The Striker: Chapter 2
The Striker (Gods of the Game Book 1)
âNow we go a little quicker. Back, side, back, side.â I walked through the studio, correcting the studentsâ posture and alignment. âDonât overcross to the back. Now demi-pliéâ¦â
My leg ached, but I ignored it. It was manageable compared to true flare-ups, which could last days or weeks or months, and there were only ten minutes left until class ended. Iâd deal with it then.
The studio was quiet except for the sound of my voice and the piano music keeping pace with the movements. I taught the advanced and masterclasses, and at this level the students were so focused, a nuclear bomb could go off and they wouldnât notice.
I used to be one of those students, and as much as I loved teaching, I wished I could rewind time so I was on the other side of these lessons. Things had been so different then, andâ â
Stop it. No more self-pity, remember?
I shook my head and refocused on the task at hand.
âFaster with the beat, Jenna. Up and stayâ¦â I faltered when my aches intensified but quickly recovered. âGood. Open the supporting side a little more.â
Iâd lived with more or less constant pain and fatigue for the past five years, so I pushed through to the end without incident.
Nevertheless, it took all my willpower not to rush my students out after class so I could get off my feet and sit in silence.
Just for a minute. Just so I could breathe.
âExcuse me, Miss DuBois?â
I glanced up. Emma stood before me, her hands fiddling first with her skirt and then the neckline of her leotard.
âIâm sorry to bother you, but I have some news.â Her excitement shone through her usual reserve. âRemember when I auditioned for The Nutcracker last week? They released the cast list today. Iâll be playing the Sugar Plum Fairy!â
âOh my God.â My hand flew to my mouth. âCongratulations! Emma, thatâs amazing.â
It wasnât the most professional response, but Emma had been my student for years, and while we technically werenât supposed to play favorites, she was secretly my favorite. She worked hard, she had a great attitude, and she wasnât catty or competitive with her peers.
The Nutcracker was her favorite ballet. If anyone deserved its most prestigious role, it was her.
Iâd been one of the audition judges, but none of us knew the final cast until the director announced it. I hadnât checked my emails yet, so Iâd missed it.
âThank you. I still canât believe it,â Emma said breathlessly. âItâs such a dream come true, and I couldnât have done it without you. Iâd loveâ¦I mean, if youâre not busy, Iâd love for you to come to the opening night. I know itâs only May and opening night isnât until December, and I know you usually donât attend the school showcases, but I thought Iâd ask anyway.â Rose colored her cheeks. âItâll be at the Westbury Theatre again.â
Westbury Theatre.
The name punched a hole through my gut, and my excitement leaked out like water through a sieve.
Emma was right. I never attended school showcases because they were always held at Westbury.
I wanted to support my students, but the thought of going anywhere near the theatre caused panic to swell.
âYou donât have to,â Emma said, obviously picking up on my mood shift. She drew her bottom lip between her teeth. âItâs during the holidays, so I understandâ ââ
âNo, itâs not that.â I forced a smile. âIâd love to attend, but I might be out of town. Iâm not sure yet. Iâll let you know.â
I hated lying to her, but it was better than saying I would rather stab myself in the leg than step foot in Westbury.
There were too many memories there. Too many ghosts of what Iâd loved and lost.
âOkay.â Emmaâs face regained some of its glow. âIâll see you next class, then?â
âOf course. Congratulations again.â My smile was more genuine this time. âSugar Plum Fairy is a huge role. You should be proud.â
I waited until the door shut and Emma was gone before I released a shaky breath and sank onto the floor.
The ache in my leg sharpened into a bright, pointed pain, as if the mere mention of Westbury had awakened the worst parts of my condition.
In, one, two, three.
Out, one, two, three.
I hated taking medication, so I breathed through the discomfort instead of reaching for the emergency packet Iâd stashed in my bag.
Luckily, my symptoms had improved a lot over the years, thanks to lifestyle changes and careful stress management. It wasnât like the months immediately following my accident, when I could barely get out of bed, but it wasnât a walk in the park either.
