Thatโs Amore
โก Part II
Macklin Celebrini x ice dancer!Reader
Summary: youโre an ice dancer whoโs spent your entire life focused on one thing: winning. Romance? Distractions? Hard pass. Then a hockey player sees you across the Olympic Village and completely malfunctions. Like, stops-walking-gets-shoved-by-teammates-becomes-a-viral-TikTok kind of malfunctions. Your well-meaning coach and his well-meaning captain decide the solution is obvious: lock you both in a room with false promises of puppies and Mario Kart. Turns out, sometimes the best things happen when you stop trying to control everything. Sometimes love is just as terrifying as a triple twizzle. And maybe worth the risk.
Divided into two parts because this is long and tumblr hates me: read part I here โค๏ธ
Mitch calls Morgan Rielly from his room at 9:30 PM, which is 3:30 PM in Toronto, which means Morgan is probably working out or in a meeting or doing literally anything other than waiting for a phone call about Olympic Village romance.
The phone rings four times.
โMarns?โ Morganโs voice is slightly out of breath. โWhatโs up? Everything okay?โ
โYeah, everythingโs fine. Are you busy?โ
โJust finished up at the gym. Why?โ
โI need you to do something insane.โ
Thereโs a pause.
โHow insane?โ Morgan asks cautiously.
โPretty insane.โ
โScale of one to ten?โ
โSolid eight.โ
โOkay.โ Mitch can hear Morgan moving, probably walking to somewhere more private. โHit me.โ
โI need you to call Tessa.โ
โMy wife?โ
โDo you have another Tessa?โ
โI mean, no, but-โ
โI need you to call Tessa and ask her to call Scott Moir.โ
Another pause, longer this time.
โWhy,โ Morgan says slowly, โwould I ask my wife to call her former ice dance partner?โ
โBecause he coaches Y/N Y/L/N.โ
โThe ice dancer who just won gold?โ
โThatโs the one.โ
โOkay. And why do we need Scott?โ
โBecause Macklin Celebrini is in love with her.โ
โIโm sorry, what?โ
โCelebrini. The kid. First overall pick. Plays for the Sharks. He saw Y/N after the game tonight and completely lost his mind. Like, fully stopped functioning as a human being. And Crosby has decided that we all need to intervene.โ
โCrosby decided this?โ
โHe pulled me into a literal closet to discuss it.โ
โA closet.โ
โA storage closet. There were mops.โ
Morgan starts laughing. โOh my god.โ
โItโs not funny!โ
โItโs extremely funny. Sidney Crosby, captain of Team Canada, three-time Stanley Cup champion, is playing matchmaker.โ
โTechnically weโre all playing matchmaker. He just initiated it.โ
โAnd he wants Scott to do what, exactly?โ
โGet Y/N and Celebrini in the same room somehow. Create an opportunity. I donโt know, Crosby was vague on the specifics.โ
โBecause itโs an insane plan.โ
โIโm aware!โ
โAnd you want me to pitch this to Tessa.โ
โYes.โ
โMy wife. Who is an ex-professional athlete with an actual day job and a literal Olympic champion and probably has better things to do.โ
โAlso yes.โ
Morgan is quiet for a moment. Mitch can hear him breathing, thinking.
โDoes this kid actually like her?โ Morgan asks finally. โOr is this just Crosby being weird?โ
โApparently he stared at her for like a full minute without blinking. Multiple teammates had to physically move him.โ
โOkay. Thatโs-โ
โA lot?โ
โI was going to say kind of sweet, actually.โ Morgan pauses. โTessa loves this kind of thing. You know that, right?โ
โI was hoping.โ
โSheโs gonna call Scott immediately.โ
โIs that a yes?โ
โThatโs a yes. Iโll call her now.โ
โThank you.โ
โBut Marns?โ
โYeah?โ
โIf this goes sideways, Iโm telling everyone it was your idea.โ
โThatโs fair,โ Mitch says, and hangs up.
***
Morgan calls Tessa at 3:45 PM Toronto time.
She picks up on the first ring.
โHey babe,โ she says. โHow was your work out?โ
โExhausting. But thatโs not why Iโm calling.โ
โOkay?โ She sounds intrigued now. โWhatโs up?โ
โHow would you feel about calling Scott?โ
โScott?โ Thereโs a smile in her voice. โI just talked to him yesterday. Heโs losing his mind over Y/N and Tristan winning. Why?โ
โBecause-โ Morgan pauses. โOkay, this is going to sound insane.โ
โIโm listening.โ
โApparently Macklin Celebrini, the Sharks kid, saw Y/N at a hockey game and had some kind of emotional crisis. And now Sidney Crosby has decided that the entire Canadian Olympic menโs hockey team needs to play matchmaker.โ
Silence.
Then Tessa starts laughing.
โAre you serious?โ She asks.
โCompletely serious. Mitch just called me. Crosby pulled him into a closet to discuss strategy.โ
โA closet?โ
โApparently it was very serious.โ
Tessa is fully cackling now. โOh my god. This is the best thing Iโve heard all week.โ
โSo youโll call Scott?โ
โAre you kidding? Iโm calling him right now. This is amazing.โ
โYou think heโll go for it?โ
โMorgan.โ Tessaโs voice is warm, affectionate. โScott Moir is one of the most romantic people I know. Of course heโll go for it. Heโll probably already have a plan before I finish explaining.โ
โYouโre the best.โ
โI know. Love you. Iโll text you after I talk to him.โ
โLove you too.โ
She hangs up.
Morgan sits there for a second, staring at his phone, wondering how his Friday afternoon turned into coordinating an international matchmaking scheme.
Then he shrugs and heads back to wipe down his equipment.
***
Tessa calls Scott at 4 PM Toronto time, which is 10 PM in Milan.
Scott is in his hotel room, reviewing footage for next weekendโs exhibition gala program, when his phone rings.
โTess?โ He answers. โEverything okay?โ
โEverythingโs great. But I need to tell you something, and youโre going to love it.โ
โOkay?โ
โMacklin Celebrini is in love with Y/N.โ
Scott stares at his laptop screen.
โIโm sorry, what?โ
โThe hockey player. First overall pick. Plays for the Sharks. He saw her at the Canada-Switzerland game and apparently had a complete meltdown. Sidney Crosby is orchestrating a matchmaking operation and he needs your help.โ
Scott sits back in his chair.
โSidney Crosby,โ he says slowly, โis matchmaking.โ
โI know!โ
โFor Y/N.โ
โYes!โ
โAnd he called you?โ
โHe called Mitch Marner, who called Morgan, who called me, who is now calling you. Itโs like telephone but for romance.โ
Scott starts grinning. โThis is incredible.โ
โI knew youโd love it.โ
โTell me everything.โ
Tessa relays the story as she understands it โ the game, the staring, the intervention, the closet conversation. Scott listens, his grin getting wider with every detail.
โThis kid has no idea, does he?โ He asks when Tessa finishes.
โI donโt think so. Do you think Y/N would go for it?โ
โI think-โ Scott pauses. โI think Y/N has been so focused on skating for so long that she doesnโt let herself think about anything else. But yeah. If thereโs a connection? Sheโd go for it. She just needs a push.โ
โSo youโll help?โ
โIโm offended you even have to ask. Of course Iโll help.โ
โWhat are you thinking?โ
โI donโt know yet. Let me talk to Crosby. Get a sense of what weโre working with.โ He pauses. โIs this kid actually good, or is he just some random player who got starstruck?โ
โHeโs good. Really good. And from what Morgan said, heโs a good person too. Little awkward, maybe. Very earnest.โ
โPerfect. Y/N hates cocky.โ Scottโs already pulling up his phone, scrolling for Crosbyโs contact from 2010. โIโll call Sidney tonight. Weโll figure something out.โ
โKeep me posted.โ
โObviously.โ
โAnd Scott?โ
โYeah?โ
โThis is very cute. You playing matchmaker.โ
โItโs called growth,โ Scott says, and Tessaโs laugh is the last thing he hears before they hang up.
