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Puck Me, Stepbrother
img img Puck Me, Stepbrother img Chapter 2 Little Brunette
2 Chapters
Chapter 6 Locker Room img
Chapter 7 New Home img
Chapter 8 What Are The Odds img
Chapter 9 Golden Ticket. img
Chapter 10 Car Ride. img
Chapter 11 Brothers. img
Chapter 12 Old Ghost. img
Chapter 13 Fitting In. img
Chapter 14 Caught. img
Chapter 15 Breaking Point. img
Chapter 16 Suit and Tie. img
Chapter 17 Making Connections. img
Chapter 18 Warnings img
Chapter 19 Distraction img
Chapter 20 Late Night Encounters img
Chapter 21 Vulnerability img
Chapter 22 Playing Along img
Chapter 23 Ghost from the past img
Chapter 24 Protective Instinct. img
Chapter 25 Game Time img
Chapter 26 Losing Control img
Chapter 27 Falling Apart img
Chapter 28 Off The Ice img
Chapter 29 Independence img
Chapter 30 Talent and Desires img
Chapter 31 Old wounds img
Chapter 32 Regrets img
Chapter 33 Old Friends img
Chapter 34 New Routines img
Chapter 35 Misunderstandings img
Chapter 36 Victory and Confusion img
Chapter 37 Grade Issues img
Chapter 38 Crossed Lines img
Chapter 39 Misheard voices img
Chapter 40 Breaking Point img
Chapter 41 Spiraling img
Chapter 42 Letting Go img
Chapter 43 Wrong Place img
Chapter 44 Collision img
Chapter 45 Trapped img
Chapter 46 New Roommates img
Chapter 47 Domestic Routine img
Chapter 48 Caught Red Handed img
Chapter 49 Fractures img
Chapter 50 Game Time. img
Chapter 51 The Aftermath img
Chapter 52 Moving On img
Chapter 53 Jealousy Games img
Chapter 54 Tug of War img
Chapter 55 Crossing Lines img
Chapter 56 News img
Chapter 57 Risk img
Chapter 58 Expectations img
Chapter 59 Domestic Things img
Chapter 60 Claiming img
Chapter 61 Distance img
Chapter 62 Terms and Conditions img
Chapter 63 Arrangement img
Chapter 64 One Bed img
Chapter 65 Morning img
Chapter 66 Synergy img
Chapter 67 Secrets img
Chapter 68 Date Night img
Chapter 69 Caught Red Handed img
Chapter 70 Emergency Complications img
Chapter 71 Complications img
Chapter 72 Recovery Arrangements img
Chapter 73 Sacrifices img
Chapter 74 Ski Problems img
Chapter 75 Hollow Victory img
Chapter 76 Break img
Chapter 77 Escape img
Chapter 78 Unexpected Truth img
Chapter 79 Accidental img
Chapter 80 Not Boyfriends img
Chapter 81 Cold Distance img
Chapter 82 Trapped img
Chapter 83 Clarity img
Chapter 84 Stake your img
Chapter 85 First Day img
Chapter 86 Freedom img
Chapter 87 Surprise. img
Chapter 88 With The Pros. img
Chapter 89 Gone. img
Chapter 90 Caught. img
Chapter 91 Roy img
Chapter 92 New Lead img
Chapter 93 Gone img
Chapter 94 The Cabin img
Chapter 95 The Rescue img
Chapter 96 Fight img
Chapter 97 Loss img
Chapter 98 Unraveling img
Chapter 99 Touch img
Chapter 100 Exposed img
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Chapter 2 Little Brunette

Julian's POV

I can't get that little brunette out of my head.

It's been twenty-four hours since the coffee incident, and I'm still thinking about it. Not because I care about the ruined shirt-Dad's credit card can handle a dozen replacements. It's the way he looked at me afterward that won't leave me alone. Like I was the bad guy. Like I was some kind of monster instead of the victim who got drenched in hot coffee.

The disrespect is eating at me.

I don't let things like that slide. Ever. When you're at the top of the food chain at a place like Blackridge, you stay there by making sure everyone knows their place. And that transfer student clearly doesn't know his.

"You're quiet today," Marcus says, dropping into the seat across from me in the dining hall. "Everything okay?"

I shrug, stabbing at my lunch. Around us, the usual crowd is gathered. It always happens like this-wherever I sit, people follow. It's been that way since freshman year. Being captain of the hockey team, having the Hayes name, looking the way I do... it all adds up to a kind of magnetic pull that draws people in.

"Just thinking," I tell him.

"About what?"

Before I can answer, Jake slides in next to Marcus, followed by Tyler and Sean. My inner circle, complete and ready for whatever entertainment I might provide.

"Did you guys see that new kid yesterday?" Tyler asks, unwrapping his sandwich. "The one who dumped coffee all over Julian?"

My jaw tightens. "He didn't dump it. He crashed into me like he was blind."

"Still," Jake laughs, "watching you stand there soaked was pretty funny."

"Hilarious," I say flatly.

