LOGINCole
I always get the girl. It’s not something I usually say out loud because it sounds like something an asshole would say. But it doesn’t make it any less true. Girls have always been easy. Not because I think I’m God’s gift to women. Not because I spend my time chasing them. It’s just… simple. A smile. A little confidence. A conversation. The ending usually writes itself. That’s part of being Cole Ryder. Part of being the football captain. Part of being the guy everyone assumes has life figured out. People look at me and think everything comes easy. Football. Friends. Women. The truth? Most of it does. Or at least it used to. Because right now, I’m standing in my own hallway watching Maya walk away. And I hate it. The worst part? I don’t even think she’s doing it on purpose. Maya isn’t playing games. She isn’t trying to make me chase her. She genuinely thinks leaving is the reasonable thing to do. Which somehow makes it worse. “Come on, lady in red.” Bree hooks her arm through Maya’s and starts pulling her toward the stairs. Maya glances back once. Just once. And that tiny look hits harder than it should. Then she’s gone. The sound of the front door opening reaches me a few seconds later. Then it closes. Silence. I stare at the empty hallway. The same hallway that felt way too small five minutes ago suddenly feels way too big. “Well.” I don’t even have to turn around. I know that voice. Parker. One of my teammates. Professional pain in my ass. I close my eyes. Slowly. “What?” “Damn.” I turn around. Parker is leaning against the wall. Two other teammates stand beside him. All three of them are grinning. Which means I’m about to hate this conversation. “Damn what?” He gestures toward the front door. “That was brutal.” My jaw tightens. “Nothing happened.” “Exactly.” The idiots start laughing. I immediately regret not running extra conditioning drills during practice. If I’d worked them harder, they might not have enough energy for this. Parker points toward the stairs. “Did the great Rogue Ryder just get left standing in his own hallway?” “No.” “Looked like it.” “She went home.” “Without kissing you.” I hate all of them. Every single one. A second teammate whistles. “Wow.” “Shut up.” “No, seriously.” He shakes his head. “I’ve never seen that before.” “Seen what?” “You trying.” The words hit harder than they should. Because he’s right. Usually I don’t try. I don’t have to. Girls flirt. Girls approach me. Girls make things easy. Maya… Maya showed up to mess with me and somehow ended up completely wrecking my evening. Parker studies me. Then he starts smiling. A slow smile. The kind that means trouble. “Oh no.” “What?” “You like her.” I laugh. Immediately. Too quickly. The wrong answer. Three sets of eyebrows shoot up. Damn it. “No.” “Ryder.” “No.” “Buddy.” “No.” Parker folds his arms. “Your coach just threatened your future. You sprinted upstairs the second he left.” I don’t respond. “To find her.” Still nothing. “Then you stood in a hallway looking like someone stole your puppy.” “I did not.” “You absolutely did.” The guys lose it. Laughing. Pointing. Being generally useless. I drag a hand through my hair. “Can you all leave?” Parker ignores me. “What’s her name?” “You know her name.” “Maya.” He nods thoughtfully. “The pizza girl.” I point at him. “Don’t call her that.” The second the words leave my mouth, I know I’ve made a mistake. A huge mistake. The hallway goes silent. Parker’s grin grows. “Oh my God.” “No.” “Oh my God.” “It’s not like that.” “It’s exactly like that.” One of the guys looks genuinely concerned. “For your sake, I hope she’s not a psychology major.” “What?” “They’re terrifying.” “She’s not.” Parker looks at me. “You know her major?” I swear under my breath. The idiots start laughing again. This is a disaster. An absolute disaster. And somehow it’s still better than watching Maya leave. Which is a problem. A massive problem. Because now I’m standing here thinking about whether she made it home safely. Whether she’s laughing with Bree right now. Whether she’s talking about me. Whether she’ll show up tomorrow. Whether she’ll avoid me. Whether— Yeah. Definitely a problem. Parker bumps my shoulder. “You’re smiling.” I immediately stop smiling. “I wasn’t smiling.” “You were.” “No.” “You looked happy.” I glare at him. He grins right back. “Rogue Ryder is cooked.” “Nobody says cooked.” “We do now.” The guys start heading downstairs, still laughing. Still throwing comments over their shoulders. “Night, Romeo.” “Don’t text her too fast.” “Try not to stare out the window waiting for her.” I flip them off. Maturely. Professionally. As a team captain should. Their laughter echoes through the house. Eventually, I’m alone again. The hallway is quiet. The party is over. The night should be over too. Instead, I find myself walking toward the window overlooking the yard. And there she is. Across the lawn. Standing under the porch light next door. Bree is talking with her about something. Maya laughs. Even from here, I recognize it. Then, like she can somehow feel me watching, her head turns. For half a second, our eyes meet across the darkness. Neither of us moves. Then she shakes her head. Almost like she’s annoyed with herself. And disappears inside. The porch light shuts off. I stand there for another second. Maybe two. Then I laugh quietly to myself. Because this is ridiculous. Completely ridiculous. I’ve known her for what? A week? And somehow she’s already the most interesting thing in my life. I shove my hands into my pockets and head downstairs. But one thought follows me the entire way. I always get the girl. That’s the story everybody tells. The story everybody expects. The story I’ve never questioned before. But Maya? Maya isn’t a trophy. She isn’t a game. And for the first time in a long time… I don’t think I want to win. I think I want the chance to earn it.ColeThe closer we get to Maya’s dad’s apartment, the quieter she becomes.She hasn’t said more than a dozen words since we left my house.She just sits in the passenger seat wearing my hoodie, twisting the sleeves around her fingers so tightly I’m surprised the fabric hasn’t torn.Every few minutes she looks down at her phone, hoping for another message.There isn’t one.I keep glancing over at her whenever we stop at a light.She’s pale.Too pale.Like she’s trying to prepare herself for something she already knows is going to hurt.