by Ivy Jordan
Maybe that was where I belonged, with my nose in a book instead of drinking and screaming with the rest of the guys. I didn’t have anything in common with them anymore. They were loud and rambunctious. None of them would be there next year.
If I stayed, I’d have to deal with another round of drunken idiots while I led their ignorant asses through to the playoffs. It would be hell. The library sounded like a better alternative, and there was so much more there.
My eyes had opened, and I wasn’t sure I could go back to this world. I was too deep in Ava’s. Football wasn’t a challenge. School was, and it was a competition, too. There were dozens of others vying for the top position in my class. I wanted to be there, working on something enriching. Maybe Ava was right. Football didn’t matter.
For the first time in my life, I was questioning the direction I had taken. It was supposed to be unsettling. Football was a part of who I was, but it felt enlightening, like I’d been blind and my eyes had opened. I wasn’t sure what to do with this, so I let it sit while the party went on around me.
The bus moved slowly through the cornfields to the south of the city, until I saw the library peeking out. There was a rush of relief. I was shutting down, and the guys were just getting started. Mike noticed me slump back in my seat. He turned to me, and I smelled liquor on his breath. “Dude, what is wrong with you?”
“Nothing, I’m just tired.”
“It’s your girl.” He sounded excited, overly so, but it was catching. “You’re falling for her, Channing.”
“Maybe.”
“Don’t give me that maybe crap. Don’t hold back. You really care about her.”
“I do.”
“Good, I’m glad, and I’m sorry for all the shit I gave you before.”
“Thank you.” I laid my head back. We pulled into the dorms, and the men rolled out, roaring and cheering at the tops of their lungs. There was a group of girls waiting outside, groupies mostly. Half of them weren’t even with the team, but they would be by the end of the night.
I slipped through the crowd, past the cheers and back slaps, through a group of scantily clad girls. Nobody seemed to notice me. They were too excited by now, and I was just getting in the way of their fun.
I didn’t want to go back to the dorm. Ava was waiting for me, but I didn’t get a chance to finish my shower, and I didn’t want to show up in my dirty sweats. I gave her a call when I got back into my room.
“Did you win?” she answered.
“Yes. You know what that means, don’t you?”
“Yes, and I want you to know that I fully expected to get this call. I didn’t doubt you for a second.”
“That means a lot.”
“Not as much as what this means for you. You really are a star now, Channing.”
“I guess I am. How’s dinner coming?”
“It’s good. It’s almost done. Are you still getting out?”
“No, I’m at the dorms. I’m gonna get ready. Then I’ll head over there.”
“Alright, I’ll see you soon.”
I rushed up, turned the water on, and cleaned myself off as fast as I could. When I was done, I threw on the best clothes I could find and ran out. I didn’t want to take any more time than I already had. Ava was waiting, and I’d been away from her for far too long.
She should’ve been with me. I still didn’t feel right. I wanted her to feel like the rest of the guys felt. But it was still exciting, knowing that my name would be on the tips of everyone’s tongue, up until the final moment.
We would win. I didn’t have to worry about that. I was more worried about what the rest of my life would be like. I wanted her to be there at the games, but she had no interest in football. She didn’t want to see that. It wasn’t a part of her world. How could she take part in things if she couldn’t give in to that excitement?
She’d be there. She’d come to the after-game parties, and if I got signed, she’d be standing next to me when I gave my acceptance speech. That was all wonderful, but she wouldn’t really be a part of things. She wouldn’t feel the same rush that I got when I won a game. It’d be like having a child come up to you to tell you that they won a game of dodgeball. She’d be happy for me, but she wouldn’t understand the magnitude of it.
I was depressed when I should’ve been flying, and it didn’t get better when I saw her building, with the light on at the top. Her window was open, and I could see the curtains streaming out. At least she was there, but for how long? What if she lost interest in me because she couldn’t be a part of that life? She didn’t like football, and that was my world.
I walked up to her apartment and knocked on the door. When she answered, she was wearing a short, tight dress with a spritz of lilac perfume. I smelled it when she pulled in to give me a hug. She pecked me on the lips. “Congratulations.”
I could almost celebrate. “What is that smell?” It was savory, with a hint of roasting herbs.
“Chicken.” She turned back and walked inside. The apartment was dark, with a white cloth on the table and a vase with a tealight sitting in the center. It was casting a glow that danced back and forth along the wall.
Sitting behind the table was an antique china hutch made from pine. “What is this?”
“Oh,” she laughed, “me and my friend went shopping, and we stopped at an antique store. What do you think?”
“I love it.”
“I still have to get some china, but I think it’ll look good.”
“I think so too.” I wrapped my arms around her waist and pulled her in to taste her lips. She seemed to fall into it, so I pulled back, just to give her a tease. “I’m hungry.”
“Good, because I made a lot. It’s not gourmet.”
“You made it, so I’m sure it’s fantastic.”
“I hope you really believe that, because I don’t know how to cook.” She walked behind me into the kitchen and opened the oven. A blast of steam flew out, and the smell of roasting chicken burst into the dining room.
