LOGINHe is everything she despises arrogant, brutal, and worshipped for the violence he delivers on the ice. Atticus Finch is the league’s most feared hockey star, a man who wins games with clenched fists and a heart carved from ice. Sheila Feint wants nothing to do with him. She sees the ego behind the fame, the rage behind the smile, the destruction he leaves in his wake. And Atticus? He can’t stand her defiance, her sharp tongue, the way she looks at him like he’s nothing more than a headline waiting to implode. Forced into close proximity by fate and circumstance, their hatred burns hotter than rivalry. Every argument crackles with tension. Every glare lingers too long. Somewhere between verbal wars, bruised pride, and moments they refuse to name, the line between enemy and something far more dangerous begins to blur. But loving your enemy comes at a price. Because if Atticus lets her in, he risks exposing the darkness he’s spent years hiding. And if Sheila gives in, she might fall for the one man capable of destroying everything she believes in. On the ice, Atticus Finch never loses. But with Sheila Feint… love might be the most brutal game he’s ever played.
View MoreSheila Feint hated Atticus Finch, that first time she saw him. It wasn’t the way he looked although he was tall enough to make people feel small, and built like someone who had never met a limit. And it wasn't even that he carried himself like he owned the ice, the arena and every person in it. It was his presence demanding attention without asking for it. Sheila hated that. She had come to the rink for one reason only: an internship assignment to watch players perform and track injury patterns in their performance for a sports science study. Nothing dramatic. No fanfare. No headlines. And definitely no famous hockey star. But her supervisor had already warned her before she even walked into the building. “Don’t let him intimidate you,” the supervisor had said in half-amused, half-serious tones. “Atticus Finch has a reputation.” Sheila’s only response was a nod, because she never believed in reputations. She had faith in facts and figures and evidence. She passed through the hallway in the direction of the training room, clipboard in hand and shoes squeaking softly on the shiny floor. Somewhere in the distance beyond the doors the sound of skates on ice echoed. Like a warning, the heavy smell of sweat and metal wafted through the air. That’s when she saw him. Atticus Finch, half-unzipped jersey, tape wrapped around his wrists, stood near the locker room entrance. His hair was damp, his eyes sharp, his expression unreadable as if always calculating, always judging. He looked like a man who never needed anyone. Sheila felt her skin prick. She stopped, making herself breathe the way it should. She did not want to be seen as nervous. She didn’t want to indicate that he impacted her. He looked up, as if feeling her gaze. Their eyes met. Not in a romantic way. Not in a “fate” kind of way. In a way like being stared down by a predator. Atticus's lips curled into a small, mocking smile. “Are you lost?” he said, voice low and calm. As if he were questioning a child about whether they needed directions. Sheila didn’t blink. ”No. I’m exactly where I’m supposed to be.” His eyes narrowed. “You sure about that?” Sheila lifted her chin. “Why? Because I’m not here to worship you?” His smile disappeared. “You’re not here to do what?” Sheila’s jaw tightened. “To stand here and act like you’re the only important thing in this building.” Atticus approached her and the scar on his eyebrow was visible. He didn’t touch her. He didn’t need to. His proximity was a warning in itself. “You don’t know who you’re talking to,” he said. Sheila didn’t flinch. “I know exactly whom I’m addressing. A man who thinks he can intimidate everyone with a name.” Atticus’s eyes flashed with what looked like anger. Then he laughed, a short, quick sound that didn’t reach his eyes. “Big mouth,” he said. Sheila met his gaze evenly. “And you’re arrogant.” Sheila took a step closer. "You don't belong here." “I belong wherever I’m allowed to be.” Atticus’s voice dropped. “You don’t want to be on my bad side.” Sheila’s voice stayed steady. “I’m not afraid of you.” The silence that followed was heavy. Atticus looked at her as if he was considering whether she would be worth his time or worth his hate. Then he finally stepped back, as if he’d decided she would be annoying rather than dangerous. “Stay out of my way,” he said, turning toward the rink. Watching him go, and for the first time in more than seven seconds, she felt something she didn't want to feel. Curiosity. She quickly pushed it away, focused on the clipboard she was holding in her hand, forced herself to remember why she had come here. Sheila Feint didn't get involved with famous athletes. She didn't fall for them. She didn't let herself be drawn into their world. She was here to study the game, not the man. And if Atticus Finch thought she’d be intimidated or impressed by him, he was mistaken. Because she hated him. And she was going to prove it.
