Lost & Found
Chapter 62

Copyright© 2007 by Douglas Fox

Romantic Sex Story: Chapter 62 - Kyle Martin goes to PSU seeking football glory. Read about his successes, failures and excesses as he tries to find his place in the world

Caution: This Romantic Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa   Ma/Ma   Consensual   Romantic   Group Sex   Anal Sex   School  

My parents and Penny's parents were delighted at our news Sunday afternoon when we told them. Hunter and the twins were ecstatic at the news of my "gir'friend," which shocked Penny. I explained how much the kids enjoyed when Kelly had played with them during her visits. I warned Penny that the kids would expect the same from her.

Liz and Andy were happy that their "big sister" was back in my life. Both my younger brother and sister had busy weekends. Liz spent Saturday on preparations for the junior prom, which was a week away. Liz wanted her night with her boyfriend Wyatt to be special.

Andy was busy studying. He had one week of class before finals the following week. He also lined up his summer job working at the same restaurant on Route 30 where he worked during high school. They were glad to have an experienced line cook back for the tourist season.

Penny started work at the veterinary clinic for Dr. Chu on Monday morning. I went shopping for food for the dinners I would prepare for the family while I was home. Jeremy went to work for the landscaper he worked for the past two summers. Ed stopped in the afternoon to hang out, watch TV, toss some balls and play a few computer games.

I got two phone calls from prospective agents on Sunday. Seven more called me on Monday during the day. Over dinner I brought the subject up to my parents.

"All these agents calling are pains in the ass," I growled.

"Language, Kyle," Mom warned as the twins and Hunter giggled. I wasn't used to censoring my speech yet.

"Sorry, Mom," I replied. Turning back to Dad I said, "I can keep telling these agents that call that I'm waiting until after my bowl game to talk, but I don't think it will stop them from calling. I have talked with some of my friends that went through the agent and NFL process the last couple years. I need your help getting prepared, knowing how crazy things will be when I am done with the bowl game. I'm going to need a sports agent, a financial manager and probably a legal advisor. I can't make all these choices next January completely unprepared or without your help."

"That's good thinking, Kyle," Dad agreed. "Do you want to sit down and talk about it tonight?"

"How about tomorrow night?" I suggested. "I wanted to visit scouts this evening."

"Done!" Dad agreed. "We'll sit down and discuss this after dinner tomorrow."

"We also need to talk about where I will live next winter and spring while I'm student teaching," I added. "The university doesn't provide off campus housing to athletes and I will be teaching somewhere around Philadelphia. I hope I will be able to borrow the rent and food money for spring semester."

"I think Mom and I can pay room and board for you," Dad said. "Especially considering these will be the only college expenses we have for you for your four years of education."

"Oh ... cool!" I replied. "I didn't expect that you would pay my way. I thought it would be a loan, like the rest of my expenses have been."

"Good, the three of us will sit down tomorrow night and help you start planning life after college," Dad said.

"I'd like to include Penny in the discussion, Dad" I said. "It affects her future ... or at least I hope it affects her future too."

"You're sure about this?" Mom asked. "Are you and Penny that serious after less than two days as a couple?"

"I am," I said. "I hope Penny is too, but I don't know. I think she should be invited to be a part of the discussion even if we're not certain about where we are going as a couple."

"It won't hurt if she's involved, I guess," Dad said. "She has a good head on her shoulders."

I stopped by my scout troop's meeting to visit after dinner. The Senior Patrol Leader was out that evening, so Gary Harrison was running the scout meeting. Gary did a good job. I would have liked to talk with him, but he was too busy. Gary and I would have plenty of time to talk over the summer. Gary was on my pool staff.

I stopped by Penny's house after scouts.

"Honey, do you have a minute?" I asked when she invited me inside. "Are you busy tomorrow after dinner?"

"No, why?" Penny answered.

"I'm sitting down with my parents to talk about my financial future," I explained. "I will have to deal with a sports agent, a financial planner and a legal advisor next year. We will also be talking about where I live next spring semester."

"Are you sure you want me sitting in on this?" Penny asked. "Maybe I can come over when you talk about sharing the apartment. I can leave when that part of the discussion is over."

"I want you there for everything," I said. "You know me. When you agreed to be my girlfriend I think you knew I wasn't talking about the next six weeks or just this summer."

"I know," Penny agreed.

"We've talked about how to make things last next year," I said. "We will see how things go in the fall, but I hope we are together for the long haul. Is that OK?"

