Elsewhere, a young man was sitting on a picnic blanket. The man wasnāt eating anything. His basket was empty, the picnic was a front.
Heād never met the dealer he was waiting for. Theyād agreed on the day and location but not on an explicit time. The theory was that by being vague in this way, they avoided leaking details to the authorities. However, despite being done for security reasons, this strategy introduced its own vulnerabilities.
A cracking sound entered his field of awareness and then grew into a sound of footsteps. The man turned toward the sound and caught a visual of a figure. It was an old man holding something that looked like a compass and walking toward him.
The old man looked up and the two locked eyes. āHey there, I take it youāre waiting for someone?ā
The question was based on the oddity of a solo picnic, but it was taken as a sort of self-identification. āI am. You here to talk?ā
āYou could say that. Mind if I join you?ā
He gestured for the old man to take a seat. His visitor was cloaked behind more layers than one would expect. The combined senses of nervous anticipation and impatience made it seem plausible that the old man could be hiding all sorts of products or combat tools in there.
āWhatās your name, then?ā
āWalter,ā he lied. āAnd yours?ā
The old man shrugged. āI take it youāve encountered a rather strange app in the last couple months?ā
Walterās eyes widened. āHow do you know about that?ā
Again the old man shrugged. āI donāt know much.ā
āWell, thatās what Iām here to discuss. Youāre right that I found such an app, only I didnāt just find it. Iāve improved on it in a way that could revolutionize the narcotics market.ā
Walter pulled a phone out of his pocket, unlocked it, and handed it to the old man.
āThatās my app right there. The original app had a function called āsave body stateā. I cracked the appās code and rebuilt it to isolate this feature.ā
The old man frowned and held the phone up, as if looking for a signal. Walterās eyes followed and, in doing so, didnāt notice the old manās other hand sneaking into a coat pocket.
He continued, āThe idea is that the app can save the state of your body and then return it to that state later. So, and Iāve tested this, if someone gets high and saves, they can then return to that high without taking anything at the push of a button. Same works with sobriety, if you have anything on you I can demonstrate to that effect.ā
āNot necessary, I believe you. I know a bit about this after all.ā
āWell, hereās the kicker. My mod also introduces a paywall which kicks in after a while. In order to return to their high, a junkie will have to send money. So, we only need to buy the first dose that they save with and then weāve got them paying us with no further input required.ā
Walter ended this pitch with a proud grin stretched across his face. His sense of ingenuity was undercut, though, by the look of disgust the old man had as he looked down at the phone.
He put his hands up and attempted damage control. āItās more ethical too. See, since the body is basically just returning to a memory it doesnāt build up any tolerance or physical dependency. So if someone quits using it they wonāt, like, die or anything. They just probably wonāt quit because theyāll freely choose an altered state. Folks are much safer with this than with traditional methods.ā
āHmmā¦ maybe. The thing I donāt understand is whereās the app?ā
āWhat?ā
Walter took the phone back and searched through it. Heād had the app on there just a few minutes ago, but now it was gone. His innovation had somehow disappeared.
āHuh, must be some sort of glitch. No worries, though, Iāve got another build of it here.ā
He pulled out a laptop. The old man moved next to him so that they could both see it.
āSee, here it is. Iām calling it The Happy Button at the moment, but the name is a work in progress. Another benefit is that once we get someoneās login credentials, we can use the original app on them.ā
āI see.ā The old man pulled something out of his pocket which looked something like a marble or a lens. āTake a look through here.ā
Walter took the lens. It was odd. Through the lens, all the colors and shades of everything seemed to blend together into a dark red. He couldnāt make out the surrounding trees, his basket, his blanket, his laptop, his hand, nothing. The only thing he could identify was a pink rectangle. Comparing with and without the lens, he found the rectangle was the window of his modified app.
āWeird. Say, who did you say you-ā
The pink rectangle vanished along with the window. All the links to the program were gone, as was the program itself.
āHow did youā¦ You justā¦ā Walter leapt up. āWho the hell are you?ā
āCalm down-ā
āYou tricked me! Oh man, Iām so stupid! I thought you were somebody else! And nowā¦ fuck, how am I going to get any investors!ā
āJust wait, I think we could-ā
āNoā¦ no, no, no, my mom thinks Iām at college, how am I going to explain this to-ā
āShut up and listen for a mo-ā
āNo, why the hell wou-ā
Pulling from his pocket, āThis is a thousand dollars!ā
Walter was shocked to attention.
