âWeâre excited to have you as a part of this program, Ruby.â My advisor smiles at me, his teeth blindingly white. Jim Williamson was in the NFL for about a minute, before my dad and uncleâs time, and heâs been using that âconnectionâ with me since the moment I met with him via Zoom over the summer to discuss my goals and aspirations as part of the sports management and marketing program.
I didnât call my plans âgoals and aspirations,â he did. But anywayâ¦
I decide to give Jim what he wants.
âIâm excited to be here.â I sit up a little straighter, my gaze wandering over all of the stuff in his office, taking it in. He has an entire shelf devoted to his college and NFL career, with photos and plaques and ribbons and a signed football encased in plexiglass. Iâm sure heâs proud of his accomplishments but that was a long time ago and I canât help but wonder if heâs the type who revels in the glory days.
My father isnât. He was in the NFL for yearsâpart of that time when I wasnât even born yetâand Dad doesnât brag about it. He doesnât even really talk about it much. With Knox he does, of course, because my brother is just like him. Whenever Knox needs advice, Dad is always willing to give it to him. And now Knox is on a professional team like our father, about to play his first season opener in like whatâ¦two weeks?
Yikes. I bet Knox is nervous. Excited. I canât wait to watch him.
âAn opportunity has come up,â Jim says, his voice serious and I return my gaze to his. âWe have paid internships with the teams here on campus and one of the students had to pull out of the program, due to her withdrawing from the university. You were the first person I thought of for the job.â
âOh, wow. Thank you.â Iâm flattered. I took classes at the other college I went to, but nothing specifically for this major. The sports marketing major that Colorado University offers is right up my alley. And while Iâm not a diehard football fanâIâm not a huge fan of any type of sportsâI do know my way around athletes. Plus, I enjoy marketing and promotion, specifically in social media, and Iâve put together some great projects in the past. It seemed like a natural fit. âBut Iâve barely been in the program.â
Itâs only the second week of school. How am I the first person Jim thought of for the job?
âI know, but I truly believe youâre the perfect candidate.â He smiles at me, looking pleased, but doesnât say another word.
âWhatâs the position?â
âSocial media for the football team.â Jim leans back in his chair, resting his linked hands on his chest. âRunning their Instagram and Facebook pages, I guess. Oh, and that clock app. Twitter? Is anyone there anymore? Reels and videos and whatnot.â
Spoken from a man who sounds like he doesnât have a firm grasp on social media. âAre you saying I would be the social media manager for the football team?â Iâm shocked they donât have one currently.
âNot the manager. They already have one of those. Youâd be an integral part of the team though.â
âHow big is the team?â
âNot sure. It varies. Would you care to interview? They need someone right away, so theyâre willing to talk to you ASAP.â He smiles. âI already put in a good word for you and told them youâre Knoxâs little sister.â
Frustration ripples through me at his using my family name as a selling point. Though I suppose I canât blame him because the Maguire name is well-known on campus, thanks to Knox. âI appreciate the mention, but I can get by on my own merits, Mr. Williamson.â
âCall me Jim,â he insists. âAnd trust me, it doesnât hurt to say who youâre connected to, young lady.â
Ugh. I want to roll my eyes, but I just nod and smile instead.
âThey like the fact that youâre so steeped in football history. Your family is a legacy. That you want to carry it on in a sports-related field is a smart move. Youâll get far with the Maguire name on you.â
Thatâs not necessarily why I chose this major and potential profession, but itâs definitely influenced me. Iâve been immersed in football pretty much my entire life. I understand athletes and they donât faze me. Theyâre just people. I donât get dazzled by their massive fame or strong confidence or outrageous good looks. Many of them are sweethearts. Some of them are egotistical assholes. I can handle any of them.
All of them.
