Broken play, p.1

Broken Play, page 1

 

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Broken Play


  Broken Play

  Pucks and Passion, Volume 1

  Amber Kuhlman

  Published by Amber Kuhlman, 2026.

  This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.

  BROKEN PLAY

  First edition. January 21, 2026.

  Copyright © 2026 Amber Kuhlman.

  ISBN: 979-8230371359

  Written by Amber Kuhlman.

  Also by Amber Kuhlman

  Breaking Pointe

  Forbidden Dance

  Pucks and Passion

  Broken Play

  The Sound of Sin

  Dirty Little Melody

  Standalone

  The Guys Next Door

  If I Fall

  Playing for Keeps

  Watch for more at Amber Kuhlman’s site.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Also By Amber Kuhlman

  Chapter 1: Wren

  Chapter 2: Wren

  Chapter 3: Kael

  Chapter 4: Wren

  Chapter 5: Atlas

  Chapter 6: Finn

  Chapter 7: Wren

  Chapter 8: Kael

  Chapter 9: Atlas

  Chapter 10: Wren

  Chapter 11: Kael

  Chapter 12: Finn

  Chapter 13: Wren

  Chapter 14: Wren

  Chapter 15: Kael

  Chapter 16: Finn

  Chapter 17: Kael

  Chapter 18: Atlas

  Chapter 19: Wren, Then

  Chapter 20: Finn

  Chapter 21: Wren

  Chapter 22: Atlas

  Chapter 23: Finn

  Chapter 24: Kael

  Chapter 25: Atlas

  Chapter 26: Wren

  Chapter 27: Finn

  Chapter 28: Kael

  Chapter 29: Wren

  Chapter 30: Atlas

  Chapter 31: Wren

  Chapter 32: Kael

  Chapter 33: Wren

  Chapter 34: Kael

  Chapter 35: Wren

  Chapter 36: Atlas

  Chapter 37: Finn

  Chapter 38: Kael

  Chapter 39: Wren

  Chapter 40: Atlas

  Chapter 41: Wren

  Chapter 42: Kael

  Chapter 43: Wren

  Chapter 44: Kael

  Chapter 45: Wren

  Chapter 46: Atlas

  Chapter 47: Wren

  Chapter 48: Atlas

  Chapter 49: Wren

  Chapter 50: Adrian

  Chapter 51: Kael

  Chapter 52: Finn

  Chapter 53: Wren

  Chapter 54: Wren

  Chapter 55: Atlas

  Chapter 56: Kael

  Chapter 57: Wren

  Chapter 58: Adrian

  Sign up for Amber Kuhlman's Mailing List

  Further Reading: Dirty Little Melody

  Also By Amber Kuhlman

  About the Author

  Chapter 1: Wren

  Boston air hits differently.

  Sharper. Colder. The kind of cold that gets under your skin and stays there, swirling with the smell of harbor wind, espresso from the street carts, and the burnt-toast scent of the subway grates. I breathe it in anyway, forcing it deep, letting it scrape the inside of my lungs like I deserve the punishment.

  I can handle the cold.

  It’s the ice I’m not sure about.

  The Boston Reapers Training Center rises in front of me like something out of a sports documentary—steel, tinted glass, banners flapping with players’ faces, and a massive Reaper logo looming overhead, grim and iconic. The city hums behind me: traffic, horns, the distant yell of a vendor, the brutal honesty Boston is famous for.

  The second I walk through the doors, it hits me:

  Hockey.

  Men.

  Heat wrapped in cold.

  The scent of sweat and skate oil and expensive cologne. Bodies moving with purpose. Voices echoing off concrete and metal. Pucks clacking against boards. The low growl of someone cursing from the rink.

  My pulse stutters, then steadies.

  This is exactly what I signed up for.

  And exactly what I promised myself I’d avoid.

  But bills don’t care about promises.

