"I'm not a deadbeat." Asad said.
Coach Henry Jacobs stood looking at the teenage boy, jaw clenched, his brawny arms folded across his chest. His green-hazel eyes were hard as slate giving him the forbidding appearance of a bald eagle. This had been arguing for some time now in his office, and Asad was going to be late for his AP Philosophy class.
It was a lost cause, of course, because Coach Jacobs was never known to have lost an argument with his players.
A clock ticked on the wall. Somewhere in the room a fly buzzed. The overhead florescent lights glinted off the sides of Coach's gold Aggie ring. Asad knew he was not only angry (helplessly angry, an interior voice chimed in), but also scared, because time had seemed to slow down now; he couldn't help but fixate on these little details in his environment.
Jacobs considered his response for what seemed a long time.
"Well, Asad, you might not be a deadbeat, but you are in deep shit, son" Jacobs said, at last, in his soft, Southern drawl.
"I'll have the money-"
"You said that last week,"
"I thought I was going to-"
"And the week before that. Look, you don't give me a choice here, Asad. You're either going to pay off your debt, or you're going to work it off. One or the other."
"Work it off? How?"
Jacobs chuckled. He took on the weary, half-smiling expression of a correctional officer.
"What are you going to do with your life, Asad?" Jacobs said, avoiding his question.
The boy groped for an adequate answer. It was something had wrestled with for some time, and knew that saying the right words now was crucial. For such a strong, handsome boy, so fast, so ruthless on the field, he had a curious habit of folding under questioning by his elders.
"I-I don't know. I'm going to U of H, to study engineering, but..."
"Don't stammer in my office, boy. I expect better than that from my quarterback, especially since we're going up against Westchester next week."
"Yes, sir," Asad said.
"Either pay up, already, or get ready to roll up your sleeves and get your hands dirty. I have a party Thursday night at my dad's place in the country, and I'm hurting for wait staff."
"Okay, Coach, okay."
Asad Udovicic looked away from his Coach's glare. The whole situation was surreal. He had snorted one thousand six hundred dollars' worth of cocaine over a semester. Cocaine the older man had supplied him, and now the bill was past due.
Jacobs had to fight hard to look away from the waistband of Asad's yellow jockey compression shorts peeking over his low slung gym shorts like a dazzling lemon wedge. The older man's eye traced the contours of the teen's impressive bulge, traveled upwards, and measured Asad's pecs. The words Jefferson High Mustangs rippled across the boy's chest.
"Go on to your next class," Jacobs said.
Asad left, closing the door gently behind him.
Jacobs had developed a minor obsession with Asad Udovicic. The Croatian teen was tall, well-built, with the broad, handsome face, high cheekbones, and full lips typical of Slavic males. Asad's black hair was neatly trimmed in a high and tight cut that Jacobs very much approved of. He also possessed a nine and half inch penis, as everyone at Jefferson Davis High School knew. His nickname on the team was "Anaconda."
The problem was that this young Adonis belonged to what Jacobs termed Generation Wuss. When it came right down to it, these kids expected something for nothing, and they wanted it right now. Not that it lessened his attraction to the boy. Despite his shortcomings, Asad had real potential-maybe even pro potential. Watching the teen go, Coach Jacobs couldn't help but feel a stab of hunger for the boy's perfect ass, for his youth, for his vitality.
***
Asad walked to the senior parking lot later, as the school day drew to a close, feeling low. This whole mess was exactly what his father had warned him about. He was falling prey to Western decadence. There' no way in hell he'd ask his family for the money.
He felt like talking to no one, but didn't get very far before he was surrounded by a group of hangers on, and their girlfriends. It wasn't easy to have a moment alone at Jefferson Davis High, not for the 2013 Gatorade Texas High School Football Player of the Year.
Still, the idea of having to wait tables for a private party as means to pay Coach back what he owed did not scare Asad in the least...
Not, at least, until the next day.
Asad Udovicic's jaw dropped when Coach Jacobs informed him of the details.
Once again, they were in Jacobs' office.
"I'm going to what?"
"Did I stutter? Go on and pick your jaw up off the floor, Asad. I told you you'd pay off what you owe, or you'd work it off. I didn't say you were going to like it."
"That's really funny, Coach, I mean it. Everything you just told me. A real knee-slapper," Asad said.
But there was nothing warm, or humorous about the way Henry was looking at him now.
"Not as funny as you're going to look, serving food and drinks to all those older men in your tighty-whiteys, Anaconda."
"No way, Coach, no way."
"Then, I have no choice. I'll have to let the boys know who talk to about collecting payment."
"The boys?"
"Yeah, believe me, you don't want the boys to have to pay you a visit," Coach Jacobs said, an ominous note creeping into his voice.
The man who spoke these words was a total stranger to Asad. For years, Udovicic had felt an overwhelming surge of trust, and respect, laced with a healthy amount of fear, for Coach Henry Jacobs. He was Jefferson Davis High's own General Patton.
But the man, the legend that was Coach Jacobs was also a bit of a father figure to many of the boys, and indeed, spent more time with them on average than their real fathers did. He reminded them, in fact, of Kyle Chandler on Friday Night Lights. Jacobs even quoted from that particular show frequently, citing the coach's catchphrase, "Clear minds, full hearts, can't lose," before a big game.
So Asad was startled when Jacobs learned of his cocaine predilection, and said this to him: