âYou look like youâre going to throw up.â
I glared at my brother, who grabbed the waste bin on the other side of his hotel bed and put it on the mattress between us, patting the plastic assuredly.
âIâm not going to throw up.â
âI donât know, sweetie,â Mom said, sitting on the edge of the bed and placing the back of her hand against my forehead. Her hair was the same deep shade of brown as my own, thick and silky other than the bit of gray peppering the roots. She was slight like me, too, barely making a dip in the mattress when she sat next to me. âYou do look a little pale.â
Gavin stifled a laugh as I peeled Momâs hand off my head and pinched his side.
âIâm fine,â I said, with more of a bite than I intended. I forced a soothing breath before smiling at my mother. âI promise. Just a little nervous.â
âThatâs to be expected,â Dad said, sitting on the arm of the couch behind Mom. He pulled her halfway into his lap, wrapping his arms around her waist while she smiled and leaned into him in return. âOur baby girl. Playing in the Blackberry Bowl on New Yearâs Eve!â
Mom teared up immediately, swiping her tears away as soon as they fell. âWeâre so proud of you.â
Dadâs eyes shone with that pride as he assessed me, like he was just realizing I wasnât a little girl anymore. His eyes were the same shade as mine, a warm brown laced with green and gold, and looking at the two humans who gave me life and helped me get where I was today made me loose a sigh.
My annoyance faded altogether, and I smiled â genuinely for perhaps the first time in weeks. âThanks, guys.â
âAnd Zeke!â Mom added, clapping her hands together with stars in her eyes.
My stomach dropped.
âHeâs going to have a record-breaking return,â Dad said. âI can feel it.â
That genuine smile Iâd worn was gone now, replaced by one that fell as flat as a pancake.
âYou sure you donât want to get the vomiting out now?â Gavin asked, nudging the waste bin toward me again.
I smacked his arm as our parents laughed, Dad giving Momâs backside a little love tap as they both stood. âWeâre going to run out and grab something for dinner. You sure you canât join us?â Mom asked me.
âCanât. Team meeting soon, just came to say hi.â
âWell, weâll have plenty of time to hang out after the game tomorrow night,â she said, kissing my forehead. âAnd .â
She winked at me when she stood, grabbing her purse as I tried to overcome the nerves that were riddling my stomach. She started singing âCelebrationâ by Kool & The Gang, wiggling her hips with her hands in the air, and Dad joined in on the chorus one time before laughing at the deadpan looks Gavin and I gave them.
âAny requests, Gav?â Dad asked on their way out.
âNot seafood.â
âSushi? Got it!â Mom said, and they giggled themselves into the hallway, shutting the door behind them.
Gavin poked a thumb over his shoulder. âYour parents.â
I smiled, leaning back into the stack of pillows against the headboard. I didnât mean to, but as soon as it was quiet, I slipped into my thoughts, a tornado of kicking drills and game circumstances that might land me in a sticky situation. I ticked through the weather report, noting the wind possibilities, and visualized my kick being good each time I kicked it despite the Louisville Thunder defendersâ attempt to block it.
Somewhere along the way, those thoughts drifted from football to Zeke â a pattern I should have been used to at this point but was still immensely annoyed by. I thought time would help, thought distancing myself would start to patch every tear heâd left behind.
But when youâre on the same team with the person who broke you, there is no such thing as true distance.
Every day, I saw him. Every day, I watched him pull his shirt overhead, watched his muscles flex as he replaced it with a practice jersey or pads or nothing at all before stalking to the shower. I heard his voice calling out encouragement to our teammates, smelled his body wash when he brushed past me, felt his eyes on me when I was doing everything I could to keep mine off him.
He was inescapable.
And the worst part was that I wouldnât escape him even if I could.
The masochistic part of me was thankful to have those stolen moments, to run into him in the weight room or kneel next to him in the team huddle. I longed for an accidental brush of our hands, or to look at him and catch him staring at me.
I wanted to know he still wanted me, too.
It was sick â that much I knew. Just like it was sick that I clung to him the day Coach told us we were playing in the bowl game, that I cried and held onto him, silently begging him to fix it, to fix when he was the one responsible for the damage.
His words that day had haunted me every second since they left his lips. Everything he said was sincere, that I knew just from how he suffered getting them out.
