Page 23 of Pride and Pregame


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"Been covering him since his rookie year," Peterson continued. "Smart player, probably overthinks everything. Not exactly media-friendly, but he's consistent—says little, plays well, stays out of trouble." He paused. "Your coverage has a particular angle on him."

It wasn't a question, but the implication was clear. Libby chose her words carefully.

"I'm still forming my impressions."

"Mmm," Peterson nodded. "Well, word of advice from someone who's been around this team a while—D'Arcy's not as simple as he seems. Neither better nor worse, just... complicated." He gestured toward the exit where Liam was speaking quietly with a facility staff member, his expression animated in a way it never was with media. "Might be worth looking beyond the obvious narrative."

Before Libby could respond, Peterson moved away, leaving her to consider his words. The "obvious narrative" was exactly what Wickham had provided—privileged heir using family influence to control the team. But what she'd observed that morning in the skills session suggested something different.

She gathered her things, heading toward the media room to retrieve her bag. The main corridor was crowded with players heading out, their post-practice routines complete. As she rounded the corner to the narrower hallway leading to the media facilities, she found her path blocked by a group of players still in their post-shower team gear, discussing dinner plans.

Liam stood at the center of the group, his hair still damp and curling slightly at the nape of his neck. The fitted Steeltraining shirt clung in ways that his usual suits never did, outlining the athletic build that professional hockey demanded. Her traitorous mind supplied the memory of that build without the shirt—the locker room glimpse that had been seared into her brain despite her best efforts to forget it. Varlenko was saying something about a steakhouse, while two other players debated the merits of Italian instead.

"Excuse me," Libby said, trying to edge past.

The group shifted, but four professional hockey players took up considerable space even in the facility's wide corridor. She turned sideways to slip through the gap they'd created, which brought her face-to-face with Liam, barely six inches between them.

Time seemed to slow. She could smell his soap—something clean and expensive—mixed with a scent that was uniquely him. A drop of water from his still-damp hair had traced a path down his neck, disappearing beneath his collar. His eyes, this close, were intensely green with darker flecks she'd never noticed from a distance. They widened slightly at her proximity, his pupils dilating in a way that had nothing to do with the hallway's lighting.

Neither of them moved. Neither of them breathed. The conversation around them became white noise as they stood frozen, caught in a moment of pure physical awareness. Libby's heart hammered against her ribs, every nerve ending suddenly, blazingly alive. She saw his throat work as he swallowed, saw his gaze drop—just for an instant—to her mouth before snapping back to her eyes.

Then she forced herself to move, sliding past him with a murmured "Sorry," her body brushing against his for one electric second. She didn't look back, but she heard Varlenko say something in Russian that made the other players laugh—something that sounded distinctly teasing.

Her hands were shaking slightly as she retrieved her bag, her skin still tingling from that brief contact.Professional, she reminded herself firmly.You are a professional covering a professional sports team. Nothing more.

Her phone buzzed with a text from Reid:

Sully Reid

Good work on today's coverage. Your analysis piece is getting social media traction. Keep pushing.

Attached was a screenshot of the Herald's website showing her latest article as the most-read sports story, with a comments section full of engaged discussion.

Sully Reid

Editorial meeting tomorrow morning. Be ready to pitch playoff series coverage ideas.

Professional validation felt good, especially after the initial dismissal from her press colleagues. Libby pocketed her phone with a small smile of satisfaction. Whatever the truth about Liam D'Arcy, her coverage was hitting the mark with readers.

As the media room emptied, Libby found herself alone with her notebook, weighing conflicting impressions. Liam with rookies versus Liam with media. Wickham's damning account versus Jane's positive assessment. The cold public figure versus the glimpses of something more complex beneath.

"Still working?"

Libby looked up to find Jane in the doorway, changed from her clinical gear into casual clothes.

"Just organizing notes," Libby replied. "Your boyfriend gives good tips, by the way. That skills session was illuminating."

"He's not my—" Jane began, then sighed. "Chase thought you might appreciate seeing a different side of the team."

"I did," Libby admitted. "Though I'm still processing what I saw."

Jane settled into the chair beside her. "Which was?"

"D'Arcy being actually human with the rookies. Patient, engaged, even remembering personal details about their families." She shook her head. "Completely different from his media persona."

"Maybe that suggests something about why he's different with media," Jane said gently.

"Or maybe he was putting on a show because he knew I was watching," Libby countered.