The transition from the suite to the locker room was like stepping into a furnace of testosterone and ancient, lupine power.
As the six Alphas filed into the Team Locker Room, the air grew thick with the scent of pine, musk, and the metallic tang of the coming hunt. They moved with a synchronized, predatory grace, shedding their civilian layers until the room was a gallery of lethal, sculpted muscle. Mateo Cruz slapped a hand against his midsection, feeling the iron-hard ridges of his abdominal wall. Even during the brief summer lull, he hadn't lost an ounce of his enforcer’s edge. At 6’5”, Mateo was built to be a walking barricade on the ice, a mountain of meat and fury designed to crush anyone foolish enough to challenge the pack's territory.
There was a frantic, hungry energy vibrating through the squad. This wasn't just the usual pre-season jitters; it was a collective snarl directed at the administration. They wanted to win, but more than that, they wanted to prove that they didn't need a handler. They wanted to shove their success down the owner’s throat—and perhaps show Lyon Navarro exactly what a Stormbreaker’s "pride" felt like in person.
"You really marked your territory in there, Rafael," Logan Hayes remarked, leaning against his locker. Logan was the pack's fastest hunter, a winger who lived for the blur of the chase. "Did you see his face when you staked your claim? I couldn't tell if he wanted to bolt for the exit or drop to the floor and start worshipping."
Mateo exhaled a sharp breath. He trusted Logan with his life on the ice, but the man’s mouth was a liability.
"The point is," Rafael said, already down to his briefs as he prepared to suit up, "he needs to understand that we aren't domestic pets. He can play his games in the press, but in this room, there are consequences for crossing the pack."
"He's a fine-looking specimen, though," Adrian Knox drawled, a wicked glint in his eyes. Adrian, the team’s most unpredictable defenseman, was currently adjusting a cowboy hat that looked absurdly out of place next to his hockey pads. "The way those slacks hugged him... makes a wolf want to do more than just growl."
"Enough," Mateo snapped, the sound of his locker door slamming shut echoing like a gunshot. He didn't want to hear it. He didn't want to think about Lyon’s sharp, observant eyes or the way the man’s throat had worked when he tried to maintain his composure. Mateo loathed the journalist—especially after Lyon’s report on a barroom scuffle at the Neon Wave Club had cost him three months of the season. Lyon had painted him as a mindless brute when he’d actually been defending a pack-mate.
"Whatever," Brandon Pierce grunted, his voice a low vibration. "I’d still take a bite."
Viktor Petrov, the massive goalie from across the sea, paused while unbuckling his gear. "He’s changed," Viktor noted, his accent thick and cold. "He didn't use to carry himself with that much... heat."
"Who cares?" Mateo growled. "The only thing I want from that man is a reckoning."
By now, the six of them were completely stripped, standing as a raw display of athletic dominance in the steaming heat of the locker room. Adrian joked that if the hockey career folded, they could probably make a fortune on a private feed, and looking around at the sheer amount of prime muscle in the room, he wasn't wrong.
"Don't worry," Rafael said, his voice carrying the effortless authority of a true Alpha. "You saw him. He’s fascinated by the danger. We’ll all get our turn to show him exactly what he’s dealing with."
Suddenly, the heavy door flew open.
"Which one of you thieves has my—"
Lyon Navarro’s voice cut through the air like a blade, but he stopped dead in his tracks. He had stormed in on a mission of fury, but he found himself standing in the center of a den of six naked, glistening gods.
Lyon wasn't some naive waif; he’d seen his share of men. But he had never seen anything that compared to the physical perfection of the Stormbreakers' starting lineup. It was a sensory overload of bronze skin, corded muscle, and heavy, resting power. A sudden, traitorous heat bloomed in Lyon’s chest, spreading downward as his breath hitched. He had spent years writing about these men, but seeing the legends in the flesh—entirely in the flesh—was a different reality altogether.
Mateo was the first to react. He shifted his weight, widening his stance to ensure Lyon took in every inch of his 6’5” frame. "What do you want now, Navarro?"
Lyon took a moment to find his voice. "My phone," he managed, trying to summon his usual professional mask, though his flushed cheeks betrayed him. "I know one of you swiped it from my bag."
"Do any of us look like we're hiding a phone on us?" Logan Hayes asked, spreading his arms and flashing a cocky, boyish grin that screamed trouble.
The room went silent as the Alphas simply watched him. It was predatory. It was hungry. They were posing like statues of ancient warriors, and Lyon was caught in the middle, his anger warring with an undeniable, primal attraction.
"I’m not leaving until I get it back," Lyon insisted, though his resolve was melting in the sauna-like temperature.
"Enough games," Rafael commanded, stepping toward Lyon. The Alpha’s presence was overwhelming. "If anyone has his device, hand it over."