The old man continued, āI acknowledge that I just took something from you. I havenāt decided yet, but thereās a fair chance Iāll end up erasing the original app too. In the meantime, as a reparation, Iāll give you these dollars and the lens.ā
Walter took the cash and took another peek through the lens. Everything remained red, except the silhouette of the old man which looked like an almost random splattering of colors.
āIf you ever find something which looks different from the background, call me and Iāll compensate you for it. Does that make up for the trouble?ā
āWell, no.ā
The old man raised his eyebrows.
ā...but I guess itās not nothing.ā
----------------------------------------
Helenās phone buzzed to life with a notification from the group chat.
ā ā ā ā Sasha: DID YOU GUYS SEE THE BASKETBALL GAME LAST NIGHT?
ā ā ā ā Becky: no
Not having much to do that afternoon, Helen seconded this.
ā ā ā ā Helen: me either
ā ā ā ā Sasha: you guys are missing out
ā ā ā ā Sasha: it was a good game
ā ā ā ā Becky: when did you become a sports fan?
ā ā ā ā Sasha: when I saw the guys on the team š¦
ā ā ā ā Helenās palm went straight to her forehead as she strongly considered putting the phone down.
ā ā ā ā Becky: wtf
ā ā ā ā Sasha: Iām serious!
ā ā ā ā Becky: thirsty is what you are slut
ā ā ā ā Sasha: uncalled for
ā ā ā ā Sasha: @Helen back me up on this, moral patrol
ā ā ā ā Helen: that was a little harsh
ā ā ā ā Becky: lol
ā ā ā ā Helen: I donāt exactly agree on the other part though
ā ā ā ā Becky: yeah me and helen, jocks just arenāt our type
ā ā ā ā Sasha: I seem to recall you dating a guy from the soccer team last year
ā ā ā ā Becky: for two weeks
ā ā ā ā Becky: wasnāt my type
ā ā ā ā Becky: case in point
ā ā ā ā Helen: lol
ā ā ā ā Sasha: you two just donāt know what youāre missing, come to a game and youāll see what I mean
ā ā ā ā Becky: maybe
ā ā ā ā Becky: helen, go watch basketball with sash and report back
ā ā ā ā Helen: what? why me?
ā ā ā ā Helen: im not interested either
ā ā ā ā Sasha: come on pweeese?
ā ā ā ā Sasha: you gotta start looking into guys some time or youāll miss your chance
ā ā ā ā Helen: wtf
ā ā ā ā Becky: lol ok grandma
----------------------------------------
Sam kept up the habit of scanning the stands for the first few games of the season. Helen was generally absent, but in looking he wound up getting a sense for the regulars. His father was there a fair amount of the time and sometimes managed to drag his mother along too. There was also a vaguely familiar blonde girl in a ponytail who always seemed remarkably invested in the games.
As he got used to not seeing Helen, the scanning became less frequent. Heād check before the game and at halftime, but once she wasnāt there the idea that she may suddenly appear seemed less likely.
All the better for focusing on the game itself.
Nash Highās team was winning, but only by a point and the timer was winding down. Their opponents had control of the ball. Sam had decently preserved his stamina and Rex had avoided fouls that game, so they were both on the court. Sam was chasing the ball when a teammate cut off the opponentās path.
He passed the ball to another from the other team, who held it and looked for openings. Then the first enemy repositioned and the ball-holder decided to pass it back. This was not the best move, as a Nash player intercepted the ball and passed it to Sam.
At this point, Sam was too far from the net to shoot. The way there, however, was clear and he made a run for it. A couple players attempted to get in front of him, but heād long since learned to evade. No one was in his way now, and the other team wasnāt fast enough to catch him.
Eyes trained on the net, he kept going. Just a few more steps and heād be in position to jump and dunk the ball. His legs ran on autopilot. His hands dribbled like an upside-down juggler. He pushed the ball down andā¦ it didnāt come back up.
Samās eyes left the net to search for the ball. Sure enough it was no fumble, the ball had been stolen. Rex ran in front of him with the ball. By other hands, the ball was dunked. Nash Highās score increased. Heād technically won.
He looked around. His team was celebrating. Rex was doing some sort of primal victory scream. The coach was hesitantly disgusted.
Sam looked down at the hands that had lost the ball. I canāt let that happen while Helenās watching.