She began make us plates while I turned around watched intently. The counter was between us, so I couldn’t see what she was doing, which made it that much harder. I was in suspense. She kept me waiting while she ducked into the fridge and started working on the plates again.
Finally, she brought my plate out and set it down. “Oh-hoh, you are a woman after my heart.” There were two big pieces of oven-fried chicken, a pile of mashed potatoes, and rice.
“I hope you like it.” She walked back into the kitchen to grab her plate and set it down at the table before sitting down. “My mom showed me how to make it when I was younger.”
“What is she like?” I asked.
“Naïve, mostly. I love her a lot, but she made some bad decisions.”
“I’m sorry.”
“It’s her fault. She got with the wrong guy when she was a teenager. She had me when she was 16, and her mother couldn’t handle it, so she kicked her out of the house.”
“How did she work?”
“She danced.”
“Oh, I’m sorry.”
“It’s nothing. I used to mind when I was younger, and I’d see her leaving for work, but over time I got used to it. She was just doing what she had to do to survive. We made pretty good money back then, but she gave it up when she got pregnant with my sister. They wouldn’t let her work, so she started waiting tables.”
“That must not have been easy.”
“It wasn’t. I was 14 at the time, and just starting to get angsty. I hated her. I thought she had ruined our life. We didn’t have any food, no money. I had to wear clothes from the thrift store and bargain bins. Then, when my sister was born, I started to understand. She wasn’t just doing it because she didn’t want to dance. She did it because she wanted to do the right thing by Chelsea. It was hard, but I accepted it over time.”
“But what about money?”
“Poverty became the norm. It was terrible, but when you wake up like that, day after day, it beco
mes mundane. We never lived well. Things just got a little bit worse is all.”
“Isn’t there something she can do? Can’t she find a better job?”
“There’s no time. She works all day, every day. She can’t apply during business hours.”
“That’s terrible. It’s like she’s a slave.”
“A wage slave,” she said. “That’s why they have the term.”
“That’s the saddest thing I’ve ever heard, honestly. I am so sorry.”
“Thank you, Channing.” Her voice was low and somber.
“It’s okay.”
“No, I mean it. You saved them both.” Her head was low.
I reached out and moved my finger down her jawline, then caught her chin up and lifted her head. A tear fell down from her eye, and I wiped it away. Then I leaned in and kissed her, grazing my lips over hers. It was meant to be comforting, but she erupted in a burst of fiery passion. She wrapped her arm around my neck and dove her tongue through. I caught it up, pulled past her lips, and let my tongue dive in. Then we met and danced around one another while our breath stormed through.
I let my finger pass down her arm, and she shivered. “You are a sex god, you know that?” she laughed. “The second I see you, I just can’t help it.”
“Eat your food.” I smiled and looked back down at my plate. “You’re distracting me from this wonderful chicken.”
“You think it’s wonderful?”
“Yes. I don’t know what you did to it.”
“I found a bottle of this stuff called yellow seasoning. I’m sure it’s mostly MSG.”
“That’s what makes it so good.” I went back to my chicken.
“Oh, I got these from the thrift shop, too.” She got up, pulled something out from under the sink, and brought it to me. It was a painting in a gilded frame, forged with impressions of roses and a butterfly sitting on top. Inside it was a picture of a house sitting on the edge of a forest with lights on in the windows, and pink and purple flowers flowing down the hill below.
“That’s perfect.”
“Look in the window, here.” She pointed at the window on the right. There was a candle sitting on a table inside. Beside it was a china hutch behind the table, just like the one she had.
“It’s home.”
She reached down and pecked me on the lips. Then she placed it under the sink and went back to her food. “Home could be simple, you know. It doesn’t have to be a place that you slave away to keep or decorate to impress other people. It’s just a shell.”
“The people inside it are what matters.” I smiled up at her, and she smiled back, sending a shiver down my spine. At that moment, I knew what I wanted. I had a clear picture, and a goal in mind, but that goal wasn’t as important as the hours we’d spend together trying to get there.
“How are you, Channing? You’re quiet tonight.”
“I’ve been thinking a lot. It’s nothing important. I’m more concerned with now. I’m glad to be here with you.”
“I’m glad you’re here.” She took my hand.
“What are you going to do when the semester is over?” I asked.
“I’ll probably get a full-time job. I want to keep sending money home, and I think it’s time to upgrade a little bit. I feel like I’m camping here. I want to make it a home.”
“I think it’s nice either way.”
“You’re biased.”
“I am. This is my favorite place in the entire world.”
“Why is that?”
“It just feels like you.”
“Yeah?”
“Mm-hmm.”
“What are you going to do? You’re not going home, are you?”
“No,” I shook my head, “God, no. I’m thinking of getting a place nearby. Maybe we can live next to each other.”
“That would be nice.”
“I don’t want to rely on my parents anymore, honestly. I’m tired of them leading me around like a dog on a leash. Every time I do something they don’t like, they threaten to cut me off. I’d rather not take any of their money at all than have to deal with them.”
“I think you’d regret that.”
