The echo of skates scraping ice still rang in Silas Vance's head as he trudged into the locker room. Usually, that jagged rhythm calmed him, reminded him why he endured the pain. Tonight, it felt like a serrated blade dragging across his nerves, leaving raw wounds in its wake.
His broad shoulders sagged under the weight of bruises, sweat, and the suffocating tension of being the NHL's most feared enforcer. Tonight had been a bloodbath. He could still feel the vibration in his knuckles from punching a rival's jaw, the sickening thud of a body slammed against the boards at forty miles per hour. The crowd had roared its approval, hungry for violence. That was his job: be the monster, start the fights, and scare anyone who dared cross the team's star scorers. They got the glory while he collected the scars.
He was the Shield—but tonight, the shield felt cracked, ready to shatter into a thousand irreparable pieces.
Silas peeled off his soaked gloves and pulled free his helmet, ignoring the sharp pain shooting from his cracked ribs to his collarbone. Each breath felt like broken glass grinding against bone. He leaned his forehead against the cold metal of his locker, eyes closed, seeking relief in the chill. Another night, another fight, another reminder that to the world, he was just a weapon. A tool to be used and discarded. No one cared about the man inside the armor. No one ever looked past the scars to see what lay beneath—the exhaustion, the loneliness, the quiet desperation for something more.
"Silas."
The voice was quiet, hesitant, almost like a whisper meant for ghosts rather than men.
He froze mid-motion, muscles coiling instinctively. His eyes scanned the dimly lit room, searching for the source. At first, only the usual chaos greeted him: discarded tape, empty Gatorade bottles, and the sharp scent of liniment hanging heavy in the air. Then, he saw her.
A girl crouched near a bench, carefully wiping a pair of blood-stained pads with deliberate, practiced movements. Her black hoodie was pulled tight, hood up to shadow her hair, and a white medical mask covered the lower half of her face. She looked… unreal. Like an apparition conjured from his exhausted mind.
Silas stared, his pulse quickening despite himself. No one stayed this late. No one ever dared approach him in this state—dark, bleeding, radiating a silent warning that kept even his teammates at a distance. Yet here she was, working with a calm, methodical grace, treating battered equipment as if it were porcelain. As if it mattered. As if she cared.
"Uh… you're bleeding," she said softly, her voice steady, not timid or scared like he'd expected.
Silas didn't move, didn't trust himself to. "I'm fine," he grunted, the edge in his voice usually sending people running. She didn't flinch. Didn't even blink.
"You don't look fine," she countered, tilting her head up to meet his gaze. Her eyes—bright, startling, impossibly clear—pierced through his beastly persona like sunlight through storm clouds. "Do you want me to… clean it? The cut on your cheek is deep. It'll get infected if you leave it."
A part of him, the part used to shouting and swinging fists, wanted to roar at her to back off. To leave him alone with his pain like everyone else did. But another part—the part he hadn't acknowledged in years, the part he'd buried under layers of violence and isolation—felt… seen. Not as a weapon. Not as a stat on a scoreboard. But as a man in pain. A man who needed help.
"Alright," he muttered, sinking onto the wooden bench. His massive frame made the wood groan in protest.
She approached slowly, her movements careful and measured, as if approaching a wounded animal. Her hands moved over the cuts with surprising confidence. Her touch was electric, cool, gentle—everything his world wasn't. She didn't flinch at the bruises on his jaw or the way his muscles rippled with residual tension. She worked silently, acting like a quiet shield against the storm of adrenaline that still throbbed through his veins. For the first time in months, maybe years, Silas felt his shoulders relax slightly.
"What's your name?" he asked, his voice low, weighted with genuine curiosity.
She froze, hand trembling slightly before she pulled back. "Just… Ivy," she whispered, almost too quiet to hear. There was something fragile in the way she said it, as if the name itself might break if spoken too loudly.
"Just Ivy?" His voice was rough, but there was something tender in it, something he hadn't heard from himself in far too long.
She nodded, eyes downcast, shyness overtaking her momentarily. There was a softness there, a hidden depth that made his chest ache in a way no hockey hit ever could. It was the ache of recognition, of finding something precious in the most unexpected place.
"That's fine," Silas said, surprising himself with the gentleness in his tone. "I like Just Ivy."
In that moment, Silas Vance—the man everyone called a beast, a brute, a monster—felt something stir inside. Not rage. Not hunger for a fight. A primitive, terrifying spark of trust. Of hope. Of possibility.
She finished cleaning his wounds, hands steady and careful, and for a moment, they simply looked at each other. No words. No expectations. No demands. Just two people in a world that had only ever demanded brutality from him, and perfection from her. Two people who somehow, impossibly, had found each other in the wreckage.
The sound of footsteps echoed behind her, sharp and deliberate against the concrete floor.
She glanced up, her body tensing. "Who's there?" she asked, her voice steady but low, as if she had been expecting shadows all along.
Silas's jaw tightened, his protective instincts roaring to life. Whoever dared to interrupt this fragile silence, whoever dared to expose her or threaten this unexpected sanctuary, would have to go through him first. And he'd make sure they regretted it.
But the locker room was empty. Silent. Still.
A chill ran down his spine, raising the hair on his arms. Something about the stillness felt wrong. Unnatural. Like the calm before a storm he couldn't see coming.
Ivy looked at him, sensing the shift in the air between them. "You feel it too, don't you?" she murmured, her eyes searching his face.
Silas nodded once, hard and sharp. Something was out there. Watching. Waiting. Biding its time.
He stood, massive and imposing, casting a shadow over her fragile form. The contrast between them was stark—his size and strength against her delicate presence. "Stay close," he warned, his voice dropping to a protective growl. "Don't step out of line, Ivy. Not here. Not now."
Her gaze met his, steady despite the tension crackling through the room. "I'm not afraid of the shadows," she whispered, and he heard the truth in her words. She'd faced darkness before. Perhaps even darker than his own.
A flicker of something dangerous stirred within Silas—admiration, annoyance, fascination—all three emotions swirled through him like a whirlpool, each one fighting for dominance. His jaw tightened as he studied her face, searching for any hint of deception. Could he trust her? The question gnawed at him, persistent and unanswerable. Part of him wanted to believe in her sincerity, in the warmth he'd glimpsed behind her guarded eyes. Yet trust had become a luxury he'd abandoned years ago, buried alongside too many betrayals to count.
His fingers curled into fists at his sides, a physical manifestation of the war raging inside him. She stood there waiting, patient despite the tension crackling between them, and something in her steady gaze made his chest constrict. When had anyone last looked at him that way? Not with fear or calculation, but with genuine recognition of his humanity?
Still, one certainty crystallized through the chaos of his thoughts: whatever darkness awaited them, they would face it together—or not at all. He refused to let her stand alone against the threats lurking in the shadows. Not now. Not after she'd become the first person in years to see past the armor he'd built around himself, to acknowledge the man beneath the scars and suspicion.
And somewhere in the darkness, something was moving. Watching. Waiting for its moment to strike.