----------------------------------------
The fact that Helen wasnāt showing up didnāt surprise Sam. This wasnāt because heād lost hope that she might ever attend, rather it was because heād only brought it up the one time. On the Monday following Rexās theft he woke up intending to change this. That is, he woke up that day to some knocking and a loud
āSam! Itās time to get up!ā
He rolled out of bed and opened the door. Looking down at his father still felt weird.
āWhatā¦ ahā¦ what time is it?ā
The father pointed at a wall clock in the hall. Samās eyes widened with a sudden awakeness. He shut the door and hopped out of his pajamas. By then heād used the app to enlarge a few sets of his clothes so there wasnāt too much of a fitting search. He passed his father down the stairs.
āThereās a sandwich on the table. Canāt be skipping breakfast the week before playoffs.ā
Sam nodded, gave goodbyes, snatched the sandwich, and ran for the schoolbus. Familiar worries went with him.
What if Iām being too forward? (He only made two moves, neither very recently.)
What if she hates me? (He had no reason to think she might.)
What if she says no? This thought was the one which stuck. If she didnāt swoon at his basketballing or, worse, if she didnāt want to show up in the first place, then he had no follow up plan.
He brought his worry into chemistry class. There was a lab that day. The students were grouped into pairs. Each pair was given four white powders and an acid. By seeing which ones dissolved in water and which ones didnāt respond even to the acid, the class was meant to figure out which was which.
Sam was paired with a girl he didnāt know. Heād probably heard her name during attendance but it was a pretty big class. They put on goggles, collected the chemicals, and went back to the lab tables to do the experiment.
The mechanical task failed to ease his apprehension. As he was squirting distilled water into one of four small test beakers, it started to overflow. Moreover, he only noticed this after his lab partner pointed it out.
āIt says weāre only supposed to fill them halfway,ā she said.
āOh, yeah, youāre right.ā Iām too distracted. I need to resolve this before I wind up spilling the acid or something.
He looked down at his partner. On one hand she was a stranger. On the other hand, she was a girl so she may have more perspective on what Helen might be thinking. Moreover she was two grades older than he so she had the benefit of hindsight on her side.
As he stirred a powder into the water, he started āSay, if someone asked youā¦ umā¦ā
It seemed like a bit much to put on a stranger. He realized he didnāt really want to explain too much but, having started, he needed to improvise.
āLikeā¦ if you were this powder and you didnāt dissolve in this first round, do you think youād react to the acid?ā
She gave him a puzzled look. ā...thatās the point of the second round isnāt it? Some will react and some wonāt.ā
āYeah, but if I were an acid Iād want to know which would happen in advance, you know.ā
āUhā¦ I meanā¦ these look pretty similar. The instructions donāt give us any other way to tell them apart. Putting them in the acidās kinda all weāve got.ā
āSo youāre saying we just need to put them in and see what happens?ā
āIā¦ itās a lab, thatās the point.ā
Sam nodded. āMaybe itāll dissolve, maybe it wonāt. Our only option is to put it in and see.ā
ā...yes?ā
āThanks, that really helps.ā
ā...right.ā
In the end, no acid spilled. In the water round, only one of the four powders vanished into the liquid. It interacted similarly with the acid, seeming to disappear as it was stirred. One of the non-aqueous powders faded into the acid and another remained an inert pile at the beakerās bottom. But the fourth powder reacted differently.
As predicted by the lab sheet, one powder distinguished itself by doing more than just vanishing. This powder entered the acid and changed it as it went in. The acid started out as a clear liquid but, when this powder was stirred in, changed its color. In the end there were three beakers with clear liquid and one dark crimson solution.
āHuh, thatās neat,ā the lab partner said.
She then proceeded to wash out the beakers while Sam was, again, distracted.
----------------------------------------
Helen got out of biology class a few minutes early that day. She had a mild headache but, having not slept well the preceding night, thought nothing of it.
The preceding class was still using the room when she arrived so she pulled out her phone to kill some time. It was practically bursting with unread notifications. Helen wasnāt stealthy enough to read through them in class, so her messages had piled up. Some skimming showed Sasha was still, weeks after first raising the topic, lobbying for the other two to try attending a basketball game.
ā ā ā ā Becky: why us?
ā ā ā ā Sasha: youāre my friends
ā ā ā ā Becky: you have other friends, ask them
ā ā ā ā Sasha: you donāt understand
The story has been taken without consent; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident.
