Classes started, and so did the countdown to our first game.
I thought fall camp was tough, the long practices, nonstop meetings, strength training, and conditioning in-between. But now, we had to balance practice and meetings and training classes and homework and exams.
The first day of classes, I thought Iâd be fine.
I woke up at six, hit the weight room for strength and conditioning, showered, and reviewed the practice schedule with the team at our first meeting of the regular season.
After that, it was my âlight dayâ class-wise, one at nine and the other at noon. I ate lunch in-between, met up with the other kickers to watch film of our opponents weâd face Saturday, and headed into a three-hour practice.
When practice ended, we talked with the media, showered, and had dinner as a team before heading to the academic support center for homework. Thankfully, it was syllabus week, which meant most of us didnât have much to do just yet.
By the time I made it back to the dorm, it was nine-thirty, and exhaustion took me under as soon as Iâd brushed my teeth and let my head hit the pillow.
I was tired, yes, but Iâd made it.
It was the morning when my alarm sounded at six and I knew I had to do it again, with an extra class on the schedule, that I realized what we were truly in for.
As the week went on, I was lucky to have my bleary eyes open enough at the end of each night to wash my face before I passed out. My body ached from practice and training. My brain ached from class and homework. And my ached from feeling like I didnât have a single spare moment to myself.
I wanted desperately to decorate my dorm, something I hadnât had time to do during camp, but now I wondered if Iâd be subjected to plain white walls until spring.
Zeke, however, seemed to have more energy than four Red Bull cans.
How he did it, I would never understand. His schedule was just as grueling as mine, but somehow, he found the will to have a girl over after study hall, or go out with some guys from the team to check out the local college bars. Sure, some nights heâd come straight home and pass out just like me, but others, heâd be out until well after midnight.
And still, when that alarm sounded at six, he was up.
I think thatâs what bothered me most â that he could go out and have fun and still somehow get up and perform. He didnât slack at practice, didnât look like he was anywhere near tired. That kind of stamina was beyond me.
Not that Iâd let him I was that aware of his schedule. We were cordial as roommates, but we barely talked, other than discussing what groceries were his versus mine, or asking the other to turn down their music or close their damn door. His favorite pastime seemed to be trying to get under my skin, but he saved it for practice, where I could mostly ignore him.
I had to admit, even when I was annoyed with him, weâd fallen into a routine I was comfortable with. He stayed out of my way and I stayed out of his, and that was all I could ask for.
On the Friday night before the game, Coach dismissed us early and told us to wind down, relieve some stress, and get good sleep. We needed to report back at the stadium at nine the next morning for breakfast and pre-game team meetings, which meant I didnât need to be awake until eight.
I almost whimpered at the thought of sleeping in.
When I got back to the dorm, I felt that nervous pre-game energy building up just like it had the night before a game in high school. It was the closest Iâd felt to being homesick since Iâd arrived at NBU â mostly because I simply hadnât had the to be homesick.
So, I turned on the latest Kid Cudi album and finally dug out my boxes of art Iâd had stashed under my bed, settling in for a night of decorating to take the edge off.
The moment I popped the top on the first box, my heart heaved a sigh of relief.
A bright mosaic painting stared back at me, one from a local Boston artist that Mom had framed for me last Christmas. I pulled it out of the box, wiped down the glass and frame to remove any dust, and then held it up as I pivoted in the center of the room, looking for the perfect spot to hang it.
Art had been my passion ever since I could remember. Where Gavin had obsessed over sports growing up, Iâd harassed Mom and Dad to take me to every museum in our city and any we visited, too. I loved soccer, of course, and enjoyed messing around on the football field with Gavin when he played on Little League teams. But for me, there was nothing like spending an afternoon in a museum.
When I was little, Iâm sure it was just joy from looking at pretty things, from sculptures and paintings that made my imagination run wild. But as I grew older, I learned to truly appreciate it. I could distinguish where a piece was from before I even read a plaque, and could narrow down to what time period if I looked long enough. I started understanding what made a painting modern versus abstract or impressionism versus expressionism. I found I could easily detect a Monet, or a Picasso, or a Van Gogh. And as I grew up, I felt the urge to decorate my room and our entire house with those aesthetics in mind, with art being the first and foremost thought.
The space above my headboard was perfect for the painting I held in my hands â the mosaic of tiny squares making up a larger image of ducks and other birds frolicking in the Charles River. I climbed up onto the mattress with a nail between my teeth, hammer tucked under one arm and painting laid safe and secure at the foot of the bed. Once I had the nail in place, I hung the painting, using a small leveler to ensure it was straight.
âNeed help with that?â
Zekeâs voice surprised me, and I jumped, nearly knocking the painting off the wall before I steadied myself and the frame.
I blew out a breathy laugh at myself.
