e was the smell of cheap whisk
highlights of some college football game I couldn't care less about. M
ft years ago, taking the kids with her. She told them I
rse from a hospice. Matthew Clark, the golden boy quarterback Sabrina had
should have been mine. The irony was so bitter it made me laugh, a dry,
o the roar
l of popcorn and cheap perfume. I was nineteen again, s
ming parade. The
ed. I flexed my leg, feeling the powerful muscl
a loud, off-key version
trosity of our mascot, a hornet, wobbled precariously. And standing
erfect, the town' s golden girl, my childhood nei
it used to. There was no b
he decades of her cold shoulder, the way she flinched when
ur son that his father was
hornet head tilted. In my f
the
f the way, and let the structure crush
ould call
marry me out of guilt. A li
this