I Wish I Would’ve Told You Read Online Whitney G

Categories Genre: Angst, Contemporary, Forbidden, New Adult, Sports Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 54
Estimated words: 54383 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 272(@200wpm)___ 218(@250wpm)___ 181(@300wpm)
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What the fuck?

I stand to my feet. “I’m good, Coach.”

“No, trust me.” He pushes the packets closer. “The closer you get to announcing whatever college you’re attending in the spring, the closer the gold diggers are to sinking their claws into your future.”

“I’m going to leave now.”

“I smelled the scent of female desperation in the air once this school year started, once ESPNU started running those long promos on you.” He’s officially talking to himself, not me. “The stench is unmistakable.”

“Are you taking new meds, Coach?”

“I don’t want to be invited to your baby shower for at least ten years,” he says, staring into space. “I wish I could go back in time and have someone say that to me…”

I turn around and head to the door.

“Wait, Easton!”

I look over my shoulder. “Yes, Coach?”

He picks up a blue envelope and holds it out for me. “Happy birthday son. I never forget.”

“Thank you.” I take the envelope from him and leave his office, shutting the door behind me.

“Easton?” Someone else calls my name.

Fuck… I turn around and spot the offensive coordinator. “Yes, Mr. Hinson?”

“I wanted to make sure I caught you before I looked at some film.” He hands me a small gift bag. “Happy birthday.”

“Thank you, sir.”

He pats my shoulder. “Don’t let anyone ever tell you that you’re not the next best All-American quarterback. You have an incredible game, a beautiful supportive family, and good looks and shit, too.”

I nod. “Will do, sir.”

Turning away before I can be distracted again, I walk down the hall and into the team’s state-of-the-art locker room.

I check all the rows to ensure I’m the only person here. Then I open my bag and take out a framed picture that I can only face once a year.

My mother used to come here with me during this ungodly hour, armed with cupcakes and candles like I was still in kindergarten. She’d also bring a portable piano keyboard and request that I play a Chopin piece from memory.

Even though I’d long given up my old dreams of being a musician, she was proud of me for choosing “a sport that might actually pay your bills someday.”

I run my finger along the edge of her face.

The sudden sound of heavy footsteps makes me put away the frame. Before I can ask who else is interrupting my morning, my father rounds the corner, holding up a brown bag.

“I hope you won’t mind that I came here,” he says. “I brought you breakfast.”

“Thanks.” I motion for him to sit next to me.

I don’t mention that he reeks of alcohol.

“Your mother was a really great woman.” He hands me a box of waffles. “Loyal to a fault.”

“She never lied to me.” His voice cracks. “Not one time.”

“She didn’t lie to me either.”

“Very loyal.”

“Yes,” I say. “Very loyal.”

We eat our food in silence, swallowing it down with our forced lies.

We’ve never discussed the truth.

It hurts too damn much…

My mother died on her way to our family vacation last year.

She was in the passenger seat of a red Corvette that didn’t belong to my father.

It was our church pastor’s.

The accident report revealed that they were half-naked, that the backseat floor was littered with condoms.

At the hospital, the doctors gave me a plastic bag of her things, and while I was texting her friends and families the news, I realized that most of the names in her phone belonged to other men with nicer cars than Corvettes.

My life had already been hanging by a thread, but that was the week it finally snapped.

The same week I met Scarlett…

“Well…” My father downs the last bite of his waffle and stands to his feet. “I know I’m not her, but Happy Birthday son. I’ve got to get my rehab meeting. I’m one hundred percent sober now, you know.”

“Yeah.” I watch him walk away. “I know.”

Later that afternoon

Are you at home yet?

Scarlett

I will be in an hour. Late practice. Some idiot decided to play a game with the fire alarm today.

How unfortunate…You’re the only person who hasn’t wished me ‘Happy Birthday’ today.

Scarlett

Because you told me that you prefer to celebrate it on a different day…Have you changed your mind about that?

Not at all. Call me when you’re heading home.

I toss my football pads onto the floor before slumping onto the living room couch. Trying to kill time, I flip through the channels, but nothing catches my attention.

I scroll down my contacts and call my best guy friend, Jeremiah.

“What’s up, Shitface?” he answers on the first ring. “Miss me already?”

“Terribly.” I shut my eyes. “I’m wishing you were kissing me right now.”

He laughs. “I hope you’re not trying to use the birthday sympathy card to get out of going with me to the gulf this weekend.”

“Never.”

“Good. What do you really want then?”

“A distraction,” I admit. “At least half an hour if you can…”


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