one day all my love will come back to me
Spending a mid-degree gap year in the guest bedroom of your best friend who youâve been in love with for ages seems to be a recipe for disaster until a hook up with a player from a visiting team threatens to change your future foreverÂ
pairing: nathan mackinnon x reader; brayden point x reader
warnings: creative liberties taken with the 2021-2022 regular season schedule and the availability/contributions of Brayden Point during the 2022 playoffs, typical angst associated with a love triangle with a hint of unrequited love, sexual themes (not quite smut but more than implied) and the usual (alcohol, swearing, etc.)
word count: 10.9k
a/n: surprise @senditcolton i'm your summer exchange fic writer! i'm so so so sooooo sorry this is late, @wyattjohnston and i were having a hot girl european summer and it's not an excuse but a bit of an explanation. when i saw you had written brayden point twice in your players list, i knew it was time to dust off this fic idea i had last year and do her proper justice. i hope you like it!!! shout out to demi for the many "replace c with C" suggestions on google docs and @thomasschabot for the other suggestions. ok i'll shut up now, enjoy!!
The Avs are up by one with thirty seconds to go and youâre pretty sure youâre going to puke. Itâs a good thing everyone is far too focused on the action going on at ice level to question why your gaze keeps bouncing between the good guys and a certain forward on the other team. Itâs such a strange feelingâyou want with your entire being for your boys to hoist the Cup, but thereâs a small part of you that never wants to see the boy on the other team you care for so deeply, so upset. He was right, you both crossed the line past hooking up a long time ago.Â
-
âYou look hot.âÂ
In any other circumstance, those words from Nate would have your heart going into overdrive. As it stands, your heart is already pumping at a rate you fear is not healthy while you lie on a trampoline with your nieceâs sprinkler set up beneath it. For every bitter complaint youâve ever had about a Canadian winter, the opposing heat waves might just be slightly worse.
âA/Câs broken,â you say like that explains everything.Â
Nate hums in response like maybe it does before pulling himself up beside you.Â
Somehow the air around you feels even hotter, precipitation building at your hairline. You fuss for a minute, wiping away the sweat before dramatically slapping your hands down on the trampoline in protest.Â
Nate ignores you, choosing to instead cheerfully proclaim âThis is nice!â
âWhat do you want?â you ask in response. There are layers to your grumpiness, but for now you can pretend itâs all related to the unbearable heat.
âCanât a guy visit his best friend?âÂ
You can feel his eyes on you, but you keep yours closed. âNot when it's 34 degrees out and humid as hell and he has to leave his air conditioned mansion to do so.â
âI saw your story and I was coming to invite you to my air conditioned mansion.â
âIs Sidney home?â Your tone is so much more nonchalant than you feel. It doesnât matter that the aforementioned man went from Nateâs childhood hero to mentor to near-brother; it will never not be weird to have but one degree of separation from the man whoâs name is on your townâs welcome sign.Â
Nate laughs like he can read your mind, but you still donât glance over at him. You donât need to, not really. The image of him beside you comes all too easily to your inner mind. His hairâs got a wave from the humidity, his nose tinged red from the hot sun, and his chest golden and chiseled and harlequin romance novel cover-esqueâÂ
âYou know one day youâre going to have to get used to being around guys who made it to the show. Hell, I'm a guy who made it to the show.â
Finally you turn to look at him and heâs somehow even more beautiful than youâd just imagined. âThatâs different Nate. YouâreâŠ.you.â
He smiles at you and itâs brighter than the damn sun causing you so many problems today. âAnd Sidâs just Sid. And the guys in Denver are just the guys in Denver.â
His words have your nose scrunching and you promptly go back to laying flat on your back. âDonât remind me.â Thereâs silence for a beat or two and then you continue, âSpeaking of, are you sure itâs still okayââ
Nate doesnât let you finish this time. âYes, Iâm sure itâs okay for you to hang around my apartment in Denver while you take a year off from school to figure out what you want to do.â
âThanks Nate,â you reply and he hums in response. Abruptly you sit up, sliding a little from the slick trampoline surface. âYour A/C offer still standing too?â
He grins this time and youâre damn near blinded. âFor you? Always.â
SidneyâSid waves at you both from his kitchen when you pull up to Nateâs but thatâs as far as it goes. Nate makes a joke about banana bread that you donât quite get, mood souring considerably when you wonder aloud if he thinks Sidney will bring some over.Â
Itâs all forgotten when the cold air hits you as you enter the lake house.Â
-
The summer passes by quickly without too much incidentâjust the nagging of your mother about your future and your own tiptoeing around the feelings you have for your friend.Â
On one of your and Nateâs last nights before leaving for Denver, your niece pulls him aside and sternly instructs him to bring home the Cup for her.Â
He laughs, but thereâs something in his eye that says he means it when he says he will. That intensity doesnât waiver, even as his gaze slides toward you. It has you thinking about a future by his side, celebrating those moments with him in a way so much greater than you do now.Â
The thought doesnât leave you as you kiss your family goodbye, trying desperately to not let any tears shed at the thought of no longer being a small distance away. Nateâs constant near proximity and the promise of more of it takes away the sting a little, but you fall into your sisterâs embrace that little bit more all the same.Â
Even as you do a final check of your thingsâtwo large suitcases, a carry-on and a backpack to house everything youâll need for the next yearâyou think about it, of what it would be like to do this every year. What it would be like to pack with the intention of unpacking your things beside Nateâs in his closet. Itâs silly, but sometimes you still feel like youâre fifteen years old, realizing youâre in love with your best friend as he goes away to the same hockey school as his idol.Â
Two flights full of self doubt and Nate sleeping on your shoulder later youâre convinced spending your impromptu gap year at his place is a bad idea. But then heâs smiling and âwelcome homeâ-ing you and you step through the door.
