Chapter Eleven
Troy had never been in the visiting team’s dressing room in Toronto before, and he didn’t like it.
Everything about being in this building—this city—again was unsettling.
He sat in his stall, wearing his Ottawa Centaurs uniform, and tried not to let his face show the panic that was tearing him up inside.
He couldn’t do this. He couldn’t go out there.
Maybe if he hadn’t been playing like shit since he’d been traded. Maybe if Dallas Kent hadn’t been on fire all season. Maybe if Troy wasn’t returning as a member of the Ottawa fucking Centaurs.
God, he felt sick.
“Walk with me.” Troy glanced up and saw Ilya standing over him.
He obeyed his captain, standing and following him into the hallway.
“You are nervous,” Ilya said as soon as they were alone.
“A little.”
“No. Not a little. What do you need?”
Troy shook his head. “I don’t know. I’m not ready.”
“You are not facing them alone. We are with you. We have your back, Barrett.”
Troy managed to hold his gaze for a few seconds before looking away. In truth, he wasn’t confident that his new team did have his back. “Thanks.”
“You don’t believe me.”
Troy shrugged one shoulder. “I wouldn’t blame you if you didn’t have my back.”
Ilya stared hard at him, then let out a huff of exasperated laughter. “Cheer the fuck up, Barrett. We don’t hate you, you know.”
“No?”
“No. Everyone on the other team hates you. Dallas Kent hates you. Everyone in the crowd hates you.”
“All right, I get it.”
“No one on our team hates you. And we want to beat Toronto as much as you do.”
Troy stared at his skates, embarrassed and a little bit touched.
“Okay?” Ilya asked.
“Okay.”
Ilya punched Troy’s padded shoulder. “I have been looking forward to knocking Dallas Kent on his ass. It has been a while.”
Troy managed a bit of a smile. His stomach felt calmer than it had before their talk. “I’ve been wanting to do it for years.”
The crowd booed every time Troy touched the puck.
They fucking booed him. And they cheered on a sexual predator. What the fuck was wrong with the world?
His former teammates were even worse, snarling insults at him every chance they got.
Dallas seemed to be on a mission to spend as much of this game as possible attacking Troy.
Dallas’s gray-blue eyes flashed with hatred every time he looked at him, and it made Troy furious.
How dare this fucker feel anything but shame?
By the middle of the first period, Troy was channeling all of his rage into his game. He played fast, aggressive hockey, the kind he was known for. He went hard to the net, took bodies in the corners, and never stopped battling.
It didn’t matter. Toronto was still all over them. Dallas had a goal and an assist already.
“Merry Christmas, bitch,” he sneered at Troy after he scored.
Dallas had practically spat every word he said to Troy during the game. And then he’d punctuate it by literally spitting.
“How’s it feel to lose everything, traitor?” Kent asked him after a whistle in the second period.
“You’re going to really lose everything, one day,” Troy warned. “I can’t fucking wait.”
Dallas shoved him. “Your dad must be pissed. He likes me way more than he likes you.”
Troy shoved him back. “Because you’re both shitheads.”
The ref broke them apart, but Dallas got one last dig in. “You fucked yourself, Barrett. Was it worth it?”
Troy skated away without answering.
In the third period, Troy scored a fucking goal. Finally. It was off a perfect pass from Ilya, and watching the puck sail past the goalie felt fucking incredible. The crowd booed louder than ever, but Troy didn’t care. He was too busy hugging his new teammates.
“Tell your dad I said hi,” Dallas said as Troy skated past him.
“That sounds like you want to fuck my dad,” Troy shot back.
Dallas looked horrified. “Blow me, fuckhead.”
“That sounds like you want to fuck me.”
“You wish,” Dallas yelled after him. “That’s probably why you’re so mad, right? You wanted this dick, you disgusting fucking—”
He didn’t get the last word out because Ilya had laid him out on the ice. Dallas was on his back, stunned. Then he started flailing his arms, gesturing wildly toward Ilya. “Hey, ref! What the fuck! You see this fucking psychopath?”
“Shut the fuck up, Kent,” Ilya said in a low, dangerous tone.
“Why? Is Barrett your boyfriend? Did you take a break from fucking Hollander to shove your dick in Barrett’s—”
Ilya hauled Dallas up by his jersey, yanking him roughly until he was fully standing. Then Ilya shook his other glove off and punched him in the face.
“Holy shit,” Troy muttered.
The refs, who had been taking their time breaking things up between Ilya and Dallas considering this was all during a stop in play and very illegal, came rushing in. Ilya was swiftly handed a game misconduct, but he didn’t seem to mind. He winked at Troy before he left the ice.
