For three months I didn’t leave the house except to buy groceries at the store two towns over, where nobody knew my face. I stopped answering my phone. I stopped watching the sports channel. I told myself the girls had moved on, that they believed what the adults had said about me. Then, on a Tuesday in June, my doorbell rang. I opened it in an old sweatshirt, hair unbrushed, and there stood Maya, my point guard, holding a folded jersey. Behind her on the porch were the other eleven girls from my last team. And behind them, spilling down the driveway, were parents, siblings, alumni from every roster I had ever coached. Maya’s hands were shaking. She said the team had gone on to win state under the interim coach using every drill, every play, every principle I had built for four years. She said the trophy belonged to me. Then she stepped aside, and there in the street was a school bus with hand-painted letters across the side that read COACH, COME HOME. The new principal, hired that morning after Danvers resigned in a scandal none of us saw coming, walked up my steps with a signed contract and tears in his eyes. He said the board had voted unanimously. He said the girls had refused to accept their championship rings until I was reinstated. I dropped to my knees on my own porch, and twelve young women I had raised on the court knelt with me and wrapped their arms around my shoulders. I understood then that the scoreboard had never been the real measure of what we built. The real measure was standing on my porch in the summer sun, refusing to let me disappear.
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