“Maybe, but I’m not pulling away altogether. I’ll ease into it, ask them for a place. Then I’ll get my own job and start easing my way out.”
“Neither of us know what we’re going to do for a living.”
“I don’t care. I’ll figure it out. I just want to be free. I feel like I’ve been caged up for so long, in school, at my parents’ house. There’s always been somebody looking over my shoulder telling me what to do. I’ve never been free; not like you.”
“Me? No, I’m chained up.”
“Not like I am. You can leave, go where you want, work where you want. You’re not going to get called back home so your parents can scream at you if you screw up.”
“I see your point,” she said. “But it’s not freedom. It’s a different kind of slavery.”
“I won’t mind it. I can get up on time in the morning. I don’t need anyone shooting me down to do it. I won’t be cutting out the work, just the taskmaster.”
“I like the way you say that.”
“You know what’s going to happen after this game, don’t you?”
“No; I’ve been wondering, though.”
“It’s not going to be pretty. I really should be preparing you for this,” I sighed.
“Why?”
“It’s a circus. So, first the NFL sends out scouts to watch the game. They’ll be plainclothes and business-like, watching every little thing that we do. Every pass is another tally mark, every foul. They have a whole checklist they go through.”
“What happens if you win?”
“When I win. I can promise you. This next team is absolute crap. Their wide receiver had to quit the team because he failed, and he was the only reason they’re winning. That means that the scouts will be watching me.”
“Are you going to get signed?”
“I don’t know. I could, but the circus beforehand is going to be horrific.”
“How so?”
“I’ll be on the national news, and the paparazzi will start swarming. You’ll be a part of that, of course. Expect cameras waiting for you outside of class, in the library, maybe even the hall outside your apartment. I don’t know.”
“Dear God.”
“That’s when they start to look for dirt. The NFL has a strict drafting process. There will be drug screens, psych analysis, and people will be asking about my personal life. The entire time the media will be digging, trying to urge things on. They want the scoop on the new star, and part of me thinks that the NFL is paying them to get it.”
“Why would they do that?”
“Because they’re putting millions of dollars into us. They want to make sure that they’re making a good investment, and that they won’t get caught up in some scandal. That, and it makes for good promotion.”
“But they can’t get anything on you. You’re plain, just like me.”
“I am, but that doesn’t mean they won’t try to cause trouble. They’d do anything, even pit us against each other.”
“But that won’t work.”
“Not unless you give into them. Don’t expose yourself to the limelight. Stay away from the cameras. Shit, wear a burka if you have to. They’ll try anything.”
“A burka,” she laughed.
“Maybe I’m going too far, but I know that you won’t appreciate the added attention, so I want you to be ready.”
“Short of having to get a security detail, I think I can handle it. If things get ugly, and there’s death threats, things like that, then I’ll worry about it.”
“I won’t let it get that bad.”
“Whatever happens, so long as you’re here, I won’t mind.”
“I feel the same way. The media is the only thing in this world that truly scares me.”
“Why?”
“It’s money at the expense of everyone involved,
and they play dirty tricks. One player, who turned out to be gay, was caught with a prostitute they paid to make a sex tape. They spammed it on every NFL site they could find.”
“Oh my God,” she gasped.
“That’s what I’m talking about. It’s dirty tricks.”
“We just have to be secure with ourselves.”
“And what we have,” I met her eyes, and she looked away, her cheeks blushing.
“I think we’ll do fine.”
I went back to my food and finished every bite of it. Then I went back for more chicken, and she broke out a bottle of wine. We took it to over to the couch and started talking about our house on the hill, and what we wanted to do when we finally graduated. Ava’s dream, which I’d been trying to get out of her for a while, was to be an author—of course.
She was sheepish about it, smiling and turning away like it was just a childish fantasy, something that could never happen in her world. It could happen in mine, though. I told her about how my father pushed me into my business major and told me that he’d find me a job at his firm. It wasn’t really sure what I wanted to do, though.
She went on to tell me about how my degree could take me anywhere. I could use it in any industry that I wanted. I’d never actually sat down and thought about that. It was an enticing idea, but it was too much for the moment. It was meant to be simple.
She was laying on the couch with me with her head resting on my chest, and her eyes looking up at me. She didn’t need to wear anything to be beautiful, but she always dressed up with me. She had on a lilac top, contrasting with ebony curls, and a pair of white pants, so tight I could see the outline of her panties.
I had my hand wrapped around her stomach when she sat up and turned to me. “I got you a present.”
“You didn’t have to get me anything.”
“I wanted to.” She stood up and walked into her room.
“What is it?”
She didn’t say anything, so I folded my hands and waited. I wasn’t sure what she could possibly get me. I had everything I wanted, but the gesture meant a lot. I knew that she was doing it to pay me back for what I did for her family.
I saw her shadow pass over the door and looked up. She was leaning against the doorframe now, wrapped in a nightie, a tapestry of millions of tiny, white lace flowers. I could see her dark nipples peeking through the translucent cloth, and the outline of her hips, succulent mounds of flesh. My cock was hard instantly.