Monday morning practice brought relief to Jacob's nerves. He always felt better on the court. This was his place, his purpose. The familiar feel of the bumpy rubber texture in his hands before a free-throw was comforting. He extended his arm and released the ball from his fingertips. It flew through the air and he felt at peace. The ball swished through the net of the basket, not even close to the rim. That was bliss.
Practice ended and brought Jacob back to the present. For the first time since he joined, Jacob ended with the rest of the team. He didn't even notice their presence. They were just other guys; it's not like they were Seth. They were different now. The world was segregated into Seth and Not-Seth.
Bret noticed Jacob was with them. "Look at you! Not doing overtime today? Finally giving the rest of us a chance to catch up?" It was no secret that Jacob was the best on the team. He had been offered the position of captain at the end of last year, but he turned it down.
Jacob just scoffed at Bret's comment. He didn't owe them any explanation.
The real captain, James Dooley, rounded up the team as they were changing.
"Since you’re all here, we’ve got some business. We've agreed to a skirmish with the Columbia Wildcats before the official season starts this weekend. Half the Columbia team are going to show up to our evening practice after school tomorrow. This will be a good opportunity to test our new plays."
Everyone seemed excited. Columbia was second in their division district. If they could get a heads-up on Columbia’s current abilities, they'd have a good chance at making it to the playoffs. If they could at least beat Columbia, they would be guaranteed the number two spot from their district at the division state championship.
Jacob hung his head. Everyone looked at him.
"Is there a problem, Jake?" asked James.
"My parents have schedule a kind of important dinner. I can't be at practice tomorrow night."
Disappointed groans echoed through the locker room.
"Well, that's it then," James sighed. "We'll have to do it without Jake."
Shouts of consternation and disagreement followed.
"What? You don't think we can win without Jacob Foster? What kind of lousy team are you? Besides, this isn’t a conference game. It’s just practice."
Jacob clapped Bret on the shoulder. “Think of it this way, now’s your chance to catch up,” he teased.
“Colin, it looks like you’ll be Shooting guard tomorrow. Are you ready?” asked James.
Colin nodded his head. Jacob could always count on Colin. He was a strong player and often was sent in to give Jacob a breather before the game’s final few minutes. He was a junior, and would probably be taking over shooting guard after Jacob graduated next spring.
With that settled, the team was released to finish changing.
“Fancy dinner, huh?” Colin opened his locker beside Jacob.
“Yeah. My family’s all highkey hyped for me dating Sarah and got a whole thing planned with her family. I’m not into it, but whatever.” Jacob shoved his gym clothes in his locker.
“Sucks for you!” Colin chided cheerfully. “You get Sarah alone, yet?”
“Nah,” Jacob said as he laced his shoes. “We haven’t hung out much outside school yet.”
“You are one lucky mofo, dude,” Colin shook his head and smiled. “She is hot, man.”
“Yeah, she’s also a really good person.” Jacob swung his backpack over his shoulder.
“Whatever, man,” said Colin. He turned and hurried after Bret out the door. Colin stuck to Bret like a shadow. They were a year apart, but as soon as Colin joined the school, he and Bret became inseparable. Bret loved feeling like a cool mentor, and Colin got to ride on Bret’s popularity.
Jacob had known Bret since middle school, but it didn’t bother him that Colin was closer to Bret than he had ever been. They were his teammates, but they were more friends of circumstance than anything.
School passed uneventfully, and Jacob found himself back on the court that afternoon. The whole team didn’t always practice both morning and afternoon - morning practice wasn’t even an official practice - but he did. At least, he had until the recent upheavals in his life. He didn’t like when his routine was interrupted; it made him uncomfortable. Everything about the last two weeks had made him uncomfortable. It was nice to get back into the routine of practice, especially with the first games coming up.
The gym was filled with the echoing sounds of sneakers on the polished court and the repetitive hollow smack of the ball against the floor. Jacob breathed out the stress from the day before hitting the court and signaling for James to pass him the ball.
