Iย โm not a dreamer. Not in the traditional sense, at least. My dreams are
within reach, attainable moments in time, not romanticized notions of the impossible.
Grown men fall to their knees and pray to their gods over these forty- eight minutes of basketball. Me? I donโt glamorize fate or leave things to chance. I believe in hard work and dedication. My life has a plan. Opportunities are in my path because Iโve willed myself in their direction.
The rest of my teammates, however, have certainly romanticized the idea of a championship if they think they can walk into the first week of practice as out of shape as they are.
โDom, you need to roll off that screen twice as fast. Youโre slow as fuck right now. What the hell were you doing all summer?โ
โLiving my life, Shay. You should try it sometime.โ
Dom Jackson, our big man, slumps over, his palms on his knees, trying to catch his breath along with every other guy I call my teammate.
I use my practice jersey to swipe sweat from my brow as one of the rookies passes me the ball at the top of the key.
โLetโs run it again.โ
โRyan, practice was over an hour ago. Some of us have wives and kids we need to go see.โ Ethan Jeong, our veteran shooting guard, stands with
his hands on his hips in the corner of the court.
โYeah, and some of us have dates withโฆโ Dom looks over to one of the young guys on the sideline. โWhat was her name?โย he silently mouths. โRaquel! Some of us have dates with beautiful women named Raquel.โ
My eyes wander around my teammates, everyone exhausted but me. โFine,โ I resign. โWeโll call it.โ
โThank God!โ Dom turns around, throwing his hands up and slipping his sweat-soaked jersey over his head. The rest of the team quickly follows to the locker room.
โItโs still pre-season, Ryan.โ Ethan puts a comforting hand on my shoulder. โTheyโll get it together.โ
โIโm tired of losing. We canโt even win a wildcard game to make the playoffs. I spent my entire summer running two-a-days to get in shape for this season. Everyone else needs to get on my level.โ
โTheyโll never be on your level. Thatโs why youโll be one of the greats, but as a new captain, you need them to respect you, and Iโm not referring to the way you play.โ He backs away, following the rest of the team. โBesides, I donโt want you tiring yourself out too much. I need you to carry me on your back and get me a ring so I can retire.โ
Ethanโs lips slide up in a smile before he ducks into the locker room. Heโs a good guy. Family man. Father of three children and long-time
NBA vet. He was the team captain for the last seven years until he asked to step down this season, wanting to have a better work-life balance.
And as of last week, I earned the title and am now the newest captain of the Devils, Chicagoโs NBA team.
I knew itโd happen one day. I just didnโt know itโd be when I was twenty-seven and before my fifth season in the league. I still have a lot to learn at this level, and now I have the weight of being the team leader, on and off the court.
The General Manager of the Devils was against the promotion, but thatโs not how it works around here. Our captain is determined by a team vote, and after unanimous support by my teammates, I was given the title.
I want to be good for my guys, but I want respect for more than the way I play. I get plenty of it for my talent throughout the league. Iโve dedicated my life to my craft, sacrificed relationships and most of my twenties for this game and it shows.
Year after year, Iโve beat my own records on my path to greatness, not letting distractions get in the way of what I wantโto be one of the best to ever play the game.
Though, I have quite the shoes to fill, seeing as my home court is the same as the GOAT himself. The championship banners that hang from the United Center remind me of the greatness that came before me and the gaps in years since weโve had one, taunt me to earn my own.
I need my guys to take this game as seriously as I do. I need them to live, eat, and breathe it the way I do if weโre going to have a shot this season, but how do I voice that without sounding like the controlling point guard theyโve come to know me as? Now, as the team leader, I need to figure out how to communicate with them in a way I havenโt been able to before because โlisten to me, Iโm the best player youโve ever shared a court with,โย doesn’t exactly work when youโre the team captain.
Iโm not particularly close with any of my teammates besides Ethan, so the vote was a bit surprising. My game has always spoken for me, and I got away with being domineering on the court, but now I have another title to wear and Iโm not sure how to adjust.
