AS IT TURNS OUT, CBS does want an interview. The reporter catches up to me in the tunnel right when the game ends. We won in overtime, thanks to a beauty of a goal by Mickey, and Iâm still sucking wind, sweat dripping from me like Iâve just climbed out of a pool. I had to literally throw myself in front of a couple of shots on the net, which means Iâm sure to have a bunch of fancy new aches and pains once the adrenaline wears off.
âHi Cooper, Iâm Kacey Green from CBS Sports. Mind if we chat for a few minutes?â she says with a camera-ready smile. Sheâs wearing a pine-green dress that complements her deep brown complexion, and even though she has heels on, she barely comes up to my chest. I feel like a huge, sweaty monster compared to her, but she must be used to it, because if she thinks I smell, she doesnât show it.
I lean on my stick. âOf course.â
âFantastic game,â she says. âDo you feel like it showcased what youâre hoping to bring to the league?â
I try my best to ignore the cameraman standing next to her as I bend down to speak into the microphone. It would be weird to talk about myself after such a great group effort, so I say, âThanks, Kacey. The whole team played great. We had a tough loss to UMass earlier in the season, so itâs exciting to keep the Turkey Freeze trophy here for another year.â
âBut you really put it all out there today.â
âYeah.â I laugh a bit, wincing when that makes my gut ache. âPressed well on the forecheck, blocked some shots. It was a good effort.â
âYou were recently named captain.â
âYes. Iâm honored that Coach and the team chose me.â
âYou and Nikolai Abney-Volkov are the highest ranked defensemen in Division I menâs hockey,â she says. âYour stats are nearly identical this season. The Sharks drafted Volkov in the first round of the first year you were both eligible, but you chose to remain undrafted.â
I wait for a question, but she pauses, so I just nod. Fucking Nikolai.
âDo you have any regrets about holding out for a deal after graduation?â
âIâ¦â Before the season started, I would have said yes, Iâd rather be at the pro level, putting all my energy into the one thing I care about most in the world. Let me scrap and enforce our zone and fight for my ice time like everyone else. But now? Iâm not so sure. If I was in the league already, I wouldnât have met Penny. If someone gave me the choice between sticking out the rest of college or entering the league tomorrow, I donât know what Iâd say.
Out of the corner of my eye, I see my father. Heâs leaning against the wall as he talks to someone on the phone, half in shadow, but I can feel him looking at me. Maybe other dads wouldnât wear slacks, a collared shirt, and a cashmere sweater to see their sons play hockey, but he still gets recognized everywhere he goes, so his standards arenât the same as most. Technically, heâs not even allowed back here, but Iâm sure someone recognized him and waved him through.
We fought about whether I would enter the draft for most of my senior year of high school. The resentment ran so deep that we hardly spoke to each other for months. Itâs mostly faded now, a part of the past I have no interest in reliving, but as Kaceyâs question echoes in my mind, and as I look at my father, no doubt able to hear our conversation, I feel the sting. Heâs never understood how the world of professional hockey differs from football, and heâs never cared to learn, either.
âNo,â I say. âIâve been improving with every game I play, and Coach Ryder is a big part of that. Iâm where I need to be right now, even though Iâm excited about what comes next.â
âCongratulations again,â she says. âThanks for your time.â
I thank her and wait until the camera stops rolling before crossing the hallway to my father. âDad,â I say, wiping at my forehead with the sleeve of my sweater. I canât contain my smile. âDid you hear that?â
He ends his call, a frown on his face. âWhat?â
âThe interview.â
âIs there something I should have noticed?â
I bounce on my toes, nearly lurching forward for a hug but stopping myself at the last moment. Iâm drenched in sweat; he wonât want me to ruin his clothes. âWhat about the change in uniform? Pretty cool, right?â
He looks me up and down. I straighten, years of being told to watch my posture kicking in, and smooth down the front of my sweater, just in case he hasnât gotten a good look at the new addition.
âYou didnât want to tell us in advance?â he says, still studying me like Iâm a complex route in a playbook.
âI wanted it to be a surprise.â
âItâs good that your coach saw sufficient improvements in your play and behavior.â
âIâve been working really hard this season.â
âWhich is what I expect from you,â he says. âI raised you and James to become captains.â
âYes, sir.â
Why did I think weâd get through this conversation without him mentioning James? No matter what I do, no matter what I achieve, even in a different sport, James will do it first. And Dad will like it better because he did it in football.
âThat sloppy turnover at the start of the third period could have been a disaster,â he continues.
Heâs right, of course; that was the biggest mistake I made during the game, and Iâm not surprised he caught it. I nod, biting the inside of my cheek. Itâs a fair critique, even if itâs not what I want to hear right now. When we go over the tape of this game, Coach will say the same thing. The remedy to turnovers is not making them in the first place. âRight, sir. But arenât youâisnât it great? And Iâve scored four goals already this season.â
The phone in his hand buzzes. He glances down at it, and his mouth tightens. âI need to take this, son. Iâll talk to you later.â
âWait, Dadââ
He claps me on the shoulder again as he passes. âDonât make sloppy plays.â
I watch as he hurries down the hallway, his phone pressed to his ear. I donât catch what he says, but judging by the look on his face, itâs not very pleasant.
I feel stupid, all of a sudden; Iâm going home for Thanksgiving in less than a week, itâs not like I wonât see him there. We can talk more then. But even though I know that, part of me wishes I couldâve talked to him for just a little longer right now. To actually hear the words that Iâm craving come out of his mouth. He tells Jamesâand Izzy, and Sebâhow proud he is all the time, so why donât the words come for me? Whenever I try to connect with him, something gets lost in translation. If he looks at James and sees himself, then Iâm Uncle Blake, and heâs just waiting to see when Iâm going to fuck everything up.
Iâm about to open the door to the locker room when I see that McKee hat with the pom-pom on top.
Itâs Penny, looking like she just saw a ghost.