Adrian Knox let out a low chuckle. Still completely bare, he swaggered over to his pile of clothes, bent over—giving Lyon a deliberate view of his powerful physique—and retrieved the phone. He sauntered back, smirking as he handed it over.
"Just wanted to see if I could get a reaction out of you, sweetheart," Adrian purred.
"Is that so?" Lyon snapped, finding his spark again. He took a daring step into the center of the circle, standing defiant amidst the sea of bare skin. "Judging by the state of this room, I’d say I’m the one getting a reaction out of you."
He glanced down at Adrian, whose body was visibly responding to Lyon’s proximity. The air was thick enough to choke on.
"Alright," Rafael intervened, his voice a sharp crack that broke the spell. "Adrian, give him the phone. Then, escort Mr. Navarro out before he suffers from heatstroke. The rest of you—suit up. We have ice to break."
The pack dispersed, returning to their lockers. Only Adrian remained, his eyes locked on Lyon as he pulled on a pair of dark briefs. Even through the fabric, the effect Lyon had on him was impossible to hide.
Adrian gestured toward the door with a sharp, wicked grin. "After you, Navarro."
Adrian Knox would have much rather been carving up the Main Ice Rink with the rest of the pack than babysitting Lyon Navarro, but he followed Rafael’s directive regardless. While the league and the media viewed Adrian as the Stormbreakers’ resident provocateur and king of chaos, he wasn't foolish enough to derail the team’s focus for the sake of a prank gone sideways.
He reached for his discarded street clothes, pulling them on with deliberate, slow motions, ensuring his muscles remained flexed and taut. He knew Lyon was still watching. When Adrian finally turned back, he caught the way Lyon’s amber-flecked eyes lingered on his frame, shimmering with a mix of professional coldness and undeniable heat. Lyon was clearly trying to play it cool, leaning against the locker room wall with his arms crossed and a defiant, sharp expression that was as frustrating as it was magnetic.
It took every ounce of Adrian’s restraint not to do something reckless right then. It would have been effortless to show the strategist exactly what he thought of that polished, superior attitude. He imagined pinning Lyon against the cold tile of the wall, ensuring he was the first of the six to extract a debt. He wanted to hear that composed voice break, to hear Lyon gasp his name and finally admit that he never should have hunted the pack in his columns for all those years.
Adrian wasn't as explosive as Mateo or as erratic as Logan, but he had a visceral loathing for anyone who tried to exert authority over him. That defiant streak had earned him countless penalties from referees and endless lectures from the league office. Now, he could tell that same streak was going to put him on a collision course with the pack’s elegant new problem.
As the rest of the Stormbreakers finished suiting up and headed for the ice, sticks in hand and blades clicking against the floor, Adrian turned and caught Lyon by the arm. Compared to the massive enforcers he usually grappled with on the rink, Lyon felt dangerously lean, almost fragile, as Adrian steered him out of the locker room and down the narrow concrete corridor toward the concourse.
"Here’s your damn device," Adrian snapped, thrusting the phone toward him.
Snatching it from Lyon’s bag had been a calculated opening move—a simple message that the pack wasn't just going to speak their minds; they were going to take whatever they wanted. There were no boundaries they wouldn't trample, no personal space they wouldn't invade to make Lyon’s life in San Diego as grueling as possible. The sooner the man realized he was in a cage with wolves, the faster he’d run back to his penthouse.
"Stealing my phone? What is this, high school?" Lyon hissed, snatching the phone back with a sharp jerk.
The movement brought him inches from Adrian’s chest. Lyon stood his ground, radiating a fierce energy. After the way he had stepped up to Rafael, Adrian knew the man was weaponizing his own presence to try to throw the Alphas off-balance.
Adrian leaned in, closing the gap until they were nearly chest-to-chest. He wanted Lyon to feel the sheer physical weight of a predator, letting him know that he was dealing with someone every bit as defiant and unshakable as he pretended to be.
“That’s rich.” Adrian kept his voice low, a razor-edged smirk playing on his lips, but the rhythmic thrum of his pulse betrayed a predatory anger. He wasn't about to let this outsider challenge the pack without drawing a little blood from that inflated ego. “I’m not the one who built a career on high-school-tier character assassinations.”
That pushed the tether too far.
Lyon’s composure snapped, and he swung a fist toward Adrian’s chest in a blur of frustration. But the wolf was faster. Adrian caught Lyon’s wrist mid-air, his grip like a steel shackle, killing the momentum instantly.
Suddenly, the elegant strategist was completely physically dominated.
Something in the way Lyon’s breath hitched told Adrian he might not entirely hate the sensation.
