In Her Head
Alice told everyone she was going to be a great tennis player. She announced it at family dinners, her voice bright with conviction. She updated her social media bio: Future Champion. 🎾 She even bought the crisp white outfit, the expensive racket with the famous player’s signature, and the pristine, shock-absorbent shoes that promised greatness. Her room became a shrine to intention. A poster of Serena Williams smiled grimly from the wall. A library of tennis memoirs, their spines unbroken, sat on her shelf. Her phone held a notes app list titled “Grand Slam Goals.” Alice loved the idea of tennis, the elegance of the swing, the roar of the crowd, and the shiny trophy lifted in victory. She daydreamed in cinematic detail about the final, winning point, the flashbulbs, the interview where she’d thank her parents for their unwavering support. The trouble lived in the spaces between the dreaming. At her first lesson, when the coach, a weary man named Frank who had seen a thousand Ali...