ā ā ā ā Sasha: I already have
Becky capitulated further later in the chat. Helen started typing a message when the bell rang and the students came trickling out of the room. Her phone landed back in her backpack and she drifted into the room.
Taking her seat, she coughed a bit. It shook up her aching head, which was not fun.
Being the first one to english class was surprisingly refreshing. The quiet empty room made a good setting to unwind a bit. People trickled in at a leisurely pace and it was a while before the din rose. And even when the class got noisy, this died down a fair bit when the severe Mrs. Doenitz began prepping papers at her desk.
Sam entered a couple minutes before class started. From where Helen was sitting he was hard to miss, obviously. She caught his gaze as he walked, after which he quickly looked away.
Back on her phone, she scrolled past a few more of Sashaās messages before a connection was made. She tapped Sam on the shoulder. He jumped in his seat before spinning around.
āHey Sam, youāre on the basketball team right?ā
His eyes widened, his head nodded emphatically.
She held up her phone and pointed at it. āA friend of mine is a pretty big fan of your team. I hear youāve got a big game coming up?ā
āYes. Playoffs. Big-tournament-start thing. I think. Yeahā¦ Sports.ā
āYeah, she says I should come see one.ā
āOh yeah sheās right, Iād love it if you- I mean, ya know, coach says we should invite all our friends to show up. Like, as a ticket sales thing. Should be a good game though, Iām sure youād enjoy it.ā
āMaybe. Well, I was thinking, I know you and youāre on the team and Iām sure this friend of mine would love to be introduced to your teammates.ā
āOh. Ummā¦ yeah. I guessā¦ If you came to the game I couldā¦ we could do some introductionsā¦ā
āRight, how about we meet right after the game?ā
āSure.ā
She smiled, āSee you then.ā
Returning to her phone, she started typing up a message to tell Sasha. Then she stopped. Thisāll make a nice surprise.
----------------------------------------
Pressure was on. The ball had just fallen into Samās hands. He took it in stride, ran up to the net, and took the shot.
āGood one,ā said the coach. āKeep that up and we may actually have a long season this year.ā
Sam nodded and continued solo practice. He wanted to make sure he could make shots from as many positions as possible. When solo practice ended, he made sure he was consistent with passing as well. The teamās main strategy up to this point had been to keep one of Sam or Rex on the court as often as possible and focus on getting the ball to one of them.
The memory of the stolen ball echoed in his head. Coach had already chewed Rex out for that one, but Sam wanted a word with him about it. That is, he especially wanted to resolve that before the game with Helen attending.
Practice ended. The players put the balls in a basket. Sam started approaching Rex when the coach pulled him aside. She kept him to talk about strategic positioning and movement for a few minutes. When he was released, he hurried into the locker room hoping Rex was still there.
Luckily, he was. Moreso, he was the only one still there. Sam took a deep breath and started his approach. He noticed Rex had something written on his arm, but he couldnāt parse the handwriting. The bigger shock was on the phone in the hand at the end of that arm.
Samās eyes widened. Heād recognize that app anywhere.
Now completely sidetracked, he hurried over to his gym locker. It was at this moment that Rex noticed him and leapt to his feet.
After a moment of panic, he growled āHey, whatever you think you saw, itās-ā
āLook!ā Sam held out his phone.
This sent Rex back down onto the bench.
āItās the same app! Weāre the same! Thatās so cool, isnāt it crazy?ā
āUh-ā
āThis explains so much! I was wondering why we were the only two guys our size on the team.ā
āHey, listen-ā
āDid you notice the thing with the clothes? Well your clothes fit so you probably did, never mind that. Any idea whatās up with that one feature that makes 3D models?ā
Rex did know about āsave body stateā. Heād been using it to prevent the writing on his arm from fading after things like showers. This wasnāt what he answered with though.
āI donāt know anything about that app.ā
āWhat app?ā
āThat Bod.io thing.ā
Sam looked at the screen. āThe name isnāt listed here.ā
āNo fair! Erā¦ fine, you caught me. Donāt get any ideas though, weāre not the same.ā
āBut weāre doing the same thing in the same way.ā
āWellā¦ itās none of your business anyway.ā Rex gathered his belongings.
