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Word Count: 946, just a quick little babyTopics/Tropes: best friends, no label labels, theyâre in their own bubble
A/N: i kinda like this and want to make little blurbs in this universeÂ
Tonight was a rare occurrence. The house was dark and quiet, three of the four residents seated in the backyard holding their other half. The fire was glowing, taking only part of the chill out of the air. Hannah and Allie giggling softly at a truth question Garrett had asked Dean.
The final pair was using each other, and a very fluffy blanket, to combat the other part of the fall air. John Logan thought about the girl pressed into his side. Sharing one adirondack chair, her head filled the crook of his neck, one hand in his hoodie pocket, the other wrapping behind him. Legs were intertwined. Logan could feel her fuzzy socks rub against his calf. The girl nuzzled closer, releasing a deep sigh. Logan tightened his grip around her.Â
Allie called her name, prompting her to answer a truth or truth. She was an enigma. Kept her cards close to her chest. When she became sleepy or a little tipsy, her walls faltered just enough to let people see the real her. âWhat wish came true when you met the person next to you?âÂ
Allie loved to ask questions about the dynamic between the girl and her boyfriendâs teammate. They were always so coy. Hell, no one could even pinpoint if theyâve had sex. They were masters of allusion. She pulled her face away from Loganâs neck.Â
âTo be heard.â His eyes softened, but his grip tightened. Nothing made John Logan softer than emotional vulnerability. A few âawesâ could be made out in the background, but neither was paying them any mind. He mumbled something small into her ear and she winked.
This was the usual behavior between the two. Quiet conversations, explosive laughter and the inherent ability to tune out the world around them. They knew all eyes were watching, but it didnât let it bother them. Logan didnât seem to care when his teammates saw him play with the ends of her long hair, or the way he rubbed her hip when they were at the bar. She never bat an eye at the dirty looks girls gave her when they danced a little too close for two people who were potentially just friends.
She threw a truth question at Garrett and went back to ignoring the world. Her head rocked back into the boy, tracing the skin above the hem of his boxers. She knew exactly what she was doing. Logan broke out in goosebumps and pulled her closer to his center. She could turn this man to putty in two seconds flat.Â
Loganâs brown eyes drifted down to her every so often to check on her. And to just look at her. He would never get tired of tracing the outline of her nose. Her breath just started to even out when Dean called her name.Â
âWhatâs the best question someone has ever asked you?â
Without missing a beat she answered, eyes staying closed. âSprinkles or peanuts?â
John Logan's throat dried up. His eyes went wide. He hadnât thought about that question in years. Somehow, the moment she said those words, it all came flooding back to the front of his brain.
Three were puzzled, looking for an elaboration. Garrett just smirked.
âWhat did you answer?â Dean asked.
âBoth.â Logan answered for her, a blush rising to his cheeks. âYou wanted both.â
His freshman year of high school his hockey team was on a streak of bad behavior and as punishment they had to work the concessions for the basketball game. It was nearly halftime when she had walked up and asked for a sundae. Logan had asked the question without thinking twice, but when he looked up the prettiest girl he had ever laid eyes on was standing right in front of him.
âBoth. If thatâs allowed,â she met his eyes for only a second. From there Logan noticed her everywhere he went. Inseparability came next.
âItâs how they met,â Garrett chuckled. Hannahâs jaw dropped at how effortlessly she seemed emotionally rattled Logan. The most thoughtful words just rolled off her tongue. Her hand peaked out from under her cocoon, following the sharp edge of his jaw. She loved his stubble. The way it rubbed against her skin. All of her skin.
âThank you,â she mumbled. Her consciousness was fading, but he knew that it would only last until they made it upstairs. He moved a piece of hair behind her ear, and pulled the blanket up further.Â
âNo, thank you.â This was their thing. It was a little less than âI love you,â but a little more than âjust friends.â While the dynamic between John and her seemed to keep the rest of their friends guessing, the pair knew exactly where they stood. He was hers and she was his.Â
Years of friendship had quietly melted into something beautiful. Logan placed a kiss on the crown of her head and pulled her closer. The girlâs eyes fluttered closed.Â
He sat there for twenty more minutes waiting for the fire to dwindle to smolders before picking her up bridal style. He threw a nod to the others and made his way to his bedroom.
He gently placed her in the center of the bed, and she looked up at him with a lopsided grin. âHi, John.â
Hair was scattered across the pillows and her face. She looked crazy. âHi, baby.â Scooting down next to her, Logan kissed her jaw. âSprinkles or peanuts?â
She let out a small giggle, trying to stifle her whimper. âBoth, please.â And with a pull of his hair, she knew they were going to have a really hard time keeping their activities to themselves.  Â
Summary: you donât tell him your last name. By the time Dean finds out, heâs too far gone to do anything but brace for impact. Falling for the ice-cold, vodka-drinking Russian freshman is one thing. Falling for Ilya Rozanovâs little sister is a death wish. Dean decides he doesnât care
Warning: 18+ content
Read part two here
The 2000s hits blasting from the speakers are so loud they rattle the floorboards, but Dean is undeniably bored.
He leans against the doorframe of the living room, a red Solo cup dangling loosely from his fingers. The party is packed, a sweaty sea of grinding bodies, spilled beer, and bad decisions, but itâs the exact same crowd as last weekend. And the weekend before that. Dean is a guy who thrives on variety, and lately, the scenery is getting repetitive. Money is no object, and usually, neither are women. He rarely spends a night alone. But tonight? Nothing is catching his eye.
âYou look miserable,â Garrett remarks, bumping Deanâs shoulder as he passes by with a fresh keg of beer.
âIâm not miserable,â Dean corrects him smoothly. âIâm uninspired.â
Logan snorts from his spot on the ratty couch. âUninspired? You literally took twins home on Tuesday.â
âThat was Tuesday, Logan. Itâs Friday. Iâm a growing boy. I need fresh stimulation.â Dean sighs, pushing off the doorframe. âIâm going to the kitchen to find something stronger than this watered-down piss.â
âGood luck,â Tucker calls out over the music. âI think the football team raided the liquor cabinet an hour ago.â
Dean navigates the crowded hallway with the effortless grace of a guy who owns the place. He dodges a couple making out against the thermostat and sidesteps a puddle of questionable origin. As he rounds the corner into the kitchen, the noise level shifts. Itâs less thumping bass and more rowdy, escalating shouts.
A crowd is gathered around the center island. Specifically, a crowd of massive, tank-like senior football players. And right in the middle of them is you.
Dean stops dead in his tracks.
You are perched on one of the barstools, looking entirely out of place and yet completely in control. Your hair falls over your shoulders in messy waves, and youâre wearing a cropped leather jacket over a tight top that leaves exactly the right amount to the imagination. But it isnât just the way you look â though you are undeniably, breathtakingly stunning. Itâs the way youâre holding court.
âYou are slowing down, big guy,â you say, your voice carrying over the chanting. Itâs smooth, slightly raspy, and laced with a heavy, unmistakable Russian accent.
You push a brimming shot glass of clear liquid toward a guy Dean recognizes as Meathead Mike, a defensive lineman who weighs close to three hundred pounds.
âIâm not slowing down,â Mike grunts, looking slightly green around the gills. âIâm pacing myself.â
âPacing,â you repeat, a smirk playing on your lips. Itâs a wicked, self-assured smirk. You pick up your own shot glass. âIn Moscow, pacing is for the weak. We drink, or we go home to sleep. Which one are you doing, Mishka?â
Dean is instantly fascinated.
âIâm drinking,â Mike growls, snatching the glass.
You tap your glass against his. âNa zdarovye.â
You toss the vodka back effortlessly, not even a flinch crossing your features. You set the glass down with a sharp clack against the granite. Mike follows suit, but he gags halfway down, coughing violently into his elbow. His buddies groan and slap his back.
âAlright, alright, heâs done,â one of the other linebackers laughs. âJesus, girl. What are you made of?â
âMostly spite,â you reply, your face deadpan, though your eyes gleam with amusement.
You glance over your shoulder at a blonde girl standing nervously by the fridge. Your roommate, Morgan, the quintessential all-American girl next door whom you dragged here because you were bored.
âMorgan,â you say, snapping your fingers lightly. âPass the bottle. I think the offense wants a turn.â
Morgan looks terrified. âUm, I think maybe we should stop? Thatâs, like, a lot of vodka.â
âIt is barely a warm-up,â you insist, reaching over to grab the handle of Smirnoff yourself. You look at the bottle with a mix of pity and disgust.
Dean watches you, completely captivated. He knows the type of girls who hang around Briar parties. They giggle, they flirt, they bat their eyelashes at the hockey players. You are doing none of that. You look like you could buy and sell everyone in this room, and honestly? You probably could.
Six years younger than Ilya Rozanov, the infamous, cocky Boston Bruins center, you are practically a miniature version of him. Ilya brought you to the United States the second you turned eighteen, pulling you out of Moscow and away from your emotionally abusive father and older brother. He bought you a luxury apartment just off the Briar campus, filled your bank account, and told you to get an education â mostly because, in Ilyaâs words, âhockey players are dumb, and we need at least one brain in the family.â Ilya spoils you rotten and guards you like a dragon hoarding gold. But right now, nobody in this kitchen knows that.
Dean takes a step forward, sliding into the gap left by one of the retreating football players.
âI donât think you should waste your time with the offense,â Dean says, leaning his hip against the counter right next to you. He flashes you his trademark, million-dollar smile â the one that usually has girls melting into puddles. âThey drop the ball when it counts.â
You pause, the vodka bottle hovering over a glass. You turn your head slowly, raking your eyes up and down Deanâs frame. You take in his messy blond hair, his sharp jawline, the casual but expensive fit of his casual sweater.
Your expression doesnât change. You donât melt. You donât even blink.
âAnd who are you?â You ask, your tone bordering on bored. âThe waterboy?â
A few of the remaining football players snicker. Deanâs eyebrows shoot up. Okay. Not the usual reaction.
âDean Di Laurentis,â he says, offering his hand. âI live here. Play hockey.â
You look at his hand, then back up to his face. You donât shake it. âCongratulations on paying rent, Dean Di Laurentis. But as you can see, I am busy.â
Dean lets his hand drop, entirely unbothered. The chase is the best part, and you just handed him a massive head start.
âBusy giving the entire offensive line alcohol poisoning,â Dean notes, glancing at the bottle. âYou know, thatâs cheap shit. Itâll eat straight through your stomach lining.â
You snort, pouring yourself another shot anyway. âPlease. I am Russian. This,â you tap the bottle of Smirnoff, âis practically flavored water.â
âA Russian,â Dean says, stepping a fraction closer. âThat explains the accent. What brings you to a sweaty college basement in Massachusetts? Boston isnât exactly Moscow.â
âThank God for that,â you mutter under your breath. You pick up the shot glass, twirling it between your fingers. âI go to school here. First semester. Which means I am currently trying to enjoy a party, but people keep talking to me instead of drinking.â
Dean laughs, a genuine, startled sound. âYouâre a freshman? Couldâve fooled me. Youâre holding court like a senior.â
âAge is a number,â you say dismissively. âMaturity is knowing when a man is trying to hit on you with terrible opening lines.â
âTerrible?â Dean clutches his chest in mock offense. âOuch. Iâll have you know my opening lines have a very high success rate.â
âThen the women here have very low standards.â You toss the shot back. Again, no chaser. No wince.
Dean shakes his head in amazement. âOkay, color me impressed. Youâre completely unbothered by that.â
âI am unbothered by most things,â you reply. You slide off the barstool, landing lightly on your feet. Youâre a few inches shorter than Dean, but the way you hold yourself makes you seem taller. You have this undeniable, gravitational pull.