The stadium lights were bright, cutting through the late afternoon haze, casting long shadows across the ice. The crowd’s energy buzzed like electricity, fans waving banners and chanting, their voices swelling into a roar that felt almost tangible. After weeks of chaos, betrayal, and uncertainty, today was different. Today, Atticus would skate again—not just for himself, but for everyone who had stood by him, and most importantly, for Sheila.Sheila stood near the edge of the rink, her hands clasped tightly together, heart hammering so loudly she feared it might echo over the cheers. She had seen him through the worst of it—false accusations, media attacks, manipulative forces trying to tear them apart—but now, seeing him in full uniform, the team ready at his side, she felt a warmth spreading through her chest. Relief, pride, love—all mingled into a knot that made her almost dizzy.Then he appeared through the tunnel.Atticus’s strides were purposeful, his posture straight, the famil
The city finally felt quiet.Not the heavy, suffocating silence that had haunted Sheila for months—but something softer. Lighter. Like the air itself had exhaled.The courthouse chaos, the press conference, the team reinstatement—it had all happened so fast. Too fast for her heart to fully catch up. Now, standing in the middle of the apartment living room with the evening skyline glowing outside the windows, she felt the aftermath settling into her bones.“They’re in custody,” she whispered again, almost like she needed to hear it out loud.Atticus stood behind her, arms sliding slowly around her waist. His chin rested on her shoulder.“They’re not running,” he murmured. “They’re not hiding.”She closed her eyes.“And you’re back.”He smiled faintly against her skin. “I never really left.”She turned in his arms then, studying him. There was something different about him tonight. The tension he’d carried for so long—like an invisible weight pressing against his shoulders—had eased.“Y
The call came at 5:52 a.m.Sheila had barely slept. Too many questions still echoed in her mind. Too many emotions from the night before—truths about adoption, stolen identity, betrayal layered over grief.Her phone vibrated against the nightstand.Unknown number.Her stomach twisted.Atticus stirred beside her. “Who is it?”“I don’t know.”She answered slowly. “Hello?”“Ms. Sheila?” The voice was firm. Official. “This is Inspector Morales from Border Security. We believe you’ll want to hear this personally.”Her heart began pounding so loudly she could barely hear.“Yes?”“There was an attempted departure at the northern border checkpoint at 4:18 a.m. Two individuals traveling under falsified passports. Susan Hale and Richard Hale.”The room felt like it tilted.“They—what?”“They were detained while attempting to cross into Canada. The passports were fraudulent. They’ve been arrested.”Her breath left her in a broken sound.Alive.They were alive.Her so-called parents.The ones who
Sheila couldn’t breathe.The name still echoed in her ears.“Mae.”Not Sheila.Mae.The woman in front of her trembled, one hand gripping the doorframe as if the world might spin out from under her at any second. Her eyes—identical in shape to Sheila’s—filled with tears so quickly it felt unreal.“You…” the woman whispered, voice breaking. “You’re alive.”The words made no sense.Sheila’s chest tightened. “Alive?”The woman covered her mouth, tears spilling freely now.From somewhere inside the house, a man’s voice called out, “Clara? Who is it?”Footsteps approached.A tall man with streaks of gray in his hair appeared behind her. He stopped short when he saw Sheila.Time froze.His gaze locked onto her face.The air left his lungs in a sharp, broken exhale.“No,” he breathed.Atticus stepped slightly closer to Sheila, protective but silent.The man took one hesitant step forward.“It can’t be…”Sheila’s voice shook. “Do you… know me?”The woman—Clara—let out a soft sob.“We searched
The sunlight that followed the rain didn’t last long.By late afternoon, the sky had returned to its dull gray color, matching the uneasy calm that had settled between Atticus and Sheila. After spending hours at the park, talking in slow, careful words, he had insisted on walking her home. She had
The apartment felt too quiet after the call ended. Sheila stood in the center of her living room, the folded press release still clutched tightly in her hand. The words blurred together the longer she stared at them, but the damage they promised remained crystal clear. Career sabotage. Public hu
The rain hadn’t stopped by the time Sheila finally fell asleep.It tapped relentlessly against her windows, a steady rhythm that felt less like weather and more like a countdown. She hadn’t meant to drift off on the couch, but exhaustion had pulled her under somewhere between rereading Carter’s pre
The apartment smelled faintly of chamomile and rain.Sheila hadn’t realized how cold she was until the door shut behind Atticus and the warmth of her living room wrapped around her soaked clothes like a sudden, suffocating embrace. Water dripped steadily from her sleeves onto the hardwood floor, fo






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