***
Scott calls Sidney Crosby at 10:15 PM Milan time.
Sid picks up immediately.
โScott Moir?โ He says, and he sounds almost nervous, which is wild because this is Sidney Crosby.
โThatโs me. Tessa called.โ
โRight. Yeah. Okay.โ Sid takes a breath. โThanks forโI know this is weird.โ
โItโs not weird. Itโs great. I love weird.โ
โYou do?โ
โI was an ice dancer for twenty years. My entire career was weird. This is nothing.โ
Sid laughs, and Scott can hear the relief in it. โOkay. Good. So Tessa explained?โ
โKid saw Y/N, lost his mind, you want to engineer a meeting.โ
โThatโs the gist, yeah.โ
โTell me about him. Celebrini.โ
โHeโs-โ Sid pauses, choosing his words. โHeโs a really good kid. Talented, obviously. First overall for a reason. But heโs also got thisโheโs earnest, you know? He cares about things. Heโs not jaded yet.โ
โHow old?โ
โNineteen.โ
โSame as Y/N.โ
โExactly.โ
Scott leans back against his headboard, thinking. โWhat happened at the game?โ
โHe saw her in the stands. Completely froze. Iโve never seen anything like it. Jarvis literally had to push him to get him moving again.โ
โAnd he hasnโt talked to her?โ
โNo. Heโs convinced sheโs out of his league.โ
โIs he right?โ
โMaybe. But heโs nineteen and awkward and sheโs an Olympic gold medalist whoโs basically perfect, so I understand the intimidation.โ
Scott grins. โSheโs not perfect. Sheโs neurotic and competitive and she stress-eats Swedish Fish before competitions.โ
โShe sounds great.โ
โShe is great. So hereโs what we do.โ Scottโs already formulating a plan, the same way he used to plan out programs, seeing the pieces fall into place. โYou donโt have a game the day after tomorrow, right?โ
โWeโve got practice in the morning but weโre free after.โ
โOkay. Iโll make sure Y/N is where she needs to be. You make sure Celebriniโs there too. And then-โ Scott pauses. โThen we engineer a very natural, very casual meeting.โ
โHow?โ
โLeave that to me. Iโve got an idea.โ
โShould I be concerned?โ
โProbably. But itโll work.โ
Sid is quiet for a moment. โWhy are you doing this? You donโt know Macklin.โ
โNo,โ Scott agrees. โBut I know Y/N. And Iโve watched her give everything to skating for three years. She deserves something for herself. Even if itโs just a conversation with a cute hockey player who canโt stop staring at her.โ
โHe really canโt,โ Sid says, and thereโs a smile in his voice.
โThen letโs give them both a chance.โ Scott pauses. โBut Crosby?โ
โYeah?โ
โIf this kid breaks her heart, Iโm holding you personally responsible.โ
โThatโs fair.โ
โGlad we understand each other.โ
They hang up, and Scott immediately texts Tessa.
Scott: Operation Olympic Matchmaking is a go.
Tessa: I knew youโd love this.
Scott: Iโm texting Y/N now. Wish me luck.
Tessa: You donโt need luck. Youโre Scott Moir.
Scott: Damn right I am.
***
Scott is beginning to realize that you are dangerously easy to manipulate.
Heโs walking through the Olympic Village with you toward a random meeting room in Building C, and youโve asked exactly zero follow-up questions about why Buzzfeed wants to interview you with puppies in an unmarked room in a residential building instead of, say, a proper studio or literally anywhere else that would make sense.
Youโre just walking next to him, humming something under your breath, completely trusting, and Scott is having the uncomfortable realization that if he were a kidnapper instead of your coach, you would already be in an unmarked van.
โSo theyโre just bringing the puppies here?โ you ask, adjusting your Team Canada hoodie.
โYep,โ Scott says.
โTo the Olympic Village.โ
โThatโs what they said.โ
โAnd they specifically requested me?โ
โYou and Tristan, but heโs stuck doing a segment with TVA Nouvelles, so itโs just you.โ
โHuh.โ You seem to accept this without question. โWhat kind of puppies?โ
โI donโt know. Puppy puppies.โ
โThatโs not a breed, Scott.โ
โDoes it matter?โ
โI guess not.โ Youโre smiling now, that genuine excited smile that makes you look about twelve years old. โI love puppies.โ
โI know,โ Scott says, and he does know, because youโve mentioned it approximately ninety-eight times since he started coaching you. You follow every dog Instagram account. You stop to pet every dog you see on the street. Last year at Worlds you missed a team meeting because you were playing with a Corgi in the hotel lobby.
Youโre obsessed with dogs.
Which is why Scott knew this would work.
Still. The ease of it is concerning.
โWe should talk about stranger danger,โ he says.
โWhat?โ
โLike, we should have a conversation about how you would absolutely get kidnapped if someone told you there were puppies somewhere.โ
You look at him. โScott, are you kidnapping me?โ
โNo.โ
โThen why are we talking about this?โ
โBecause you asked zero follow-up questions about this Buzzfeed thing.โ
โYouโre my coach. I trust you.โ
โThatโs exactly what a kidnapping victim would say.โ
โAre you having a stroke?โ
โIโm having a realization about your critical thinking skills.โ
You shove his shoulder, laughing. โIโm not going to get kidnapped. Iโm an Olympic athlete. Iโm very aware of my surroundings.โ
โYouโre about to walk into an unmarked room because someone said there would be puppies.โ
โYou said there would be puppies.โ
โExactly.โ
You stop walking. โScott. Is there actually a Buzzfeed interview?โ
Scott keeps walking. โOf course there is.โ
โYouโre being weird.โ
โIโm always weird.โ
โWeirder than usual.โ
โWeโre here,โ Scott says, stopping in front of a door marked Conference Room 3B. Itโs at the end of a hallway in one of the residential buildings, quiet and out of the way, exactly the kind of place where no one would think to look. Perfect.
You look at the door. Look at Scott. โThis is a conference room.โ
โVery observant.โ
โI thought we were going to a studio?โ
โChange of plans. Theyโre setting up inside.โ
โI donโt hear puppies.โ
โTheyโre very quiet puppies.โ
โThatโs not a thing.โ
Scott opens the door. The room is empty. No cameras. No Buzzfeed crew. No puppies. Just a conference table, some chairs, and fluorescent lighting that makes everything look vaguely institutional.
โScott-โ you start.
โGo on in,โ Scott says, gesturing. โTheyโll be here in a second.โ
โWhere are you going?โ
โI have to grab something from my room. Iโll be right back.โ
You look skeptical now, which is good, which means your survival instincts are finally kicking in, but Scott is already gently pushing you into the room.
โScott-โ
โTwo minutes. I promise.โ
He closes the door.
You hear the lock click from the outside.
โScott?โ You try the handle. It doesnโt turn. โSCOTT?โ
His footsteps are already disappearing down the hallway.
You stand there, alone, in an empty conference room, and slowly realize what just happened.
โOh my god,โ you say to the empty room. โMaybe I am too trusting.โ
***
Macklin is not a suspicious person by nature.
