Home / MM Romance / OFFSIDE / Marcus Knows

Share

Marcus Knows

last update publish date: 2026-06-30 16:54:52

POV: Callum

Marcus was already in the kitchen when I came out of my room, which was unusual enough that I noticed it before I noticed anything else.

He had the pan going. Eggs, from the smell of it, and the particular burnt-sugar smell that meant he was also doing his attempt at french toast, which always came out slightly wrong in a way he refused to acknowledge no matter how many times I pointed it out.

"You're up early," I said.

"I'm always up early."

"You're never up early."

He flipped something in the pan with more confidence than the result deserved. "I am a man of mystery, Cal. Full of surprises."

I got the orange juice out of the fridge and two glasses down from the cabinet and did not point out that I had lived with this man of mystery for two years and knew his sleep schedule better than my own. I set the glasses down. I watched him move around the kitchen with the easy, loud confidence that had made him impossible not to like from the very first week of freshman year, when he had introduced himself by asking if I wanted to split a pizza he could not actually afford and then insisting on paying for the whole thing anyway.

That was when I noticed the limp.

Small. Barely there. He was favoring his left leg just slightly when he crossed from the stove to the counter, a small hitch in his stride that someone who did not spend three years studying this man's movement patterns on a football field might have missed entirely.

I did not miss it.

"What happened to your leg."

"Nothing happened to my leg."

"Marcus."

"It's fine." He waved the spatula at me without turning around, which was its own kind of answer. "Old soreness. Preseason stuff. You know how it is."

I did know how it is. I also knew Marcus well enough to know that when he answered a direct question with a vague generalization and refused to make eye contact while doing it, there was usually more underneath than he was willing to hand over before coffee.

I let it go. For now. I have learned with Marcus that pushing too early gets you nothing but a better-constructed deflection. You wait. You watch. Eventually he tells you, usually at the moment you least expect it, usually disguised as a joke you have to dig past to find the actual information.

He plated the eggs. He plated the not-quite-right french toast. We sat at the small table that barely fit both of us and our school bags and ate the way we always ate, fast and unceremonious, two people who had learned a long time ago that meals were fuel first and ritual second, even when the ritual mattered to both of us more than we usually said out loud.

"So," Marcus said, around a mouthful of eggs. "Whitfield."

I kept my eyes on my plate. "What about him."

"What about him, he says. Cal. I was on that field yesterday. The entire team was on that field yesterday. You ran six routes and caught zero passes and everybody noticed, including the people who are supposed to be too important to notice things like that."

"It's preseason. Timing's still rough."

"It is not a timing issue when the timing is perfect every single time and the ball goes somewhere else anyway." Marcus set his fork down. "I've watched you run routes for two years. Your timing has never been the problem. His decision making was the problem."

I did not have a good response to that because he was right and we both knew it.

"Why," I said finally. "That's the part I can't get to. Why me."

Marcus leaned back in his chair, and something in his expression shifted from joking to something more careful, the version of him that existed underneath the noise, the one he did not show most people but had shown me plenty of times over two years of being each other's only real family on this campus.

"You weren't here freshman year," he said. "Not really. You redshirted, you were on the practice squad, you weren't around the program enough to see how it actually works. So let me give you the history."

I waited.

"Jaxon Whitfield has been the center of this entire program since the day he walked onto this campus. Not because of his last name, though that helps. Because he's actually that good. Coaches protect him. Donors love him. Half the legacy families on this team grew up watching his father play and they treat Jaxon like he's some kind of inheritance they're personally invested in." He shrugged. "The team follows him because following him wins games. That's not politics, that's just true."

"Okay."

"But here's the thing." Marcus leaned forward again. "I have watched that guy for three years. I have watched him be cold to people. I have watched him be dismissive, distant, completely uninterested in players who weren't useful to him in the moment. I have never, not once, watched him deliberately single someone out the way he's singling you out."

"He's trying to bench me, Marcus. That's not exactly flattering attention."

"That's not how he treats people he doesn't care about." Marcus said it simply, like it was obvious, like he had already worked through the whole equation and was just handing me the answer. "That's how he treats people he can't stop thinking about."

I stared at him.

"That's a ridiculous read," I said.

"Is it though."

"Yes."

"Okay." Marcus shrugged again, picked his fork back up, went back to his eggs like he had not just dropped something into the middle of my morning that I was going to be turning over for the rest of the day whether I wanted to or not. "Just something to think about."

"It's not something to think about because it's not true."

"Sure, Cal."

"Marcus."

"I said sure." He grinned at me around another bite of eggs, infuriating and unbothered, and I gave up because giving up was the only way to actually end this conversation with Marcus once he had decided he was right about something.

