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Breaking the Ice - A Hockey Romance Novel Cover

Breaking the Ice - A Hockey Romance

I was supposed to be America’s next figure skating sweetheart. Instead, one brutal injury ended my Olympic dreams and stranded me at Yale, far from the ice that once defined me. Now all I want is to disappear. I want to stay invisible, escape the suffocating grip of my former coach who also happens to be my mother, and outrun the whispers that say I am finished. But Yale hockey is anything but quiet. And neither is Eli Hayes. He is the team captain, the campus golden boy, and impossible to read. To me, he is arrogant, distant, and everything I promised myself I would never get tangled up with. To him, I am reckless, stubborn, and a distraction he does not have time for. Our worlds were never meant to collide, except the rink has a way of pulling broken people back where they belong. When gossip turns vicious and the secrets I have been hiding threaten to destroy what little peace I have left, I am forced to choose between running yet again or fighting for the life I thought I lost forever. And as Eli faces his own demons under the relentless attention of NHL scouts, what starts between us becomes something dangerous. Something fragile. Something that could save us both or shatter us completely. This is a story filled with sharp banter, late night study sessions, stolen glances at the rink, and the electric tension of enemies who might be something more. It is about ambition, redemption, and learning how thin the line really is between pride and passion.
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Chapter 3

POV: Silver Preston

The question won't leave me.

If I couldn't skate, who was I?

It's haunted me through every MRI scan, every consultation with specialists who speak in careful measured tones about torn ACLs and damaged meniscus. It echoes through physical therapy sessions where therapists smile encouragingly while I struggle to bend my knee past ninety degrees.

It whispers during sleepless nights when reporters still call, their voices honey sweet with false sympathy.

"Silver, when can we expect your comeback? Will you make it to the next Olympic cycle?"

Now the question follows me onto the plane like unwanted baggage, settling somewhere between the persistent ache in my reconstructed knee and the hollow space where my future used to live.

The economy seat feels impossibly cramped.

My post surgical knee brace, a hulking contraption of metal hinges and velcro straps, juts awkwardly into the narrow aisle, forcing the flight attendant to navigate around it with apologetic smiles.

I keep my gaze fixed on the small oval window, watching ground crews load luggage into the belly of the plane.

Anything to avoid the curious stares from other passengers.

I recognize the look. Recognition followed by pity, sometimes mixed with the uncomfortable fascination people feel when witnessing someone else's spectacular failure.

Oh, isn't that the figure skater? The one who fell at Nationals?

"Can I get you anything, miss? Extra pillow for your leg? Something to drink?"

The flight attendant's voice is professionally kind, the sort of practiced concern airline staff reserve for passengers who look like they might need extra attention.

I shake my head without looking up.

"I'm fine."

But I'm not fine. Nothing about this is fine.

Three months ago, I was on planes heading to competitions, my skate bag carefully stowed overhead, program music loaded on my phone for last minute mental run throughs. Those flights were filled with anticipation, with the electric buzz of possibility.

This plane is carrying me away from everything I've ever known toward something I never wanted.

Yale University.

College wasn't part of the plan. It was my father's insurance policy, the safety net Leona dismissed with a wave of her manicured hand.

"Champions don't need backup plans, James. They need focus."

Now the backup plan is all I have left.

I shift in my seat, trying to find a position that doesn't send lightning bolts of pain through my knee joint. The doctors keep saying the surgery went well, that I'm ahead of schedule in my recovery.

But ahead of schedule still means months of rehabilitation, and even then, no guarantees.

Figure skaters who come back from major knee injuries are rare. Those who come back at the same level are rarer still.

The guy across the aisle has been glancing at me since boarding.

Early twenties, wearing a faded Bridgeport Sound Tigers hoodie. Some minor league hockey team I vaguely recognize. His dark hair sticks up at odd angles from sleeping against the window, and there's a small scar cutting through his left eyebrow that suggests he knows something about sports injuries himself.

Athletes always recognize other athletes.

It's something in the posture, the way we move through space with controlled precision even when injured. He hasn't said anything, but I can feel him putting pieces together. The brace, my careful movements, maybe even my face if he follows figure skating at all.

I turn deliberately toward the window.

I don't owe him or anyone else an explanation or acknowledgment. Let him wonder. Let him google my name later when curiosity gets the better of him.

My phone buzzes against my thigh, trapped in the front pocket of my Yale University hoodie. A piece of clothing that still feels like wearing someone else's costume.

I don't need to check the screen to know it's Leona.

Stay focused on rehab. Don't let Yale distract you from the real goal. This is temporary.

I shove the phone deeper into my pocket without reading the full message.

My father called this morning before my flight, his voice carrying the kind of gentle concern that made my throat tighten.

"You don't have to prove anything to anyone, kiddo. Not to the skating world, not to your mother, not to me. Yale's a fresh start if you want it to be. Or just a place to figure things out. Either way is okay."

But James Preston's voice feels distant compared to Leona's constant presence in my head, the relentless drumbeat of expectations that has shaped my entire existence.

