"I'm new," she agreed. "Marlowe. Athletic trainer."
"Dane." He held out a hand the size of a dinner plate. "You're replacing Boyle?"
"Boyle retired."
"Boyle got scared." Dane said it like a fact, not a rumor, and went back to his shoulder before she could ask what that meant.
She didn't ask. She'd promised herself, on the six-hour drive up from her aunt's place in Millbrook, that she was not going to be the girl who asked questions in her first week. She was going to show up, do the job, cash the checks, and not think too hard about the fact that the team's home city was also the last place her father had been alive.
Eight years now. She still caught herself doing the math like it mattered.
The locker room smelled like every locker room she'd ever worked in, sweat and antiseptic and the particular sourness of gear that never quite dried between games. What was different was the quiet. Twenty-two grown men getting ready for a morning skate, and nobody was loud. No music. No trash talk. Just the low murmur of guys who all seemed to already know exactly what everyone else in the room was thinking.
She was halfway through restocking the tape cart when the room went stiller than stiller, if that was a thing rooms could do, and every head turned toward the door at once like they'd heard something she hadn't.
Rhys Callahan didn't dress like a hockey owner. No suit, no clipboard, just a black quarter-zip that fit like it had been made for him, which it probably had. He was younger than she'd expected from the team photos in the hallway, maybe mid-thirties, with the kind of stillness that made a room rearrange itself around him without him doing anything at all.
His eyes found her before she'd even decided whether to look up.
"You're Hale," he said.
Not a question. She felt something cold slide down the back of her neck, the specific unease of being recognized by someone you'd never met.
"Marlowe Hale," she said, and made herself hold his gaze instead of looking away like every instinct told her to. "Athletic trainer. Started this morning."
"I know." He didn't blink. Nobody in this room seemed to blink much, now that she thought about it. "Simon Hale's daughter."
The tape cart rattled under her hand. She hadn't meant to grip it that hard.
"I don't usually lead with that," she said, keeping her voice level. "How do you know my father's name?"
Something moved behind his expression, gone before she could name it. Grief, maybe. Or guilt. "Small hockey world," he said instead, which wasn't an answer, and turned to Dane before she could push. "You're starting on the left side today. Coach wants to see if your shoulder holds."
The conversation was over. She understood that the way you understand a door closing in your face, politely but completely.
She spent the rest of the morning skate telling herself it didn't matter, that plenty of people in this sport had heard of her father, that he'd been a beat reporter for the regional paper covering this exact franchise before he died. It made sense. It didn't need to mean anything.
It was almost convincing until she went looking for the second ice machine and ended up in a hallway that wasn't on the arena map she'd been given.
The door at the end was unmarked, heavier than it should have been for an interior door, steel instead of the standard fire-rated stuff, and it had a keypad instead of a handle. She stood there a second longer than she should have, close enough to feel cold air leaking out from underneath it, colder than any HVAC system had a reason to be in June.
"That's not for you."
She turned fast. Dane again, moved up behind her without a sound despite his size, which should not have been possible on a tile floor in skate guards.
"Sorry, I got turned around," she said. "Looking for the second ice machine."
"Other way." He was still smiling, but it didn't reach anything past his mouth. "This hallway's storage. Nothing you need."
She let him walk her back the way she'd come, chatting easily about nothing, and told herself the whole way that she was imagining the way his nostrils flared twice, deliberately, like he was checking something about her the way a dog checks a stranger at the door.
By the time the morning skate ended, she'd almost talked herself out of the whole thing. Almost.
She was packing up her cart when Rhys Callahan appeared in the doorway of the training room, alone this time, and closed the door most of the way behind him.
"A word," he said.
"Sure." She kept her hands busy, capping a bottle of liniment, giving herself something to do that wasn't stare at him. "Is this about the hallway? I really did just get lost."
"It's about my brother."
That got her attention. She looked up.
"Wes Callahan," he said. "Played for this franchise nine years ago. Career-ending injury during a road trip through Millbrook." He watched her face while he said it, watched for something, and she had the distinct sense she'd just failed a test she hadn't known she was taking. "Your father wrote about that trip."
The floor felt less solid than it had a second ago. "My father wrote about a lot of things. He covered this team for six years."
"He wrote about that trip three days before he died," Rhys said, quiet and even, "and he never filed the story."
She hadn't known that. She'd been eighteen when her father died in a single-car accident on a back road outside Millbrook, and she'd spent exactly one year trying to understand why a careful, sober, unremarkable man had driven off a road he'd taken a thousand times, and then she'd stopped, because there was no answer that didn't make her lose her mind a little.
"How do you know what he did or didn't file?" she asked, and her voice came out steadier than she felt.
Rhys's jaw tightened, just barely, a muscle jumping once under skin that looked too warm, like he was running a low fever that never broke. "Because I read every word my brother's team lawyers pulled about that accident afterward," he said. "And your father's name came up more than it should have."
She should have asked what that meant. She should have pushed, the way the old version of her, the one who'd wanted to be an investigative reporter just like her dad before physical therapy school swallowed that dream whole, absolutely would have pushed.
Instead she watched his eyes, hazel in the fluorescent light, and swore, swore, she saw them flare gold at the edges, just for a second, just long enough that she blinked and told herself it was a trick of the light.
Rhys saw her see it. She knew he did, because something shut behind his face like a door slamming, final and total.
"Welcome to Blackwood Harbor, Ms. Hale," he said, and walked out before she could say another word, leaving her alone with a half-capped bottle of liniment and the absolute certainty that she had just seen something she was never supposed to see.