Chapter 1 The Arrival
I didn’t knock. Knocking felt wrong when the person on the other side was supposed to be your dad.
The door opened before I could reach for the handle. Coach Daniel Hayes—my father—stood framed in the doorway, wearing a fitted navy team jacket with the Hawks’ logo stitched over his chest. His cap was pulled low, shadowing his eyes, but I could feel the weight of his stare sweeping from my suitcase to my face.
“You made it,” he said. No smile, no hug. Just three clipped words.
“Yeah,” I answered, my voice catching on the cold air between us.
He stepped aside, and I rolled my suitcase over hardwood so polished it shone like ice. The house smelled faintly of leather and whatever expensive cleaner made wood gleam like that. It was the kind of clean you didn’t live in, you just maintained.
The entryway opened into a wide living space, all straight lines and cool colors. Framed photographs of hockey arenas and championship celebrations lined the walls. Not a single picture of me. I shouldn’t have been surprised, but the emptiness in those frames still landed like a check against the boards.
“You’ll be upstairs, the last door on the right,” he said, already moving toward the kitchen.
My boots were too loud on the stairs. I passed a guest room, a closed office, and then found my “room.” Gray bedding. White walls. A single framed print of an aerial shot of the Hawks’ home ice. It smelled faintly of laundry detergent, like sheets that had never been slept in. This wasn’t a bedroom. It was a placeholder.
I dropped my bag on the bed and stared at it for a moment before heading back down. My father was on the phone now, pacing the length of the kitchen island, his voice low but firm. Words like “stats,” “penalty kill,” and “trade deadline” drifted toward me, unfamiliar and sharp.
The sound of voices at the front door pulled my attention.
It swung open, letting in a burst of cold air and a group of men in team jackets and beanies, their laughter loud and unfiltered. The smell of sweat and winter clung to them, mixed with the faint chemical tang of the rink. Gear bags thumped to the floor, skates clattered inside their cases.
My father ended his call and gestured to me forward. “Harper,” he said, his tone clipped but carrying through the room, “my daughter.”
A few nods, a couple of polite “hey”s. And then my gaze caught on him.
Liam Carter.
I knew the name—hard not to when the local sports channels wouldn’t shut up about him. But the TV didn’t prepare me for the way he looked in person. Taller, broader, his posture easy but commanding. His dark hair was damp, pushed back from his forehead, a few strands curling at the edges. His jaw was sharp, the kind of sharp you’d expect to hurt if you touched it, and his gray-blue eyes locked on mine like he was studying me.
“Harper,” he repeated, and my name sounded different in his less formal voice, almost testing the shape of it. He stepped forward, offering his hand.
His grip was warm, firm, but there was a softness to the way he let go, like he didn’t want to drop the connection too quickly. My fingers tingled when they fell back to my side.
Around us, the room buzzed with conversation guys talking over one another about a fight in the third period, someone complaining about the new practice schedule, the sound of a soda can cracking open. But in the middle of it, I caught Liam’s reflection in the darkened window behind him, his eyes finding me again when he thought I wasn’t looking.
Dinner happened fast. My father's version of hosting meant takeout in serving dishes, set on the table like he’d cooked it himself. I sat at his right, Liam across from me. The food smelled rich, steam rising into the air, fogging the overhead lights.
The guys talked nonstop. They laughed loudly, teased each other, and told stories that didn’t need explaining because everyone at the table already knew the ending. Everyone except me. I chewed slowly, letting the warmth of the food fill the silence I kept for myself.
Halfway through, I glanced up. Liam was watching me, his elbow resting on the table, fingers curling loosely around a glass of water. His gaze didn’t flinch when I caught him; it held, steady and unreadable. Something in my chest tightened, and I looked away first.
“Carter’s been playing like a machine this season,” one of the older players said, clapping Liam on the back.
My father nodded, smiling for the first time all night. “This,” he said, his hand landing on Liam’s shoulder with a weight that was half pride, half possession, “is the son I never had.”
The words hit harder than I expected, sharp and cold, and I knew my expression faltered before I could stop it. Liam’s gaze flicked to me for just a second quick enough to catch, slow enough to mean something before he looked back down at his plate.
I swallowed the bite in my mouth, the taste gone flat, and forced a smile like it didn’t matter.
But it did.