Heโs trusting. Optimistic. The kind of guy who assumes the best in people and situations, which has served him well in life and hockey and generally not being a cynical disaster at age nineteen.
Which is why, when Sidney texts him at 2:30 PM and says Mario Kart tournament in Conference Room 3B at 3. Be there, Macklin doesnโt question it.
He loves Mario Kart.
The team has been talking about doing a tournament since they got here.
Conference Room 3B is a weird place to hang out, but whatever. Maybe itโs the only room with a free TV.
He shows up at 2:52 PM, wearing joggers and a Team Canada t-shirt, his hair still damp from the post-practice shower.
Sid is waiting outside the door.
โHey,โ Macklin says. โAm I early?โ
โNo, perfect timing.โ Sid opens the door. โEveryone else is running late. You can go set up.โ
Macklin walks in.
The room is empty.
No TV. No Nintendo Switch. No Mario Kart. No teammates.
Just an empty conference room and-
You.
Standing by the window, arms crossed, looking extremely confused and slightly annoyed.
Macklin stops walking.
His brain makes the Windows shutdown noise.
โUh,โ he says.
You turn around.
Your eyes meet his.
For a moment, neither of you moves.
Behind Macklin, the door closes.
The lock clicks.
โSID?โ Macklin spins around, grabbing the door handle. It doesnโt turn. โSIDNEY?โ
โHave fun!โ Sidโs voice comes through the door, already moving away.
โWHAT-โ
But heโs gone.
Macklin turns back around.
Youโre staring at him.
Heโs staring at you.
The fluorescent lights hum.
Somewhere in the building, someoneโs playing music.
โHi,โ Macklin says, because his brain has apparently decided that single-syllable words are the current maximum capacity.
โHi,โ you say back.
More silence.
โSo,โ Macklin tries. โMario Kart?โ
โPuppies,โ you say.
โWhat?โ
โI was told there would be puppies.โ
โI was told there would be Mario Kart.โ
You both look at the empty room.
โI donโt see puppies or Mario Kart,โ you say.
โNo,โ Macklin agrees.
โI think-โ you start.
โWeโve been set up,โ Macklin finishes.
โYeah.โ
You both stand there.
Macklin is trying very hard not to stare at you, which is difficult because youโre right there, five feet away, in a Team Canada hoodie and leggings and no makeup and youโre somehow even more beautiful than you were at the hockey game. Your hair is in a ponytail. Youโve got a scrunchie on your wrist. You look tired and annoyed and perfect.
โIโm Macklin,โ he says, because apparently his brain has rebooted and decided that introductions are the logical next step.
โI know,โ you say.
His heart does something complicated.
โYou do?โ
โYouโre kind of hard to miss. First overall pick. Game last night.โ You pause. โNice goal, by the way.โ
โThanks. You-โ He stops. Starts again. โYou won gold. Ice dance. The Hadestown program.โ
โYou watched it?โ
โLike six times.โ
The words are out before he can stop them, and Macklin wants to die. He wants the floor to open up and swallow him whole. He wants to go back in time and not say that.
But youโre smiling.
โSix times?โ you ask.
โIโyeah. It was-โ Macklin runs a hand through his hair, which is definitely doing something stupid right now. โIt was really beautiful. The program. You wereโboth of you were incredible.โ
โThank you.โ Youโre still smiling, and itโs doing something to his cardiovascular system. โTristanโs my partner. Weโve been skating together since we were nine.โ
โThatโsโwow. Thatโs a long time.โ
โYeah. Heโs basically my brother at this point.โ You lean against the conference table. โSo. Your team set this up?โ
โI think so? Sid said there was Mario Kart.โ
โMy coach said there were puppies.โ
โThatโs-โ Macklin canโt help it. He laughs. โThatโs actually kind of genius. If someone told me there were puppies, Iโd probably follow them too.โ
โRight? I was literally thinking about being kidnapped on the way here.โ
โPlease tell me your coach talked to you about stranger danger.โ
โHe did! Extensively! While walking me directly into this trap!โ
Youโre both laughing now, and itโs easier suddenly, the tension breaking, the absurdity of the situation overriding the awkwardness.
โOkay,โ you say, wiping your eyes. โOkay. So they locked us in here.โ
โSeems like it.โ
โFor what? To force us to talk?โ
โI think that was the plan, yeah.โ
โThatโs-โ You shake your head. โThatโs so stupid.โ
โIs it though?โ Macklin asks before he can stop himself.
You look at him.
He looks back.
โI mean,โ he continues, committing now because thereโs no going back, โIโve been wanting to talk to you since I saw you for the first time last week. But I was too scared to just walk up and introduce myself like a normal person. So maybe this isโI donโt know. Maybe this isnโt the worst thing.โ
Youโre quiet for a moment.
โYou wanted to talk to me?โ You ask.
โYeah.โ Macklinโs face is definitely red. He can feel it. โIs that weird?โ
โNo. I just-โ You pause. โYou stared at me after the game.โ
Oh god.
โYou saw that,โ Macklin says.
โEveryone saw that. Itโs on TikTok.โ
โOf course it is.โ Macklin sits down in one of the conference chairs because his legs have decided theyโre done holding him upright. โIโm sorry. That wasโI didnโt mean to be creepy.โ
โYou werenโt creepy.โ You sit down too, one chair away from him. โYou were just โฆ intense.โ
โI didnโt mean to be intense either.โ
โWhy were you staring?โ
Macklin looks at you.
Youโre watching him, your expression open, genuinely curious, and Macklin makes a decision.
โBecause,โ he says, โyouโre the most beautiful person Iโve ever seen.โ
Your eyes widen.
โAnd,โ he continues, because apparently heโs decided to just go for it, โI watched your program about six times like I said, and it made me cry. Actually cry. Iโm a hockey player. We donโt cry. But I watched you skate and I-โ He stops. โYou tell stories on the ice. Thatโs what it felt like. Like you were telling me something true.โ
Youโre not saying anything.
Macklin panics.
โSorry,โ he says quickly. โThat was too much. Iโm not good at this. Iโve been awake for like three days and Iโm exhausted and I justโI should stop talking.โ
โNo,โ you say quietly.
โNo?โ
โDonโt stop talking.โ Youโre smiling now, soft, genuine. โThat wasโthatโs the nicest thing anyoneโs said about my skating in a long time.โ
โReally?โ
โReally.โ
Macklin lets out a breath he didnโt know he was holding.
โOkay,โ he says.
โOkay,โ you echo.
You both sit there for a moment, the silence comfortable now instead of awkward.
โSo,โ you say finally. โWeโre locked in here.โ
โSeems like it.โ
โShould we try to get out?โ
โProbably.โ
Neither of you moves.
โOr,โ Macklin says, โwe could just talk? Since weโre here? Since they went to all this trouble?โ
โYou want to talk to me?โ
โIโve wanted to talk to you for like eight days.โ
You laugh, and itโs the best sound Macklinโs ever heard.
โOkay,โ you say. โLetโs talk.โ
***
Outside the door, Scott and Sidney are standing guard.
Well. โStanding guardโ is generous. Theyโre leaning against the wall, talking quietly, occasionally checking their phones.
โHow long do we leave them?โ Sid asks.
โAt least an hour,โ Scott says.
โAn hour?โ
โThey need time. You canโt rush these things.โ
โWhat if they hate each other?โ
โThey wonโt.โ
โHow do you know?โ
Scott gives him a look. โIโve coached Y/N for three years. I know when sheโs interested in someone. And based on what you told me about Celebrini, heโs already halfway in love with her.โ
โThatโs not-โ Sid stops. โOkay, thatโs probably accurate.โ
โSo we give them time. We let them figure it out.โ
Down the hall, Tom Wilson appears, followed by Seth Jarvis and Brad Marchand.