โCasey!โ I call out to one of the interns as he quickly scurries my way. โThatโs your name, right? Casey?โ
โYes, Mr. Shay.โ
I roll my eyes. โCall me Ryan or Shay or literally anything other than Mr. Shay. You got plans? I need someone to rebound for me.โ
โI uhโฆIโฆwell, my momโฆโ โYou got plans or what?โ
โNope.โ He quickly shakes his head. โI can rebound for you, Mr. Shay.โ His eyes go wide. โRyan! I can rebound for you, Ryan.โ
His nervous strides take him to the net where he stands underneath it, wearing a pair of khaki cargo shorts and a polo shirt with our team logo. He canโt be older than eighteen or nineteen, but the staff has him dressing like heโs in his mid-forties.
I take my spot at the free-throw line where I plan to stay until I get at least a hundred shots up, but by shot number seventy-six, the doors to our private practice get thrown open.
โRy!โ my sister calls out. โPractice was over two hours ago. I went by the apartment looking for you.โ
โHey, Vee!โ
Shot number seventy-seven barely touches the net as it floats through the hoop. Casey cleans up the rebound and passes it back.
โYou already worked out this morning. What are you doing?โ โGetting my free throws in.โ
My twin sister stands a few feet away from me with a hand on her hip. I donโt look her way, but in my periphery, I can see her shaking her head at me, her curly hair bouncing with the movement.
โWhatโs your name?โ She directs her attention to the intern. โIโm Casey.โ
โIโll take over for you, Casey.โ Stevie intercepts his pass to me and steals his spot under the net.
The internโs nervous gaze bounces between my sister and me.
โDo you have a ride home? Itโs late.โ My twin is as sweet as can be, and unlike me, I didnโt even realize the kid might not have a ride home.
โYeah. My mom is parked out back waiting for me.โ
โRyan!โ Stevie scolds. โHis mom has been waiting for him.โ
โI didnโt know!โ I throw my hands up. โSorry, man.โ
Casey quickly shakes his head. โIt was an honor, Mr. Shay.โ My eyes narrow at him.
โRyan, I mean. It was an honor, Ryan Shay. Anytime.โ Casey awkwardly waves before scurrying out the main doors.
Stevie turns back to me, standing under the net. โHis mother was waiting for him,โ she laughs. โHow fucking adorable is that?โ
โAdorable,โ I deadpan, clapping my hands together and asking for the basketball thatโs resting on her hip.
โHow many do you have left?โ She passes the ball, perfectly nailing it in my shooterโs pocket.
After twenty-seven years together and her rebounding for me more times than I could count, my twin sister has it down.
Sinking another shot, I tell her, โTwenty-two.โ She passes it back.
โWhatโs up? Tired of Zanders already? You ready to move back in?โ
โHa-ha,โ my sister says dryly. โNot a chance. Iโm obsessed with that guy.โ
My lips quirk in a proud smile. Evan Zanders, who I thought was going to be an absolute piece of shit, has turned out to be anything but. He plays professional hockey for Chicago, and my sister met him last year when she was a flight attendant on their teamโs plane. Their relationship was under wraps until early this summer, and the past four months have been a nonstop public love fest between the two of them.
Stevie moved in with him, which is thankfully just across the street from my place, and as much as I like to be right, when it comes to Zanders, Iโm happy I was completely wrong about the guy. He lights my sister up like Iโve never seen before, allowing her to own who she is with confidence. Hard to hate the guy when heโs the best thing to happen to your favorite person.
And Iโm not going to lie, heโs become a good friend of mine as well. โWell, Iโd say heโs equally obsessed with you, if not more so.โ
My sister rests the ball on her hip. โI know. Isnโt it great?โ
Lightly laughing, I shake my head and clap my hands together, needing the ball back.
Thereโs no denying Iโm a different guy around my sister. Iโm the man I was before the fame and fortune. Money has never gone to my head in the way youโd expect it to for a young first-round draft pick, but it has made me more wary and paranoid than most people realize. Stevie is the only person I unequivocally trust with my life and having that freedom, not watching my every turn, allows me a moment to relax. To be myself.
โSo, whatโs up?โ The ball slips through the net with another made shot. โWhatโs so urgent you had to come down here and rebound for me?โ
Stevie doesnโt pass the ball back. Instead, she holds it in front of her with her arms across her chest. โI have a favor to ask.โ
I hold my hands out for her pass, but she refuses. โWhat is it?โ
โWell, you remember how I moved out?โ
โYes, Vee. Iโm pretty sure I remember I live alone now.โ
โIn your huge, beautiful, empty-when-youโre-on-the-road apartment.โ Her eyes sparkle.