āBut we could coordinate, work together better for the team.ā
āNo,ā he said. As he left, he gave a parting shot. āThis doesnāt change anything. Iām still gonna beat you!ā
Sam gave the closed door his reply ā...arenāt we on the same team?ā
----------------------------------------
On the day of the big game, Sasha and Becky arrived at Helenās house to pick her up. When she didnāt immediately come out, they went in to go get her.
Knock knock.
ācome in,ā Helen croaked.
They opened the door and found her on the couch just inside.
āYou ready?ā Sasha said. āMy dadās waiting in the car outside.ā
āoh yeah. just let me go get my shoes on.ā As Helen started to rise a pained look took over her face.
Becky stopped her. āNo you donāt.ā
ābutā¦ the gameā¦ā
āGirl, you are in no condition to go anywhere.ā
Sasha protested, āBut-ā
Becky merely gestured at the weak, pale, sickly creature before them.
āYeah, no, youāre right. Sheād infect the whole stadium.ā
ān- no guys iām fine,ā Helen said. This then broke into a coughing fit that left her without the strength to rise from the couch. āok you right.ā
Sasha shook her head. āThatās unfortunate. Weāll take lots of pictures and tell you all about it, okay?ā
āwait, i-ā Helen considered telling her about the introduction plan with Sam, but couldnāt bring herself to mention this thing she wouldnāt be able to do. ānevermind, have fun.ā
----------------------------------------
Rex boarded the bus that day with determination. Heād spent the past week bulking up further and wasnāt about to let anyone upstage him at the start of playoffs.
The team got off the bus at the stadium. They were then shepherded to pregame warmups and, after that, to a hype session with the coach. At one point he locked eyes with Sam. No words were exchanged, but he put as much venom into his glare as possible.
Yeah, you! I can see you quaking in your shorts there. When the gameās through, you wonāt have a point to your name. No one will. Iāll control the ball. Iāll control the score. With my new improvements nobody will be able to lay a finger on me. And once the gameās throughā¦ he checked his arm, everyone will know the name Rex!
Sam thought it was an odd moment for a staring contest, but didnāt think much more of it.
Pregame formalities then followed. Someone came clad in merchandise to deliver some snacks. Another came in and explained how the entrance of the two teams was going to work. Then a third came in to administer a last minute test.
The coach had earlier told the team to hold off on restroom breaks if they could help it, and this was why. Cups were distributed and the students were told to collect their golden water at the earliest convenience.
āWe know you guys are just high schoolers, but after that business out east we donāt want to take any chances with drugs. Weāll run a basic screening on your samples for things like alcohol and cannabis, as well as some performance enhancers.ā
There was some waiting for the samples, but before too long the cups were sealed and taken away for testing. Waiting for the test taker to return was mostly a matter of mitigating boredom, though some of the older students on the team seemed a bit worried. After all, if the test came back positive their parents would be notified. Thus this small contingent was on the edge of their seats when the results came in. They breathed a collective sigh of relief when Rex was the one called up.
Rex got up. āWhat is it?ā
āItās probably nothing, the results just came back ambiguous. Weāll need you to take another test just to make sure.ā
The coach said nothing, merely eyeing him suspiciously. The three of them were shuffled into a separate room. Rex sat down and the test taker disappeared for a moment.
āYou havenāt done anything, right?ā asked the coach.
āOf course not!ā This was true, he hadnāt used any substances.
Returning, the test taker proceeded to draw a bit of blood from his arm. āDonāt worry, we wonāt take enough to impact performance.ā
They then returned to the rest of the team to wait for the results. This waiting period carried a different tone. The coachās suspicion had spread. Rex had gotten noticeably stronger, faster, and a bit taller over the past week. Questions of how this was possible were beginning to cast shade from behind some playersā eyes.
Eventually the test taker returned. No announcements were given, rather hushed words were exchanged with the coach and Rex was called over to them.
Whispering, āRex, I want you to be honest with me right now. Have you ever taken steroids?ā
āWhat? No!ā
āMaāam, that doesnāt matter. The policy is that if a player tests positive then-ā
āYes, I understand that. I just want to hear it from him. Now, Rex. Youāve tested positive for steroid usage twice. No matter what you say, you wonāt be able to play.ā
āBut-ā
āBut nothing! I just want you to be honest with me. Maybe you made a mistake because you care about the team. Maybe you thought this wouldnāt matter. Whatever it is, I want you to be honest. Iām asking again. Did you use performance enhancing drugs?ā
āNo, I didnāt.ā
She sighed and looked at him disgustedly. āOk.ā
Rex looked around the room. His team had gone quiet when the conversation went serious. The last exchange had been heard by everyone. It showed on their faces.
