I step off the helicopter, and a chauffeur ushers me and Tuck to a waiting black SUV. The driver asks if everything is to my satisfaction, and I tell him yes before we pull out of the heliport in lower Manhattan and head toward the offices of the owner of the Pythons, D amon Armitage II.
The morning started with Damonâs personal jet picking us up at a private airstrip in Austin. We landed at J FK Airport, then hopped in the helicopter. All of this was intended to impress me. I smooth down my blue slacks and white dress shirt. My hands tug at my silver tie.
âYou look a little pale,â Tuck says as he settles into the SUV. He picks up one of the bottled waters and hands it to me. âIt was a bumpy ride.â
I set it down and scrub my face. âI didnât sleep last night.â
âAdrenaline from the game. I get it.â His hazel eyes study me.
âYeah, right.â I lean back on the seat.
I couldnât sleep because of her.
Her words. That goodbye kiss.
I stare out the window at the financial district. People walk up and down New York, coming and going, heads down as they move from one place to another. The bustle, tall buildings, and honking horns are an adjustment. Iâve visited Tuck several times in the off months, but this time, the city feels busier, more intense. I think about my hammock in Blue Belle.
Weâre ushered out of the SUV and greeted by Damonâs personal assistant. I leave Tuck and get on the elevator with the PA and head to his office.
Heâs not there when I arrive, so I pace around the room, my heart thudding, a feeling of surrealness inching in. For two seasons , my life revolved around kids in Texas, trying to help them be champions. I came up with our motto, Win the heart, win everything, and those words sit like a lump of cement in my gut.
Whatâs Toby doing right now? Is he working a shift at the bookstore? Is he worrying about his mom? Dammit, I should have checked on her last night . . .
Bruno . . . heâll be planning a date with his hot cheerleader girlfriend.
Milo . . . heâll be at Loisâs playing video games.
Skeeter? Heâll step up as head coach and take the Bobcats to state.
Maybe Andrew will apply and get the job next year.
And Nova . . .
My heart splinters. I shut my eyes and force myself to push the images of her away.
Blowing out a breath, I make my way to the trophy case on the right side of the room.
âIf all this works out, Iâll need another case,â says a raspy voice behind me.
I turn to find Damon Armitage II, the owner; Coach Bruce Hardy, the head coach of the Pythons; and my agent, Reggie.
Leaning on a gold-tipped cane with a snake on it, Damon walks behind his desk, then sits. Wearing a black tailored suit, complete with an ascot and a boutonniere, heâs in his seventies, rich as fuck, and known as an eccentric firebrand. âIâm glad you were able to fly in, Ronan. We could have chatted over the phone, but then I wanted you in the room.â He waves his arms around at his spacious office. âNothing beats seeing a man face to face and getting the measure of him.â
âTrue,â I say.
âWe all met in the elevator,â Reggie says with a nod. âGood to see you, Ronan!â Around forty, heâs dressed in a slick suit, his dark hair clipped around the ears.
âSame,â I say, and the four of us shake hands.
Coach Hardy grins at me. A tall man in his late fifties, he sat by my bed in the hospital for three days after the wreck. He flew my mom from Chicago to New York on the team jet the night it happened. When I woke up the first time in my room, the two of them were there, waiting.
We make small talk, catching up, then chat about his new quarterback, L ucas Pine, a fresh kid from Iowa. Heâs having trouble with the transition from college to professional, missing snaps and play calls.
âHowâs Coach Dixon doing?â I ask a few minutes later. âTuck said he was flying to Houston for treatment.â
Coach Hardy sticks his hands in his khakis. âYou probably passed him somewhere over Indiana. Weâre going to miss him on the field. A hell of a man and coach.â
Reggie takes a seat. âItâs a tragedy.â He looks at me. âBut it gives Ronan a chance to step in. I was thinking weâd start with what Dixon was makingââ
âHold on,â I say sharply as I slide into a leather chair. âI appreciate the urgency, but there hasnât been an offer made or one accepted. This was just a discussion.â
Reggie starts, glaring at me.