"We'll see how the fall goes," Penny said, " ... but yes, I hope we last beyond the next twelve months."

I gave Penny a hug and a big kiss. "I hope all the things we said we wanted back in high school are still possible."

"We'll see, but I hope they are too," Penny agreed.

"That's wonderful," I said. "I've got to go work out. I'll see you tomorrow evening, say around seven o'clock." We sealed things with a kiss.

--oooOooo--

Ed, Jeremy and I showed up Tuesday afternoon to help coach the high school passing drills. Ed spent half of practice polishing Matt Sauder and Jacob Baughman's work at QB. Jeremy worked with the defense, especially the linebackers. Nate Trimble loved getting more instruction from his sister's boyfriend.

I spent half the practice with the varsity receivers, less Dave. Dave worked with the younger guys until our mid-afternoon break. Dave and I switched and I worked with the younger guys the rest of the afternoon. The young kids were green, but willing to listen and work hard. I could see improvement over last Thursday by the end of practice. By the end of school they would be performing pretty well for JV receivers.

The twins were delighted when Penny arrived after dinner, at least until they realized she was joining Mom, Dad and me in Dad's study. The little kids were sent off to the family room under Liz's supervision while the grown-ups had our discussion.

Mom and I brought a couple kitchen chairs into the office so everyone had enough room to sit down. "Now that everyone is here, we can begin," Dad said. "I did a few calls after we talked last night, Kyle. I learned who handles financial planning for Aaron Herr, Jeff Smoker, and Dan Kreider." [Aaron Herr is the son of Tommy Herr, the all-star second baseman for the Cardinals and Phillies. Jeff Smoker and Dan Kreider play professional football, Arena League and the NFL, respectively]

"Are you sure I should be here for this discussion, Mr. Martin?" Penny asked. "It seems like this discussion should be among family."

"My son seems to think that this may affect your future too," Dad said. "He wants you involved. Also, call me Dan. You're not a little kid anymore."

"OK, Dan. I guess you can continue," Penny said.

"This financial advisor handles business for the High family, the Horst family and the Wares," Dad said. "I thought it would be good if I sat down with him and picked his brain for information about what we're facing in the next year or two. I see us needing to gain knowledge about the whole professional sports business – how things work, what challenges you will face and what pitfalls you need to watch for."

"I agree, Dad" I said. "Zack and Leigh Ann Hayes are coming in for a vacation in a couple weeks. I think it would be good to sit down with Zack and see what suggestions he will have."

"Definitely," Dad agreed. "Are you going to dinner with Chase next Sunday after the Phillies game?"

"Yes, Chase invited Penny and me to join him and Jena for dinner when the game is over," I said. I noticed Penny's eyes get big. I forgot to tell her about that part of our visit to Citizens Bank Park the next weekend.

"I'll ask Chase for advice when we're down there," I agreed. "He should be able to give me some ideas."

"That would be good," Dad said. "The more information we can get, the better. We need to find out if a sports agent handles more than contracts. Who handles endorsements? Do you need a legal advisor?"

"Good questions," I agreed.

"I probably should talk with John Hayes and find out how involved he has been in Sam and Zack's business dealings," Dad added.

"OK, we have the start of a plan," I said. "I talk with Chase and Zack. You talk with Zack's dad and the financial planner. We can make a more detailed plan of action after we have more information."

"OK," Dad said. "What's the next question?"

"I guess that would be where I will live next winter," I replied.

"I have offered to share my apartment with Kyle," Penny said. "My roommate and I secured the lease last February. Now she is studying in Scotland next year and I need a roommate."

"I don't see why that would be a problem if you can put up with my son," Mom said. "He's sloppy and leaves the toilet seat up much too often. He is handy in the kitchen though."

"I'm NOT sloppy," I countered. "I'm organizationally challenged. You've got to be PC, Mom."

"I'm used to him, Mrs. Martin," Penny said, chuckling. "Anyway, I'm sure I can train him."

Mom gave Penny an odd smile and chuckled too. "I'm sure you can, dear. I'm sure you can. By the way, call me Sharon."

"I think the important question is cost," Dad interjected. "What is the rent on this apartment? Is it in a good neighborhood?"

"Next year's rent is $1295 a month," Penny replied. "The building has security at the front door, is in a nice neighborhood and only a block from Drexel and two blocks from Penn. April and I haven't had any security problems this year."