โStatus report?โ Tom asks.
โTheyโre talking,โ Scott says.
โHow do you know?โ
โI can hear them through the door.โ
All four hockey players immediately press their ears to the door.
Thereโs laughter coming from inside.
โOh my god,โ Seth whispers. โItโs working.โ
โOf course itโs working,โ Scott says. โIโm a professional.โ
โYouโre something,โ Sid says, but heโs smiling.
Inside the room, you and Macklin are still talking, completely unaware of the conspiracy happening directly outside, and for the moment, thatโs exactly how it should be.
***
Youโve been talking to Macklin for twenty minutes, and youโre starting to understand why the universe conspired to lock you in a room together.
Heโs funny.
Not in a trying-too-hard way, but in a genuine, slightly self-deprecating way that makes you laugh without meaning to. He tells you about getting drafted, about moving to San Jose, about his mom crying during his first NHL game and his dad trying not to cry and failing.
โThey were in the stands,โ he says, โand I looked up during warmups and my mom was already sobbing, and I was like, โMom, the game hasnโt even started,โ and she just-โ He makes a gesture. โShe just kept crying.โ
โThatโs sweet.โ
โIt was humiliating. But also sweet, yeah.โ
You tell him about growing up in London, Ontario, about starting skating at four, about the first time you and Tristan did a lift and you fell and gave him a black eye.
โWe were nine,โ you say. โAnd he didnโt even cry. He just held ice on it and said, โWeโll get it next time.โโ
โThatโs actually adorable.โ
โIt is, right? Heโs the best.โ
โAre you guys-โ Macklin stops. โSorry, thatโsโnever mind.โ
โAre we what?โ
โNothing. Forget it.โ
โMacklin.โ
He looks embarrassed. โAre you and Tristan โฆ you know. Together?โ
You stare at him.
Then you start laughing.
โOh my god,โ you say. โNo. No, weโreโTristan is very gay.โ
โOh.โ Macklinโs face does something complicated. โOh. Okay.โ
โDid you think-โ
โI didnโt know! Everyone kept saying he was, based on vibes, but I wasnโt sure, and I didnโt want to assume-โ
โThe vibes are correct.โ Youโre still grinning. โTristan is extremely gay. We actually have the same taste in men, which is a problem when weโre both single and going to the same events.โ
โThat sounds complicated.โ
โItโs mostly just funny.โ You pause. โWhy did you want to know?โ
Macklin looks at you.
You look back.
โBecause,โ he says carefully, โI wanted to know if I had a chance.โ
Your heart does something stupid.
โA chance at what?โ You ask, even though you know.
โAt taking you to dinner. Or coffee. Or โฆ I donโt know. Whatever people do when they want to get to know each other better.โ
โYou want to get to know me better?โ
โIโyeah. Yes. Very much yes.โ
You smile.
โOkay,โ you say.
โOkay?โ
โYeah. Letโs have coffee. Or dinner. Or whatever.โ
Macklin grins, and itโs bright and genuine and makes him look even younger.
โReally?โ
โReally. But-โ You hold up a hand. โNot until after your next game. You need to focus on hockey.โ
โI can focus on hockey and have coffee with you.โ
โCan you though? Because you literally stopped functioning when you saw me after your last game.โ
โIโm never going to live that down.โ
โProbably not.โ
Heโs still smiling.
Youโre still smiling.
Outside, thereโs a knock on the door.
โTimeโs up!โ Scottโs voice calls through.
The lock clicks.
The door opens.
Scott, Sid, and approximately six other people are standing in the hallway, all of them grinning like idiots.
โSo,โ Scott says. โHowโd it go?โ
You look at Macklin.
Macklin looks at you.
โGood,โ you say.
โReally good,โ Macklin adds.
Tom Wilson actually whoops.
โI told you it would work!โ Seth says, high-fiving Brad.
Sid just looks satisfied.
Scott crosses his arms. โYou can thank me later.โ
โIโm going to kill you later,โ you tell him.
โThatโs fair.โ
You and Macklin stand up, walking toward the door, and as you pass Scott, you lean in close.
โThere were no puppies,โ you whisper.
โThere was something better,โ Scott whispers back.
And looking at Macklin, whoโs currently being chirped by his entire team about his โdateโ with the ice dancer, you think Scott might actually be right.
***
The Olympic Village dining hall is not romantic.
Itโs a massive cafeteria-style space with industrial lighting, hundreds of tables, and approximately seventeen different food stations serving cuisine from around the world. Thereโs a constant hum of conversation in a dozen languages, the clatter of trays, the occasional sound of someone dropping a plate. It smells like a combination of pasta, disinfectant, and the particular chaos of feeding several thousand elite athletes at once.
It is, objectively, the worst place to have a first date.
Which is why, when Macklin suggested meeting here for dinner, you said yes immediately.
Because calling it a โdateโ in the Olympic Village dining hall feels safer somehow. Lower stakes. If it goes badly, you can just grab your food and leave. If it goes well โฆ well, youโll figure that out when you get there.
You show up at 7 PM, which is when you agreed to meet, wearing jeans and a Team Canada t-shirt because this is casual, this is just dinner, this is not a big deal.
(You changed outfits three times. Tristan watched you have a crisis and offered zero helpful input beyond โtheyโre all fineโ and โyouโre spiraling.โ)
Macklin is already there, waiting by the entrance, wearing joggers and a hoodie and looking just as nervous as you feel, which is oddly comforting.
โHey,โ he says when he sees you.
โHey,โ you say back.
Thereโs a pause.
โSo,โ Macklin says. โDinner?โ
โDinner,โ you confirm.
โCool. Great. Letโs-โ He gestures vaguely toward the food stations.
You both grab trays.
The dining hall has everything. Thereโs a pasta station, a salad bar, a grill, a sushi counter, a dessert section thatโs genuinely overwhelming. Every countryโs athletes have different dietary needs and preferences, so the IOC basically just said โfuck it, weโll make everything.โ
You head to the pasta station because carbs are always the right choice.
Macklin follows you.
โIโve been eating so much pasta since we got here,โ he says, watching the chef prepare his bowl. โLike, an alarming amount.โ
โSame. I think Iโve had pasta for dinner every night this week.โ
โNo regrets though.โ
โZero regrets.โ
The chef hands you your bowl, and you notice immediately that the pasta is shaped like the Olympic rings.
โOh my god,โ you say, holding it up. โLook at this.โ
Macklin peers at your bowl. โIs that-โ
โOlympic ring pasta.โ
โThatโs incredible.โ
โThatโs the most Olympic thing Iโve ever seen.โ
โIโm getting that too,โ Macklin tells the chef, who looks very pleased with himself.
You move through the stations, both of you grabbing bread, some vegetables that youโll probably not eat, and then, because youโre in Italy even if itโs the contained Italy of an Olympic Village, tiramisu from the dessert section.
โIโm getting two,โ Macklin announces, putting two slices on his tray.
โThatโs ambitious.โ
โIโm an athlete. I need fuel.โ
โYou need therapy, but okay.โ
He laughs, and you feel stupidly proud of yourself for making that happen.
You find a table in the corner, slightly away from the main crowd, and sit down across from each other.
For a moment, you both just look at your Olympic ring pasta.
โThis feels very official,โ you say.
โShould we take a photo?โ
โAbsolutely.โ
Macklin pulls out his phone, and you both angle your bowls so the Olympic rings are visible. He takes the photo, looks at it, grins.
