Chapter 1 The Sound of Shattered Glass
Elena
My life is strict. Violin at 5:00 AM. Classes at 9:00. Meals, sleep, everything scheduled. No distractions. Control is what keeps me from feeling completely overwhelmed. Predictable. Quiet. Safe.
Today, that control disappeared.
A pipe burst in the music building. Flooded rooms. Wet carpets. Water seeping under doors. The smell of soaked drywall hit me the moment I stepped inside. Damp, heavy, impossible to ignore. My Vivaldi Showcase is in three weeks, and I need a space where I can practice. A space where the sound was mine. Where I could hear every note. Every note matters. I needed it.
The Dean, calm as if the building weren’t falling apart, told me my only option.
“We’ve moved the elite soloists to the North Arena,” he said. “Private skyboxes. Soundproof. Total privacy.”
Privacy. Right. Except the North Arena is hockey central. Loud. Chaotic. Full of collisions. And full of Julian Vane. I didn’t want to go there. I wanted quiet. But I had no choice.
The concrete tunnel leading into the arena smelled like ice, floor wax, and sweat. My violin case felt heavier with every step. I didn’t want to see the players below. I didn’t want to hear them. I just wanted to disappear, sit, play, and pretend none of this was real.
Skybox 4. Small. Glass walls. Suspended over the rink. I sat, tuned my violin, closed my eyes, and let Winter fill the room.
For a few minutes, it worked. The music cut out the chaos. I could feel the notes settle into me. I was alone. Safe.
Then
CRACK.
The glass exploded. Not just a crack. Full-on shatter. Tiny shards flew everywhere. My violin case rattled. A black hockey puck smashed through the hole and landed with a dull thud on the carpet. One shard nicked my cheek. Hot, sharp.
My bow froze midair. My heartbeat jumped, hammering in my ears. I edged closer to the jagged window.
Below, the ice stopped moving. Every player froze. And there he was. Julian Vane. No helmet. Smirking. Like he’d just done something amazing.
“That was a nice high note, Rossi!” His voice carried across the arena. “Maybe play quieter; you’re making the glass explode!”
The team laughed. I didn’t. I leaned slightly into the broken window frame in full Ice Queen mode.
“Julian,” I said. Steady.
He tilted his head. “Yeah, Princess?”
“That puck,” I said, pointing, “is the most interesting thing you’ve done all day. Too bad your aim is as bad as your reputation.”
Silence. The laughter died. His smile faltered. I packed my violin, hands trembling. My pulse raced. I tried to tell myself it's not personal. It’s Julian. Always Julian. Always chaos. Always underfoot.
I hated him.
I walked back through the echoing halls. Cold concrete under my shoes. The cut on my cheek burned. Not just the glass. Julian had a way of getting under your skin. A way of making you second-guess everything. I told myself not to care. I failed at it.
The arena was massive, empty, and echoing. Skates scraping ice, distant shouts bouncing off walls. Not a music space. Not my space. The only option I had left.
I wiped my cheek and straightened my back. Music would save me. It always had. Julian Vane wasn’t going to intimidate me. I was Elena Rossi. Ice Queen. Still in control.
But control feels fragile when someone like him exists. Skybox 4 wasn’t just a practice room; now it was a battlefield. And Julian Vane? Right in the middle.
I waited for a few more minutes, trying to calm down, trying to pretend it hadn’t happened. But the noise from below started again.
The sound of pucks hitting the boards and skates cutting the ice. I could hear their laughter. Their voices. Julian’s laugh.
I gritted my teeth and took out my violin again. I tried to start Winter, but my hands shook too much. Every note was jagged. My fingers didn’t obey. My bow felt heavy. I dropped it onto the strings, letting the vibration die before it even started.
I wanted to scream. I wanted to smash something. But I didn’t. I breathed. Slowly. In. Out. I reminded myself that I could handle this. I had to handle this.
And then I heard him.
“You okay up there, Rossi?” Julian’s voice from below. He wasn’t yelling this time. Calm. Mocking calm.
“I’m fine,” I yelled back. My voice sounded tighter than I wanted.
“Sure looks like you’re having fun,” he said. His teammates snickered. I ignored it. Focus. Bow. Notes.
I took a deep breath. I could do this. I had to. I started playing again, slower this time. Careful. Measured. I let the music fill the room. Let it drown him out. I didn’t look down. I didn’t even think about him. Only the notes. Only the rhythm. Only me.
For a moment, I almost believed I was safe.
Almost.
Then I heard a thump. Not the puck hitting the boards. Something heavier. Something aimed at. My bow froze. My eyes snapped to the hole in the glass.
The puck was still there. Julian smirked up at me. His teammates were behind him, watching. Waiting. Enjoying the chaos he’d created.
I gritted my teeth. My fingers tightened around the violin. My case felt lighter, as if I could pick it up and throw it at him. I didn’t. I couldn’t. Instead, I took another breath. Control. Focus. Breathe. Play.
I finished the piece, each note trembling but precise. Each one was a tiny victory over him. Over the chaos. Over my own fear. When I was done, I put my violin away and sat back, hands shaking. My cheek burned. My pulse hadn’t slowed. My breath still caught. But I survived.
I stayed in Skybox 4 a few minutes longer, staring at the hole, the broken glass, and the black puck on the carpet. I imagined cleaning it up. Pretending it hadn’t happened. But I knew I couldn’t. Not yet. Not with him below, still smirking, still watching.
Finally, I stood. Packed everything carefully. Walked down the cold, echoing hallways of the arena. Concrete under my shoes. Ice smell in the air. Every step is a reminder that control is fragile. And Julian Vane? He’s the storm that can destroy it.
I stepped outside into the chill night air, letting the cold hit my face. I wiped my cheek again. It stung. Not just from glass. From frustration. From fear. From the awareness that nothing in my carefully scheduled world could protect me from him.
But still… I could survive. I had survived this long. I could survive this.
The Ice Queen was still in play. And I wasn’t going anywhere.