"Half of $1295 sounds reasonable, I think," Dad said. "Do you know what Penn State charges for housing, Kyle?"

"I think they charge around $3200 for the semester in a four person apartment like I have now," I said. "That is around $800 a month. What Penny and I are proposing is actually a little cheaper than paying for an apartment on campus at University Park. I'm sure it is much cheaper than the alternative for me next spring – that I go find an apartment for myself. What could I get in suburban Philly for $650 a month?"

"A closet with a pullout sofa-bed," Dad said, chuckling. "I think the rent sounds fine. How much are you going to need for food and other essentials?"

"My roommate April and I spent about $450 a month per person for food and household supplies."

"A meal plan at Penn State varies between $1,800 and $2,200 for a semester," I added.

"Does that sound reasonable, honey?" Dad asked as he looked over at Mom.

"Feeding someone Kyle's age and size?" Mom replied. "That sounds like a bargain."

"OK, that's settled," Dad said. "$650 a month for rent and $500 a month for food and household supplies. Sharon and I will talk to your parents and make sure they are fine with this, Penny."

"Do you have a roommate for the fall?" Mom asked.

"Not yet," Penny said. "I'm advertising for someone with Penn and Drexel's housing offices. They assure me that I shouldn't have any problem finding someone that needs a place for one term. Lots of kids need an extra semester to finish their graduation requirements."

"Let's reconvene this meeting in a couple weeks after you talk with Chase and Zack and I have time to do my research," Dad said.

Penny and I grabbed some iced tea in the kitchen and headed outside to enjoy the warm weather outside on our deck.

"Are you serious about Chase Utley inviting us to dinner?" Penny asked.

"Sure, that's what he said in the e-mail he sent me last week," I replied. Penny shook her head.

"I can't believe this," Penny said. "This is just amazing." Penny had a slightly dazed look.

"I've seen that look before," I said.

"What look?" Penny responded.

"You look like you don't believe you belong here," I said. "You had the same look back in ninth grade when we started hanging out with the 'cool kids' at school. You got to know them and then it was fine."

"It's not the same at all," Penny insisted. "That was Zack Hayes. Now we're talking about having dinner with a superstar ball player. It's totally different."

"Is it?" I asked. "Would you think having dinner with Zack Hayes was a big deal now?"

"No, of course not," Penny agreed.

"There are people in Wisconsin that think Zack will be the second coming of Bart Starr and Brett Favre rolled into one," I said. "They would be awed to be in his presence. We know better. Dinner with Zack and Leigh Ann will just be a dinner with friends for us. That's all."

"But we're talking about Chase Utley," Penny insisted.

"Who you haven't met yet," I said. "Chase is a genuinely nice guy who happens to work with a ball, a bat and a glove. You will understand when you meet him on Saturday. You don't hold Ed or Jeremy in awe. Ed is now a huge star in the Gator nation, thanks to rescuing their season and nearly taking them to a national championship. Jeremy is huge among the Fighting Irish fans. You know better. You will find Chase and Jena are simply nice people."

"Who make millions of dollars on TV," Penny said.

"Are you going to hold me in awe if I make millions of dollars?" I asked.

"No, but you don't make that," Penny replied.

"Only because I value my education," I countered. "A couple of the draft gurus thought I would go mid-first round in the NFL draft if I had declared for the draft this year. A year from now we may have plenty of money."

"In my head I know what you're saying is true," Penny agreed. "It all just seems so unreal."

"You'll get used to it," I said. "Some of the perks that come with a famous boyfriend can be pretty nice – like dinner with Chase and Jena Utley."

"Yes, they are nice," Penny agreed, chuckling. "Some of the other perks are nice too, like this morning, loverboy."

"I'm glad you enjoyed this morning. I certainly did," I replied. "Relax and go with the flow on Saturday. You'll see what I'm talking about when you meet my friends. They're nice, down to earth people that I know you will like."

Hunter and the twins found us outside, effectively ending our conversation. The three kids loved having Penny around and Penny loved playing with the little ones. We played with them until it was bath time. Penny hung around and helped me with their bedtime story.

--oooOooo--

Ed, Paige, Kathy, Jeremy, Penny and I went to dinner at Ruby Tuesdays in Rockvale Square. After dinner we headed over to the Village Greens for an evening of mini-golf. After golfing, we grabbed some ice cream at the Ice Cream Shop in the center of Strasburg before heading home.

