LOGINLuca Devereaux has spent twelve seasons building the perfect image. He is the captain of the Chicago Phantoms, a two-time Olympic gold medalist, and the man every sponsor wants on their poster. He is calm under pressure, professional in every interview, and completely untouchable. The only person in the world who has ever made him feel like he might come apart is Ronan Calloway. Ronan is the captain of the Boston Bruins and the league's leading scorer for two straight seasons. He is quiet, intense, and impossible to read. He does not chase drama, he does not play games, But for three years, he has watched Luca with the kind of focus that goes beyond rivalry. He has counted Luca's habits, studied his tells, and waited for the perfect time.. When a brutal championship game collision ends with a nine-second fight broadcast to millions, the world sees the first crack in Luca's perfect armor. But that is nothing compared to what happens after the final whistle, when Ronan locks a locker room door and they are finally, truly alone. What begins as obsession slowly becomes something neither of them has words for. They meet in empty arenas and dark corridors. They push each other away and pull each other back. The hockey world is watching. Management is watching. And somewhere out there, someone is taking photographs. This is a story about two men who have spent years hiding behind control, competition, and composure. And about what happens when the one person who can see through all of it refuses to look away.
View MoreLuca POV
The crowd was so loud I could feel it in my chest before I even stepped onto the ice.
Twenty thousand people packed into the United Center, all of them screaming. Banners waving. Lights cutting through the smoke above the rink. The Chicago Phantoms versus the Boston Bruins, Game Seven of the Eastern Conference Finals. The kind of night that ended careers or made them. The kind of night that got replayed in highlight reels and locker room speeches for the next decade. And I was already bleeding.
I had taped my shoulder myself in the locker room, wrapped it so tight the circulation in my left arm felt like it was working against me. Three weeks ago I had taken a bad hit in Game Four and something had shifted inside the joint, something that grated every time I raised my arm above my head. The team doctor had recommended I sit out. Management had strongly suggested the same. I had smiled at both of them and told them I was fine.
I was not fine.
But losing to Ronan Calloway was not an option I was willing to consider.
I spotted him the moment I glided onto the ice for warm-ups. He was on the far end, moving through drills like he owned the rink, dark hair visible beneath the edge of his helmet. Ronan Calloway, captain of the Boston Bruins, the league's leading scorer for the past two seasons, and the one person on earth who made my pulse do something I did not have a clean name for.
Hatred. I always told myself it was hatred.
He saw me the same moment I saw him. Across fifty feet of ice, through the chaos of warm-ups and crowd noise-flashingcameras, his eyes found mine with the kind of precision that made me want to look away. I did not look away. Neither did he. For a moment the entire arena went somewhere behind us and it was just the ice and the distance between us and whatever that look was made of.
The referee's whistle broke whatever that was.
The game started hard and stayed that way. Ronan was everywhere. Every time I touched the puck, he was already moving to cut off my angle. Every time I found open ice, he appeared at the edge of it. He played me the way a man plays someone he has studied obsessively, every habit anticipated, every tendency predicted. There was nothing accidental about how he moved around me. He had done the homework and he wanted me to know it.
I played him right back.
We collided twice in the first period. Once at the boards, shoulder to shoulder, both of us grinding for position until the whistle forced us apart. Once in front of the net, his stick hooked up my skate as I drove toward the crease. The referee missed it. I said nothing. That was the kind of game this was.
By the second period, my shoulder was screaming.
I knew I should pull myself. I knew what another hard hit could do to a joint already working against me. But we were tied two-two and Ronan was on the ice and the thought of walking to the bench while he watched me leave felt like handing him something I had been refusing to give him for three years.
The hit came in the final minute of the second period.
I had just stripped the puck from a Bruins defender and was cutting hard toward the neutral zone when I heard the ice behind me before I felt him, no whistle, clean hit, technically. His shoulder met mine at full speed and I was airborne before my brain had time to process what had happened.
I hit the barrier so hard the Plexiglas shook.
The crowd went silent in that way crowds do when they are not sure if they just watched something athletic or something awful. I was on one knee, glove off, fingers pressed against the ice to keep myself upright. My shoulder was a white wall of pain. The arena noise came back slowly, like water filling a room.
Then Ronan was crouching in front of me.
Not to help. His voice was low enough that only I could hear it under the noise.
"You look exhausted, Captain. Starting to break already?"
Something inside me cracked open.
I do not fight on the ice. That is not who I am. I have played twelve seasons of professional hockey and in those twelve seasons I have received exactly two fighting majors, both of them in my rookie year when I still had something to prove. I am composed, I am controlled. I am the kind of player who smiles at the camera and taps gloves at the end of a loss and says the right things in post-game interviews. My father built that image and I had maintained it for over a decade because it was the only version of myself I was allowed to be in public.
