Page 20 of Resting Pitch Face


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It wasn’t much. Just a shadow behind the eyes. But it was there.

The brush of vulnerability.

And suddenly, I didn’t feel quite so victorious.

Maybe I’d gone in swinging. Maybe I’d been so focused on the sound bite, on the viral moment, that I hadn’t stopped to ask whether I was throwing punches or pressing on bruises.

I closed the tablet and stared at the dashboard, my heart still hammering—just not from anger anymore.

Kieren Walker was still a jerk. Still defensive. Still exhausting.

But maybe that interview hadn’t been about ego.

Maybe it was about fear.

And maybe—I hadn’t just walked into an interview.

Maybe I’d walked into a man unraveling at the seams.

And I hadn’t even realized it.

By the time I got back to my apartment, my makeup was smudged, my ponytail was falling out, and my heels felt like medieval torture devices.

I kicked the door closed behind me, tossed my keys in the dish, and immediately beelined for the couch. My bag slid off my shoulder and hit the floor with a dramatic thump. I collapsed onto the cushions like I’d just returned from war.

Because I had.

Verbal warfare, anyway.

God, Kieren Walker was impossible.

Not difficult. Not mildly annoying.

Impossible.

I was still running through every awful thing he’d said when my phone rang.

My producer’s name flashed across the screen.

I winced. Sat up. Answered.

“Hey.”

“I watched the footage,” she said, her voice unreadable.

I braced myself. “Do I still have a job?”

There was a pause.

“Depends.”

I closed my eyes. “Oh, no.”

“Can you do it again next week?”

I blinked. “Wait—what?”

“Another sit-down. Same setup. Maybe pre-game or post-practice. Think of it as a recurring segment.”