-
Unemployment and a mid-twenties life crisis isnât so bad from the guest bedroom of a lavish semi-detached in the suburbs of Denver. The bedâs softer than the one in your childhood bedroom. Bigger too. And the closet leading into the attached en-suite has no business being the size it is.Â
There are downsides of course. You are still unemployed and in the middle of a life crisis. Nathan is woefully unaware of your feelings and likely to never reciprocate. His teammates look at you like they know, though. And thereâs the whole banning of any food that brings any modicum of enjoyment that youâre not entirely sure is serious or not.Â
The teammates that come around are kind to you when youâre around them enough to let them be. A small part of it is the intimidation of them being professional hockey players but theyâre good guys and youâve met many of them before. Really, itâs something more akin to the inherent uncomfortability of your predicament. Itâs Nateâs house and youâre free-loading.Â
Of course he would argue differently if you voiced your thoughts and hang ups but thatâs precisely why you donât.Â
Nate may have never caught onto your feelings for him, but heâs not an oblivious person. Thatâs probably how you end up in the family box, being personally invited to brunch with the Better Halves by the best-half-in-charge herself, Mel Landeskog.Â
You find yourself nodding despite the anxiety of the possibility of making new friends, certain itâs less of an invitation and more of a demand.Â
She tells you as much, pressing a mimosa into your hand when you arrive at a cute restaurant and a table full of beautiful, predominantly blonde women. If Nateâs teammates were intimidating on a personal level, their wives and girlfriends are a whole other level. Never in your life have you been so surrounded by a group of women so put togetherâevery outfit perfectly on point, every head of hair treated to an expensive blowout, every foundation shade perfectly matched or worse, no makeup needed.Â
It has you self-conscious, despite having spent ages picking out something to wear and trying to tame your hair into something presentable. The mimosa helps, and so do the compliments from Ashley Kadri. Little by little you open up, and by the end of brunch you have a killer buzz and a dozen new instagram followers and numbers in your phone.Â
When Nate picks you up, the bubbles have gone to your head. You spend the entire ride back to his place with the back of your head pressed to the passenger side window so that you can grin stupidly at his side profile.Â
âThe girls are great,â you tell him with a silly giggle. His returning smile reeks of satisfaction of a job well done, but you donât focus on it. âWeâre gonna get dinner this week too!â
-
Although Mel takes you under her wing, itâs Heidy, Caleâs girlfriend who you instantly click with.Â
Sheâs every bit as beautiful and kind as the rest of them, but you connect with her on a different level. Itâs almost like youâve known her as long as youâve known Nate. She shares your love of Taylor Swift and gets your jokes and is more than happy to let you bounce future career plans off her.Â
You can tell the girls have questions about your relationship with Nate, and truthfully they can get in line behind you. Sometimes, when youâre not careful, it almost feels like youâre not alone in how you feel. Sometimes it feels like youâre high school sweethearts, playing house on the precipice of a greater future.Â
Nate doesnât help it himself though. Itâs you he calls on long road trips, you he pulls into a giant hug outside the locker room before driving you both home after a game. You who is invited to WAG functions as a connection to himâboth informally in a social context and more formally and broadly. Things like charity toy drives and the family box at games. A part of you fears the possibility of playoffsâespecially with odds so clearly in the Avs favorâand what it would mean to be so publicly claimed as Nateâs while privately remaining the way you always have been.Â
Itâs Heidy who you confide in. Sheâs always there to offer her ear, her shoulder, her opinion. And, although she encourages you to share your feelings, she also knows when to back off and let you do it when and if youâre ready.Â
You donât think youâll ever be ready.Â
-
With Christmas comes the Better Halves Christmas Tree Auction. Itâs Melâs favorite charity event of the season, she tells you gleefully.Â
âEvery event is her favorite,â Suzanna says behind her back later.Â
Designated Favorite Human of the Avalanche Children is usually your favorite title, but it means you have one kid hanging off of you when the girls drop the bomb on you.Â
âSo what are you thinking for your WAG tree?â
Itâs an innocent enough question, especially when you think itâs aimed at one of the aforementioned WAGs in the family box. Only when there is no response do you look up and realize itâs meant for you instead.Â
âSorry, what?â
âYourâŠTree,â someone says slowly and you shake your head.Â
Your tone and words are almost as flustered as you are. âNo I heard you. Iâm justâWhat do youâWhy are you asking me?â
âWell, Nate saidâŠâÂ
It all comes clear. Yet again, youâre expected to play the part. At great personal cost, mind you. Itâs a mindfuck and a half, having to do all the things that you do for a man you love when it doesnât mean anything.Â
Your thoughts are invaded with a tempestuous mixture of Nate and your relationship or lack thereof and yet another public acknowledgement.Â
Truly, you wonder if the others in the box pity you or laugh behind your back.Â
âCâmon,â Heidy says later, when the final buzzer sounds, cementing another win. âIâll drive you home.â
âNateâs,â you correct weakly.Â
She nods and repeats his name, grabbing your arm and leading you away.Â
-
Youâre stewing in silence when Nate comes home.Â
âYou okay?â he questions upon finding you in the living room, lit up only by the light filtering in through the large bay window.Â
The twitch of your eye is the only indication youâve heard and recognized his words for a long moment. You can practically hear the gears whirring in his head, can feel the moment heâs about to speak again.Â
Not wanting to give him the opportunity, you ask, âWhy?â His brows furrow and his head tits and so you continue. âWhy did you say I would do your Better Half tree?â
âItâs for charityâŠYou love charity work.â Nate visibly relaxes and you understand why. Heâs not wrong, engaging in charity work has been a big part of why youâre not wallowing in self pity, but this isnât just simple âcharity workâ and you tell him as much.Â
âI love toy drives and helping at the soup kitchen and adoption events at the ASPCA. This is different, this is your WAG tree. It means something. Itâs in your name, like IâmâIâmââ you canât bring yourself to say it.Â
âEverything you mentioned you do in my name.â He doesnât seem to get it, frustrating you further.Â
âItâs not the same, Nate! All those other things I do as part of the larger group. Itâs all facilitated by your team and your teammates âBetter Halves.â Their wives and girlfriends. Theyâve all made me feel welcome, but I'm not one of them. This implies that I am one of them, but Iâm not your girlfriend and certainly not your wife.â
