Well. I talk a nice talk. Don’t think it made much of a difference, though.
To say we are a tad…out of sync, would be generous. It’s in the eightieth minute, we’re down 1–0, and we’ve messed up so many offensive opportunities, even I’m pissed, though of course I’m not showing it.
Neither is Gavin, and that’s all you need to know. That’s when you know it’s bad—when Gavin Hayes is being quiet, eyes narrowed in fierce concentration, strategizing, wracking his brain for what he can do to save this. He squints, black-coffee eyes sparkling with flecks of toffee as the sun hits them. A frigid wind flies through the stadium, whipping back his dark hair. He breathes out a puff of steam that I see as he backtracks in the midfield, receiving the ball, not even watching it to his feet as he stops it with one flawless touch that’s as natural to him as that exhale from his lungs.
Finding me, he sends a pass that’s perfect, threaded between two defenders, both of whom turn and run after me. They’re fast. But I’m faster.
Unfortunately, they’re onto me. New England’s read our formation like a book and has every man marked. Santi’s covered. Carlo, too. Ethan’s fighting to give me something along the wing as he flies up from midfield, but his defender is right there, tight on him. I have nothing. It’s just me.
That’s when I remember what I told everyone. This game isn’t won by one person. It’s not all on my shoulders. It takes all of us.
Glancing back, I find Gavin, knowing exactly what I’m going to do.
I fake out my defenders and slip through them, pulling the ball in a Maradona and cutting central. I catch Gavin’s eye, wishing we’d practiced this, wishing I’d said something when he told me not to expect him to be fast enough to be right behind me.
You can still get there, I should have told him. I can buy you time.
But then I realize, I didn’t have to tell him. He knows. Gavin knows exactly what I’m doing. No one’s on him. He plays a commanding role that’s pivotal in midfield but not the most vital position to cover when defending an offensive attack, at least, if that position’s being held by anyone but Gavin. New England should know better, but they seem to be flying on autopilot, acting like he’s some regular player who’s not a threat outside thirty yards from the goal. Which he is. Oh, he is. And that’s why I’m about to give him the ball.
I know Gavin Hayes’s career better than I care to admit. I know his every goal, his every iconic game. I know the man has thighs like a goddamn truck for a reason. He might not have the speed that he used to, but he still has power; that man can crack a ball into the back of the net from here, easy.
As Gavin barrels down the field, I nutmeg my defender, cut past a guy chasing after me, and come face to face with Bryce. It’s shocking, how much nothing I feel as he bears down on me, as we hit bodies and I spin away with the ball, taunting him out of position, exposing the center of the field. I don’t look at those russet curls of his and miss threading my fingers through them. I don’t look into his bright blue eyes and remember staring into them as he touched me and begged me to touch him.
It's a sweet victory to feel nothing for someone who once made me feel everything I didn’t want to—self-doubt, hurt, betrayal, loss. It’s going to be an even sweeter victory when Gavin scores because of it.
And now he’s here, having read me perfectly, exactly where I need him to be, as I send the ball in a lateral pass across the field where it lands one step in front of him. I hold my breath, freeze as he plants his left foot and cracks the ball with one touch, a bullet through the air that hits its target at the top of the goal, rippling gloriously beneath the crossbar and down the back of the net.
Goal!!!
I sprint toward him, the whole team does, a crush of bodies throwing our arms around him.
As if he’s soaking up the moment, Gavin’s eyes are shut, his head bowed, as Amobi, the only one taller than him, ruffles his hair. But I see it when no one else does.
His smile. Small, private. The faintest tip of his mouth, but I’d swear if he’d shaved his beard down to scruff, I’d catch a deep dimple flashing in his cheek.
After he shoves the guys away good-naturedly, the group breaks apart. Gavin and I walk toward the center of the field.
I smile down at my cleats, watching them side by side with his. This camaraderie is what I dreamed might be possible when he first signed with the team. This is what I’ve been waiting for, for two long years.
