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Sheila 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.
Atticus Finch had kissed a lot of people.Fans. Strangers. People whose names he forgot before the night was over. Kissing had never meant anything to him just another transaction, another way to keep control, to keep distance disguised as intimacy.So the fact that he wanted to kiss Sheila Feint badly, relentlessly, stupidly felt like a flaw in his system.And flaws were unacceptable.He noticed it first during drills.She stood at the edge of the rink, coat pulled tight against the cold, tablet in hand. Focused. Always focused. She barely looked at him, except when she needed to. No starstruck awe. No fear. No fake smiles. Just observation sharp enough to slice through bone.Atticus missed a shot.The puck slammed into the boards instead of the net. A rare mistake. The rink went quiet for half a second before the drills resumed.Sheila didn’t react. She just wrote something down.That annoyed him more than if she’d stared.“Again,” he barked.His body moved on instinct, muscles burn
The locker room corridor smelled like disinfectant and adrenaline, a sterile attempt to mask the violence of competition. Sheila stood just outside the threshold, tablet pressed against her chest, heartbeat syncing with the distant thud of skates against concrete. Practice had ended ten minutes ago. The team should have been flooding out by now, laughing, shouting, tearing off gear.They weren’t.The silence was wrong.Sheila checked her watch, then the practice schedule. Everything was on time. Atticus Finch, however, was not a man who followed schedules unless they bent to his will.She stepped forward.The locker room door was half open. Steam rolled out, fogging her glasses. Inside, most of the stalls were empty. Helmets rested upside down like abandoned crowns. Atticus stood alone near his locker, shirtless, back to her, shoulders rigid as if carved from stone. A thin line of red traced down his ribs—fresh, angry.She stopped breathing.“I thought analysts weren’t allowed back he
The storm broke quietly. No alarms. No press swarm. No screaming headlines splashed across Sheila Feint’s phone when she woke up the next morning. Just a single notification that sat there like a loaded weapon. Unknown Sender: We should talk. Today. Sheila stared at it for a long moment, heart thudding against her ribs. She hadn’t replied last night. She’d needed sleep. Space. Time to convince herself that ignoring problems made them less real. It hadn’t worked. She rolled out of bed, muscles tense, mind already racing through worst-case scenarios. Carter. Media. Leaks. Or something worse something that involved Atticus Finch more deeply than she’d already been dragged. By the time she reached the arena, she’d made a decision. She wasn’t running. The parking lot buzzed with early-morning activity. Equipment trucks. Trainers hauling bags. Players moving in clusters, laughing too loudly. Everything looked normal. That was the problem. Sheila had learned by now that normal was c
The first rule Sheila learned was simple.Nothing happened in the open.The second was worse.Everything was deliberate.By midweek, the arena felt less like a workplace and more like a board set up by unseen hands. Conversations stopped when she passed. Staff smiled too carefully. Security lingered just long enough to remind her they were watching not protecting.And Atticus Finch?He was everywhere.Not physically close. Never hovering. But always present.On the ice, he played like a man trying to outrun something chasing him. Off it, he barely spoke. When he did, it was clipped, sharp, and laced with warning.They hadn’t talked alone since the office incident.Which meant the tension had nowhere to go.Until it snapped.It happened during film review.Sheila stood at the front of the room, remote in hand, footage paused mid-frame. Atticus was frozen on the screen—torso twisted, shoulder strained, jaw clenched.She took a breath. “This angle here,” she said evenly, “shows delayed r
Sheila didn’t sleep.Every time she closed her eyes, she saw the message.Stop digging.The words burned into her mind, looping over and over, like a threat whispered directly into her ear. She lay on her back, staring at the ceiling, listening to the faint hum of the city outside her apartment window. Every sound felt louder. Every shadow felt deliberate.By morning, she was exhausted but sharper.Fear had a way of doing that.She arrived at the arena earlier than usual, hoping the quiet would steady her nerves. It didn’t. The building felt awake already, humming with something restless and alert, like it was holding its breath.She scanned in, nodded at security, and moved quickly toward the analysis room.That was when she noticed it.The door to her office was slightly open.She stopped.Her pulse spiked.She was certain she had locked it the night before.She stood there for a moment, debating whether to turn around and call someone. But the thought of looking weak of confirming
Sheila looked at Atticus for just an instant too long. It felt like the walls were closing around her, the room smaller. There was tension in the air, the kind that prickle your skin and took too much air. Atticus had his arms at his sides, stiff like a man who didn’t want to be weak. Coach Rivera’s eyes shifted within between them as if he were witnessing a match. The silence stretched. Then Atticus spoke. “Why are you here?” he said again, but his voice had no resemblance. It had turned sharper, colder a blade. Sheila swallowed hard. She didn’t want to answer. Not because she didn’t have anything to say, but because she knew what she said would be used against her. Still, she held her ground. "I'm here because I was assigned," she explained. "And because I'm doing my job." Atticus just gave a slight lip curl, a smile, but not a full-throated one. “Your job,” he said again, as if he was sniffing the words. Sheila felt anger flare. “I’m not your enemy,” she said. “I’m not your target