âIâm good,â I said without turning around, and I sat back on my heels, tilting my head to one side as I took in the painting.
âYou sure? I can reach higher than you, you know. And thereâs no stepladder around here.â
I turned to find Zeke holding a Dalà print Iâd begged Dad to buy me when we visited the museum in Tampa, and I blanched, hastily crawling off the bed and ripping it from his hands.
âDonât touch my things.â
He arched a brow, holding up his hands in mock surrender. âI was just looking. Not my fault youâre hiding freaky paintings in a box under your bed.â
My eyes turned to slits. âItâs not freaky. Itâs surrealist. Itâs meant to be unnerving.â
Zekeâs eyes slipped to the print in my hands, and they widened at the headless woman with a white, nearly transparent dress hugging her ample curves. Next to her stood a ghastly figure of a man holding a long stick, and the woman held a string tied to a third dismantled figure, all of them set in a scene of barren wasteland with haunting rocks and sand and gray sky.
âIt succeeded.â
I couldnât help but smile at that, and maybe it was the exhaustion from the week, or the pre-game jitters, or the fact that I was touching art again, but my shoulders relaxed, and I handed it back to him.
âItâs called . Believe it or not, this was actually one of his more controlled and balanced pieces.â I nodded toward the white wall above my desk. âCan you hang it there for me?â
âWow, youâre actually going to let me help?â
âDonât make me regret it,â I said, shoving the hammer into his chest.
Zeke was quiet while he hung the frame, and I watched him every step of the way, making sure he took the same care with making it perfect as I did. Something foreign tugged at my chest, like a string wrapped around a rib that Iâd completely forgotten about until I felt the pull.
A flash of Zeke as a kid hit me, his wide and bright smile, his laugh. I remembered for just a breath what it was like to be carefree, to be a little girl with a crush on my brotherâs best friend.
But the feeling slipped as quickly as it had come.
When Iâd ensured Zeke had leveled the frame appropriately, I dug under my bed to pull out the biggest piece I had, one covered with a thick blanket. I unveiled it and gave a happy sigh.
It was street art, but on a canvas, bright neon colors dancing across the white background. Up close, it might only look like paint splatters, but as the viewer backed up, a whole slew of enigmatic images could be seen â a seductive woman with lush lips of roses, tree branches for her hair, a waterfall for her neck. The earth spread out around her, and above her, an endless starry night.
âThatâs beautiful,â Zeke remarked.
âIt was painted by a homeless man in Dorchester,â I said, hanging my hands on my hips and looking around the room. âJohn Blackman.â
âYou remembered his name?â
âOf course.â
âNot many people ask the name of a homeless man,â he remarked.
âHeâs an artist.â
My eyes met Zekeâs briefly, but what I found there unnerved me for reasons I couldnât explain, so I cleared my throat and pointed to the blank wall next to my closet, across from the only window I had.
âThere. So the light can hit it.â
Zeke picked up the frame and went to work as I picked through the rest of the boxes.
âI forgot how into this stuff you are. Do you want to be an artist?â
âGod, no,â I answered immediately. âI mean, I I had the talent to paint or sketch, but I tried when I was younger, and letâs just say stick figures is about as artistic as I get.â
I smiled, pulling out my favorite, textured, earthenware clay vase and setting it on top of my tall dresser. I filled it with dried flowers and herbs next.
âI do think this is where my future is, though,â I remarked. âArt curation.â
Zeke lifted a brow, glancing at me only a moment before his attention was back on hanging the large canvas. âWhich meansâ¦â
âIt means that in my wildest dreams, Iâll work for a museum, and Iâll be in charge of acquiring and cataloging new pieces and exhibits.â
Zeke made a face, but didnât say anything.
âWhat?â
âNothing.â
I leveled my gaze. âOut with it.â
He shrugged, stepping back to make sure the painting was hung straight. I handed him the leveler just to be sure.
âNothing. Itâs just⦠you donât think you have a future in football?â
The question slammed into me harder than I expected, my throat tightening as I struggled to regain my composure.
â
,â I said, sticking out my tongue before I instructed him to tilt the painting down a bit on the left side.
Zeke turned, his dark eyes finding mine, jaw set as his brows tugged inward. I hadnât taken any time to study him when he walked in, but now, I saw the fatigue he held from the week just like I did. And still, his muscles bulged like heâd just been in the gym for a pump, and his shoulders were relaxed, like it didnât bother him in the least that we had a game in the morning.
âIâm serious,â he said.
âThen youâre even more of an idiot than I thought you were.â
âYou think just because there arenât any women in the NFL right now, that there canât ever be?â
âI think itâs highly unlikely, and not something I personally want.â
That last part felt sticky as I said it, and I reached for the bottle of water on my bedside table, taking a sip.