  A receptionist waves me through. “Wren Harper? Coach is expecting you. Locker Room Hall C.”

  I adjust my bag on my shoulder and start down the hall. Every step drags up memories I don’t want—bright lights, screaming fans, ice so clean it glittered like a mirror.

  And then the fall.

  The sabotage.

  The humiliation.

  I swallow hard and force the past down.

  This is different.

  New city. New job. New version of me.

  I stop in front of Hall C. The door is cracked. Voices spill out—loud, unfiltered, rough. There’s laughter. The clatter of gear hitting the floor. Something thumps against a locker.

  I push the door open.

  And stop breathing.

  Eight men—half dressed, half undressed, all sculpted like Greek statues that swear too much—turn their heads toward me.

  The room goes silent. A stretched, vibrating silence that thickens the air until it feels humid.

  Then someone whistles low.

  “Well, shit,” a player mutters. “Management finally got something right.”

  I arch a brow. “I’m Wren Harper, your new athletic trainer and rehabilitation specialist.”

  A few of the guys look disappointed I’m not strutting in wearing lingerie.

  A few look like they wish I was.

  A few look like they're imagining it anyway.

  And then he steps out.

  Kael Mercer.

  Captain. Defenseman. Boston legend.

  Tall, bare-chested, towel slung low on his hips, droplets of water sliding down his torso like they’re being pulled by gravity and a higher power. Chest carved. Shoulders wide. Jaw sharp enough to cut glass. And those eyes—ice-gray, assessing, dangerous in the way a loaded gun on the coffee table is dangerous.

  He freezes when he sees me.

  Not long.

  Just enough.

  His gaze skims my face. My throat. My chest. The line of my waist. Not sleazy. Not lingering. Just... thorough. Like he’s cataloguing things he shouldn’t be noticing.

  “You’re early,” he says, voice low and gravelly.

  “Should I be late?” I ask.

  His eyes flicker with something—interest or irritation, hard to tell.

  Before he can respond, another body slides into view.

  Tall. Lean. Smirking like he sins recreationally.

  Finn Rourke.

  Goalie. Darling of Boston’s sports media. Tattoo on his ribcage peeking over the edge of a towel like it’s flirting too.

  He looks me up and down without shame.

  “Well damn,” he purrs, “if I knew our new trainer was going to look like that, I would’ve sprained something last week.”

  I blink. “Give it ten minutes. You still might.”

  He grins, wicked and beautiful. “Promise?”

  A deep scoff echoes from behind him.

  And then Atlas Ward appears.

  The Reapers’ enforcer.

  The league’s favorite hooligan.

  Tattooed from throat to wrist, muscles stacked on muscles, expression carved from violence and boredom.

  He looks at me like I’m a new problem he didn’t ask for.

  “Great,” Atlas mutters. “A kid.”

  A kid?

  I step closer—not enough to touch him, but enough that he has to tilt his chin down to keep glaring at me.

  “You five-foot-four thundercloud,” I say calmly, “I’ve put grown men on the floor for less.”

  The locker room erupts.

  Finn doubles over laughing.

  Several players choke on whatever they were drinking.

  Even Kael’s mouth twitches like he’s fighting a smile.

  Atlas stares.

  Then—VERY faintly—smirks.

  Dangerously attractive.

  Unfortunately attractive.

  “Alright,” he says. “Maybe not a kid.”

  Kael steps forward, cutting the chaos cleanly.

  “Enough,” he snaps. The entire room stills. Even Finn’s grin dims.

  Kael looks at me. “Follow me.”

  I do.

  Because honestly? My legs don’t seem interested in doing anything else.

  He leads me into the training room—cold, quiet, lined with equipment and treatment tables. The door closes behind us, muffling the noise.

  The silence between us feels thicker.

  Kael faces me fully. “Before you start, understand something.”

  I cross my arms. “I’m listening.”

  “This team is volatile right now. You’re walking into a storm.”