Adrian didn't let go. He wasn't even using his full strength; Lyon could have twisted away if he truly wanted to. But the way the man was pinned against him, eyes locked onto his… Lyon knew exactly what an Alpha could do to him. Adrian leaned in, his voice a low, teasing vibration. “I was actually hoping to see if you had any scandalous photos saved. I’ve always wondered what you’re hiding under those pristine, tailored shirts.”
“Keep wondering,” Lyon spat back, wrenching his hand free with a sharp, dismissive jerk. He immediately smoothed his shirt and adjusted his cuffs, desperate to reclaim his shattered poise. “I don't display the goods for just anyone. Unlike the local exhibitionists.”
“Given the show you just got from the pack, I’d say we’re due for a reciprocal viewing.” Adrian’s eyes traveled slowly down Lyon’s lean, athletic frame. The man looked delicious—good enough to hunt, good enough to break. Adrian could sense that with just one more shove, the strategist’s professional mask would crack wide open.
Unfortunately, the ice was calling. As Adrian turned to head back to the locker room, he saw Lyon staring at his phone, a small furrow between his brows. Adrian hadn't actually looked at the private files—he had some vestige of a code—but he’d enjoyed the scare.
“You should head to the stands and witness a real practice,” Adrian called over his shoulder. “All those hit pieces you wrote, and I bet you’ve never actually watched us go all out.” He paused, a dark glint in his eyes. “You’ve never seen us when we’re going hard on the ice. Or off it. Maybe you’ll finally see something you actually want.”
Lyon only glowered, a soft, rose-colored flush creeping up his neck. “I highly doubt that, Adrian.”
Adrian chuckled as he walked away. The man didn't know if he wanted to kill them or climb them. Most people would be speechless after being thrown into the deep end with the Stormbreakers, but Lyon was still swinging. And if teasing was the way to dismantle him, Adrian was more than happy to oblige.
VIKTOR
It was the dawn of the season, and Viktor Petrov was relegated to puck-handling drills. While the rest of the pack blurred across the ice in high-speed passing formations, the massive goalie was left alone in the crease, tapping the black disc back and forth. It was Coach Vargas’s order. After the long hiatus, the skaters needed to regain their edge before facing the "Wall of San Diego."
Viktor didn't like the isolation, but he understood the necessity. In a squad where every man was a giant, Viktor was the titan. Standing 6’6” and broad enough to block out the sun, his physical presence dominated the net. With his golden hair and thick beard, the fans called him "The Storm Lord," a title he preferred over the one Lyon Navarro had tried to pin on him years ago.
Lyon had once published a story claiming Viktor was "The Siberian Sellout," alleging he was begging for a trade back to Europe after a locker room dispute. It was a lie. Viktor had played his college years here; he was as much a product of this city as any of them. It had taken a season of shutouts to win back the pack’s trust. He didn't forget debts like that.
As if summoned by his thoughts, Lyon appeared in the stands near the glass. Viktor watched him. Lyon was clearly trying to project an aura of control, using that lean, sharp aesthetic to command the room. It was almost working. As Viktor’s gaze traced the lines of Lyon’s body, a mixture of cold fury and hot interest stirred in his gut.
When Adrian skated onto the ice a few moments later, wearing a triumphant grin, Viktor knew the needle had been pushed. He decided it was his turn to play. Skating to the edge of the rink, Viktor looked up. Lyon was fixated on the front line—Rafael, Mateo, and Logan.
“Hey,” Viktor called out.
Lyon jumped, startled out of his trance. People thought Viktor was the silent one, but he knew that when the quietest man in the room speaks, people listen. Lyon was listening now, his attention fully captured by the towering goalie.
“I need a shooter for stick-save drills,” Viktor rumbled. “The others are occupied. There are skates by the bench. Get down here.”
Lyon’s eyes went wide. “No,” he said instantly, trying to sound dismissive. But Viktor smelled the hesitation. “No way. Find one of the reserves.”
“You were hired to improve this team,” Viktor countered. “I cannot improve without a target. You do not even need to skate well. Just stand and fire.”
It was a trap, and they both knew it. Lyon had stood up to their threats and their nakedness, but the ice was the pack’s true domain.
“I’m a PR consultant,” Lyon insisted. “Not a practice target.”
“A wager then?” Viktor’s lips curled into a rare, predatory grin. “Five shots. If you score once—even by accident—I will follow your every directive for the entire season. No arguments.”
He saw the spark of ambition in Lyon’s amber eyes. One Alpha under his thumb would change everything. Lyon scanned the ice, looking for the catch.
“How do I know you won’t cheat?” Lyon demanded.
“One puck, one net. There is no cheating in the crease,” Viktor said, flashing a smile that was surprisingly charming for a man of his size. “Trust me.”
