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DANGEROUS ICE: MY HOCKEY NEMESIS IS MY SINFUL OBSESSION

Cyra_McKenzie
14
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
"Open wide, Golden Boy. I know you’ve been imagining sucking my cock in your head the entire practice." ​The cold floor of the locker room is bruising my knees, but it’s nothing compared to the grip Michael Rossi has on my hair. My mouth is stretched tight around his cock, my heart hammering against my ribs in a rhythm of pure, unadulterated shame. I’m the star defenseman for the Knights, the disciplined, untouchable Axel Thorne and yet here I am, choking on the pride of my greatest enemy while he talks to me like I’m his favorite toy. They call him the "Menace," and for once, the media isn't exaggerating. Michael Rossi is the jagged edge of the Rebels’ front line, a dirty, arrogant prick who plays like he has nothing to lose and a god complex to maintain. I’ve hated him since freshman year, since the night I walked into a hallway and saw him stealing the girl I thought I’d marry. He didn't even want her; he just wanted to show me he could take her. He’s spent the last year and a half chirping in my ear on the ice, checking me into the boards with a smirk, and dismantling every shred of peace I’ve tried to build. Now, a viral "spite kiss" has trapped us in a contract that says I have to be his "boyfriend" to save my career. I’m supposed to play along with the guy who ruined my life, but the closer I get, the more I realize the rivalry was just the beginning. The ice is thin, and the man I’m supposed to hate is the only thing keeping me from falling through. __________________________________ ​I’ve been watching the "Golden Boy" for eighteen months, and it’s been a slow, beautiful torture. Axel Thorne is everything I’m not, disciplined, loved, and blissfully oblivious to the rot surrounding him. He thinks I stole his girlfriend because I’m a villain; he doesn't realize I only did it to watch the look in his eyes. He looked like he wanted to cry when he saw her lips on mine, and all I could think about was how much better those plump, trembling lips would feel wrapped around my cock. This rivalry was never about the game; it was about the obsession. I’ve spent every practice, every game, and every restless night imagining how it would feel to finally claim him, to break the Golden Boy until he realizes he was never meant for the light. Now that the PR board has handed him to me on a silver platter, I’m never letting go. He thinks we’re faking a relationship to save our jerseys, but I’m playing a game where the only way he wins is by losing himself to me.
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Chapter 1 - CHAPTER 1 ~ ROSSI

AXEL'S POV

​I sat on the wooden bench of the locker room, hunched over, staring at the scarred floorboards between my skates. The air in here was a thick soup of smelling salts, stale sweat, and the sharp, chemical tang of laundry detergent that never quite got the blood out of the practice jerseys.

​Around me, the rest of the Knights were a blur of shouting and high-fives.

Bass-heavy rap thudded from a speaker in the corner, vibrating in my chest, but it didn't do anything to drown out the noise in my head.

​"Thorne! Head in the game or on the ice?"

​I looked up. Miller, our goalie, was staring at me while he strapped on his massive leg pads. He looked like a transformer halfway through a shift.

​"I'm good," I said, my voice sounding raspier than I wanted. I reached for my helmet, checking the cage for the hundredth time.

​"You look like shit," Miller grunted, not unkindly. "Listen, I know about the Liam thing. Everyone knows. Don't let that prick get to you today. We need you on defense, not in the penalty box because you're trying to take someone's head off. Chill. It will all pass."

​The 'Liam thing.' My best friend, well, former best friend and my ex, Chloe.

They'd been official for three weeks. I'd found out via a tagged Instagram post that it had felt like a cross-check to the throat.

Chloe didn't even break up with me officially before getting together with Liam. It was like what we had never existed. In her eyes, that is.

​"I'm not going to the box, Miller. I'm going to play my game," I lied.

​I stood up, the extra twenty pounds of gear making my movements feel heavy and deliberate. I was 6'2" and built for the defensive line, broad, solid, a wall of muscle meant to stop guys from getting anywhere near the crease. Usually, the weight of the pads made me feel invincible.

Today, they just felt like lead.

​I started toward the tunnel, the rhythmic clack-clack-clack of skates on the rubber matting filling the hallway. That's when I saw him.

​Michael Rossi was leaning against the doorframe of the visitors' locker room.

He didn't play for us. He played for the State Rebels, our biggest rivals. Our school oversees two universities: Northwood and Westwood College. Even though both are under the same administration, the tension between them is fierce. Each has its own hockey team, and the rivalry between the Northwood Knights and the Westwood Rebels isn't just about sports, it's personal.

Recently, Westwood ran into a major problem, and the principal had no choice but to transfer all Westwood students to Northwood. That meant students from the two rival universities were now forced to share the same campus, the same classrooms, and the same corridors. Which also meant I had no choice but to breathe the same air as Michael Rossi.

He was forward, a fast, flashy, bisexual superstar who lived for the camera and the highlight reels. He was also the guy who had kissed my girlfriend a year ago at a frat party. The guy who started the domino effect of my life falling apart.

​He was already geared up, his dark jersey making him look even broader than usual. He had a piece of gum in his mouth, chewing slowly as he watched our team file past.

​When I got close, his eyes locked onto mine. He didn't look away. He never looked away because it was obvious he liked challenging me.

​"Hey, Thorne," he said, his voice a smooth, low drawl that made my blood pressure spike instantly.

I didn't stop. I didn't even want to give him the satisfaction of a glance.

​"Heard you're single again," Michael continued, loud enough for the guys behind me to hear.

"Rough break. You'd think after the first time, you'd learn how to keep a girl's attention. Or maybe you're just better at playing defense than keeping what's yours."

​My vision tunneled. I stopped, my skates digging into the rubber mat. I turned my head just enough to see the smug, crooked tilt of his mouth. He looked so effortless and relaxed. Like he wasn't about to go out and play a high-stakes game.

​"Go to hell, Rossi," I spat.

​"Already there, sweetheart, and I also plan to take you there with me. You don't belong to the light anyways" he winked, pushing off the wall. "See you on the ice. Try to keep up."

​He skated past me into the tunnel, the swagger in his stride so arrogant I could feel the heat radiating off my own skin. My heart wasn't just beating; it was thudding against my ribs like a trapped animal.

​I fisted my hands inside my gloves. He was right about one thing. I was a defenseman. I was supposed to be the one who didn't let anyone through.

​But as I stepped out onto the ice and the cold air hit my face, I realized I wasn't just playing for the win anymore. I was playing to survive the humiliation.

The cold hit me the second I cleared the tunnel.

​It was a shock to the system, the kind that usually cleared my head, but today it just felt like it was freezing the rage into my bones.

The arena was buzzing, that low, vibrating hum of a packed house on a Friday night. Blue and white jerseys in the stands, the smell of popcorn and expensive stadium beer, and the blinding white of the fresh ice reflecting off the plexiglass.

​I did a lap, digging my blades in hard, feeling the bite of the ice. I needed to feel the burn in my quads to distract me from the burning in my chest.

​As I circled back toward our bench, I looked up. It was a habit. A masochistic one.

​There they were. Third row, center ice.

Liam was wearing his varsity jacket, my varsity jacket to be precise from sophomore year that I'd lent him and he'd never returned.