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My glove dropped to my side as I skated back to position, tossing the puck to the next shooter before resetting.

"You on mute today, Callahan?" Grady called from the circle.

"Saving it for game day," I said, tone tight.

They laughed. They didn’t notice.

Coach blew the whistle and sent them into a two-on-one drill. I tracked the forwards, reading the play. They were fast, but I was faster, until I wasn’t. I slid too far on the initial push and had to snap my pad back to recover. I made the save, but it was tight. Sloppy.

"Bit jumpy," Grady muttered as he skated past.

I didn’t answer.

I wasn’t jumpy. I was bracing.

Waiting for the hit that might not come. Preparing for the loss before it happened. Playing safe. Too safe. My angles were tighter, my stance deeper, like I was trying to shrink inside my own armor.

The next shot came high and clean. I didn’t challenge it. Just let it come to me. Safe. Contained. Controlled.

But it wasn’t how I played when I was on.

I used to trust the reads. Trust the rhythm. Now I was trying to out-think everything, and I was tired.

Coach skated over. "You're getting the job done, but you're not loose. You alright?"

I gave him a nod. "Yeah. I just have to dial it in more."

Coach’s eyes narrowed, just a touch. His mouth stayed flat, unreadable. The pause was long enough to say he didn’t buy it. "Cool down after the last drill. Then hit the showers."

The guys ran a passing sequence. I tracked, reset, tracked again. Then Mac fired a ridiculous no-look backhand. It had zero business being on net.

It went in. Clean.

The bench howled.

"Big-Mac delivers again! " someone shouted. "You gonna sign that puck for him?"

I forced a smirk. Raised my glove in mock surrender and tossed the puck to Mac.

“Guess I’m just here to make you look good, Mac.”

A couple of guys laughed. Mac grinned.

Croc barked a laugh, “Look at Callahan, handing out compliments.”

Someone thumped the boards.

The laughter echoed, then thinned. Sticks scraped. Skates turned. The guys were still chirping, still loud.

I reset in the crease, eyes on the next shooter.

But my gut twisted.

Not because I missed it. Because I knew exactly why I did.

I was expecting the logical shot, the structured one. The one that made sense. I wasn’t ready for improvisation.

Just like with Claire.