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  Axel heard the unspoken ultimatum. Sign now or you’re not a team player. Or worse—benched.

  He hadn’t risen up out of a Helsinki ghetto to play on a championship-quality team only to be sidelined now. He’d have to find a way to protect his Stateside foster family from his past if—when—it came calling. Swallowing hard, he picked up the pen his coach had cast aside.

  Carefully, he inked his Anglicized name on the appearance waiver, knowing damn well that Axel Rankin wasn’t far enough from Akseli Rankinen to fool anyone back home. He was sure his old motorcycle gang kept tabs on him. Waiting for the right moment to call in a favor or blackmail the hell out of him. He figured the only reason they’d waited this long was to ensure his net worth went up along with his newfound success.

  “Good man,” Nico Cesare assured him, snagging the signed agreement before Axel changed his mind. “You did well in practice this morning. I’ve got you on the starting line tomorrow night.”

  Hard-won praise from a notoriously tough critic. Too bad Axel’s gut was too full of lead to enjoy the props.

  “I won’t let you down,” he promised, always willing to sacrifice his body to the game. Hockey had helped haul his ass out of the crap life he’d had back home, so he gave it one hundred percent in return.

  He just hoped the filmmaking didn’t steal his focus, because now he’d have a whole lot more to think about than lofting the Stanley Cup over his head. Stalking toward the exit, Axel planned to head home and make a few inquiries right away. But as he pulled open the heavy glass-and-steel door, his coach called to him.

  “Axel?”

  Turning, he paused with one foot out in the hall.

  “Yeah?”

  “The film crew arrived this afternoon.” The coach’s level gaze gave away nothing. “The director wants to start meeting the team members as soon as possible. You could give it the old stick in the eye and just get it over with. She’s set up camp in the conference room.”

  “She?” Axel tried to weigh what that meant. “We’re being followed night and day by a chick?”

  He wasn’t some backwoods misogynist or anything, but then again, he wasn’t a fan of females in the locker room. And hey, to be fair, he wouldn’t have taken up journalism and expected free access to the ladies’ showers if he was following a women’s sport. If he had, maybe he would have been in a whole different career field.

  “Her name is Jennifer Hunter. And she looked female to me.” The coach grinned, the expression increasing the twist of his nose in a face that could only have belonged to a hockey player. “The good news is, I got the impression she really doesn’t want to be here any more than we want a New York filmmaker in our business. So who knows, maybe she’ll turn in a lame, half-baked assignment and we’ll all get off easy.”

  It was the first bit of good news Axel had received since hearing about the monthlong documentary special.

  “I could do some reconnaissance and see what I can find out. In fact, maybe I could go meet her right now.” He’d do it before he hit the showers. The smell of unwashed hockey equipment alone could send grown men to their knees. What woman would be able to stand the stench inside an enclosed space like the conference room?

  “You’re going to make a hell of a first impression, Rankin.” Thankfully, the coach didn’t seem too upset about that.

  Which reaffirmed the message—win as a team, lose as a team.

  Sometimes, the role of a hockey defenseman was to throw down the gloves and pick the fight to protect his teammates. Axel’s responsibility wasn’t all that different now. He’d find out a little more about Jennifer Hunter and see why she didn’t want to be here. Then he’d make sure she remembered those reasons daily until she packed her camera and left.

  That was plan B, and he liked it as a backup. But right now, he’d go with his A game. Charming the socks off the film director by introducing her to the fragrant reality of life in the locker room….

  2

  “WHERE THE HELL IS THE director lady who’s supposed to be in the conference room?”

  Filmmaker Jennifer Hunter hid a smile as she eavesdropped on the two-hundred-and-fifty-pound human bullhorn clanging around the hallways of the Phantoms’ practice rink in ice skates with a pair of rubber guards on the blades.

  The player searching for her had been hammering on the conference room door for two minutes before he started stomping toward the administration offices, his sweaty face glowering. He seemed to have cornered a trainer to demand Jennifer’s whereabouts. She—the missing director in question—simply folded her arms on the cold steel railing that circled the practice rink, feeling no great need to identify herself to some self-important player who hadn’t even seen fit to pull off his helmet before introducing himself.

  Besides, from the ominous tone in the behemoth’s voice, she guessed the player wasn’t any more enthused about meeting her than she’d been about meeting him. Them. Anyone on the Phantoms’ hockey team.

  Because, as an activist for social change through her art, Jennifer didn’t think affluent athletes were going to make for interesting subjects.

  “I’m not sure, Axel,” replied the young trainer in matching blue-and-white sweats bearing the team’s logo. He flung a clean towel over the player’s shoulder and clapped him on the back. “I’ll go find out. If you want to hit the showers, I can have an answer by the time you’re on the massage table.”

  Tucked behind a post supporting the high, Plexiglas roof that allowed light to flood the rink, Jennifer wasn’t surprised the athletes had celebrity services at their fingertips. It did surprise her that the thick-shouldered player wearing jersey number sixty-eight shrugged aside the offer.

  “That’s okay, Ken,” the other man responded, his deep voice matching the fierce expression on his angular face. Thick, dark stubble didn’t hide one heavily scarred cheek. His accent made her want to listen to him speak for a long time so she could trace the cadences and vowel sounds. “I’ll go ask Nico… Oh, there he is now.”

  Crap. Jennifer tore her gaze away from the he-man hunky player as the head coach emerged from an office nearby. Not wanting to be drawn out of hiding like a skulking teen since this was an important assignment even if she resented it, Jennifer strode boldly toward the group. She kept her eye on Nico Cesare instead of disgruntled number sixty-eight. The trainer excused himself, leaving her with the looming player and his coach.

  “I hope you don’t mind that I’m making myself comfortable around the rink, Coach.” Smiling, she adjusted a camera strap on her shoulder as if to suggest she’d been busy taking pictures. “You’ve got an impressive facility here.”

  As she neared the men, she gained some perspective on their size. Nico Cesare had been seated when she’d been shown into his office, but now he stood beside his player and she could see he’d probably played the game at one time if his height was any indication. The other man—Axel, the trainer had called him—was positively mammoth. Even without the skates he must be at least six-foot-five. His chest was broad enough that she could have lain on him like a bed and had room to roll around.

  An odd image considering the moment. Thankfully, she was saved from developing that thought any further as the scent of pungent male sweat assailed her nostrils. The whole rink smelled of hockey equipment, in fact. She’d seen the massive fans in the locker areas that circulated fresh air, but she’d guess no amount of wind power would freshen up a place built on undiluted testosterone.

  “I would have given you a tour if I’d known you wanted to see the place right away, Ms. Hunter,” the coach returned coolly. “I’ve got some business to take care of, but at least let me introduce our best defenseman, Akseli Rankinen, a Finnish import we know around here as Axel Rankin. Axel, this is Jennifer Hunter, who will be a fixture around the team for the next month to film a documentary series.”

  The coach excused himself, leaving her alone with Axel. Hello, awkward moment. What did a woman do when faced with the man who’d caugh