Damon frowns, straightening his ascot. âDonât be coy, Ronan. The salary will be there. We know you, your talent, your work ethic. Weâve seen what you did with that team in Texas. Youâre our pick, hell, before Stanford snatches you up!â He slaps the desk and lets out a wheezy laugh.
I lean back and smile, pretending to be calm when Iâm anything but. My stomach just wonât settle. âI called Hite and turned him down.â
Reggie nods, and the other two smile, clearly happy.
I clear my throat and steeple my hands. âThe thing is Iâve made commitments, Damon. The high school playoffs start December first. Will this wait until afterwards?â
He picks up the pipe on his desk and lights it. âNo. Sorry. We want to announce Dixonâs leaving the team, as well as his replacement, on Monday. Our staffâs covering the game Sunday, but weâve lost two already, ones we should have won.â
âIâm aware,â I say. âI see the mistakes, the bad calls.â
He stares at me with beady eyes. âWhy donât you and Coach Hardy catch up, go meet the staff, maybe some players, then take a walk in that stadium.â He puffs on his pipe. âYouâve got memories there. Hell, I get a hard-on every time I sit in the ownerâs box. Not bad for an old man, eh?â He slaps his desk and lets out another laugh, then sobers, considering me, raking over my face and posture. âAll right, all right . . . I hear you; I do. Youâve spent some time in Texas and need some time to mull this over.â
âYes.â
He nods decisively. âIâll be in touch with Reggie about the money by the end of the day; then Iâll need your answer by tomorrow. All right, boys, I have a phone call with a senator. So . . .â He waves his hands for us to leave.
Reggie, Coach Hardy, and I walk out to the foyer. Coach heads to the restroom, and Reggie pulls me to the side, a furrow between his brows.
âYour part is to win the interview,â he says. âYouâre acting like youâre having second thoughts.â
âThat was barely an interview. He wanted my ass in New York so Iâd feel nostalgic.â
He shakes his head. âWhy are you hesitating? This job is a no-brainer. It cuts years off your plan to be in the league.â
True. Scoring an NFL position wasnât something I expected so soon. I love my old team. I love the staff I used to work with. This is my dream job.
I stare out the window. So why does it feel wrong?
Later that day, itâs dark when the cab drops me off in front of Tuckâs building. They wanted to put me up at a hotel, but I chose to stay with him. Earlier, he left us at Damonâs office and went to his physical therapy appointment.
Wearing joggers and an old shirt, heâs waiting for me in the den, Chinese takeout already ordered, a drink poured in a glass. He hands it to me.
We walk in the kitchen, where he grabs a cheese-and-fruit plate out of the fridge and sets it on the island like itâs the H ope Diamond. He gives me a smile, batting his lashes. âHow was your day, dear?â
âYouâd make a great wife, Tuck, but I prefer blondes.â
He flips me off while sticking a cube of cheddar between his lips. He chews and swallows it down. âSo? Give me the deets.â
I nod and sit on a stool. âIt was good. Met the new guys. They seem great. Jasper has a great arm. I like his enthusiasm. I caught up with some people on staff and a few players. The stadium, ah, it was fucking great to walk inside. I closed my eyes and pictured a hundred thousand fans on their feet for us . . .â
âLike coming home?â
I pause, glancing around at his modern apartment, the one I shared with him for years. The gray leather couches. The expensive, fancy Swedish swivel chairs he insisted we had to buy. The mirror coffee table that broke once when one of his girlfriends danced on top of it. (He ordered another one.) The bright yellow painted on one wall, black on the other. My eyes end on the floor-to-ceiling windows.
The curtains are spread, and the view of Manhattan twinkles like stars in the distance.
Stars.
Nova.
I take a steadying breath, feeling the loss of her like an uppercut to the face. Itâs Saturday, and we could be hanging out, playing pool or darts, watching a movie, watching football . . . I never showed her my comic book collection. My lips twitch. Sheâd fall over laughing. Then thereâs the M atchbox cars and video arcade machines. I wonder if she likes M s. Pac-Manâ
âRonan?â
I look up. âYeah, man, it felt like home. It was awesome.â
âHmm, I see.â Thereâs a question in his tone, but the doorbell rings, and he leaves to grab our food.