Penny and I went shopping after dinner Thursday night. We needed to get birthday presents for a certain pair of young boys who turned three next Thursday. Penny wanted to stop by the Sports Authority in Park City while we were shopping. She had developed a certain rooting interest in the Nittany Lions and needed a proper shirt to wear when she visited Penn State in the fall.

The clerk at the store recognized me immediately. He was the same one who helped Kelly and me last summer. I ended doing half a dozen autographs, including two on my replica jerseys, before Penny and I finished. We also picked up a Nittany Lion plush toy for Hunter. Both of us knew he was going to have trouble when Noah and Connor were showered with presents at their birthday party and he received nothing.

Penny came over after dinner Friday night with her overnight bag. We caught a movie outside Millersville before heading back to my house. Penny and I performed the rites of spring twice that evening before falling asleep beside each other.

Penny and I got up around nine o'clock on Saturday morning. Hunter, Noah and Connor appeared the second Penny and I came up from the basement. I made ham and cheese omelets for my lover and myself. I made small cheese omelets for the three mooches. The boys enjoyed their second breakfast with us.

"T'ank you, Unka Ky," Noah said as he finished his omelet. "Breakfast good."

"Yeah, t'ank you," Connor agreed. "T'ank you for being here, Penny."

"Good you are Unka Ky's gir'friend," Noah added. "You nice."

"Yeah, nice," Connor agreed.

"Yeah, Penny good," Hunter said.

"Thank you, boys," Penny replied. "I enjoy spending time with you."

"You p'ay [play] wit' us?" Connor asked. "P'ease p'ay wit' us, Unka Ky."

"Yeah, p'ease Unka Ky?" and "Please?" the others begged,

"Sorry, guys" I said. "Penny and I are going to a baseball game today. I bet there are some good cartoons on TV now."

"Cartoons?" Noah said. "Yeah, let's see cartoons."

"Yeah, let's go, Noah," Connor agreed. The twins raced off for the family room TV.

"Yeah! 'toons," Hunter squealed as he ran after his bigger nephews.

"That was deftly handled," Penny said as the kids disappeared.

"It's just from practice," I replied. "The kids are great but they're easily distracted."

"You're going to make a good daddy someday," Penn said.

"I think I'll enjoy it when the time comes," I said. "I envy how close Andy is to his boys, though I wouldn't have wanted a family under his circumstances."

"You'll have a family eventually," Penny replied. "Let's get cleaned up so we can get to the ball park. I can't wait to meet some of the players."

"Sounds good to me," I agreed.

I finished up the breakfast dishes with Penny's assistance. We took off for the ball park as soon as we finished. I thought it was faster to go down Route 41, 1 and 322 from Gap to Chester and then up I-95 to get to the ball park than to go to King of Prussia and down the Schuylkill Expressway. Penny disagreed.

I listened to my lover and she was right. I pulled into the parking lot at the ball park an hour and ten minutes later. We probably saved ten or fifteen minutes following Penny's route. The parking passes Chase sent us got me into the VIP parking area near the entrances.

We headed inside. I gave an usher the note Chase gave me to send to him when we arrived. Penny and I found our seats in Section 118, behind the Phillies dugout. We were about three rows back from the front rail and the fourth and fifth seat in from the aisle. We had to squeeze by a nice looking lady who looked to be around thirty years old to get to our seat.

She gave us a friendly smile as we passed her. I noticed she was wearing a Chase Utley jersey. I presumed she was a fan of his. A Phillies warm-up jacket was draped on the seat between me and her. I assumed that belonged to her boyfriend or husband, who was out getting snacks for his lady.

Penny and I got settled and watched the Phillies ground crew prepare the field. The players came out a couple minutes later. We watched as our team prepared for the afternoon's battle. The lady to my right did the same.

"Do you get to Phillies games often?" she asked after we watched for a couple minutes.

"No, not nearly enough," I replied. "I go to school at Penn State. Between school and working over the summer, I don't get to see many Phillies games. Are you a big Chase Utley fan? He's my favorite player on the team."

"Mine too," Penny added.

"I guess you could say he's mine too," she answered, chuckling.

"Taylor!" a familiar voice beyond exclaimed. "You met Kyle." Penny, the lady and I turned towards the voice. It was Devin Kerr. "Kyle, I see you met my step-mom."

