
Behind His Mask: My Hockey Alpha
Rhea Hale, a young art restorer at the old Elaria gallery, lives a life of near-perfect calm-canvases, colors, and classical symphonies that fill her every day. But when she touches a mysterious painting titled The Moon Painting, something inside her begins to shift. Strange visions, eyes watching from the fog, and wild emotions she can't explain slowly start to unravel her peaceful world.
Across the city, Kaelan Viero-the national hockey team's captain-carries the charm and composure of a champion. But beneath the arena lights and public spotlight, there's a side of him he never shows... until his eyes lock with a stranger's in the stands.
That brief moment sparks something long buried.
And from then on, neither of their lives remains the same.
"One glance started it all. And after that... there was no turning back."
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Chapter 10
(Rhea's POV)
The late afternoon air clinging to the corridor walls felt damp and heavy, as if the building itself was swallowing the breath of anyone who entered. Our footsteps echoed out of sync-Callum with his quick pace that always stayed a little ahead, Kaelan with his calm, measured steps that made me want to hide behind his back, and Anselma who moved almost soundlessly, like a shadow slipping along the edge of the world.
Me? I dragged my feet, my bag feeling heavier with each step. Not just because of the papers and symbols inside, but because of something I couldn't see-energy, or maybe a curse-that pulsed and burned hotter against the strap. It was like carrying a coal pretending to be asleep, ready to flare up any second.
"Stop fidgeting with your bag strap," Kaelan's voice cut through the silence. His eyes flicked toward me, cold but with a protective layer underneath. "If it feels hot, let it be. But don't let go."
I swallowed hard. "What if my bag suddenly explodes?"
"It's just a piece of paper. It won't explode."
I shot him a skeptical look. "Just, you say?"
Kaelan nodded. His face was calm, and that calmness only spiked my emotions.
"Yeah... just a piece of paper. But people like you-dangerous people-are fighting over it. And this paper clearly isn't just paper. Are you still gonna use the word just for this?"
Kaelan stopped walking, forcing Callum, Anselma, and me to stop too. He studied me carefully. "I can guarantee your safety. So trust everything I say-it's for your own good."
His words left me stunned. Whatever comeback I had died on my tongue.
Next to me, Callum clicked his tongue. "Honestly," he muttered, twirling his telescopic staff casually, "I'm more scared of Kaelan when he's like this than of that insane cult waiting for us at the gallery. Usually when he's this calm, it ends one of two ways: we all make it out alive... or we all die together."
I glanced at him, half wanting to snap back, half wanting to laugh at how terrible his timing was. But before I could speak, Anselma-silent this whole time-finally said something. Her voice was low, calm, but cutting.
"No one will die... as long as they know which path to choose."
Callum snorted, eyes narrowing at her. "And you know which path, huh? Is that it?"
Anselma didn't answer. She just pulled her raincoat hood tighter and kept her gaze fixed straight ahead. Like someone unwilling to talk to other humans, preferring instead to commune with her own shadow. I didn't know what to make of her-fear her, trust her, or hate her.
Was she good? Or was she pretending, waiting to drag us all down?
I took a deep breath, my voice cracking as it escaped. "Earlier... you said the painting had already come alive. What did you mean?"
For the first time, Anselma actually turned to look at me. Her gaze was so intense it made my skin crawl. "I meant it's no longer just paint on canvas. That painting has become a door. And someone... from the other side, has already started pushing back."
"I still don't get it."
"You'll understand when we get to the gallery," Kaelan replied.
***
The car sped through streets that were slowly growing busier. From behind the glass, the evening light painted tall buildings in gold, casting long shadows across the asphalt. I sat in the back seat with Anselma, while Kaelan drove and Callum sat beside him. The hum of the engine and the rush of the wind were the only sounds filling the car.
Since we left, I'd barely said a word. My silence was heavy with questions. About what was really happening. About who was truly on the right side.
Honestly... everything I'd experienced today was impossible to fully process.
I exhaled sharply. My thoughts scattered when Kaelan's voice broke through.
"What do you think... who actually sent those people?" Kaelan asked Callum.
Callum sighed deeply, eyes locked on the road. "If they were just random hunters, they wouldn't have weapons that effective. The wolfsbane they used was specially made, and clearly their target wasn't random. They knew what they were after. They knew who we are."
