Chapter 3 #3
“Winter? Hey! I had no idea you were coming tonight!” Clover Sweet—it’s her real name—pushes past the dark-haired guy and hops off the ice, pulling me into a hug.
“You know everyone,” BJ says with a curious smile.
“This is a six-degrees-of-separation convention.” Rose motions between me and Clover. “How do you two know each other?”
Clover hugs my arm. “From the library. We bonded over our mutual appreciation of hockey.”
The first time I met Clover, she was standing in the stacks, simultaneously shelving books and trying to read.
The second time I met her, I was working on an assignment for my online college course and fell asleep in one of the comfy chairs.
She had to wake me because the library was closing.
My feet had been propped up on my hockey bag.
She helped me gather my things and made small talk, mentioning that her boyfriend coaches here.
Since then, we always chat when I come in, so she’s aware that I moved here recently and that I’ve started working at Boones.
The dark-haired guy smirks. “You mean your appreciation of hockey romance?”
“I had no idea that was a thing until I met Clover,” I admit with a grin.
“It’s all about the stamina.” She winks and motions to the dark-haired guy. “Winter, this is my boyfriend, Maverick.”
“Hey. Nice to meet you.”
His eyes light up. “Clover’s mentioned you before, I think. You play hockey?”
“Mostly pick-up, but yeah.”
“Awesome. We’ll scrimmage later. It’ll be fun to have you on the ice with us.”
I’m amazed by how welcoming everyone is—and grateful that Lovey hasn’t said anything about how we know each other.
There’s always a level of discomfort when people who know about my circumstances are also familiar with one another.
It’s hard not to wonder if they’ll gossip later.
The only thing I loathe more than my father’s sharp words is pity.
BJ nudges me. “Come on, let me introduce you to everyone.”
“Sure. Yeah. Okay.” The girls give us room to get on the ice, and I follow BJ across the rink to a group of older, dad-aged guys.
BJ does some kind of spin thing and skates a circle around me.
He must have taken some figure-skating lessons along the way to hone his skills on the ice. “You showing off?”
He winks. “Maybe a little.”
He stops when we reach the group of men gathered in a semicircle. I recognize his dad right away. It makes sense now that BJ seemed familiar when I first met him, because he looks a lot like Randy Ballistic, the former NHL star. Who I’m about to meet.
If I don’t faint first.
“Hey, Dad, I wanted to introduce you to Winter. She works at Boones with Rose, and she’s a hockey player.”
The conversation amongst the dads stops, and every head turns our way.
It’s a moment that will 1000 percent go down in my top-five most memorable. Because I’m in the presence of some of the greatest retired players in the league.
I raise a hand in a wave and am impressed when my voice doesn’t come out seven octaves too high. “I usually play pick-up at the old town rink.”
“Winter, this is my dad, Randy.” BJ motions to his father. “And this is my uncle, Alex Waters; Rose’s dad, Darren Westinghouse; Lovey’s dad, Miller Butterson; and her brother Logan.”
The puzzle pieces start falling into place. All these people I’ve been running into are connected to one another through their hockey-legend fathers. It’s a freaking trip and a half.
I also recognize Logan. He’s local law enforcement. He’s stopped by the trailer park on occasion to deal with domestics or issue drunk-and-disorderly charges. If he recognizes me, he doesn’t show it.
I shake their hands and try not to pass out from the thrill of it all. “It’s an honor to meet you. All of you. You’re like, legends.” Yeah. I’m totally fangirling.
“We’re very excited that you’re here.” Alex Waters gives me a warm smile.
“Yeah, me too.” I nod a bunch of times and am grateful when BJ suggests we warm up.
He nudges me with his elbow. “You all right? You’re looking a little shell-shocked.”
“I have an Alex Waters rookie card. I’m low-level freaking out.” I found it at a garage sale. The person getting rid of it had no idea what they were parting with.
He shifts to skate backwards in front of me. “They’re glad you’re here. And so am I. Just have fun with me, Winter.” He skates a circle around me and follows it with a pirouette.
“What the?”
He does some kind of jump thing. “I might have forgotten to mention that I’m not a hockey player. I’m a figure skater.”
I bite my lip. A tattooed, bearded figure skater. Why does that up his hotness level? “You’re full of surprises, aren’t you?”
For the next forty-five minutes, we skate and talk.
I find out that most of this group goes to university together in Chicago, and that Rose is moving in with Lovey and her twin sister, Lacey, and their cousin River, who is Maverick’s brother.
It finally clicked that Maverick is Alex’s son.
I also find out that Lovey is BJ’s best friend, which is…
interesting. Lovey is gorgeous in that all-American-girl way: tall, willowy, fair-haired with tan skin.
She looks like she could be captain of the cheer squad, and she has a gentle, kind personality.
I also learn that the foodbank isn’t the only place Lovey volunteers, but I don’t correct him when he makes the assumption that we volunteer there together.
While we chat and circle the rink, BJ twirls and jumps and spins around everyone. It’s unexpected and impressive. My skates are definitely on the dull side, so I’m extra careful on the turns, not wanting to wipe out, especially in front of all these former NHL stars.
At eight, the scoreboard lights up with ten minutes on the clock, and Rose, Lovey, and Clover glide toward the gate.
BJ skates a wide circle around me, eyes lit up. “You’re gonna scrimmage with us, yeah?”
“If that’s okay.” I’m nervous, but excited. This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. I just hope I can keep up.
“It’s more than okay. Come on.” BJ inclines his head to where the dads are standing by the bench. “We’re about to pick teams, and I want you on mine.”
I grab my gear, and we skate over to the rest of the group.
“We gonna go four-on-four? Split it two old-timers and two youngins?” Maverick asks.
Four-on-four means fast play. It’ll be a challenge.
His dad—Alex freaking Waters OMG—shoots him a look. “We’re veteran players, not old-timers.”
“Sorry, Dad. I forget how much you hate to be reminded that you’re not in your twenties anymore.” Maverick sends a wink my way.
Instead of schoolyard pick, which BJ votes for, we draw pieces of paper with either a red or black dot in the center from a small box. I end up on a team with Maverick, Darren Westinghouse—he’s intimidating—and BJ’s dad.
Alex, Miller, Logan, and BJ form the other team.
“What position do you usually play, Winter?” Randy asks.
“I’m pretty versatile. I play right wing, but sometimes defense.”
“You have a preference tonight?”
“Nope. You can put me where you need me.” Defense could be tough because of tight turns in the crease, especially with dull skates.
“Let’s start you on right wing, then.”
“Sure. Sounds good.” I’m a jumble of nerves as I take my place to the right of Randy, with BJ across from me. The easy mood turns serious, which makes sense because these guys, retired or not, are still competitive hockey players.
Clover skates in and drops the puck. There’s a flurry of action as it hits the ice. Randy snags it, and then we’re all barreling toward the net.
I manage an assist in the first five minutes of play, and Randy pats me on the shoulder, his smile wide. “Nice play, Winter.”
“Thanks.”
I’m buzzing from the praise and riding a natural high as we face off again.
This time BJ’s team gains control of the puck.
I nearly trip as I change course, chasing BJ down the ice.
I’m so focused on the puck, and trying to steal it, that I don’t consider my speed, or the tight turn I’ll need to make.
Thanks to my dull blades, I lose my footing, careening into BJ and sending us into the boards.
I try to roll away from him, so we don’t end up in a heap on the ice, but somehow, I end up under him anyway.