He caught it, dribbled up to the three-point line, and let the ball loose from his fingers. It swished through the net with no sound and was rebounded by Charlie, who passed it to Bret. They had fallen into a small game of two-on-two, without a word spoken; James and Jacob against Charlie and Bret, while they waited for Colin and Derek to get changed.
They traded control of the ball up and down the court. Jacob was in his element. He didn’t have to think. Everything made sense.
James passed him the ball when he was at the foul line; easy shot.
No problem.
Jacob raised the ball to shoot and saw Sarah and Seth sitting next to each other on the bleachers, cheering for him.
Jacob could feel something was wrong before the ball left his fingers. “Fuck!” It flew through the air, hit the edge of the backboard, and bounced off, out of bounds.
“What was that, Jake?” James said as he approached Jacob. Bret climbed into the bleachers to recover the ball.
“Fuck. Sorry. I was distracted.” Jacob shook his hands to release excess tension. He kicked himself internally for the mistake. “Can you give me a minute?”
“Yeah, sure.” James let him go.
Jacob jogged over to the bleachers where Sarah and Seth were sitting. They climbed down the bleachers to meet him.
“What are you doing here?” he asked, looking back and forth between the two of them.
“I ran into Seth on my way out and he told me about you tutoring him after school,” Sarah explained.
Seth smiled sheepishly at Jacob from beside Sarah.
Sarah continued. “So, since he had to wait for you anyway, I suggested we come watch you practice. I hadn’t seen you play yet. You’re really good!”
“Except for that last throw,” Seth joked, eyes glinting mischievously. Jacob glared at him. Who’s fault did he think that was, anyway?
“Is it okay if we watch the rest of practice?” Sarah implored.
The earnest hopefulness in Sarah’s request and the playful eagerness in Seth’s face forced Jacob to agree. He would have to play in front of them at some point anyway, he was sure. It might as well be now. Did they have to be here together, though? He remembered Sarah saying she and Seth were friends, but actually seeing them together put him on edge. He cracked his fingers to ease the tingling in his hands. “Yeah, I don’t mind.”
“Thanks! We won’t be a distraction, I promise!” Sarah turned to bounce back up into the bleachers, pulling Seth along behind her. Seth’s eyes met his, and Jacob almost tripped over his own feet as he returned to the court.
He tried to focus on his teammates for the rest of the practice, but he was definitely off his game. He missed two more of the five throws he tried before the end and lost the ball to Ray Cipriani of all people, a sophomore. He was slick with sweat when the Coach finally called it for the day.
“Christ, Jacob. After that performance, I think I’m glad you won’t be with us tomorrow night,” said Bret as he shouldered past Jacob into the locker room.
“What was with you out there?” asked Charlie.
“He’s got it fucking bad,” Derek observed. He almost never spoke.
Jacob sat down on the bench next to his locker and slumped over, his elbows resting on his knees.
“I mean, it’s Sarah Fucking Williams, so I get it, but fuck, man.” Bret peeled his jersey off.
“I know,” Jacob rasped.
James approached Jacob and rested his hands on Jacob’s shoulders, forcing him to look up. His short curls were shiny with sweat, but his green eyes were calm and earnest. He was a good captain. Jacob was again grateful that he had turned down the position. James was a better captain than he ever would have been.
“It’s okay, man. It happens. Get her to come to more practices. You’ll get used to her being there, and you’ll get over it. She’s going to come to games right?”
“Probably,” Jacob smiled. He’d love to have Seth cheering him on during a game. The rest of the team groaned.
“Well, then she’s gotta come to practice!” James announced. “We practice with the same conditions we play, right? No surprises. Take your weakness and make it your strength, Jake. Okay?”
Jacob sat up with relief. “Okay,” he said and nodded to James.
The whole room seemed to relax around him as the rest of the team went through their end-of-practice routine.
Jacob cooled himself off with a shower before changing and leaving.
Sarah and Seth were waiting for him outside of the locker room.
“Yaaay! Good job out there!” Sarah put her arms around Jacob’s neck and kissed him sweetly. Jacob glanced at Seth and pulled away from the kiss, putting one arm around Sarah to compensate for his coldness.
“Thanks,” he said.
