Chapter 167: Chapter 167 - One Yard
Hayes did.
Briarwick needed points before halftime, and Woodstock knew it.
The Titans crowded the line, sent pressure from both edges, and made Zac throw before the routes could fully open. Their defense was reading his eyes better than any team had all season. Their line kept forcing Mason and the others backward. Every snap felt smaller than the last.
So Zac stopped waiting.
He hit Reed underneath.
He threw to the running back in the flat.
He used Dylan as bait twice, pulling the safety just enough to open the middle.
Every throw came fast.
Every hit came faster.
With 30 seconds left before halftime, Zac sold the handoff hard enough to make number 35 step inside.
That was all he needed.
He rolled right and threw across his body to Reed near the sideline.
Reed caught it, turned, and got shoved out at the 9.
Timeout.
Zac jogged toward the sideline, chest heaving.
His ribs burned. His shoulder pulsed. The stadium noise pressed against his helmet until the whole field felt too close.
Then he saw Roxie.
She stood near the cheer line with her pom-poms lowered at her sides. Her hair was pulled high, a few loose strands stuck near her cheek, and the gold glitter near one eye caught under the stadium lights.
Everything behind her blurred for half a breath.
The crowd.
The cameras.
The scoreboard.
Roxie stayed clear.
She looked at him like she could see through the helmet, the pads, the mud on his jersey, and every bit of effort he was using to keep his face steady.
His heart pounded hard enough to hurt.
He could lose the game.
He could lose the record.
He could lose to Woodstock, to the pressure, to his father in the stands, to the part of himself already bracing for how bad this would feel.
He could lose all of it right here while Roxie watched.
Her chin lifted.
Captain face.
Brave face.
The one she wore when she was scared and still refused to hand fear to anyone else.
Zac’s fingers tightened around his helmet.
Stop looking at her.
You’re going to mess this up.
Hayes stepped in front of him. "Front corner. Dylan."
Zac looked toward the end zone.
Woodstock expected it.
The corner was already watching Dylan’s feet. The safety had his weight tilted that way. They knew Zac liked him there.
Zac knew they expected it.
Expecting Dylan and stopping Dylan were two different things.
The ball had to come out early.
No hesitation.
He threw anyway.
Dylan cut outside, planted on the taped ankle, and came back hard toward the front corner. The corner grabbed his jersey again, but Dylan ripped through it, reached back, and caught the ball against his chest as he fell.
He hit the ground on his side and slid across the paint.
The referee’s arms went up.
Touchdown.
Ravens 21.
Titans 24.
Dylan stayed down long enough for Zac’s stomach to tighten.
Then Dylan rolled over and held the ball up.
Halftime came with Briarwick down 3.
Hayes kept it short in the locker room.
Woodstock was stronger up front.
Their quarterback was too calm.
Their defense was reading Zac too well.
So Briarwick had to steal one.
Hayes drew it on the board.
Lateral to Dylan.
Reed deep.
80 yards if the safety bit.
Dylan sat on the bench with a trainer taping his ankle tighter.
Zac looked at his wrist.
Dylan glared at him. "I can throw it."
Zac nodded once.
The third quarter opened with Woodstock punching first.
Their quarterback led a long drive that dragged almost 7 minutes off the clock. Kyle nearly knocked the ball loose from the slot receiver, but the Titans fell on it first.
Woodstock scored anyway.
Titans 31.
Ravens 21.
The stadium felt heavier after that.
The cameras turned toward Zac.
He could feel the game trying to tilt out of reach.
Across the field, the cheer line had gone quieter.
Roxie stood near the numbers, hands tight around her pom-poms. Angela was beside her. Karen looked furious, but Roxie barely moved.
She was watching him.
Only him.
Zac’s throat tightened.
She looked too pretty for this field. Too bright against the torn grass, blue jerseys, and mud-streaked uniforms. Her face held steady like she was trying to give him some of it from across the field.
He wanted to go to her.
Instead, he had a 10-point hole and last year’s champions smelling blood.
Zac looked away.
Win the damn game.
On the next drive, Woodstock crowded the line.
They expected Zac to force something.
Their safety crept forward. Their corner leaned toward Dylan. Number 35 pointed at Zac before the snap.
There.
Zac took the ball and tossed it backward to Dylan.
The defense froze.
Dylan caught the lateral and started right like he was going to run.
The Titans bit.
The safety came down.
Reed slipped behind him.
Dylan planted on his bad ankle and threw.
The ball sailed high.
40 yards.
50 yards.
60 yards.
Reed ran under it and caught it over his shoulder without breaking stride.
The Briarwick sideline exploded.
He kept running until a Titan dragged him down at the 3.
80 yards.
Three plays later, Zac ran it in behind Mason.
