Gardner smiled tenderly, leaning across his big glass desk, hands clasped. “You haven’t even asked me what the conference is for.”
Like I freaking cared. It could have been because someone had found a cure for cancer, and it wouldn’t matter. I’d be trying not to lose it all the same. My heart just started beating faster at the mention of the c-word, but I forced myself to look like I wasn’t fighting back a panic attack. “All right, what’s it for?” I asked slowly.
Our soccer team’s preseason training started in a week and a half, so I guess I’d subconsciously assumed that was it.
But the question had barely left my mouth when he started smiling, his brown eyes wide. He leaned forward and said something that was just as bad, if not worse, than asking me to do a press conference. Sixteen words that I hadn’t been braced to hear. Sixteen words that I had no clue were about to change my life.
“We just got confirmation that Reiner Kulti is taking the team’s assistant coach position this season,” Gardner explained, his tone implying, “This is the best thing to ever happen.”
My face said, “No, it’s freaking not.”
It took a minute for his smile to fall and a confused look to take over, but it happened. It fell like a Jenga tower, slowly and surely.
He gave me a look. “Why are you making that face?”
I WAS seven years old the first time I saw Reiner Kulti on television. I could remember the exact moment he came on the screen. It was the semifinal for the Altus Cup—the tournament that happened every three years and included every national soccer team in the world eliminating each other left and right over qualifying rounds. It was the most highly televised sporting event in the world.
Why wouldn’t it be? Soccer, also known as the “real” football orfutbol, was the most widely played sport across the inhabited continents. It didn’t discriminate. You could be tall, short, skinny, poor, or rich. All you needed was a ball that was at least sort of inflated and something to make a goal, which could be anything. Coffee cans. Coke cans. Trash cans. Anything. You could be a girl or a boy.Have a uniform, not have a uniform. And as my dad said, you didn’t even need shoes if you really wanted to get technical.
Because my brother played it and loved it—and for some reason, back then, I thought my brother was the coolest person ever—I made my parents put me on a team when I was around six. My mom, on the other hand, was slightly horrified and enrolled me in karate and swimming as well. But a small part of me had always known I liked soccer more than I liked anything else.
On my dad’s side, I came from a long line of soccer fanatics. The Casillas didn’t play much, but they were big fans. With the exception of my older brother, who had supposedly showed an interest and a talent for it from the moment he was old enough to walk, everyone else just watched.
But as I remembered, and from the hundred times Dad retold the story, my brother and my father had been talking about whether Spain was going to wipe the floor with Germany or not, before the game started. A little after halftime, most of the players on the German team had to be substituted because of one injury or another.
Eric, my brother, had already said, “Germany’s done,” and my dad had argued there was still time left for either team to score a point.
Clear as day, I could visualize in my head the fresh-faced, nineteen-year-old who made his way onto the field. He was the last player on the team that could possibly be put in, the guy’s first time playing on the international scene. With light brown hair that seemed even lighter because of our static-y old television, a face that was hairless and a body that was long and thin… oh man, he’d been the cutest, youngest player I’d ever seen on the Altus Cup so far.
Truthfully, Germany should have been done. The odds were against them. Hell, their own fans were probably against them by that point.
Yet, no one had seemed to have given the team the message.
At some point between the forty-five-minute marker that started the second half of the game and the ninety-minute marker that ended normal regulation time, that skinny boy with the cuteface who couldn’t have been that much older than me, but he was, managed to steal the ball from a Spanish forward attacking the German goal and ran. He ran and ran and ran and, by some miracle, avoided every opposing player who went after him.
He scored the most beautiful, ruthless goal in the top right corner of the net. The ball seemed to sail through the air with a one-way ticket to the record books.
My dad screamed. Eric yelled. The freaking stadium and the announcers lost it. This guy who had never played on such a platform had done what no one expected of him.
It was one of those moments that lifted a person’s spirit. Sure, it wasn’t you that did anything special, but it made you feel like you had. It gave you the impression that you could do anything because this other person did.
It reminded you that anything was possible.
I stood there screaming right along with my dad because he was yelling, and it seemed the most appropriate thing to do. But mostly, I thought that this Kulti on the German national team, who looked barely old enough to drive, was the most amazing player in the world that year.
To do what no one believed you could do….
Jesus. Now, as an adult, I could look back and understand why he had such an effect on me. It made total sense. People still talked about that goal when they brought up the best moments in Altus Cup history.
What was the turning point when I decided to follow this dream of turf, two goals, and a single, checkered white-and-black ball? That moment. That goal changed everything. It was the moment I decided I wanted to be like that guy—the hero.
I dedicated my life, my time, and my body to the sport all because of the player I would grow to follow and support and love with all my little heart, my patron saint of soccer—Reiner Kulti. For him, it was the moment that changed his career. He became Germany’s savior, their star. Over the next twenty years of his career, he became the best, the most popular, and the most hated.
Then there was the whole I-had-posters-of-him-all-over-my-walls-until-I-was-seventeen and the whole me-telling-every-one-I-was-going-to-marry-him thing.
Before the posters and the marriage announcements, there had been the letters I remembered writing him as a kid. “I’m your #1 fan” written on construction paper with markers and crayons. They never got a response.
But I kept that crap to myself.