Later, after weâve eaten, I clean up the mess while he tells me about his ankle, his therapist, the new neighbor who plays music too loud, his new yoga class . . .
He lets out a breath. âAll right, then. Iâve told you everything. Whew. What should we do tonight? Thereâs a new club I want to hitââ
âYou canât dance on that ankle.â I toss a dish towel over the faucet to dry.
âNo, but I can talk to pretty girls.â
Several moments tick by as we lean in over the island.
âWell? Hot chicks or stay at home?â
âLetâs take a ride somewhere,â I say, easing up.
He nods, not asking me where. He already knows.
He grabs keys from a drawer and dangles them. âFerrari or M aserati?â
I roll my eyes. âYou got a new sports car?â
âMeh. Got rid of the Escalade.â
A few minutes later, we back out of his garage in his silver Ferrari. He lets the car idle at the exit. âConnecticut, I presume?â
âYeah.â
He pulls out on the road and points the car away from the city.
I gaze out the window at the passing buildings. I roll my neck. This entire day Iâve been unsettled, a pricking sensation eating at my insides. Itâs fear, that Iâm fucking something up, but I donât know how to stop it.
âYouâre quiet. Whatcha thinking?â Tuck asks a few minutes later, glancing over at me.
I smirk ruefully. âThat youâre my best goddamn friend in the whole world. I might not be where I am today if it wasnât for you. You got me dry. You sent me Leia. Like a boss. You bought an outfit and found the perfect girl. Fuck. I love you, man.â
I hear him sniff. âAsshole. Why are you making me cry like a girl?â
I huff out a laugh. âYouâre almost a girl anyway.â
Itâs close to ten by the time we pull into the landscaped and well-lit memorial garden. Tuck drives through the park, around the curves and hairpin turns. We stop at the bottom of a hill, park, and get out. He leans against the car and crosses his legs. âTake your time, bro.â
I nod and walk to Whitneyâs grave. Itâs set next to her grandparentsâ, a gray stone carved into a heart that ends in a flat stone on the bottom. Her parents picked it out, and I feel like she would have loved it. I sit down next to it and stare at her name, the date she was born. Itâs been over two years since I visited. In the beginning, it was a lot, sometimes with Tuck, sometimes without. It usually involved a bottle of whiskey.
The last time I came was the day after the Mercer Hotel.
I settle my hands on the stone. Is it possible to have two (or more) loves in a lifetime? Does fate select your possibilities, and if the stars are aligned, you meet them? Is it possible to love them differently?
Whitney was the first girl I let into my heart. Our love bloomed into a gentle thing, sweet and uncomplicated. I planned a happy life with her. Then watched her die.
Nova. Jesus. Iâm in deep with her. I love who she is. How strong. How sure she is of her feelings for me. How she treats others. How sheâs devoted to Sabine. How she puts up with Lois. How her accent thickens when sheâs pissed. Her hair. Her smile. Her damn cat. Her spunk. Her old cowboy boots. Her words about living a meaningful life, and fuck me, I miss her.
I glance up at the night sky, stars gleaming. I swallow thickly. Whitneyâs up there in heaven, scowling and huffy. I bet she has her little round glasses on, the ones I said made her look like a professor. Sheâs pointing her finger at me, telling me Iâm a fool, that I need to let go and live my life.
I exhale. My gut knows that to feel alive, to taste what life has to offer, I must conquer my fear of losing people and letting them down. I need to loosen the guilt that burdens me. Fear and guilt have built a fortress in my heart, the stones laid with anguish and pain. Itâs whispered to me that itâs safer to just skim through life, lurking in the dark, never living in the light.
But . . .
Now I have another chance, and Iâm too scared to reach out and grasp it.
Nova called Andrew a coward.
I bend my head, unable to look at the stars.
Iâm. The. Fucking. Coward.