I never knew when pain or fatigue would strike. I had to be on guard all the time, but Iâd more or less learned to live with it. It was either adapt or wallow, and Iâd done enough wallowing to last a lifetime.
My phone rang. I picked it up without checking the caller ID; there was only one person in my contacts who had that ringtone.
âLavinia wants to see you in her office,â Carina said without preamble. âDonât worry, itâs nothing bad.â A pause. âI think.â
The shock was enough to take my mind off my leg for a second. âWait. Seriously?â
Lavinia was the director of RAB and quite possibly the most intimidating person Iâd ever met. Iâd worked at the academy for four years, and Iâd never heard of her calling an unscheduled meeting.
This canât be good.
âYes.â Carinaâs voice dropped to a whisper. âI tried to find out more but sheâs being super hush-hush about it. She just told me to tell you to see her as soon as class is over.â
âRight.â I swallowed. âOh God, Iâm getting sacked.â
Was it because I refused to attend the school showcases? Did she think I was a bad team player? I mean, I wasnât the best team player, but that was because people were soâ â
âNo! Of course not. If she sacks you, sheâll have to sack me too,â Carina said. âWeâre a package deal, and we both know she canât afford to lose her top instructor and her trusty assistant. I hold the keys to all her PDFs.â
A small laugh rippled across the surface of my anxiety. She always knew how to make me feel better.
Iâd lost a lot of âfriendsâ after the accident, but Iâd met Carina three years ago, when she joined RAB as Laviniaâs executive assistant. Weâd bonded her first day over our mutual love for trashy reality TV and jigsaw puzzles, and weâd been best friends since.
âIâm coming,â I said. âSee you soon.â
I stood with a wince, but the pain gradually faded into a manageable ache again. Or maybe it was all in my head and manageable only relative to my sky-high anxiety over the surprise meeting.
Carina was on the phone when I arrived, but she mouthed good luck and flashed me a thumbs-up as I knocked on the directorâs door.
âCome in.â
I stepped inside with the caution of someone approaching an aggravated rattlesnake.
Laviniaâs office was as neat and polished as the woman herself. Giant windows overlooked the academy grounds, and an artfully arranged gallery of photos dominated the wall opposite the door. They captured the famous former prima ballerina in every stage of her career, from blossoming ingenue to international star to retired legend.
Lavinia herself sat behind her desk, her hair pulled back into a bun, her glasses perched on her elegant nose as she flipped through some papers.
âPlease, sit.â She gestured at the chair opposite her.
I obliged, trying to tame my rampage of nerves and failing miserably.
âWeâre both busy, so Iâll cut to the chase.â Lavinia was never one for beating around the bush. âWeâve partnered with the Blackcastle football club on a special training program this summer. I want you to run point on it.â
My mouth parted. Out of everything Iâd imagined sheâd say, a football cross-training program ranked in the bottom five.
Granted, Iâd run similar programs in the past, but they were usually for League One or Two teams, not for the freaking Premier League.
âBy run point, you meanâ¦â
âYouâll be training them. Youâre one of my best instructors, and youâre familiar with football,â Lavinia said. âI trust youâll do a good job.â
I bit back a knee-jerk rejection. I knew exactly what she meant when she said I was âfamiliar with football.â After all, my brother was the captain of Blackcastle.
However, as much as I loved him and the club, I did not want to train him or his teammates. Most footballers were arrogant, insufferable, and selfish.
I should knowâI used to date one.
Vincent was the only exception to my anti-footballer sentiments, and that was because he was family.
âIâm honored,â I said carefully. âBut I have a full schedule this summer, and I think there are instructors who would be better suited for the role. Less conflict of interest.â
Laviniaâs brows rose a fraction of an inch. âAre you saying you canât put aside personal feelings for the sake of professionalism?â
Dammit. Iâd walked straight into a trap I shouldâve seen coming.