“Okay, well, I’m going to head home. I know you guys have work to do.” Sarah released her hold on Jacob and headed for the main door. “It was really fun hanging out today, Seth. Bye guys!”
Jacob was suddenly left alone with Seth in the gym lobby.
“Well… should we walk to my house?” Seth asked.
Jacob followed Seth up the cement walkway to his door. On his last visit to this house, he had been angry, apprehensive, and a bit guilty. He hadn’t been aware of anything but the possibility someone would soon out him if he didn’t get ahead of the situation. How things had changed in just over a week. He was still apprehensive, but this time it was an exciting, arousing apprehension that brought a blush to his face and amplified his senses.He noticed the boxwood bushes that lined the yard between Seth’s townhouse and the next, and the overgrown rose bushes in the small garden along the front of the house. The yard was otherwise completely empty. The house was pale grey with bare windows curtained on the inside with heavy drapes. The houses on either side were freshly painted, with pale yellow on one side and sky blue on the other. Seth’s house looked worn, with knicks and de
The bottom dropped out of Jacob’s stomach. The aroused excitement he had been lost in moments before had been transmuted into terror. He was done. This was it. He had gotten greedy and now his life would be ruined. He struggled back into his shirt. He was ready to bolt out the door and all the way back home. He fumbled with his belt, too stressed to handle the small buckle.Seth reached out and stopped his hands, then guided them out of the way so he could buckle Jacob’s belt for him. “It’s gonna be fine,” he said, more confidently than he looked. “We’ll explain.”“Explain how his son was just about to be screwed by another dude?”“I was about to be screwed, huh?” chuckled Seth. “My dad knows about me. He’s just… h
Tuesday.Jacob changed in his room after school. He was used to his dad hosting dinners and social functions with church people; it had been happening for most of his life. He dressed in his nice clothes, put on his Church Son persona, and prepared for an evening of small talk. He was used to it.These dinners had never been about him before. Sarah would be there. The Williams’ would actually want to know something about this guy who was dating their daughter. What had Sarah told them? Surely she wouldn’t have said anything about his reputation at school. What would they talk about? He still barely knew Sarah. He hadn’t spent much time with her outside of school yet. One dinner with a partner's parents was enough for one week. He didn’t think thi
Jacob pulled on his home game jersey over his head. It did not seem fair that Forge would have to play Middleton first. Middleton High School’s Vikings had taken the state title two years in a row and took the consolation the year before that. Forge had only had a high school basketball team for the last two years. This was the first year there had been seniors on the varsity team.Jacob was apprehensive but the rest of his team seemed overly confident after their triumph over Columbia without his help. They had never beat Middleton. The Middleton Vikings were generally unbeaten. Preston beat Middleton the year they got the consolation trophy, but Preston hadn’t been able to beat them since.The Middleton team had rock-solid plays, but they had lost all their strongest offensive players to graduation last year, which could give other tea
Brett passed the ball to Jacob, who went up for a three point. Jacob’s new guard backed into him, a legal move, causing him to step back on his right foot. His ankle screamed under him. As the ball left his hands he knew it was over. They hadn’t made a single basket since Middleton called the time out.After the ball hit the rim, Middleton caught the rebound and took off to the other end of the court. Jacob did his best to not limp as he hurried to catch up to guard his man. They scored eighteen points in the last fifteen minutes. Forge was just too tired to mount a strong defense anymore, and Jacob was struggling to not trip over his own feet, let alone get any more baskets. Middleton did not end the game with a strong lead, but they didn’t need it. They won. The whole team crowded together to celebrate before lining up for the post-game handshake.