We finished breakfast. I watched the limp again on his way to the sink with his plate, more careful this time, more deliberately even, like he had clocked that I noticed and was now actively managing it. I filed that away too, next to everything else from the last two days that I did not yet have a complete picture of.

---

The second practice of preseason had the same electric, overfull energy as the first, but something in the air had shifted slightly, the particular quality of a team that had watched something happen yesterday and was now collectively waiting to see if it would happen again.

I ran my first route clean.

The ball went to Riley.

I reset. I did not let my face do anything. I ran the second route, sharper than the first, and at the top of the break I turned and the ball was already in the air, already arriving, a clean perfect spiral that hit my hands at exactly the right speed and exactly the right angle like it had been thrown by someone who actually meant it.

I caught it. I held onto it through the hit from the corner trailing late. I came up off the turf and Jaxon was already moving to the next play like nothing had happened, like that catch had been inevitable instead of the first real thing he had given me in two days.

The whole field had gone quiet for half a second around that catch. I felt it. The particular hush of a group of people recognizing something real.

Two plays later, he found me again.

This one was not a short timing route. This was a sixty yard go ball, the kind of throw that requires complete trust in where a receiver is going to be before he gets there, the kind of throw that cannot be coached into existence, only earned through actual chemistry. I ran my route. I looked up at the exact moment the ball needed to arrive and it was already there, dropping perfectly into the small window between two defenders with a precision that made the entire practice field stop moving for a beat.

I caught it in stride. I did not break it for a touchdown only because the play was designed to end at the sideline marker, but everyone on that field knew exactly what had just happened.

In the huddle afterward, Jaxon's voice was flat. Controlled.

"Run the route right and I'll throw it right."

Like it was a correction. Like the last two days had been some kind of teaching mechanism, like he had not been deliberately, specifically ignoring me on every single rep until exactly this moment.

I almost said something.

I had several things ready. I had two days of frustration loaded and waiting and a dozen different versions of exactly what I thought about his correction and his testing and his sixty yard bullet that had just rearranged something in my chest that I did not have time to examine on a practice field.

I said none of it.

I reset instead. I ran the next route. Clean again. Perfect again. The ball arrived like it had always been going to arrive there, like the last two days of silence between us had never happened, and I caught it and ran it in and did not give him the satisfaction of a single word.

---

After practice, Coach Dara pulled both of us aside near the sideline.

He had his clipboard pressed against his chest the way he did when something had genuinely gotten to him, and his voice when he spoke had a barely contained excitement that I had not heard from him before, not even during recruiting visits.

"What I just watched out there," he said. "That sixty yard ball. That chemistry. I have been coaching college football for fourteen years and I am telling you both right now, you two are going to be something special this season. Something this program has not had in a long time."

Jaxon stared at the middle distance over Dara's shoulder, his expression giving away nothing, the particular blankness he wore like armor.

I stared at Jaxon.

I could not help it. I watched him not react to praise that should have meant something, watched him hold himself completely still in a way that felt less like indifference and more like someone working very hard to not let anyone see what was actually happening underneath.

He felt me looking. I knew he felt it because something flickered, briefly, at the corner of his jaw.

He did not look back at me.

Dara kept talking, something about practice schedules and game planning and the kind of season-long optimism that coaches were entitled to after a session like the one we had just had. I nodded in the right places. I said the right things. I kept half my attention on Jaxon the entire time, cataloging the stillness of him, the particular effort visible in how hard he was working to look like he was not working at anything at all.

When Dara finally let us go, Jaxon walked off without a word.

I stood there for a second longer than I needed to, watching him go, turning over redundant and try not to make this a problem and run the route right and I'll throw it right, trying to find the version of all of it that made sense together and not finding one.

---

I expected Marcus to be waiting by the equipment shed for our usual walk back to the locker room. He was not.

I checked the field. I checked the sideline. I asked Patterson if he had seen him and got a shrug and a half answer about Marcus heading toward the training room sometime during the second half of practice, though nobody seemed entirely sure when or why.

I told myself it was nothing. Athletes disappeared into the training room constantly, taping ankles, icing knees, getting checked out for things that turned out to be nothing. I finished my own post practice routine. I showered. I packed my bag.

He still was not back.

I walked home alone, which we almost never did, the twenty minute walk that usually filled itself up with Marcus narrating something ridiculous that had happened in his classes or replaying a play from practice in exhaustive, hilarious detail. The silence of walking it by myself felt wrong in a way I did not examine too closely.

The apartment was empty when I got there.

I called out anyway, the way you do even when you already know the answer, and the silence that came back confirmed it. His shoes were not by the door. His bag was not on the kitchen chair where he always dropped it.