  “I’m not afraid of storms.”

  (Only the ice. Only falling again. But he doesn’t need to know that.)

  His gaze lingers on my mouth. Just long enough to feel it.

  He’s too close.

  He smells like cedar and winter and something male and warm beneath it.

  And Boston cold does NOT explain why my cheeks feel hot.

  “You shouldn’t be here,” he says, voice dropping.

  “What?” My pulse jumps. “Why?”

  “Because you look like trouble.”
< br />   His gaze drags over my face, my throat, my hips.

  “And this team already has too much of that.”

  I swallow. “Are you telling me not to do my job?”

  “No,” he says quietly. “I’m telling you to be careful.”

  It’s protective.

  Almost intimate.

  And annoyingly magnetic.

  Before I can respond, the rink erupts in noise—shouts, the crack of bodies slamming into boards.

  Kael curses under his breath and grabs his gear.

  “Welcome to Boston,” he murmurs as he passes me, voice brushing my ear like a touch. “Try not to get yourself hurt.”

  ***

  Practice is pure chaos.

  Ice flying. Bodies crashing. Players growling at each other like wolves fighting over a carcass.

  And Boston fans think hockey is a religion? Being down here is like walking into a cathedral where all the saints are sinners in disguise.

  Finn is first to mess up.

  He slides too hard into the post, slamming shoulder-first. He stands like nothing happened, but when he skates past me, I catch the tightness in his jaw.

  “Finn!” I call. “Off the ice!”

  He pretends not to hear, so I march over and grab his jersey.

  His breath catches—just slightly.

  “I said off the ice,” I repeat.

  “You like grabbing me, Harper?” Finn asks, low and wicked.

  “If I liked grabbing you, I’d hold tighter.”

  He smirks like that just became his new religion.

  But when he sits on the bench, he winces, then tries to hide it.

  I press my fingers gently against his shoulder. His breath stutters again—this time from pain.

  “You’re strained,” I say.

  “I’m fine.”

  “You will be, after treatment. That’s not a suggestion.”

  He looks at me differently then. Not cocky. Not flirty.

  Hungry.

  “I’m starting to think you’re dangerous,” he murmurs. “And I really fucking like dangerous.”

  Before I can answer, shouting erupts.

  I look up.

  Atlas has another player pinned against the glass, fist drawn back. Blood on his lip. Rage in his eyes. Everyone else is shouting, trying to pull them apart.

  Kael barrels into the mess, trying to break it up.

  I react before thinking.

  I sprint onto the ice.

  “HEY!” My voice cracks through the arena. “KNOCK IT OFF!”

  Everything stops.

  Atlas freezes, chest heaving.

  Kael stares, jaw clenched, eyes burning.

  The other player drips blood onto the ice.

  They’re all watching me.

  I step between Atlas and the other man, palms up.

  “Sit,” I tell Atlas.

  Shock flares on his face.

  But he... sits.

  Then I point to the bloody player. “Bench. Now.”

  He moves immediately.

  Finally, I turn to Kael.

  His eyes drop to my mouth again.

  Then lift, slow, dangerous.

  “Captain,” I say. “You done?”

  His breathing slows. Shoulders drop. The tension bleeds out of him.

  He nods.

  The entire arena exhales.

  And I realize something terrifying.

  They listened to me.

  All of them.

  Kael.

  Atlas.

  Finn.

  Every single one of these massive, muscled, volatile men just obeyed me like I was the one wearing the C on my chest.

  My heart thuds hard against my ribs.

  This job is going to ruin me.

  Or it’s going to set me on fire.

  Chapter 2: Wren

  I don’t realize how badly my hands are shaking until I’m off the ice again.

  The boards slam shut behind me as I step into the tunnel. My breath still comes quick, my body buzzing with leftover adrenaline—and something else I don’t want to name. Not yet.

  Being stared down by three different flavors of dangerous will do that to a girl.

  Kael’s command.

