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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 4

POV: Silver Preston

The towers of Yale looked impossibly far away from the shuttle window.

Up close, they loom even larger.

Gothic spires pierce the late afternoon sky like stone fingers, their shadows falling across courtyards that have witnessed centuries of ambitious students. I've competed in arenas designed to intimidate, but Yale's medieval architecture carries a different kind of weight.

These buildings don't just stand. They have stories to tell, and most of them probably involve people far more accomplished than a washed up figure skater with a reconstructed knee.

I clutch the strap of my backpack tighter and try not to favor my left leg too obviously as I navigate the maze of pathways leading toward my residential college.

The campus map crumpled in my free hand makes about as much sense as ancient hieroglyphics. All the buildings look the same, all Gothic stone and arched windows and ivy that climbs toward gargoyles perched on impossible heights.

Every step sends a dull throb through my knee joint, the post surgical brace rubbing against my jeans in a rhythm that matches my uneven gait.

I ditched the crutches three weeks ago against my physical therapist's better judgment, but walking any significant distance still feels like negotiating a minefield. Each footfall has to be calculated, measured, trusted to hold my weight without betraying me.

Students flow around me in easy clusters, their voices bouncing off stone walls that amplify every laugh and conversation.

A group of girls passes carrying field hockey sticks, their faces flushed with post practice endorphins.

Two guys in rowing team shirts debate dining hall options with the intensity of UN peace negotiators.

Everyone moves with the casual confidence of people who belong here, who earned their place through test scores and essays rather than triple jumps and spiral sequences.

I pull my Yale hoodie tighter and keep my head down, blonde hair escaping from its messy bun to frame my face.

The oversized sweatshirt feels like armor. If I look like every other freshman, maybe no one will notice the way I walk or recognize me from the endless replays of my fall that dominated skating forums for weeks after Nationals.

My residential college is tucked behind Phelps Gate, an arched stone entryway that looks like it belongs guarding a medieval castle rather than housing American teenagers.

The courtyard beyond stretches between buildings that rise four stories high, their windows glowing golden in the fading light. Ivy covers nearly every surface, thick and ancient, lending the space an air of scholarly gravitas that makes me feel even more out of place.

I'm halfway across the uneven cobblestones when it happens.

My right toe catches on a stone that juts slightly higher than its neighbors. The kind of imperfection that generations of foot traffic have only made more pronounced.

For a split second, I feel the familiar loss of balance that every skater knows, the moment when physics takes over and the body becomes subject to forces beyond its control.

But this isn't ice.

There's no muscle memory for stumbling on centuries old cobblestones while wearing a knee brace that limits my range of motion. My arms shoot out instinctively, seeking equilibrium that isn't there, my damaged knee locking in protective spasm as my body tilts forward.

The ground rushes up to meet me.

I can already picture it. Silver Preston, former national champion, sprawled across Yale's historic courtyard on her first day, brace twisted, dignity scattered like leaves across the ancient stones.

Except I don't hit the ground.

Strong hands catch me mid fall, one gripping my elbow with surprising gentleness, the other steady against my back just below my shoulder blade.

The contact sends a jolt through my system that has nothing to do with the near fall and everything to do with the unexpected warmth of another person's touch. My knee still screams in protest from the sudden movement, but I remain upright, chest heaving with adrenaline and embarrassment.

"Careful."

The voice belongs to the hands that saved me. Low and measured, with a slight roughness that suggests someone who doesn't waste words.

There's something in his tone that isn't quite concern, isn't quite indifference. More like the careful assessment of someone who understands the mechanics of falling and getting back up.

I blink up at him, taking in details that my rattled brain struggles to process.

Tall. Probably six two or six three, with the kind of broad shoulders that come from years of athletic training. His dark hair needs a cut, falling across intense hazel green eyes that study me with unsettling focus.

Everything about him is sharp angles and controlled stillness, like a blade resting on ice before the first push off.

There's something familiar about the way he holds himself, the easy balance that marks him as an athlete even in civilian clothes. His Yale Hockey sweatshirt explains part of it, but this is deeper. The unconscious confidence of someone who has trained their body to respond exactly as commanded, exactly when needed.

"I..." My throat works, but coherent words seem to have scattered along with my equilibrium.

I hate the way my pulse has kicked into overdrive, hate that my first instinct is to notice how solid his hands feel against my arms.

He releases me slowly, as if testing whether I can maintain my own balance. His fingers linger a half second longer than strictly necessary before he steps back, giving me space to breathe and regroup.

"You okay?"

The question should be simple. Standard post near accident courtesy.

But something in his delivery suggests he already knows the answer is more complicated than yes or no. His gaze flicks briefly to my knee brace, visible beneath my jeans, then back to my face with the kind of recognition that makes my stomach drop.

I straighten, fighting the urge to wince as weight settles back onto my damaged joint.

"Fine."

"Didn't look fine."

The observation comes without judgment but with enough certainty to make me bristle. I've spent months perfecting my poker face, learning to hide pain and uncertainty behind the same mask I wore during competition.

Apparently, it's not as effective as I hoped.

"Well, I am."

My chin lifts in automatic defiance, the same stubborn angle that carried me through countless falls during training, through my mother's criticism, through physical therapy sessions that felt like medieval torture.

Something shifts in his expression. Not quite a smile, not quite a smirk, but a subtle softening around his eyes that suggests he finds my defensiveness more interesting than irritating.

"New here?"

The question feels loaded somehow, as if he's asking about more than just my enrollment status.

I force myself to meet his gaze directly, refusing to let my voice waver.

"Just got in."

He nods once, an economical movement that somehow conveys both acknowledgment and assessment. His eyes are the kind of green that changes with the light. More hazel now in the courtyard's golden glow, but I suspect they'd look sharper under fluorescents, colder under overcast skies.

"Welcome to Yale."

The words are simple enough, but they follow me like an echo as I push past him toward the safety of my dormitory entrance.

My cheeks burn with embarrassment and something else I don't want to examine too closely.

The heavy oak door swings shut behind me with a satisfying thud that muffles the sounds of campus life and leaves me alone in a stone corridor that smells of furniture polish and centuries of academic ambition.

I sag against the door for a moment, letting my carefully maintained composure crack just enough to release the breath I've been holding.

My knee throbs in earnest now, reminding me that near falls carry consequences even when strong hands prevent actual impact.

But it's not the pain that makes my pulse continue its erratic rhythm as I climb the stairs toward my room.

It's the memory of hazel green eyes that saw through my defenses in the span of a single glance, and the unsettling certainty that this encounter is just the beginning of something I'm not prepared for.

Outside, the Gothic towers continue their silent vigil over Yale's courtyards, indifferent to the small dramas unfolding in their shadows.

But for me, the ancient stones have witnessed my first step, however unsteady, into a world where falling down might not mean the end of everything after all.

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