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"You brought lunch for me?"

"My favorite." He holds the bag out.

We find a table in the student lounge near the window. He unwraps both sandwiches and pushes one toward me. I offer to pay him back, but he waves it off.

"We're even for the creatine."

I almost smile. Then I remember why I'm here.

"Tell me what you know about Cody."

He takes a slow bite and chews, watching me. The pause stretches longer than is comfortable. "Not much."

"As in?"

"I didn't know he had a girlfriend." His eyes stay level on mine. "Not until the hallway anyway. When he corrected me."

The air goes out of me quietly.

I take a bite of my sandwich, so I don't have to respond immediately. The bread feels like nothing in my mouth.

"What else?" I ask.

"That he's entitled." He says it the way you'd say someone is left-handed. A fact, not a judgment. "He doesn't ask. He just takes."

I set the sandwich down, feeling on edge. "Give me an example."

He shakes his head slightly. "I think you already know what I mean."

I want to argue. But something stops me — the way Cody's name was apparently never attached to mine on this campus. The way his teammates walked past me as if I didn't exist in his life.

"It sounds like you weren't close," I say.

"We're teammates. We're supposed to know each other's weaknesses." He leans back. "I know his."

I shift in my seat. "Did any of you know anything real about him?"

Something crosses his face — fast, unreadable. "Define real."

"Friends. Girlfriend. What he cared about outside the rink."

He turns his cup slowly on the table. "We knew what he showed us."

I hold his gaze. "And what was that?"

He picks up his sandwich again. "Someone who wanted to be here very badly."

I smile at that briefly, knowing what he means. Cody really wanted to attend UW. I remember the day he told me he got in and got a spot on the team.

I want to get to know him better, so I ask, "Is that what you wanted too?"

He looks at me for a long moment. "He and I are different."

I don't push it. But I feel something shift — like I found a seam, just barely.

He glances at his phone and stands. "I need to go."

"When will I see you again?" The words are out before I can decide whether to say them.