I dropped my gloves.
The fight lasted nine seconds before linesmen pulled us apart. Nine seconds that were broadcast on every major sports network and clipped and shared and dissected before the period was even over. In the footage, you can see the moment it happens. Ronan does not even look surprised. He looks almost satisfied, like he had been waiting for exactly this, like he had known that one sentence in the right voice at the right moment would finally break something I had spent years keeping intact.
The third period was a funeral for my season.
Ronan scored twice. The second goal came from a play I should have read, a pass I should have intercepted, a moment where my injured shoulder slowed my reach by a quarter of a second and that quarter of a second was everything. The puck hit the back of the net and the arena erupted and somewhere in that explosion of noise I felt my stick snap in my hands.
I stared at the two halves of it like they had something to tell me.
Final score: Boston four, Chicago two.
I did not speak in the locker room. I sat at my stall while teammates moved around me with the careful silence of people who did not know what to say, stripped off my equipment piece by piece, and tried to locate something inside myself that felt like composure. There was nothing there. Just the hollow sound of a season ending and the memory of Ronan's voice, low and precise, choosing the one thing that would work.
By the time the room emptied, I was alone.
I turned off the overhead lights. I preferred the dark when things were this bad. Easier to just sit in it without anyone reading my face. I was still in my skates, elbow on my knee, staring at the floor, when I heard the door open behind me.
I did not move.
"You made me chase you all season, Captain."
Ronan's voice came from somewhere behind me and unhurried like a man who had nowhere else to be.
Then I heard the locker room door lock..
Sienna ValeI had done my research before I agreed to anything. That was the first thing people always underestimated about me. The smile, the lifestyle content, the carefully curated aesthetic of someone who made everything look effortless. People looked at all of that and decided I was decorative. It was one of the most useful misunderstandings of my life.I knew who Luca Devereaux was before Diane Marsh called me. I knew his stats, his public image, his sponsorship portfolio, and the specific narrative problem currently attached to his name. I had watched the exhibition game clip three times, not because I was curious about the gossip but because I wanted to understand exactly what I was being asked to walk into.The arrangement made sense for both of us. My partnership deal with Vertex Sports Nutrition was contingent on demonstrating meaningful reach in the professional sports space. Two appearances alongside one of the NHL's most recognizable captains would do more for that metri
LucaI was in the middle of a passing drill when Marcus appeared at the boards and held up two fingers. That was our signal. Someone was waiting who could not be made to wait.I skated off and handed my stick to the equipment manager and followed Marcus down the corridor without asking who it was. I already knew the walk. The particular way Marcus moved when he was delivering news he did not want to deliver, shoulders slightly forward, eyes ahead.Diane Marsh was standing in my office.Not sitting. Standing, which meant she had not been there long enough to get comfortable and also meant she did not intend to be comfortable. She was in a charcoal blazer with her dark hair pulled back and a leather folder under one arm, and she was looking at my wall of team photographs with the expression of someone who had already decided how the next thirty minutes were going to go."Diane," I said. "You could have called.""I did call." She turned from the wall. "Twice. You didn't pick up."I pulle
RonanI drove home with both hands on the wheel and the radio off. That was how I knew something had shifted. I always drove with music. It was the one habit I had carried from my rookie year, something about filling the space between the game and the person I had to be by morning. But tonight I needed the silence because the silence was the only place I could put what was happening inside my chest without it spilling somewhere I could not clean up.The tunnel kiss had not felt like a victory. That was the part I had not prepared for. I had imagined, in the abstract, logical way I planned everything, that if Luca ever closed the distance between us the feeling would be something I could categorize. Relief, maybe. Or satisfaction, the way you feel when a play you designed finally works on the ice the way it worked in your head.It was not that. It was enormous. That was the only word that fit. The moment his mouth found mine it was like something that had been compressed for three year
POV: LucaI stepped back first. My shoulder hit the cold concrete wall and I used the pain to anchor myself, to pull back into the version of myself that knew how to think clearly. Ronan did not move immediately. He stood in the middle of the corridor with his hands loose at his sides and his breathing slower than mine, and I hated him a little for that. For the fact that whatever had just happened had not visibly cracked anything in him the way it had cracked something in me.The figure was gone. The far end of the tunnel was empty, just shadow and the distant sound of the building settling around us.Neither of us spoke. I looked at the exit where the figure had been. I measured the distance with my eyes the way I measured angles on the ice, calculating, sorting, trying to build something useful out of a situation that was already moving in a direction I could not fully control."We should go," I said.My voice came out flat, which was what I wanted.Ronan looked at me for a moment.





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