Several whispers went through the two lines. The jumper impressed. I had their attention.

“Do it again,” I said, backpedaling to my spot under the rim. “Left foot back, right foot out front.” I bounced the ball to the girl on the block. “Go.”

The passer snapped the ball to Kristin. She caught it like I’d shown her, got the shot off and watched it drop through the rim.

“There you go,” I said.

She nodded quickly, a brief hint of a smile shadowing across her face as she cut down to the defender line.

My heart pounded hard against the inside of my chest, part anxiety and part pride in showing her something and being right about it. I didn’t know what Chuck’s reasons were for coaching high school basketball, but the little high I’d just experienced-teaching someone to do something and then watching them execute it successfully-made me want to stick around awhile longer.

SIXTEEN

The practice lasted another hour. Kelly ran them through a series of drills, exhorting them to continue working. I played a dummy defender in one drill and rebounded again in another.

They were serious, intense, tight as a group. I didn’t see any divisions. They were supportive of one another, critical when it was called for and there was no bitching about any of it. They moved precisely, found the spots they were supposed to and more often than not, did what they were needed to do and did it well.

I thought back to my high school days and couldn’t recall a single day where I went after it with the same intensity these girls did. I thought at the time that I was lucky, that I was pretty good without having to practice too much at it. Give me the ball and let me go. If some coach had stopped me mid-drill and corrected me, like I had done with Kristin, I probably would’ve smirked with the arrogance of a teenage boy and continued doing it my way, rather than the right way.

These girls, the way they listened to their coach, the way they sprinted their butts off, were only interested in doing it the right way.

After running them through a short five-on-five scrimmage, Kelly Rundles clapped her hands and brought the team to center court. The girls, breathing hard, sweat pouring down their red faces, watched her like she was going to give them the answers to every important question in life.

Kelly offered them some criticism of what she’d seen, then backed it up with a little bit of praise. The girls nodded at both.

Then she looked at me. “And let’s thank Coach Tyler for filling in today. Maybe we can get him back here again soon.”

The girls clapped and whooped and I felt like I’d just won an ESPY. I nodded, held up a hand in thanks and tried-unsuccessfully, I’m sure-to look cool about it all.

Kelly held her hands up high and the girls collapsed to her like buzzards to a carcass. The girl I’d pegged as the best in my group, who I’d learned was named Meg, turned and looked at me. “Get in here, coach.”

I took a couple of steps forward and awkwardly put my hand in with the rest of theirs.

From the middle of the pack, Meg said “Play hard on three. One, two, three.”

The gym walls echoed with the entire team’s scream of “Play Hard!” My voice chimed in loudly with theirs.

The girls scattered toward the outside hallway and Kelly came over to me.

“You’ve coached before?” she asked.

“I haven’t.”

“Really? Well, you did a nice job. Getting on Kristin about her feet was sharp.”

I was surprised she’d noticed from the far end of the gym, but realized she didn’t seem like the type to miss much of anything. “Thanks. It was fun. They’re a good group.”

Kelly nodded. “They are. And I was serious about getting you to come back. You’re welcome anytime. I always have such a hard time finding coaches to work with the guards.”

“If you’ve got time to talk about Chuck, I’ll come back here tomorrow,” I said.

“I was going to talk to you anyway,” she said, backpedaling slowly. “But I’ll take that offer. Meet you outside in ten minutes.”

I walked outside, letting the cool, ocean-tinged breeze wash away the warm gymnasium air that clung to me. A group of players huddled together, laughing and talking. They stopped as soon as they saw me

Meg stepped outside the small circle. “Are you coming back tomorrow?”

She was maybe five-ten, most of it arms and legs. Her long blonde hair was pulled back in a ponytail that had swayed wildly from side to side when she’d run up and down the court. She had a gray sweatshirt on over her practice jersey, red mesh shorts and rubber sandals on her feet. She was confident, not cocky. She knew she could play but didn’t wave it in the other girls faces.

She was their leader.

“Think so,” I said, sitting down on a concrete wall that lined the walk. “We’ll see what your coach says.”

“Do you know Coach Winslow?” she asked.

The other girls-three of them whose names I couldn’t recall-watched me intently.

“I do,” I said. “He’s a friend.”

Meg nodded, like that was alright. “I liked him. We all did.”

The girls behind her nodded.

“Where’s Meredith?” I asked, wondering what kind of reaction I’d get. “Why wasn’t she at practice?”

The girls behind Meg flinched as a group, almost taking a step back, like they needed to get away.

Meg just shrugged. “She’s taking a couple of days off. Until she feels better.”

“Friends with her?”

“We all are.”

“She pretty good?” I pointed a thumb back over my shoulder. “Can she play?”

“Best player we have,” Meg answered. “We need her.”

“Think she’ll be back soon? To play?”

Meg adjusted the canvas bag on her shoulder. “Are you just trying to get answers out of me? Because you’re an investigator or whatever?”

In real life, word travels fast. In a high school, word traveled at Internet speed. Still, I was surprised she knew about me.

“Someone saw you at school today,” she said, shrugging, reading my expression. “Heard you at the desk, talking.”

Internet speed.

“Yeah,” I said. “I guess I am trying to get answers out of you. Only because I want to help my friend and Meredith, though. If you know something, or anybody knows something, I’d like to know about it.”

A cobalt-blue Ford Mustang roared up to the curb behind the girls. Meg glanced over her shoulder, then back at me. “Gotta cruise. I don’t know anything, Coach. If I did, I’d tell you and so would any of the other girls on the team.” She held up a hand. “Later.”

She slapped hands with her teammates. They followed her to the curb and scattered around the Mustang to their own cars. Meg opened the car door and slid into the passenger seat, then leaned across and kissed the boy driving it before she shut the door. They tore out of the lot.

The boy hadn’t seen me.

But I’d seen him.

My buddy Matt, the one who had been tailing me in Seaport Village.

SEVENTEEN

Kelly Rundles emerged from the gym in a hooded sweatshirt, a huge duffel bag on her shoulder. She convinced me that I was as hungry as she was and I followed her to a coffee shop over on Orange.

After we ordered, she looked at me over her Diet Coke. “So. I’m probably not supposed to be talking to you.”

I dropped a straw in my soda. “Don’t see why not. Your A.D. didn’t ban me from campus.”

“Yeah, but the man who matters probably wouldn’t be very happy.”

“Jon Jordan?”

Her mouth twisted up with irritation. “And probably most of the other parents, too.”

“I don’t want you to lose your job,” I said.

“Oh, I won’t,” she said. “The team is winning. Trust me. That supersedes just about everything around Coronado. They might tell me they aren’t happy about it, but they won’t do a damn thing as long as we’re winning games.”

“Wasn’t like that when I went there,” I told her. “People barely cared. May have had something to do with us not being very good.”


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