Outside the window, clouds stretch endless and white. Cotton batting pulled across an impossibly blue sky.

From thirty thousand feet, everything looks small and manageable. The ice rink where I fell, the hospital where I learned the extent of my injury, even my mother's disappointment. All of it reduced to miniature landscapes far below.

But my knee is very real.

Every slight bump of turbulence sends jolts through the joint, reminder that some damage can't be left behind at altitude.

I shift again, biting down on my lip to keep from making any sound that might draw more unwanted attention.

Will it always be like this? Will every step carry the echo of that moment when my blade caught wrong and physics betrayed preparation?

I've been falling and getting back up since I was four years old, but this fall feels different.

Final.

The memory surfaces unbidden. The practice session three days before Nationals where I landed the triple Lutz perfectly, the satisfying scrape of blade against ice as I checked out of the rotation.

Leona actually smiled. A rare crack in her perpetual stern expression.

"That's it. That's the one that wins it for us."

Us. Always us, as if Leona would be the one launching into the air, defying gravity through sheer force of will.

I doze fitfully as the flight drags on, jerking awake each time my knee shifts at an uncomfortable angle. I dream in fragments. Jumps that turn into falls, crowds that cheer and then fall silent, my mother's voice cutting through applause like a blade.

The pilot's voice over the intercom jolts me fully awake.

"Ladies and gentlemen, we've begun our descent into Bradley International Airport. Flight attendants, please prepare for landing."

Connecticut.

My stomach clenches as the plane begins its descent, ears popping with the pressure change. This isn't just a change in altitude. It's a complete transformation of trajectory.

My life cleanly divided into before and after, with the moment my skate blade caught serving as the dividing line.

The wheels touch down with a screech that makes me wince, and passengers immediately begin the familiar ritual of standing, stretching, and jockeying for position in the aisle.

I wait until the crowd thins, my brace making quick movement impossible anyway.

When I finally make it to the jet bridge, the hockey player from across the aisle falls into step beside me, clearly having waited.

"You okay with that bag?"

His voice is deeper than I expected, with just a hint of what sounds like Canadian accent roughening the edges.

I glance at him sideways, taking in the genuine concern in his expression.

"I've got it."

I do, barely. My carry on feels like it's filled with rocks, but accepting help feels too much like admitting defeat.

He nods and doesn't push, which I appreciate.

"Yale?"

I pause at the top of the jet bridge, suddenly uncertain.

"How did you—"

"The hoodie."

He gestures at my sweatshirt, then at his own.

"Different sport, same destination. I'm transferring in for hockey."

The airport terminal buzzes with typical travel chaos. Families reuniting, business travelers checking phones, the constant drone of departure announcements.

I find the Yale shuttle waiting near the pickup area, its navy blue logo crisp against white paint.

The driver takes my bag with a sympathetic smile, but I keep my eyes on the pavement. Sympathy is almost harder to handle than outright stares.

The ride through Connecticut countryside feels like traveling through someone else's life.

Highway gives way to smaller roads lined with trees just beginning to show hints of fall color. We pass coffee shops with chalkboard signs, bookstores with narrow windows, the kind of small town New England charm I've only seen in movies.

My knee throbs with each bump and turn, but I find myself pressing closer to the window as we enter New Haven proper.

The city wraps around Yale like it grew up specifically to support the university. Narrow streets lined with brick buildings, students with loaded backpacks hurrying across crosswalks, professors in tweed jackets walking dogs.

Then the shuttle turns through wrought iron gates, and suddenly we're inside the Yale campus itself.

My breath catches.

The Gothic architecture rises around us like something from a fairy tale. Stone towers reaching toward the sky, arched windows glowing golden in the late afternoon light, courtyards that look like they belong in medieval England rather than modern Connecticut.

The buildings carry weight, history pressed into every carved detail and weathered stone.

It's beautiful.

And completely foreign.

The shuttle slows as we pass students throwing frisbees on a tree lined quad, their laughter carrying through the open windows. A group of girls in matching field hockey uniforms jogs past, their ponytails bouncing in synchronized rhythm.

Normal college students doing normal college things.

My chest tightens.

I've never been normal. Since childhood, my days have been structured around ice time, training schedules, competition calendars. I was homeschooled to accommodate travel, socialized mainly with other skaters, measured my worth in scores and standings.

Now I'm here, surrounded by people who probably choose their classes based on interest rather than scheduling around practice, who go to parties because they want to rather than because their coach thought it would be good for their image.

The shuttle turns again, pulling up in front of a residential college that looks like a castle.

Students stream in and out of the entrance, some carrying musical instruments, others with paint stained hands, a few in athletic gear heading toward what I assume are practice facilities.

For the first time since my fall, I feel something stir that isn't pain or regret or my mother's disappointed voice echoing in my head.

It's small, tentative, almost too fragile to name.

But as I stare up at the Gothic spires etched against the darkening sky, I recognize it.

Possibility.

Yale. My next chapter, whether I chose it or not.

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