Dylan looked over her shoulder, smiling as she noticed Cat’s rapt wonder. “I’d give you the nickel tour, but we’re running late. Feel free to look around
while I scrounge up those damn papers. Be back in a minute.”
As Dylan jogged up the stairs, her faithful companions only a step behind, Cat took immediate advantage of the invitation and walked to the first thing that
caught her attention: a wall made entirely of glass, which looked out onto the back of the huge, sprawling grounds.
In the foreground, down a slight hill, sat a sparkling, and quite large, in-ground pool which gave the illusion it was being fed from the artfully created
waterfall set into the hill. At the base of the waterfall, Cat could see a good-sized Jacuzzi just waiting for some lucky person to immerse herself within its
warm, swirling waters.
Behind the pool, brightly lit against the darkening night, was a large, clay floored basketball court.
“So this is how the other half lives,” she said softly, her breath slightly fogging the glass in front of her. “Niiiice.”
Turning away from the window, Cat looked over the large living room. Dylan’s tastes apparently ran toward modern. Leather and chrome dominated the
huge, open structure. Tasteful, colorful, and no doubt frightfully expensive pieces of abstract art decorated the otherwise barren walls.
In one corner sat the mother of all entertainment centers. Cat got pleasant chills just looking at it. Part of her, the electronics geek that was all her father,
itched to dig in and play, to see just what all that sleek metal and glass and fabric was capable of.
Her fantasies were interrupted at the sound of Dylan’s quiet return. She turned, quite aware of the goofy look on her face. “Quite a place you’ve got here.”
Dylan shrugged. “It’ll do.” Then she smiled. “Glad you like it.”
“Like it? A girl could fall in love here, you know.”
Dylan’s eyes sparkled. “She could, could she?”
The change in the tenor of their banter finally penetrated Cat’s hazed mind, and she froze for a moment as the words replayed in her head. Then she
smiled. “Yes. She could.”
The two stared at one another, separated only by the silence of emotions a hair away from being revealed.
Dylan’s cell-phone shattered the intensity of the moment into a million shining fragments. “What?” she barked the second the phone was up to her ear.
“Testy, testy!” Manny’s voice was its usual annoyance. “You planning on getting those papers to me before Chanukah, sweetheart, or am I going to have to
send the nice Nike people to come down and collect them personally?”
“Call me sweetheart again, Manny, and I’ll break you like the slimy little twig you are.”
Cat’s eyes widened, not realizing that this passed for normal banter between the two.
“Ooooo, someone’s got a touch of the PMS, nu?”
“Cut it, Manny. I’m headed out the door now. I’ll be there in ten.”
“Ta, sweetheart.”
Growling, Dylan snapped the phone closed and shoved it back in its place.
“Everything okay?” Cat asked cautiously.
Blowing out a frustrated breath, Dylan forced herself to calm. She smiled. “Never better. Let’s get outta here before my head explodes. Brains are a bitch to
get out of leather.”
“Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and welcome to ESPN’s annual coverage of the Children’s Cancer Initiative Pro-Am Three on Three tourney. I’m Bob
Haskell, here with my partner Jan Wainright in sunny California to cover what promises to be an interesting and fast-paced weekend of athletic
competition”
“You’re right about that, Bob. Especially after yesterday’s surprise announcement which shocked the sporting world and caused tickets, already going
briskly, to completely sell out in just a little over twenty minutes.”
“And that surprise, Jan ,is of course the announcement that Dylan Lambert, the Goddess of Women’s Professional Basketball, will be competing in this
year’s tournament.”
“It certainly surprised me, Bob.”
“I’m sure it did, Jan. Now, let’s get to the particulars. Basketball isn’t the only sport being played during this four day event.”
“You’re right, Bob. Some of the teams that are competing in the basketball arena are also going to be competing on an entirely different court. Made of
sand.”
“Yes, two on two beach volleyball will be on the schedule for the first two days of this weekend athletic gala, and we have several interesting matchups to
be seen here today.”
In the tunnel into the small, but packed, stadium, Dylan was sitting calmly on a stool, adjusting her new knee brace before dropping her lose nylon
windbreaker type pants over it. Crossing her arms over her knee, she watched with amusement as Cat either paced back and forth as if trying to wear a
hole through the cement floor, or jumped in place like a demented kangaroo, swinging her arms in large, looping circles.
“You’ll have had bigger crowds at your high school games,” Dylan commented softly as Cat stopped jumping and began pacing again.