âEven though youâre as good as you are?â
âI made chart,â I said. âNot the pro bowl team. I havenât even played in a college game yet.â
âYou earned a scholarship to a D-1 university. Do you understand how impressive that is?â
I hated how my heart swelled with those words, something akin to pride begging me to let it out, and hope was right there on its heels, waiting for its chance to dash.
But I stifled them both, knowing there was nothing but disappointment waiting for me if I let myself get too far down that imaginary road.
I shrugged, picking at the polish on my nails and thinking I should probably take it off completely for the game tomorrow. âYou know why Iâm here.â
That sentence sobered both of us, a heavy silence falling over the room.
âI think itâs more than that,â he said softly.
My face warmed.
And then out of nowhere, agitation washed over me, swift and all-encompassing.
both Like the reason wasnât directly tied to .
âYeah, well, itâs not,â I said flatly, turning back to the boxes. âIâve got the rest. You can go play video games or fuck a cheerleader or whatever it is you were off to do before you barged into my room.â
âI was going to study, actually. This Econ class is reallyââ
I didnât mean to snort out the laugh that came involuntarily from my chest, but I did, and it cut Zeke short. I glanced up with an arched brow and smile of amusement to find his expression hardening into stone.
âSorry,â I said, though I was still laughing a little as I shook my head and pulled a small watercolor painting out of the box. âI thought that was a joke.â
He stood frozen in the corner of my room, and I looked up again just in time to see his jaw flex. Something in his eyes made mine soften, and I opened my mouth to actually apologize, but he was gone before I got the chance.
His door slammed so hard it shook the whole dorm, and I shuttered at the sound of it, blinking as my veins ran cold.
But I shook it off a moment later, assessing my room for where to put the next piece.
I didnât care if Iâd hurt his feelings.
Heâd hurt me and my entire family far more than that.
It took every effort not to slam the door behind me when I retreated to my room, chest seared by every fiery breath I expelled. I yanked my desk chair out and flopped into it, tearing my textbook open with entirely too much force. My over-the-ear headphones were snapped in place next, and I turned on an atmospheric playlist, something to stimulate my brain without distracting it with melodies or lyrics.
For a long while, I just stared at the book where Iâd opened it to chapter four, to our assigned reading before class on Monday. It was just a few chapters. All I had to do was read and comprehend it enough to pass the quiz that would be waiting for us on Monday morning to ensure weâd read.
If only it were that simple.
For almost all the other students in my class, I assumed it just that simple. Theyâd probably wait until Sunday night and just crank those chapters like it was nothing, absorbing every word and going into Monday morning feeling confident in their ability to ace the quiz.
I, on the other hand, would need to read it several times, take notes, and even Iâd be lucky to retain enough to get a C.
Rileyâs laugh haunted me as I stared at the open book. Sheâd always just assumed I hated school, or was lazy, or incompetent â or maybe a combination of the three. She didnât know how I struggled. Not many did. Outside of my parents, Gavin, and the teachers who to know in order to allow me more time on tests, I kept it to myself.
A glance at the clock told me I could go down to the team study hall if I wanted, maybe enlist the help of one of our tutors. But we had a game in the morning, and I just wanted to get enough done to make me feel confident that I could focus all my energy on football for a full day and be fine.
Blowing out a breath, I sat up a little straighter, using the edge of my notebook to line up right under the first sentence. I only moved it down when I was ready to read the next line, so I wouldnât get distracted.
Slowly, I read the first page, having to pause now and then when a word didnât make sense because Iâd read the letters out of order. Any time that happened, Iâd lose the context of the sentence completely and have to read it over. But I was used to this. It was just the way it was for me. Reading and comprehension took time and work.
It was never going to be something that came easy to me, never going to be something I excelled at. And that was just fine.
Because I had football.
I sat back for a break after the first page, sipping my energy drink. I had to be careful â I needed energy to focus, but I didnât want much or I wouldnât sleep, and that was what I needed most before our first game.
The deep humming of the atmospheric song playing in my headphones lulled me into a quiet focus, and I thought about the day I found out about my dyslexia.
remarkable That was the moment where my parentsâ belief in my dream began. They went from supporting me as a kid playing football for fun, to drilling me like the NFL player they already knew I would be one day.
It was love in the purest form.
But resting just below that layer of love was an even thicker, heavier layer of pressure.
Dad had told me when he dropped me off for summer term. Because he knew just as well as I did that there was no degree waiting for me here, no future career that would require anything of me other than performing on that field.
It was football or bust.
So, I took a deep breath and got back to reading only long enough to get the first chapter read, and then I climbed into bed to make sure I had a good nightâs sleep.
Because tomorrow was the chapter that mattered most for me â the next one in my football career.
Thatâs where my focus needed to be.