On her next service game, Nicki starts serving so fast it feels like a blitz.
I can feel the fatigue in my legs. They are starting to give out, my thighs quivering when I squat. My knees are screaming. She shuts me out of the game.
I can barely hold her off on my service game. But I do.
It’s now 6–6 in the third set. We’re going to another tiebreak.
And then lightning cracks, and the sky roars. I look up at the clouds, and rain starts falling.
* * *
—
Gwen, Bowe, and Ali all rush into the locker room during the delay.
“Guys,” I say. “I’m fine. I’ve got this.”
“You are dominating!” Gwen says. It is the most intense I’ve ever seen her. “Raining sheer motherfucking terror!”
I laugh. “Thank you.”
Bowe smiles. “She’s right.”
I lock eyes with him and smile. “I have to stay focused on winning the tiebreak. Do we know how long the delay will be?”
Ali speaks up. “The storm is passing already. They don’t think more than twenty minutes.”
“In that case, everyone get out of here,” I say. And then I add, “Please.”
Bowe grabs my shoulder and squeezes it, then escorts the two of them out. He turns back to me at the last second.
“This is a beautiful match,” he says. “An absolutely beautiful match.”
He doesn’t wait for my response. He just taps the doorframe and leaves.
Suddenly, it is so quiet around me that I can hear the churn of the pipes in the walls.
I try to think of what my father would say to me right now. I open my locker and look through the notebook. I read his notes again. He says nothing about a tiebreak for the third set. I flip through the pages, searching for something—anything—but there’s nothing I haven’t already read.
What would he say if he were here? What would he have written in this book if he’d had more time? There are still things I need to know; there is still advice I need to get from him. There is more to do together.
I run through strategies—start slow, let her get tired; come out fast, don’t let her get a foothold; go for the big serves; now’s not the time for big serves—desperately trying to assess which one sounds the most like him.
But…I don’t know. I don’t know what he would say.
I feel as if the wind has been knocked out of me. From this moment forward, I do not have him with me. I do not know what he would be thinking. I do not know any more of his strategy, his plan. His logic. His advice. Because he is gone. And he will never be back. I have come to the end.
Suddenly, I feel as if the pain is enough to level me.
I pick up the notebook and put it back in the locker. If I win this tiebreak, it will be because I know how to beat her on my own. And if I don’t, it will be because she is the better player. This is the test I asked for.
The door opens, and Nicki comes in.
“I was waiting in the training room,” she says. “I didn’t want to see you.”
“Oh.”
“But now it’s gonna be at least another ten.”
“Okay.”
She sits down next to me on the bench. She doesn’t say anything for a long time. And neither do I. I just sit next to her with my eyes closed, trying to control my breathing, trying to ignore the pain in my knees.
“This should be mine already,” Nicki says, finally.
I open my eyes and look at her. “Well, it’s not, sunshine.”
Nicki shakes her head. “You are the best player I have ever played, then and now,” she says. “You bitch.”
I laugh.
“I’m trying to be funny to hide how much I hate you with every atom in my body,” she says. I check her face, and she’s not smiling.
“Don’t hate me,” I say. “It is a waste of your time.”
Nicki huffs.
“You’re playing some of the best tennis I’ve ever seen you play,” I tell her. “Thanks to me.”
She rolls her eyes. “Okay, Soto.”
I add, “You deserve every single place you claim in history.”
Nicki looks me in the eye. “I am going to beat you.”
“No,” I tell her. “You are not.”
Nicki laughs, despite herself. A coordinator comes in and tells us they are preparing for us to head back out. We both stand up, and Nicki puts her hand on my shoulder.
“Playing you this year…beating these records—with Carrie Soto, against Carrie Soto—it’s been a dream come true.”
I look her in the eye and nod, unsure quite how to tell her that this match has meant the same for me.
“And now I’m going to shoot an arrow right into your heel so I can say I was the one who finally took down Achilles.”
And that I instantly have the words for: “I’d like to see you fucking try.”
* * *
—
The tiebreaker begins.
A point for Nicki, a point for me.
For Nicki. For Nicki.
For me. For me. For Nicki.
Around and around in circles. It is the most fun I’ve had in years.
This will be the last tournament that I will ever play. And I can’t help but enjoy it.
I did not pick up a racket to grow tense and weary and afraid of failing. I picked it up to feel the joy of smashing a ball as hard as I can. I picked it up to spend time with my dad.
This is it. My last moment of what he and I started together. This match. This tiebreaker. I could live in it forever.
Me. Then Nicki.
Then me. Then Nicki.
Then me. Then Nicki. Then me.
I serve my sharpest, most deadly serve, trying to get an ace off her. But she returns it just as fast. And I can’t match her power now. Her point.
Nicki serves maybe the fastest serve I’ve ever seen in my life. But I gear up and return it. She hits a smash so high I have to leap into the air despite my knees. But I jump higher than I think I’ve ever jumped before, and I manage to graze the ball with my racket, somehow landing it where she can’t reach. My knee is killing me now, but it’s my point.
I serve it, and she returns with a groundstroke. I hit a cross-court backhand and watch as it bounces in. But she’s too far from it. No one can get across the court in the time she has, certainly not with her ankle. I watch as the ball flies over the net. Nicki is running too fast. I can tell. She’s going to overshoot. But the ball bounces lower than I think it’s going to.
It shouldn’t have bounced that low. It’s a fresh ball, and I sent it over hard. But sometimes you get a bad bounce, and the ball doesn’t do what it’s supposed to. And usually, in those moments, the returner misses the shot.
But not Nicki. Not now. Somehow she saw it happening before it happened. She meets the ball outside the line and skids across the court as she drops low to her knees. She leans back, overextended, and gets under the ball just as it’s flying past her, her shin already bleeding from the skid.
She turns ever so slightly and returns it with a shot I can’t touch.
Her point. It’s now 16–15.
And for the first time, I know something as terrifying as it is freeing.
Nicki Chan might just understand the ball better than I do.
She serves the ball again, whipping it at me. I return it so deep it hits at the baseline and then bounces high off the court. Nicki jumps into the air and returns it with a lob.
It glides, slowly, above us. I watch it as gravity brings it back toward the ground. I move two steps to the right, one step back. I hedge my footing, staying on my toes, ready to run whenever it lands. My left knee feels like steel grinding against steel. The pain rings through me, reverberating, absorbing into every part of my body.
I do not care.
The ball descends toward the court. I have to decide whether to hit it before the bounce or get it on the rise. I cycle through my options, all my shots. And then, instead of choosing, I just let my arms fly.
I take it out of the air, quick—send it careening back. Nicki starts running.
I might beat her today. If that ball is in and she misses it, I can beat her today.