Who ever knew throwing a perfect spiral would be simple compared to dealing with guys?
A Hail Mary and a Harem
The Count? 21 Days until My Trip to Alabama

I once read that football was invented so people wouldn’t notice summer ending. But I couldn’t wait for summer vacation to end. I couldn’t wait for football. Football, dominator of fall—football, love of my life.
“Blue forty-two! Blue forty-two! Red seventeen!” I yell.
The cue is red seventeen. JJ hikes me the ball. The defense is blitzing. JJ slams into a freshman safety, knocking him to the ground. The rest of my offensive line destroys the defense. Nice. The field’s wide open, but my wide receiver isn’t where he’s supposed to be.
“What the hell, Higgins?” I mutter to myself.
Dancing on my tiptoes, I scan the end zone and find Sam Henry instead, and hurl the ball. It flies through the air, a perfect spiral, heading right where I wanted it to go. He catches the ball, spikes it, and does this really stupid dance. Henry looks like a freaking ballerina. With his thin frame and girly blond hair, he actually could be the star of the New York Ballet.
I’m gonna give him hell for his dance.
This is my senior year at Hundred Oaks High, and I’m captain, so I’m allowed to keep my players in line. Even though he’s my best friend, Henry has always been a showoff. His antics get us penalties.
Through the speaker in my helmet, I hear Coach Miller say, “Nice throw. This is your year, Woods. You’re going to lead us to the state championship. I can feel it…Hit the showers.” What the coach actually means? I know you’re not going to blow it in the final seconds of the championship game like you did last year.
And he’s right. I can’t.
The University of Alabama called last week—on the first day of school—to tell me a recruiter is coming to watch me play on Friday night. And then a very fancy-looking letter arrived, inviting me to visit campus in September. An official visit. If they like what they see, they’ll sign me in February.
I can’t screw this season up.
I pull my helmet off and grab a bottle of Gatorade and my playbook. Most of the guys are already goofing off and heading over to watch cheerleading practice across the field, but I ignore them and look up into the stands.
I spot Mom sitting with Carter’s dad, a former NFL player. My dad isn’t here, of course. Asshole.
Lots of parents come to watch our practices because football is the big thing to do around here. Here being Franklin, Tennessee, home of the Hundred Oaks Red Raiders, eight-time state champions.
Mom always comes to practice—she’s been supporting me ever since Pop Warner youth football days, but sometimes she worries I’ll get hurt, even though the worst thing that’s ever happened was a concussion. Sophomore year, when JJ took a breather, the coach brought in this idiot to play center, the idiot didn’t cover me, and I got slammed hard.
Otherwise, I’m a rock. No knee problems, no broken limbs.
Dad never comes to my practices and rarely comes to games. People think it’s because he’s busy, because he’s Donovan Woods, the starting quarterback for the Tennessee Titans. But the truth is he doesn’t want me playing football. Why wouldn’t a famous quarterback want his kid to follow in the family footsteps? Well, he does. He loves that my brother Mike, a junior in college, plays for the University of Tennessee and led his team to a win at the Sugar Bowl last year. So what the hell is Dad’s problem with my playing ball?
I’m a girl.
After chugging a bunch of Gatorade, I go find Higgins, who’s already attempting to flirt with Kristen Markum, the most idiotic of cheerleaders. I take Higgins aside, avoiding her Darth Vader stare, and say, “Next time try finishing your route instead of staring at Kristen, will you?”
His face goes all red before he nods. “Okay.”
“Great.”
Then I go pull a sophomore cornerback aside to speak privately. Duckett’s a couple inches shorter than me, so I put a hand on his shoulder and walk him down the sideline.
“On that last play, where I threw the long pass to Henry, you left him wide open. And I know how fast he is, but you can’t let that happen in the game. You were totally out of position.”
Duckett drops his head and nods at me. “Got it, Woods.”
I pat his back with my playbook as I take another sip of Gatorade, and wipe the dribble from my mouth. “Good. We’re counting on you Friday night. I’m sure Coach is going to start you.”
Duckett smiles as he puts his helmet under an arm and heads toward the locker room.
“Awesome job today, guys,” I say to a couple of my offensive linemen, then jog over to Henry and look up at him.
He says, “What’s good, Woods?”
“Nice move faking out Duckett on that last play.”
Henry laughs. “I know, right?”
“Would you quit it with the dancing?”
He grins at me, his green eyes lighting up as he drags a hand through his blond curls. “You know you love it.”
Smiling, I shove his chest. “Whatever.”
He shoves me back. “Want to come out to eat with us?”
“Who’s us?”
“Me and JJ…”
“And?”
“Oh, let’s see…Samantha and Marie and Lacey and Kristen.”
I stick my tongue out before saying, “Shit, no.”
“We’re going to Pete’s Roadhouse,” he says, wiggling his eyebrows.