âYou basically are.â The phrase has your heart jumping into your throat. Of every daydream or fantasy youâve ever allowed yourself to slip into, you never dreamed this would be how it all went downââWithout actually being my wife or girlfriend.â
âRight.â Your voice is short and clipped, masking the hurt quickly overtaking you. You wonât cryâyouâre stronger than that. So strong in fact, that you lay down a firm boundary. âI wonât do it. Get Sidney to do it or something.â
âOkay,â he says slowly, pausing and then asking, âWeâre good, right?â
âYep.â You feign nonchalance and then wish him a good night.Â
The pillow holds all your tears and secrets.Â
-
The incident sticks with you, despite your many attempts to shake it off. Even Heidy canât help. She tries anyway.Â
Youâre not his.Â
But you are. Youâre his and you have been for years now. Since he was leaving for school. Maybe even many years before that. Regardless of the true beginning, it doesnât quite matter. What really matters is this: youâre not sure it will ever have an ending, but youâre almost certain if it does, it wonât be the one you want.Â
Youâre his but heâs not yours.Â
Part of him is, sure, but you share that part with the other residents of Cole Harbour. The other part with the team and his teammates and their families, with the fans and the haters alike. The part you so desperately want to be yours has belonged to many a woman, but never to you.Â
It was a lot easier to live in the space between his childhood best friend and everything more when you were separated the majority of the year. A summer chock full of other things to do and focus your attention on to keep the longing at bay and enough distance for the rest of the year to forget how it feels to have him near without really having him.Â
One of Heidyâs distraction schemes involves hitting up downtown Denver a few nights later.Â
âBut itâs Thursday,â you say when she shows up at Nateâs dressed up like sheâs ready to hit the bar.Â
âI have tomorrow off and you donât have a job, so,â she replies.Â
You frown, âOuch.â She throws a look your way as if to not take it so personally and continues perusing your closet. âIâm not really feeling up to going out tonight.â
âToo damn bad,â she replies. âYou canât just sit here and wallow for the rest of your life.â
âWatch me,â you retort but start to get up anyway.Â
She smirks and tosses some clothes at you. âGet dressed and do something with your hair. Iâll do your makeup.â
âWhere are you guys going all dressed up?â Nate questions when he spots the two of you in the foyer.Â
âOut.â Heidy is curt, a consequence of her not only being a good friend to you, but also her own awareness of his behavior.Â
His brows knit together but he soldiers on, âDo you want company?â
âNope!â Sheâs much more cheerful now that sheâs handed you your coat and bundled herself up. âDonât wait up!â
Heidy drags you out to Caleâs car, where the man himself sits waiting. You instantly feel badâbetween your protesting and actual time spent getting ready, heâd been sitting a while.Â
âHave you been here the whole time?â you ask as you get in the backseat. He shrugs with a rosy smile as Heidy pushes you in further and takes a seat beside you. After pressing a quick kiss to her boyfriendâs cheek over the center console, of course.Â
Cale doesnât stick around after dropping you both offâa wave, a âbe safeâ, and âcall me when youâre ready to go homeâ and heâs gone.Â
Youâre terrible company admittedly, mouth set in a deep frown that doesnât crack even as you sip your drink. Heidy does most of the talking at first, blabbing away about everything and nothing. Until she sighs, slaps her hand down on the bar top and says, âYou need to deal with this. Either you need to resolve things with Nate or you need to get over it, distract yourself with something or someone else.â
You nearly choke on the last of your drink. âGee, Heidy, could you be any more subtle?â
âIâm worried about you.â Sheâs so earnest it tugs at your heart.Â
âIâm sorry. Iâll try. Really.âÂ
She smiles, relaxing into the seat at the bar top.Â
Just then, the bartender sets another drink in front of you.Â
âI didnât order another,â you state politely, attempting to hand back the drink.Â
The bartender shakes his head, motioning to the table in the corner as he speaks. âFrom someone at that table.â
Itâs a group of athletic men, but only one is looking your way. Heâs all intense eyes framed by intense eyebrows, but the look on his face doesnât match the intensity. ItâsâŠintriguing to say the least. Soft but confident, and definitely interested.Â
Itâs not until one of the other men at the table elbows him that you realize theyâre the team playing the Avs tomorrow night.Â
Quickly you spin back around and whisper to your friend, âSomeone from the Tampa Bay Lightning just bought me a drink.â
Her eyes widen and she herself turns around quickly to get a glimpse of your admirer across the bar. You grab at her arm and bring her back to face the bar top.Â
âHeidy!â you hiss.Â
âSorry!â she replies, âWhat are you going to do?â
You think about it for a second before throwing caution to the wind. Putting on your flirtiest smile, you turn around a lot more gracefully this time. Raising the gifted drink, you tilt it in a âCheersâ motion before wrapping your lips around the straw for a sip. He responds with an identical gesture, although with an amber colored beer bottle instead.Â
Satisfied, you resume your earlier position while Heidy speaks.Â
âWhen I said you needed a distraction that is not what I meant!â
You roll your eyes. âItâs a drink, not a marriage proposal. Relax.â
She does, until you pull her out to the dance floor with eyes only for the man across the bar. Lucky for youâand less lucky for Heidyâs resting heart rate and blood pressureâheâs got eyes for you, too.Â
It only takes half a song for him to approach and introduce himself. âIâm Brayden.â
You smile and reciprocate, waiting a beat for Heidy to speak too, but she just tilts her nose up. An elbow to her side doesnât get her speaking and so you introduce her, too.Â
One of Braydenâs eyebrows raise and you find yourself momentarily mesmerized by the action before quickly explaining, âBig Avalanche fans.â
He nods slowly once, then shrugs. âMaybe I can change that.â
âDoubtful,â she says under her breath, but if you heard it, you imagine Brayden did too.Â
She doesnât thaw any, even as the song changes. Nor does she get the hint to take herself elsewhere and so you rather pointedly ask if she can go get you both another round.Â
Heidy isnât even able to get out whatever she was ready to grumble before Brayden is offering, pausing to ask what Heidy is drinking. She begrudgingly tells him and he disappears.Â
âSeriously? You could have any guy here and thatâs who you go for?â she asks.Â
You shrug, âHeâs the one I want.â
She softens at your earnest tone. âOkay.â
âCall Cale,â you tell her. âGo curl up on the couch and watch TV together or whatever you would have done if you werenât worrying about me.â
âI donât knowâŠâ
âGo. Iâll be fine. And Iâll text you if I need you,â you confirm.Â
She sighs. âIâm waiting for my drink first.â
You laugh and pull her into a side hug. âLove you.â
