Home > Books > Icebreaker(26)

Icebreaker(26)

Author:A. L. Graziadei

They’re right, obviously. But it’s my job to keep her humble.

Mickey: You look like a swamp hag

Nova: Dammit.

I was going for more of a banshee kind of vibe

As awful as the day has started, as miserable as I feel, it still makes me smile, even just a little.

“You been hiding a girlfriend from us, Terzo?” Zero asks from behind me, leaning over the back of my seat to creep on my phone. I click out of the messages reflexively, like I’ve been caught looking at something dirty.

“Not my girlfriend,” I mutter, but it’s lost in Zero’s shout of, “Nova? Nova Vinter? Terzo!”

“What’s your deal?” Kovy asks beside him.

“This asshole’s literally texting Nova Vinter!”

“I lived with her,” I try to remind them. I figured it was common knowledge I stayed with the Vinters after my family left for Raleigh, but the whole team’s yelling about it now. I roll my eyes and sink low in my seat, unlocking my phone again.

Mickey: Thanks a lot

You sent my team into a frenzy

Nova: Watch them have the best game of their lives

When we get off the bus to head into the arena, the boys make me take a selfie with them in our suits to send back to her, Dorian and Kovy smiling on one side of me, Zero making what he probably thinks is a seductive face on the other side, and Barbie towering over me from behind, looking slightly less bored than usual with one side of his mouth turned up.

Nova: Who’s the tall one???

Mickey: They’re all tall to me

Nova: Mickey.

Mickey: Barbie.

Nova: Hmmmm

We make it to the locker room before she can add anything else. I shove my phone into my duffel bag and start getting ready for the game.

We’re up against a brute of a team. I’ve got this same massive blueliner on me all game, straight up trying to kill me with the way he throws his weight into his checks and toes the line with what should’ve been a thousand slashing and holding penalties. It’s annoying, but I don’t let him instigate me into retaliation. I’ve never been one to sit in the penalty box.

Halfway through the second half, Kovy dumps the puck along the halfboards and I pick it up behind the net, turning away a check before passing it along to Zero. I make my way to the top of the goal crease, screening the goalie and fighting for position with the aggressive defenseman. Cauler slides to the point, taking Kovy’s place. I see the one-timer coming as soon as Zero makes the pass. As Cauler winds up, I shove my hip hard into my defender, turning my body and reaching out with my stick. The puck tips off my blade and rings off the pipe on its way into the net. The goal light flashes red, and my teammates crowd me against the boards to give out fist bumps and helmet pats.

The blueliner doesn’t take it well. Next time we’re on the ice together, he gets the blade of his stick shoved into the holder of my skate blade as I’m crashing in on his goalie. He pulls my legs out from under me, sending me sprawling. I hit the ice forearms first, and the rest of me follows so hard, it knocks the breath out of me. I slide headfirst into the goalie’s pads, tripping him so he falls right onto my back.

For a second, with his weight on me, unable to breathe, I swear my back’s broken and I’m dying. Whistles blow and guys are shouting and the goalie’s pads push harder into me as he struggles back to his feet.

The asshole blueliner gets banished to the box, and I’m stuck on the bench for the power play as the trainer fusses over me.

We win the game 5–1, and all I want to do is get to the next hotel and crash for the night. But the boys have other plans. We have an early team dinner at a restaurant with high tables and barstools with no back support, then head to a plaza with a movie theater and what looks like a closed-down department store holding a haunted house for the season. I’d rather go to the movies and sit in a comfortable chair for a few hours, but most of the team and coaches head for the haunted house instead. Dorian doesn’t give me much of a choice when he says, “I’m hiding behind you, Terzo. The monsters’ll probably be more scared of your glare than you are of them!”

He’s not wrong about the last point at least. I’ve never scared easily. And when I do get scared, I don’t scream or jump, just kind of freeze up. I might look unfazed, but that lack of a fight-or-flight response would get me killed first in any horror movie situation.

They try to put me up front, but Cauler argues against it because apparently I’m so short, they’d just end up trampling me. So he takes the lead while Dorian stretches out my Royals Hockey zip-up, choking me with the collar of it and hunching over to bury his face in my neck before we’ve even run into an actor. The most startling things that happen are when Barbie full-on screams bloody murder from the back, and when Cauler reaches behind himself to grab at me as a little girl in a tattered, bloody dress comes shambling out of the darkness ahead of us.

 26/93   Home Previous 24 25 26 27 28 29 Next End