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Authors: Craig Lightfoot
bright pink as all of the waiters congregate around their table to sing
him happy birthday, and Louis even manages to clap along with the rest
of the restaurant as Zayn pecks Liam on the cheek before Liam turns
and kisses Zayn on the lips.
Niall calls for a toast, and Harry volunteers to do the honors. He pushes
his chair back and stands, lifting his glass into the air and clearing his
throat a little before he begins.
“When two people find each other,” Harry says, smiling down at the
ridiculously happy couple, “it‟s a pretty amazing thing. The best thing,
really. Liam and Zayn, the two of you are proof of that. It took a while,
but with a little help, destiny finally got its way. The rest of us couldn‟t
be happier, mostly because now we don‟t have to listen to Zayn whine
about it anymore.” Niall laughs, and Zayn blushes and flips Harry the
bird. “But seriously, you guys, congratulations. You two are really,
really lucky.”
Louis drops his eyes down to his plate so he doesn‟t have to see the
look on Harry‟s face, but he can‟t stop himself from hearing Harry add
softly, “Just... really lucky.”
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It‟s quiet at the table for a moment, and then Niall shouts, “Cheers!”
and they all say it back, downing gulps of the champagne Liam insisted
upon buying. Louis is determined not to feel anything about it.
Finally they pay the bill and head outside, and everyone starts hugging
goodbye. Louis knew this was inevitable, but his heart still stutters
when he finds himself face to face with Harry and his broad chest and
waiting arms, the last ones who haven‟t said goodbye. Three months
ago they‟d be going home together, kissing each other goodnight in
Louis‟ bed hours later, the shape of each other‟s mouths stained on
their skin. Tonight, it‟s this.
He lets Harry wrap him up in his arms, and God, it‟s like a shot of
morphine in his veins, making him go soft and pliant. He can‟t help it.
In a moment of complete weakness, he lets himself slide one hand up
into Harry‟s hair, and he feels Harry‟s hand fist in his shirt in response.
Then he realizes what he‟s doing, and he breaks off immediately,
taking three giant steps backward.
“Right, this was lovely, must run, night boys!” Louis chirps, waving
robotically at them all. He turns on his heel and marches off to his car
and doesn‟t look back.
As he drives home, he tries to come up with a contingency plan. If
being close to Harry over the course of a meal is becoming too much
for him now, he needs to be distracted. He needs to keep his hands and
his mind busy until Harry goes. From now on, he decides, he‟s going to
throw himself into his work every spare minute he has. It‟s not like he
doesn‟t have piles of marking to get through before the year ends
anyway. Maybe if he‟s buried under projects and essays and report
cards, he‟ll be too overwhelmed to feel anything even close to desire.
Sticking to the plan, the next week Louis tries to get a jump start on
marking his student‟s final projects. He‟s sitting at his desk during his
free period, working his way through a soliloquy that seems
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particularly unconcerned with the constraints of English grammar,
when there are three sharp raps on the door.
He looks up to see none other than Mike Kendall in his doorway, tall
and ginger and smiling a little goofily. “Hi, Mr. T!” he says, his
baritone voice booming. Louis half winces and half grins at the
nickname, which caught on among the footy players during Grease and
hasn‟t vanished yet.
“Hi, Mike,” Louis says, leaning back in his chair. “Has the theatre‟s
siren song drawn you back to darken my doorstep?”
Mike just laughs. “Nah, sorry. Just wanted to see if you were coming to
the match tonight.” Ah, that‟s right. The last match of the footy season
is tonight, some tournament or another. He remembers Harry
mentioning it a few weeks back, talking about how it was lucky the
season ended just before he had to leave. Louis has no plans to attend.
“I‟m not sure—“ he starts, but Mike jumps in, all cajoling enthusiasm.
“C‟mon, Mr. T, please?” Puppy eyes shouldn‟t be possible from a
hulking teenager, but they‟re coming out nonetheless. “Me and the lads
helped you out with your thing, it‟d be sick if you came to see us at our
thing.”
He does have a point. Plus, Louis has a soft spot for his former T-Bird.
The kid has spirit, even if he sometimes reminds Louis of those
walking trees from Lord of the Rings. “I‟ll see what I can do,” he says,
tilting a look at Mike that makes it clear that‟s all he‟ll get.
“Brilliant!” Mike says, punching the air. “Okay, I‟ve gotta get to class.
Bye, Mr. T! See you tonight!” And then he‟s gone.
Louis hasn‟t been to one of the football matches in what has to be
months. He‟d gone regularly for most of first and second term, sitting
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in the middle of the stands and yelling his lungs out, usually with Zayn
or Niall or both in tow. He hasn‟t been back since Easter, though.
So when he finds himself at the pitch that night, it all feels a little alien.
He climbs all the way to the top of the stands, moving to a back corner
away from the cheering parents and friends. He pulls on his sunglasses
and sips on the iced coffee he bought on the way and tries not to feel
horrendously out of place.
Harry‟s there, of course, on the sidelines with his boys, but he doesn‟t
ever look up at the stands. It‟s not like he‟d be expecting anyone to be
there. Louis tries not to watch him, but since he couldn‟t manage that
when he‟d known Harry for two weeks it‟s not like he‟s going to pull it
off now. It‟s almost nice, being able to watch Harry without worrying
about talking to him or touching him or any of it.