âThe interview is later this afternoon if youâre interested,â Jim continues, grabbing a piece of paper from a notepad and thrusting it toward me along with a pen. I take both from him, the pen poised on the paper, ready to take downâ¦what exactly, Iâm not sure. âThree oâclock in the athletic department. You know where the building is?â
Itâs attached to the stadium. âI do.â
âThe meeting is with Marilee. Sheâs in charge of the entire athletic departmentâs social media section.â He smiles, nodding toward the paper and I jot that little fact down. âYouâll like her.â
âAre there any other positions available?â I ask, offering a weak laugh at the sharp look Jim sends my way. I donât mean to act ungrateful and I do want to work with the football team. Sort of. Though there is someone on the team Iâd rather avoidâ¦
Iâd rather not think about him at all. Thatâs been my plan since I walked onto this campus.
âNot that I know of,â Jim answers. âYou can ask Marilee that particular question, but I figured youâd jump at the opportunity to work with the football team.â
âOh, I want to. Of course, I do.â I smile and nod, hoping I look more enthusiastic than I feel.
Minutes later, Iâm walking around campus, the notepaper crammed into the pocket of my denim shorts with the meeting details written on it. I should probably change into something more professional. Or maybe I should go to the student store and buy a Golden Eagles T-shirt. Would that be too obvious?
Whipping my phone out of my pocket, I FaceTime Natalie. My new roommate and bestie. She answers on the second ring.
âWhy canât you call like a normal person?â Sheâs still at home. From the looks of it, sheâs still in bed.
âI like to see your face, especially when youâre so cheerful,â I tease.
I lucked out getting Natalie as a roommate. My brotherâs girlfriend, Joannaâand Natalieâs best friend and now former roommateâleft campus to be with Knox. Sheâs still a full-time student, taking her classes online and sheâll come back to graduate here in May, but she wanted to be with Knox during his first NFL season after he begged her to go with him. The man is obsessed with her and she seems to feel the same way about him. I guess I canât blame her.
Theyâre madly in love. They want to be together as much as possible.
With Joanna gone, Natalie needed a roommate and so did I, since Blair did the same thing as Joanna and sheâs now living with Cam. Considering Natalie and I got along so effortlessly when we hung out over the holidays, it made sense.
Natalie rolls her eyes. âWhy are you calling so early?â
âItâs eleven,â I point out. Iâm not a total early bird, but come on.
The day is almost half over.
âThatâs still early for me. My first class doesnât start until one.â
âMust be nice,â I mutter, plopping down on a nearby park bench. âI need advice.â
âAbout a guy?â
Itâs my turn to roll my eyes. âYou wish. No, not about a . About a job.â
Natalie makes a face. âWhy do you need a job?â
âItâs for my major. I spoke to my advisor and he said thereâs a social media manager position open for one of the teams.â
âThat sounds perfect.â Natalie sits up a little straighter, pushing the hair out of her eyes. âWhy do you need advice?â
âI still have to interview for it, though he made it seem like I already have the job.â I canât count on that though. I canât really count on anything unless I achieve it myself.
âWould it be for the athletic department or for a specific team?â
âA specific team.â I hesitate. âThe football team.â
Natalie is a shit friend because she immediately starts laughing.
Likeâ¦hysterically.
âItâs not funny,â I try to interject, but sheâs not listening to me. And she knows how I feel about the football team, but itâs obvious she doesnât care. âSeriously, Nat. What am I supposed to do?â
âTake the job if they offer it to you. Make his life a living hell,â Natalie says, sobering up quickly.
âWouldnât it be better if I just ignored him?â
âHow can you? Heâs the freaking quarterback. He struts around campus like heâs the top dog and damn it, he the top dog.â She sounds irritated. I appreciate her undying loyalty to me, I really do. Even if she was laughing at me only a moment ago. âI hate him.â
âYou do not.â
âI do. If you hate him, I hate him.â
I donât hate Ace Townsend. Though I am still pissed over what happened on New Yearâs Eve. I thought we had a connection. We definitely had chemistry. That almost kiss in the bathroom still ranks as one of the hottest moments Iâve ever experienced, but then he had to go off and ruin everything.