You turn to your roommate. âMorgan. Are we having fun yet, or do you want to go?â
Morgan jumps, startled to be addressed. âUm! Iâm having fun! But, uh, maybe no more shots?â
âFine. No more shots.â You look back at Dean. âSee? I am very compromising. A delight to be around.â
âI can tell,â Dean says, his eyes tracking the movement of your mouth. âBut you know, you never told me your name.â
âI did not,â you agree.
Dean waits a beat. âAre you going to?â
âNo.â
Dean laughs again. He loves this. He is completely, hopelessly intrigued. You are stunning, sharp-tongued, and just the right amount of a bitch. Itâs a breath of fresh air. âCome on. Give me something. A fake name? A nickname?â
âYou can call me when you have better vodka,â you deadpan. You step around him, your shoulder brushing lightly against his chest. The contact sends a sudden, sharp jolt of electricity straight down Deanâs spine.
âHey, wait,â Dean says, turning to follow you as you start walking toward the living room. âAt least tell me what youâre studying. Let me guess. Business? Political science?â
You donât stop walking, but you glance back over your shoulder, a patronizing smile on your lips. âDo I look like I want to wear a pantsuit and argue in a boardroom?â
âYou look like youâd win every argument,â Dean fires back effortlessly.
âObviously. But I donât need a degree for that.â You weave through the crowd with expert precision.
Dean keeps pace, ignoring the people calling his name. âSo what is it then? Art history? Bio?â
âYou ask too many questions for a hockey player,â you tell him. âArenât you supposed to just grunt and hit things?â
Dean grins, stepping directly into your path to force you to stop. âI can do that too, if youâre into it.â
You look up at him, your eyes narrowing slightly. Itâs a purely assessing gaze, like youâre weighing his worth on a scale and finding him somewhat lacking, but not entirely useless.
âYou are very confident,â you note.
âI have reason to be,â Dean says, his voice dropping a fraction of an octave, turning rougher, more intimate. âIâm a good guy to know around here. I throw the best parties. I know the best places to eat. I can get you out of that dorm and into places you actually want to be.â
âI do not live in a dorm,â you say smoothly. âAnd I go wherever I want to go.â
A shadow crosses your face so fast Dean almost misses it. The mention of your father in Moscow hits a nerve, pulling at the dark memories Ilya dragged you away from. Your jaw tightens.
âNot my father,â you say, your voice suddenly cold enough to freeze hell over. âMy brother.â
Dean instantly realizes he stepped on a landmine. âHey, I didnât mean anything by it. Just making conversation.â
âYou are making assumptions,â you correct him sharply. You take a step back, the playful banter completely evaporating from your posture. You look at Morgan, who is hovering a few feet away. âWe are leaving.â
âWait,â Dean says, reaching out instinctively. He catches your wrist, his fingers wrapping around the warm, soft skin.
You freeze. You look down at his hand on your wrist, and then slowly bring your eyes back up to meet his. The look you give him is so lethally calm it actually makes Deanâs heart skip a beat.
âRemove your hand,â you say softly.
Dean lets go immediately, holding both hands up in surrender. âMy bad. Iâm sorry. Seriously.â
You brush off your sleeve, even though he barely gripped you. You are Ilyaâs sister through and through, you donât take shit from anyone, especially not pretty-boy athletes who think they own the world.
âDo not touch me again,â you say.
âI wonât,â Dean promises, and he means it. He watches as you turn on your heel and stalk toward the front door, Morgan trailing anxiously behind you.
âHey!â Dean calls out, unable to help himself. He takes a few steps after you. âCan I at least get your number? To apologize properly?â
You stop at the front door and look back at him. The coldness has receded a bit, replaced by that same haughty, amused superiority from the kitchen.
âYou do not need my number, Dean Di Laurentis,â you call back over the thumping bass of the music. âYou are clearly used to girls making things easy for you.â
âAnd youâre not going to?â Dean asks, a smirk pulling at the corner of his mouth.
You smile â a full, devastatingly gorgeous smile that hits Dean like a physical blow to the chest.
âI do not make anything easy for anyone,â you say.
With that, you open the front door and step out into the cool September night, pulling it shut behind you.
Dean stands in the hallway for a long, silent moment. The party rages on around him, people bumping into his shoulders, girls laughing in his direction, but he doesnât notice any of it. He is staring at the closed front door, his mind completely blank except for the echo of your heavy Russian accent and the sharp, burning realization that he needs to see you again.
Garrett appears out of the crowd, clapping a hand on Deanâs shoulder. âHey man, who was that? She completely ghosted you.â
âI donât know,â Dean murmurs, still staring at the door. âBut Iâm going to find out.â
Garrett laughs. âLooked like she was about to rip your throat out.â
âYeah,â Dean says, a slow, entirely genuine smile spreading across his face. He finally turns to look at his teammate, his eyes bright with a sudden, fierce energy. âI think Iâm in love.â
***
Outside, the air is crisp, biting at your exposed skin. You pull your leather jacket tighter around yourself as you walk down the sidewalk, the rhythmic click of your boots echoing in the quiet street.
âOh my god,â Morgan gasps, rushing to keep up with your long strides. âAre you insane? Do you know who that was?â
âSome guy named Dean,â you say dismissively, checking your phone. A text from Ilya sits on the lock screen: Are you home? Drink water. Lock door. Love you.
âNot just some guy!â Morgan insists, practically vibrating with anxiety and awe. âThatâs Dean Di Laurentis! Heâs, like, Briar hockey royalty. Heâs gorgeous, heâs rich, and he literally never gets turned down. You just rejected the hottest guy on campus!â
âHe is arrogant,â you reply, typing a quick reply to Ilya: I am fine. Going home now. Do not be annoying.
âWell, yeah, they all are!â Morgan huffs. âBut he was so into you! Why did you blow him off?â
You slide your phone back into your pocket and look at Morgan. You like her â sheâs sweet and harmless â but she clearly doesnât understand how the world works. At least, not your world.
âBecause, Morgan,â you say patiently, your Russian accent softening in the quiet night air. âMen like that are used to getting what they want the moment they want it. They think the world is a vending machine. You put in a little charm, and a woman falls out.â
âAnd youâre not a vending machine,â Morgan finishes, nodding slowly.
âExactly.â You smile, looking ahead down the dimly lit street toward your luxury apartment building. âI am the prize. If he wants me, he is going to have to work for it. And I am going to make him work very, very hard.â
You know exactly what youâre doing. You saw the look in Deanâs eyes when you walked away. The shock, the frustration, the desperate, clawing hunger. Itâs the exact reaction you wanted.
Ilya taught you a long time ago that on the ice, you never let the opponent know your next move. You make them chase you. You make them exhaust themselves trying to figure you out, and then, when theyâre completely off balance, you strike.
Dean Di Laurentis thinks heâs a player. He thinks this is a game he knows how to win.
But as you walk back to your apartment, a small, triumphant smile playing on your lips, you know one thing for absolute certain.
He has absolutely no idea who he is playing with.
***
The sharp, scraping sound of steel biting into ice is the first thing that actually makes you feel like you can breathe since you landed in America.
You sit in the third row of the arena, the chill of the rink seeping through your designer sweater, and you close your eyes for just a second. The smell of the cold, the faint metallic tang of sweat and Zamboni fumes â itâs universal. It smells like Moscow. It smells like the freezing, dilapidated local rinks where you used to sit huddled in a thick coat next to your mama, her gloved hands wrapped around a paper cup of awful coffee, watching a scrawny, angry little Ilya learn how to check kids twice his size into the boards.
Hockey is in your blood just as much as it is in Ilyaâs. Before your mother passed away, the rink was your sanctuary. It was the only place your father didnât care to go, which meant it was the only place you, Ilya, and your mama were truly safe. Now, there are very few things in this world you genuinely love: Ilya, expensive clothes, fast cars ⌠and this.
âI donât understand whatâs happening,â Morgan complains loudly over the roar of the crowd, pulling you out of your memories. She is shivering beside you, holding a foam finger she bought at the concession stand. âWhy are they hitting each other so much? Isnât the puck over there?â
âIt is a forecheck,â you say, not taking your eyes off the ice. âThey are establishing physical dominance to force a turnover in the defensive zone. Keep up.â
âI thought we were just here to look at hot guys,â she mutters, taking a sip of her hot chocolate.
âYou are here to look at hot guys,â you correct her smoothly. âI am here because I appreciate the sport.â
And you do. But as you watch the Briar Hawks cycle the puck in the offensive zone, your eyes inevitably track back to number sixty-six. Dean Di Laurentis.
You havenât seen him since the party last weekend. You havenât texted him, and since you didnât give him your number, he hasnât texted you. But on the ice, he is impossible to ignore. For a guy who spends his weekends trying to charm freshmen out of their clothes, he is undeniably lethal on the blue line. Heâs a defenseman, playing right side, and his skating is fluid, almost effortless.
âOh, look,â Morgan gasps, pointing. âItâs Dean! Heâs the guy you yelled at!â
âI did not yell at him,â you say calmly. âI simply declined his unsolicited advances. There is a difference.â
âHeâs really good, isnât he?â
You narrow your eyes as Dean receives a pass at the point. He fakes a slap shot, dragging the puck around a sliding defender, and fires a wrist shot through traffic. It clangs hard against the post and deflects out.
âHe is decent,â you allow, your voice flat. âBut his gap control is inconsistent, and he relies too heavily on his forehand.â
Morgan stares at you blankly. âIs that English?â
âIt is hockey,â you reply, leaning back in your seat. âWhich is better.â
The buzzer sounds a few minutes later, the scoreboard flashing a 4-3 victory for Briar. The crowd erupts into a deafening cheer, the student section banging on the glass. You offer a polite, golf-clap level of applause. It was a sloppy third period. Briar let up on the gas, allowing two unanswered goals in the final ten minutes. Ilya would have been screaming on the bench if his team played like that.
âOkay, they won! Can we go now?â Morgan begs, teeth chattering. âI canât feel my toes.â
âWe can go,â you agree, standing up and brushing invisible lint off your jeans. âYour toes are weak.â
You navigate the crowded concourse, weaving through the sea of Briar hockey jerseys and drunken college students. You are halfway to the main exit, your mind already jumping ahead to the heated seats in your car, when a voice cuts through the noise.
âHey! Moscow!â
You donât stop walking. You know exactly who it is, but you are not a dog to be called.
âHey, wait up! Come on, I know you hear me!â
Footsteps jog up behind you, and suddenly Dean is stepping right into your path, forcing you to stop or physically walk into his chest.
You pause, looking up at him slowly.
Dean is slightly out of breath, his chest heaving under a crisp, perfectly tailored charcoal suit. His blond hair is still damp from the post-game shower, pushed back casually, and his tie is already loosened at the collar. He looks ridiculously, unfairly handsome, and the smug, triumphant grin on his face tells you he knows it.
âYou know,â you say, your accent thick and unbothered, âusually, the players wait until they have left the arena to harass the fans.â
Dean laughs, dragging a hand through his damp hair. âI saw you walking out. Had to run to catch up. I didnât peg you for a hockey fan.â
âI am full of surprises,â you reply dryly. âNow, if you will excuse me, my friend is freezing to death.â
Morgan, standing a few feet away, gives a tiny, terrified wave. Dean shoots her a dazzling smile that makes her blush furiously, before immediately turning his full attention back to you. The laser-focus in his eyes is intense. Itâs the same look he had on the ice.