True to her word, she finishes the drink Brayden brings herâeven managing a âthank you!ââbefore slipping off into the crowd and, you imagine, into her boyfriendâs car.Â
Brayden looks a little concerned at her rapid exit. âDid I do something to make her leave?âÂ
âBesides playing for the wrong team? Nah.âÂ
He doesnât look convinced, but the concern fades when you wrap your arms around his neck.Â
Itâs all but gone when you press your lips to his.Â
You dance for another few songs and another drink before your inhibitions are just low enough to drag him in the direction of the bathrooms.Â
The menâs is empty when you enter, and so you flip the lock on the door and press yourself against him.Â
He reciprocates, crowding you against the door with his mouth hot on yours.Â
Your whole body lights up at his touch, coming alive beneath his fingertips. There are no thoughts of Nate or the predicament youâve found yourself in, just Brayden.Â
His hands are curved around your jaw, and your leg is wrapped around his waist when he pulls away. âWait...wait.â
âYou donât wantâŠ?â Youâre not drunk, just a little bit more sensitive to rejection than you usually would be.Â
âNo thatâsâThatâs not it at all. I want you, like, really want you.â He kisses you, and as good as his touch feels, being wanted feels that extra bit more. âNot like this. Not here.â
Truthfully, youâve never been the kind of girl who lets someone hit and quit in a bar bathroom before. Or anywhere really. A part of you that you thought was long buried stirs inside of you and you realize for the first time in a long time youâre feeling something for a man who isnât your best friend.Â
Your best friend. Shit. âI have a kind of odd living situation right now, my place isnât an option.â
âYour parents?â
You bark out a laugh that he immediately covers with his mouth. âNo, theyâre back in Canada.â
âYour husband? Your boyfriend?â Heâs joking, but you canât help but get the sense thereâs an ounce of worry that heâs right. Itâs such an inconceivable notion that Nate could ever be either to you that you laugh again.Â
âNo, I just live with a friend who probably wonât be understanding about a strange man in their house.âÂ
Brayden visibly relaxes, pauses, and then says, âI have a hotel roomâŠyouâll have to be quiet though.â
âI can be quiet,â you reply, barely hiding your smirk.Â
You try your best, really give it your best effort, but no one has ever touched you like he does.Â
Nate doesnât cross your mind once.Â
-
You sneak out early in the morning, determined to not have a semi-public walk of shame in front of an entire hockey team. Itâs almost a success until you run into his captain in the lobby. Feeling your face grow hot, you give him a little nod and escape to the waiting Uber. You can only hope he doesnât get too much shit, telling him as much using the newest number in your phone.Â
Youâre not nearly as lucky, facing the firing squad that is Nate as you slip into the entryway. It shouldnât be a surprise to see your best friend awaiting your arrival, if the several messages that popped up when youâd finally opened your phone to send the aforementioned text to Brayden were any indication.Â
âWhere have you been?â he asks and you have to keep from rolling your eyes.Â
âOut,â you say, calling back to Heidyâs response last night but he doesnât accept it as easily coming from you.Â
âAll night?â he continues the interrogation.Â
âI crashed at Heidyâs last night, whatâs with the fifth degree, Dad?â
He looks like he was waiting for this moment as he replies, âNo you didnât, I talked to Cale.â
This time you do roll your eyes. âItâs none of your business, Nate.â
âIt is my business if youâre under my roof,â he says, doing his best impression of your father for real this time.Â
You know itâs not his intention, but your stomach drops all the same. The old feeling of guilt and shame and failure floods your veins, and you can tell he notices.Â
âIâm sorry,â he offers, âI didnât mean it like that. I was just worried and you didnât answer my messages.â
âI know,â you say but the words taste bitter in your mouth. âIâm going to go get some more sleep. See you later.â
He repeats the words back at you, but youâre more focused on the buzzing phone in your pocket.Â
Safe in Nateâs guest bedroom, you slip into something more comfortable, get beneath the covers and open your messages.Â
Bar Guy đđ€: Got fined
Bar Guy đđ€: Probably going to get chirped for a month
Bar Guy đđ€: Worth it thoughÂ
You: I would tell you Iâm sorry but Iâm notÂ
Bar Guy đđ€: Me either
-
If you thought that was the beginning and the end of Brayden you would be sorely mistaken.Â
Long distance flirting becomes a long distance hook up becomes him flying you out to see him. Any time you protested the latter, youâd find a non-refundable ticket in your email and a âpleaseâ in your text messages.Â
Fall fades into Winter and Bar Guy đđ€ turns to Brayden turns to B đ. As your feelings for him grow, you find thoughts of Nate as anything other than someone-you-grew-up-with fade.Â
You come clean about the âfriend you live withâ being Nathan MacKinnon before the first time you fly down to see him, worried that your lie by omission might be a dealbreaker. Brayden only laughs, he figured Heidyâs hostility was more than just motivated by more than sports team loyalty.Â
The thing about Brayden is he never makes you feel bad about Nate. He is understanding and gracious, never demanding, never unreasonable. A small part of you sometimes thinks about how if the roles were reversed, you donât think Nate would be quite the same.Â
Initially unsupportive and apprehensive, Heidy comes around, although her persistence turns from telling Nate how you feel to telling Nate about Brayden. You donât do either, and she keeps your secrets.Â
Nate being selected for the All Star Game in Vegas while Brayden isnât brings a unique opportunity for a week straight in hot, sunny Florida. The chill of Denver isnât quite as biting as back home, but youâre excited to escape it all the same.Â
He doesnât ask you to join him in Vegas, but you do wonder if he thought he didnât need to.Â
It doesnât matter either way, when an errant high stick in overtime breaks his nose and dashes his All Star dreams.Â
Your first thought upon seeing him bloody and disoriented on the ice is that there is no way you can go to Florida.Â
It probably looks much worse than it is, the girls try to reassure you in the box, but youâre not convinced.Â
Nateâs reassurances later donât do much either. Not with his face puffy and bruised and some dried blood on his chin.Â
Itâs not until he assures you that his mom and sister will be coming down to Denver since they had the time off anyway that you decide for sure you will go.Â
The day you leave for the airport, his pathetic form on the couch is almost enough to have you last minute cancelling on Brayden.Â
Nate all but demands you donât miss out on his account, asking that you âbe safeâ and âhave funâ.Â
In return you hit him with a âthanks Dadâ and âtake it easyâ despite knowing just by virtue of who he is as a person he will be doing the exact opposite. Â
Thoughts of Nate, broken and bruised, haunt you the entire journey. They donât fade until youâre in Braydenâs arms. Even then, itâs a dull ache that you do your best to ignore.Â