โIโm posting this,โ he says.
โDonโt you dare.โ
โWhy not?โ
โBecause then everyone will know weโre having dinner.โ
โEveryone already knows weโre having dinner.โ
He has a point.
You look around the dining hall. At a table about fifteen feet away, you can see Tristan sitting with two other Canadian figure skaters, very obviously watching you. When you make eye contact, he waves enthusiastically and gives you a thumbs up.
You flip him off.
He blows you a kiss.
โIs that your partner?โ Macklin asks.
โUnfortunately.โ
โHe seems supportive.โ
โHeโs a menace.โ You twirl some pasta around your fork. โYour teamโs here too, you know.โ
โWhat?โ
You nod toward a table on the other side of the dining hall, where approximately eight members of Team Canada hockey are sitting. Theyโre not even pretending not to stare. Seth Jarvis is actually pointing at you. Tom Wilson is holding his phone up like heโs filming.
Macklin puts his head in his hands.
โIโm going to kill them,โ he says.
โGet in line. I called dibs on Tristan.โ
โMaybe we should just accept that we have no privacy.โ
โMaybe we should start charging admission.โ
Macklin looks up, smiling. โThatโs actually not a bad idea. We could make a fortune.โ
โOlympic Village dinner theater. Coming to a cafeteria near you.โ
โStarring two people who were forcibly locked in a room by their well-meaning but unhinged mentors.โ
Youโre both laughing now, and itโs easy, easier than you thought it would be. The anxiety thatโs been sitting in your chest since you agreed to this starts to loosen.
โOkay,โ you say, taking a bite of pasta. โSo. Weโre doing this.โ
โDoing what?โ
โGetting to know each other. Thatโs what you said, right? In the room?โ
โRight. Yeah.โ Macklin eats some of his own pasta, and you watch him process the Olympic ring shape with the delight of a child. โThis is so cool.โ
โFocus, Celebrini.โ
โSorry. Yes. Getting to know each other.โ He sets down his fork. โWhat do you want to know?โ
โI donโt know. Normal stuff?โ
โWhatโs normal stuff?โ
โLike-โ You think. โOkay. Whatโs your favorite color?โ
โBlue.โ
โWhat kind of blue?โ
โIs there more than one kind?โ
โThere are like fifty kinds of blue.โ
โOkay, um-โ He looks around, then points at the San Jose Sharks case on his iPhone. โThat blue. The one on the flag.โ
โThatโs teal, but Iโll accept it.โ
โWhat about you?โ
โAlso blue. But like-โ You look out the windows. โThat blue. A clear winter sky.โ
โWe both like blue.โ
โThis is a very promising start.โ
Macklin grins. โOkay, my turn. Whatโs your-โ He pauses. โActually, I already know a lot about you.โ
โYou do?โ
โYeah. I watched a lot of interviews after your program went viral.โ He looks slightly embarrassed. โYouโre from London. You started skating when you were four. Your favorite movie is Pride and Prejudice. Youโre scared of heights but not falling. You have a cat named Poutine.โ
You stare at him.
โThat was creepy,โ he says quickly. โThat was absolutely creepy. Iโm sorry. I justโI wanted to know more about you and I kind of fell down a rabbit hole and-โ
โI donโt have a cat.โ
โWhat?โ
โI donโt have a cat. Poutine is Tristanโs cat. He was in the background of one of my Instagram stories and everyone assumed he was mine.โ
โOh.โ Macklin looks relieved. โSo I didnโt completely nail the research.โ
โYou did pretty well though. Little stalker-y, but thorough.โ
โI prefer โฆ enthusiastically interested.โ
โThatโs literally just a nice way to say stalker.โ
โYeah, okay, fair.โ
Youโre smiling though, and heโs smiling back, and across the dining hall someoneโs phone flashlight goes off like theyโre trying to get a better photo.
โThis is insane,โ you say.
โWant to leave?โ
โNo.โ You surprise yourself with how quickly you say it. โNo, IโIโm having fun.โ
โYeah?โ
โYeah.โ You take another bite of pasta. โOkay, my turn. Tell me something I canโt find in an interview.โ
Macklin thinks about this, chewing slowly.
โOkay,โ he says finally. โWhen I found out I went first overall, I cried.โ
โThatโs notโpeople probably know that.โ
โNo, I meanโI went home after the draft, after all the media stuff, and I got in my childhood bed and I just cried. Because I was so happy and so terrified and I didnโt know if I was good enough.โ
His voice has gone quiet, genuine.
โI still donโt know sometimes,โ he continues. โIf Iโm good enough. If I deserve it. Itโs a lot. People expect things. And I want to be that guy, the one who lives up to it, but Iโm also justโIโm nineteen. Iโm still figuring it out.โ
You donโt say anything for a moment.
โI get that,โ you say finally. โThe expectations thing. Everyone wants us to be Tessa and Scott. Everyone wants the next great Canadian ice dance team. And I want that too, but alsoโsometimes I just want to skate because I love it. Not because Iโm trying to be someone else.โ
โExactly.โ
โAnd the scared thing. Iโm scared all the time. Before every competition. During every competition. That Iโm going to fall or mess up or prove everyone right who said I wasnโt good enough.โ
โBut you won gold.โ
โAnd Iโm still scared.โ You look at him. โI think thatโs just part of it, maybe. Being good at something doesnโt mean youโre not terrified of losing it.โ
Macklin nods slowly. โYeah. Yeah, that makes sense.โ
You eat in comfortable silence for a moment.
Then, from somewhere across the dining hall, music starts playing.
You both look up.
When the moon hits your eye, like a big pizza pie, thatโs amore โฆ
You and Macklin make eye contact.
You both start laughing immediately.
โAre you kissing me right now?โ Macklin calls out, looking toward his teammatesโ table.
Tom Wilson stands up and bows.
The entire hockey table is losing it, laughing and filming and thoroughly enjoying themselves.
โWHEN THE WORLD SEEMS TO SHINE,โ Tom sings, badly, โLIKE YOUโVE HAD TOO MUCH WINE-โ
โTHATโS AMORE!โ The rest of the table joins in.
Other diners are starting to notice. Some are laughing. Some are filming. A group of Italian athletes at a nearby table actually start clapping along.
โIโm going to switch citizenships,โ Macklin says, but heโs laughing too hard to sound serious.
โAt least theyโre committed to the bit,โ you offer.
โTheyโre committed to ruining my life.โ
At your table, Tristan has stood up on his chair.
โWHEN THE STARS MAKE YOU DROOL,โ he sings, gesturing dramatically at you and Macklin, โJUST LIKE PASTA FAZOOL-โ
โIโM GOING TO KILL YOU!โ You yell.
โTHATโS AMORE!โ Tristan sings back.
The entire dining hall is watching now. Someone near the pasta station starts slow-clapping. A group of curlers joins in on the chorus.
You look at Macklin.
Macklin looks at you.
โThis is the most embarrassing first date in history,โ he says.
โThis is incredible,โ you counter.
โReally?โ
โAre you kidding? This is-โ You gesture at the chaos around you, the singing, the laughter, the sheer absurdity of it. โThis is perfect.โ
Macklinโs expression softens.
โYeah?โ He asks.
โYeah.โ
The song reaches its crescendo, and approximately half the dining hall is singing along now, and someone โ you think itโs Sidney Crosby but you canโt be sure โ has started conducting like itโs a symphony.
When it finally ends, the applause is deafening.
Macklin is bright red.
Youโre pretty sure you are too.
โSo,โ Macklin says, once the noise dies down. โStill having fun?โ
โThe most fun,โ you confirm.