Titans 31.
Ravens 28.
After that, the game turned into damage.
Woodstock hit harder.
Briarwick hit back.
Kyle started taking the slot receiver apart one tackle at a time. He fought off blocks, ripped free, and drove through the catch. Once, he knocked the ball loose and the Briarwick side screamed, but the bounce went back to Woodstock.
The Titans kicked a field goal.
Titans 34.
Ravens 28.
The fourth quarter started with Zac’s shoulder burning and his ribs tight every time he breathed deep.
He had thrown for more than 300 yards.
He was 31 yards from the state championship passing record.
He hated knowing the number.
Mason knew he knew.
Before the next snap, Mason looked back between his legs. "Scoreboard."
Zac looked up.
Titans 34.
Ravens 28.
Right.
That was the number that mattered.
The drive moved fast.
Reed for 12.
The tight end for 8.
Dylan dragging coverage downfield even while limping.
At the Woodstock 36, Zac saw the Titans shift toward Reed.
Dylan stood alone on the other side.
His gloved hand opened once by his thigh.
I can beat him.
Zac trusted him.
The ball snapped.
Dylan burst off the line.
His ankle had to hurt. Zac could see it in the sharp anger of his first step.
The corner grabbed at him.
Dylan ripped through it.
Zac threw before the safety recovered.
The ball dropped over Dylan’s outside shoulder.
Dylan caught it, dragged one foot, then the other.
24 yards.
The announcer’s voice cracked over the stadium.
"With that completion, Zac Prescott has broken the state championship passing record."
The whole place erupted.
Briarwick screamed.
Cameras flashed near the track.
Zac heard his name.
He heard record.
He heard historic.
Then his eyes went to the cheer line.
Roxie was clapping with everyone else, but her face was different from the crowd’s.
Everyone else looked thrilled.
Roxie looked straight at him.
She understood the part that still felt wrong.
He wanted one breath where the record meant something because she saw it.
Then Mason shouted from the line, and the field snapped back into place.
Zac turned away.
Finish.
Two plays later, Woodstock doubled Reed and Dylan.
Zac kept the ball.
He ran through the middle, followed Mason’s back, and took the hit at the goal line with the ball tucked high against his ribs.
Pain flashed white behind his eyes.
Then he fell across the line.
Touchdown.
Ravens 35.
Titans 34.
Briarwick had the lead.
For 4 minutes, they had the lead.
Then Woodstock took it back.
Their quarterback stayed calm through the noise, through Kyle’s hits, through Briarwick’s pressure. On third and goal, he threw to the same slot receiver Kyle had been hitting all night.
Kyle arrived half a step late.
He hit him anyway.
The receiver held on.
Touchdown.
Titans 41.
Ravens 35.
1:12 left.
Zac put his helmet on.
The strap snapped under his chin, and the sound felt final.
Across the field, Roxie stood still with her hands tight around her pom-poms.
The record announcement still rang somewhere behind the noise.
438 yards.
New state championship record.
The number sat on him like weight.
A record meant cameras. Headlines. People saying his name. His father hearing everyone else call him historic.
But the scoreboard still had Woodstock ahead.
Titans 41.
Ravens 35.
6 points to tie.
7 to win.
72 seconds to save everything.
Zac walked into the huddle.
Mason’s chest rose hard under his pads. Dylan stood with most of his weight on one leg. Reed’s eyes stayed up, but his face had gone pale. The line looked wrecked.
Every boy in front of Zac looked like he had been hit for 4 quarters and chose to stand there anyway.
The weight of it pressed into Zac’s ribs harder than the sack had.
One mistake and the season ended.
One bad throw and the record became a consolation prize.
One yard short, one second late, one wrong read, and all of this became a story people told with pity in their voices.
Zac swallowed and looked at them.
"One drive," he said.
His voice came out rougher than he wanted.
The first throw went to the tight end for 9.
The tackle came hard, but he held on.
The offense hurried to the line.
The second throw went to Reed near the sideline.
Catch.
Step out.
First down.
48 seconds.
The crowd was standing now. Zac could barely hear Hayes. His own breathing filled his helmet, sharp and uneven.
Woodstock rushed again.
The right side collapsed.
Mason shoved the defender just enough for Zac to step up.
A hand scraped his jersey.
Zac threw to the running back.
6 yards.
Clock running.
40.
39.
38.
The numbers on the scoreboard started to feel louder than the crowd.
Mason sprinted to the ball.
Zac got behind him before his legs could shake.
They snapped fast.
Dylan broke across the middle.
Zac threw.
Dylan caught it and took the hit from behind.
His body slammed into the turf.
He held on.
First down at the Woodstock 29.
23 seconds.
Timeout.
Zac walked to the sideline with his chest heaving.
