Authors: Anne Eliot
Tags: #dating your best friend coming of age romance with digital photograpy project and Canada Great Lakes, #Football player book boyfriend, #kindle bestselling authors, #Anne Eliot, #teen young adult contempoary sweet high school romance, #Children's literature issue young adult literature suitable for younger teens, #teen with disability, #football player quarterback boyfriend, #family issues, #young adult with CP and cerebral palsy, #best friends, #hemi kids including spastic and mixed, #Ann Elliott, #first love story, #growing up with wheelchairs and crutches, #CP and Cerebral palsy, #Author of Almost and Unmaking Hunter Kennedy, #friendships and school live with childhood hemiparesis, #Countdown Deals, #Issue YA Author, #friends to dating story, #Summer Read
His eye crinkles double and deepen. “That sounds so damn cool. Duct tape? You amaze me.”
I blink, forcing my face to go all serious. “Duct tape amazes me. It’s my spirit animal.”
He laughs, throwing back his head. “Ah, Ellen, I’m so happy that we—after all these years have finally been able to—”
“DAMMIT, CAMDEN CAMPBELL! IS THIS HOW YOU KEEP YOUR HEAD IN THE GAME? WHAT DO YOU THINK YOU ARE DOING?”
The real world crashes back in. I flinch and search out the sound of the screaming voice.
Cam jerks and stiffens like he’s been shot, running a hand over the back of his hair, his grip tightens on his helmet. “Crap. My dad.”
I quickly grab onto the bleacher ledge and steel my legs to balance me in case he tries to make a sudden move. “I distracted you and now you’re in trouble. I need to learn to shut up about photography. I’m so sorry. I have no control.”
“I’m always in trouble with that guy. And photography is the best subject ever. Besides, I came over to you, remember?” Cam’s slowly climbing out of the bleachers—too slowly and keeping an eye on me and my gripped hands—which says he’s as afraid as I am that he’s going to bump into me again.
I analyze Mr. Campbell through my long bangs. He’s huge, like Cam. And he has nice wavy hair just like Cam’s, but that’s where the similarities seem to stop. This guy’s wound so tight I feel like he’s going to snap even from this distance. Right now, he has his arms spread wide with his hands facing the sky like he’s some sort of insane preacher. “SON. YOU NEED TO GET YOURSELF DOWN HERE AND TRHOW SOME DAMN WARM UP PASSES OR I’M GOING TO MAKE YOUR LIFE A LIVING HELL.”
“Eesh.” I frown. “You should go.”
“Those are empty threats. Besides, my life with that guy as a father has already been a living hell for years and years. No way could today make it worse.”
“If it helps at all, my dad sucks, too. He just pays for my iPhone and ignores me.”
“I KNOW YOU CAN HEAR ME, DUMB-ASS! GET OVER HERE. NOW. WE’VE GOT A GAME TO WIN.”
He raises one brow and the sparkle in his eyes fades as he glances back at his dad and pulls a scrunched face. “Want to trade?”
I shake my head, which makes him smile.
Cam leans in against the side of the bleachers, talking fast. “I can’t come talk to you after the game because if I do—well—so many reasons. But mostly, he and Coach make me do some cleanup work after the games…so…” He shrugs. “I hope that’s okay that I don’t come back up here—and I might not make it to the lake—that’s all.”
“Yeah. Sure. Of course. Patrick’s going to give me a ride to physical therapy and I’ll get Nash to walk me over to the lake if I need help.”
He nods and his gaze slides away from mine. “So…you’re covered. Good. I’m—glad you came to see the game.”
“Whatever Laura wants, right?” I ask, trying to joke.
It works. He smiles. “Right.”
“CAM!”
My turn to talk fast, “Go! Just go! I don’t need a baby sitter. And I hope you win and get un-sacked or—whatever.” I furrow my brow, wracking my head for the right thing to say to a quarterback about to start a game. I add, “Like the theater people say:
Break a leg!”
He looks back, his eyes pulling at me like they did before. “I wish.”
“DAMN YOU, CAMDEN. DON’T MAKE ME COME UP THERE.”
But Cam’s already gone. Vaulted over the half-fence at the farthest point away from where his dad’s been waiting for him. He’s running so fast he looks like a streak compared to everyone else. If I didn’t just hear his dad acting psycho, I’d accuse Cam of showing off. But even I get that his last move was probably a life-saving move to get as far away from his dad as possible.
When Cam reaches the center of the field, he grabs a ball but then stops, hand in mid-air as he looks around. His arm doesn’t move an inch until he’s spotted me in the bleachers.
I hear his dad still shouting, “CAM. THROW THE DAMN BALL. WARM UP’S ALMOST OVER.”