āReally, I didnāt!ā
He looked back at the coach. She shook her head. He wouldnāt be allowed to play.
Fire came into his eyes. His teeth clamped shut and his fists tightened.
Rex mumbled to himself. āYou canāt do this.ā He locked eyes with Sam. āYou canāt do this to me.ā He started walking forward. āThis was going to be my day.ā He raised his fist. āMY DAY, YOU HEAR ME?ā
The team had to hold him back from attacking. Rex thrashed about, knocking comrades off him as new ones came in to replace them. Sam, for his part, scrambled away to the other side of the room, utterly shocked.
āYou think weāre the same? Why me then? WHY ME?ā
Security was brought in and Rex was dragged away. Everyone went back to less agitated positions. The coach explained the situation, that theyād have one less player on the team this time. She asked Sam if he was okay. He nodded. As the room settled, a puzzled student came up to him.
āWhatās his problem?ā
Sam shrugged, still shaken.
āCrazy that he roided up like that though. Dude was good, he wouldnātāve had to cheat.ā
ā...cheat?ā
āWell yeah. Imagine you take a pill and it makes you good at basketball. Think how unfair that would be. Totally defeats the purpose of the game.ā
Sam had nothing to say to this. Instead of responding, he just sat and thought.
Rex was telling the truth. He wasnāt using drugs, he was using the app. The app can make you stronger. Butā¦ if you tell it to do that, is that all that it does?
He recalled how the app had made him better at holding his breath without him adjusting any such slider.
Maybe if you make yourself too strong, itāll put more chemicals in to make that strength more natural or something. Either wayā¦ he made himself stronger and traces of steroids appeared in his drug test. The test worked. I just didnāt go as farā¦
āYou okay dude?ā The teammate was still there.
āHmm? Yeah.ā
Defeats the purposeā¦ your purpose is different from mine.
----------------------------------------
Cyborgās phone buzzed.
ā ā ā ā Helen: hey
ā ā ā ā Cyborg: whatās up?
ā ā ā ā Helen: you know Sam, right?
ā ā ā ā Helen: like you two are friends?
Oh damn he really is still on that.
ā ā ā ā Cyborg: he didnāt do something, did he?
ā ā ā ā Helen: no no
ā ā ā ā Helen: I promised Iād come to the basketball game today
ā ā ā ā Helen: but Iām sick so I canāt
ā ā ā ā Cyborg: thatās too bad.
ā ā ā ā Helen: yeah
ā ā ā ā Helen: Iād like to tell him whatās up but I donāt have his info
ā ā ā ā Helen: would you mind passing on the message?
ā ā ā ā Cyborg: just that youāre sick?
ā ā ā ā Helen: yeah
ā ā ā ā Helen: that and
ā ā ā ā Helen: actually yeah thatās it
ā ā ā ā Helen: Iām sick, I canāt make it, the planās off, sorry
ā ā ā ā Helen: ^^^ that
----------------------------------------
Mechanically, all basketball games are equivalent. The balls, courts, nets, everything is standardized. Obviously the opponents arenāt, though, and there can even be variation in oneās own teammates. Further, as Sam found out the moment he walked onto the court, the audience can vary wildly. There is simply a difference between a panel of people off to one side and a sea of faces surrounding you.
It made the crowd harder for him to look through. The coach left him on the bench at the start of the game, so he had a moment to scan. Too many faces were just indistinct grains in a pile. He couldnāt even spot his father, even with the guarantee that he was there.
At a timeout the coach called him up. Sam would be blocking one of the bigger guys on the opponentsā team to give a teammate a chance to slip through. She substituted him in and he started onto the court. Before he got there, though, she put a hand on his shoulder.
āHave fun out there, kid. Okay?ā
Sam nodded and assumed his position. The game proceeded as planned. Nash High passed the ball around until the moment the intended player got ahold of it. He started running and Sam attached himself to the target. Out of the corner of one eye he kept the target in check. On the opposite side he saw his teammate run past. Regardless he was still scanning the crowd.
Then his eyes caught sight of another enemy. A teammate had let one of the opponents free and he was headed on a collision course with the ball. Sam dropped his block and sped over to stop the other player just before he cut off the ball. The runner cut a turn to avoid them and passed the ball to the one who had let the opponent go in the first place. One throw and the score went to Nash.