âSo you came to watch me play,â Dean says, his voice dropping into that smooth, confident purr. âIâve gotta say, Iâm flattered. You played hard to get at the party, but you show up to my game? Thatâs a mixed signal, sweetheart.â
You let out a soft, patronizing laugh. âI came to watch a hockey game, Di Laurentis. You just happened to be on the ice. Do not flatter yourself.â
âOuch,â Dean says, though his grin doesnât waver. âYouâre killing me here. But hey, we won. You canât deny we put on a good show.â
âA good show?â You tilt your head, crossing your arms over your chest. You look him up and down, your expression perfectly deadpan. âIs that what you call that third period?â
Dean blinks, the smugness faltering for a fraction of a second. âUh. Yeah. We got the win.â
âYou got lucky,â you correct him seamlessly. âYour team played a neutral zone trap for the first two periods, which was effective against a slower offensive line. But in the third, they adjusted their breakout, and your defense collapsed. You were scrambling.â
Dean is staring at you now. The playful, flirtatious energy completely drains out of him, replaced by genuine, unadulterated shock. âWait. You actually ⌠you know the systems?â
âI know when a team stops moving their feet,â you say, stepping a fraction closer. You donât even realize youâre doing it, but the hockey analysis is completely taking over. âYour forwards stopped backchecking, which left you and your partner hung out to dry on odd-man rushes. You were playing on your heels for the last ten minutes.â
Deanâs mouth opens slightly. He looks like heâs just been hit by a truck. âI ⌠yeah. Garrett was pissed on the bench. We gave up the blue line way too easily.â
âYou specifically,â you point out, tapping a finger lightly against his expensive suit jacket. âYou pinched on the boards with four minutes left. It was a stupid risk. If their winger had been half a second faster, that was a breakaway, and the game goes to overtime.â
Dean swallows hard. Heâs looking at you like you just sprouted a second head, but more importantly, heâs looking at you like you are the most incredible thing he has ever seen in his entire life. His eyes track the movement of your finger on his chest, then snap back up to your lips.
âYou saw that,â he murmurs, his voice suddenly sounding a lot rougher.
âI have eyes,â you say dismissively. âBut the real problem is your transition game. You are fast, I will give you that. But you are predictable.â
âPredictable?â Dean echoes, his competitive streak flaring up. He steps closer, closing the distance between you so that you have to crane your neck slightly to maintain eye contact. âIâm the leading scoring defenseman in the conference.â
âBecause you play against college boys,â you fire back, unimpressed. âBut you rely entirely on your forehand. Every time you pick up the puck behind the net, you pivot right. Every single time. You never transition to your backhand to make the breakout pass up the left wing.â
âBecause my forehand is stronger,â Dean argues, a defensive edge creeping into his tone. âThe pass is more accurate.â
âBecause your backhand is weak,â you correct him bluntly.
Silence falls between you.
Even the dull roar of the crowd leaving the arena seems to fade into the background. Dean just stares down at you, his green eyes wide, his chest rising and falling visibly under his shirt.
He is completely silent.
For a defenseman who prides himself on his skill, being called out like that should infuriate him. It should make him defensive, angry, or at least dismissive. But you watch as a slow, dark flush creeps up his neck. You watch the way his jaw tightens, and the way his gaze drops to your mouth again, heavy and hot.
Holy shit, Dean thinks. His brain has short-circuited.
Heâs spent his entire life surrounded by puck bunnies. Girls who wear his jersey, girls who tell him he played great even when he knows he played like garbage, girls who only care about the post-game parties and the status of hooking up with a Briar hockey player.
And then there is you. Standing in the middle of a crowded lobby, ripping apart his blue-line transitions and calling his backhand weak with a heavy Russian accent and an expression that says you couldnât care less if you bruised his ego.
He has never been so incredibly turned on in his entire life. Itâs actually a little terrifying. His pants suddenly feel uncomfortably tight, a heavy knot of pure lust coiling in his gut.
âMy backhand is weak,â Dean repeats slowly, his voice dropping an octave, practically vibrating with tension.
âVery weak,â you confirm, completely oblivious to the internal crisis you are causing him. Or maybe you arenât oblivious. Maybe you just donât care. âIf you ever make it to the pros, a smart forechecker will notice that in the first period and shut down the right side of the ice. You will be useless in your own zone.â
âUseless,â Dean whispers. He licks his lips, stepping even closer. The scent of his expensive cologne mixed with the faint, lingering smell of his body wash hits you. âGod, you are brutal.â
âI am honest,â you reply, though your breath catches slightly as he invades your personal space. You hold your ground, refusing to back up. âDo you want me to stroke your ego and tell you that you are perfect, Di Laurentis?â
âNo,â Dean says immediately, and he means it. âI want you to tell me everything else I did wrong.â
You pause, caught off guard for the first time. You expected him to get mad. You expected him to puff up his chest and rattle off his stats. You did not expect him to look at you like he wants to drag you into the nearest broom closet and let you dissect his entire life.
âYou missed a wide-open pass to Graham on the power play in the second period,â you say, your voice a fraction softer, the air between you suddenly thick and electric.
âKeep going,â Dean murmurs, his eyes dark, his body angled entirely toward you.
âYou ⌠you over-commit on the penalty kill.â You feel a flush rising to your own cheeks now, furious at yourself for losing your composure. Why is he looking at you like that? âYou chase the puck instead of holding the box.â
âWhat else?â Dean asks, his voice practically a gravelly whisper. He reaches out, and for a second you think heâs going to touch you, but he just rests his hand on the wall next to your head, leaning in. âTell me my gap control is shit again.â
You swallow hard. Ilya warned you about American boys. He did not warn you about this.
âYour gap control is shit,â you say, forcing your voice to stay steady. You lift your chin, meeting his intense gaze head-on. âAnd if you do not fix it, you are going to cost your team the championship.â
Dean lets out a harsh breath, shaking his head slightly as a slow, wicked smile spreads across his face. âJesus Christ. Who are you?â
âI am the girl who is leaving,â you say, ducking swiftly under his arm.
The spell breaks. You grab Morgan by the sleeve of her coat, practically dragging her toward the glass doors.
âWait!â Dean spins around, his dress shoes slipping slightly on the tile. âSeriously! Whatâs your name? I canât keep calling you Moscow!â
You push through the double doors, the freezing night air hitting you like a physical wall. You donât stop, but you look over your shoulder one last time. Dean is standing inside the lobby, framed by the bright fluorescent lights, looking after you with a mixture of desperation and awe.
âFix your backhand, Di Laurentis,â you call back, a smirk finally breaking through your icy exterior. âMaybe then you will earn my name.â
You turn away, letting the doors swing shut behind you.
âOh my god,â Morgan gasps as you speed-walk toward the parking lot. âWhat just happened? What was that? Was that flirting? Because it sounded like you were insulting him, but he looked like he wanted to eat you alive.â
âIt was hockey analysis,â you say firmly, though your heart is hammering against your ribs in a way that has absolutely nothing to do with the sport.
âNo, that was ⌠that was aggressive sexual tension disguised as hockey analysis,â Morgan insists, pulling her keys out of her pocket. âY/N, I am not joking. I think you just broke Dean Di Laurentis.â
You reach your car, leaning against the cold metal door as you wait for Morgan to unlock it. You think about the look in Deanâs eyes when you called out his play. The sudden shift from arrogant playboy to entirely, intensely captivated. You didnât expect him to care about the sport as much as the glory. You didnât expect him to listen to you.
And you certainly didnât expect to feel this sudden, terrifying urge to see him again.
âI did not break him,â you say softly, mostly to yourself as you pull open the passenger door. You stare out at the darkened arena one last time, the cold air biting at your cheeks.
âBut I think I might.â
***
Inside the arena lobby, Dean is still standing exactly where you left him.
He feels like heâs just been hit by lightning. His heart is pounding against his ribs, his blood rushing hot and fast through his veins. He replays the last five minutes in his head on a loop. The way your eyes flashed when you criticized his transition game. The heavy, intoxicating purr of your Russian accent. The absolute, unshakeable confidence radiating off you.
Garrett walks out of the locker room hallway a minute later, dressed in his own suit, his gym bag slung over his shoulder. He spots Dean standing completely still in the middle of the empty concourse.
âHey,â Garrett says, walking over and waving a hand in front of Deanâs face. âEarth to Dean. You good, man? You look like you just saw a ghost.â
Dean slowly turns his head to look at his captain.
âGarrett,â Dean says, his voice totally deadpan.
âYeah?â
âI need to run drills.â
Garrett frowns, confused. âWhat? Now? We just played a game, dude. Weâre going to Maloneâs to celebrate.â
âNo,â Dean says, shaking his head. He looks back at the doors you just walked through, that wicked, determined smile returning to his face. He has never wanted a challenge more in his entire life. He has never wanted a girl more in his entire life. âI need ice time. Right now.â
Garrett stares at him. âAre you sick? Are you concussed? What drills do you even need to run?â
Dean adjusts the cuffs of his suit jacket, his eyes gleaming.
âBackhand passing,â Dean says simply. âIâve got a lot of work to do.â
***
The Briar University quad is a rare picture of New England perfection today. The sun is shining, the sky is a crisp, cloudless blue, and the temperature is hovering right around seventy degrees â an absolute miracle for early October.
Because of this, half the student body has decided that classes are optional. The sprawling green lawns are covered with students lounging on blankets, throwing Frisbees, and pretending to study.
You are one of the people pretending to study.
You sit on a plaid blanket under the shade of a large oak tree, a heavy microeconomics textbook propped open on your lap, and a pair of oversized, dark sunglasses resting on your nose. You have a highlighter in one hand, but you havenât marked a single page in twenty minutes.
It is entirely too loud to focus, mostly because of the pickup soccer game happening fifty yards away.
Normally, you would just pack up and go back to the quiet luxury of your off-campus apartment. But there is a reason you are still sitting here, pretending to read about supply and demand curves.
Dean Di Laurentis is playing soccer.
He is running around the makeshift field with his teammates along with a guy you recognize from a party as Beau, the star quarterback of the Briar football team. They are loud, obnoxious, and taking the game far too seriously for a Thursday afternoon.
âPass it, Di Laurentis, you puck hog!â Beau shouts, jogging backward as Dean weaves the black-and-white ball between his feet.
âItâs a ball, Beau, not a puck,â Dean fires back, his footwork surprisingly nimble for a guy who spends his life on ice skates. âAnd maybe Iâd pass if you knew how to finish a play!â
âI throw seventy-yard bombs for a living,â Beau laughs, trying to steal the ball. âI finish plenty.â
âYeah, but your footwork is trash,â Logan calls out from across the grass. âStick to using your hands, golden boy.â
You watch them over the top of your textbook, hidden safely behind the dark lenses of your sunglasses. Dean is wearing a grey Briar Hockey t-shirt and athletic shorts, his blond hair sticking up in sweaty, messy spikes. He is laughing, completely in his element, shouting trash talk at his friends.
And then, he turns around to jog backward, scanning the perimeter of the quad.
His eyes sweep over the crowds of students, past the girls clustered on a nearby blanket who have been practically drooling over him for the last hour, and land squarely on the oak tree.
He stops. He actually trips over the soccer ball, stumbling forward a few steps before catching his balance.
âHey, watch it!â Tucker yells as he steals the abandoned ball. âHead in the game, Di Laurentis!â
Dean completely ignores him. He is staring straight at you. Even from fifty yards away, you can see the exact moment the cocky, playful grin melts off his face, replaced by that sharp, predatory focus he had in the arena lobby.
You do not wave. You do not smile. You simply flip a page in your textbook, pretending you havenât noticed him at all.
âMan, itâs hot out here, isnât it?â You hear Dean say loudly a moment later.
âScorching,â Dean insists. âAbsolutely boiling.â
You glance up just in time to see Dean grab the hem of his grey t-shirt and pull it over his head in one smooth, practiced motion. He tosses the shirt onto the grass, running a hand through his damp hair, and stands there in the dappled sunlight.
He is built exactly the way a Division I athlete should be built. Broad shoulders, a sculpted chest, and a torso lined with sharp, defined abdominal muscles that disappear down into the waistband of his shorts. He looks like a centerfold for a fitness magazine, and he absolutely knows it.