“You okay?” I ask softly.She lets out a humorless laugh.“That’s becoming everyone’s favorite question.”“I know.”She turns toward the window again.“I don’t know how to answer it anymore.”Neither do I.I reach across the center console and lace my fingers through hers.She squeezes my hand immediately.Not hard.Just enough to remind herself I’m here.We drive another fifteen minutes before my GPS announces we’ve arrived.The apartment complex isn’t
MayaI don’t move.I can’t.The words stay frozen on my phone screen while my brain stubbornly refuses to understand them.They came this morning. Everything’s gone.Everything.What does that even mean?Furniture?Clothes?Pictures?The apartment?My childhood?The room suddenly feels too small.Too warm.I can hear my own heartbeat pounding inside my ears.Cole says my name quietly, but it sounds far away.“Maya.”I blink once.Then twice.Nothing changes.My father’s text is still there.Everything’s gone.“I have to go.”The words leave my mouth automatically.Like breathing.Like instinct.I start climbing off the bed before I even realize I’m moving.I need my shoes.My purse.My keys.I need to get to my dad.I need to…I don’t even know what I need.I just know I can’t sit here.“I’m going with you.”Cole’s voice is calm.Steady.Certain.I shake my head immediately.“No.”“Maya.”“No.”I grab my hoodie from the chair and shove my arms into it so fast I almost put it on backwa
ColeI wake up before Maya does.For a second, I have no idea where I am.Then I feel the weight of her curled against my side, her head tucked beneath my chin, one hand fisted in the front of my T-shirt like she grabbed hold of me sometime during the night and never let go.My heart does that stupid thing again.The one it keeps doing around her.The one that reminds me I’ve completely, irrevocably fallen for this girl.Sunlight spills through the crack in my curtains, painting soft gold across the room. Somewhere downstairs, I hear a cabinet slam followed by Jake loudly arguing with someone over cereal.Normal.Everything outside this room is completely normal.Inside?Nothing about this feels normal anymore.Maya shifts in her sleep, her nose brushing lightly against my chest before she lets out the tiniest sigh I’ve ever heard.Jesus.She’s adorable.I brush a loose strand of hair away from her face as carefully as I can, trying not to wake her.She looks different asleep.Younger
MayaI don’t remember deciding to go to Cole’s house.One second I’m sitting in my car outside Po Folks, gripping the steering wheel while my father’s words replay in my head.Four months.He had lost his job four months ago.Four months of lying.Four months of pretending he was fine.Four months of me believing every crisis was just another bump in the road instead of the entire road collapsing underneath us.The next second, I’m pulling into my driveway with my chest so tight I can barely breathe.The house is mostly dark, except for the kitchen light and the soft glow coming from Bree’s bedroom upstairs. Logan’s truck is in the driveway, but I don’t go inside right away. I just sit there with my hands still on the steering wheel, staring at the football house next door.Cole’s house.Lights are on.Of course they are.The football house is never fully asleep. Even from my car, I can hear faint music, laughter, male voices yelling about something that sounds vaguely competitive and
MayaThere are two versions of my life.There’s the version where I’m with Cole.Where we laugh over miniature golf, argue over who cheated, text each other during the day, and somehow make an ordinary Wednesday feel like the best day I’ve had in months.And then there’s…This.“Table twelve needs drinks!” Andrea shouts from across the restaurant.“I got it!” I call back, grabbing two sweet teas before balancing them on my tray.The familiar smell of fried chicken, biscuits, and gravy wraps around me as country music hums through the speakers. Boots clack against the hardwood floor while conversations blend together into the same comfortable chaos I’ve worked in since freshman year.Po Folks hasn’t changed.Neither have the customers.Neither have the tips.For a few hours every shift, it’s almost easy to pretend nothing outside these walls exists.Almost.“Evenin’, sugar,” an older man says as I refill his coffee.“Can I get y’all anything else?”He smiles.“Another basket of biscuit
Chapter 106ColeCoach Daniels has a rule.Leave your bullshit in the locker room.The second you step onto my field, I don’t care if your girlfriend dumped you, your dog ran away, or you failed an exam. Football comes first.Normally, I don’t have a problem with that.Football has always been the one place where everything else disappears.Once the whistle blows, my brain shuts off. Reads become simple. Routes become instinct. The noise fades until all that matters is the next play.Today?Not a damn chance.“Ryder!”Coach’s voice cuts through the afternoon air just as the football whistles past my fingertips.It smacks into the turf behind me.“Again!”I curse under my breath and jog back toward the huddle.Jake falls into step beside me wearing the biggest grin I’ve ever wanted to punch off someone’s face.“You okay there, Romeo?”“I’m fine.”“Liar.”“I’m having an off day.”Jake laughs.“No, you’re having a girlfriend day.”I shoot him a look.“You ever stop talking?”“Nah.”Coach