I just wished his apology was enough.
âOkay, now Iâm not even joking â you really look like youâre about to vom.â
Gavinâs voice snapped me back to the present, and I sighed, managing a small smile. âI told you, Iâm fine.â
âLiar.â
âJust nervous.â
âLiar.â
I frowned at him. âDonât be mean.â
âIâm not, just calling you out for what you are.â
âGavââ
âI know about you and Zeke.â
My mouth hung open, and then I slowly closed it, swallowing and considering my next words carefully. âWhat about us?â
âEverything.â
Panic lodged in my throat, but it was erased quickly, washed away by fury as I gritted my teeth. âHe told you.â
âI pried it out of him,â Gavin clarified. âAnd only because I told him I could handle lying to me, but not him.â
âI wasnât lying,â I started, but then I sighed, noting Gavinâs expression. âI didnât to lie. I just⦠we werenât sure what it all was. And when we figured it outâ¦â
âEverything blew up. Yeah, I know the whole story, so spare me.â
I crossed my arms. âOkay, well, if youâre not going to yell at me forâ¦
with your best friend, then why are you attacking me like Iâm on trial?â
âBecause Iâm sick of seeing you mope around. You and Zeke, both.â
I rolled my eyes. âSorry my mood offends you.â
âItâs not your mood. Itâs your attitude, and your stubbornness, and the fact that you could both put this behind you and be happy the way you wanted to if youâd just sit down and talk. And .â
âWeâve talked,â I said. âAnd it doesnât change what he did.â
âAnd what exactly did he do?â
âHeââ
âBefore you say , I want you to think really hard on that and consider if itâs true.â
I sighed. âGavin, I donât want to do this. Especially not now.â
âToo bad. I do.â
âI have a big game tomorrow.â
âAnd you have a conversation with your twin brother tonight.â
I fumed. âHe was careless. And selfish. And lazy. I showed him my paper to give him a place to start, to give him ideas, and instead he abused my trust and copied enough to warrant of us getting suspended from the team and almost from school.â I threw my hands up before letting them smack against my thighs. âLike â what are you missing here?â
âDo you really think he meant to do it? That he did it to hurt you?â
âNo,â I said instantly. âI think he did it to help himself. He wasnât thinking of anyone else.â
âSure about that?â
The way Gavin asked that question, one brow arching into his hairline, it made me flush so hard I unzipped my midwear jacket. I knew there was no Zeke would have told him about particular part of that day, how Zeke was rushing through that paper so he could have time with me before a long day.
But it made me think of it, of the role I played, of how I might have acted if he was teasing like that.
I shook my head. âZeke and I are fine,â I lied. âOkay? Weâve come to an understanding. He gives me my space, I give him his, weâre teammates. Thatâs it.â
âThatâs not it. Not for either of you. And youâre both making yourself sick trying to convince yourself otherwise.â
Any attempt at an argument died in my throat at his words, at the memory of Zeke holding me under that cloudy sky as I clung to him just as much.
âRiley, I want you to think about it â
think about it. You know Zeke. You know his family, and , how different they are. Think about how he cared for both of us growing up, how he treats our parents like theyâre his own, how he did to help me adjust to life after the accident.â
âThat he was responsible for.â
âAnd he wasnât the only one!â Gavin shook his head, exhausted. âI was just as much at fault as he was.â
My stomach turned, the memory of my birthday flashing in my mind. But Gavin didnât know about that, didnât know what Zeke had told me.
â
got in the driverâs seat hammered that night,â Gavin continued.
Hearing it from him struck me even harder than when Zeke had told me, and I closed my eyes on a hot exhale.
âI damn near crashed the car myself. And Zeke stepped up because he figured out of the two of us, he was the most sober.â Gavinâs nose flared. âIt was a stop sign hidden behind a low-hanging tree, Riley. Even in broad daylight, itâs hard to see. Car accidents can happen to anyone, at any time, regardless of intoxication. Zeke didnât even have enough booze in his system to blow above the legal limit. Did you ever think of that? Heâd have been in jail or juvie, at best, if he had, would have had to pay off a D.U.I. in more ways than one.â
I sobered at that, a thought I hadnât even considered â likely because Iâd been so caught up in what had happened to Gavin that I couldnât think straight. I never stopped to sift through the details of everything, to think about the intersection and how it was known for being dangerous.
