Page 26 of Missing Ivy


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I stepped back, eyes tracing the lines, the circles, the things I’d marked over and over like if I stared at them long enough, something would finally click.

And that’s when my phone buzzes.

Bishop.

I hesitate before answering. “Hey,” I say finally.

There’s a pause on the other end. “You doing alright?”

My grip tightens around the phone. I stare out the window. My throat is tight when I finally speak. “I’m alright…just not sleeping lately,” I say quietly. “I’m having those dreams again.

There’s a pause. Not the awkward kind. The familiar one. “I was hoping those were done.”

“What about those sleeping pills you were taking?” Bishop asks.

“I stopped,” I say. “Didn’t like being hooked on them.”

“Yeah. I get that,” he says. “But maybe… as a last resort. Just to reset. You know?”

I don’t answer right away.

“Sleep matters, man,” he adds. “You know this better than anyone.”

“…Yeah,” I say finally. “Alright.”

“Alright,” he says. “Take a nap, call me after…okay.”

“I will.”

The line goes dead. I stand there for a moment, phone still in my hand, then set it down and walk into the bathroom.

I open the mirrored cabinet above the sink. The bottle is right where I left it. I stare at it for a moment. Then I take one.

A few minutes later, I’m on the couch, staring at the ceiling. And then?—

I close my eyes, try to slow my breathing. But the second I drift off, it happens again. The noise, the light, the stadium roar.

I saw her across the field.

I jogged over to her and stopped inches from her. “What’s your name?”

“I’m good, thanks,” she answered with a smirk. No heat. No hostility. Just a graceful dismissal that rattled harder than any linebacker.

“I’ll win this game for you,” I said. She laughed to herself, flashed a smile at me and walked away with no response.

Hit number one, and I didn’t even flinch. She wanted to play? I’d make sure she remembered me—not the game.

I must have done something right, because minutes later, one of her cheer mates jogged over and said she had a message from her. “If you want to know her name, lose.”

I’d never purposefully lost a day in my life.

My pulse spiked. “Nice try,” I responded without even thinking. “I don’t ‘lose.’ I just don’t. It’s not an option.”

She ran off, irritation and indignation burning down my fingertips, imprinting itself into my soul. And then I did it anyway.

I held the ball a second too long. Missed a throw I could’ve made blindfolded. Let a tackle happen that I could have slipped.

The crowd groaned. My teammates stared.