Sam shook his head. That was close.
The other team had control over the ball. Sam took a defensive position near the hoop. His teammates made a valiant effort to block the ball from crossing the court, but it wasnāt long before Samās position came into play. An opponent had the ball within shooting distance. Sam stood in front of him, ready to block the shot. Thinking he had the enemy under control, Samās attention split toward the crowd for a moment.
He snapped back when the opponent jumped to shoot. Sam started to block it when he realized the guyās hands were empty. The ball was not in the air. Another enemy had run behind the one Sam was pinning and the latterās body had blocked the view of a pass. Sam started toward the other enemy, but when the ball came he couldnāt stop it from flying over his head. The other team scored.
Nash had control over the ball. One player threw it to another, and another, until it landed in Samās hands. He was still over halfway across the court, but he didnāt care. Sam took the shot. It went in.
With a free moment as the other team moved the ball, he glanced around. Off to the side, he locked eyes with the coach. She shook her head at him and he knew why. A shot from that far was reckless.
He returned to the game and ran forward. An opponent initiated a pass, but didnāt see Sam coming and it was intercepted. From right there, Sam jumped up. His arms moved, but his eyes got caught on a flash of orange in the crowd.
Is that her?
The ball bounced off the backboard and into the enemiesā hands. Two passes and some running increased their score again.
Controlling the ball, Samās team attempted the same pattern as before. Sam got the ball. It was bad timing, though, and his eyes were still trying to find what heād thought heād seen. He missed the net completely and the play that repeated itself was the opponentsā.
The coach called a timeout and pulled Sam off the court.
āYou need to stop doing that.ā
āWhat, Iām taking shots.ā
āNot those ones. I donāt care if it looks cool, you need to-ā
āIām gonna go use the restroom.ā
On the toilet, he put his head in his hands. He was exhausted and she was right. He was making shots he knew he couldnāt make. If only I was more accurate! He considered going over to his locker and getting out his phone. But the app only activates when Iām asleep.
The image of sleeping pills came into his head. He didnāt have any, but the idea that he could just pop some, fall asleep, and then have the app wake him up the moment it activated was tantalizing. Only for a moment though. The next moment a shiver went down his spine. Rexās screaming voice rang through his mind: āYou think weāre the same?ā We are the same, in one way at least.
He shook his head. Focus.
Returning to the bench, his eyes went back to the patch of crowd that had tripped him up. At last he spotted the flash of orange hair. Beard hair. It wasnāt Helen.
He sighed and put his face in his hands.
The coach noticed. āYou okay?ā
āYeah. Justā¦ distracted.ā
āDonāt worry. We may be down a man, but getting this far is more than some guys on the team were even hoping for. Itās tough, but this is a good game and I think we can beat it.ā
āWhoās winning?ā
āThem at the moment but itās close.ā
A buzzer rang. Points went to Nash.
āNow it's us. See? Close.ā
The game went on. Samās side kept strong, lost their lead, then gained it back. Halftime came and went. The clock started to wind down and Sam got up.
āPut me back in.ā
The coach nodded and made the substitution.
Sam started with the ball. She said she'd be here, so I've just gotta trust her. Let's give her something to see. He signaled to another teammate and ran the ball around a bit so that the enemies would gather near him to block. Then he jumped up. It looked like he was taking another long shot at the net, so the opponents braced themselves for a rebound. That was the trap, though, because it was a pass. Sam's teammate caught the ball and dunked it.
As the game progressed, Sam pushed himself harder than he ever had. His team followed suit. They coordinated plays within plays. He pushed his legs to send him farther than heād ever gone.
But it wasnāt enough to widen their lead. When the clock hit zero, the scores matched. Five minutes of overtime were added to resolve the tie.
Both teams battled furiously over the ball. Passes were being intercepted left and right. Samās team had the ball but fumbled it. The other recklessly replicated Samās long shot and missed. Tensions were high.
One of Samās teammates got the ball and started running. One swarm moved to stop him, but the other parted the seas. A single enemy chased Samās teammate.
The clock ticked down.
Sam rushed into the fray.
His teammate jumped and tossed the ball.
The enemy leaped, barely in position to knock it away.
But Sam caught it just in time. Mere seconds later he smashed the ball into the hoop.
The swish of the net, the noise of the buzzer, and the roar of the crowd all blended into each other. Heād barely won.
