"Second: I respect you more right now than I have at any point since I hired you. You came to me before. You're coming to me now. You're making the hard choice and you're making it right. That matters. That's the only thing that matters."
The transition happens quickly because Sharon is efficient and because the newsroom does not stop for personal decisions. She assigns me to college football, which is a beat I have no passion for and which she knows I have no passion for, and the assignment is not punishment. It is the available slot. The Reapers beat will go to Marcus Chen (no relation to Wes), who is a capable young reporter and who will do a good job and who is not me, and the not-being-me is a fact that I will have to sit with for a while.
I clean out my press box credentials. The laminated badge. The media guide. The notebook with three months of observations, quotes, and (if I'm being honest) a catalogue of the ways Jamie Kowalski has rewritten my understanding of what it means to pay attention to another person.
I write my last Reapers game recap. The game is a Tuesday night contest against Philadelphia that the Reapers win 4-1, and Jamie has two assists, and the recap is clean and professional and mentions Kowalski's playmaking in the third period with the neutral, objective precision of a journalist who is covering his last game and who is determined to make it flawless.
The recap is flawless. The journalist writing it is sitting at his desk with tears on his face that he wipes with his sleeve before anyone sees, because the tears are not about the game or the recap or the beat. The tears are about the loss of a thing he built. Three years of building. Every freelance pitch. Every unanswered email. Every late-night filing. Every 5 AM drive to the facility for morning skate. The press box that was his crease, the notebook that was his stick, the words that were his game. All of it, traded for the possibility of something that hasn't happened yet.
I file the recap. I close the document. I shut my laptop.
At home, the apartment is quiet. The books are on their shelves. The kitchen counter has two items on it: my glasses and my phone. I take off the glasses and hold them. The frames are familiar in my hands, the weight and shape of an object I've worn every day for fifteen years. The frames are professional. Serious. The frames of a journalist.
The frames of a journalist who no longer covers the Atlanta Reapers.
I set the glasses on the counter. I don't put them back on. The apartment is blurry without them. The edges of the books, the corners of the furniture, the outline of the window are all slightlysoft, slightly undefined, and the softness is appropriate because the lines of my life are softer now than they were this morning. The hard edges of the beat, the credentials, the press box, those are gone. What remains is soft and uncertain and shaped like a possibility.
The possibility is Jamie. The possibility is a coffee shop in Decatur and a boy who said "don't put them on" and whose voice when he said my name in a doorway is a sound I will carry in my memory alongside the sound of my father's printing press and my mother's laughter and the scratch of my pen on a notebook.
I pick up the phone. I do not text Jamie. Not yet. The sacrifice needs to settle before I share it. The loss needs to be felt fully, honored fully, before I convert it into a gift. Because that's what it is: a gift. Not to Jamie. To myself. The gift of honesty. The gift of choosing the person over the performance. The gift of walking through the space between who I was and who I'm becoming and trusting that the space, which is empty and terrifying and mine, will eventually become a room I can live in.
Cole Briggs's words, from the feature I wrote and can no longer write: "The relief was physical. Like setting down a bag I'd been carrying for ten years. I didn't know how heavy it was until I put it down."
The bag is down. The beat is gone. The glasses are on the counter.
I stand in my apartment without them. The world is slightly blurry. The edges are soft. The possibility is enormous.
I make jollof rice because my mother says that cooking is what you do when you need to think and can't sit still. The rice takes forty-five minutes. The tomato paste sizzles. The onions caramelize. The apartment fills with the smell of home, which is Accra and East Atlanta and my mother's kitchen and the grounding, irreplaceable comfort of food made with attention.
I eat at my kitchen table. Alone, but not lonely. There is a difference, and the difference is the presence of a choice. I am alone because I chose to be alone tonight, to sit with the loss, to honor the career I'm leaving. Tomorrow I will not be alone. Tomorrow I will tell Jamie what I've done and the telling will be its own kind of beginning.
The jollof rice is good. My mother would approve. My father would eat it slowly, the way he does everything, and say "not bad, but your mother's is better," which is both a criticism and a compliment and the Osei version of a standing ovation.
I clean the kitchen. I go to bed. The glasses are on the counter. The phone is on the nightstand. The night is quiet.
Tomorrow. Tomorrow is the beginning of whatever I chose.
JAMIE
The press conference after the Columbus game is normal in every way except one: the third row is wrong.
I don't register it immediately. The questions start and I'm in podium mode, the autopilot that engages when I face the media, the checkpoint running, the answers filtered and approved and delivered with the minimum number of words required. "Good team effort." "We stuck to the system." "Just trying to contribute."
The third question comes from a voice I don't recognize. The voice is male, younger, slightly nervous in the way that new beat reporters are nervous when they're still learning the rhythm of the scrum. The question is about my assist in the second period. The question is fine. The question is professional and competent and completely unremarkable.
The voice is wrong.
I look at the third row. The chair where Declan sits (third from the left, always, the specific position he's occupied at every press conference since his first week on the beat) is occupied by someone else. A man I've never seen. Young. Notebook open.Press credential around his neck that says AJC in the same font as Declan's but with a different name.
My chest does something. The something is not the warm, expanding sensation that Declan's presence produces. The something is the opposite. A contraction. A tightening. The specific, physical response of a body that has been expecting a particular signal (glasses, notebook, brown eyes, the quality of attention that makes me speak in full sentences) and has received its absence instead.
He's not here.
I finish the press conference. The answers are professional. The autopilot holds. I walk to the locker room and I change and I shower and I perform every step of the post-game routine with the mechanical efficiency of a player who has done this a hundred times, and underneath the mechanical efficiency my brain is running a search that has nothing to do with the browser on my phone.
Where is he?
The possibilities are: he's sick. He's on assignment elsewhere. He's covering a different game. He had a personal emergency. These are the rational possibilities, the explanations that a reasonable person would generate when a journalist misses a press conference.