up my tab for me. I just have to get out of here.
Miranda: Noah, are you up?
Me: I am now. What’s up?
Miranda: This is going to sound crazy, but—I was wondering if…
Miranda: You know what, never mind.
Me: What?
Miranda: Nothing. I feel stupid now. Go back to sleep.
Me: That isn’t going to happen until you tell me what’s up. Is everything okay?
Miranda: Yes, I was just…
Miranda: This is going to sound so dumb, but I was wondering about your friend. The one from tonight?
Me: Which one?
Miranda: The tall blond. I was talking to him by the bar.
Me: What about him?
Miranda: He left abruptly—was everything okay?
Me: Uh, yeah? I mean, it’s nice that you’re asking, but why do you care?
Miranda: I hugged him and he took off, so now I feel like I violated him.
Me: LOL
Miranda: Shut up! It’s not funny!
Me: It kind of is. Who runs away when a beautiful girl hugs them? LOL
Miranda: Well see, I’ve been wondering about that.
Me: And what have you decided?
Miranda: I think he liked it, but it freaked him out.
Me: And why would it do that?
Miranda: Listen, I don’t really want to get into it with you. I just wanted to make sure he’s okay.
Me: He’s fine and I’ll tell him you were asking.
Miranda: OH MY GOD, PLEASE DO NOT.
Me: LOL why?
Miranda: I don’t need him to know I…
Me: …?
Miranda: Nothing.
Me: Tell me.
Miranda: I’ll talk to you soon, okay? We’ll figure out a time and place to meet for that second card, yeah?
Me: Sure—ball is in your court.
Miranda: Good night, Noah.
Me: Good night, Miranda.
7
Noah
Why was Miranda texting ‘Noah’ about me?
I can’t get it out of my mind. Not Saturday night—couldn’t sleep. Not the next day, or the next.
Not today, at batting practice, and not as I stand here, fielding balls in the infield. An assistant coach slowly hits a grounder in my direction; it rolls straight through my legs. I hear him groan from where he stands on home plate, one hand in a catcher’s mitt.
“Harding, what the fuck?” I can hear him spitting tobacco out the side of his mouth; that’s how pissed he is. “A toddler could have stopped that ball with his eyes closed.”
Coach’s arms go up then come down, slapping at his meaty thighs, face getting redder with each grounder I miss.
“Eight. Zero.” He points at me, fist shaking. “Start fucking earning it, kid.”
Way to shame me in front of the entire infield, fucker.
I pull the cap from my head, running a hand over my perspiring forehead and through my hair. My face is beginning to match Coach’s burgundy jacket.
Get your head in the game. The season opener is three weeks away—you do not have time to suck. Per my contract, if I biff it in practice, they can bench me—and if they bench me, I lose a few million bucks, and my contract could get cut short.
Still, I can’t stop Miranda’s words from running on a loop through my goddamn head: I think he liked it, but it freaked him out. Freaked him out, freaked him out.
Yeah. I did like when she wrapped her lithe body around mine for a hug. And yes, it freaked me out, too.
But damn, she didn’t need to go and psychoanalyze that shit. The timing of her crawling into my headspace and setting up camp there is awful.
Thank God she’s not actually texting Wallace; thank God it was me on the receiving end.
“Heads up!” a voice shouts, and instinctively, I raise my glove toward the fly ball. It lands in the center of my mitt with a satisfying pop and immediately gets released again—to the first baseman.
“Nice,” Coach praises because I finally did something right this morning.
Somewhere near the dugout, when another member of the coaching staff announces a 15 minute break, gloves around the field start coming off. Bowing my head, I begin the leisurely stroll toward the locker rooms, a water bottle appearing out of nowhere from one of the assistants, placed in my waiting hand.
I squirt a steady stream into my mouth, wiping the dribble hitting my chin with the hem of my blue team t-shirt.
“Earth to Harding.” A hand gets waved in my face while I chug, not realizing until now how thirsty I was. Am. “Yo, Baseman.”
My eyes snap up; three of my teammates are watching me inquisitively, and it’s then I realize I’m not walking toward the locker rooms at all—I’m walking toward the opposing team’s dugout.
Jeez. Get your head on straight, Harding.
“What’s your problem, bro? You’ve been acting