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The Weight Room At Midnight

last update publish date: 2026-06-30 16:49:56

POV: Jaxon

The 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 because the routine is sacred but because the counting and the loading and the small mechanical decisions of it occupy exactly enough of my brain that the rest of it can go quiet for a while.

Tonight the rest of it would not go quiet.

I kept seeing it. The route. Third drill, second rep, Reyes cutting off his back foot at a speed that should not have been possible that early in a preseason session, hitting the top of his break clean, hands already up and ready before the corner had even recovered.

I had the ball in my hand. I had a clean read. I had every reason in the world to put it directly into his hands.

I threw it to Riley instead.

I told myself it was a test. I have told myself a great many things over the years and I am, if nothing else, a very convincing audience for my own reasoning. I told myself I needed to see whether Reyes would fold under pressure, whether he was the kind of player who needed the ball fed to him to perform or the kind who showed up regardless. I told myself a real season-anchoring receiver proves himself in the absence of opportunity, not in the presence of it.

I told myself this while loading forty five pound plates onto a bar at midnight because my body needed something to do and my mind needed an excuse not to examine the actual reason.

The actual reason had a different shape.

My father called at seven.

He always calls around seven. It is not a coincidence. He has structured his entire life around precision and his calls are no exception. I answered because not answering creates its own conversation, one I have even less patience for than the actual call.

"Jaxon." His voice does this thing where it sounds warm and contains absolutely no warmth, a trick I am fairly sure he developed for boardrooms and then exported to fatherhood without adjusting the settings. "How was the first practice."

"Fine."

"Just fine."

"Good. It was good."

A pause that was doing work. My father's pauses always do work. "I pulled the spring numbers. Your completion percentage under pressure needs to come up before scouts start building their boards. You know this."

"I know this."

"And I heard there's a new name getting attention. A receiver." Another pause, shorter, more deliberate. "Don't let some nobody receiver outshine the quarterback, Jaxon. That's not how legacies get built."

He did not say Reyes' name. He did not need to. My father does not say things directly. He has never needed to. He drops a sentence into a phone call and lets it sit there doing its damage long after he has moved on to discussing something else entirely, in this case my summer training regimen and whether I had kept up with the speed coach he had hired without consulting me.

I said the right things. I always say the right things on these calls. It is its own kind of performance, the most well rehearsed one I have.

When I hung up I sat in my apartment for eleven minutes without moving.

Then I came here.

I put my earbuds in. I lifted until the bar felt heavier than it should have, which meant I was lifting through something other than muscle fatigue, which I knew and ignored anyway. The thought my father had planted sat behind my sternum the entire time, low and persistent, the particular quality of something that has been planted there for nineteen years and knows exactly how to root.

Don't let some nobody receiver outshine the quarterback.

I racked the bar after my fourth set and stood there breathing and trying to locate the version of myself that existed before that sentence had any power over me.

That was when the door opened.

I did not turn around immediately. I heard it first, the particular sound of someone trying to be quiet in a room built entirely of hard surfaces, which is a losing effort no matter how careful you are. Footsteps. A bag set down without being dropped. The small mechanical click of a water bottle against the floor.

I looked.

Reyes.

Hood up, one earbud in, the other dangling loose against his collarbone like he'd been planning to put it back in and gotten distracted. He had not seen me yet. He moved past the bench rack and the squat cage toward the back corner where the pull up bar lived, the corner nobody used because it required actual upper body control instead of just loading plates and following a program someone else had written.

He set up beneath it. He did not stretch first, which surprised me. He just reached up, found his grip, and started.

I had never actually watched him train.

I had watched him on film. I had watched him in team drills, in walkthroughs, in the kind of structured environment where everyone is performing some version of themselves for the people watching. This was different. This was someone training the way you train when you genuinely believe no one is in the room.

He moved efficiently. No wasted motion, no theater, no checking his form in the mirror the way half this roster does even when they think they're not. He worked through a set, dropped, shook his arms out for exactly four seconds, and went back up. There was something almost brutal about the economy of it. Like his body had been taught, somewhere along the way, that effort without immediate reward was simply the cost of doing business, and he had stopped questioning the bill a long time ago.

I realized I had stopped my own set.

I was standing at the bench rack with a loaded bar in front of me, completely still, watching a wide receiver do pull ups in the back corner of an empty weight room at midnight like it was the most interesting thing I had seen in months.

It might have been.

I racked my own weights louder than I needed to. The sound cracked through the room, deliberate, the kind of noise you make when you want someone to know you're there without having to say anything.

He stopped mid rep. Dropped down clean.

He pulled one earbud out.

He looked at me.

I do not know what he was expecting to find. I do not know what I expected him to do. What he actually did was simply look. No performance in it, no challenge, no attempt to read the room or manage the moment the way most people on this campus manage every interaction they have with me, calculating angles before they've even opened their mouths.

He just looked at me the way you look at a fact. Something present. Something to be registered and accounted for and then returned to whatever you were doing before it arrived.

Then he put the earbud back in.

He went back up on the bar.

I stood there with my hands still resting on the bar I had just racked, feeling something that I did not have an immediate name for, which is a rare enough occurrence in my life that I noticed it specifically.

I went back to my own work. We existed like that for another twenty minutes, two separate sets of effort in the same room, not speaking, not particularly looking at each other, the silence between us doing something that felt less like absence and more like its own kind of conversation.

He finished before me. I heard him pack his bag, screw the cap back on his water bottle, sling the bag over one shoulder.

He walked toward the door.

I expected him to leave without another word. That would have made sense. That would have matched everything about today, the version of this where we exist in proximity without actually touching anything real.

He stopped at the door instead.

He did not turn around.

"Whatever you're testing me for, Whitfield." His voice was even. Unbothered in a way that somehow landed harder than anger would have. "I don't fail."

Then he left.

The door swung shut behind him with a soft mechanical sigh and the weight room went back to its midnight quiet, the ventilation humming, the half lit fluorescents buzzing faintly overhead, the bar still loaded in front of me where I had left it.

I stood there for a long moment.

I thought about my father's voice on the phone. Don't let some nobody receiver outshine the quarterback. I thought about the route I had deliberately thrown away from this afternoon, the test I had told myself I needed to run.

I thought about the particular, specific quality of not being looked away from.

I had spent the entire day successfully not feeling anything about any of it. I was good at that. I had been trained for it my entire life, the same way Reyes had apparently been trained to do pull ups with no one watching and no immediate reward waiting for him.

Standing alone in that empty weight room at midnight, I felt something crack loose from wherever I usually kept it locked down.

It was not numbness.

I could not yet say what it actually was. But for the first time in longer than I wanted to examine, it was not nothing.

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