The locker room was already deserted, but the air still smelled of sweat, and steam from the showers clung warm and heavy to Jacob’s skin.“They sure get out of here quick,” Seth commented. “Do they even wash up?”Jacob laughed. “Sort of.” He winced as Seth helped him to sit on a bench. “It’s more of a rinse.”Seth kneeled down and began unlacing Jacob’s shoes.“You don’t have to do that,” Jacob argued as he put a hand out to stop Seth.“I said I would help.” Seth removed the ice pack from Jacob’s ankle and set it on the bench.Jacob glanced down at his boyfriend, curious what Seth was thinking, but a curtain of curls hid Seth’s face as he worked. His boyfriend. Was Seth his boyfriend, though? They hadn’t yet had that conversation.Jacob peeled his jersey off. He was still swe
Jacob had never been so grateful for an injury. Seth’s arm held tight around his waist as he limped along to meet Sarah, who waited at her two-door hatchback at the curb. Sarah wouldn’t be able to tell that both his legs were weak for a different reason. He barely noticed the injured foot now, as long as he didn’t put too much weight on it. He wasn’t sure if that was because of the ice or because it was already getting better; most likely, he was just too distracted to feel the pain.Sarah hurried over to help. She lifted Jacob’s other arm over her shoulders, and she and Seth almost levitated him the rest of the way to the car. Jacob felt silly needing so much help, especially since he didn’t, actually. He could have walked on it if he had to.“It’s really not that bad,” he complained. He had been doing just
The Forge dragons played two more games before the weekend of Seth’s show. They won both of them easily. It was starting to feel like they actually had a real chance, after all. Jacob’s ankle had pretty much recovered by the next day, and he had no problem playing on it. It could have been much worse, and it served as a bit of a wake-up call to the team both to be careful on the court.The lobby outside the auditorium was sparsely populated. Jacob paid seven dollars for his ticket, and the girl on the other side of the table handed him a color program. He flipped through it while he waited for the auditorium doors to open. Jacob hadn’t ever gone to see a play before. He didn’t know anything about theater. It wasn’t his thing. He liked some television well enough, and he definitely liked movies, but his only experience with theater was the couple of times the youth of the
“Come on! If we get going now, we will get in before midnight!” Seth called from outside.Jacob shouldered his way through the front door with the last box of his belongings. “You know we’ll end up hitting traffic, anyway. The maps don’t tell you about traffic that doesn’t exist yet.” “All the more reason to get going,” Seth said as he shoved a box over to make room for Jacob’s last contribution. Jacob pushed his box into the tetris of luggage that was held in place by sheer luck. They forced the hatchback closed together, grunting in unison with one last push to get it to latch. They had bought it together a week ago; their first purchase together, though it was in Jacob’s name since Seth didn’t have a license. Having completed their packing, they leaned against the back window to catch their breath. This was it. Everything was done.Two weeks ago, Jacob had walked across the auditorium stage for the first and last time, collecting his diploma before taking a seat among the gradua
Jacob couldn’t believe it. He grasped Seth’s hand as the nurses checked his vitals and wrote things on charts. Seth’s gaze darted around wildly, but always came back to Jacob. The feeding tube down his throat prevented him from speaking, but he occasionally made scared sounds that sounded to Jacob almost like a whimper. “It’s okay,” Jacob kept saying. “You’re okay now.” He was overwhelmed with joy that Seth was awake, but his heart ached that there was nothing he could do to make this easier for Seth. Nurses ran in and out of the room, bringing new equipment. The instruments on the cart beside Seth’s bed had calmed down to a steady rhythm of beeps. Seth’s doctor came in. He checked the monitors, then turned to Seth. “It’s good to see you finally with us, son,” he said. “I’m going to take the tube from your throat now, if that’s alright.” He gently lifted the mask from Seth’s face. Seth squeezed Jacob’s hand. “I need you to continue to breathe slowly and evenly. Breath with the
Jacob knew they were in trouble as soon as the two teams circled up on the court. There wasn’t a single player on the Hillcrest team shorter than Derek, Forge’s tallest player. They were outfitted to win. Hillcrest attracted players who were planning to go professional, and they looked the part.Derek stood in the center circle for the tipoff, dwarfed by the opposing Center. The dude had to be at least seven feet tall. The ref tossed the ball. Derek jumped, but the other center’s height was too much of an advantage. Hillcrest’s center, number seventeen, tapped the ball to his teammates, and they dribbled down the court. Blocking such tall players proved challenging as well. They made every pass and shot they took. Forge depended on rebounds to get possession of the ball. Sweat poured down Jacob’s face. Luckily, Forge used Hillcrest’s height against them on offense. Jacob remembered the low passes that short players on other teams had used to evade his block, and he made liberal use
