Saturday morning, State Championship, Eugene. I walked Maya to the starting block of the 1500m and whispered the same thing I’d told her every practice for two years: “Trust the plan. Kick at 800.” Danvers was in the stands with the school board, already smirking, already drafting my termination letter on his phone. What he didn’t know — what nobody knew — was that six weeks earlier, a scout from the U.S. Olympic Development Program had been sitting in our empty bleachers on a rainy Tuesday, watching Maya run a 4:19 in training shoes on a cracked track. He’d called me that night. “Coach, whatever you’re doing with that kid, don’t change a thing. She’s the real deal.” I hadn’t told a soul. Not the parents. Not the board. Not Maya. The gun went off. Maya sat in fourth for three laps, exactly the plan, while Danvers loudly told the board, “See? Dead last, just like I said.” Then the bell rang. Maya kicked. She passed the third girl on the back straight. She passed the second at the curve. Coming down the final hundred meters, she caught the defending national champion and blew past her like she was standing still. 4:11.62. A new national high school record. The stadium exploded. Before Maya even crossed the line, a man in a red USA Track & Field jacket was already walking down from the officials’ box toward me, clipboard in hand, hand extended. Danvers saw him. Saw the jacket. Saw the logo. His face went the color of old paper. He started shoving down the bleacher row toward us, mouth open, ready to claim credit — and the scout turned, looked right past him, and said loud enough for the whole board to hear, “Coach Ellis. We need to talk about Maya’s contract. And about your job offer.”
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