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Power Ten by LauraLoo7
http://www.fanfiction.net/s/6191933/1/
Chapter 1: Dawn
EPOV
The air was surprisingly crisp for early September, but the threat of humidity still
lingered as the eight oars quietly sliced through the still water of the Seekonk
River. It was silent at five a.m. on the river, save for the steady, thumping
rhythm of the oars rotating in their oarlocks, the harsh exhalations of breath as
we worked and the slight rippling of the water moving in our wake. This was my
version of heaven.
"Let her run!" Alice's chipper voice sliced through the bubble I'd created in my
head that always helped me focus. Once I finished my stroke I let the oar fall flat
on the water and straightened my posture, as did the other seven guys behind
me. I had to appreciate Alice's ability to be full of sunshine this early in the
morning - and to put up with eight stinky, sweaty men on a regular basis. "Great
warm-up, guys. Now, what do you say we cut this pansy shit?"
She and I shared a knowing smirk as she readjusted herself in the coxswain's
seat - a ridiculously small space at the stern of the boat which I was convinced
was strictly designed for contortionists and tiny people like Alice - and pulled the
mic of her headset closer to her mouth. I knew the look in her eyes. She was
going to put us through our paces today.
"Countdown when ready!" One by one, beginning with my buddy Jasper Whitlock
in bow, we counted off until I yelled eight, only inches away from Alice's face.
"Ready all. Row." Oars sliced through the calm water and instantly the boat was
in motion. Once we all got into a swing, all eight perfectly in time with strong,
clean strokes, it was awesome. Perfection was usually an elusive thing this early
in the season, so I enjoyed each moment of it.
Alice let me know when the stroke rate was at a consistent 28, keeping her eyes
on the electronic display, me and the water around her. She yelled at us as we
plowed through the water, giving us feedback on the consistency and power of
our catches and drives and the balance of the boat on the finish and recovery,
analyzing every part of our strokes. We were, apparently, a bit rusty.
"Guys, set it up, please," she said. "You're down on the port side." I could feel the
shimmy in the boat when it wasn't level, and it pissed me off. When all eight
weren't perfectly in-sync, things could easily go bad and catching a crab was not
something any of us looked forward to. Sometimes the force of the inertia of a
boat in motion was enough to throw guys over their oars and into the water.
Even a small crab - losing focus just enough that you didn't feather the blade of
the oar correctly, sending it slicing down into the water at an odd angle - was
enough to have to stop a boat. And as the stroke, or eight seat, I did not want to
be that guy.
"Tyler, you're rushing your slide," Alice chirped, and the speaker crackled. "Eric,
you're not feathering properly. Everyone, please relax and watch Cullen. He's
stroke for a reason." I loved it when Alice got bossy. She called 10 power tens on
us that morning and by the time we were paddling up to the dock, we were
wheezing and coughing from the effort. Just another day at the office with the
Brown University crew team.
As we approached the dock, Alice gave us the order to lift the starboard side
oars, allowing us to kiss the dock with the side of our boat. After freeing our feet
from the shoes that were attached to the foot stretchers, we all freed the oars
from their locks and awaited her call. It always gave us a few moments of
reprieve while we waited for Alice to disconnect the cox box. She bounded out of
the stern and stood next to us.
"Count down when ready!" she called again. After we'd counted, she commanded
us to climb up and out at once, and then four of the guys ran up and into the
boathouse with the oars while the rest of us held the shell against the dock.
"Hands on," Alice said when we'd resumed our posts next to our respective seats.
"Overhead ready, up!" We all lifted the deceptively heavy boat out of the water
and over our heads in one fluid motion. There were grunts and groans of protest,
as always, as fatigued muscles strained to carry the awkward vessel. "Shoulders
ready, down," Alice called and we adjusted the boat onto our shoulders and
walked it up the ramp and into the boathouse. It took a few tries to walk it in, but
we got the boat on its rack without incident. Not bad for the first official day.
"Hey Cullen, you slipping or something?" a booming voice asked mockingly.
Turning, I was greeted by a wide, toothy grin and the thick shoulders of my
friend and roommate Emmett McCarty, who had come in a few minutes earlier. "I
saw the stern dipping a bit there when you guys walked it in. Did you spend too
much time this summer whacking off and not enough time in the weight room?"
