Authors: Jasinda Wilder
I could almost hear his voice:
Don’t be a fucking sissy, Jason. Get out there and score. You’re
my
son, and you’re a winner. Winners don’t quit. If you don’t get out there and play, everyone will know what a fragile little fucking bitch you are.
I’d never backed down, ever. From anything. No matter how hurt I was, I played. That had been drilled into me since I’d heard those words at age eleven, the first time I’d gotten hurt on the field. I’d sprained my wrist, and Dad had knelt in front of me, hissing those words into my face, the smell of whiskey on his breath overpowering me, making my eyes water along with the tears I knew I didn’t dare shed. I’d gone out and I’d played, and I’d scored. He’d only nodded at me, hadn’t said a kind word.
I gritted my teeth and stood up. “Tape…my
fucking
…ribs.” I growled the words at Doug, flexing every muscle in my body, clenching my fists, letting adrenaline surge through me.
I let my anger at my dad take over, brought up every memory of his fist crashing into me, every demeaning word. I felt myself swelling up, heat radiating from my skin, anger from my eyes.
Doug paled. “Okay, man. Okay. It’s your career, not mine.” He snagged the role of tape from the counter and stuck the end to my sternum and pulled it taut around my body, stretching it so it bound my ribs together.
I ground my teeth and clenched my fists, staring at the wall over his head. He rolled it around my torso again and again, pulling it tight and smoothing the edges together. When he was done, the agony of each breath was intense but more manageable. I donned my gear, slid my gloves onto my hands, and pulled the straps tight.
Doug stopped me with a hand on my shoulder, pale blue eyes on mine. “Jason, I’ll say it again: You shouldn’t play. I’m gonna tell Coach Payton you’re playing against my recommendation. You don’t have to prove anything. Whatever’s driving you right now, it’s gonna get you injured. Season-ending, possibly, or worse. A broken rib can puncture your lung.”
I pushed past him, my shoulder jostling his and sending a brief bolt of pain through me. It was going to seriously suck to get tackled.
Becca was waiting for me. She saw me in my gear, saw the expression on my face. I didn’t stop for her, though, even when she called my name. Ben’s babbling voice stopped me, though. I turned back and glanced at him, his innocent face lit up with excitement as he reached for me, and then I looked up to Becca’s eyes, which was my undoing.
I moved back to the stands, and Becca switched Ben to the other hip so she could reach down and take my hand. “Don’t let him push you anymore,” she murmured to me, barely audible over the noise of the stadium. “He’s not here.
I’m
here, and I’m proud of you.”
Her words pierced through my self-induced haze of anger-fueled adrenaline. I kissed her fingers and then continued on to the sidelines, taking my place next to Coach Payton.
“Ready, Dorsey?” he asked without looking at me. “We stopped their drive. You’re up. Let’s win this.”
I glanced back at Becca, who was watching me with a pleading expression on her face. She knew exactly what was driving me, and she hated it.
I’m here, and I’m proud of you
.
When Dad had been injured, he’d been warned not to play, but he had anyway. His ankle had been fucked up by a tackle, and if he’d let it heal, he would have gone on to play again. Things could’ve been different for him, I realized. The trainer who’d been working for the Jets at the time had recognized me at a training camp in Florida a few weeks back, since apparently I looked exactly like my dad had back then. He’d told me the story, shaking his head ruefully and bemoaning the stupid loss of what could have been a damn good career.
All this flashed through my head in the split second that my eyes met Becca’s.
Coach’s voice shook me out of my thoughts. “Dorsey? You’re up.”
“No, sir. Put Jarred in.” The words tumbled out before I could stop them.
He glanced at me. “Sure, son?”
I nodded. “I’d rather not take the chance. It fucking hurts, man.”
He peered sideways at me, glanced at his clipboard, then nodded, clapping Jarred Fayson on the back and pushing him toward the field. “Good choice. Go sit.”
Fayson ended up making a game-winning touchdown. I went home with my wife and son rather than party with the rest of the guys. They expected this from me already, though, and a few guys ribbed me about being pussy-whipped, but they all respected me for it.
