gritting my teeth at his baiting.

โ€œCome on,โ€ he spits at me, eyes flashing. โ€œI deserve it, donโ€™t I?โ€

My fists clench.ย Heย was the one who changed. He was the one who turned into a fucking asshole. He used to care about hockey. Now itโ€™s a big fucking joke to him.

Everythingโ€™s a joke to him. โ€œGo on,โ€ he goads.

Blood rushes in my ears. In the NHL, both players need to agree to a fight, or the player who instigates will get a penalty while the other doesnโ€™t.

All the anger Iโ€™ve held inside for years at the guy who used to be my best friend bubbles to the surface, overflowing, and I rip my gloves off.

The crowd roars. Goalies almost never fight.

I pull my helmet off, and the glass behind me shakes from the fans. The refs and linesmen circle us, ready to break up the fight when it goes too far. Until then, theyโ€™ll let us deal with it, because this is how the score is settled in hockey.

I donโ€™t dare look at Pippa. I can hold my own in a fight, but I donโ€™t want her worry and concern in my head as I do this.

โ€œFucking finally,โ€ Miller snaps, and I remove my goalie pads and toss them aside.

I skate at him, and his fist flies. I block his punch before throwing my own. It connects with his jaw, and a second later, his fist sears the outer corner of my eye.

It hurts, and it feels good.

Chaos breaks out around us. Fists fly as players let the pressure off, clutching each otherโ€™s jerseys as they land punches. The energy in the arena boils over. Iโ€™ve never heard it this loud in here. My blood beats hard, flooded with adrenaline as Miller and I take out our aggression on each other.

The fight is all instinct, all primal rage. Iโ€™m gripping his jersey, heโ€™s gripping mine, and weโ€™re hitting each other. The pain feels cathartic, and my face is wet. Thereโ€™s blood in my mouth and more trickling down from Millerโ€™s eyebrow.

Whistles blow left and right, and itโ€™s a tangle of limbs, helmets rolling around on the ice, guys sitting on each other, jerseys getting ripped.

The fans are going nuts.

I land one more punch and wait as Miller straightens up, the linesmen struggling to pull us apart. The fight dies from his eyes as he catches his breath, watching me.

โ€œDone?โ€ he asks.

He means the fight, but I think he means this seven-year tension. I wipe the back of my hand over my mouth. Blood smears over my skin. My chest heaves for air, and adrenaline whistles through my veins.

Something shifts between us, and my anger deflates. I donโ€™t want to be angry anymore. I just want to move on. I glance at Pippa, whoโ€™s peeking through her hands with a worried expression, and my heart clutches.

I donโ€™t want to hold a grudge, because life is too short and sweet. I give Pippa a nod to say Iโ€™m okay.

On the bench, I expect Ward to be livid as players get hauled into the penalty boxes, but instead, his smile stretches from ear to ear.

โ€œYeah,โ€ I tell Miller, meeting his gaze. โ€œDone.โ€

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon,

Enjoy a fast, distraction-free reading experience. 'Request a Book' and other cool features are coming soon.

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