"We were just talking, Devin," the lady replied. Suddenly I remembered. This was Taylor Utley Kerr, Chase's sister and Devin's step-mom. "Taylor, this is Kyle Martin, the wide receiver from Penn State who helped Chase and me get tickets to a Penn State game two years ago and helped me when I went to football camp last summer."

"It's very nice to meet you, Kyle," Taylor said. "Devin has such nice things to say about you."

"Kyle, this is Taylor Kerr, my step-mom and Chase's sister," Devin said by way of introduction.

"It's very nice to meet you, Mrs. Kerr," I replied.

"No ... no, call me Taylor," she answered.

"This is my girlfriend, Penny Edwards," I explained. "Penny, this is Taylor Kerr, Chase's sister and her step-son Devin. Devin is a wide receiver like me and a prospect the Nittany Lions are looking at."

Penny greeted Chase's sister and nephew warmly. We talked for a few minutes as we watched the Phillies players warm up for the game. Jena Utley joined us a few minutes later. I introduced her to Penny. Chase concentrated on preparing for his game, ignoring the five of us in the stands.

When warm-ups were finished Chase gave our group a wave and motioned for us to come down to the rail at the end of the Phillies dugout. Chase greeted Jena and Taylor. He high fived Devin before turning to me and Penny.

"Hey Kyle, it's great you could make it," Chase said. He reached up and we shook hands.

"Thanks for inviting us, Chase," I replied. "I'd like to introduce you to my girlfriend, Penny Edwards." Turning to my lover, I added, "Penny, I'd like to introduce you to my friend, Chase Utley."

"Mr. Utley, it's such a treat to meet you," Penny gushed as she shook Chase's hand.

"Mr. Utley is in California," Chase answered. "Please call me Chase."

"Wow! Thanks ... Chase," Penny raved. "I'm a huge fan of yours."

"That's very kind of you," Chase said. "Let me introduce you to a few of my friends."

Penny's eyes grew big as Chase called over his teammates to say hello to us. We met Ryan Howard, Jimmy Rollins, Placido Planco, Carlos Ruiz, Jason Werth and Shane Victorino. The guys greeted Jena and Taylor as they mingled with us. They knew Devin by name. He obviously had spent significant time around the big club thanks to his father.

Penny collected autographs as she talked with her heroes. The guys left when Coach Davey Lopes chased them inside to finish preparing for the Cubs. We headed back to our seats. Penny was dumbfounded at meeting so many of her baseball heroes in the space of five minutes.

"My friends at school will be astounded!" Penny gushed. "We were in the crowd on Broad Street last fall cheering these guys during the parade after the World Series. My friends aren't going to believe I met them."

"They will be fine with it," I replied. "Do you want to go find some lunch before the game starts? I'm getting hungry."

"Sure, that sounds good, Kyle," Penny agreed. We headed across the stadium. I knew I wanted some barbecue from Bull's Barbecue. Penny spotted the Tony Luke's stand and had to have one of his delicious roast pork sandwiches. I remembered just how good Tony Luke's pork sandwich was last winter when Penny brought her sandwich back. We ended up getting the best of both. I shared some of my barbecue with Penny and she shared some of her pork sandwich with me.

We settled back at our seats with large sodas and dishes of Turkey Hill ice cream and waited for the start of the game. Devin chattered away about his experiences as a football recruit.

A dozen college coaches had called him now that they were allowed to talk with him. Penn State remained at the top of his list of preferences. He planned a fall official visit to us, hopefully the weekend of October 6th. That way he could get in to see us play Michigan.

Roy Halladay was on the mound for the Phillies that afternoon. He faced the Cubs' Carlos Silva. Silva was a big right handed Venezuelan pitcher who was 6-1 on the season. He was very tough on left handers, which included a good part of the Phillies lineup.

The game turned into a real pitcher's duel between Silva and Halladay. Neither team got on base until the fourth inning. The Cubs' Marlon Byrd managed a broken bat single to get on base. The next batter, Tyler Colvin, the Cubs' young left fielder, crushed an off speed pitch and sent it out of the park. The Cubs took a 2-0 lead. Halladay wasn't rattled. He retired the next three batters.

The game stayed at 2-0 Cubs into the seventh inning, when Silva seemed to run out of gas. Jimmy Rollins smashed a line drive into the gap and sprinted to first base well ahead of the throw. Placido Polanco worked Silva hard but unfortunately popped up on the 3-2 pitch.