The group of girls on the blanket nearby actually let out a collective gasp.
You, however, slowly raise an eyebrow behind your sunglasses. Really? âWhat are you doing?â Logan demands, hands on his hips. âPut your shirt back on, nobody wants to see that.â
âIâm cooling down,â Dean says easily, though he is looking directly at you. âGotta let the skin breathe, right?â
âYouâre an idiot,â Garrett mutters.
Dean ignores them. He leaves the soccer game entirely, jogging across the grass at a slow, deliberate pace. He is making sure you have plenty of time to look. You make sure your eyes are glued firmly to the page about market equilibrium.
âHey there, Moscow,â a smooth, slightly out-of-breath voice says a minute later.
A shadow falls over your textbook. You wait three full seconds before you slowly tilt your head up. Dean is standing at the edge of your blanket, his chest rising and falling from the run, a bead of sweat tracing a path down his stomach. He has his hands planted on his hips, flashing you that million-dollar, dimpled smile.
âYou are blocking my light,â you state plainly.
Deanâs smile widens. He drops down onto the grass, sitting directly across from you on the edge of your blanket, completely uninvited.
âYouâre studying,â he observes, leaning back on his elbows. He stretches his long legs out, crossing them at the ankles. âEcon. Boring.â
âIt is only boring if you lack the intelligence to understand it,â you reply, picking up your highlighter. âWhich, I suppose, explains your opinion.â
Dean barks out a laugh, entirely unoffended. âGod, I missed you. Where have you been hiding? Iâve been checking the stands at practice every day.â
âI do not hide,â you say smoothly, turning a page. âAnd I do not attend practices. I have a life.â
âA life that involves sitting on the quad, reading a textbook, and secretly watching me play soccer?â
âI was not watching you.â
âRight. You were just staring intently in my general direction.â Dean shifts closer, the scent of fresh air, grass, and masculine sweat washing over you. It is entirely distracting. âDid you enjoy the show, at least?â
You pause. You look up from the book, sliding your sunglasses down the bridge of your nose so you can look him directly in the eyes. You let your gaze drop down his chest, over his abs, and back up to his face.
âYou took your shirt off in seventy-degree weather,â you say dryly. âIt was the most obvious display of male ego I have ever witnessed.â
âDid it work, though?â Dean challenges, a teasing spark in his green eyes.
âI am not a fan of theatrics.â You push your sunglasses back up. âPut your shirt on, Di Laurentis. You look ridiculous.â
âYouâre lying,â Dean murmurs. His voice drops into that low, gravelly register that he used at the arena, the one that makes the hair on the back of your arms stand up. He leans forward, closing the distance between you. âI saw the way you looked at me just now. You like the theatrics.â
Your breath hitches slightly, but before you can fire back a cutting remark, a sharp, loud ringing cuts through the tension.
Your phone, sitting on the blanket beside your leg, is vibrating. The caller ID flashes brightly in the sunlight.
You let out a soft sigh, breaking eye contact with Dean. âI have to take this.â
âBoyfriend?â Dean asks, his voice suddenly losing its playful edge. His jaw tightens, a flash of genuine territorial annoyance crossing his face.
âNone of your business,â you say smoothly. You pick up the phone and swipe to answer, bringing it to your ear.
Dean doesnât move. He sits right there, completely invading your personal space, watching you intently. He clearly expects you to get up and walk away, or lower your voice.
Instead, you lean back against the trunk of the oak tree and slip effortlessly into your native tongue.
âHello, Ilyusha,â you say in Russian, your voice softening just a fraction, the sharp consonants and flowing vowels rolling off your tongue perfectly.
Across from you, Dean practically stops breathing.
His eyes widen, locking onto your mouth. He doesnât understand a single syllable of what you just said, but the sound of it hits him like a physical blow. Your voice is huskier in Russian, deeper, and the cadence is incredibly intimate.
âY/N. Little bird,â Ilyaâs booming voice comes through the speaker, loud enough that you have to pull the phone away from your ear for a second. âWhy did it take you three rings to answer? Are you safe? Is someone bothering you?â
You roll your eyes, though a fond smile touches the corner of your lips. âI am sitting on the grass at school, Ilya. I was reading. Nobody is bothering me.â
You glance at Dean. He is staring at you with an intensity that is bordering on feral.
âWell, except maybe one idiot,â you add, a smirk forming.
Dean shifts his weight, leaning closer. âWhat did you just say?â He whispers, his voice thick. âAre you talking about me?â
You ignore him.
âAn idiot?â Ilya demands, his protective instincts instantly flaring. âWhat kind of idiot? A boy? Do I need to fly back to Massachusetts and break someoneâs kneecaps? Because I have a game in Dallas tomorrow, but I can make the flight tonight.â
âDo not be dramatic,â you sigh, switching your phone to the other ear. âIt is just a hockey player. He thinks he is charming.â
âA hockey player?â Ilya groans. âGod, Y/N. I told you to stay away from them. They are stupid. They only want one thing. Trust me, I know. I am one.â
âI know you are,â you laugh softly. âI am handling it.â
âYou better be,â Ilya grumbles. âBut listen to me. You are in college. You are beautiful. You are going to have boys chasing you. I do not like it, but I cannot stop it.â
âYou are remarkably self-aware today.â
âShut up and listen,â Ilya says, though there is warmth in his voice. âI am your brother, so it is my job to threaten to kill them. But I am also realistic. If you find a boy you actually like â which is highly unlikely because your standards are terrifying â you have fun. Do you hear me? Have fun. Use protection. Make him buy you dinner.â
You feel a flush creeping up your neck. Having your older brother give you sex-positive dating advice is always a bizarre experience.
âI am hanging up now,â you tell him, embarrassed.
âWait, wait! Let me finish,â Ilya laughs. âIf he crosses a line, you break his heart. If he makes you cry, I break his legs. It is a very simple system.â
âI understand the system, Ilyusha.â
âGood. Give them hell, little bird.â
âI always do. Good luck with the game tomorrow. Love you.â
âLove you too. Call me this weekend.â
You hang up the phone, tossing it back onto the blanket. You let out a breath, centering yourself, and then you turn your attention back to Dean.
You fully expect him to have a smug comment ready. You expect him to ask who you were talking to, or tease you about the foreign language.
Instead, Dean is staring at you like a starving man looking at a feast.
His pupils are blown wide, almost entirely swallowing the green of his irises. His chest is rising and falling rapidly, and there is a dark, heavy flush high on his cheekbones. He is leaning so far forward that his face is only inches from yours.
âDi Laurentis?â You ask, frowning slightly. âAre you having a stroke?â
âWhat the fuck was that?â Dean asks, his voice so raw and raspy it barely sounds like him.
âIt was a phone call.â
âIn Russian.â
âYes,â you say slowly, as if explaining something to a child. âI am Russian. I speak Russian to my family. This is not a new development.â
âYou didnât sound like that when you spoke English,â Dean breathes, his eyes tracking the movement of your lips. âYour voice ⌠it dropped. It was completely different.â
âIt is a different language,â you point out. âThe inflection changes.â
âDo it again,â he demands softly.
You raise an eyebrow, your heart suddenly giving a hard, erratic thump against your ribs. The sheer, overwhelming wave of lust rolling off him is palpable. It is thick enough to choke on.
âDo what again?â You ask, keeping your tone carefully neutral.
âSpeak it,â Dean says. He reaches out, and this time you donât pull away when his fingers lightly brush against the side of your knee. The touch sends a jolt of pure electricity straight up your thigh. âSay something else. Anything.â
You look at him, really look at him. You see the desperate curiosity, the absolute fascination. But beneath that, you see exactly what he is thinking.
Dean doesnât just want to hear you speak Russian. He wants to hear you speak it in his bed. He wants to hear you whisper it in his ear when the lights are out. He wants to know what you sound like when you lose that rigid, icy control.
The realization makes the breath catch in your throat. It is intoxicating. The power you hold over this guy right now is absolute, and you both know it.
You lean forward, mirroring his posture. You let your sunglasses slide down your nose slightly, locking eyes with him.
âYou are completely out of your mind,â you say in Russian, your voice a soft, husky murmur.
Dean lets out a ragged exhale, his eyes slipping shut for a fraction of a second. âGod. I have no idea what you just said, but say it again.â
âNo,â you say, slipping back into English. You sit back against the tree, pulling your leg away from his touch. The sudden loss of contact leaves a cold spot on your skin. âThe show is over.â
âCome on,â Dean groans, running a hand over his face. He genuinely looks pained. âYou canât do that to a guy and just stop. Itâs cruel and unusual punishment.â
âI told you at the party,â you remind him, picking up your highlighter and turning back to your textbook. âI do not make things easy for anyone.â
âI donât want it to be easy,â Dean says. The playfulness is completely gone from his voice. It is replaced by a quiet, fierce sincerity that makes you look up again.
He is staring at you, not with the smug arrogance of a playboy, but with the focused, unwavering determination of a D1 athlete who has his eyes on the championship.
âI donât care how hard you make it,â Dean tells you, his voice steady. âIâm not going anywhere.â
You hold his gaze for a long moment, your pulse hammering a frantic rhythm in your ears. Ilyaâs voice echoes in the back of your mind. If you find a boy you actually like ⌠give them hell.
A slow, wicked smirk curves your lips.
âWe will see, Di Laurentis,â you murmur.
âYo, Dean!â Garrettâs voice echoes across the quad, breaking the heavy tension. âAre you playing or are you just going to sit there and bother the girl all day?â
Dean doesnât take his eyes off you. âIâm busy!â He yells back.
âWeâre down a man!â Beau shouts. âGet your ass back over here!â
Dean finally tears his gaze away, looking over his shoulder at his friends. He sighs, running a hand through his hair. âDuty calls. But this isnât over.â
âIt has not even begun,â you correct him.
Dean smiles. Itâs a softer smile this time, smaller and much more dangerous. He pushes himself up off the grass, grabbing his discarded t-shirt. He doesnât put it back on, much to the delight of the girls on the nearby blanket, but simply slings it over his shoulder.
âHave dinner with me,â Dean says, looking down at you.
It isnât a question. It is a demand.
âI am busy tonight,â you reply without missing a beat.
âTomorrow, then.â
âI have plans.â
âSaturday.â
âI study on Saturdays.â
âSunday night,â Dean counters, refusing to back down. âMy treat. Any restaurant in the city. You pick.â
You tap your highlighter against the page of your textbook, pretending to consider it. You are pushing him, testing the limits of his patience. Most guys would have walked away by now, their egos bruised.
Dean just stands there, waiting.
âSunday,â you finally say, your tone conceding an inch. âBut I pick the place, and you pay.â
âDeal,â Dean says instantly, looking like he just won the Stanley Cup. âIâll pick you up at seven.â
âYou do not know where I live.â
âIâll figure it out,â Dean promises, taking a step backward toward the soccer game. âSee you Sunday, Moscow.â
âDo not call me that,â you call after him.
âThen give me your real name!â He shouts back over his shoulder, jogging backward.
You smile, looking back down at your textbook. You wait until he is halfway across the quad before you answer, your voice carrying easily over the grass.
âItâs Y/N.â
Dean stops. He turns around, a massive, genuine grin breaking across his face. He points a finger at you, backing away toward his friends.
âY/N,â Dean repeats, testing the sound of it on his tongue. He nods slowly. âSunday, Y/N. Be ready.â
You watch him turn and jog back to the game, immediately tackling Beau to the ground in a mess of limbs and laughter.
You let out a long, shaky breath, closing your textbook. Studying is officially impossible now. You pull your knees up to your chest, resting your chin on your arms as you watch the group of boys on the grass.
Dean is laughing, shoving Logan out of the way to steal the ball. He looks carefree, happy, and entirely out of your league when it comes to emotional availability. He is exactly the kind of guy Ilya warned you about. A player. A distraction.