I just wanted someone to blame.
Zeke was the easy target.
âI know it hurt you to see that happen to me, and trust me, it killed me, too,â he confessed. âBut â
at me,â he said, smiling as he spread his hands out over himself. âIâm here. Iâm alive. Iâm . Iâve got a great girl, a great group of friends to play basketball with, and a great future ahead of me.â He paused. âAnd I know even if I okay, Iâd have Zeke. And that alone tells me I can make it through anything.â
I picked at my fingernails, digesting everything heâd said.
âZeke struggles in school. He struggles more than I think you understand.â
Those words sank into my skin slowly, like a remedy clearing the fog Iâd been living in for weeks now.
Another thing I hadnât considered.
How Zekeâs dyslexia might have played into the way he wrote the end of that paper.
If he was cross-referencing mine, if he was trying to rush to hurry⦠he could have easily mixed things up.
But if that was the case, why wouldnât he just tell me that?
I almost laughed at myself the moment the thought crossed my mind.
He wouldnât tell me because he wouldnât be trying to pass the blame or make an excuse. Just like the night of the accident, he was accepting full fault.
And he thought he deserved every bit of punishment I was dishing out.
âLook,â Gavin said after a moment. âYou can hold onto this forever. You can use it as an excuse to not give yourself what you really want, to deny yourself Zeke happiness, to attest youâre by punishing him for his mistake. But thatâs all it was, Sis. A .â
Emotion surged in my chest, tears pricking the corners of my eyes.
âOr,â he countered. âYou can forgive. Forgive, and understand that weâre human. Weâre not perfect. And one day when make a mistake, youâll want someone to afford you the same grace.â
I closed my eyes, trapping what moisture had gathered in them as I let out a long, slow breath. I thought about that first game I blew, how Zeke forgave me without a second thought, how he didnât even consider that I was less than, that I was a failure, that I no longer had what it took to be a starter.
He saw my potential the entire time.
Not only that â but he had been hell bent on making sure saw it, too.
And Gavin was right. Us, me and him, our parents â weâd been like a safe haven to Zeke ever since we met him. Not that his parents werenât amazing, because they were. But when he needed a break from the pressure, when he needed someone to love him exactly as he was.
He came to us.
Zekeâs words slammed into me like a train, so hard and unexpected that I gasped and covered my aching chest with both hands.
He loved me.
He loved me, and Iâd turned my back on him, judging and executing him at the first sign of him not being perfect.
Because thatâs what it had been before that day everything crashed down â perfect.
Iâd let my stubbornness keep me from comforting him, from seeing the truth that he mean to hurt me. That pride wouldnât even let me consider forgiveness, let alone give it to him.
Iâd pushed him away in the name of protecting myself, all the while ignoring everything heâd given me, and the fact that he needed too.
When I opened my eyes again, it was like putting on glasses after walking around blind for weeks. I looked over at my brother, and then, without warning, I launched myself at him.
He caught me in his arms with a surprised , chuckling a little as he held me in a tight hug.
âItâs okay,â he said.
And that broke me.
I cried like Iâd never cried in my life, and for the first time, I didnât fight it. I let the tears come, let them wash away the last few weeks, and maybe even the pain Iâd held onto in the years before that. It was a baptism in a hotel room, and my brother was the preacher.
We stayed like that a long time until I finally pulled back, wiping at my face and apologizing profusely as I wiped where Iâd soaked his shirt next.
But Gavin just smiled and held up his pinky.
I eyed it suspiciously, cocking a brow.
âOne more promise,â he said, wiggling the digit. âThat you will do whatever makes you happy from this moment on. Regardless of what you think you should do, or what you think think you should do.â He paused. âYouâve given a lot to the people you love. Let us return the favor.â
I smiled, holding up my pinky, but I held it away from him. âEven if it would make me happy to try to play in the NFL?â
Gavinâs brows shot up at that, a loud belly-laugh echoing through the room. â
then.â
I laughed, too, hooking his pinky with mine before I rested my head on his shoulder, looping my arms around his.
âThank you,â I whispered.
âFor helping you pull your head out of your ass?â he asked. âAnytime, Sis. Anytime.â