I saw Kaelan's jaw tighten from the side, his brow furrowing. "You think this has something to do with-"
"The Pack," Callum cut him off quickly, his tone cold. "Or more specifically... someone who wants us back, whether we agree or not."
"The elders..." Kaelan murmured.
"I'm not surprised if they're involved," I added. "But I thought they were still busy with internal matters. Why send people after us now?"
Callum glanced briefly at Kaelan before looking back at the road. "Maybe because of you, Kaelan."
"Me?"
"Yeah. They've been uncomfortable with your decisions for a long time. You ignored their summons, refused to return. They said there was something important to discuss. But you stayed here. They could easily see you as... a threat."
Kaelan scoffed. "A threat? I just-"
"You're the heir, Kaelan." Callum's voice dropped lower, almost a whisper. "Did you forget that?"
Kaelan went silent for a moment. "I tried to forget, at least for a while. Living outside the pack makes me feel... freer. But apparently, they'll never truly let me go."
"That's the problem."
"So, they want me back by force?" Kaelan asked quietly.
Callum gave a slight nod. "That's my guess. But there's another possibility too."
I turned to him, waiting for an answer. Kaelan did the same.
"What?" Kaelan asked.
"They might not be from the elders at all. It could be outsiders exploiting the situation. Someone who wants us divided. And... who's been after the Moon Painting from the very beginning."
"I can't go back now," Kaelan said heavily. "If I return to the pack, that's walking straight into their trap. I'm not ready to face the elders and their games yet."
Callum tapped his fingers against the window. "Sooner or later, you'll have to. Otherwise, it'll only get worse. You know that."
Kaelan stayed quiet.
"Remember the elders' last message?" Callum asked again.
Kaelan scoffed. "Of course. 'Come back before it's too late.'"
Callum turned, his eyes sharp. "And what do you think they meant by too late? Too late for them? Or... too late for you?"
His words sent a chill down my spine. Especially since Kaelan didn't answer, his eyes fixed firmly on the road.
And then... silence again. This time heavier, thicker.
I finally leaned forward, my head poking between their seats. I couldn't hold it anymore.
"Do you guys even realize I'm here? I mean, you're the ones who dragged me into this insane mess."
Kaelan glanced at me in the rearview mirror, his face calm but his clenched jaw gave him away. Callum, on the other hand, chuckled softly, like he was entertained by my frustration.
"What do you want to know, Rhea?" Kaelan asked flatly.
I met his gaze through the mirror. "What are you even talking about? What's this Pack? Who are the elders? And... what did your friend mean by heir?"
"You can only find those answers in our world, Rhea. And it won't be long before you'll know it too," Kaelan replied.
I wanted to push for more, but Anselma's piercing eyes made me bite my tongue.
"Then why were those people after me? Why are they looking for me? Am I some kind of treasure? Worth dying for?"
The silence that followed cut sharper than before. Kaelan opened his mouth, but Callum beat him to it.
"Because you are a treasure, Miss Hale." Callum gave a faint smile, but his eyes were deadly serious. "The Moon Painting... it would never have reacted if it wasn't you who touched it. So of course they're after you."
My throat tightened. "What do you mean, reacted?"
"That painting is like a symbol," Anselma finally spoke, her soft words sharp as blades. "It's not just a seal. It's a key. And you..." she looked straight into my eyes, "are the hand chosen to turn it."
I shook my head, letting out a bitter laugh at the absurdity. "Chosen? Chosen by who? I never chose anything! I didn't even know about that painting until it showed up at the gallery-" I stopped, my anger threatening to spill over. "Please... can someone just explain this to me in plain human language? Not riddles?"
Callum leaned back in his seat with a long sigh. "Here's the short version. The painting holds a supernatural seal. It's been locked for ages. The seal gets passed down through generations, always landing in a certain family. No matter how hard they reject it, the painting always finds its way back to the rightful keyholder. And... yeah. You guessed it. The Hales."
I felt the blood drain from my face. My head spun, my vision blurring. "You mean... my family?"
Kaelan finally spoke, his voice low and cautious. "Rhea, there are things your family might never have told you. About the origin of your name. About why your grandparents lived near this land. About your bloodline. None of it... is a coincidence."
My head spun harder. I wanted to deny it, to call it nonsense. But the heat pulsing stronger from the bag on my lap left me speechless.