Emmett, Jasper and I had been rowing together since freshman year and had
decided to room together early in the semester. Our former roommates did not
appreciate the alarm sounding at 3:30 a.m., the frantic dressing in the dark, the
odd dieting or drinking behaviors (to keep our weights level) or the extreme
camaraderie that we all exhibited. I suppose to an "outsider," it might have
seemed odd to have passion for such a torturous endeavor like rowing; but to us,
it was everything.
"Bite me, asshole," I said with a smirk, knowing full well that I'd spent ample
time in the gym this summer to maintain my form. I'd even convinced my folks to
help me buy a Concept II rowing machine or erg as we called it. It was a suitable
replacement for the real thing and a formidable adversary. I fucking hate ergs. "I
logged about a million meters on that damn rowing machine this summer. You
still too fat to get into our boat, McCarty?"
At over six-five and pushing 275, Emmett was much too big for our boat, where
the average height was six-three and the weight 200 pounds. He was the stroke
in the varsity four, a coxed boat of guys all similar in height and build. It might
have been hitting below the belt a bit - I knew he'd give his right nut to be in the
first boat - but Emmett was pretty thick skinned. Jasper sidled up to us and
slapped Emmett on his burly shoulder. The size difference between the two was
comical.
"Fuck you, Cullen. I'm big-boned," he said sullenly. But his mood was derailed
only for a moment and then the grin was back just as quickly. "Besides, Coach
says he's looking into entering both a coxed eight and a four this fall for Head of
the Charles. So maybe I'll get to show up both you fairies after all. Are we
partying tonight? Classes don't start for two days and damn it, I'm gonna take
advantage."
We made plans to go The Fish Co. that night in Providence - a totally shitty bar
but the college girls were plentiful - and all three of us got our shoes and water
bottles and headed upstairs to the weight room. Carlisle's routine consisted of a
two-mile run first thing at 3:45 a.m., followed by morning practice, and then one
hour in the weight room. Once classes started, we were expected to keep that
schedule and add another evening weight training session, either on the ergs or
lifting. It was beyond rigorous to everyone else, but to us it was necessary for
keeping our forms. The ladies team had the same schedule. There was no gender
bias in this sport. On our way up the stairs, a small blur of blue and brown rushed
past me before heading out the door.
"Hey guys, who was that?" I asked my friends. Jasper looked out the window at
the retreating form. All I could see was long, dark hair, blue shorts and thin white
legs. "I haven't seen her before."
"I think that was the new coxswain," Jasper offered. "Alice told me she'd
convinced her friend to try out for the open cox position. Alice said she needs to
get back to Emmett's boat for the season and Coach Esme can't spare a rower for
either of the men's boats for any of the races."
"Well, what the fuck? I thought we were going to get Alice for this season," I
grumbled. The idea of getting stuck with a brand new coxswain for my senior
year did not appeal at all. I groaned at the thought. "Can we really afford to train
a newbie? Has she ever coxed before?" Jasper shrugged as we walked down the
hall, past the coaches' offices and into the weight room. With my mind on the
possibility of my final season getting shot to hell by a new, shitty cox, my erg
split times were off and my form was horrendous.
"Ed, man, if Coach sees you looking like that on the erg, he'll pull your ass out of
the boat so fast you'll get skidmarks," Emmett said from the bench press
machine. Fuck. Reining in my paranoid thoughts, I refocused on my form and
timing and blocked out everything else for the time being. The soothing whoosh
of the erg's wheel grounded me as I surged forward and then pulled back with all
of my strength. My legs burned with the anaerobic movement, as did my lungs,
but it was a sensation I'd grown comfortable with. Once our workout was
finished, we drove back to our apartment downtown for early lunch (pasta, tuna
and salad with a side of protein shake), a little R&R and later, some pre-
barhopping drinking.
"Hey, shitface, take it easy," I joked later that night as Emmett threw back his
tenth shot. "If you can't walk yourself outta here, J and I sure as hell aren't
carrying your big, fat ass." The Fish Co. was busy for a Thursday night, and it
was early, so we'd all taken to drinking instead of watching for hot girls. We could
all hold our liquor quite well, but Emmett's eyes were getting glassy and it wasn't
even nine o'clock yet. "Pace yourself, man."