My phone buzzed in my pocket.

I pulled it out already knowing, somehow, before I even looked at the screen, that whatever this was, it was not nothing.

The text was from Marcus.

"Don't freak out. At the clinic. Don't tell anyone."

I stood in the middle of our empty kitchen, the same kitchen where two hours earlier he had been making slightly wrong french toast and telling me a ridiculous theory about Jaxon Whitfield, and I read those nine words three times trying to figure out exactly how worried I was supposed to be.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • OFFSIDE    What Marcus Is Hiding

    POV: CallumThe clinic was twelve minutes away by car, which gave me exactly enough time to call Marcus twice, get no answer either time, and arrive with my hands not quite steady on the wheel.I found him in the third row of waiting room chairs, leg stretched out in front of him at an angle that looked careful in a way that had nothing to do with comfort. His jaw was tight. He had his phone in his hand but wasn't looking at it, just holding it, the way you hold something when you need your hands occupied and don't actually care what they're occupied with.He looked up when I came through the door."I told you not to freak out.""I'm not freaking out.""You drove here going at least forty in a twenty five zone, I can see it on your face."I sat down in the chair next to him. I did not point out that he was right about the speed limit. "What's going on, Marcus."He opened his mouth. Closed it. Before he could answer, a door opened down the hallway and a nurse called his name, and whate

  • OFFSIDE    Marcus Knows

    POV: CallumMarcus was already in the kitchen when I came out of my room, which was unusual enough that I noticed it before I noticed anything else.He had the pan going. Eggs, from the smell of it, and the particular burnt-sugar smell that meant he was also doing his attempt at french toast, which always came out slightly wrong in a way he refused to acknowledge no matter how many times I pointed it out."You're up early," I said."I'm always up early.""You're never up early."He flipped something in the pan with more confidence than the result deserved. "I am a man of mystery, Cal. Full of surprises."I got the orange juice out of the fridge and two glasses down from the cabinet and did not point out that I had lived with this man of mystery for two years and knew his sleep schedule better than my own. I set the glasses down. I watched him move around the kitchen with the easy, loud confidence that had made him impossible not to like from the very first week of freshman year, when

  • OFFSIDE    The Weight Room At Midnight

    POV: JaxonThe weight room at midnight is the only place on this campus where I am not performing.Everywhere else I am something. On the field I am the quarterback, the Whitfield name, the legacy, the thing this entire program is quietly betting its season on. In the dining hall I am a conversation people want to have whether I want to have it or not. In my own apartment I am still somehow my father's son, even when he is four hundred miles away, even when the only thing connecting us is a key he gave himself permission to keep.Here, at midnight, with the lights down to the half setting and the only sound the low hum of the ventilation and the occasional clank of a plate finding its rack, I am just a body doing work.I like the work.I have always liked the work more than I like talking about the work, which is something my father has never understood and never tried to.I loaded the bar. Stripped it down. Loaded it again differently. I have a routine I do not deviate from, not beca

  • OFFSIDE    Second String

    POV: CallumI didn't sleep.Not really. I did that thing where my body went horizontal and my eyes closed and the room got dark but my brain kept the lights on and ran the same loop on repeat until my alarm went off at five forty-five and I sat up feeling like I had spent the night doing something strenuous.The text sat on my phone screen where I had left it.I had not responded. I did not know who sent it. What I knew was that someone in this program thought I deserved a warning, which meant someone in this program believed the warning was necessary, which meant Jaxon Whitfield had said something specific enough in front of the wrong person that it had traveled from Coach Dara's office to an unknown number to my phone in under twenty four hours.You don't try to bench someone you barely know unless it's personal.That was the part I kept circling back to at two in the morning. At three. At four fifteen when the apartment was so quiet I could hear the refrigerator running from my bed

  • OFFSIDE    First look

    POV: CallumThe fluorescent lights in Room 114 of the Crestfield Athletic Administration Building had been flickering for what felt like the entire summer.I noticed it the second I sat down. That small, stuttering buzz above my head. Like the building itself was tired.I kept my eyes forward anyway.There were fourteen of us in the room. Scholarship athletes. Returning ones mostly, with a few freshmen in the back row who still had that look about them. That wide, careful look of kids who had just realized the thing they worked their whole lives for was actually real and were terrified of doing something to make it not real anymore.I remembered being that kid.I wasn't anymore.I uncapped my pen and signed where Dr. Vasquez pointed. Financial aid renewal confirmation. Academic standing verification. Athletic scholarship continuation agreement. Each form said the same thing in different language.You are here because we allow it. Stay in line and we will keep allowing it.I signed. I

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status