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
âYep.â
âThe only things your readers care about are basketball, football, and the swimsuit issue!â
âBaseball sometimes,â Sammy reminded him. âAnd hockeyâs a thing.â
Zack ran his free hand over his face. He should probably shave at some point, but he thought the facial hair thing was starting to work for him.
âOkay. Tell me why you want me to get on a plane right now for figure skating.â He couldnât be sure, but he had a sinking suspicion his life was about to get more absurd than it already was.
âThe number one menâs figure skater in the U.S. just shattered his leg,â Sammy said. âSuper gory. Which our readers will love.â
âIâm not in a mental place to do medical stories right now,â Zack said immediately. No matter what the source of the injury, he suspected he would never be in a mental place to do medical stories again.
âWhatever, itâs just a paragraph,â Sammy said, breezing by Zackâs concern. âIâll shove it in if you canât deal. The point is, the Winter Olympics are in February in Almaty. The U.S. has two menâs figure skating spots. Which everyone in the sport knew were going to go to Luke Koval and Jack Palumbo. But Koval fucked his leg up and now everything about every competition this season is in turmoil and his spot is up for grabs. Thereâre two main contendersâCayden Sauer in Phoenix and some kid in Minnesota. Aaron Sheffield... Sheftall? I donât know, something like that; youâll figure it out.â
âYouâre making me chase ambulances to try to make America care about figure skating and you donât even want me to chase the actual ambulance? And canât remember the names of the people Iâm supposed to write about?â Zack was pretty sure he was offended; he just wasnât sure on whose part.
âKind of, yeah.â
âWhich is why you want me to get there before anyone else does?â Zack said, as if multiple reporters were going to be banging down the doors of skating rinks across the country. Which, for all he knew, maybe they were.
âBasically. Also figure skating is an absolute trash fire of drama, and it has hot ladiesâ skaters to appeal to our core demographics.â
âI hate you.â Zack sighed heavily. The reasonable thing would be to ask for time to think about it before uprooting his entire life for an unforeseen amount of time. But his life here in Miami wasnât at all appealing at the moment, and work would give him something to focus on. âI donât get what youâre thinking, but hey, itâs your careerâs funeral. You still pay a dollar a word?â
âYou bet.â
âAnd this is why I love you,â Zack said. âSo, uh... do any of these people know Iâm coming?â
âYeah, I set up a whole thing. Itâll be like an embed. Well with the Minnesota people. The other major training center hasnât gotten back to me yet, so thatâs on you.â
âOkay, Iâll go. On one condition.â
âWhat?â
âNever compare covering figure skating to war reporting again.â
TWO DAYS LATER, AFTER an endless series of mechanical delays, Zack was on what had become a late-night flight to the MinneapolisâSaint Paul airport. Once upon a time, boarding a plane would have felt not just exciting, but like a relief. Being in the field as a reporter, ready to talk himself in and out of chaos and danger, was where he had felt most himself. Had, of course, being the operative word. Now, whenever he got on a plane, his mind, body, and adrenaline levels were convinced he was flying into danger again, and reacted accordingly. The entire experience was extremely unpleasant, and as his heart pounded in his ears during the taxi for takeoff, he wondered if he should have driven.
As soon as he was allowed, he pulled out his laptop and started trying to learn everything he possibly could about skating. He watched a video about how to identify each of the main jumps at least six times before he had to accept that he still had no idea how to tell the difference between them despite slow motion and arrows.
Watching the previous yearâs U.S. Nationals just as unhelpful. Zack may have intellectually understood why some programs with falls got better scores than those that seemed, to his inexperienced eye, to go off without a hitch, but he was emotionally baffled by it. At best, he was able to classify skaters into essentially meaningless boxes: lyrical, cocky, confident, and chaotic.
By the time he got off the plane at MinneapolisâSaint Paul he was overtired and motion sick and hadnât yet gotten around to watching any post-competition interviews with the skaters he was being paid to write about.
For bonus points, Brendan Reid, one of Aaron Sheftallâs coaches, had arrived to pick him up at the airport. Which struck Zack as excessively courteous, but then, this was Minnesota.
âHey, you must be Zack,â Brendan said brightly once theyâd found each other at arrivals. âGlad you made it,â he added as warmly as if theyâd been friends for years. He was exceptionally attractive, too, with neatly-cropped sandy brown hair, keen green eyes, and the faintest dusting of freckles across his fair skin.
Too bad heâs married to his skating partner, Zack thought glumly as he shook Brendanâs offered hand. âSammy sent you a picture?â
âNo, we googled you. Congrats on the book, by the way. Though I havenât had a chance to read it yet.â
âAhhh, thatâs fine,â Zack said awkwardly; Brendan was a wall of charisma. And his own charming war reporter schtick felt grim and boring in the face of all this middle-American sparkle. âIt would probably only make you more confused about why I got this assignment.â
âIâm not confused at all. You and your editor have your expertise, and Iâve got mine.â Brendan shrugged. âAnyway, you got everything? I donât want to keep Marie up later than we have to.â
Zack shouldered his backpack and his camera bag and trotted to catch up with Brendan who was already
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