But as Dean suddenly looks over his shoulder, catching your eye from across the field and shooting you a quick, blazing wink, you know exactly what is happening.
You are giving him hell.
And you are enjoying every single second of it.
***
The date is, annoyingly, perfect.
You expected Dean to stumble. You picked an upscale, impossibly hard-to-book French-Asian fusion restaurant in the heart of Boston â the kind of place with a six-month waiting list that you only bypassed because Ilya knows the owner. You expected Dean to look out of place, or complain about the portion sizes, or act like the typical, uncouth college athlete he pretends to be.
Instead, he showed up at your apartment building right on time, wearing a tailored black button-down that made his shoulders look impossibly broad, and a pair of dark jeans that hugged his legs in all the right ways. He opened the car door for you. He ordered wine in flawless, unaccented French. He kept up with your sharp, biting banter effortlessly, matching you insult for insult with that constant, devastating smirk on his face.
He didnât just survive the test. He passed it with flying colors.
âYou look annoyed,â Dean observes as he steers his sleek black SUV off the highway, taking the exit back toward the Briar campus.
âI am not annoyed,â you say, looking out the passenger window at the passing streetlights.
âYouâre a little annoyed,â he teases, glancing over at you. The dashboard lights cast a warm glow across his sharp jawline. âYou thought I was going to embarrass myself. You thought Iâd order chicken fingers and ask for ketchup.â
âI thought you would be a hockey player,â you correct him, turning your head to meet his gaze. âInstead, you were surprisingly tolerable.â
Dean laughs, a rich, genuine sound that fills the quiet interior of the car. âTolerable. Wow. Iâll have to add that to my resume right under top scoring defenseman.â
âDo not let it go to your head.â
âToo late.â Dean reaches across the center console. He doesnât ask. He just slides his hand over yours where it rests on your thigh, lacing his long, warm fingers through yours.
Your breath catches slightly, but you donât pull away. His palm is rough with calluses from his hockey stick, a stark contrast to the soft leather of the car seats and the smooth fabric of your slip dress. The casual intimacy of it sends a sudden, sharp jolt of heat straight to your core.
âSo,â Dean murmurs, his thumb brushing a lazy circle against your skin. âThe date is over. I paid. I was charming. I didnât embarrass you in front of the waiter.â
âBarely.â
âWhere to now, Y/N?â He says your name softly, testing the weight of it. âI can take you back to your ivory tower. Or âŚâ
He lets the sentence hang in the air, thick and heavy with implication.
You look at his hand holding yours, and then up at his profile. You can feel the electric tension radiating off him. You know exactly what heâs asking, and you know exactly what the answer is. You made up your mind somewhere between the second glass of wine and the way his eyes darkened when you laughed at one of his jokes.
âYour house is on the way,â you say, your voice perfectly steady, though your heart is suddenly hammering against your ribs. âIt would be inefficient to drive all the way to my apartment.â
The SUV actually swerves a fraction of an inch as Deanâs hands tighten on the steering wheel. He exhales a harsh, shaky breath.
âMy house,â he repeats, as if making sure he heard you correctly.
âUnless you are scared your roommates are awake.â
âI donât give a fuck if my roommates are awake,â Dean says instantly. He hits the turn signal, taking a sharp left onto the residential street that leads to the off-campus hockey house. âMy door has a lock.â
The drive takes less than five minutes, but it feels like an eternity. The air in the car is so thick with anticipation you can barely breathe. When Dean finally throws the SUV into park in the driveway, he doesnât wait for you. He is out of the car in a flash, opening your door and offering you his hand.
The house is surprisingly quiet. The usual thumping bass and smell of stale beer are absent. As Dean unlocks the front door and ushers you inside, you see exactly one person.
Logan is sprawled on the ratty living room couch, a bowl of cereal balanced on his chest, watching SportsCenter on low volume.
He looks up as the door clicks shut. He sees Dean. Then he sees you.
Loganâs spoon freezes halfway to his mouth. His eyes dart between the two of you, taking in Deanâs dark, focused expression and your thoroughly unimpressed, perfectly manicured appearance.
âDi Laurentis,â Logan says slowly, lowering the spoon. âYou brought a girl home.â
âAstute observation,â Dean says, not stopping as he guides you toward the stairs by the small of your back.
âNo, I mean, you brought a girl home,â Logan insists, sitting up slightly. âNot a puck bunny. Not a sorority girl. You brought an actual woman who looks like she could murder you and hide the body.â
âI will not hide the body,â you tell Logan calmly over your shoulder as you start up the stairs. âI will leave it in the living room for you to clean up.â
Loganâs eyes widen. He looks at Dean with pure, unadulterated respect. âGood luck, man. Youâre going to need it.â
âShut up, Logan,â Dean snaps, though he is smiling as he pushes you gently up the final few steps and down the narrow hallway.
He opens the door at the end of the hall, pulling you inside, and kicks the door shut behind him. The heavy click of the lock sliding into place echoes in the quiet room.
Deanâs bedroom is surprisingly clean. The bed is large and freshly made, there are no clothes on the floor, and the faint scent of his expensive cedar and citrus cologne lingers in the air.
You barely have a second to take it in before Dean is right in front of you.
The playful banter is completely gone. The energy shifts so fast it gives you whiplash. He crowds you against the heavy wooden door, his hands coming up to bracket your head. He looks down at you, his green eyes completely dilated, dark and hungry.
âIâve been wanting to do this since you yelled at me in the kitchen,â Dean whispers, his voice rough and vibrating with need.
âI did not yell at you,â you breathe.
âShut up,â he murmurs, and then his mouth crashes down onto yours.
It is a devastating kiss. There is nothing hesitant or gentle about it. It is pure, unfiltered demand. His lips are hot, his tongue immediately parting your lips, tasting the expensive wine and sweeping inside to claim every inch of your mouth.
A sharp, electric shock rips through your body. You kiss him back just as fiercely, your hands flying up to grip the lapels of his black shirt. He lets out a low, guttural groan, sliding his arms around your waist and pulling your hips flush against his.
He is hard. Achingly, brutally hard against your stomach.
The realization sends a thrill of pure power straight to your head. Ilya taught you to never let anyone dictate the pace of the game. You pull your mouth away from his, leaving him chasing your lips with a frustrated sigh.
âMy turn,â you say smoothly.
Before Dean can process what you mean, you grab the collar of his shirt and push. He stumbles backward, completely caught off guard. You advance, pushing him again until the back of his knees hit the edge of his mattress, and he falls backward onto the bed with a soft thud.
Dean looks up at you, his chest heaving, his dark hair messy from your hands. He looks completely thoroughly derailed. âWhat are you doing?â
âTaking control,â you tell him. You step between his spread thighs, looking down at him with a wicked, predatory smile. âYou are very used to running the show, Di Laurentis. But you are playing my game now.â
Dean swallows hard. He leans back on his elbows, watching you with wide, fascinated eyes. âOkay. Show me your game, Moscow.â
You climb onto the bed, straddling his hips. He groans instantly at the friction, his hands twitching at his sides, but he doesnât touch you. He lets you set the pace.
You reach down, your fingers deliberately slow as you start undoing the buttons of his tailored shirt. You watch his face as you work, taking in the rapid pulse at the base of his throat, the way his jaw tightens with every agonizingly slow brush of your knuckles against his bare skin.
Once the shirt is fully unbuttoned, you push it off his shoulders, letting it fall onto the sheets. You run your hands flat over his sculpted chest, feeling the heavy, frantic thud of his heart beneath his ribs.
âYou are impatient,â you murmur, leaning down to press a soft, teasing kiss to the center of his chest.
âIâm dying,â Dean corrects roughly. His hands come up, gripping your hips tightly. âY/N. Please.â
âPlease what?â You ask, your voice dropping into a sultry, teasing purr. You shift your weight, grinding down against his hard length right through his jeans.
Deanâs head throws back, his hips automatically bucking up against you to chase the friction. âFuck,â he gasps. âTake it off. All of it.â
You smile. You reach down, finding the hem of your slip dress, and pull it up over your head in one smooth motion, tossing it to the floor. You are wearing nothing but a matching set of sheer, black lace lingerie.
Dean stares at you. He actually stops breathing for three full seconds.
âHoly shit,â he whispers reverently. âYou are ⌠you are perfect.â
âI know,â you say confidently.
You lean down, capturing his lips again. The kiss is deep, wet, and incredibly hot. You move your hips in a slow, rhythmic grind that has Dean cursing into your mouth. He is letting you ride him, letting you dictate the rhythm, his large hands resting on your waist, guiding your movements but not forcing them.
You reach for the buckle of his belt, your fingers completely steady, but before you can even undo the clasp, the dynamic shifts.
Deanâs patience completely snaps.
âOkay. Youâve had your fun,â Dean growls softly against your lips.
Before you can even react, his hands tighten on your waist. He lifts you effortlessly â like you weigh absolutely nothing at all â and in one fluid, powerful motion, he flips you.
You let out a startled gasp as your back hits the mattress. Suddenly, Dean is hovering over you, his broad shoulders blocking out the overhead light. His eyes are entirely black now, the playful, indulgent boy completely gone, replaced by something dark, dominant, and terrifyingly hot.
âYou think youâre the only one who likes control?â Dean murmurs, leaning down so his mouth is a breath away from your ear. âYou think you can just climb on top of me, grind against me like that, and Iâm just going to lay there and take it?â
âYou were doing a very good job of it,â you try to say haughtily, but your voice is suddenly a little breathless.
âI was letting you win the first period,â Dean corrects, his teeth grazing the sensitive skin of your earlobe. âBut the game is mine now.â
He doesnât give you a chance to argue. His hands are everywhere. He unclasps your bra with a single, practiced flick of his fingers, tossing it aside. He takes your mouth again in a bruising, dominant kiss, swallowing your soft gasp as his warm, rough palm cups your breast. His thumb drags firmly over your nipple, and a jolt of pure pleasure shoots straight down to your core.
You arch your back, your hands tangling in his thick blond hair. The icy, untouchable Russian princess act is rapidly melting under the sheer, scorching heat of his attention.
Dean breaks the kiss, moving his mouth down your neck, pressing hot, open-mouthed kisses along your collarbone. At the same time, his hand slides down your stomach, hooking his fingers into the waistband of your lace panties and pulling them down your legs.
He steps off the bed for exactly three seconds. The sound of his zipper dragging down, his jeans hitting the floor, and the tear of a foil wrapper are deafening in the quiet room.
When he comes back over you, he is completely bare, beautiful, and completely focused. He settles between your thighs, his knees pressing your legs wider.
He reaches down, his fingers finding your slick, aching center. He strokes you once, two fingers pressing deep inside, and you let out a sharp, genuine cry.
âYouâre so fucking wet for me,â Dean groans, his voice dark with triumph. He leans down, his mouth hovering over yours. âTell me you want this.â
âI want it,â you breathe, your accent heavy. âDo not make me wait, Dean.â
He doesnât. He grips your hips, aligning himself with your wet heat, and pushes forward.
He fills you completely in one long, agonizingly slow thrust. You gasp, your nails digging half-moons into the hard muscles of his back as he buries himself to the hilt. Itâs incredibly deep, stretching you so perfectly it makes your vision swim.
Dean freezes, a low shuddering groan tearing from his throat. He rests his forehead against yours, his eyes closed, his jaw clenched tight as he fights for control.
âFuck, Y/N,â he breathes, his body trembling over yours. âYou are so tight. So incredibly tight.â
âMove,â you demand softly, your hips instinctively arching up to take him deeper.
Deanâs eyes snap open. âYes, maâam.â
He starts to move. He pulls back almost completely before driving his hips forward, burying himself deep inside you again. The friction is immediate and explosive.
âOh!â You gasp, your head throwing back against the pillows.
