10. Let me Save You

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Drugs suck. Getting hit by a three hundred pound lineman? Yeah, sucks way harder.

~Austin~

"Moon!" Coach Jackson yelled. "Where's your head this morning, huh? Focus!"

Right. Focus. Stop thinking about highlighted hair and mega-watt smiles and what that smile would feel like if it was directed at me again, and that hair again running through my hands, and—

"Moon!" The football snapped just in time for me to grab it and finish the play.

I seriously needed to stop getting so distracted by her.

What the hell was wrong with me?

By the time practice finished I had enough bruises to last me a lifetime, not the best sign for a quarterback.

"Where were you today?" Brad asked throwing off his clothes and jumping into the shower.

"Not present," I grumbled doing the same.

"Right." He snorted. "Better get present if we want that bowl game this year."

I hated talking about the future. What was the point anyway? I nodded and gave him a gruff.

"Yeah, you're right."

Once I was done showering, I went to one of the many school coffee shops and grabbed a protein shake.

Two classes and then I could see Ally.

She would have read my note by now, so she was either pissed or smiling.

I hoped she was smiling. In fact, I hoped that when she woke up and read the note, she'd forget all about how to frown.

                                                                             ~~~~ (ू•-•ू⑅) ~~~~

"Lunch." I pushed a pile of food toward Ally and watched for a minute as she examined it with distaste. "You have to eat."

"Not hungry." She pushed the tray away and crossed her arms over her stomach.

"Bad first few classes?"

She glared.

I held up my hands.

"Wanna talk about it?"

"I can't." Her face flushed as she looked around the cafeteria.

Almost everyone was staring at us as if we'd just announced we were going to adopt one of Brad Pitt's twenty children.

"I'll take care of it." I sighed and sent a quick text to James.

He hated covering for me, but at least it got people to stop gawking.

I watched him across the cafeteria. He looked at his phone, scowled, and then threw his newspaper onto the table. In an instant he was walking toward us, after two or three strides he collapsed onto the floor.

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