The truth is, it wasn't funny at all. It was embarrassing. And the way that kid looked at me afterward-like he was disappointed in me or something-that made it worse.

Who does he think he is?

I scan the dining hall while my friends talk, looking for him without really meaning to. I want to see him again. I want another chance to put him in his place, to make sure he understands how things work around here.

And then I spot him.

He's sitting alone at a table by the windows, completely focused on a textbook. His dark hair catches the sunlight, and even from here, I can see he's wearing another sad outfit that probably came from some discount store. A plain gray t-shirt that's too big on him and jeans that have seen better days.

Perfect.

"Guys," I say, interrupting whatever Jake was saying. "Look who decided to show his face."

I nod toward the brunette's table, and my friends all turn to look. Marcus grins.

"Oh, this is going to be good."

The thing about having a reputation is that it comes with certain responsibilities. People expect things from you. They expect you to be entertaining, to be confident, to never back down from anything. And right now, they're all looking at me like they're waiting for a show.

I can't disappoint them.

"Come on," I say, standing up. "Let's go say hello."

My chair scrapes against the floor, and several people at nearby tables look up. Good. An audience makes everything better.

I walk across the dining hall with my trademark confidence, the kind of walk that makes people notice. My friends fall in behind me like they always do, ready to follow my lead. I can feel other students watching us, whispers starting to spread through the room.

The transfer student doesn't notice us coming. He's too busy reading whatever boring textbook has captured his attention. Economics, I think. How fitting.

I stop right in front of his table, close enough that my shadow falls across his book.

"Well, well," I say, making sure my voice carries. "If it isn't yesterday's coffee delivery boy."

His head snaps up, and those dark eyes meet mine. For a split second, I see surprise, then recognition, then something that looks like dread.

Good.

"Remember me?" I continue, loud enough for half the dining hall to hear. "You know, the guy you decided to use as target practice yesterday?"

His face starts to turn red, but he doesn't say anything. Just stares at me with those big dark eyes like he's waiting for this to be over.

"What, no apology?" I ask, tilting my head. "No offer to pay for dry cleaning? That's not very civilized behavior."

A few people at nearby tables have turned to watch now. I can hear whispers, see phones being pulled out. Social media at Blackridge moves fast, and everyone loves drama involving me.

"I did apologize," he says quietly, so quietly I have to lean in to hear him.

"Did you?" I pretend to think about it. "Huh. Must not have been very memorable."

Marcus snickers behind me, and I can feel my confidence growing. This is what I'm good at-commanding a room, making people laugh, being the center of attention.

"You know," I continue, gesturing at his outfit, "maybe the problem is that you can't see where you're going because your clothes are too big. Have you considered shopping in the women's section? They might have things that actually fit."

The laughter from my friends is immediate and loud. Other students start laughing too, and I watch the transfer student's face get redder and redder.

But his eyes... his eyes aren't embarrassed anymore. They're angry. Really angry. For a second, I think he might actually stand up and fight back. Part of me almost wants him to. It would be entertaining to see what this little nobody thinks he can do against me.

Instead, he starts packing up his books.

His hands are shaking, I notice. Actually shaking as he shoves his textbook into his backpack. He won't look at me now, won't look at anyone. Just keeps his head down and focuses on getting his stuff together.

"Leaving so soon?" I ask. "We were just getting acquainted."

He stands up without saying a word, slinging his backpack over his shoulder. For just a moment, his eyes meet mine again, and there's something in them that I don't expect. Not fear or embarrassment.

Disappointment.

He walks away without looking back, and I watch him go, surrounded by the laughter and approval of my friends and half the dining hall.

"Damn, Julian," Jake says, clapping me on the shoulder. "That was brutal."

"Poor kid looked like he was about to cry," Tyler adds, grinning.

They're all looking at me like I just won some kind of victory, like I've proven something important. But as I watch the transfer student disappear through the dining hall doors, I feel... empty. Hollow.

Like I've won something that wasn't worth winning.

"Come on," I say, pushing the feeling down. "Let's get back to lunch."

We return to our table, and the conversation quickly moves on to other things. Hockey practice, weekend plans, and a girl Jake's been trying to ask out. Normal stuff.

But I keep glancing toward the windows where the brunette was sitting, and I can't shake the image of his hands shaking as he packed up his books.

Later that evening, I'm in my dorm room trying to focus on homework when my phone buzzes.

Dad: School bonding party this Saturday at the Morrison house. Make sure the whole team shows up. Good for morale.

I stare at the text for a minute, thinking. A party means the whole student body will probably show up. Rich kids at Blackridge never pass up a chance to drink expensive alcohol and show off their clothes.

Which means the transfer student might be there.

The thought should annoy me, but instead I find myself wondering if he'll come. If he has the guts to show his face after today's humiliation. Part of me hopes he will.

Another chance to put him in his place wouldn't go amiss.

I text Dad back: Got it. Will spread the word.

But even as I send the message, I can't stop thinking about those dark eyes and the way they looked at me like I was something disappointing.

Like I was less than what he expected me to be.

The feeling bothers me more than it should.

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