Chests were bumped. Hands were shaken. The sound was the kind they tell you not to blast on headphones. Some booming voice probably announced the winner, but the players couldnāt hear it over their own celebration.
Then Sam moved and assumed another strategic position just outside the locker room door. There he waited.
Oh man, I hope she saw that.
And waited.
The crowdās leaving, so they should come any moment.
And waited.
It wouldnāt hurt if I ran in and grabbed my phone right? Like even if they show up, as long as they wait out here as planned Iāll meet up with them in no time.
He ran in and opened his locker. A scantily clad athlete came by and slapped his back.
āGood game out there man!ā
Sam nodded, retrieved his phone, and resumed his position. Before long he leaned back and started looking through his phone. He had a message.
ā ā ā ā Cyborg: Hey, so Helen told me to tell you that sheās sick and couldnāt come to the game today. She also said something about a plan being off and didnāt elaborate, I assume you understand what she meant.
The lean dropped into a sit. Real convenient.
āWhatāre you doing down there?ā It was the coach. āWeāre gonna board the bus soon.ā
āIāmā¦ uhā¦ Iām waiting forā¦ I guess Iām not doing anything, sorry.ā He got up.
āDonāt be sorry, that was a good showing out there.ā
He shook his head and turned to get the rest of his things from the locker.
āI couldnāt do it.ā
āDo what?ā
He shrugged and passed her. āHave fun.ā
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Over the next few days in class, Helenās illness verified itself through her absence. Sam felt a mix of bads, one for having wasted all that effort and the other for having doubted her upon first seeing the message. He missed a few practice sessions before he saw her again.
English class that day was busy and he didnāt get a chance to talk to her. Mrs. Doenitz then kept him briefly after class to discuss his recent performance. She reminded him that sports were no excuse to skip studies and he agreed as quickly as he could.
Sam found Helen outside the building and approached her. She spoke first.
āOh, Sam. Iām sorry about the other day, I could barely get out of bed.ā
āYeahā¦ I got your message. Say, mind if I ask you a weird question?ā
āUhmā¦ I guess?ā
āWould you sayā¦ umā¦ so guys. If a guy was more athletic, like a stronger, faster, better at sports typeā¦ would you be into that? Totally hypothetical, of course.ā
āIā¦ itās not a bad thing butā¦ I guess Iām not reallyā¦ No offense of course.ā
āOf course.ā
āI guess thatās just not really my thing. Again, itās not like a bad thing, I justā¦ umā¦ā
āNo, I get it.ā He turned and walked away. āIā¦ I get it.ā
Helen saw how he was taking it and opened her mouth to say something to try to make him feel better, but nothing both gentle and honest came to mind. As he walked away, a couple slack-jawed girls emerged from a distance behind him.
Becky was the first to speak. āWhat did you just do?ā
āWhat? Uh, I told himā¦ Remember when you said something like jocks arenāt our type?ā
āNoā¦ no wayā¦ā
Sasha was up next. āDo you know who that is?ā
āYeah, thatās Sam. I think you actually met him the first day.ā Helen cringed at the memory. āBecky, you said he was too short to-ā
Becky shook her head, āNope. Nope. Thatās not who Iā¦ Nope.ā
āDo you think you could introduce me?ā Sasha asked.
āI donāt think now is a good time.ā
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That night, Sam visited his mother in the basement. When she noticed him coming she took off her headphones and put them on the desk in front of her.
āHey Sam whatās up?ā
The first response that came to mind was ānot my gradesā but that wouldāve been too direct. Instead he went with, āJust got something you should probably see.ā
He told her to log in to the schoolās parent portal to check his grades. She was silent for a moment as she took them in.
āSam, thisā¦ is not good.ā
āYup.ā
āYou remember what I said about sports and grades?ā
āIf I canāt keep them up, no basketball?ā
āRight.ā She observed him a moment longer. āYou donāt seem too torn up about it.ā
He shrugged. āIt didnāt do what I was hoping it would.ā
āOh. Iām sorry to hear that. Doā¦ you want to talk about it?ā
āNot really.ā He turned to leave. āYouāll tell Dad about this?ā
āSure, Iāll let him know at his midnight break. And Sam?ā
He stopped.
āYou know you can talk to me about anything right?ā
āI guess.ā He walked out of view. āI love you Mom.ā
āI love you too.ā