To the astonishment of the entire squad, who had stopped to watch the exchange, Lyon stood up and marched toward the bench, his chin held high in defiance.
“You have a deal, Petrov.”
LYON
Viktor was a mountain. He filled the goal so completely that there seemed to be no light passing through. Lyon knew he should be terrified. He should be worried about looking like a fool. But the chance to bend the "Storm Lord" to his will was too intoxicating to pass up.
One goal, and he could force Viktor into quiet interviews and professional conduct. The others would follow. As he descended the stairs, Lyon looked at the rippling muscle of Viktor’s frame and thought of a few unprofessional things he might like to order the goalie to do, too.
He found a pair of skates and a stick. The pack gave them a wide berth, watching with predatory curiosity. Lyon stepped onto the ice, shivering slightly, but his heart was racing too fast for the cold to take hold. It was time for his secret: he hadn't just written about hockey because of the gossip. He had grown up in a house obsessed with the sport. He had spent his childhood chasing his brothers across frozen ponds.
Viktor slid the puck toward him. Lyon caught it with the stick, a fluid, practiced motion. He slapped it back—a low, biting shot toward the left post. Viktor snapped his stick down to block it, but Lyon saw the flicker of surprise in the goalie’s eyes.
The pack went silent. Viktor grunted, returning the puck. This time, Lyon built up speed, skating in a tight arc before firing a hard strike to the opposite side. Viktor dropped low, his massive pad taking the hit.
“Beginner’s luck!” Brandon Pierce barked from the sidelines, his voice a mix of a sneer and a question. “Come on, Viktor, end this.”
Third shot. Lyon feinted left, then whipped the puck high to the right. Viktor’s composure slipped; he had to launch himself into a glove save that looked far more desperate than he would have liked.
“What? You thought I was just a suit?” Lyon called out, widening his stance, a triumphant fire in his eyes.
“Don’t get cocky, Navarro,” Rafael’s voice rang out across the ice. Lyon turned to see the captain grinning, his gaze lingering on Lyon’s form in a way that made the strategist’s skin tingle. “Two shots left. And we have all season to break you.”
Rafael used a pet name—Navarro—but the tone was almost intimate. Lyon turned back to the puck. He skated back and forth, luring Viktor out. As the goalie bit on a fake move, Lyon fired between his legs. Viktor dropped into a butterfly block just in time.
Last shot. Viktor was no longer relaxed; he was coiled like a spring, scowling. Lyon took a wide circle, building maximum velocity. He came in at an angle, forcing Viktor to pivot, and put every ounce of his strength into a shot over the goalie's left shoulder.
“Bozhe moi!” Viktor snarled as he twisted mid-air.
It wasn't pretty. Viktor slammed into the ice, blocking the goal with the sheer mass of his torso. The puck bounced off his shoulder. It was a save, but a frantic one. If it had been anyone but the league's best goalie, Lyon would have scored.
“Did you see that?” Logan Hayes asked, genuinely impressed.
Viktor had blocked them all, but the victory felt hollow for the pack. The smart comments had died. They knew that Lyon Navarro had just proven he belonged in their world.
LOGAN
Back in the Team Locker Room, the air was heavy with a new kind of tension. Lyon wasn't just a hack; the man had ice in his veins.
“Pure fluke,” Mateo rumbled, though he didn't sound convinced.
“That wasn't a fluke,” Adrian said, unlacing his skates. “That bitch... he’s going to be impossible to manage now that he knows he can play.”
“We’ll find another way to ground him,” Rafael said. He stepped out of his gear, standing naked as he turned to Logan. “Logan, do we still have the Coastal Prime reservations for tonight?”
The team dinner was a sacred tradition—one last night of excess before the strict seasonal regime began.
“You want to invite him?” Logan asked, catching the glint in Rafael’s eye.
“It’s our turf,” Rafael said. “If we can’t beat him on the ice, we’ll show him how the pack really plays.”
Logan checked his reflection in the mirror. People called him the black sheep of the Hayes dynasty, but he took pride in his own path. He ran a hand through his blonde hair, wondering how Lyon would see him in a sharp suit instead of hockey pads.
“You want to get him drunk, Rafael?” Brandon laughed. “Afraid he won’t notice you otherwise?”
“Bet I’m the one who gets him home first,” Brandon challenged.
The room went still. The ice had been broken. It wasn't just about PR anymore. Lyon Navarro was a trophy, and every man in the room wanted a piece.
“Please,” Adrian scoffed. “You saw how he looked at me in the hall. I could have had him right then.”
“In your dreams,” Logan challenged. “You see the way he looks at me? He’s got a crush on the 'reckless' one.”
Rafael stood up, heading for the showers. “We’ll see. Just don't fill up on appetizers tonight. I have a feeling the main course is going to be spectacular.”