โWant to get out of here?โ
โDesperately.โ
โThereโs a courtyard. Itโs quiet.โ
โLead the way.โ
You both grab your trays, bus them, and head for the exit.
As you walk past Tristanโs table, he grabs your arm.
โHowโs it going?โ He whispers.
โI hate you,โ you whisper back.
โYou love me.โ
โThatโs debatable.โ
โIs he nice?โ
You glance at Macklin, whoโs waiting by the door, looking back to make sure youโre following.
โYeah,โ you say. โHeโs really nice.โ
Tristan grins. โGood. Go. Have fun. Use protection.โ
โTRISTAN.โ
โEmotional protection! I meant emotional protection!โ
โIโm leaving.โ
โText me later!โ
You catch up to Macklin at the door.
โYour partnerโs intense,โ he observes.
โYou have no idea.โ
***
The courtyard is quieter.
There are still people around โ athletes walking, talking, enjoying the evening โ but itโs manageable. The sun is setting, turning everything gold and pink, and there are string lights hung between the buildings that havenโt been turned on yet but probably will be soon.
You and Macklin find a bench away from the main paths and sit down.
โThat was-โ Macklin starts.
โA lot?โ
โMemorable.โ
โThatโs a nice way to put it.โ
โYour tiramisu survived,โ he points out, nodding at the container youโre holding.
โSo did yours. Both of them.โ
โI told you I needed fuel.โ
You open your container and take a bite. Itโs good โ really good, the kind of good that makes you close your eyes and appreciate it.
When you open them, Macklin is watching you.
โWhat?โ You ask.
โYou look like youโre having a religious experience.โ
โI take my tiramisu very seriously.โ
โIโm learning that about you.โ
You take another bite, just to prove your point.
Macklin opens his first container and tries it. His reaction is similar to yours โ eyes closed, full appreciation.
โOkay,โ he says. โI get it now.โ
โRight?โ
โThis is incredible.โ
โWeโre in Italy. Even the Olympic Village has good tiramisu.โ
โIโm going to miss this when we leave.โ
โWhen do you leave?โ
โDepends on how far we make it. Medal rounds are next weekend. You?โ
โMy part is done other than the exhibition gala. But Iโm staying through the closing ceremony. Tristan wants to โsoak it all in.โโ You make air quotes. โHis words.โ
โThatโs nice though. Getting to watch everyone else.โ
โYeah. Iโm excited to watch more hockey.โ
โYeah?โ
โI mean-โ You pause. โIโll be cheering for Canada either way. But also, specifically, maybe cheering for you.โ
Macklinโs face does something that makes your chest feel warm.
โIโd like that,โ he says.
โYou would?โ
โHaving you there? Yeah. That would beโyeah.โ
Youโre both smiling now, and the courtyard is getting darker, and the string lights flicker on, and itโs almost aggressively romantic in the way that only accidentally romantic situations can be.
โCan I ask you something?โ Macklin says.
โSure.โ
โWhy did you say yes?โ
โTo dinner?โ
โYeah. You could have said no. After the whole locked-room thing. You could have just gone back to your life. But you said yes.โ
You think about this.
โI think-โ you start. โI think because you were honest. In the room. About being scared and wanting to talk to me and all of it. You didnโt try to be cool or play it off. You justโyou were real.โ
โIโm not sure I know how to be anything else.โ
โGood. Donโt learn.โ
Macklin looks at you for a long moment.
โCan I be honest about something else?โ He asks.
โAlways.โ
โI really want to kiss you right now.โ
Your heart stops.
Restarts.
Does a full gymnastics routine.
โBut,โ Macklin continues quickly, โI know itโs the first date, and weโre in public, and people are probably watching-โ
โTheyโre definitely watching.โ
โ-and I donโt want to be the guy who moves too fast or makes you uncomfortable or-โ
You lean over and kiss him.
Itโs quick. Soft. Over before your brain fully catches up to what your body just did.
When you pull back, Macklin is staring at you.
โSorry,โ you say. โYou were spiraling.โ
โI wasโyeah. Okay.โ
โWas that okay?โ
โThat was-โ He blinks. โCan I do it again?โ
โYes.โ
This time, he kisses you.
Itโs longer. Sweeter. His hand comes up to cup your face, and yours finds his shoulder, and somewhere in the background you can hear people cheering but you genuinely donโt care because Macklin Celebrini is kissing you in the Olympic Village courtyard under string lights and it turns out every romantic comedy youโve ever watched was right about everything.
When you finally break apart, youโre both grinning like idiots.
โSo,โ Macklin says.
โSo,โ you echo.
โThat was-โ
โReally good?โ
โExtremely good. Top tier. Gold medal worthy.โ
You laugh. โDid you just make an Olympics joke?โ
โIโm multifaceted.โ
โYouโre a dork.โ
โCan a dork kiss you again?โ
โAbsolutely yes.โ
So he does.
And across the courtyard, hidden behind a pillar, Tristan and Seth high-five.
โOPERATION OLYMPIC ROMANCE IS A SUCCESS,โ Seth announces, too loudly.
โSHUT UP,โ you yell, not breaking away from Macklin.
โNEVER!โ Tristan yells back.
Macklin starts laughing against your mouth, and you start laughing too, and the kiss dissolves into just joy. Pure, uncomplicated, first-date joy.
โOur friends are insane,โ Macklin says.
โThe absolute worst,โ you agree.
โWant to stay out here anyway?โ
โDefinitely.โ
So you do.
You sit on the bench, Macklinโs arm around your shoulders, your head on his chest, and you eat your tiramisu and talk about nothing and everything until the courtyard gets too cold and you both have to admit that you should probably head back.
โCan I see you tomorrow?โ Macklin asks as youโre walking back toward your buildings.
โYou have practice.โ
โAfter practice.โ
โYou need to focus on hockey.โ
โI can focus on hockey and see you.โ
โThat didnโt work out great at the last game.โ
โThat was before I actually knew you. Now that I know youโre real and not a hallucination, Iโll be fine.โ
โA hallucination?โ
โLong story.โ
โYouโre ridiculous.โ
โIs that a yes?โ
You stop walking. Look at him. Heโs got tiramisu on the corner of his mouth, and his hair is doing something stupid, and heโs looking at you like youโre the best thing heโs ever seen.
โYes,โ you say. โTomorrow.โ
โGreat. Perfect. Amazing.โ
โNow wipe your face. You have dessert on it.โ
He does, badly.
You reach up and do it properly, and he catches your hand and kisses your palm, and itโs so smooth that youโre genuinely surprised.
โWhere did that come from?โ You ask.
โI have no idea. It just happened.โ
โDo it again.โ
He does.
And somewhere in the distance, โThatโs Amoreโ starts playing again, and you both dissolve into laughter, and this โ this ridiculous, chaotic, perfect first date โ is exactly what you needed.
***
Long distance is hard.
Thatโs what everyone tells you when you and Macklin decide to make this work after the Olympics. Your friends, your family, random people on the internet who have Opinions about your relationship based on three Instagram photos and a TikTok of you at a Sharks game.
Long distance is hard. Long distance never works. Youโre both too busy. Youโre too young. Itโs going to fall apart.
And yeah, okay, it is hard.
Hard when Macklinโs on a road trip and youโre halfway through a post-Olympic tour around Canada and the clashing schedules means youโre ships passing in the night, communicating through voice memos and texts sent at 2 AM.
Hard when you have a bad practice and all you want is to curl up next to him on the couch, but heโs in Dallas and youโre in Montreal and the best you can do is FaceTime while he sits in his hotel room eating room service.