Hayes met him near the numbers.
"We can tie if we get closer," Hayes said. "We can win if they give it."
Zac looked at the defense.
The safety kept pointing at Reed.
The corner on Dylan looked exhausted.
The middle would open.
Maybe for a second.
Hayes saw his face. "Use it."
Zac nodded and ran back out.
23 seconds.
Down 6.
Ball at the 29.
The weight came back heavier now.
He felt every person watching.
Every camera.
Every scout.
Every student in the stands.
His father somewhere above him.
Roxie near the cheer line.
The whole season narrowed to the grass between his cleats and the end zone.
The snap came.
Woodstock dropped deep.
Reed cut toward the sideline and pulled two defenders with him.
Dylan ran hard on the other side, dragging the safety for three steps.
The middle opened.
Zac ran.
His first 5 yards came clean.
Then the linebacker closed.
Zac slid late, taking the hit across his shoulder as he went down.
The whistle blew.
14 seconds.
Ball at the 17.
Close enough to dream.
Close enough to hurt.
Mason helped him up.
Zac looked toward Hayes.
Hayes held up one finger.
One shot.
The whole field seemed to shrink.
Zac felt it in his hands first. A tight pull in his fingers. Then his throat. Then the center of his chest.
One shot for the win.
One snap left between them and the end.
The call came in.
Reed underneath.
Dylan pulling coverage deep.
Tight end blocking, then leaking out.
Running back staying in protection.
Zac stepped into the huddle.
"One shot. Reed, catch it and get north. Mason, I need the pocket."
Mason nodded.
Dylan looked at Reed. "Run."
Reed swallowed and nodded.
They lined up.
The stadium noise pressed into Zac’s helmet.
He set his hands under Mason.
His ribs screamed when he bent.
Across from him, Woodstock crouched low with rage in their eyes.
They knew the game was here.
So did he.
Zac looked once toward the cheer line.
Roxie stood frozen under the lights.
He had no time to hold onto her face.
He carried it anyway.
"Blue eighty!"
Mason snapped the ball.
Zac dropped back.
The Titans rushed.
Mason caught the first rusher and held.
The guard took the second.
The running back threw himself into the linebacker coming free.
Reed crossed underneath.
Dylan pulled the corner and safety toward the end zone.
The middle opened.
Zac threw.
The ball left his hand clean.
For half a second, hope moved faster than fear.
Reed caught it at the 6.
The stadium screamed.
He turned upfield.
A Titan grabbed him at the 4.
Reed drove forward.
Another defender hit him at the 2.
Zac started running before the whistle.
His chest locked.
Get in.
Reed twisted, reaching the ball out as bodies crashed over him.
Get in.
The pile moved half a yard.
The clock kept running.
Zac’s feet hit the grass, but he barely felt them.
Reed stretched with everything in him.
The whistle blew.
The clock hit 0.
The referee ran in.
Zac stopped breathing.
The ball was marked short.
At the 1-yard line.
For one second, the whole stadium seemed confused.
Then the Woodstock sideline exploded.
The Titans poured onto the field, helmets in the air, bodies crashing together near midfield.
Zac stood frozen at the 10-yard line.
The scoreboard glowed above them.
Titans 41.
Ravens 35.
Final.
The word hit harder than the sack.
Final.
His body understood before his head did.
His knees wanted to fold. His fingers went loose. His throat closed around air that would barely come in.
The announcer said his name again.
Historic.
Record.
438 yards.
The words sounded wrong now.
They belonged to someone who had won.
Zac looked toward the cheer line.
Roxie had stopped clapping.
Her pom-poms hung loose in her hands. People moved around her, crying, shouting, turning toward the scoreboard, turning toward the field.
Roxie stayed still.
She looked at him across all that space.
Zac hated that she had to see this.
He hated that she had seen him break a record and still stand there empty.
Reed finally pushed himself up.
His face was wrecked.
"I tried," Reed said.
Zac walked to him and grabbed the front of his jersey.
For half a second, Reed looked like he expected anger.
Zac pulled him into a hard hug instead.
"I know," Zac said.
His own voice almost broke on it.
Then Mason got there.
Dylan limped in and shoved one hand against Reed’s helmet.
Kyle came last, furious and wet-eyed.
The Titans celebrated around them.
Confetti shot near the far sideline.
Reporters ran toward Woodstock first.
Zac stood with his teammates near the 1-yard line and looked at the ball still lying on the grass.
One yard.
One more yard, and everything changed.
His chest hurt.
His ribs hurt.
His shoulder hurt.
But the worst part was the scoreboard staying exactly the same no matter how long he stared at it.
Titans 41.
Ravens 35.
He had broken the record.
He had made history.
He had given them everything he had.
And Briarwick had still lost.
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