Dean sets a brutal, relentless pace. He isnât rushing, but he isnât being gentle either. Every thrust is deep, hard, and perfectly angled. He hits the exact spot that makes your toes curl with every single stroke. The skin-on-skin slap of his hips meeting yours echoes loudly in the quiet room, a dirty, incredibly erotic sound.
âIs this good?â Dean asks, his voice thick, thrusting hard into you. âIs my form okay for you, Moscow?â
âShut up,â you moan, your hands gripping his shoulders desperately.
âYou had a lot of opinions about my performance on the ice,â Dean taunts darkly, dropping his head to bite lightly at your neck as he pounds into you. âCritique this.â
âDean-â
âSay my name again,â he demands, his grip on your hips tightening. He angles his hips differently, grinding hard against your clit with his pelvis as he thrusts deep inside you.
The sensation is so sharp, so overwhelming, that your brain completely short-circuits. The English language entirely evaporates from your mind.
âBozhe moy,â you cry out, your voice fracturing.
Dean freezes for a fraction of a second, his head snapping up. His eyes are wide, wild with sudden, explosive heat.
âWhat did you just say?â He breathes, thrusting back into you with sudden, renewed ferocity.
âDa,â you gasp, completely unable to stop yourself. The pleasure is mounting too fast, spiraling out of control. âDa, pozhaluysta.â
âRussian,â Dean groans, the sound completely animalistic. âFuck, yes. Keep doing that. Talk to me in Russian.â
He speeds up, his thrusts becoming a rapid, punishing rhythm. You are completely lost in it, clinging to his broad shoulders as the world spins around you.
âSilâneye,â you beg, your nails scratching down his back. Harder. âI donât know what that means,â Dean rasps, his chest heaving, sweat dripping from his forehead onto your collarbone. âBut I fucking love it. Tell me youâre mine. Tell me in Russian.â
âTvoya,â you sob, the word slipping out as the tension in your core finally snaps. âYa tvoya.â
The climax hits you like a freight train. You cry out loud, your back bowing off the mattress as wave after wave of intense, blinding pleasure rips through your body. Your inner muscles clamp down hard around his thick length, milking him perfectly.
Dean lets out a loud, raw shout. He drives into you two more times, impossibly deep, and then completely falls apart. He buries his face in the crook of your neck, his body shaking uncontrollably as he empties himself inside the condom, completely surrendering to you.
For a long time, the only sound in the room is the ragged, desperate sound of both of you fighting to catch your breath.
Deanâs heavy weight is crushing you into the mattress, but you donât care. You feel thoroughly, beautifully wrecked.
Slowly, the haze begins to clear. Dean shifts his weight, pulling out of you with a soft, wet sound, and carefully rolls off to the side to dispose of the condom. When he comes back, he drops onto the mattress beside you, throwing one heavy arm and a leg over your body, pulling you flush against his side.
You rest your head on his bare chest, listening to his heart still hammering against his ribs.
âWow,â Dean breathes into the quiet room.
âYes,â you agree softly, your voice still a little raspy.
Dean presses a soft kiss to the top of your head, his fingers lazily tracing the curve of your hip. âYou completely lost your mind there at the end, didnât you?â
You feel a flush creeping up your neck. âI do not know what you are talking about.â
âLiar,â Dean laughs softly. âYou lost your English entirely. It was the hottest fucking thing I have ever experienced in my entire life.â
You turn your head, resting your chin on his chest so you can look up at him. His eyes are soft now, completely completely devoid of the cocky arrogance he usually wears like armor. He just looks entirely, thoroughly captivated by you.
âYou played a good game, Di Laurentis,â you tell him, your accent soft and thick in the quiet room.
Dean smiles, reaching up to tuck a damp strand of hair behind your ear. âGood enough for a second round?â
You raise an eyebrow, your old, haughty confidence returning in full force. âDo not flatter yourself. Let us see if you can handle the conditioning drills first.â
Dean throws his head back and laughs, a bright, happy sound that makes something warm and completely foreign bloom in the center of your chest. He pulls you up slightly, capturing your lips in a soft, lazy kiss that tastes like contentment and the promise of a very long night.
âWhatever you want, Moscow,â Dean murmurs against your mouth. âIâm not going anywhere.â
***
The house living room smells like stale pepperoni, cheap beer, and the distinct, aggressive musk of four college athletes who have been yelling at a television for the past two hours.
Dean is sprawled in the worn armchair, a long-necked bottle of Corona resting on his stomach. On the ratty couch, Garrett, Logan, and Tucker are packed shoulder-to-shoulder, their eyes completely glued to the sixty-inch screen mounted on the wall.
It is a Tuesday night, which means the Boston Bruins are playing the Toronto Maple Leafs, and in this house, an NHL game is basically a religious event.
On the screen, Ilya Rozanov, the Bruinsâ star center and arguably the most terrifying, arrogant, and talented player in the league, intercepts a pass at center ice. With a burst of speed that defies the laws of physics for a man of his massive size, he blows past two Toronto defensemen, dekes the goalie out of his crease, and casually roofs the puck on his backhand.
The goal horn blares through the TV speakers, shaking the floorboards of the living room.
âHoly shit,â Garrett breathes, leaning forward so fast he almost knocks over his beer. âDid you see that edge work? The guy is an absolute machine.â
âItâs disgusting,â Logan agrees, shaking his head in awe. âHe makes NHL defensemen look like Pee-Wee players. Itâs physically embarrassing for them.â
âAnd there are still idiots out there who claim Shane Hollander is a better player,â Tucker snorts, reaching for a slice of cold pizza from the box on the coffee table. âHollander is great, sure. Heâs got the golden boy reputation. But Rozanov? Rozanov is a killer. He has zero conscience on the ice.â
âHollander has better defensive metrics,â Garrett points out, ever the captain. âBut yeah, offensively, Rozanov is in a league of his own. If I ever meet him, I think Iâd actually ask him to sign my chest.â
Dean laughs, taking a slow sip of his beer. âYou literally have a poster of him in your bedroom, Garrett. Itâs creepy. Youâre twenty-two years old.â
âItâs not a poster, itâs a framed print,â Garrett corrects defensively. âAnd itâs about respecting greatness, Di Laurentis. Try it sometime.â
Dean just grins, leaning his head back against the armchair. He feels relaxed. Better than relaxed, actually. He feels completely, terrifyingly anchored. Itâs been three weeks since that first date with you, and his life has practically flipped upside down. He spends half his nights sneaking into your luxury apartment, and the other half trying to convince you to stay at his place. You are demanding, brilliant, ruthlessly critical of his defensive zone coverage, and the best thing that has ever happened to him.
He hasnât looked at another girl since the night you called his backhand weak.
On the TV, the broadcast cuts away from the Bruinsâ bench celebrating the goal.
âAn unbelievable individual effort from Ilya Rozanov,â the play-by-play commentator announces over the roar of the TD Garden crowd. âHis tenth goal of the season already, and weâre not even fully into November.â
âAnd you know whoâs loving it up there?â the color commentator chimes in. âLetâs take a look up at the Bruinsâ friends and family suite.â
The camera cuts from the ice to the luxury boxes high above the lower bowl. The shot zooms in on two young women sitting in the plush front-row seats, leaning over the glass barrier to look down at the ice.
Deanâs brain instantly short-circuits.
He stops breathing. The bottle of Corona slips dangerously in his grip.
Itâs you.
You are right there on the sixty-inch screen, wearing a flawless black leather jacket over a form-fitting white top. Your hair is styled in perfect waves, and you are currently in the middle of an animated, laughing conversation with the woman sitting next to you.
âWhoa,â Logan says, leaning forward. âWho are they? The one on the left is gorgeous.â
âShut up, John,â Dean croaks, his voice cracking horribly.
The broadcast graphics flash at the bottom of the screen, highlighting the two of you.
âThatâs Svetlana Vetrova on the right,â the commentator explains cheerfully. âDaughter of the legendary Soviet goaltender Sergei Vetrov. She and Rozanov grew up together in Moscow.â
The camera pans slightly, focusing entirely on your face as you laugh at something Svetlana says.
âAnd with her is Ilya Rozanovâs younger sister,â the broadcaster continues, the words echoing through the dead silent living room like gunshots. âShe just moved to Boston this fall to attend university locally. The Rozanov siblings are famously close. Ilya practically raised her, and rumor has it he is incredibly protective.â
The TV screen shows Ilya skating back to the bench. He looks up toward the suite, pointing a gloved finger directly at you. You smile, rolling your eyes affectionately, and give him a small, sarcastic golf clap.
In the house, the silence is so heavy it could shatter glass.
Garrettâs jaw is practically on the floor. He slowly, mechanically turns his head to look at Dean.
Logan and Tucker follow suit, their eyes wide with absolute, unadulterated horror.
Dean is frozen in the armchair. All the blood has rushed out of his face, leaving him pale and dizzy. His heart is hammering a frantic, terrified rhythm against his ribs.
He thinks about the way he pushed you against his bedroom door. He thinks about the sheer, insane volume of highly explicit texts he has sent to your phone in the last forty-eight hours. He thinks about the massive, bruised hickey he left just below your collarbone two days ago â a hickey that Ilya Rozanov could probably see with his naked eye from center ice.
âDean,â Garrett whispers, his voice trembling slightly. âIs that âŚâ
âYes,â Dean says hollowly.
âThatâs Moscow,â Tucker confirms, sounding like heâs at a funeral. âThatâs your girl.â
âShe didnât tell me,â Dean gasps out, clutching the beer bottle like a lifeline. âShe told me her brother paid for her apartment! She never said her brother was the most dangerous player in the National Hockey League!â
âYouâre sleeping with Ilya Rozanovâs little sister,â Logan says, the reality of the situation finally crashing down on him. A slow, hysterical laugh bubbles up in his chest. âDean. He is going to literally kill you. He is going to break your legs with his bare hands.â
âI have a poster of her brother in my room,â Garrett says, staring blankly at the wall. âIâve been in the same room as you two while you were making out, and I have a poster of her brother on my wall.â
âWhat do I do?â Dean demands, panic finally settling in. He drops the beer onto the side table and runs both hands through his hair, gripping the blond strands tightly. âDo I text her? Do I ask why she didnât tell me? Do I change my name and move to Mexico?â
âYou canât move,â Tucker says solemnly. âRozanov has Russian mob connections. He will find you.â
âHe does not have mob connections!â Dean yells, though his voice pitches up nervously. âDoes he?â
âDude, he led the league in penalty minutes for three consecutive seasons,â Logan points out, highly unhelpful. âHe shattered a guyâs jaw last year just for looking at his goalie wrong. If he finds out you â Briarâs biggest, sluttiest defenseman â are hooking up with his baby sister? Youâre dead. Theyâll never find your body.â
Dean stares at the television screen. The broadcast has moved on, showing a replay of the goal, but Dean canât see the puck. All he sees is his own impending doom.
He is so incredibly fucked.
***
Two hours later, you are sitting in a private booth at one of the most exclusive steakhouses in Boston.
The post-game adrenaline is still buzzing in the air. Ilya is sitting across from you, casually dressed in a dark designer sweater that stretches tight across his massive shoulders. He has a faint, purpling bruise on his jaw from a high stick in the second period, but his mood is absolutely electric.
âI told you,â Ilya says, cutting into a massive, rare ribeye steak. âToronto defense is weak this year. They leave the middle of the ice wide open. It is insulting.â
âYou showboated on the breakaway,â you point out, sipping your sparkling water. âYou did not need to go to the backhand. The five-hole was open.â
âI am an entertainer, Y/N,â Ilya replies smoothly, chewing his steak. âThe fans pay a lot of money to see me play. I must give them a show.â
You roll your eyes, picking at your truffle fries. You love him, but his ego takes up ninety percent of any room he walks into. Still, the dinner is nice. Sibling bonding time is rare during the NHL season, and you cherish the moments when itâs just the two of you, speaking Russian and acting entirely normal.