But he doesn’t throw the ball. Instead he tilts the ball into a small wave.
My chest twists all funny and I finally give a tiny wave back—very close to my chest—because I don’t need anyone spotting me waving like a freak fan-girl at the cliché handsome football team quarterback. Thankfully blue-lipped, tiger-striped Laura shows up, skips up high onto the bleachers next to me just in time to catch Cam’s wave.
She screams out louder than any cheerleader, ”
Oi—Oi—Oiiiiii!
Go, CAM! GO, PATRICK! Give-em what they’re deserving! Go, Tigers. ROAAAAR!”
My face heats like I’ve caught fire. I quickly look away which has me locking eyes with Mr. Campbell who’s still standing at the half-fence and glowering at me and Laura like he wants to kill us both.
cam
I can’t remember the minutes in the game I’ve already played. I only remember, quarter after quarter, how it’s taken all my strength not to pick out Ellen’s sitting in the bleachers again and again. It’s ruining me—and my head—to know she’s here. Watching me. Waiting to go the lake with or without me. And since I’ve left her side, nothing I’ve promised myself makes sense.
I only want to get off this field and meet her under the trees. Hear the water pushing at the shore and watch the wind move her long bangs against her cheeks. Check out what she’s created with duct tape for her iPhone. See if the pulleys work. Snap the first photographs along with her.
Try out o
ur
pulleys. Work on
our
project.
Even though I’ve sworn to stay away, I now know I can’t. Or, maybe it’s just that I won’t.
To get through the game, I’ve made myself hyper-focus on things here on the field: the weight of the ball sticking then releasing out of my hands, my feet digging into the dirt below the bright green grass, my eyes locking into the end zone and the location of the other players, how each muscle pulls taut and releases in my legs as I run, the shriek of the whistles and the hum of the crowd mixed with my own breath.
I’ve personally scored three times rushing the ball. My receivers have also scored four so we’re way ahead.
People’s voices have become robots spurting riddles in my face. Whatever words I’ve thrown back must have been enough. I’ve been handed water and energy bars and I’ve swallowed them down, unable to taste, unsure how I’ve managed to chew. I’ve huddled on the bench—pretending to concentrate on the other team’s QB, and while in play, I’ve tossed out commands before we break and while on the lineup. Just like I’m supposed to—but every time I’ve had no clue what I’m saying. Nor do I know how I’ve ended up with these touchdowns. No recollection of my feet walking me back to the sidelines, waiting to go again. I know I’ve interacted with Coach and even my dad on the sidelines like all is great. Like I’m not losing my sanity. They don’t notice because they’re happy and we’re winning better than we could have ever hoped.
But…
crap
…in my typical indecisive way, this game’s almost over and I’ve nearly let my own goals slip away just because I can’t get Ellen’s smile, her soft voice, and the sound of her saying, ‘break-a-leg’ from replaying over and over:
Break a leg. Break a leg. Break a leg!
All mixed in with my truthful answer to her:
I wish. I wish. I wish!
Because I do wish for that. I still wish it. I will always wish it until I’ve got a way off this field forever but at the same time…I wish exactly what she wishes. That I wasn’t here at all, and I was simply already down at the lake working on photography with Ellen Foster.
With only a few minutes left to play, I’m walking onto the field, wondering what I’m going to do. I analyze the other team like I’ve been doing the whole game until I find the guy who could do it for me. Who should have locked in everything that I really want for me—and way back in the first quarter.
Player number 56.
He’s easily six-foot-three. 240 pounds of crushing defensive linebacker. Perfect, and just the player I’ve been waiting for.
I still have a chance because at this point he’s so frustrated by the score he’s radiating pure hatred right at me. The last three times we’ve had the ball, I’ve flipped past him like a floating bird passing a brick shoved in concrete. Worse—worse for him—I also scored on his misses. On the last one, I came so close I could feel the sweat and heat off his brow as I ran through his finger tips.
I’ve also just seen his coach screaming in his face even worse than my dad does.
Number 56 wants to crush me into the dirt. I want to let him. My head spins and fills with the sound of my own voice.
I wish. I wish. I wish.
If Ellen weren’t here. If she hadn’t looked so small and alone on those bleachers when I’d spotted her. If only I hadn’t walked up to talk to her before the game…I’d have already let this guy seal my fate so perfectly. Let him hit me hard. Forced myself to stand back up and tell everyone I felt great. I’d faked that my knee, or my shoulder—wherever he’d done the most damage—didn’t hurt the first time he took me out. And then I’d pull another play—and as many as I could get away with—make sure he’d pounded me twice, even three times to seal it. Whatever fate decided ‘it’ might be for me.
But each time I’ve started executing my plan, worry has me changing my mind.
