Three weeks later, the state tournament aired on the local sports channel, and my wife quietly turned it on while I pretended to read. I had not spoken to Marcus since the firing. I assumed the new coach benched him. I assumed I was already a footnote. Then the camera found him. Marcus Ellison, seed number sixteen, the lowest in the bracket, walking out under the lights with my old blue warm-up jacket zipped to his chin. My name was still stitched above the heart. He had refused to take it off all season. Match after match, he pinned boys who had beaten him by twenty points a year ago. The announcers kept saying nobody could explain it. I could. I had spent four hundred mornings in that gym teaching him one move, the same move, until his body learned it before his mind could stutter. In the final, down by six with thirty seconds left, he hit it. The exact move. A high crotch to a trap arm, clean as a prayer. The whistle blew. State champion. The camera rushed the mat, and Marcus did not raise his arms. He pointed straight into the lens, tapped my name over his heart, and mouthed two words the microphones caught anyway. For Coach. My phone did not stop ringing for six hours. The athletic director. The mayor. Three of the parents who signed the petition, crying. But the call I answered was from a blocked number outside the arena. Marcus, breathing hard, still in his singlet. He said, Coach, they gave me the trophy, but it belongs on your shelf. Can I bring it by tonight? My wife was already crying in the kitchen doorway. I said yes, son. The door is open. It has always been open.
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