Sheena peeked her head through the cracked door. “Hi.” The door swung open and a second later, I spotted the head that appeared above hers.
My stupid, stupid, stupid traitorous heart remembered what it was like to be thirteen.
My brain, apparently the only logical organ in my body, said to all of its brothers and sisters: Get your shit together and calm down.
I put my Big Girl Socks on, took a deep steadying breath, and managed to smile at the two people who made their way into the office, right toward the chairs next to mine. I swallowed and said, “Hi, Sheena, hi, Coach Kulti.” All right, that came out a lot dumber than I would have liked. My cheeks decided right then that they were going to get hot, real hot.
Damn it.Get it together, Sal!
“Hello, Sal,” Sheena greeted me as she took the seat right next to mine, glancing over her shoulder for a moment to say, “I asked Mr. Kulti—“
Mr.Kulti? Really?
“—to come along.”
I blinked at the same time my bones froze.
The short-haired man, who resembled someone in a branch of the military, shook his head, still silent.
My knees felt stiff and traitorous as I planted my feet solidly on the ground and got to my feet, thrusting a surprisingly steady hand toward the man that had shaken hands with—
Poop. Poop, poop, poop.
Why should I care who he’d shaken hands with? I didn’t.
With a slow quiet breath through my nose, I tipped my chin up higher, like that would help me keep my dignity intact more. And like that wasn’t enough, I blurted out another “Hi, I’m Sal Casillas, one of the forwards…?”
Was it time to shut up? Yes. Definitely.
A large, warm masculine hand gripped mine almost immediately, and I filled my lungs with another steadying breath, smiling at the man standing on the other side of Sheena. It was a normal handshake; he wasn’t limp-fishing it, but he wasn’t trying to break my hand either. He was just a man. He was just a normal man with interesting eyes and a serious face.
“Can you tell me a little about the emails you’ve been getting?”
Drawing back the hand that had just touched Reiner Kulti, I settled my gaze on the woman next to me and nodded. I summarized the messages I’d been getting. Insults aimed at my brother, warnings that I should do everything I could to learn as much as possible from the German, and a bunch of other crap that stressed me out a whole lot.
Sheena’s cheek hitched up high, and it was easy to see on her clear dark skin that she was thinking. Then she nodded sharply. “Okay. I’ve got it—“
“Your brother was that imbecile?”
‘That imbecile’ had been the fourteen-year-old to my seven-year-old who held my hand when I crossed the street, let me tag along when he’d go play soccer with his friends even though he grumbled, kicked the ball back and forth with me in the backyard before he would go out, and he was the same person that would be on his feet in the stands, yelling at the top of his lungs when I had a bullshit call made against me. Ilovedmy brother. Was he an arrogant jackass who thought he was gifted with a talent straight from heaven? Yes.
But he was the one that had held on to my shoulder when I’d made a horrible play in my younger years that cost my team a championship and told me that it wasn’t the end of the world. While I looked at Kulti as the type of badass I wanted to aspire to be one day, Eric had been the one to assure me I could be better.
When Kulti had broken my brother’s leg, I made my choice.
I would choose my brother every single time.
Except as my lips formed the shape it took to enunciate the letter ‘b’ for bitch, Iremembered.
I remembered what Gardner had warned us of two weeks ago during our first Pipers meeting.If I hear any of you call him Führer, you’re out of here.Fuck me.
Calling him a bitch wasn’t better, was it?
A bag of dicks wasn’t much better either.
My lips sealed themselves together and in response my nostrils flared.
“He isn’t an imbecile, but Ericismy brother,” I answered him carefully. My eye was starting to twitch.