Chase stepped into the batter's box. He worked Silva to three balls and two strikes. He fouled off a couple more nasty pitches before drawing a walk. Chase took his base as Jimmy trotted ahead to second.

Ryan Howard took another practice swing and strode up to the plate. Lou Pinella, the Cubs manager, called time and headed out to the mound to talk with Silva and the Cubs' catcher, Geovany Soto. After a couple minutes conference, Pinella walked back to the dugout, allowing Silva to try to get Howard out.

Big Ryan fell behind on the count 1-2. He crushed the fourth pitch. It flew down the first base line. The hushed crowd waited for the umpire's call. The crowd let out a collective sigh as the umpire signaled the ball was foul. Silva dug deep and unleashed a fast ball low on the inside. Ryan couldn't handle it, striking out swinging.

Jason Werth took the plate confidently. Jason was on a hitting tear lately, batting over .350 in the past three weeks. I think Silva meant to throw a curve on the first pitch, but it didn't curve. It came right down the middle, slow and tantalizingly juicy. Jason smashed it into the stratosphere. It looked like it would go the whole way to Ashburn Alley at the far end of the park. It didn't make that far but there was no question whether it was a home run. It was.

Jimmy, Chase and Jason trotted around the bases to the cheers of the big, partisan crowd. The score was now Phillies – 3, Cubs – 2. Carlos Silva was done for the afternoon. Shane Victorino managed to get on base in that inning but Carlos Ruiz couldn't advance him.

Charlie Manuel let Roy Halladay continue pitching. Roy cruised through the eighth and then the ninth, not letting anyone on base. The Phillies ended up with a nice 3-2 victory over the #2 team in the NL Central.

Penny and I hung out as the crowd streamed to the exits. As they were departing Jena asked Taylor, "Do you and Devin want to hang around? Chase and I are taking Kyle and Penny to dinner."

"No, that sounds like fun but someone ... who shall remain nameless, is trying to squeeze in a ballgame and a birthday party today," Taylor replied.

"I have to go!" Devin insisted. "That party is for my girlfriend's best friend. Bailey would crucify me if I missed Danielle's party. I didn't want to miss this pitching matchup either. Halladay versus Silva – it was just as good as I expected."

"The two of you better get on the road if Devin is going to stay in Bailey's good graces," Jena said. She gave Taylor a big hug. "It was good to see you, Taylor."

"It was good to see you too, Jena," Taylor replied.

"Aren't you going to give your aunt a hug before you go, Devin?" Jena asked.

"Aunt Jena!" Devin fussed. "I'm seventeen!"

"C'mon, Devin," Jena asked. She held her arms out to her nephew.

"All right," Devin replied as he gave his aunt a perfunctory hug, complete with the eye roll that seventeen year olds specialize in.

"I'll see you, Aunt Jena," Devin said when he was released. He turned towards us. "It was nice to meet you, Penny."

"It was nice to meet you, Devin," Penny replied.

"Did you find out, Kyle?" Devin asked. "Are you going to work any of the football camps this summer?"

"I am," I replied. "I'm working the Senior Camp this summer."

"Cool! That's the one I'm going to," Devin said. "I hope I'm assigned to your floor in the dorm."

"I'm not in charge of a floor this summer," I answered. "Coach Burton asked me to help coach the wide receivers."

"That's even better," Devin said. "I'll see you next month, Kyle."

"Yes, I'll see you then, Devin," I replied.

Jena, Penny and I hung out at the ball park for about forty minutes until Chase was ready for join us. Jena gave her husband a big hug and a kiss when he met us. All of us complimented Chase on his game.

"No, I didn't have a good game," Chase protested. "I didn't get a hit all day. Silva came with his best stuff."

"It happens," Jena consoled. "You had a great at bat in the seventh. You wouldn't let Silva get you out. You advanced Jimmy with a walk and made Jason's game winning home run happen. That's not a bad day."

"Statistics don't always matter," I added. "Last season my best two games statistically were the two my team lost. My worst two games were important victories for my team. We both play team games. You contributed to the win today. That's what matters."

"Yeah, I know," Chase agreed. "Still, I'm going to have to go in early tomorrow and do more film study to see what I did wrong today."

"Watch out, Penny," Jena said. "You're going to have to get used to playing second fiddle to a film machine sometimes if your boyfriend is as driven as my husband. How long have you dated? Have you seen that side of successful athletes?"

 
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