The Jump
Hanif’s world was made of three things: the squeak of rubber on polished hardwood, the rhythmic pound of his own heartbeat in his ears, and the certain, soaring freedom of his legs carrying him into the air. At thirty-two, he was a journeyman forward, not a star, but a vital piece, a defender, a rebounder, a man who understood his role in the geometry of the game. The geometry of the accident was all wrong. A late-night ride home from a charity event, a rain-slicked curve, a truck crossing the line on the M1. He was in the passenger seat. He remembers the headlights filling the window, then a sound like the universe crumpling. Then, silence, and a strange, profound stillness in his legs. The diagnosis was a cold, clinical word: paraplegia. In the sterile hospital room, he would close his eyes and command his feet to move. Lift. Point. Flex. Nothing. He raged. He bargained. He drilled his will into his own flesh like a diamond bit, believing pure desire could rewire severed nerves....