Hard when the Sharks play the Maple Leafs and youโre in the stands at Scotiabank Arena and Macklin looks up at you between shifts and you can see how much he wants to come up there, and you want him to, but there are 19,000 people and a sheet of ice and an entire hockey game between you.
But itโs also good.
Itโs really, really good.
Because Macklin comes to Montreal whenever the Sharks play the Canadiens, and he stays an extra day if he can, and you cook him dinner in your apartment and he pretends itโs great and orders pizza after you fall asleep.
Because you fly to California for endorsement meetings and media appearances, and you add an extra day to the trip so you can stay with him in San Jose, and his teammates chirp him mercilessly but also clearly love you because you brought homemade cookies from your mom and all-dressed chips, which apparently are โway better than American potato chipsโ according to Tyler Toffoli.
Because you FaceTime every day. Sometimes for five minutes, sometimes for two hours. Sometimes you donโt talk at all, just leave the call running while you do your own things โ him playing video games, you foam rolling and watching reality TV.
Because when you won your first Grand Prix assignment in October, Macklin sent flowers to the rink. Red roses with a note that said told you that program was gold medal worthy. Now go prove it again.
Because when the Sharks won their first game of the 2026-27 season, you posted a photo of you in his jersey with the caption thatโs my boyfriend!!! and Macklin called you crying-laughing because โyou canโt just post things like that when youโre in a different country.โ
(You did not care. You did it again.)
So yeah. Long distance is hard.
But Macklin is worth it.
Which is why youโre here, in San Jose, sitting in the SAP Center in the Friends and Family suite, wearing Macklinโs jersey and trying not to have a full emotional crisis about the fact that this is your first time watching him play here.
At home.
In teal.
In the arena where 17,000 people are screaming his name.
โYou good?โ Asks the woman next to you. Sheโs in her forties, also wearing a Sharks jersey, and sheโs been very nice about explaining various Sharks traditions that you, a lifelong Leafs fan, donโt know.
โYeah,โ you say. โItโs just a lot.โ
โFirst game at the Tank?โ
โFirst game watching him play here, yeah.โ
She smiles. โIt never stops being overwhelming. Iโm Will Smithโs mom. Iโve been coming to these games for years and I still get nervous.โ
โThat makes me feel better.โ
โHeโs going to be great. He always is.โ
You nod, because sheโs right. Macklin is great. Youโve watched him play a dozen times now โ in person, on TV, on grainy streams when the game isnโt broadcast in Canada. Youโve watched him score goals and make assists and skate with the kind of confidence that makes you forget heโs twenty.
Youโve also watched him get hit.
A lot.
Which is the part youโre not great with.
The puck drops.
The game starts.
Macklin is on the first line, centering between Smith and Sherwood, and he looks good. Fast. Focused. He wins the opening faceoff and the Sharks maintain possession for the first forty-five seconds before Colorado gets it back.
Itโs a fast game. Chippy. Both teams are fighting for playoff positioning even though itโs early in the season, and you can feel the tension from your seat.
Midway through the first period, Macklin gets an assist on a Smith goal, and the Tank erupts, and youโre on your feet screaming before you even realize youโve stood up.
โTHATโS MY BOYFRIEND!โ You yell, which is becoming your signature move apparently.
Willโs mom laughs. โYouโre good for morale.โ
โIโm very enthusiastic.โ
โWe love enthusiastic.โ
The first period ends 1-1. The second period is more of the same โ fast, physical, lots of hits. Macklin takes a hard check into the boards in the defensive zone and you physically flinch, but he pops back up, shakes it off, keeps playing.
โHeโs tough,โ Willโs mom observes.
โI know. I hate it.โ
โYou get used to it.โ
โDo you?โ
โNo. But you get better at pretending.โ
The Sharks score again early in the second. Then Colorado ties it. Then the Sharks score. Then Colorado ties it again.
By the time the third period starts, itโs 3-3 and youโre stressed.
Youโre also loving it, which is confusing, but youโve learned that hockey does that to you. Makes you feel seventeen emotions simultaneously.
Five minutes into the third, Macklin is in the corner battling for the puck with one of Coloradoโs defensemen โ you donโt catch the name, but heโs big and physical and playing aggressively.
Theyโre shoving each other. Nothing unusual. This is hockey. This is how it works.
And then the Colorado player says something.
You canโt hear it from your seat. You canโt even see his mouth move. But you see Macklinโs reaction.
He stops.
Completely freezes for half a second.
And then he drops his gloves.
โOh shit,โ you say.
The Colorado player looks surprised, but he drops his gloves too, and then theyโre fighting โ actually fighting, fists swinging, jerseys grabbed, the kind of hockey fight that happens maybe once every few games if youโre lucky.
The crowd is going insane.
Youโre standing. You donโt remember standing, but youโre on your feet, hands pressed to your mouth, watching Macklin throw punches like heโs done this a thousand times even though youโre pretty sure he hasnโt.
โGO CELEBRINI!โ Someone behind you screams.
The refs break it up after about twenty seconds. Both players are sent to the penalty box โ five minutes each for fighting.
Macklin skates off the ice, his jersey half-pulled over his head, his hair a mess, and he looks up at the section where youโre sitting.
Your eyes meet.
He grins.
You shake your head, but youโre smiling too.
โWhat was that?โ Willโs mom asks.
โI have no idea,โ you say honestly.
But youโre about to find out.
***
The Sharks win 5-4 in overtime.
Macklin gets the game-winning goal, which is objectively incredible and also means the post-game media availability is going to be entirely focused on him.
You wait in the family area, which is a room near the locker room where playersโ families and partners wait after games. There are couches, a TV playing the post-game coverage, snacks that youโre stress-eating because that fight is still replaying in your head.
Willโs mom gives you a hug before she leaves. โWelcome to the Sharks family,โ she says. โYouโre going to fit right in.โ
Youโre watching the post-game press conference on the TV when you see it happen.
Macklin is at his stall, still in his gear minus the pads, his hair sticking to his forehead. Heโs answering questions about the winning goal, about the teamโs performance, the usual stuff.
And then a reporter asks what everyoneโs been waiting for, โMacklin, you dropped the gloves in the third period, which isnโt something we see from you often. What sparked that fight?โ
Thereโs a pause.
Macklin leans into the microphone.
โHe said my girlfriendโs Hadestown program was overrated,โ Macklin says, completely serious. โSaid it shouldnโt have won gold.โ
The room goes silent.
Then erupts.
Reporters are talking over each other, trying to ask follow-ups, but Macklin just keeps going.
โAnd I justโI snapped,โ he continues. โThat program was a masterpiece. It was technically flawless, artistically brilliant, and emotionally devastating. She and Tristan on it for months. They deserved that gold medal. And this guy-โ Macklin shakes his head. โThis guy wouldnโt know art and technicality if it slapped him in the face.โ
Someone in the press room laughs.
โSo yeah,โ Macklin finishes. โThatโs why I dropped the gloves. No regrets.โ
The reporter tries to ask another question but Macklin is already standing up, done with media, and the feed cuts to the studio analysts, who are all grinning.
In the family room, youโre standing in front of the TV with your hand over your mouth.
โDid he just-โ you start.
โHe absolutely did,โ says one of the other WAGs in the room, laughing. โOh my god. Thatโs the most romantic thing Iโve ever heard.โ
โHe fought someone over ice dance.โ
โHe fought someone over you.โ
Your phone is already blowing up.
Tristan has sent approximately fifteen texts, all in caps, all variations of OH MY GOD DID YOU SEE THAT.