âNo, of course not. Iâm simply preempting problems based on other peopleâs potential perception.â I gave the first excuse I could think of. âI donât want to be accused of favoritism.â
âIâll deal with any problems that might arise.â Lavinia looked unimpressed by my explanation. âIf it makes you feel better, youâll only be training two players, not the entire club.â
I blinked, blindsided twice in the space of five minutes. That had to be a record.
Iâd thought it was strange Blackcastle would require its players to stay in London for the offseason, but given their performance yesterday, Iâd figured it was some sort of special exception.
The two-player development was both a relief and a concern.
âI assume my brother is one of the two players,â I said. Otherwise, Lavinia wouldâve denied the conflict-of-interest issue. âWhoâs the other?â
There was a short pause before she answered. âAsher Donovan.â
My stomach dropped. âAsher Donovan?â I couldnât have contained my outburst if Iâd tried. âYou want me to train Vincent and Asher in private lessons for an entire summer? Theyâll kill each other!â
Iâd lost count of the number of times Iâd had to listen to Vincent rant about Asher, and the internet was constantly debating who was the better player. I thought the comparisons were unfair considering they played different positions, but people loved to pit the two against each other.
It started years ago when an innocent online Match poll asked people to choose the best up-and-coming footballer. Asher won by one point over Vincent, which had my brother fuming. Since then, their rivalry had escalated to encompass who got paid more (Asher), who had the most brand sponsorships (Vincent), and who won the most Ballon dâOrs (Asher, though theyâd received an equal number of nominations). It came to a head at the last World Cup, when Asherâs red card turned their feud into something even more bitter.
âPart of your job is to ensure they donât kill each other.â Laviniaâs face softened a smidge. âI realize itâs unfair of me to spring this on you with so little notice, but when Frank reached out to me, we agreed to keep the arrangement under wraps for as long as possible in order to prevent leaks.â Frank was Blackcastleâs manager. âHe also hadnât committed to his decision until after yesterdayâs match.â
I understood the reasoning, but that didnât mean I had to like it. In fact, the more I thought about it, the worse my gut churned.
It was easy to figure out why Frank Armstrong was singling out my brother and Asher. Their animosity had led to plenty of issues and resulted in Blackcastle losing this yearâs league. Things between them were bitter on a good day, and Frank obviously wanted them to patch things up by forcing them to train together.
That was all well and good, but unfortunately, that meant I was now caught in the middle.
Asher Donovan. Of all the people in the world, the other player had to be him. He was most womenâs celebrity crush, and he mightâve been mine too had it not been for my loyalty to Vincent, my strict No Footballers rule, and his questionable reputation.
Asher was generally regarded as the worldâs greatest footballer. The striker who played as impressively as he looked, the savior whose goals had brought his team back from the brink of defeat countless times. But for all his talent on the pitch, he was mired in controversy off it. The car crashes, the parties, the revolving door of womenâall tabloid fodder that the public ate up like sweets at a childrenâs party.
Iâd never met the man, but if other players had a god complex, I could only imagine how massive his was.
âIs there anything I can say to get out of this?â I asked hopefully.
Laviniaâs brows rose another half an inch.
I held back a sigh. Thatâs what I figured.
âLessons start next Monday,â she said. âYouâve cross-trained footballers before, so small tweaks to your previous regimens should be sufficient. Iâve also taken a look at your summer schedule and adjusted it accordingly. Are there any more questions?â
It was a subtle dismissal.
âNo,â I said. âIâll have a final training plan ready by Monday.â
âGood.â Lavinia returned to her papers. âThank you, Scarlett.â
Okay, that was a clear dismissal.
When I exited her office, Carina was already waiting for me with her bag in hand. It was six thirty-five, which meant it was officially after work hours.
She grimaced when she saw me. âThat bad?â She could read my expressions better than anyone.
âIâll tell you about it over drinks,â I said. âI need one. Badly.â