Becca showed me how proud of me she was that night, using just her sweet mouth and soft hands in ways that had me groaning with pain-tinged bliss.
EIGHTEEN: Our Forever
Becca
November
Jason had his arm around me, and beyond him were six of his teammates and their wives and girlfriends, all of us crammed into a roped-off section of the club. The boys were rowdy and the girls loud, most of them having been drinking in the limo we’d all ridden in together. Jason and I were nursing beers, the first either of us had had since before Ben’s birth. My parents had come down to visit us in New Orleans, and they were watching Ben so we could have a night out together. Ben was seventeen months old, walking and talking and charming everyone he encountered. He reminded me all too often of his namesake, my brother, in the way he laughed, in his smile and certain angles of his face.
The stage lights dimmed and the crowd in the bar quieted a bit as an MC strode on stage, a mic in his hand trailing the black thread of a cord. “Hey y’all. Welcome to Circle Bar. I’m Jimmy, and it’s my great pleasure to introduce tonight’s act. Some’a you may know ’em, but after tonight, you’ll all love ’em, I can guaran-damn-tee you that. Please help me welcome…Nell and Colt!”
The entire bar rose to their feet when Nell crossed the stage, a guitar slung over one shoulder to hang at her side. Cheers filled the bar, shaking the floor beneath our feet. Colt was right behind her, his guitar held by the neck in one hand, no strap. They sat side by side on stools, settling their guitars on their laps and adjusting the microphones.
“Hey y’all,” Colt said, shifting the mic closer so his voice boomed over the fading applause. “Am I allowed to say that? I’m not from the South, but it’s okay, right? Cool. So yeah, I’m Colt, and this is the love of my life, Nell.” He turned to face her, keeping his mouth near the mic. “Say hey, babe.”
Nell smiled at him, then addressed the crowd. “Hey, guys. Thanks for having us here. I guess we’ll get started, huh? This first song is a cover that Colt and I got permission to rearrange. It’s called ‘Breathe Me’ by an amazing artist named Sia. I hope you like it.”
She strummed a few chords, paused to adjust her tuning a bit, and resumed strumming, finding a rhythm. Colt waited a few beats, then began picking a counter-melody, filling in the spaces around her rhythm with a more complex tune. After a few bars, Nell began singing. The song was at the upper end of her register, but it fit their sound perfectly.
I’d never seen Nell perform before, and I was in awe. When she’d mentioned, so long ago, that she was going to a school for the performing arts, I’d been stunned and not a little skeptical. She’d never expressed an interest in music before, never shown any particular talent or enthusiasm for performing. Her declaration then had come out of left field for me. It showed me just how out of touch with my best friend I’d been. When she’d left the hospital after her miscarriage, she’d talked about going back to New York with Colt and playing some gigs with him, but she’d never played anything for me. We’d hung out nearly every day for over a month while she recuperated and took some time to find her equilibrium emotionally. She’d told me more about her relationship with Colt, how they’d met and the integral role music had played for them.
She’d eventually gone back to New York with Colt, and we’d seen little of each other over the next year. She’d come to my wedding, of course, but had to go back pretty much right away for a series of shows she and Colt were playing in the New York area. I’d heard from her off and on since then, and she’d emailed me links to articles written about her and Colt highlighting their rising fame as a singer-songwriter duo. They had a knack for covering songs in a unique and unforgettable way, the articles all said, and they would cover anything from classic jazz and swing numbers to indie folk songs, as well as some of the more popular rock and pop radio-play songs.
Nell and I had made plans over and over again to meet up, but after Jason got drafted by the Saints, our lives had entered a whirlwind period of frenzied activity. We’d moved to New Orleans, and I’d applied to and been accepted into LSU’s speech language pathology graduate program. Sports media had followed Jason’s every move for the months leading up to his first game, and then he’d made that spectacular catch. The subsequent injury had placed him even more directly in the public’s eye. He’d sat out two games and then gone back to playing, and he’d been absolutely on fire, scoring multiple touchdowns in every game, setting a pace which would, by the end of that season, shatter club records for most receptions and most receiving yards in a single season.
