Late Night Calls

Brody

Five Years Ago

“Imiss you,” I said, whispering into the phone.

We were in Seattle for an away game, and I hadn’t seen Maggie since our date the night before. I was pretty sure I was going through withdrawals.

Liam was sleeping in the bed beside me, so I made sure to keep my voice low, because I sure as hell wasn’t going to let him wake up to me murmuring softly over the phone to his sister.

“You saw me last night.” I heard the eye roll, even through the phone.

I was getting good at reading her. I could practically see her face now, imagine her expressions from just the sound of her voice.

“But that was yesterday,” I said. “I need to see you at least once a day for proper functioning.”

“Poor baby,” she cooed sarcastically. “I think you’ll survive.”

But I heard her smile, and I knew what that meant.

She missed me too.

Otherwise, she wouldn’t even be entertaining this conversation.

I noticed that about her. If she wasn’t interested in someone, it was as if they weren’t even there. She wouldn’t grant them a fraction of her attention, even when they begged.

And oh, how they begged.

Not verbally, usually. But with their eyes, their flirtatious grins, their pleas for attention.

I couldn’t blame them. Maggie was the most beautiful girl in any room. The most beautiful girl in Boston, as far as I was concerned. And I’d been one of those helpless guys once, just desperate for her to look my way even for a moment.

I didn’t know if it was only me being friends with Liam that gave me the upper hand, but I didn’t even care—even if that was cheating.

She picked me.

I was the guy, out of all of them, who she was having midnight phone calls with.

And I was the one making her smile on the other end of the line, even if she’d rather die than admit it.

“When I come home, we’re going to a Red Sox game before the season ends.”

“How did you know I like the Red Sox?” she asked suspiciously.

“Because you’re a girl who grew up in Boston?” I offered bashfully.

“Or?” she said, calling me out on my bullshit.

“Or I may have asked Liam for a few ways to win some brownie points with you,” I admitted, grateful that no one was around to see the way my face reddened in the darkness of the hotel room.

“How sneaky of you, asking my brother what I like so you can weasel your way into my heart.”

“Is it working?”

“Maybe,” she said.

My heart soared.

“But only if you buy me a hot dog.”

“I’ll buy you anything you want,” I told her.

“And sing ‘Sweet Caroline’ when it plays,” she added.

“That’s a given.”

“And you have to promise you’ll say hi to Wally if we see him.”

“The Green Monster himself?” I laughed, louder than I should’ve considering my sleeping roommate. “It would be an honor.”

“Fine,” she agreed. “Then it’s a date.”

“It’s a date,” I confirmed.

I fell asleep that night with the image of Maggie on my mind and a smile on my lips, only because of her.

The future was bright.

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