We’ve scored together before; it’s not the first time. But it’s different today. Because of what he trusted me with, the way I knew where he’d be and what he needed, the way he leaned into my strength and leveraged it with his, and together we made something better than both of us. Because of that trust, the kind of partnership I’ve wanted with him and almost gave up on having, we’ve tied up this game.
“Perfect pass,” he says gruffly.
My head snaps up. I smile at him. “Perfect shot.”
“That it was,” he says, gaze trained ahead.
I roll my eyes. “Humble as ever.”
“Nothing wrong with taking pride in what you can do, Bergman. You gain nothing by understating your abilities.” He spins, stopping where I’ll stand, just outside the circle as we get ready for New England to kick off. Leaning in, he lowers his voice. “He’s looking at you.”
“Who?”
“That wanker.”
“Ah. Bryce.”
Gavin glances over my shoulder, locking eyes with him, glaring death. “Next time you have the ball, we do that play again,” he says. “But this time you’re going to keep running. I’ll feed it back to you, and you do what you do best.” He leans in, his mouth a whisper from my ear, the memory of this morning flooding my mind, his mouth against my neck, his breath warm and soft against my skin. His hand interlaced with mine.
I shiver.
“Put the ball in the back of the fucking net,” he says quietly. “Remind that inveterate ass what he let get away and will never ever get back.”
I stand there, speechless at the top of the circle as he turns and strides deep into the midfield.
I’m still on a cloud as we walk to our cars in the parking lot back home in LA. After Gavin’s goal to tie it up, I scored. We won. Not even another cross-country flight could bring my mood down.
“Will you ever stop dancing?” Gavin grumbles. There’s amusement in his voice, faint, hidden, just like the smile after his goal.
I two-step my way across the parking lot, then spin, because there are honestly few things I delight in more than watching Gavin Hayes try to act like he doesn’t enjoy the heck out of my dance moves. “Not anytime soon.” I bounce to the rhythm of Carlo’s music, which has started blasting in his car’s stereo. To the beat, I tell Gavin, “Because there’s no I in team, no me in we. You and I scored, got ourselves a victory!”
“And that’s when you know you’ve watched too much Hamilton.”
“Too much Hamilton?” I shimmy my shoulders while looking for my car. “No such thing.”
Gavin rolls his eyes, brushing past me to unlock his gas guzzler. “Why the frown?” he asks.
I’m scanning the parking lot, and I don’t see my hybrid anywhere. “Can’t find my car.” I pull out my phone as suspicion dawns and dread creeps through my limbs. My missing car has Viggo written all over it.
And there it is. A text as soon as I power on my phone, after having turned it off for our flight.
Viggo: Needed to make a long-distance bakery delivery and we both know my car is too delicate for such extended mileage, so I caught a cab to the parking lot and borrowed yours. Hopefully you can get a ride home! ;-)
Gavin opens his driver’s side door, but freezes when he sees me still standing next to him. “No lying about your car just so I’ll give in to carpooling.”
I pocket my phone, seething. Viggo’s going to pay so bad for this. “It would give Mama Nature a little hug.”
Gavin throws me a withering glare as he tosses his bag inside the Land Rover. “We played well together today, I’ll give you that. Doesn’t mean we’re buddies, and it certainly doesn’t mean we’re carpooling.”
“See, and here I was thinking, considering we woke up being big and bigger spoon this morning, a fifteen-minute car ride was peanuts in comparison—”
“Goddammit, Bergman.” He pinches the bridge of his nose. “Fine. Fine, all right? We can discuss carpooling. But only if you swear never to bring that up ever again.”
“You got yourself a deal.” I beam a smile and offer him my hand to shake.
He glares down at my hand, then peers back up at me. “Get in your damn car and go home.”
“Ooh, good idea. I’d love to caravan, except my car isn’t here. My brother borrowed it.”
Gavin sighs. “Well, then I suppose I’ll have to drive you home. But we are not listening to any musicals.”
14
OLIVER
Playlist: “Fever to the Form,” Nick Mulvey