Nell and Colt, meanwhile, had been rocketing to fame themselves, issuing a self-produced debut album of original material and a few of their more popular covers. They’d gotten numerous offers from studios, but they’d turned them all down, preferring to stay independent, recording and producing a second album at a friend’s studio, issuing that album less than a year after the first.
They’d received more and more press as the months went by, and eventually had been featured on the
Late Late Show with Jimmy Fallon
, a spot which had garnered them national attention.
Now they were at the tail end of a tour of the East Coast and several cities along the Gulf Coast. They’d specifically included a stop in New Orleans so they could see Jason and me, and our son Ben.
I watched Nell perform and found myself quietly crying with pride. She’d come so far, endured so much, and now she was on stage in front of hundreds of people every night, singing in a sweet, clear voice I never knew she had. Nell shone—there was no other word for it. She was captivating, her gray-green eyes sweeping the audience, her voice rolling over us with hypnotic beauty. Colt, too, was stunningly talented. He had a way of weaving his voice around hers, matching her in magnetic harmony that underscored the beauty of Nell’s voice. Colt was a truly talented guitar player, and together they had the crowd spell-bound.
Jason held me close and nudged me when he realized I was crying. I smiled at him and shook my head, letting him know they were happy tears.
“They’re amazing,” he murmured into my ear.
“I know. I’m so proud of her. She’s incredible.”
Nell and Colt played two sets, coming to have drinks with Jason and me and the others in between, and then, at the end of the set, when Nell would have gotten up to leave, Colt stopped her.
“I’ve got a little surprise,” he said into the mic, turning to the side so he could face Nell, dragging the mic over closer to him. “I’ve been planning this for a while, but I’ve never felt it was the right time until now.”
“What are you doing, Colt?” Nell was clearly a little panicked, glancing from Colt to the crowd and back, fidgeting with the strings of her guitar. This was obviously not a part of the routine they’d planned.
“Watch and see,” Colt said, grinning. He strummed a few chords, tuned a few strings down a bit, and then continued, “This was the first song I wrote about us. Remember when I played this in that little dive bar? I thought about writing a new song, or using a cover, but I realized this one really has the most history. It means…just so much for us. This song has changed a bit since then, but…yeah. Here it is. ‘Falling Into You.’”
“All my life it seems
I’ve been barely keeping
My head above the water
And then I saw you
I saw all the pain
Hiding in your eyes
And I wanted
To take it away
But I had no words to heal
’Cause I had no words to heal myself
I was falling, flailing, falling into you
I can’t resist you, baby
I was falling, failing, falling into you
Your love healed me
Fate has intervened
Conspiring to draw us back together
And tangle our lives
The siren of your song
And the music of your heart is calling
Whispering my name
And I have the words to heal you
’Cause I found the words to heal myself
Now I’m falling, flailing, falling into you
I can’t resist you, baby
I am falling, flailing, falling into you
And I’m falling still
I’m falling still
Now that fate has intervened
And drawn us back together
Past the years and all the pain
Behind our eyes
Despite the ghosts trailing around us
Like a fog of haunting souls
I’m still trying hard to heal you
To take your pain and make it mine
So your beautiful eyes can smile
Into mine
Now I’m falling, flailing, falling into you
I can’t resist you, baby
I am falling, flailing, falling into you
And I’m falling still
I’m falling still
I’m falling still.”
The crowd didn’t move for several seconds, didn’t clap or cheer. They simply sat, spellbound. Before they could start, Colton set his guitar down on the stage floor, dug in his pocket, and pulled out a little black box. Nell gasped, covering her mouth with her hands, her eyes shining.
“Nell, baby.” Colton snatched the mic out of the stand holder and slid off the stool to kneel at Nell’s feet. “I said it to you a long time ago, before I ever wrote that song: I’m not just falling in love with you, Nell, I’m falling into you. That’s what the song means. Well, I’ve fallen completely. I’m into you now. All the way. I love you so,
so
much. More than I could ever say in words or in a song. More than a thousand years of loving could ever express.”