He’s my ex, my patient, and the father of the secret I can’t hide.
Jason Maddox is the team’s billion‑dollar star and my walking red flag. I’m the head athletic trainer who’s supposed to keep my hands and my heart far away from him.
Then a late‑night rehab session turns into a fight, that turns into a kiss.
The next morning, management chains me to his travel schedule like we didn’t already cross every line. Suddenly it’s ice baths at midnight, shared hotel suites, and moments where he chooses me over the cameras. The grumpy, impossible man who once shattered me starts showing up in all the ways I used to dream about.
And I feel it—old feelings rising, defenses slipping, rules breaking.
But the world notices. Photos trend, compliance comes knocking, and sponsors sharpen their knives. My badge flashes red while everything I’ve built teeters.
And then I find out I’m pregnant with his baby—the secret that could end my career, wreck his reputation, and destroy us all over again.
The Hockey Trainer’s Secret Baby is a fun, quick romance that delivers plenty of tension and just enough plot to keep you hooked. The story follows Jason, a professional hockey player, and Ryan, his trainer, who share a complicated past involving a relationship that was never condoned. Now forced to work together again, they’re determined to keep things professional, but that’s easier said than done.
Daily interactions, forced proximity, and unavoidable moments of closeness only amplify the lingering chemistry between them, creating plenty of angst and emotional tension. The push-and-pull dynamic is entertaining, and the story does a great job of balancing romance with an actual storyline beyond just the attraction.
If you’re looking for a light, enjoyable romance with strong chemistry, emotional stakes, and enough substance to keep you invested, this book is a great pick.
The plot was fine but the language in which this book was written is making it both difficult to understand what actually happens + it is written either too detailoriented in regards to physioterapy terms or too much like notes. I really can’t recommend Reading it.