Evidently you donât do a very good job of hiding it, or maybe Brayden just knows you better than you think, because he catches on before youâve even reached his place.Â
âYou okay?â he asks, gently squeezing your knee where his hand rests.Â
Turning to look at his side profile, so earnest and sweet, you donât even think of lying.Â
âIâm worried about Nate.â
âI get that,â he says and you wonder if he truly does. âIâm glad youâre here with me though.â
Smiling at him, you are too, and so you try to push down the guilt and focus your attention on the man youâre with.Â
You check on Nate periodically throughout the week, never getting much more than a thumbs up emoji, but at least you know heâs alive.Â
Brayden wines and dines and, well, you know the rest of the rhyme.Â
By the time the week is up, you donât want to leave. Itâs strange how meeting one person can change things so drastically. Before Brayden, you would never have dreamed of spending a week with another man when Nate was injured and possibly may have needed you.Â
It also puts things into perspective for you.Â
Really emphasizes how much additional emotional labor you put inâand were expected toâin your relationship with Nate. The lines and boundaries had long since blurred, and it took dedicating your time and energy to another man to see it.Â
If Nate notices the way you pull back even further when you return, he doesnât say anything about it.Â
-
Falling for Brayden is easy. Itâs a gentle float down to the ground, landing among a field of flowers to catch your fall. A stark contrast to the free fall of being pushed from an airplane at 10,000 feet by Nate.Â
Where Nateâs sharp edges have cut you time and time and time again, Braydenâs curves wrap around you and hold you tight.Â
When youâre not physically with him, youâre texting and calling, and when youâre not doing that youâre thinking about him.Â
Neither of you make any move to define the relationship further, but it doesnât sting like the years of being strung along by Nate did. Itâs probably because while no words have been exchanged to that effect, Brayden lets you feel how much he cares for you.Â
-
Youâre nearly found out late in the regular season.Â
Something about Tampa has started to feel familiar and safeâyou try not to think about exactly why that isâand so, despite the knowledge that the boys are in town, too, youâre not as careful as you should be.Â
Thereâs an ice cream spot near Braydenâs that youâve taken to frequenting. As a consequence, itâs also near the arena.Â
Because itâs so close, you decide to walk there, teasing him the whole way about how one ice cream cone wonât derail his nutrition plan. Heâs arguing back, but you know itâs in vain because his sweet tooth and the lilt of your voice will win in the end.Â
Your hands naturally brush as a result of your close proximity and you take the opportunity to link your pinkies. He smiles softly and you walk in silence for a minute until he breaks it.Â
âYou really wonât let me give you my jersey?â Itâs a question that has come up before, but every time it does you wonder if itâs a little bit more serious of an ask than the last.Â
âIâd rather die. Maybe if you were a better hockey player,â you tease, jumping back to avoid his grasp.Â
He gasps playfully, thick eyebrows raising with his wide eyes. âTake that back right now.â He takes a step closer to you but you dodge his advances, sliding to the other side of the bench.Â
âSorry baby, you know I bleed blue and maroon. Wouldnât be caught dead in traitor blue.â Not to mention youâd never ever hear the end of it from the boys if someone saw you in it.Â
He fakes left and you fall for it, giggling madly as he wraps you up in his arms and scrapes his beard against your cheek. âWhat about just for me?â he asks, kissing your neck once and then nipping at it with his teeth before pulling back to look into your eyes. âIn my bed with nothing else on?â
Itâs like the already beautiful temperature rises even higher when he presses his mouth to yours. You give in quickly, pressing onto the tips of your toes to get even closer. It turns dirty quickly, his tongue in your mouth and his fingers buried deep in your hair.Â
And then a familiar voice calls your name.Â
You pull from Brayden like youâve been burnt, a look of pure panic crossing your face as you realize you know the body attached to the voice.Â
Itâs JT and he looks like been standing there long enough to figure out whatâs going on.Â
âJTââ you start to explain, but pause. There is no easy, simple explanation. There are months and months, hell years and years, of backstory and layers to even get to this point.Â
âI thoughtââ He appears to change his mind, stopping his thought mid sentence and switching to a question. âWhatâs going on here?â
âBrayden and I are, well, weâre.â Itâs a struggle to explain what you are to one of Nateâs teammates when you havenât had this conversation in full with the man beside you. Finally, you land on âWeâre together.â
You donât look over at Brayden to see his reaction.Â
âHow long?â is the natural follow up.Â
Itâs another tough question, but you decide to go with the first time you met and slept together. âBefore Christmas.â
âDoes Nate know?â he asks. The wild look in your eyes must give you away because he signs and says your name. âYou have to tell him.â
You get that, really you do. But at the same time itâs your business what you do and who you do it with, not Nateâs. At the same time, you know it would be a really shit thing for him to find out through someone who isnât you.Â
Beyond that, youâre pretty sure right before playoffs isnât the right time to have that conversation and you tell JT as much. âI know, I will. After the season Iâll tell everyone.â
JT looks less than convinced.Â
âYou know Nate, it wouldnât do anyone any good while the season is still going on. Please, you canât tell him.â
JT might be as aware as you are of who Nate is as a person, and heâs certainly more aware of who Nate is as a hockey player and so he agrees despite his clear hesitance. âPromise me, after the season.â
âI promise.â
When heâs gone, Brayden finally speaks up. âYou want to go public with us?â
You worry youâve said the wrong thing, starting to babble about how youâre sorry the conversation didnât occur privately first, and how you donât need to go public if itâs not something he wants to do when he silences you with a kiss.Â
âI want to tell everyone,â he says earnestly and you kiss him again. Â
JT thankfully keeps his word.Â
-
Nate doesnât watch any other team in the playoffs.Â
It makes trying to catch Braydenâs games tough, sneaking out to sports bars, watching games on your phone in Nateâs guest room, even flying out to watch a couple home games during the run.Â
The only supportive merch you sport is a necklace with his number, and on occasion a little blue and white lacy number under your clothes. Youâre not offered a WAG jacketâwhether thatâs due to Brayden knowing well enough you donât want to be that public or because your reaction to the style of jacket itself was less than positive.Â
In the back of your mind you recognize thereâs a chance it could come down to the teams of the boys you care for most; one Eastern Conference, one Western Conference.Â