Kissing another girl on New Yearâs Eve isnât necessarily a crime, but I donât want to deal with a guy like that. He canât commit. Not even to a kiss at midnight. And that sucks.
At the time, my thoughts were all about someone temporary. The good-time guy who knows how to have fun. But he couldnât even manage that and over the last eight months, Iâve had someâ¦thoughts.
No more settling for the guy who obviously doesnât want to commit. I deserve a man whoâs totally into me. It should be painfully obvious.
Which means Ace definitely isnât the guy for me.
After the NYE Incident as I call it, I also swore off men. There was no point in trying to get with any at my other college. I was leaving anyway so I threw myself into my school work and ended up getting all Aâs last semester. I impressed my parents and myself.
See what happens when you forget about guys and donât party as much? You actually get things accomplished.
But now Iâm here at CU and Natalie is a gigantic flirt, who is always on the prowl for hot guys and while that makes her sound awful, sheâs not. She just knows how to have fun, like I used to. She also knows when to get serious. And this is where we differ.
Iâm the type who goes all in. I either wanted to party all the time like I did my first year in college, or like last semester, when I threw myself completely into my studies and focused on nothing else. I need to learn how to balance myself out a little more, where I can have fun, but I can also be serious. Itâs like I donât know how to be one with the other.
âI have to get over myself,â I finally say with a sigh. âAnd get over what he did.â
âYouâre allowed to hold a grudge,â Natalie says, giving me the permission I didnât know I still sought. âHe was a jerk to you.â
âNot really. He didnât even know me.â I didnât know him either.
âHe knows your brother. He knows Blair. He led you on.â Natalieâs voice is firm, telling me I canât convince her otherwise.
âI can do this, right?â My voice drops and I glance around before I continue. âIf I get this job, I can ignore him and go about my business? And still work for the football team? Iâll be able to keep things professionalâ¦right?â
The doubt that lives within me lately is nearly crippling, and I hate it. Why am I second-guessing my every decision? Maybe because the first university I went to, I didnât like. I think that happens a lot more often than we think. And itâs okay to make a mistake and change my mind. Thatâs what my mom said.
Plans change and thatâs okay. Yet here I am questioning every move and choice I make, scared shitless to actually do anything.
Like, who am I right now?
I stuck it out for two years at that stupid college I hated and now Iâm back in my home state, wondering if Iâm doing the right thing, even though deep down, I know I am.
I know it.
âOf course, you can. Youâre Ruby Fucking Maguire. You can do anything you set your sights on,â Natalie says, as if sheâs reading my mind and knows how full of doubt I am.
I smile, thankful for her encouragement. âShould I go to this interview wearing an Eagles T-shirt?â
âEw, no. You need to play it cool. Can you come home right now?â
âI have an hour break.â Meaning going home will be cutting it close to make it back to class on time.
âThen get your ass here and Iâll help you pick out an outfit. Iâll start going through my closet right now.â She climbs out of bed.
âIâm sure I have something.â
âOh, Iâll be going through your closet too. I just want to check and see what I have first. A cute dress always works.â
âOkay. But nothing too cute, you know?â
âAlways professional,â Natalie says with a firm nod. âYouâve got this in the bag.â
âIf you say so.â Yep, thereâs that doubt creeping in. I donât know why it happens. My parents have believed in me ever since I can remember. My entire family is supportive. Iâve never let my insecurities get me down. Throughout high school, I was a total overachiever, both in class and in my extracurriculars. I love a schedule, staying busy, creating things, doing things.
But the moment I graduated high school and went away to college, Iâve feltâ¦wayward. A little lost. Unsure of myself. I canât explain why. Iâm not sure what Iâm supposed to be doing here, if that makes any sense. Whatâs my purpose in life? Why are we expected to have our life plan in place at eighteen and know what we want for our future career?
Over two years have passed since I graduated high school and Iâm still unsure as to what I want to be. What I want to Iâve changed my major twice already. Iâm hoping Iâve zeroed in on something that will make me happy and give me purpose, but weâll see.
We will see.