Just a piece of paper. Yet... how could it burn like this? Nothing about it was humanly logical.
"So..." my voice cracked, barely a whisper. "You think I'm the key to something trapped behind that canvas? Something I don't even understand or know exists?"
No one answered. Only the engine's hum and the tires on wet asphalt filled the space.
Until Callum finally muttered, so softly it was almost inaudible. "Not just something. But someone."
I snapped my head toward him. "What?"
But Callum said nothing more. He only stared ahead, as if he'd already said too much.
I slumped back into my seat, my chest tight. The world outside spun under the streetlights, but my mind was darker than ever.
Kaelan glanced at me again through the mirror. His voice was deep, almost like a vow. "Listen to me, Rhea. Whatever they want from you, I won't let them get it through you. Even if I have to fight and reveal my secrets to the world. I don't care, as long as they don't lay a hand on you."
For the first time since this all began, I caught a strange glimmer in his eyes-not just cold calmness, but something wilder. Something that scared me and... made me feel a twisted sense of safety at the same time.
I clutched the burning strap of my bag tighter. Only one sentence managed to leave my lips.
"Then I hope you keep that promise, Kaelan."
The car kept moving, carrying us closer to the gallery. And for some reason, every meter forward felt like stepping toward something I could never turn back from.
***
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7.4
I was the bankrupt socialite everyone pitied, standing in the mud at my mother's grave with nothing left but a pair of old Louboutins and a single white rose. My bank account was overdrawn by three hundred dollars, but I still believed Julian, my fiancé, was the one person who hadn't abandoned the toxic Compton name.
Then I saw his Maybach shaking in the cemetery parking lot. Through a crack in the window, I heard the man I loved whispering to my stepsister, Tiffany.
"Don't worry about the broke princess. Once I secure her voting proxy for the trust, I'm dumping her."
Tiffany laughed, clutching the scarlet coat she'd charged to my own maxed-out credit card.
"She's so pathetic, Julian. She actually thinks you love her."
I didn't scream; I recorded them. But when I tried to use that leverage, my family turned into vipers. To protect Julian's status, they framed me for causing Tiffany to miscarry a fake pregnancy and planted stolen documents in my bag. My own father stood by as they locked me in a room, planning to sell me to a predatory creditor named Hightower to settle his gambling debts. I ended up in a freezing police cell, my ankle shattered and my reputation destroyed.
I sat on that metal bench, shivering as I realized my own blood had traded my life for a check. I called the only man powerful enough to burn them all-Julian's uncle, the "Butcher of Wall Street," Alden Stark. The phone just kept ringing. He wasn't coming. To the world, I was just a walking bankruptcy filing, a girl who had finally run out of luck.
I didn't wait for a savior. I escaped custody and ran barefoot through the rain, leaving a trail of blood on the marble floor of Stark Tower. When I collapsed at Alden's feet, he didn't look at me with pity; he looked at me like a rare, damaged artifact he finally owned.
"Inform the board that this is my fiancée," he announced, lifting me into his arms.
I signed the marriage contract that night, trading my freedom for the power to ensure my family's liabilities exceeded their assets for the rest of their natural lives.

8.4
Kathern was forced out of her sister's home by her abusive brother-in-law, who violently demanded she pay half the rent or get out.
To protect her sister from his rage, Kathern agreed to a six-month paper marriage with a stranger—an old woman's grandson, Bronson—in exchange for a simple apartment.
But her new husband treated her like a scheming gold digger from the very first second.
He showed up to City Hall in a cheap suit, shoved a brutal prenup in her face, and dumped her in a completely empty, dust-filled apartment.
"Just don't cause any trouble," he warned coldly, before leaving her alone.
When Kathern politely texted him to ask if he was coming home for dinner, he immediately blocked her number.
Kathern was furious and baffled. She didn't want a dime of his money, nor did she care about his boring middle-management job.
She had only agreed to this marriage for a place to sleep, yet this arrogant man treated her like absolute garbage.
Refusing to swallow the insult, Kathern immediately dialed his grandmother to expose his behavior.
She was going to build her own independent life, completely unaware that her "cheap corporate loser" of a husband was actually the ruthless billionaire CEO of the Vaughan empire.

9.8
Adeline's stepmother had secretly drugged her for years, turning a child genius into a drooling, mentally disabled laughingstock just so her stepsister could steal her life.
