Face Offs & Cheap Shots (CU Hockey #2) - Eden Finley

1

Jacobs

The excitement thrumming through my veins isn’t the same as when I’m about to hit the ice. That’s anticipation and adrenaline. This is so much more than that. This is impatience. It’s a frustrating pull that makes sitting through this lecture painful. The moment it’s over, I’ll be out of my seat and trying to duck around the steady stream of students making for the door.

I should have taken a seat near the exit for a quick getaway, but alas, when the professor does finally release us, I’m surrounded by warm bodies, all of which seem to be in just as much a hurry as I am.

As soon as I hit the corridor, I’m stopped by my teammate Cohen coming the other way.

“Yo, Jacobs!”

Shit.

“Can’t talk right now.” I keep my feet moving as fast as I can without running.

He joins me, keeping pace easily. “I heard you have a meeting with Coach. This is it, right? Congratulations!”

I shove him. “Don’t jinx it. Fuck. You’re not a true hockey player if you don’t believe in superstition.”

He snorts. “You and Grant wiped the ice with the rest of us last season. You’ve got this in the bag.”

“Duuuude.”

His laugh follows me as I leave the building, headed for the arena.

With Grant leaving his CU captain position for the NHL, the spot is up for grabs. I’ve been working my whole college career for this moment.

Forgetting the fact hockey is what allowed me to go to college in the first place, I genuinely love it. I worked my ass off every minute I spent on the ice to make sure my senior year was my year.

I’m going to own it.

I get to the arena and breathe in deep, cementing this moment to memory.

I’ve walked these corridors for three years, skated in this arena six days a week, and now it’s finally happening.

I force myself to slow down and take a breath, then try to channel Grant. This is my year, damn it, and I’m going to show the team I can back up our Frozen Four win with another of my own.

The adrenaline hit is similar to the high right before we hit the ice. It buzzes in my veins.

I knock and give my arms a shake to expel all this excess energy, but it’s impossible. Coach calls me in, and here I go, ready to take my future by the horns … or whatever that saying is.

“Hey, Coach, you wanted to—” My words die the second I see another person in the room. And he doesn’t need to turn around for me to work out who it is—I’d know that expensive blond haircut anywhere.

TJ fucking Beckett.

Beck.

An elitist asshole who has more money than any twenty-one-year-old should be allowed.

And also, the second-best player on this team. The best defenseman CU has ever had.

I will never admit that aloud though.

Beck and I don’t pay each other compliments. We have more of a I scowl at him while he snarks at me kind of relationship.

This … isn’t good.

My amazing high starts to fade. I have a million different theories on why Beck is here, and I really hope it has something to do with him failing a recent drug test or something. Losing him from the team wouldn’t be ideal, but it’s better than my first instinct.

“Jacobs, thanks for coming,” Coach Hogan says.

My stare flicks between Beck and Coach as I take my seat next to my teammate. That’s all we are. Not friends. I wouldn’t even consider him an acquaintance. “No problem. What’s this about?”

Coach leans forward and props his forearms on the desk, linking his fingers together. “I’d like to think you both know why you’re here.”

Well, I thought I did. Now …

“I’ve been hoping.” Beck’s acting like he’s got all the cards as usual.

We’ve been teammates for three years now, linemates for a season, but while we work well as a team and know how to share the ice, we’ve never gotten along when we’re not wearing skates. He’s the trust fund kid, and I’m barely scraping by on my scholarship. He likes to think everything in the world is good and fair because he’s so used to being able to laugh his way through anything. The dude needs a reality check. Not everyone is given what they want on a silver platter.

“You might need to spell it out to me,” I say.

Coach leans back in his seat. “You were both outstanding this season. Jacobs, your point scoring rivaled Grant’s, and Beck, your stats

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