Ink and Ice Erin McRae (general ebook reader TXT) đ
- Author: Erin McRae
Book online «Ink and Ice Erin McRae (general ebook reader TXT) đ». Author Erin McRae
"Don't think you got away with that," she murmured as she passed.
"What?" Aaron asked, breaking off mid-sentence.
Katie kept walking.
âUh, catch you later!â he called to Cal who, long accustomed to the oddities of figure skaters, waved him off with a chuckle.
âWhat?â he asked again, hustling after Katie.
She glanced at him over her shoulder as she walked down the hall. âYou and Zack and your coffee date."
"It wasn't a date," he protested.
âYou wanted it to be.â
âWell, sure.â
"I told you no. Him, too."
"Right then, because we had ice time. I wasnât going to skip out on work.â Aaron was somewhat offended. He hadnât come back from the islands to fuck off from work with a boy.
"Aaron," Katie said slowly, like he was one of the little kids learning how to skate who needed reminding to bend his knees. "I didn't tell you no because we had ice time."
âThen why? Youâre the one who told me to show off and be nice.â
Katie stopped at the door to the little office she and Brendan shared with the other TCI coaches. âYes, but thereâs being nice to the journalist and thereâs being boy crazy at the journalist.â
Aaron couldnât exactly defend himself against that one.
âIâm not saying you canât be friends with him or get coffee with him,â Katie went on. âJust...be aware, okay? Because every moment I have known you, you've had a crush on someone. Usually ill-advised."
"You didn't mind when Huy and I were dating.â
"Because Huy is sensible. He has good boundaries and knows how to balance his personal life and his skating.â She shot him a sideways look. âIâd hoped heâd be a good role model even if you two want different things out of the people in your lives.â
âAre you saying I have a bad work-life balance?â
Katie sighed. âItâs hardly your fault. Your home and your family are out there in the middle of the lake and your work is exhausting. Thatâs a big gulf.â
âSo maybe I want to close that gulf.â
âDo you?â Katie gave him a keen look. âOr do you want a fun distraction because the work is hard and youâre lonely? Look,â she said, slinging her arm around his shoulders and steering him farther down the hall in the direction of the locker rooms. âYouâre a competitive figure skater. The work is brutal and involves too little reward most days. I get it; Iâve been there. But be smart about what youâre doing. And seriously, donât fuck the reporter. Okay?â
âDo you want me to say âokay, I hear youâ or âokay, I wonât fuck the reporterâ?â
She levelled her gaze at him. âHonestly? Iâll take what I can get.â
âWell,â Aaron said as he laughed and ducked out from under her arm, âthat makes two of us!â
Chapter 6
JUNE AND JULY
Minneapolis and Saint Paul, MN
ZACK SPENT THE NEXT several weeks falling head over heels in love with Twin Cities Ice.
Aaron never let him miss his twice-weekly skating lessonsânot that Zack was inclined to skip them. The hour was early and the rink was freezing, yes, but heâd have gone through more discomfort and lost more sleep if it meant spending more time with Aaron.
Aaron was funny, charming, handsome, and absolutely, unbelievably, strong. Not just because he could and did keep catching Zack and picking him back up when he fell. But because the more Zack skated, the more he appreciated the ocean that separated his own physical abilities from Aaronâs talent that had been honed by years of hard work.
Zack had always spent time in a gym when he could; living in conflict zones had made a certain level of physical strength and endurance a distinct asset. But now he was spending most of his time at the rink watching the TCI skaters do hours of on-ice drills and even more hours in the gym and dance studio. They didnât have the sort of bodies Zack had historically associated with strength, but they were, to a one, all stronger than him.
No one kept him at a distance; everyone from the front desk staff to the maintenance people at the rink greeted him by name and stopped to chat. The skaters bantered and gossiped around him while he sat in the break room transcribing notes or trying to thaw out. Brendan persisted in asking Zack how he was and whether he needed anything with a warmth and sincerity that made Zack relieved his inappropriate crush wasnât on him. Back at his apartment, Marie took to inviting him upstairs frequently for coffee, pastries, surprisingly good bourbon, and gossip.
There was a camaraderie here that came from doing something hard and dangerous that other people didnât understand. It made Zack miss the good things about the work he used to do: the friends, the teamwork, what it felt like when youâd done something almost impossibleâwhether it was getting the story or surviving the night.
And Aaron stood out from all of them, like a star serving as a beacon across a twilight horizon.
Zack didnât think that was only because he found Aaron devastatingly attractive, but it didnât hurt. Zack began to feel a thrill of anticipation every time he saw Aaron setting up a jump, and an even bigger thrill of satisfaction when he landed them. When he finally did sit down to formally interview Aaron, Aaron was funny and odd and charming in all the ways that, Zack was sure, would make readers fall for him.
He came to know which jumps Aaron was stronger atâtheoretically, at least; he still couldnât distinguish the jumps as they were happening in front of him. He watched Aaron spend days drilling a quadruple loop that would not happen as much as he and Katie seemed to think it should. And he watched as Aaron began working with Brendan on the choreography for what would become his programs for the competition season.
He wanted to write about it all. Not just Aaron and his hustle and the race to make the U.S.
Comments (0)