During the final minute of play, Troy was battling Dallas in a corner for the puck. He could already see the bruise forming on Dallas’s cheek where Ilya had punched him.
Troy shoved up against him, hard, trying to knock him off the puck. Dallas shoved back and said, “You’re the piece of shit, Barrett.”
“Cool. You finally came up with a comeback.”
Dallas rammed his shoulder into Troy’s chest. “You’re such a fucking asshole.”
“Yeah? How many accusations have there been so far? There was a new one yesterday, right?”
Dallas cross-checked Troy with his stick, then dropped it and shoved him again with both hands. “They’re liars.”
Troy snorted and shoved him back. “All of them?”
“Yes.” And then Dallas tackled Troy to the ice, the puck forgotten.
Troy tried to roll Dallas off him, but Dallas was hitting him wildly with one gloved hand, while holding him down with the other.
“You were my friend!” Dallas screamed. His eyes were wild with fury and hurt as he kept hitting Troy.
“I shouldn’t have been,” Troy spat back. The refs finally showed up to haul Dallas off him. Troy raised himself up to his knees and yelled, “You’re disgusting, Dallas.”
Dallas shot him one last look, over his shoulder, and Troy was shocked to see tears in his eyes.
Good. Fuck him.
The game ended with Ottawa losing 4-2. Ilya was already showered and changed into his suit when the rest of the team returned to the dressing room. Troy went to him right away.
“You didn’t need to do that,” he said. “But thanks.”
“I loved it. Why play hockey if you can’t enjoy it, right?”
Troy’s lips curved up. “Right.”
Ilya nodded at him. “Nice goal. Feel better?”
“Yeah. Thanks for that pass.”
He went to get undressed. The thing that didn’t sit well with Troy was that Ilya had gotten angry when Kent had accused him of doing gay shit.
Troy had known, when he’d been suggesting that Dallas wanted to fuck his dad, that it would make Dallas angry because he was a homophobic trash bag.
It was disappointing to see Ilya get so offended from the same kind of taunts.
But that was exactly why Troy had kept his sexuality a secret all these years. Accusing an opponent of being gay was still the lowest insult you could hurl.
He tried to focus on positive things. His first game against Toronto was over with, he’d finally scored a goal, and his teammates had supported him, especially Ilya.
It would have been nice to win this one, though. To rub Dallas’s face in it. Not just Dallas, but the entire team, especially Coach Cooper. And every fan who booed Troy. Fuck them all.
It was over. The two teams wouldn’t meet again until February, and Troy would make sure he was less of a mess by then. For now, he would put this one behind him, and focus on their next game in New York.
Troy knew it was Ilya Rozanov knocking on his hotel room door before he opened it. There was a confidence to his knocking that matched the confidence he did everything else with.
“Get your coat,” Ilya said.
“Why?”
“We are in New York and we are going out. I am meeting friends and you should come.”
“Where? Why?”
“A bar. And because you need to have fun.”
Well, Troy could think of worse things than going to a bar in New York with Ilya Rozanov. “Okay. One sec.”
The taxi took them a short distance into a neighborhood that had a lot of rainbow flags.
“Is this...” Troy started, then stopped. “Where are we going?”
“The bar that Scott Hunter and Eric Bennett own. Is nice, sort of.”
Okay. Wait. Troy knew that Hunter and Bennett bought a bar together, but... “Isn’t it a gay bar?”
Ilya frowned at him. “Is that a problem?”
“No! No, I didn’t mean—I’m just—” Troy shook his head. He wasn’t against gay bars, obviously. He’d just never been to one. And now he was going to go to his first gay bar with Ilya Rozanov, apparently. “Just surprised. I didn’t even know you liked Hunter.”
Ilya made a face. “He is okay. But you are in love with him, so I thought you would like this.”
“I’m not in love with him,” Troy grumbled as the cab came to a stop in front of a pub called the Kingfisher. A minute later, Ilya was holding the door of the bar open, and Troy had to force his feet to move, and to not let his panic show on his face.
The bar didn’t look much different inside from any other tavern Troy had gone to.
A little nicer, maybe, and decorated for Christmas.
There were flat-screen televisions showing sports, pop music playing, and pitchers of beer sitting on dark wood tables surrounded by people talking and laughing.
Regular bar stuff. The patrons were mostly men, which wasn’t unusual for a sports bar, but the fact that most of those men were probably attracted to men was kind of blowing Troy’s mind. And making him feel queasy.
There were a few flags and decals around the bar that designated it as a queer-friendly space; not just the rainbow Pride flag, but a few others that Troy had seen before, but wasn’t sure exactly what they represented. Because no one knew less about his own community than he did.