Cass
Nothing is wrong. I’m fine. Everything is fine. Nothing hurts; my body feels good. I’m hydrating, and there’s nothing wrong. I lie here on the bench, an ice pack on the back of my neck, my eyes closed to gather my thoughts, the sounds of the other girls and lockers and chatter all melding together into one obnoxious cacophony around me. I’ve been playing the words over and over in my head, because if I don’t, if I let up the mantra for just one second, I know I’m going to cry.
And once I start, I’m not sure I’ll stop.
For once, it’s not my body that is caging me. My limitations, the ones I’m battling through today, are in my head. The ugly inside me right now is new. And I don’t deserve to have to have it there. I didn’t ask for it. I didn’t want it. I didn’t go looking for it. But it found me anyway. I can’t deny that the last few hours have scarred me…again.
I shouldn’t have stayed. I should have just taken the F. But I can’t let my grades slip. That’s a deal-breaker for my parents. And just one F—risks it all.
Maybe I should have risked it? No…don’t let those thoughts in. Don’t think about it. Just think about the goal, your game—your mission. Your body is fine. Everything is fine. Your legs feel strong. You are winning.
Win. Win. Win!
I was the only one in the room. I knew that was wrong; it’s always wrong. But I slid into the small desk. I let him hand me the stapled packet for the retest. I wrote my answers, scribbling quickly, my mind too busy searching for answers and reeling from the excitement of finding them and knowing they were right. I didn’t notice how close he’d gotten. I didn’t see it coming.
And then his hand was on my thigh.
No. My body is strong—just forty-five more minutes of running. I want this. I can do this.
I jerked my leg quickly, startled, almost as I would be if a spider landed on me. A spider—this was so incredibly far from a spider. I would have gladly accepted venom instead. I can still hear it all in my head, his voice battling for dominance with my own. Every second, I fight to keep myself on top, to remain in control.
“Oh, I’m sorry Cassidy. I just wanted to check your work, make sure you were getting it this time,” he said. So condescending. His breath hot, the stench of stale coffee nauseatingly pungent.
I pretended it was nothing. I played along with the misunderstanding. I told him I felt pretty good this time, that I was sure my answers were right.
And then his hand slid back in place, his chair behind me pushed up against my own. His legs on either side of me, his fingers roaming up…slowly—he wasn’t going to stop. He. Was. Not. Going. To. Stop.
A single tear falls down my cheek. I catch it quickly, feeling it fast, and rubbing it away with the back of my hand. I open my eyes and am relieved that I am in a corner…alone. Coach has come in. I missed his entrance. I was lost for a few minutes, but I’m here now.
He’s drawing things on the whiteboard, and I nod when he speaks my name. But I’m not hearing any of it. It doesn’t matter—I will know what I’m doing on the field, whether I hear his plays or not. It’s a friendly—a match up with an OSU club team. Nothing counts here. Except everything counts for me, if I want to erase it all—get back on my map. I need to perform here. Forty-five more minutes. I can do this. My body feels strong.
I can shut this out just long enough. I can do it, because I deserve it. And he doesn’t get to take that away from me. When it’s all over, I’ll call my dad, and figure out what I’m going to do about breaking a faculty member’s nose.
The game stays on course. My mind stays sharp. The walls stay in place. And his voice—Mr. Cotterman’s, Paul Cotterman’s—it disappears long enough for me to do what I need to do.
I’ve learned her name—the girl with the jet-black hair. It’s Chandra. She’s good, as good as I assumed she would be. We’ve been playing opposite most of the game, and we work well together. The only flaw being that I’m pretty sure we share a mutual hatred for each other.
She hates me, because I’m better than her—a disruption to her comfort. I hate her…because she’s a bitch.
She knocked my water over when I set it on the table to adjust my shin guards. And she pushed her sharp cleats into the top of my foot a few times, just convenient enough to make it look accidental. But it’s not. I can tell. I can tell, because I would have played it the same way if I were strong enough to follow through with such a move. I’m getting there—strong enough? I was well on my way before this morning. But I’ve had a setback. Today, I’m only strong enough to get through a short soccer match.