But when her greedy father sold her off to Griffin Herring—a violent, untouchable billionaire psychopath—to save his company, things took a deadly turn.
Before the wedding, Griffin attacked her in a dark alley, nearly snapping her neck before stealing her grandfather's silver necklace.
That necklace held a micro-drive with her family's deepest secrets, and without it, she had nothing.
Back at the estate, her situation only worsened. Her stepsister Damaris paraded around in the Herring family's diamond engagement gifts, trying to force-feed Adeline wet dog food on an Instagram live stream.
When Adeline's calculated "clumsiness" ruined the video, her furious father locked her in a damp, rusted basement.
"Give her to the psycho," her stepmother hissed through the door. "Let him lock her away forever."
Listening from the shadows, Adeline's fists clenched until her palms bled.
Her supposed mental fog wasn't a tragedy—it was a calculated assassination of her mind. They had destroyed her childhood and were now throwing her to a monster just to keep the billions.
The dull, empty look in Adeline's eyes vanished instantly, replaced by a razor-sharp, chilling clarity.
She pulled a thin surgical needle from her messy bun and picked the heavy iron padlock in ten seconds. It was time to break into the billionaire's penthouse, take back her necklace, and tear them all apart.

7.7
Olivia Pearson is just a pawn – a wife bought to rescue her father's ailing business. Her husband, Sebastian, maintains his icy grip over her life and escape feels like a pipe dream. But when Olivia uncovers the secrets of his empire filled with lies and illicit dealings, she decides to take control. The more she tries to figure things out, the more she realizes that the only person who can assist her might be Ethan Blackwood, Sebastian's brother, and the man who has captured her heart.
Now Olivia is sandwiched between two brothers. The choice to make is simple but painfully difficult; the husband who owns her or the difficult, yet enticing lover who comes with freedom.
It remains to be seen what is more perilous: that decision, or the consequences that follow.
THIS IS A SIZZLING NEW ROMANCE – NO HANDS!

8.6
Since returning to her family, Evelyn had never truly been accepted or treated as their own daughter.
On her wedding day, her parents chose her adopted sister over her, and the man she was supposed to marry abandoned her on the highway for his true love without even looking back once.
Heartbroken but resolute, she tore off her veil and stood before his rival. "I dare you to steal the bride."
Shane met her gaze. "Why wouldn't I?"
Their impulsive marriage shocked everyone. Her ex later begged, "Give me another chance."
Shane pulled her close, his voice cold. "Too late. She's my wife now."

7.4
My fiancé Javen sent me to a yacht in the middle of a New York storm to finalize a high-stakes merger with Alfonse Wolfe, a billionaire rumored to have ice water in his veins. I did it for "us," shivering in a soaked evening gown and cutting my hand on broken glass just to get the signature that would save Javen’s company.
But when I rushed back to the Doyle estate, the manor was blazing with lights for an unannounced engagement party. Javen wasn't waiting for me with open arms; he was standing on the dance floor with Blossom Vega, the daughter of his biggest competitor, announcing their union to the elite of New York.
When I stepped forward, dripping blood and water onto the marble floor, Javen didn't try to protect me. He looked at me with pure disgust and told the gathered press that I was a "charity case" suffering from mental delusions. His mother laughed while calling me a cockroach, and his father claimed my family’s lost fortune was a hallucination. To ensure my silence, Javen leaned in and whispered that he would pull the plug on my disabled brother’s life-saving medical care if I didn't disappear.
I was hauled away by security and locked in a dark storage room like a stain on his perfect evening. I lay there in the dust, unable to process how twelve years of love could be a calculated lie. How could the man I was supposed to marry use my brother’s breath as a bargaining chip after I had just sacrificed everything to save him?
I escaped through a second-story window and went straight to the only predator powerful enough to tear the Doyles apart: Alfonse Wolfe. I didn't just ask for sanctuary; I demanded a marriage license to unlock my mother’s secret trust and protect my brother. Standing in a high-security vault as the new Mrs. Wolfe, I discovered a truth that changed the game. I didn’t just have the money to ruin Javen; the deed in my hand proved I now owned the very land beneath Alfonse’s mansion.
"I’m not the prey anymore," I whispered, watching the Doyle stock plummet on my phone. "I'm the hunter."