Selfishly, when the first round between the Bolts and the Leafs goes to seven, part of you hopes for it to end right there. Most of you is glad they push through.Â
On Coloradoâs side of the playoff bracket, they absolutely rip through everyone who stands in their way.Â
You are offered a jacket with Nateâs name and number in glitter, but you turn it down in favor of a lucky baseball cap, though you do accept an unpersonalized crop from Madison.Â
Some of the girls decide to travel for the away games. You have to turn them down because there are already tickets with your name on them to see Brayden. Thereâs no way you canâor wouldâmiss any Avs home games, and so instead you end up being one of a handful of supporters in the likes of Toronto, Miami and New York.Â
Itâs a difficult balancing act as the playoffs progress in both teamsâ favor.Â
And then your worst nightmare comes true. The quest for the Cup comes down to your⊠whatever Brayden is to you and to Nate and the team youâve supported since he was drafted and all the other people who have come to feel like family.Â
Whispering to Brayden in the dark of night before the Finals begin, you tell him, âYou know I support you, butâŠâ
âItâs okay,â he whispers back, even though he has no reason to match your tone all alone in his home in Tampa. âI get it. As long as you still like me, you can like them a little bit more.â
You giggle, âItâs got nothing to do with liking you, you dolt.âÂ
âBolt,â he corrects, and even though you canât see him you know heâs smiling.Â
âOh my God, shut up.â You donât mean it literally but heâs quiet for a second too long. âNo matter what happens Iâm proud of you.â
For two people who have never properly defined nor publicized their relationship, it might be too heavy of a moment, but his quiet thank you is laced with emotion.Â
âGo to bed,â you say after another few beats of silence. âIâll see you tomorrow.â
The first two games are in Colorado, and the boys take both at home.Â
âAinât over til itâs over,â is both of your boysâ philosophy after the first two.Â
Nate is positively buzzing, especially after so decisively winning the second, but still cautiousâvery aware of how quickly a 2-0 lead can turn into the end of the line and empty hands.Â
Brayden is also cautious, and this isnât his first or even second rodeo at the Cup final in as many years. You try to kiss it better in a random hallway in the bowels of Ball Arena.Â
Finally accepting the Better Halvesâ invitation to travel to road games, you have a good seat to Tampa taking back some momentum in game three before promptly handing it back to Colorado.Â
You die and come back to life a dozen times in game four as Brayden and his team hold on.Â
Game five is to be played back in Tampa, and you spend the night before the game in Braydenâs bed instead of the hotel Nate has paid for. âGood luck,â you whisper against his lips early in the morning before you leave to meet the girls for breakfast.Â
âYou donât mean that,â he teases, stretching out in such a way that has you considering skipping breakfastâcertain teasing and interrogation be damned.Â
âGood luck to you,â you amend, kissing him once more. âYour team can rot.â
His laughter rings in your ears as you leave.Â
Mel corners you after breakfast, a familiar offending piece of clothing in her hands. âThis could be it,â she explains, offering you the jean jacket.Â
If it were any year previous, you might have worn it. If you didnât have Brayden, you might have worn it. If Nate had offered it to you himself alongside a confession, you might have worn it.Â
None of these things are true, and so you decline. âI donât like the way it makes me feel.â
Her smile has a twinge of sadness and understanding as she replies, âOkay.â
-
Sitting alongside the girls in the box with your cropped sweater hiding the 21 necklace around your neck, youâve never felt more torn.Â
Braydenâs captain nets one early in the first, and youâre not sure you breathe again until Nateâs powerplay evens the score early in the second. Thereâs an undercurrent of excitement in the box alongside the nervous energy. Midway through the second, Arturri tips it in and Amalie Arena is silent.Â
It stays like that for the rest of the period until you excuse yourself to grab a drink at intermission. Standing in the long drink line, you spot a little girl in a Point jersey and your stomach twists as you think about how no matter which way this ends, someone you care for will be hurt.Â
That feeling doesnât leave as you sit through a scoreless third period. The arena gets loud with Bolts fans throughout, celebrating every blocked shot and turnover. That intensity picks up in the dying seconds of the game as Brayden picks off the puck in the defensive zone.Â
He rushes up the ice flanked by his linemates, but is momentarily stopped by Cale.Â
He gets his stick back on the puck and your nails dig into the leather arm of the box seat. Suzanna grabs your hand, assuming itâs worry for her boyfriend and his teammates and you let her think that and hold your hand.Â
Three seconds.Â
Two seconds.Â
He shoots right as the buzzer sounds and Darcy gloves it down like there was never a question of him stopping it.Â
The entire box explodes in a chorus of cheersâthereâs shouting, swearing, crying, laughter and youâre right in the middle of them all. Your boys are Stanley Cup Champions.Â
Someone grabs you, and then someone else joins in and suddenly youâre in the middle of a dog pile. âThey fucking did it!â
Youâre so fucking excited, incredibly proud and honestly a little weepy about your favorite people finally getting their hands on their childhood dream. But, a bigger part of the organ in your chest than you want to admit aches for the downturn of Braydenâs head as he skates back to the bench.Â
An attendant appears and wrangles the rowdy bunch down to the ice. Youâve got Linnea Landeskog in your arms and a giant grin on your face as your feet touch the ice.
âDown please,â she politely states while trying to wriggle out of your grasp. The second sheâs down sheâs running at her daddy who sweeps her up in his arms.Â
And then Nateâs on you in a way that you used to long for when you were younger. Heâs red and sweaty and out of breath but none of these things stop him from hauling you up into his arms and spinning you until you smack at his chest, demanding to be let down much like Linnea only minutes ago.Â
He stops spinning but he doesnât let go, staring up at you with a look heâs never given you before. Youâre so caught up in the excitement of it all you barely notice, grabbing his cheeks and shouting in his face, âYou fucking did it!â
âWe fucking did,â he says like he canât believe this moment is happeningâwhether thatâs due to you in his arms or the Cup that will now bear his name no one can really say. He kind of looks like heâs about to do something stupid, leaning in ever so slightly, and so you finally succeed at leaving his arms, slipping slightly as you reach the ice once again. Brayden is watching from across the ice, a sad look on his face that you just want to kiss off. You donât though, just pat Nate on the back once and continue moving, throwing yourself at Cale, then Burky, then Mikko.