He‟s a blur up and down the sideline like always, shouting out
instructions and encouragements to the players in a hoarse voice,
coordinating with the head coach, and checking in with the kids on the
bench. Louis‟ been a teacher for a while, and he knows what it looks
like when somebody cares about what they‟re doing. He sees the way
the leftback grins when Harry whoops after he nabs the ball from the
other team‟s striker, sees the team captain point at Harry when he
scores a goal. Those boys love him. Louis can‟t imagine that Harry
won‟t be loved wherever he goes, that people won‟t always flock to
him. He wonders what that‟s like.
Then it‟s halftime, all tied up at 1-1, and Louis expects the players to
come off the field. Instead, about half of them stay on the field, with
some of the substitute players joining them. One of the subs has a
microphone with them, and he hands it to the team captain, a compact
midfielder with a shock of blond hair.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” he says, “Allow me to introduce myself. I‟m
Tony Stockton,” a ragged cheer goes up from the stands, “Thanks.
Anyway, I‟m team captain, and I‟m also a year 13. Since this is our last
match of the season, we‟ve brought all of the year 13s out to say
goodbye. These lads have all been committed to this team from day
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one, and we‟d really appreciate it if you would be so kind as to give
each one a round of applause as I read out their names.”
He goes down the list, and the crowd cheers for each one. It‟s always
easy to pick out the family of the boy in question, with loud whoops
coming from small groups in the stands. Finally, once every name has
been called, there‟s a mass round of applause, and Louis finds himself
clapping along as well. He doesn‟t really know any of the year 13s
well, but he remembers how it felt to have something like this end,
something that felt like it ran your whole life while you were in school.
Tony clears his throat into the microphone, and the cheers die down.
“We actually have another farewell tonight,” he says, humor in his
voice. “We‟re also saying goodbye to our irreplaceable assistant coach,
who will be leaving us for the capital! The poshest footy coach who
isn‟t really that good at footy, Mr. Harry Styles!” All the boys start
clapping, and one of the younger lads on the sidelines gives him a little
shove towards the pitch. Harry jogs out to join the year 13s, grinning
ruefully, and is immediately engulfed in a massive group hug.
He looks very young, and very, very happy.
Louis doesn‟t realize he‟s moving until he stumbles halfway down the
stands and nearly upends a family of four. “Sorry, sorry,” he says,
stepping around them and finally reaching solid ground. He‟s not being
subtle, and if Harry has looked up he‟s almost certainly seen him, but
Louis would rather not know, so he keeps his eyes on the ground as he
rushes back towards the carpark.
He hurries back to his car as fast as he can, trying to force down the
sudden panicked nausea. All he can think about—all he‟s running away
from right now—is how happy Harry looked, happy and loved, and
how he was born to be happy and loved and probably always has been,
and how soon somebody else is going to be making him feel that way,
and how much he doesn‟t need Louis for that. He never did.
He can‟t run fast enough.
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at the pitch. come here.
It‟s almost midnight on the last day of June, and this is the first thing
Harry‟s texted him in weeks.
Harry‟s leaving tomorrow, and Louis hasn‟t spoken to him in two
weeks. He hasn‟t seen him since the football match, hasn‟t kissed him
in a month. It‟s almost midnight on the last day of June, and Harry is
going to leave tomorrow. Harry hasn‟t called, and Louis will never
forgive himself if he‟s the one who breaks, and it‟s time to let it go for
good. Or at least it was supposed to be, until the text message.
He paces through his flat, wishing he was less fucking bone-tired so
he‟d at least have the energy to throw the tantrum he wants to throw.
He wants to break half the things in his flat. He wants to tell Harry to
go to hell. But God knows he doesn‟t have the strength to do any of
that.
He knew what he was going to do as soon as he read the text message,
no matter how much he pretends to deliberate with himself over it. He‟s
going to meet Harry at the pitch. He‟s spent too much time revisiting
the night the two of them were alone there, told Harry too much about
what that night did to him. He‟s going. Fuck it, he‟s going.
The drive is short, and he swears at himself the whole way.
The stadium lights are off but the gate‟s been left open for him, and
when he makes his way through it and around the stands, he can just
barely make out Harry sitting in the middle of the pitch, broad
shoulders under the moonlight and the Manchester light pollution. He‟s
not moving, just waiting, knees drawn up to his chest and arms folded
on top.
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Louis looks out at his back in the distance and tries so hard not to think
of this person as Harry. He tries not to think of all the things that body
represents in his world, of all the places he‟s left his marks on it, of the
heart inside it and the way it feels when it‟s pressed up against his own
chest. He tries so hard not to think, this is the last time.
He makes his way out to the center of the pitch slowly, counting his
steps. When he reaches Harry, he sits down on the grass across from
him and waits.
“Hi,” Harry says, not looking at him.
“Hi,” Louis says lamely. He‟s got no idea what else to say.
“Hi,” Harry says again.
“Already said that,” Louis says automatically, and Harry just barely
stops a tiny smile.
It‟s silent after that, just the two of them breathing and the distant