Disclaimer: I work for Microsoft, but not on Windows or any team that developed NTLM. This knowledge comes from external sources and thus may not be accurate.
NTLM is two things: a one-way hash algorithm and an authentication protocol.
The one-way hash function is what the Windows OS uses to store passwords (in the secrets file, as you note.) This is, of course, so that plaintext passwords need not be stored on disk. When you type your password on the login screen, it will be hashed with the NTLM hash algorithm and compared against the existing hash in the secrets file. If they match, you'll be authenticated. If not, you'll be prompted to enter your password again.
The authentication protocol is a challenge/response protocol that authenticates some on-the-wire protocol like CIFS or HTTP. The algorithm utilizes the aforementioned NTLM hash algorithms in order to build the responses to the server's challenges based on the password that the user typed. The protocol specification for the NTLM authentication protocol is available from Microsoft under their Open Specifications license.
To answer your question, when you log in to Windows, it's likely just using the NTLM hash and checking it against the on-disk file, not doing some network call. Of course, if your machine happened to be a domain controller (and, somehow, couldn't do Kerberos) then it may do NTLM authentication over the network to localhost, but that's a pretty contrived example. Of course, if you're hitting a network resource on that local machine (say, CIFS file sharing or hitting a web site) then you'll be using the network authentication protocol, not going directly to the secrets file.