  Finn’s heat.

  Atlas’s raw, coiled violence.

  Most women probably fantasize about a room like that. Me? I’m trying to remember how to breathe.

  I press a hand to my chest and draw in a slow breath.

  In.

  Out.

  Pretend that stepping between a full-on hockey brawl didn’t light a fuse in my blood.

  My pulse hasn’t settled.

  Not because I was scared.

  Because they listened.

  All three of them.

  And that? That scares me far more than a punch to the face ever could.

  The door to the locker room bangs open behind me, voices escalating again. One of the assistant coaches yells something about discipline and fines. Someone else curses.

  Practice isn’t anywhere near done.

  Unfortunately for my anxiety.

  I straighten my shoulders and step back inside.

  The atmosphere changes instantly. A few guys lift their chins at me. One smiles like an apology. Another nods respectfully.

  But three men pull my focus like gravity.

  Finn sits on the bench with his pad half-off, his shirt clinging to his shoulders with sweat. His hair is damp, curling at the ends, cheeks flushed in a way I should not find attractive. He sees me—and his entire face lights up like he’s been waiting.

  Atlas leans against his locker next to him, knuckles bleeding anew, chest rising and falling with leftover rage. He wipes at his mouth with the back of his hand, eyes tracking me like I’m something he can’t decide whether to fight or devour.

  And Kael...

  Kael stands apart from all of them, arms crossed, watching me with an expression I can’t read. Stoic. Controlled. Intense. His gaze drags over me, slow enough to feel, quick enough to make me doubt it happened.

  I break eye contact first.

  Because I need to work.

  Not melt into a puddle at a man looking my way.

  “Finn,” I call softly.

  He perks up instantly. “Say the word and I’ll strip.”

  Atlas groans. “Jesus Christ.”

  I force a straight face. “Let’s keep your pants on for now.”

  “For now,” Finn echoes, grinning as he stands.

  He follows me into the training room like an obedient puppy—which would be endearing if he wasn’t six-one, built like a swimmer, and looking at me like I hung the damn moon.

  I pull gloves on. “Shirt off.”

  He obeys without hesitation, lifting the fabric slowly—slowly enough that I give him a look.

  “What?” he asks innocently. “I’m injured. I can’t rush.”

  “You’re insufferable.”

  “You love it.”

  I ignore that and gesture for him to sit on the table. He does. I step between his knees, lifting his arm to inspect the strain more closely.

  It’s clinical.

  It’s professional.

  It’s—

  Finn inhales sharply.

  His thigh brushes my hip.

  I freeze. “Does that hurt?”

  He smirks faintly. “Which part?”

  I look at him sharply, but he’s watching me with something soft and vulnerable under the teasing.

  For a heartbeat, the room feels warmer. Smaller.

  “Raise your arm,” I say.

  He does. Winces. Muscles ripple under my hands.

  I keep my touch steady.

  “You strained your deltoid. Nothing torn. But you need ice and rest.”

  “Will you stay and supervise?” he asks, voice dropping into something warm and gravelly.

  Before I can respond, a shadow fills the doorway.

  Kael.

  Of course.

  “I need her.” His voice is clipped, controlled. Directed at Finn, not me.

  Finn’s jaw tics. “For what, Captain?”

  Kael’s eyes flick to me. “Atlas.”

  I sigh inwardly. “What did he do now?”

  Kael steps aside so I can walk past him—and I swear, swear, his gaze dips to my mouth for half a second.

  Finn mutters behind me, “You’ve got competition, captain.”

  Kael ignores him but his jaw flexes.

  Oh.

  This is going to be complicated.

  Chapter 3: Kael

  She shouldn’t be here.

  Wren Harper shouldn’t be in my training facility, in my locker room, in my team’s orbit. She definitely shouldn’t be standing so close that I can smell the faint sweetness of her shampoo or hear the quickness of her breathing when she’s flustered.

 

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