
One Night Stand With My Ex's Favorite Hockey Player
Chapter 1
VERA
I used to think love meant endurance.
That if you stayed long enough, forgave enough, believed enough—it would all be worth it in the end.
For nine years, I tried to be the perfect woman for Brett Calloway.
I learned his moods, understood his silence, studied the way his jaw would tighten before a fight. I learned how to calm him with a touch. I watched his games from the stands, even when I was sick or tired. Not just because I loved hockey. I knew he'd get mad if I didn't and I didn't want him to.
At a point I memorized the sound of his skates cutting ice just so I could cheer at the right time.
I dyed my raven black hair to brown because he thought it was too intense. Plus I knew he had a thing for brunettes.
I did everything I could.
I told myself love was patience. That if I waited long enough, he’d finally see me. Deem me worthy of his affection.
And for a while, he did.
We built a life together in New Jersey, in a high-rise apartment with a view of the Newark skyline. It wasn’t perfect—but it was ours.
Even when he lost his temper. Even when he texted women he swore were “just fans.” Even when I knew he was pulling away, I stayed.
Because leaving Brett felt like learning how to breathe without lungs.
And then there was the ring.
A simple gold band with a diamond that caught the light just so—clean, elegant, timeless. I found it one night in his drawer while folding laundry. I remember tracing it with my thumb, my heart in my throat. I thought: It’s finally happening.
He was finally going to ask me to be his forever.
But forever didn’t come. The engagement never happened.
Instead, I got a car crash and a six-month coma.
When I woke up, everything I’d built my life around was gone.
.
.
.
Cassie’s voice wavers as she stands near the window of her father’s house in Hartford. “Vera, you need to take it slow. You’re still recovering.”
“I’m fine,” I tell her, though my voice sounds like it belongs to someone else.
The truth is, I remember everything about the night of the accident. The screech of tires, the sharp smell of smoke, Danielle screaming my name.
She was driving. We were heading to Hartford from Newark so I could visit Cassie. Then she'd suppose to later take her flight to Las Vegas the next day.
We never made it.
The accident happened just close to Hartford.
When I woke up,I was told Danielle got into a coma too. But she woke up a month before I did. She’s back home now in Vegas, still saying she doesn’t remember anything. Everyone believes her.
And maybe that’s for the best.
Because I remember more than just the crash. I remember the argument that led to it. The argument that holds a horrifying truth I don't dare talk about.
Cassie’s grandmother hums softly from the other room, lost in one of her loops. The sound is both comforting and sad.
I haven’t been back to Hartford in years. The town has changed, but I barely notice. My mind is fixed on one thing: Brett.
When I was still in the hospital, I asked Cassie about him. She wouldn’t answer. Said I needed rest. But the way she looked at me—like she was sorry for something she didn’t do—told me everything.
Now, standing in her father’s living room, I see that same look again.
“Cassie,” I say quietly. “Did Brett ever come to see me at the hospital?”
She turns, twisting the hem of her sweater. “Vera…”
“Where. Is. He?”
She exhales shakily. “He’s in New Jersey.”
“Then take me there.”
“V, no. You just got discharged this morning—”
“I said take me.”
Cassie hesitates. “You can’t handle—”
“I can't handle the truth? You know something, don't you?”
Cassie sighs, then gives a single, grim nod.
"Take me there, Cassie. I think it's time I went back home."
The drive from Hartford into New Jersey takes about two hours.
Cassie’s father lent us his car. For most of the drive, neither of us speaks. The silence between us is thick with everything she isn’t saying.
Halfway through, Cassie stops for food at a gas station. She buys two sandwiches and hands me one.
“You need to eat,” she says softly.
I just shake my head. “I can’t.”
She doesn’t argue, just keeps driving.
Every mile feels like a countdown. The familiar exit ramps. The industrial skyline coming into view.
Home—or what used to be.
When we finally pull up to the building of our apartment, my pulse stutters. This part of the city feels smaller somehow, and colder.
Cassie looks at me, her face full of worry. “V, we don’t have to do this today.”
“Yes,” I say, my voice flat. “We do.”
The doorman’s eyes widen when he sees me.
“Miss Vera! Oh my God—you’re awake!”
“Is Brett home?”
He hesitates. “Yes, ma’am. He’s home.”
Cassie tries to grab my arm. “Vera—”
But I’m already walking toward the elevator.
The mirrored walls reflect a ghost back at me—my normally warm skin now pale, dark circles under eyes too hollow to belong to the woman I used to be.
When the elevator dings, I walk straight into the life I thought was mine.
The apartment smells like cinnamon and vanilla. Soft music plays in the background, something warm and domestic.
For one foolish second, I think maybe Cassie was wrong. Maybe Brett’s been waiting. Maybe this is all a misunderstanding.
Then I see them.
Sabrina on the couch, cradling Nyla in her arms. Brett beside her, smiling softly, brushing a strand of hair from her face before he kisses her.
My world tilts.
A sound escapes me, one that doesn't even feel human.
Cassie gasps, but I can’t move.
They look so… happy.
Sabrina’s wearing a soft ivory sweater, her bare feet tucked under her. Nyla giggles as Brett tickles her, her curls bouncing.
My little girl.
The one I sang to every night. The one who used to crawl into my lap just to braid my hair.
“Mama!” Nyla’s voice is bright and innocent. She wriggles out of Sabrina’s arms and runs toward me.
Her small arms wrap around my legs, warm and familiar.
But I can’t move. I can’t even breathe.
Because behind her, Sabrina and Brett are frozen, staring at me like I’m a ghost.
“Vera,” Brett finally says, his voice rough. “You’re… awake?”
The sound of his name on her lips feels like breaking glass.
I take a shaky step forward. “What’s going on?”
Sabrina’s tone is soft, dripping with a pity that makes my skin crawl. “Vera, this isn’t good for you.”
“Good for me?” My voice trembles. “What the hell does that even mean?”
Cassie steps up beside me, a solid presence. “Don’t talk to her like that.”
Brett says nothing. His jaw tightens, his eyes shifting away from mine.
“Tell me it’s not true,” I whisper. “Tell me you didn’t—”
He doesn’t.
And that silence tells me everything.
Sabrina slides her hand around his arm, her smile small and cruel. “We didn’t want you to find out this way. We were going to tell you after… well, after the wedding. It was all decided before you had the accident.”
The word slices through me.
Wedding.
I look down—and that’s when I see it.
The ring.
The same gold band with the diamond like captured sunlight.
The one I found in his drawer months ago.
The one I thought was mine.
It glints under the soft light of the living room, catching every piece of my shattered heart.
My knees weaken. My chest tightens until I can’t breathe.
Cassie grabs my arm. “We’re leaving.”
But I can’t take my eyes off that ring.
Off him.
Off the woman who stole my life and wore it like it was hers all along.
When Brett finally speaks, his voice is quiet—almost rehearsed.
“You shouldn’t have come back, Vera.”
I look at him, my eyes burning.
“You were supposed to stay gone.”