Itâs a blur of celebrations and photos with the Cupâyou even let Linnea convince you to take a photo with her and the Cup, her mom remarking that it looks good on you. When you pull from your photo pose, you give her a questioning look. âA baby and a cup,â she smirks, blatantly looking over at Nate who seems to agree.Â
You laugh nervouslyâlast year that was all you wanted, the boys to win and Nate to want you in that way. Now? Now you can picture it still, you just picture it with someone else.Â
Finally, youâre able to sneak away and Brayden has the same idea, telling you to meet him in a closet by the locker room. No words are exchanged as he pulls you in by your hips and kisses you like he needs it to breathe.Â
âIâm sorry,â you tell him and you mean it.Â
A crinkle forms between his eyes. âNo youâre not.â
You kiss him again once, âIâm not sorry the boys won tonight, but I am sorry it was against you.â
âThereâs always next year.â Itâs far more flippant than you had anticipated, really you thought youâd be dealing with an upset Brayden and that might have broken your heart.Â
âI thought youâd be more upset.â
âCanât win âem all,â he says and you give him a look to be serious. âSo what, we didnât win the Cup this season. I got you, didnât I?â
âFuck off, dont be stupid.â Your cheeks are hot and your eyes are wild.Â
âI mean it. Iâd take you over the Cup nine times out of ten.â
âWhat about the other one?âÂ
âNeed to win another one for us to put our future babies in.â
âAwfully presumptuous for a hook up.âÂ
âThis is so much more than a hook up.â
âYeah,â you admit, sinking deeply into another kiss.Â
âBesides,â he pauses, âAlready got two rings.â
You laugh, shaking your head. âOkay I gotta go. Will you come get me later?â
He looks at you like youâre stupid to ask, like heâd go into the pits of hell itself for you without hesitation. âOf course. Now go. Celebrate. Iâll see you later.â
You slip out first, making sure the coast is clear and go find the others. A Stanley Cup Champion hat is placed upon your head and a bottle of champagne in your hand. Thereâs a celebration in the visitor locker room and then the party moves to a local bar.Â
Someone shells out the money for a few bottles of vintage Dom Perignon that you indulge in, but mostly you just relish in the happiness of everyone around you. If youâre honest, you spend a fair amount of time avoiding Nate who has a serious look every time you catch him staring.Â
Shortly before midnight, you slip out of the bar and into Braydenâs waiting car. The bubbly must have gone to your head, because you forgo any verbal greeting in favor of launching yourself over the center console to press your lips to his.Â
He pulls away and very somberly states, âI canât take you seriously in that sweater.â
Looking down, you spot the Avalanche crop and laugh as you pull it off and toss it in the back. âBetter?â
He hums, fingertip tracing the chain around your neck from your clavicle down between your breasts to reveal his number on the pendant. âMuch.â
You sink back into another kiss before remembering where you are, who youâre with and what youâre doing meanwhile the bar you just left is crawling with people youâre not quite ready to come clean to just yet.Â
âTake me home, Bray,â you say as you relax back into the passenger seat.Â
You donât have the power to bring your lover the Stanley Cup your friends were just drinking out of. All you have to offer is yourself, but he accepts it with as much gratitude as your best friend accepted the Cup earlier.Â
Later, he looks like he wants to ask you to stay, and you think you look like you want him to.Â
In the end, it doesnât matter as you fall asleep next to him and somehow make it back to your hotel room in the morning with no one the wiser.Â
-
Nate spends a few more weeks in Denver after the win, celebrating with the guys and riding the high of winning it all. You only spend a couple days and then move out of his house and back into your parents.Â
You donât tell him about Brayden, content to let Nate enjoy his successes.Â
As a consequence, you donât see much of him in July or August. Even when youâre both home, heâs busy with all his other friends and his family, and youâre busy with your niece and deciding on what to do in the fall. Youâve determined the best course of action is to finish your degree and then apply to a masters program in order to change your career path.Â
The choice, then, is where to do so. You can stay at home, commute an hour each way into the cityâsupported by your hometown friends and your family. Or you can make the shift to Denver for real, with your found family and with Nate. OrâŠ
The University of Tampa Bay has an excellent program. You know from your time visiting Brayden through the season that the university is right around the corner from Amalie Arena and Braydenâs. Itâs awfully presumptuous, but you find yourself daydreaming about the possibility much like you used to daydream about a future in Denver.Â
Of course, thereâs an entire continent of possibilities, hell an entire world of possibilities, but these are the three most attractive options.Â
There are many discussions to be had, and choices to be made. You donât want to do either until youâve had a chance to speak to Brayden in person, but just as Nateâs had a busy summer, so too has he.Â
He messages you every morning before and after working out while youâre still asleep. Every conversation eventually devolves into some combination of âI miss youâ and âwhen can I see you?âÂ
You do manage to spend a few days with him in the Rockies mid-July that fly by far too quickly. Every time you leave Brayden it gets harder and the implications of it all have your stomach in knots when the thought crosses your mind.Â
-
It all comes to a head spectacularly the day before Nateâs day with the Cup. Youâre at Nateâs, helping to prepare for the post-parade celebration when youâre called away by his sister. She wants your help deciding on which photos to displayâitâs a mixture of past and present alongside an elementary school assignment two decades old wherein Nate declared his future profession would be âStanley Cup Champion.â
Youâre smiling, lost in the memories when Nate comes crashing into the room youâre in. Thereâs an indiscernible look on his face, but it reads somewhere between anger, frustration and hurt. The look on your face betrays your confusion, and it only deepens when you see your phone in his hands.Â
âWhat are you doing with my phone?â you ask.Â
His jaw ticks. âThought it was mine.â
It doesnât really do anything for your confusion. If anything, it deepens it. âWhatâs your problem Nate?â
âThis! This is my problem.â He finally cracks, shoving your phone in your face to reveal messages from Braydenâunder the contact name of the letter B and a heartâwondering when you plan on making the trip to Calgary to see him. Your stomach drops and your heart feels like itâs at risk of falling right out your chest. It was always going to come out, but especially as you crossed the line between sharing body heat with Brayden and sharing your secrets, hopes and dreams.Â
That being said, it is a shit way for your relationship to come to light for sure, but you canât help but feel your friend is overreacting. Sarah is looking between the two of you, panicked and frozen like she doesnât know what to do.Â
âI think your mom could use some help in the backyard, Sar,â you say gently, and she gladly takes the opportunity to flee. Once sheâs gone, you turn on Nate. âIâm sorry that you found out this way, but you had no right to come in here like that. Poor Sarah looked terrified!â
He looks at you incredulously. Now that his sister is out of ear shot, he appears to have allowed himself to lean into his emotions a little more. âI have no right? What about you? Hooking up with some random guy in Calgary? Is that where youâve been running off to these past few months?â
You know that this is probably the least important part of his rant, but you feel the need to clarify. âHeâs not just some guy, Nate. His name is Brayden. And for the record, no. I wasnât in Calgary, I was in Tampa.
He looks confused in addition to enraged, and so you put the pieces together for him. âIâve been seeing Brayden Point.â
âYouâve been sleeping with the enemy?â
âAre you joking?âÂ
This is not your friend Nate. This is some angry being inhabiting the body of your friend Nate.Â
He doesnât back down. âIt was between us and them in the final, pretty sure that qualifies as the enemy!â He pauses for a second and then continues, âHow long have you been sleeping with him? During the final? Were you rooting for him instead?â
âNateââ
âNo, donât Nate me. I bet you were, I bet you wanted them to win, him to win. I bet you were sitting there in the family box, using tickets I paid for, against me the whole time.â
âThatâs not fair!â you try to interject, despite the tiny grain of truth to his words. It would be untrue to say some small part of you wanted Brayden to succeed, but your loyalties have always been with Nate and his team.Â
âDonât bother. I wouldnât trust a thing you said right now. Not after this. Not when you know.âÂ
âKnow what?â you question.Â
âHow I feel! About you. And me.â The blurred edges start to come into focus. Heâs been acting like a man scorned, because in his eyes he is one.Â
Unable to form any coherent thought, you repeat yourself from earlier. âAre you joking?â
Heâs less angry now, slipping further into the hurt brewing under the surface. âItâs always been us. Since we were kids. And now youâre messing around with some guy on another team. I can't believe you!â
The tears start to pool at your waterline, but youâre too stubborn to let them fall. âYouâre a real piece of work, you know that? You string me along for years and years and years, expecting me to play the part of your girlfriend without being your girlfriend and to wait around for you to figure it out. I am sorry you found out like this, but Iâm not sorry about him. Iâm not sorry about Brayden.â
He flinches at the sound of Braydenâs name, the anger clouding his eyes even further. âYou want him so bad, why donât you go to him right now?â
âNateââ Youâre not sure he knows what heâs saying, what the implications of all heâs said really are. What it would mean if you left for Calgary this afternoon. What it would be like if you werenât there tomorrow to join in his celebrations.
