“Uh, hold on, Gid.” Brick put a hand on Gideon’s chest.
Gideon peered down at his coach’s hand and took a step back as the rest of his team filed out of the room.
His coach epitomized his name. The former Hall of Famer stood about a foot shorter than Gideon’s six-foot-three height. His width nearly matched his height, and looking at the man from behind, it didn’t look like he had a neck. Topped off with his crew-cut hair, his coach looked like a pale brick.
Seeing the coach accelerated Gideon’s heartbeat. Gideon already had a hard time corralling his feelings about living out his dream at such a young age. Too bad he knew why he had arrived. His left knee throbbed as though it wanted to give its two cents about his situation.
“How are you feeling? You know all the plays?” Brick’s expression became somber.
Gideon tapped his temple. “Got them all. And I studied the Sharks’ previous games. They rely on their size to steamroll over their competition. It won’t happen to us.”
“And you’re doing okay?” His coach scanned Gideon from head to toe, purposefully stopping at Gideon’s knee area.
To refute his coach’s assumption, Gideon paced in his spot as he kept his gaze on Brick’s eyes. He couldn’t be seen as weak. No way could he miss this game.
“I’ve got a lot of pent-up energy. I can’t wait to get on the field.” Gideon pointed to the door to give his coach a hint to end this conversation.
“Okay. You got it.” Brick pointed to Gideon. “You know if you have any problems, you can tell me. We have Joshua waiting in the wings to fill in as quarterback. Push comes to shove, we can use Dennis.”
Gideon shook his head. “Why are you talking to me about contingency plans like I’m not going to play?”
Determination filled Gideon’s head and heart. He wouldn’t get himself to this point without seeing this game to the end.
Brick held up his hand to Gideon. “You’re right. If there’s nothing for anyone to worry about, I won’t press the issue.”
“Good.” He tried walking by Brick when the coach put his hand on Gideon’s shoulder.
“Did you get the shot?”
Gideon didn’t know what bothered him more, the fact that his coach knew Gideon had problems with his knee or the fact that he wanted him to push his body until he broke. He couldn’t put all the blame on Brick’s nonplussed reaction. Gideon had made it clear he would need to be dragged off the field for him to miss this game.
Gideon dropped his gaze and shook his head. “I don’t need it.” He wanted to do this win on his own head of steam, without chemical assistance.
Brick held up his electronic tablet. “The team doctor said—”
“He said they didn’t find anything wrong with my knee, not on the X-rays, not in the physical exam. Nothing.” He stared into his coach’s eyes when he spoke. “But I’m sure the doctor wrote down I mentioned my knee had been bothering me. I took a hard hit the last game.”
“That was two weeks ago.” Brick scratched his head under his Wolves baseball cap.
Gideon didn’t need a reminder. He’d worked his knee out harder, trying to strengthen it for the game. His big mouth had gotten him in trouble. “I’m fine. I was fine through training. I was fine for our last game. I’m going to get us that championship.” Speaking with conviction had to help him now.
Brick stared at him for a moment. “Lord knows, I want this championship. It’s been fifteen years since I led a team to a Super Bowl win. I want you to bring that home to me.” He pointed in Gideon’s face. “One time. Mess up once, and I’m pulling you. Got that?”
“I wouldn’t have it any other way.” Gideon smiled to assure his coach. “And sorry for interrupting you earlier. I’m passionate about playing. I can’t get this far only to be benched.”
“Understood. But know that if I know, the other guys know.” He patted Gideon. “Watch yourself.”
Gideon nodded. “Understood.” He grabbed his jersey from his assigned locker. He slipped it over his head but kept his cell phone. Win or lose, the first people he wanted to talk to after the game would be his family.
“Play hard, son.” Brick patted Gideon on his back.
Gideon grabbed his helmet and ran out of the locker room. He reached the rest of his team at the end of the hall. Through the double doors, he heard the full stadium of fans screaming. He listened to the stadium announcer.
“Introducing the Virginia Beach Wolves!”
The double doors opened. Fireworks shot off, white and blue sparklers erupting on either side of the doors. The screams and howls from the crowd blanketed the entire place until it sounded like late night in the middle of a rain forest. When Gideon looked into the stands, he saw a mixture of fans wearing the colors of his team and fans wearing the Sharks’ traditional blue and gold colors. In his mind, more fans wore his team’s colors.
The She-Wolves cheerleaders jumped around, waving their pompoms as the team rushed through the hallway.
“And the quarterback for the Wolves, Gideon Wells!” the announcer exclaimed.
Gideon ran from the hallway. Before he could join his team, one cheerleader jumped in front of him. He managed to catch her before he knocked her down.
“Whoa. Easy there.” Gideon set her back on her feet.
“Sorry, Gideon.” She wrapped her arms around his neck after the collision and didn’t act ready to release him.
Gideon gazed at her and recognized her as the cheerleader who had been running into him during practices and team events. Through the padding and his gloves, he couldn’t feel her body, despite her best efforts to wriggle herself against him.
Even if dating cheerleaders hadn’t been against the rules, Gideon wouldn’t have gone for this woman anyway. He had to pry her arms from around his neck before he could keep going.
He met up with the team on the sidelines.
Dennis leaned over to Gideon. “Pay up.” Then he released a big belly laugh.
“I knew she was crazy. Who does that before a Super Bowl?” Gideon shook his head.
Before the National Anthem could be sung, Dennis elbowed Gideon in his side. When Gideon looked at him, Dennis asked, “For real, are you good?’”
Gideon dropped his gaze to the ground before answering. “Yeah. Why?”
“The streets are talking, man.” Dennis shuffled in his spot before he spoke again. “You hurt?”
“Don’t worry about me.” Gideon gazed around to see if anyone could hear him. Nowadays, everyone had cameras and microphones everywhere.
“You want us to run the 300?”
Like the movie the name came from, Gideon and Dennis called the method to protect the quarterback 300 because they liked the strategy of funneling the opposing team toward the quarterback in smaller doses to handle them better.
Gideon shook his head. “Stick to my plays. Don’t deviate.”
“Whatever you say, man.” Dennis nodded. “As usual, you want to do things your way, right? Got it.”
Gideon ignored Dennis’s sly remark. Dennis had never had to be the glue to keep things from falling apart—families, friends, businesses. Gideon managed to hold everyone together. No one ever had to worry about him.
After the coin toss,