Jacob rolled over and fumbled with his phone to stop the blaring alarm. It was in the wrong place. The table beside his bed was too low. As the fog of sleep faded, he remembered why. This wasn’t his room, or side table, or bed. This was Seth’s room. Jacob grabbed Seth’s pillow and pulled it over his face, inhaling Seth’s familiar and calming scent. He ached to be able to roll over and bury his face in Seth’s curls. It was Saturday, but he was up early because it was game day two of the state championships. They had not gone out to celebrate their win versus Preston last night. One win was pointless if they couldn’t win them all. They had agreed as a team to save their celebrations for when they won the final game.Today, they were playing the Century Diamondbacks from Pocatello. They were a good team. They even had one player scouted to the University of Kentucky a couple of years back. Jacob heard that that player was already being courted by the NBA. Century didn’t have that playe
Happy Ramadan, Passover, and Easter to all who celebrate! Because of the holiday, I did not have time to complete a chapter this weekend, and I apologize! But worry not, there will be another chapter soon. We are rounding the last bend. This coming weekend, I will be out of town for the memorial of my partner's grandmother. It has been a rough few weeks for us. I will do my best to get a chapter up as soon as I can. Thank you for sticking with me, even though I am slow to update. All of my love, Blair
The gym was cacophonous as the team trotted to the court for the first huddle. The announcer called the names for the starting line-up for Preston over the noise of the crowd, while James gave last moment notes to the team.“Remember, Jacob will be on the weak side. I will dribble for a pick and roll. Charlie, I want you under the strong-side basket. If Jacob is blocked, I’ll pass to you for a jump shot. If I can’t get it to either of you, Bret will be in the paint, and we’ll relay the ball to one of you.”With a shout of “Forge!” the team broke off and lined up for the announcer’s call.On the court, Charlie stood in the center facing Preston’s number fourteen, a seven foot tall slender kid, named Chet Harper. The referee blew the whistle, and both C
Jacob pushed through the doors of the long-term ward at West Valley Medical center. Seth was in the back corner of a communal room with a curtain pulled around his bed, creating a private space roughly the size of Jacob’s bedroom at home. Not at home. He couldn’t go back there. He didn’t have a home anymore. He had slept in Seth’s bed, at Seth’s house, for the last few nights.Seth had been moved to the long-term ward after twenty-four hours of observation for complications of his surgery.Seth lay on the hospital bed, as still as the dead except for the slow rise and fall of his chest. He wore a mask with tubes connected to a beeping tower of computers. Sensor wires sprouted from a mesh cap pulled down over Seth’s trademark curls and connected to another computer. On the monitor, several lines ticked zigzags across the
Stale, musky air met Jacob when he pushed through the doors to the locker room. He was early, as usual, having bolted from class as soon as the bell rang. Most of the rest of the team would take a break before heading for the locker rooms, but not Jacob. Calm washed over him as he breathed the familiar scent. He felt at home. So much had happened in the last twenty-four hours. So much had changed. He had missed this room, this smell, this familiarity.He found his locker and dialed in the combination. His uniform was still there. He pulled his shirt over his head and slipped the jersey on. Number 33. Kobe’s number in high school. Small details seemed to matter more when you realized how short life could be.Jacob was tying his shoes when the rest of the team rolled into the locker room, echoing chatter off the walls. Jacob looked up, but they
Beep.Beep.Beep.The rise and fall of the electrocardiogram signaled Seth’s beating heart.Jacob and Mark sat in silence on opposite sides of the bed. Both watched Seth’s peaceful face as his chest slowly rose and fell with each breath.Beep.Beep.Beep.Jacob’s own heart beat in double time. He wanted to say something. He wanted to apologize again, but Mark wouldn’t hear it. Mark had already told him more than once that it wasn’t his fault; that he had nothing to apologize for, but Jacob still couldn’t make himself believe it. The only reason Seth