âGo.â When you donât move he speaks again. âGet out of here.â
He hasnât raised his fists or even his voice, but you do as he suggests. Calmly, begging the tears not to fall, you walk right out of his house and get in your car and you drive.Â
Brayden picks up when you call while driving, and thereâs a ticket in your inbox before youâve even made it home.Â
A short layover in Torontoâand with nothing but the clothes on your back and a small carry- onâlater, youâre sinking into Braydenâs arms.Â
âIâm sorry,â he says, but you shake your head where itâs buried in his chest.Â
âThank you,â you say, leaving hundreds of words unspoken in your gratitude.Â
The kiss he pressed to your lips and the way he says âAnything for youâ tells you that he understands.Â
Heâs got his own place in an affluent suburb of the city, and youâre grateful for the fact that you wonât have to see anyone else with your puffy, bloodshot eyes.Â
The last time youâd cried this hard, it had been over the loss of your childhood dog. Nate had been there then, flying in after a late game to hold you while you cried. Maybe you had misunderstood his feelings for you, missed the signs he thought he had laid out so clearly. Maybe that would have mattered a year ago.Â
It doesnât, now.Â
Not when Braydenâs arms feel like home. His warm gaze feels like the sun. His kiss and his touch feel like heaven on earth. His love feels like everything youâve ever wanted.Â
Your world nearly stopped in Nateâs living room, but it resumed spinning here in Braydenâs bedroom.Â
Youâre curled up on his chest while he soothingly runs a hand along your spine when you tell him. âI love you.â
His hand stills on the middle of your back, but you donât panic. Your mind and heart are clear and in unison. He doesnât make you wait long, cupping the back of your head and tilting your head back ever so slightly so that your eyes meet.Â
âYeah?â he asks like maybe he needs the validation.Â
âYeah,â you reply, giving it to him.Â
The grin on his face might be worth everything youâve been through.Â
You squeal as he flips the both of you, ending in a position where his arms bracket either side of your head in order to keep from crushing you with his full weight.Â
âI love you,â he repeats, kissing every inch of your exposed skin.Â
Tangling your fingertips in the hair at the nape of his neck, you say it again and again and again. Itâs a chant and a ritual, told between sighs and moans and whimpers. He strips you of your clothes, taking you apart piece by piece and then putting them all back together.Â
It is intimate and sweet as he takes you to the highest peak, hearts and limbs and minds all intertwined. There is no doubt, no insecurity, no hesitation. All of the love you have to give is reflected back at you. You and Brayden are two sides of the same coin, destiny and fate and all the good forces in the world have brought the two of you together.Â
Thatâs why when, in the dark of his room later, you say yes when he asks you to move in.Â
-
Despite the apparent suddenness, your family is more than supportive of you and Brayden. Though that may be because he charmed the pants off all of them the following week when returning to your childhood bedroom to pack your things.Â
Your niece is delighted when she learns that Braydenâs âjob is hockey!â as she so sweetly declares, requesting he win her a Cup too.Â
It reminds you of Nate and how you havenât heard from him. You donât reach out either.Â
Your time in Calgary is short, punctuated by the bittersweet news that although many of your credits will transfer over, youâre not able to start college classes at the University of Tampa until the second semester.Â
âNow you can come with me on all my road games,â Brayden says when you tell him.Â
âFat chance.â
Training camp sneaks up on you both and before you know it, youâre making the permanent move into Braydenâs bedroom and his life, publicly this time.Â
The Tampa WAGs are sweet and welcoming, but you find yourself missing the Colorado Better Halves. Thatâs probably why you agree to dinner with Heidy the first time in the season that the Avs are in town.Â
You make plans to meet at a cute spot downtown near the arena.Â
The minute you spot Nate waiting outside, you start to turn around. Not so much as an Instagram like since the day before his day with the Cup and now heâs at one of your favorite restaurants in Tampa like everything is okay?
âWait,â he says and for some reason you do, pausing mid turn. âIâm sorry.â
Thatâs enough to have you turning back around to look him in the eye as you scold him. âReally? I havenât heard a word from you in months and thatâs what you have to say?â
âI know,â he says.Â
âYou were really shitty Nate! You knew how I felt and apparently felt the same way, but you just took advantage of me and my feelings for you for years! And then, you made me feel like trash for falling for someone else.â
âI know,â he says again.Â
âCan you say literally anything other than I know?â you say exasperatedly.Â
âIââ he starts and stops with the look you give him. âI donât have a good explanation for the first bit. Youâre right, Iâve been taking you for granted for a long time. I donât know, I guess I was just scared to lose you if we ever crossed that line.â
âI get that,â you reply. âWhy do you think I never said anything either? Iâm less mad about that and more mad about you being a giant asshole about me meeting someone.â
He nods. âI know. I was jealous and hurt and I lashed out and hurt you too. I never meant for it to get like this, but the longer it took for me to reach out and apologize the harder it seemed. I am really sorry, and Iâm happy you found someone who treats you the way you deserve.â
Itâs a sincere apology and one youâre certain he means. Beyond that, you just miss your best friend and so you throw yourself at him in a big hug. Heâs startled, but very quickly wraps his arms around you too.Â
âThings arenât magically okay, you really hurt me, but youâre my best friend and Iâve missed you so much. Thereâs been a million times where something happened and I wanted to tell you about it, but couldnât.â
âYouâre my best friend,â he says.Â
Nate scores a goal during the second period of the game but itâs not enough for the Avalanche.Â
Brayden comes home the clear winner to find you curled up in his bed. First he undresses and then he slips into bed beside you.Â
âGlad you made up with Nate,â he says, tucking his head into the crook of your neck and wrapping an arm around your waist.Â
âGlad you won,â you reply, feeling the way his lips curve in a smile against your neck and knowing heâs about to say something stupid and cringe.Â
âIn more ways than one, baby,â he laughs, caging you in with his arm as you struggle to get away from him and his bad jokes. âIn more ways than one.â
Despite the way you playfully try to escape his clutches, the truth is you feel like youâre the real winner.Â