Damn it. I love going there. It’s one of those restaurants where they let you throw peanut shells all over the floor. Still, I reply, “Can’t. My brother said he’d watch film with me tonight.”
Henry gets this hurt look on his face. “Come on, Woods. You know I want to go to Michigan more than anything, and I’m working hard, but you’ve been holed up every night since you heard that Alabama is coming to opening game.”
I suck in a breath. “Right—I’ve only got three days left to get perfect.”
“You’re already, like, one hundred times the quarterback your brother was in high school, you know.”
I grin at Henry. “Thanks,” I say, even though it’s not true.
He wipes sweat off his forehead with his red and black jersey. “How about I come over and watch film with you instead?”
“What about Samantha and Marie and Lacey and Kristen?”
He glances over at the cheerleaders. “They’d wait a year for me.”
I shove him again, and he laughs. “Nah, it’s okay,” I say. “I’m glad you’re going out with girls again, even if Kristen is Satan’s sister.”
“I’d never fool around with Kristen—I have standards, you know.”
“Bullshit,” I say as JJ and Carter walk up.
With his helmet in hand, JJ drapes an arm around Henry’s shoulders. I’m surprised Henry’s skinny knees don’t buckle under JJ’s 275 pounds. “You in trouble again, man?” JJ asks in his deep voice.
“Woods doesn’t appreciate my dancing skills.”
“No one likes your dancing skills,” JJ replies. He nods at me. “You in for the Roadhouse, Woods?”
“Can’t. Gotta study,” I say, holding up the playbook.
“Take a break,” JJ says.
“I bet you’d go if they’d picked a place that makes real food, like Michel’s Bistro, or Julien L’Auberge in Nashville,” Carter says in a ridiculous French accent, and JJ, Henry, and I burst out laughing at him.
“Hell no,” I say. “All I need is a big slab of meat and a bunch of peanut shells to throw all over the floor.”
“Blasphemy,” Carter replies.
“You’re not going either?” I ask Carter.
He focuses on his cleats before saying, “Can’t—it’s a practice night, remember?” He’s, like, the only person I know whose parents never say anything about school nights—it’s always about football practice and games in the Carter household.
“Come on, Woods,” Henry whines. “Just for an hour or two.”
I hate saying no to him. “If I get through four hours of Alabama film tonight, I’ll come out tomorrow.”
“Fine,” Henry says, smiling.
“As long as you don’t bring your harem.” I jerk my head at the group of cheerleaders hovering ten yards away near a goal post, making googly eyes at the guys.
“But we’re a package deal,” he says with a laugh.
“That’s ’cause all you ever think about is your package,” JJ replies.
“And you don’t?” I snap, and JJ punches my shoulder, causing me to stumble backward. We all crack up again.
And then two cheerleaders come up and start fawning over Henry and JJ. What took them so long?
JJ and Lacey start kissing as if winning the state championship depends on it, and Samantha intertwines her fingers with Henry’s and smiles up at him. Then Kristen and Marie come over, because cheerleaders travel in packs.
“Nice practice today, Jordan,” Marie says, giving me a smile. “That quarterback sneak of yours is great.”
“Did Henry tell you to say that?” I ask, staring down at her.
“No,” she mutters, looking at her pompoms as she ruffles them.
JJ and Lacey break apart, much like unsnapping Velcro, as Kristen says, “Don’t get Jordan started, Marie. We’ll be here all night listening to stats and pointers on pitching footballs…”
“They’re called passes, Kristen,” I reply. “Don’t think too hard. I hear it makes your hair frizzy.”
“Ha, ha,” Kristen replies, but she subconsciously smoothes her brown hair with a hand. It takes everything I’ve got not to burst out laughing when I see Samantha and Lacey patting their hair too. I sneak a peek at Henry, JJ, and Carter, and they start snickering again. So does Marie.
“Call if you change your mind about getting food,” Henry says to me and Carter, and we all knock fists before Henry and JJ trudge off with their fan club toward the locker rooms.
I clutch my playbook to my chest, and for a moment, I feel a pang of loneliness and wish that I had asked Henry to come over. He’s been sad since his girlfriend dumped him a couple months ago, so he’d probably appreciate the company. Especially since he’s been spending time with girls who think a Hail Mary is a prayer to Jesus’s mom.
But he’d just distract me—and I need to concentrate on performing well for Alabama.
“Carter, let’s go home,” I hear his dad call out from the first row of the metal bleachers. “Your mom’s keeping dinner warm until we’re done working out.”
“Have fun watching film,” Carter says. “I’ll be wishing I’m you as I do sit-ups with Dad tonight.”
Carter jogs over to his dad, who immediately starts talking and gesturing with his hands, probably giving a play-by-play critique of how practice went.
I wish Dad would talk with me like that.