Chapter 12 Some Time, Alone, Alone
"So, Megan, last we left off, we talked about your parents; how soon did they divorce themselves?"
"It was almost a year; my mom dragged it out as long as she possibly could for some reason; perhaps she regretted her decision, or maybe smite."
"Your father, did he come to visit you at all through this process."
"No, I avoided him too; I just couldn't face him. I feared he wouldn't forgive me, so I avoided him, and he did the same."
"Did this affect you in school or on the court?"
"No, it made me zone in on basketball even more because I didn't want to be home with my mother. I became even better, winning the state championship three years back-to-back. A lot of college recommendations came in the mail for me. She. My mom would always have them stacked on the dining room table."
"Was she proud?"
"I didn't care if she was at that point; we barely talked?"
"What made you pick the University of Georgia?"
"It was close to home but far enough to be away from everything. As much talk as I had about not wanting to be home, I didn't move too far. The one thing that made me want to go to the school was the coach. Coach Rebecca Free was the best coach I have ever had. She made me a better player and a better person. She was the mother I always wished I had, so my mom hated her, and I think my coach also hated her. She got me to talk with my father again. She was someone I wanted to make proud; she never won a championship as a player or coach, always getting close but getting over the hump. We made it to my freshman and sophomore year's finals but lost both times."
"That is heartbreaking."
"It was, so I worked harder than ever the following year. I got in the best shape I ever had. I had a boyfriend for about two weeks and broke up with him to focus on this goal. It was the best season I had ever played basketball. There were even talks that I was the consensus number-one pick in the WNBA draft. It just so happened that this was my last basketball season. Perhaps I pushed my body too far. It was the tournament's finals; we made it again, and the game was close. I already had a triple-double and was working on a quadruple-double with blocks. Then it happened; I have nightmares about this moment, doc. I was going for my 16th rebound when two opposing team members collided with each of my legs. If I didn't try to recover, I would probably have a concussion. I know that sounds grim, but that's where I'm at. I would rather possibly have brain damage than lose this game and my career.
"Megan."
"But alas, I damaged my knee and landed all my weight on this leg," Megan says, pointing at her leg repeatedly.
"You don't have to explain the injury."
"Thank you. My career was effectively over, but I still fought for a small glimmer of hope of playing again. The doctors said Hey, if it heals this way, you may play again, but the chances are very, very slim."
"There is nothing wrong with hoping."
"I wasn't my best self during this time because basketball was my identity, my life, and I could feel it slipping away. I could hear the doctors talking in the hallway, saying that it didn't look like it would heal any better that my parents needed to prepare me for...My parents were together for the first time in a while, bickering while I sat in a hospital bed. Keisha, my best friend who I left to go several miles away to a school, came up to see me, trying to cheer me up."
"Coach Free came to visit me, but I couldn't. I just didn't want to face her. I felt like. No, I did let her down."
"It was out of your control, Megan."
"I couldn't be at school anymore, so I returned home to Key City. I finished my degree online, and the school paid for my rehab out of goodwill. My dad said mainly because Coach Free made a ruckus over them planning on not to."
"So, you started physical therapy back in Key City while living with your mother?"
"Yes, my parents and Keisha would come to my session with me. Separately, sometimes together, I wasn't progressing as fast as I wanted to. I wanted to prove them wrong, but between my parents' constant bickering and Keisha's optimism, I was pushed over the edge and said they all should get the fuck out of here. I can never apologize enough to Keisha for how I reacted. She didn't deserve that, but." Megans pauses on the couch
"What happened?"
"It had been a while since I saw Craig. I was away in college, and he was a junior in high school or a senior; it doesn't matter. He came into my room to talk to me."
"What are you doing here?"
"I came to see you; I waited for after school, but how are you?" He closed his eyes after saying I could see the regret on his face. I replied in anger.
"Not good if you couldn't tell. "
"Yeah, stupid question; I got you something," Craig says, reaching into his bag to grab a gift.
"Really," I said. "Are you dumb?"
"What?"
"I'm trying to get back on the floor to play; I don't need freaking candy to make me fat and..."
"It's only one box, Meg." I shake my head at him.
"You don't get it, just give it here," I tell him, making him smile and giving me dΓ©jΓ vu about that Valentine's Day. I opened it and ate it. It was my favorite candy, the same one from all those years ago, but this time, I got to eat it. "So, Craig Turner decided to grace me with his presence."
"Yeah, sorry, I would have come sooner. I just didn't know if you wanted to see me, and I didn't want to get in the way or anything. So, I brought a gift just in case."
"The same gift you gave me for Valentine's Day."
"You..remembered."
"Of course," I say to him, smiling like I didn't do anything innocent.
"Did you ever read my letter?" He asked me. I looked down on the floor and put the candy on the table beside me.
"No, I didn't get a chance to."
"Oh, is it still in your room unopened?"
"No, Craig, it's in the trash."
"Oh." I could hear the soul and joy leave his body.
"Besides my father, you're the only person ever to give me a Valentine's Day card," I said, laughing. "Why?"
"Why?"
"Yeah, why would you do that?" The answer was obvious, but I never actually got a confirmation of his feelings towards me. I mean maybe if I read that letter.
"Because I love..like you, you're amazing, beautiful, your.."
"Oh, shut up, I'm none of those things, God, Craig. When will you grow up and get over this stupid crush?"
"I'm freaking twenty, and you're like what 16? Get a hint already. Date girls your age." I couldn't even look at him while saying these things. Knowing someone out there who found me attractive enough to fawn over me gave me power; it lifted me.