âSveta looked well,â you say, changing the subject. âI hear she is thinking of taking a job with the Bruins.â
âShe is good,â Ilya nods. âShe asks about you. She says you are distracted lately.â
You pause, a fry halfway to your mouth. You lower it back to the plate, keeping your expression completely neutral. âI am not distracted. I am adjusting to a new country and a new curriculum. Economics is demanding.â
Ilya stops chewing. He swallows, rests his forearms on the heavy mahogany table, and pins you with a dark, intensely knowing look.
âDo not lie to me, little bird,â Ilya says softly, his heavy accent wrapping around the Russian words. âYou have been living here for months. You were not distracted in September. But the last three weeks? You are checking your phone during the game. You are smiling at your screen.â
âI look at memes,â you lie smoothly.
âYou do not understand American memes,â Ilya shoots back without missing a beat. âSo, let us skip the part where you insult my intelligence. Who is putting that smirk on your face?â
You let out a slow sigh, leaning back against the leather booth. You knew this conversation was coming. Ilya is overprotective on a good day, and completely tyrannical when it comes to the men in your life. You intentionally havenât told him about Dean because you wanted to enjoy the early stages without your brother accidentally ending Deanâs hockey career.
âIt is nothing serious,â you say carefully, sticking to Russian so the waiter passing by wonât understand. âJust a boy from the university.â
Ilyaâs eyes narrow instantly. âA boy. Does this boy play a sport?â
âThat is irrelevant.â
âIt is highly relevant. If he is a hockey player, I need to know immediately so I can arrange an accident on the ice.â
âIlya.â You give him a sharp, warning look. âI am nineteen years old. I am allowed to have fun. You told me to have fun.â
âI told you to have fun with respectable men,â Ilya argues, jabbing his steak knife in your direction. âNot college athletes. They are animals. They do not know how to treat a woman.â
âHe treats me very well, actually,â you fire back, defending Dean instinctively. The memory of Deanâs complete devotion â both in and out of the bedroom â flashes through your mind. âHe takes me to nice places. He is polite.â
âPolite,â Ilya snorts, taking a large gulp of his red wine. âSure. And what does this polite boy think is happening between you two? Does he know it is casual? Because men like that, they get attached. They get possessive.â
âHe knows,â you say smoothly, though a tiny flicker of doubt sparks in your chest. Does Dean know itâs casual? He certainly hasnât been acting casual lately. He acts like he owns you, and worse, you find yourself letting him.
âHe knows,â Ilya repeats sarcastically. He shakes his head, cutting another piece of steak. âI worry about you, Y/N. You play these games, but eventually, someone gets hurt. You cannot just keep things casual forever. Eventually, you have to commit or walk away.â
You stare at your brother. The sheer hypocrisy of his statement actually leaves you speechless for a moment.
You slowly pick up your glass of wine, swirling the dark red liquid. You look at Ilya over the rim of the glass, a slow, lethal smirk curling the corners of your mouth.
âYou are giving me advice on commitment?â You ask, your tone dangerously soft.
Ilya pauses, a flicker of unease crossing his features. âI am your older brother. It is my job to give you advice.â
âInteresting,â you note, leaning forward and resting your elbows on the table. âBecause as far as I can tell, you have been in a situationship for the last six years, and you still refuse to put a label on it.â
Ilyaâs jaw drops slightly. The smug, overprotective older brother act completely shatters. A dark, furious blush creeps up his neck, disappearing into his hairline.
âI do not know what you are talking about,â Ilya says rigidly.
âOh, please.â You take a sip of your wine, enjoying the sudden shift in power. âHow is Jane?â
Ilya actually chokes on his wine. He coughs, grabbing his napkin and pressing it to his mouth, his eyes watering.
You watch him without an ounce of pity. You have known about âJaneâ for years. You know exactly who âJaneâ is. You know that Jane is not a woman, and you know that Jane happens to be a certain golden boy captain of the Canadian national team who plays in Montreal. You know that Ilya and Shane Hollander have been hooking up in secret hotel rooms across North America for years, wrapped up in a bitter rivalry that is a very thin cover for a desperate, consuming obsession.
Ilya refuses to admit it out loud, but he knows that you know.
âJane is fine,â Ilya grits out finally, glaring at you across the table.
âGood. Tell her I say hello,â you say pleasantly. âAnd tell her that if she ever breaks your heart, I will break her legs. That is the system, yes?â
Ilya stares at you. For a long, tense moment, the air between you crackles with unspoken threats and sibling stubbornness.
And then, slowly, the tension breaks.
Ilya lets out a low, rumbling laugh, shaking his head. He wipes his mouth with the napkin, looking at you with a mixture of immense pride and total defeat. You really are his exact replica.
âYou are a menace, Y/N,â Ilya says softly.
âI learned from the best,â you reply smoothly.
Ilya sighs, raising his glass of wine toward you in a gesture of surrender. âFine. You win. I will stop asking about the boy from university. For now. But if he hurts you, Y/N, I am serious. I will end him.â
âHe will not hurt me,â you say confidently, clinking your glass against his. âI would never give him the power to do so.â
âZa zdarovye,â Ilya murmurs.
âZa zdarovye.â
You take a sip of the expensive wine, feeling a rush of affection for your brother. You handled him perfectly. He is backed off, your secret is safe, and your casual arrangement with Dean remains uninterrupted.
But as you set your glass down, your phone buzzes in your purse.
You pull it out, glancing at the screen under the table so Ilya canât see.
Itâs a text from Dean.
Actually, itâs six texts from Dean, sent in rapid succession.
Dean: Tell me right now youâre not actually Ilya Rozanovâs sister.
Dean: Holy shit.
Dean: They showed you on the broadcast.
Dean: Garrett is hyperventilating into a paper bag.
Dean: Why didnât you tell me?
Dean: Are you with him right now? Donât let him look at your neck.
You stare at the screen. Your carefully constructed, compartmentalized life is suddenly colliding in real-time.
You look up across the table. Ilya is casually cutting into his steak, completely oblivious to the absolute meltdown happening on your phone. He is relaxed, happy, and entirely unaware that his beloved little sister is sleeping with a hockey player.
You look back down at the screen, your thumb hovering over the keyboard.
A tiny, wicked thrill races down your spine. The game just got a lot more interesting.
You: I am having dinner with him now.
You: Do not panic, Di Laurentis. He does not know about you. Yet.
You hit send, slide the phone back into your purse, and pick up your fork, completely unbothered.
Across town, Dean receives the text.
He stares at his phone screen for a full minute, the words burning into his retinas. The terrifying confidence of your reply does nothing to soothe his racing heart.
âWell?â Logan asks nervously from the couch. âWhat did she say?â
Dean slowly lowers his phone, looking at his three best friends. His expression is completely haunted.
âShe told me not to panic,â Dean whispers.
âOh, youâre dead,â Tucker nods sagely. âThatâs exactly what people say right before they execute you.â
âCan I have your signed Marchand stick when you die?â Garrett asks, entirely serious.
Dean ignores them. He falls back against the armchair, pressing the heels of his hands into his eyes. He is terrified. He is absolutely, completely terrified of Ilya Rozanov finding out that Dean has had his hands all over his little sister.
But beneath the terror, beneath the very real threat of physical violence, there is another feeling. A feeling that Dean canât ignore, no matter how hard he tries.
He thinks about you sitting across from the most intimidating man in the NHL, calmly texting him, completely in control of the situation. He thinks about the way you challenge him, the way you speak Russian against his skin in the dark, the way you make him want to be better, faster, stronger just to earn a shred of your approval.
Dean drops his hands, staring blankly at the ceiling of the hockey house.
He is terrified. But he isnât going to run.
âIâm keeping her,â Dean says suddenly, his voice quiet but incredibly firm.
The three guys on the couch stop talking. They stare at Dean like he has just lost his mind.
âDean,â Garrett says slowly. âDid you hear what we just said? Her brother will end your career. He will end your life.â
âI donât care,â Dean says, sitting forward. The panic is fading, replaced by that fierce, undeniable stubbornness that makes him the best defenseman in the conference. He grabs his beer, taking a long pull. âLet him try. Iâm not letting her go.â
Logan sighs, rubbing his temples. âWeâre going to need to buy so many deadbolts.â
god 50 years ago you really could go see a trashy b-movie and it still had gorgeous cinematography, lighting and set design, fun costumes and makeup, and now a hollywood production could have 80 million dollars thrown at it only for it to look like a drawn-out tv commercial for laundry detergent
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I donât know about you guys, but I never interpreted Svetlana as being romantically in love with Ilya.
I think their relationship is a lot more complex and deep than either just friends with benefits or unrequited love.
Their dynamic to me seems more queerplatonic. Itâs undefined, but powerful. Yes, theyâre childhood friends. Yes, theyâve had sex multiple times, but Svetlana is not some doe eyed girl chasing after Ilya.
When he asks her in the cab, âare you jealous?â, she replies âI think you know me better than that.â
In the scene with Sasha in the bathroom, she says âyou boys need to catch up.â She knows about them. Sheâs actively encouraging it.
There is love there, an abundance of it, but to try and put it into a socially acceptable and limiting box is disingenuous.
Svetlana is allowed by the narrative to be quietly complex, and I adore that. For a side character with not a lot of screen time, I came to absolutely adore her and the way Ksenia portrayed her.
I think people forget that women can also love having sex without attachments. Thatâs a real thing that happens.
The way non-book readers are engaging with Heated Rivalry proves how big of a crisis media literacy is in.
Iâve seen people say they donât understand why Ilya was treating Shane the way he was in Russia and itâs not clear in the show why heâs being an asshole to him.
Is everyone watching the show with their eyes closed?
Itâs made clear by Ilyaâs mood in the rooftop at the end of episode 1 that he doesnât enjoy being in Russia. We do not see him crack a smile even once the entire time heâs there in episode 2. His playful demeanor is completely gone. He dissociates in several scenes. He barely speaks. When heâs with his father, not only is his father berating him for Russia losing, heâs also displaying signs of rapidly declining cognition as he forgets that Ilyaâs mother is not alive.
We feel the suffocating weight Ilyaâs home country places on him, and how miserable he is when heâs there, but he still feels like he canât leave it behind, because despite everything he still cares for his father and he feels too much like a foreigner in the US. The show hasnât gone into much depth about his mother yet, but his ties to her surely keep him there as well.
In the scene with Sasha and Svetlana, we see him so disengaged from two people heâs previously been intimate with. With Svetlana, sheâs savvy and gives him a great pep talk regarding why he should shift his focus to winning the cup, but he doesnât seek emotional comfort from her, and she doesnât offer it. Sasha, on the other hand, completely ignores Ilyaâs obvious signs of disinterest and dissociation to try and get a fuck out of him, and insults Ilya for not being fun anymore when he gets rejected. Everyone in Russia is trying to get something out of him and reject him when he doesnât do exactly what they want him to. Heâs clearly not doing well mentally and the only person who even asks if heâs okay is Shane.
Shane, who Ilya has already fallen for but knows he canât have, especially not in Russia where his bisexuality could pose a threat to his citizenship and livelihood, is showing concern for him outside of the parameters of their established sexual relationship, and Ilya is simply in no position to deal with the implications of that right now. Ilya can barely look at him in the scene and when he finally does, itâs to fire the final blow that gets Shane to give up and walk away, but when Shane does, Ilya canât help but watch him go. Ilya doesnât know how to deal with everything thatâs happening inside of him and everything heâs feeling, so he pushes Shane away. Heâs in pain because he wants to touch Shane and go to him, but he canât because of where they are. Thereâs frustration there because in Shaneâs mind heâs just a friend offering comfort to Ilya, but to Ilya itâs way more than that, because what if someone saw the way Ilya looks at Shane and immediately figured out everything?