Your mom has sent a heart emoji and that boy is a keeper.
The Sharks official Twitter account has posted a clip with the caption Macklin Celebrini: Elite centerman. Art enjoyer. Devoted boyfriend.
It has 40,000 likes in three minutes.
Youโre going to kill him.
Youโre going to kiss him.
Youโre going to do both, in that order.
***
Macklin emerges from the locker room twenty minutes later, showered and dressed in regular clothes, looking slightly sheepish.
โHey,โ he says when he sees you.
โHey,โ you say back.
Thereโs a pause.
โSo,โ he starts. โAbout the fight-โ
You grab his collar, pull him down, and kiss him.
Hard.
He makes a surprised noise against your mouth but recovers quickly, his hands coming up to cup your face, kissing you back with the kind of enthusiasm that suggests heโs been thinking about this for the last hour.
When you finally break apart, youโre both breathless.
โWhat was that for?โ He asks.
โFor defending my honor.โ
โI mean, he was wrong. Your program was incredible.โ
โMack.โ
โWhat?โ
โYou fought someone because they said my ice dance program was overrated.โ
โHe was objectively wrong!โ
โYou donโt fight! Youโve had like one fight in your entire career!โ
โItโs two now.โ
โOh my god.โ
โAre you mad?โ He looks genuinely uncertain.
โMad? Iโm-โ You stop. โIโm the opposite of mad. That was the most romantic thing anyone has ever done for me.โ
โReally?โ
โYou dropped the gloves over ice dance, Macklin. You defended my artistic merit. You called it a masterpiece on national television.โ
โIt is a masterpiece.โ
โIโm going to kiss you again.โ
โPlease do.โ
So you do.
And then again.
And a few more times for good measure.
โOkay,โ Macklin says when you finally let him breathe. โSo youโre not mad.โ
โIโm extremely not mad. Iโm actually kind of turned on, which is confusing because violence is bad.โ
โHockey violence is different.โ
โIs it?โ
โItโsโlook, I donโt make the rules.โ
You laugh, leaning into him, and he wraps his arms around you.
โYou know itโs going to be everywhere, right?โ You say. โThe fight. The press conference. All of it.โ
โI know.โ
โPeople are going to make edits.โ
โProbably.โ
โThereโs going to be a TikTok trend.โ
โAlmost definitely.โ
โAnd youโre okay with that?โ
He pulls back to look at you. โY/N, I just told an entire press room that your ice dance program was technically flawless and artistically brilliant. Iโm pretty sure everyone already knows how I feel about you.โ
โAnd how do you feel about me?โ
โIโm in love with you,โ he says, like itโs the simplest thing in the world.
Your heart stops.
โYouโwhat?โ
โIโm in love with you,โ he repeats. โIโve been in love with you since that first dinner in the Olympic Village when you ate tiramisu like it was a religious experience. Maybe even before that. Maybe since I saw you in the courtyard. I donโt know. But I know Iโm in love with you now.โ
Youโre crying.
Youโre actually crying, tears running down your face, and Macklinโs expression immediately shifts to panic.
โOh no. Oh shit. Was that too fast? Iโm sorry, I shouldnโt have-โ
โI love you too,โ you interrupt.
โ-said it so soon, I just wasnโt thinkingโwait, what?โ
โI love you too, you idiot.โ
His face transforms. โReally?โ
โReally. Iโve been in love with you since you told me I was the most beautiful person youโd ever seen. In that conference room. When we were locked in together.โ
โThat was eight months ago.โ
โI know.โ
โWeโve been in love with each other for eight months and neither of us said anything?โ
โApparently.โ
โWeโre so bad at this.โ
โThe worst,โ you agree, and then youโre both laughing and crying and kissing, and somewhere in the hallway Tyler Toffoli walks by and yells โGET A ROOMโ but neither of you care.
***
Youโre at Macklinโs apartment, curled up on his couch, watching the replay of the game on his laptop.
โI canโt believe you did that,โ you say for the fifteenth time.
โWhich part?โ Macklin asks. Heโs got his arm around you, playing with your hair, looking entirely too pleased with himself.
โAll of it. The fight. The press conference. The-โ You gesture at the screen, where the clip of him defending your program is playing again. โโWouldnโt know art and technicality if it slapped him in the face.โ Someoneโs going to put that on a t-shirt.โ
โIโll buy one.โ
โYouโre ridiculous.โ
โYou love me.โ
โI really do.โ
Your phone buzzes. Itโs a text from Scott.
Scott: Just watched the press conference. That kid really loves you.
You: I know.
Scott: Donโt fuck it up.
You: I wonโt.
Scott: Good. Also, tell him I said nice hit. Very protective. I respect it.
You show the text to Macklin.
โScott Moir respects my fighting,โ he says, reading. โThatโs cool.โ
โHeโs the one who locked us in a room together.โ
โWe should send him a thank you card.โ
โWe absolutely should.โ
You settle back against his chest, watching the game replay. The Sharks are skating, Macklin is celebrating his goal, and somewhere in the stands, thereโs a shot of you in his jersey, hands over your mouth, pure joy on your face.
โLook,โ Macklin says, pointing. โThatโs you.โ
โI look insane.โ
โYou look beautiful.โ
โIโm literally screaming.โ
โBeautifully.โ
You elbow him gently. โYouโre such a sap.โ
โYou love it.โ
โI really do.โ
The game ends on the screen. The Sharks celebrate. The camera catches Macklin looking up at the stands, finding you, smiling.
โCan I tell you something?โ Macklin asks.
โAlways.โ
โI was so scared. At the Olympics. When we met. I was terrified you wouldnโt like me.โ
โAre you kidding?โ
โNo. You were โ you are โ this incredible, accomplished, beautiful person who just won Olympic gold, and I was just some hockey player who couldnโt stop staring at you.โ
โYouโre not just some hockey player.โ
โI felt like it. In comparison to you.โ
You turn to face him properly. โMacklin. You were drafted first overall. Youโre living your dream. You score game-winning goals and fight people who insult ice dance. Youโre-โ You pause. โYouโre the best person I know. And Iโm so lucky I got locked in that room with you.โ
โMe too.โ
โEven though there were no puppies?โ
โEven though there were no puppies.โ He kisses your forehead. โThough for the record, I would get you a puppy if you wanted one.โ
โYou would?โ
โI would get you anything you wanted.โ
โAll I want is you.โ
โThatโs very convenient, because you already have me.โ
You kiss him, soft and sweet, and outside the window San Jose is alive with light, and somewhere in Montreal Tristan is probably texting you again, and somewhere in the world the video of Macklin defending your program is going viral, and none of it matters because youโre here.
With him.
With the boy who saw you across an Olympic courtyard and decided you were worth fighting for.
Literally.
โHey,โ Macklin says against your lips.
โHey,โ you say back.
โI love you.โ
โI love you too.โ
โGood.โ He grins. โBecause Iโm planning to keep you for a really long time.โ
โHow long?โ
โLike โฆ forever? Is forever weird? That might be too much-โ
โForever sounds perfect,โ you interrupt.
โYeah?โ
โYeah.โ
And eight months after meeting in an Olympic Village, three hours after Macklin dropped the gloves to defend your artistic integrity, and exactly fifteen seconds since you realized this was what you wanted all along, you kiss him again and think about how sometimes the best stories start with a conspiracy, a locked door, and two people who were brave enough to take the chance.
Even if that chance involves fake puppies, Mario Kart lies, and a singing rendition of โThatโs Amoreโ in an Olympic dining hall.
Especially then.


















