The Last Place She Ever Expected
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"You want to know what really happened that day?”
Jodie’s eyes flicked up, startled. She hadn’t expected her brother, Dean, to even bring it up—let alone to her face. She gave a little shrug and looked back at her half-empty coffee cup, swirling the lukewarm contents as if they were more interesting than the awkward memory of her high school reunion. But it was too late; Dean was already leaning in, lips pulled into that smirk he wore when he’d caught her doing something embarrassing as a kid.
“Oh, come on, Jode,” he teased. “People still talk about it.”
“Well, people still talk about what a pain you were in sixth grade, too, but I don’t bring that up every chance I get,” she shot back, trying to sound nonchalant. Inside, her stomach twisted at the memory.
Dean just chuckled and leaned back in his chair. “Yeah, but this… this was epic.”
Jodie sighed. She’d gone over it in her head a hundred times since it happened, replaying every humiliating detail, every eye roll and shocked gasp in the crowd. The day had started with hope—hope that maybe, just once, things would go smoothly for her. That hope had crumbled the minute she’d arrived.
She remembered every moment as if it were still happening.
It was a bright Saturday afternoon, the kind of day where the sun and breeze conspired to keep you in a constant state of pleasant warmth. She’d stepped out of her car, feeling almost too confident in her new outfit—a vintage dress. She’d spent more than she wanted to admit on it, but she figured it was worth it. After all, this was her ten-year reunion, the night everyone would be looking at her and—hopefully—wondering why they hadn’t been better friends with her in high school.
She’d walked into the gymnasium and spotted her old group in the far corner, giggling about something. A burst of nerves hit her, and she’d hesitated a second too long.
As she approached, her heel caught on something—the exact thing she hadn’t wanted to happen. One tiny hiccup in her step, but it was enough to send her careening forward, arms pinwheeling. Her hands had grabbed for anything they could reach—and that “anything” had been a massive, towering display of… drumroll… every trophy her high school had won in the last two decades.
The whole thing came crashing down.
Gold and silver trophies scattered across the floor in a metallic cascade, bouncing in every direction. A few people gasped, and then it happened—snickers, rising from one side of the room, quickly spreading like wildfire. She’d wanted to evaporate right there on the spot, dissolve into the sticky gym floor.
Jodie had scrambled to her feet, brushing herself off, cheeks burning. One of her old teachers—a kindly but befuddled Mr. Larson—had rushed over, muttering, “Goodness, Jodie, they haven’t seen a show like that since ’92!”
There it was: the laugh she’d been dreading. It echoed across the room, getting louder as her former classmates pointed and whispered, as if this stumble were exactly the sort of thing they’d all expected her to do.
And then, Dean—good old Dean, her loving brother—had decided to waltz in just as she’d managed to gather a few scattered trophies. He’d let out an exaggerated, “Oh no, my sister—she’s a klutz!” and the whole room had burst into laughter again. She’d never felt so small.
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“And that’s when I knew,” Dean said, pulling her back to the present with a satisfied grin. “I knew you’d either laugh it off or… well, hate me forever.”
Jodie raised an eyebrow. “Thanks for the vote of confidence, Dean.”
“Oh, come on,” he said, shaking his head, “You’ve got to admit—it was kinda funny.”
Jodie’s lips twisted into a reluctant smile. As mortifying as it had been, she could see the humor now. “Yeah, well, if you wanted to lighten up the night, you could’ve waited until after I destroyed the legacy of high school sports.”
Dean laughed, a full, hearty laugh that made a few patrons glance over at their table. He shrugged. “Look, Jodie. It was… sure, embarrassing. But everyone remembers it because it was memorable, not just some average night where nothing happened.”
She tapped her nails against her coffee cup, pondering his words. It was strange how that night, which had seemed like such a failure, was one of the few moments people remembered from that reunion. And maybe it wasn’t so bad to be remembered for something real, something human. As terrible as the moment had been, it had been hers, and maybe that was okay.
“Well,” she said, setting her cup down, “at least I made a mark.”
Dean gave her a mock salute. “That’s the spirit, Jode. And, hey, maybe next reunion, you’ll trip over something even bigger. Gotta one-up yourself, right?”
Jodie groaned, throwing a napkin at him, but she was laughing, she felt like maybe she was ready to own that memory—embarrassment and all.
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