โAnd?โ
โYou know my friend, Indy, right? My old coworker.โ
โThe chick who showed up at our apartment and sobbed all night, then puked on my shoes in a bar the only other time I met her? Hard to forget.โ
โBecause she caught her long-term boyfriend with someone else,โ she reminds me. โYou see, her parents moved to Floridaโโ
โNo.โ
โRyan,โ Stevie protests. โI havenโt asked anything yet.โ
โI know. And Iโm stopping you before you do. You know Iโm terrible at saying no to you, so Iโm not going to let you even ask the question. Sheโs not moving in with me.โ
โRy, she has nowhere to go. She got promoted at work, and sheโs going to have to give it up if she canโt find a place to live in the city. You know how little we make.โ
โYou make enough to pay for a place to live.โ
โSheโsโฆโ My sister hesitates. โSheโs going through some financial stuff and canโt afford to live alone here. Chicago is expensive.โ
โThen she can find a friend to mooch off. I donโt even know her other than she got cheated on and canโt hold her liquor.โ
โRyan, donโt be like that. You have a huge apartment and youโre on the road for work half the time. Indy travels for work as much as you do. Hockey is the same season as basketball. Youโll barely see each other.โ
โNo.โ
โWhy not?โ
โBecause it was one thing when you lived with me. Youโre my sister and my best friend, but I donโt want a roommate. You know how sacred my time at home is. End of discussion.โ I clap my hands together, needing to get the ball back from my twin so I can finish my daily shots.
Instead, Stevieโs shoulders drop in disappointment before she turns on her heel and heads to the exit, taking my basketball with her.
โVee, what the hell? I need to finish shooting.โ
โYou can rebound for yourself then.โ She continues towards the exit, not bothering to turn around.
โYou canโt be mad at me for saying no.โ
โNot mad. Just disappointed. Would it kill you to care about someone or something other than this orange ball?โ
โI care aboutย you,โ I remind her, but she charges through the double doors leading towards the hallway, dropping the basketball in the corner
before she goes.
Fuck.
I try not to give a shit if I disappoint people. Their standards are never as high as the ones I hold for myself. However, my twin sister? Her opinion is the only one I care about besides my own.
I jog after her.
โVee,โ I call out as I open the doors to the hallway. Sheโs almost to the exit but turns on her heel to face me. โTell me why I have to do this. Are you really that upset? Why does this matter so much to you?โ
โYou donโt have to do anything, but sheโs my friend. She was myย firstย friend in this city. You know how hard itโs been for me to make friends that werenโt just looking for a way to get closer to you. Well, Indy has been that friend, and if she canโt find a place she can afford, then sheโs going to move to Florida so she can stay with her parents. I donโt want her to leave Chicago, and I donโt know how else to help her. The guy she was planning to marry cheated on her and she was the one who had to move out. She needs a win.โ
Why does my sister have to pull at my goddamn heartstrings all the time? Someone else could give me this same exact speech and I wouldnโt blink an eye, but with Stevie saying it, my resolve is crumbling, wanting to give her anything she asks for. Iโm the reason my sister has had a hard time making real friends, and now sheโs giving me an opportunity to make it up to her, even just a little bit.
โI trust her,โ she continues. โYou can too.โ
I care about Stevieโs happiness far more than my own. In fact, Iโve given up on that idea for myself, which causes the next thing to slip out of my mouth.
โTo make it clear, I donโt want to do this.โ โI know.โ
โThere needs to be a move-out date.โ
Stevieโs lip twitches as her eyes begin to sparkle.
โI want some sort of makeshift leasing agreement, and sheโs paying rent. This is not a free ride.โ
โOf course, she will. But could you make it affordable? Itโs not like you need the money.โ
Here I am doing her a favor and sheโs making special requests. โThis is temporary. Sheโs not staying with me forever.โ
โGot it.โ Stevieโs smile is unable to hide. โHave I told you that youโre my favorite person in the entire world?โ
โYeah, yeah.โ I turn back to the gym. โCome rebound for me. I have fifty free throws left.โ
โYou said you had twenty-something.โ
I continue to the free-throw line, not bothering to turn around. โLooks like I lost count while I was letting my sister talk me into having a random chick move into my apartment.โ
Stevieโs beaming smile radiates in her tone. โFifty it is.โ