The show trusts its audience to read into the characters through the actorsâ performances and all of this is clear as crystal through Connorâs excellent performance. This show is a goldmine of characterization and romance if you pay attention.
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A/n: angst bc im boycotting watching season three LOL, not my gif
âWhat do you mean she left?â JJ questioned, dumbfounded. He didnât realize it, but he was walking into a war zone. The Chateau no longer had the same feel. It was like someone sucked the air out, and pumped smog in.Â
When Sarah forces the pogues to go to a Kook party, JJ dips early and notices you on the roof, reading peacefully.
That Side of You | @maybebanks
Stronger |@/ maybebanks
wonât last | the bet (part ii) | @myjjbaby
you make a bet with your boyfriend and JJâs really bad at winning them
ITâS NOT LIVING (IF ITâS NOT WITH YOU)Â | @storiesbymads
JJ shows up at Y/Nâs doorstep after an incident with his dad.
My girl | @ptersparkers
maybe falling for one of your best friends wasnât a good idea.
the tap of your fingertips | @/ptersparkers
all of jjâs internal thoughts.
Falling | @mydogisveryadorbs
jj never meant to fall in love with you, it just happened
jj as your boyfriend | @drewcline
Dating JJ Maybank | @kaylawritesfics
Bet | @sodasback
the beauty of love | @milkiane
the pact | @/milkiane
34 mins and 46 secs | @/milkiane
All a game | @annab-nana
You were a kook dating the hottest pogue so you should have guessed something was up, but you never would have thought that your relationship with JJ was a joke.
Dead of Night | @tweedlydumbtweedlydoo
JJ arrives at your house in the dead of night with bruises and cuts.
Dinner with the Parents | @/tweedlydumbtweedlydoo
JJ comes over for dinner because your parents want to meet him. However, they begin to insult him and you have to defend him.Â
Pogues over Kooks | @/tweedlydumbtweedlydoo
Youâre a kook and protect JJ from the other kooks. However, your fellow kook friends donât take to kindly to your protection for the pogue.
Maybe more, part 02 |Â @xreaderbooks
You and JJ always had some tension between you two. One drunken night you shared a moment, both of you being oblivious to your feelings for each other decided to completely ignore it making your individual friendship drift.
Affluenza, Pt2 , Pt3 |Â @fics-n-stuff
Y/N might be a Kook but that doesn't mean that she has to like it, and when one day a handsome Pogue strikes up a conversation how can she possibly resist being drawn in by his charm?
Too Close | @onlystarrydreams
You introduce your boyfriend to your school friends⌠with disastrous results
Sleepy Girl | @malfoyfarm
She Wanted You | @/malfoyfarm
JJ Maybank x Routledge!Reader
Welcome back | @eddiemunsonssoulmate
You are in a long distance relationship with JJ and canât wait to see him again.
Devils Roll The Dice (½) | @s-brant
JJ and Y/Nâs friendship has been different since they secretly started hooking up. With new feelings stirred up by the recent change in their relationship, Y/N avoids JJ until the Pogues gather them together for a Fourth of July party that can only end in chaos.
Angels Roll Their Eyes (2/2) | @/s-brant
Hurricane Agatha approaches Kildare Island during the aftermath of the eventful Fourth of July party. JJ and Y/N are determined to continue avoiding each other after what happened at the party, but John B has other plans for them.
Well, This Is Awkward | @fangirl-writes
JJ walks in on John Bâs sister (you) changing. He starts feeling some odd things.
Nightmares | @/fangirl-writes
secret relationship jj x reader (john bs sis) and jj shows up at her window beaten up and she cleans him up and they go to bed
Routledge!Reader
Planning Our Future | @/fangirl-writes
JJ dreams about running away with the gold and taking you with him.
Who Do You Love? | @/fangirl-writes
Clashing | @/mildkleptomaniac
father like son | @/mildkleptomaniac
Just friends | @/mildkleptomaniac
prove you wrong | @goldenroutledge
Right My Wrongs | @/goldenroutledge
in a time of need, jj comes to your rescue and ensures your safety, allowing him to make up for the past.
fem kook!reader
Drive me crazy | @/goldenroutledge
in which your best friend jj drives you crazy in the best way possible
Details | @spider6oy
Y/N has a crush on JJ, but he has no idea about it. Instead of confronting him and telling him, she has to suffer and listen to him brag about his hookups/watch him flirt with random tourons until she canât anymore and ends up distancing herself from JJ.
In your blood | @possiamo-andare
JJ and Y/N go to visit John B in jail and while theyâre there, an officer makes a comment that hurts JJ. But, Y/Nâs there to comfort her boyfriend.
Quiet  | @/possiamo-andare
This is the first time JJ has felt at peace for a long time and itâs a little overwhelming, to say the least. But Y/Nâs here to help.
The loveliest girl on the planet earth | @timmyswiife
jj knew something was wrong, and after finding out what, he had the perfect way to solve it
The best of us | @/timmyswiife
the night Jj thought you were the best
Favourite crime | @cryonme
You were going down, but you were doing it with him.
six times he realises he loves you | @fandomtravels
6 moments in which JJ realises that he is in love with you
kook!reader
Father, dear father | @sourcherryandsprinkles
prompt | @/sourcherryandsprinkles
Nothing ever go according to plan | @/sourcherryandsprinkles
Jealousy, Jealousy | @siriuslyshewrote
JJ and Y/N have been dancing around their feelings for a while. A late-summer party at the Boneyard just might change that.
Mornings | @obxession
you enjoy a morning full of love with your boyfriend. in bed.
Do You Love Me | @goldvenuslvrs
a touron makes JJ doubt your feelings for him until he hears you talking with Kiara
JJ Maybank x plus size!kook!reader
Kindred Soul | @/goldvenuslvrs
Itâs not until you show up bruised and battered at the chateau that JJ realises how similar your lives are
Donât Go | @larksthighs
ROMEO AND JULIET | @lenacameron
Jj is madly in love with you, there is only one small problem, you are a Cameron.
Gorgeous | @demxters
jj maybank is just so gorgeous that you can hardly say anything to his faceâŚ
jealousy, jealousy | @mayraki
jj likes to flirt with you all the time, but his fame with women makes you believe itâs all fun and games. until one day he gets extremely jealous when he founds out about you and john bâs shared first kiss
Stood up | @jeyramarie
You and JJ have a date planned but apparently other things were urgent.
forever and more | @xsamsharons
golden hour | @hydroponicjj
jj trying to convince you to take pictures during golden hour on the hms pogue.
boat and blunts | @slytherbun
youâre upset when jj forgets about the nightly routine the two of you share and he feels awful about it.
Avoided | @lvstcd
jj has been distancing himself from you for weeks. after getting trashed at a kegger and seeing jj talk to everyone but you, you drag the blonde boy off to confront him.
Care for Him | @bruh--wtf
the reader comforts and takes care of JJ after a fight with his dad
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John B, Sarah and their daughter sat at the Wreck after a long day on the water. The young girl sat across from her parents, picking at her fries, but mostly watching her aunt tend to the bar. She watched as her aunt waved off a man give her his number.Â
âDad? Why does Auntie always tell boys sheâs married?âÂ
This question stopped both Sarah and John B cold. The little girl knew about her Uncle JJ, his tales were her favorite bed time stories. What she didnât know was that he was the light of her Auntâs life. Before JB could spit out an answer, Sarah took over.
âBecause she is,â she said. âSheâs married to your uncle JJ.â This was not true. Well, at least not according to the State of North Carolina.Â
âBut Uncle JJ is dead.â The girl panned. Sarah checked behind her to make sure the girl was still at the bar.
âHoney, marriage does not stop once you die. Especially JJ and Y/nâs.âÂ
âWell,â the adults could see the gears in her mind turning, âWhy doesnât she ever talk about him?â
âBecause itâs painful to talk about people we love after theyâre gone. Maybe one day you can ask her about him,â Sarah responded.Â
JB sat at the table in silence as his daughter asked his wife more questions. He looked at his little sister, a shell of who she used to be. While she was still warm and bubbly like the sun, anyone who knew her before JJâs death knew that part of her died that day, too. He knew they were soulmates long before they did. It was the way their bodies moved in tandem. They became their own safe haven, one which could not exist without the other.
He remembered the way they used to sneak around. Like he didnât know that Y/n would come creeping down the stairs the minute his door closed for the night. The way that JJâs schedule soon aligned better with his sisterâs than his. He remembered the anger in her eyes when she found out the extent of how JJ was treated home. John B hasnât seen that anger since.Â
The girl no longer smoked weed, the smell making her somber. The girl who used to wear her heart on her sleeve was now aloof and stoic. For a girl who used to love adventure and adrenaline rushes, she no longer surfed the surge. She retreated to the porch and played somber tunes on the guitar.Â
âHoney,â JB said to his daughter, âask your aunt about her favorite memory of her and uncle JJâ
It wasnât until a few years later that the girl chose to ask her aunt about her lover. Even at 10 years old when her father told her to ask, she knew the weight this request would put on her aunt. It was stormy out and she had just gotten home from her first party. She was heartbroken. Her silly crush was all over another girl. He was the only reason she had gone to the dumb party in the first place. She walked out back to where her aunt was sitting. She was sitting in a navy sweatshirt, toying with a shark necklace.Â
âWhen does the heartbreak stop hurting?â She asked quietly. She curled up next to her aunt, laying her head on the older girl's shoulder.
âWell, if youâre unlucky, never,â she chuckled. âBut more than likely a couple weeks.â
âWhat was Uncle JJ really like? Not how my dad describes him.â This came out almost like a whisper.
âHe was soft and kind. He felt big emotions, only in private. He was the best kisser and my fiercest protector.â Her words were caught in her throat. âBoy, he would have loved you. When Sarah and JB told us they were pregnant we made a list of all the bad things we were gonna teach you. How to roll a joint, how to shotgun, how to be the best cockroach ever.â Even with a chuckle, she could feel her auntâs tears.Â
âWhatâs your favorite memory of the two of you?â The older girl smiled. She replayed this memory in her head every night. It was the one place she still saw her boy. She closed her eyes and took a deep breath.Â
âYour uncle loved to surf the surges when we got hurricanes, as Iâm sure you know. Well, one night we got really knocked around. Like real battered, and had gotten swept all the way down the beach to where the country club was at. I was scared and upset because I had just gotten your father back from being lost at sea. JJ knew just what to do.â
He had pulled the girl onto the sand, into his embrace, and held her tight. He held her head to his chest, close enough to hear his heartbeat. âSee baby, itâs still beating. The oceanâs gonna have to try harder than that.âÂ
She could smell the anxiety on him. She could feel him move her hair to the side and press a kiss right above her ear. His favorite spot.Â
âWe ran up to the country club to try and take a little shelter while we waited for JB to come get us. There was a wedding going on. Such a shitty day for it too. But we noticed that the couple was having their first dance, so we decided to have ours. Realistically we were never going to afford anything other than some beer in this backyard, which looking back on it now, I would take 10,000 times over this future. We were still dancing in the high winds and rain when JB picked us up. Boy did he make fun of us, but we didnât care. Not one bit. From that day on we decided we were married. Who is gonna tell us otherwise.â
âWe came home and sat on that couch and made all kinds of plans. We were gonna buy a little fishing shack, fix it up and have a baby of our own.â She wiped her eyes. âThis side of the island makes life hard. I only ever felt full with JJ. The way I hope everyone gets to feel.â
The now youngest Routledge, a title her aunt once wore, gripped her tighter.Â
âHow do you know JJ was the only one for you?â Her aunt paused. And took a deep breath.Â
âThe way JJ could make me feel infinite. There was only one thing I couldnât do when I was with JJ. Save him.â