Worse, the adrenaline I’m spiking has made it so I’ve never played better. There’s always those inspirational coaching expressions that talk about facing your fears like:
run toward the fear and you will fly
. Right now, I’m living proof of the flying part. Facing number 56 over and over has been an exercise of me meeting my fears over and over. The kid is terrifying, yet every time I head straight at the guy, I’ve soared to new heights. With each score, I’ve become even more a jumble of confused regrets and huge elation, because it’s kind of fun to fly like I’ve just done. It’s also really hard to deny the happiness of my teammates after running plays into scores that have brought the entire crowd to their feet to cheer us on.
Even though I don’t want to play even one more game, my team and I just beat Toronto’s ‘unbeatable’ team. This means we’ve made it one game farther in to the Provincial High School Playoffs—and it’s all thanks to me acting like a complete psycho inside my own head and on the field. My team, and now this whole town thinks I’m some sort of hero, but if they could read my damn mind, they’d put me into a straight jacket. Even now I’m lined up not caring that I’m the QB, in charge of calling plays and being a team leader. I’m actually wondering random stuff like what Ellen’s hand might feel like intertwined with mine this afternoon!
And I bet…no…I know…it would feel soft and small and warm and just about perfect.
I swallow and shake my head to try to clear it. I also add in some internal shouting using my dad’s voice for extra effect.
Snap out of it, loser! This is it! This is your last chance. What do you think you’ve been doing this whole game? Go with what’s real and obtainable and right in front of you instead of wasting time over stupid dreams and situations and girls you can never ever have. Girls who’ve made it pretty clear they don’t even want or need you…
At the line, I push away Ellen’s face and lock in my focus on number 56. On me…just getting off this damn football field and away from my dad’s screaming voice. Forever.
I adjust my helmet, sink my teeth deep into my mouth guard.
Dammit, Cam. What do you want? What do you really want?
Out of habit, I glance at the clock, noting we’re at the sixty yard line. This is a tick-down situation so it doesn’t matter that we’re so far from the end zone. Even if the other team intercepted one of my throws, they could never score enough to catch up, but of course I’m not planning to throw the ball. I can run any play I want, but at the same time, everyone—especially my dad—knows we’re so far ahead there’s no reason for me to rush the ball at this point so he’s expecting me to do hand-offs or keep throwing it out of bounds. Above all I know I can’t act stupid or obvious, or my dad might suspect the truth. I also can’t mess up and involve anyone from my team while I’m getting squished.
Whistle blows. The clock is counting down.
We all line up for a shotgun hike, and I meet the direct glower coming off number 56. I give him a little taunting nod that says ‘we’re-on’. I shout out the play sequence to get my team heading wide to receive the pass I’m never going to throw, “Thirty-one, twenty-two—
hike
!”
The ball’s in my hands again and my heart rate skyrockets. My feet naturally skip-dance to the right side then back to the left. I keep moving, pretending I don’t see the defenders trying to reach me as I track number 56 blasting through our players like before. The guy’s like King Kong knocking down ants. I’m fighting against my impulse to go to auto-play, but still my eyes are searching for a way to pass to an open player. Thankfully, no one’s free! I let my glance flick back to number 56 again. He’s barreling toward me in such a way I think the universe just decided for me what’s going to happen because this set up couldn’t be more perfect. Even if my dad replays someone’s video of this, he can’t deny this take-down of me is going to be no one’s fault!
All I have to do is hold, act like I’m about to throw and pretend I don’t see what—or who’s—coming.
I turn away from 56, skip to the right—and pretend-focus far down the field, knowing I’ve got to gain some of my own speed and side movements to increase the pressure of the impact that’s to come. The guy is just about on me.
I spot a small pathway, scoot to the side and head into the tiny hole of emptiness in front of me. I up my speed as I dart into another hole. Number 56 has anticipated my rush this time, and he’s already turned in my direction. He’s running parallel to me now. His eyes lock on mine as I leap and wind through another spot, legs maxed into full speed running. I’m heading for the long stretch of open space along the sideline.
Break a leg! Just do it. Break a leg, a shoulder, blow out my knee—anything at all.
Catch me…catch me.
The crowd’s screaming as I gain yard after yard. I’m flying again the way I did before…and suddenly I can only hear the deep thud-thud-thudding of my heart.
Somehow, I’m at the 40.
I can feel 56 moving up behind, just how I want, but as I slightly slow down, I look back. Something you aren’t ever supposed to do. But I’m wondering how close he is and instead I somehow lock onto Ellen in the crowd. Unlike everyone else who’s jumping, dancing and shouting as loud as possible to cheer me on, she’s completely immobile. Clutched on to Laura’s arm and she looks so anguished I almost freeze in my tracks and leap up into the bleachers to see what’s wrong.