Emmett rolled his eyes at me and pounded on the bar to indicate he wanted
another drink. The bartender eyed him warily but said nothing and slid another
into his meaty hand. After downing the shot, Emmett said, "Pussies. I can handle
my Jim Beam. Besides, there aren't any hot chicks here to keep me warm, so
this'll do."
As if on cue, one of our teammates, Rosalie Hale, waltzed into the bar with a few
of the other girls from her boat. Rose, Angela, Victoria and Jess were great to
hang out with, but none of them appealed to me as more than friends. Rose was
a tough bitch; Angela was really sweet and bookish, but was a tiger in the boat.
Victoria and Jess were good rowers but were a bit petty and shallow. They all
made damn decent drinking buddies, though.
Rose sauntered over to us and put her hand on Emmett's shoulder. I was amazed
to see the change in his demeanor: from all talk and bravado to meek pussycat.
He was definitely going to deal with a shitstorm of joking later. I'd see to it.
"Hey, boys," she cooed. "What's on tap tonight? Emmett, I hope you got one of
those shots for me." Emmett stuttered and mumbled his way to obtaining
another for Rosalie, which she promptly slammed back, without even so much as
a blink. Then she ordered a round of beers for all of us and raised hers in a toast.
"Here's to senior year and what is going to be a great season! I love you guys!
Cheers!" Glass clinked against glass, followed by silence as we all chugged our
brews. Emmett's eyes were all over Rose as she chatted with her friends and me
and Jasper. This dude is seriously whipped. Does she even know it?
"Where's Alice tonight?" I asked Jasper as I signaled for another round. "I figured
she'd want to start the season out right and come out with us." Jasper laughed
and nodded, telling us his girlfriend would be arriving later. Alice, apparently, had
gotten held up speaking with Coach Esme earlier in the day and was spending
time with her roommate and our new coxswain. Again, I shuddered at the idea.
"Fuck, man, I hope she doesn't suck. We don't need another Jane this year. Too
much is at stake," I grumbled. Jane, our cox for the last two seasons, had been
sweet and pretty, but the poor thing was horrible at steering the boat and multi-
tasking, and the university's Vespoli supply had been diminished because of it.
Neither the coaches nor the benefactors of our sport appreciated their $20,000
pride and joy being dinged and damaged. Those things cost a bundle to repair.
Because we had been down one coxswain, Alice had been run ragged doing
double coxing for both our eight and the men's four. It also meant that only the
eight could compete in regattas.
Jasper laid a hand on my shoulder and attempted to assuage my worries. "Relax,
man. Ali wouldn't have suggested her friend if the girl didn't have at least some
of the qualifications," he said. "Trust my girl. She has a sixth sense about these
things. And you know she'd never want to be responsible for saddling the Brown
men's eight with a bad cox. Okay?" His words added a thin blanket of comfort
and I nodded. There wasn't much I could do about it at this point, anyways.
About an hour later, Alice walked in - alone - wrapped her arms around her
boyfriend's neck and kissed him before saying hello to the rest of us. I was
admittedly a bit curious about the girl, but the thought was fleeting.
"Hey guys!" she said, getting herself a beer. "What did I miss?" Jasper reiterated
my concerns while Emmett made goo-goo eyes at Rose. The other girls talked
amongst themselves, probably about their erg test times. Eat. Sleep. Row.
"Aww, Eddie, don't worry about your new cox, okay?" she cooed. "Bella's great
and you guys will all love her. She's smart and a quick study. After talking with
Coach today, I set her up with all of the reading materials she'll ever need and
also spent some time with her in the tank after practice. Just so Bella can get a
feel for what you guys do. It'll be fantastic!" The tank was a place where
freshmen practiced in their initial days of rowing. It was an indoor tank filled with
water with a simulated boat set up and suspended, fixed in the water. It allowed
new rowers to get the feel of the action of rowing, without the dangers of being
on the open water in a real shell. We had all paid our dues there first. Even Alice.
"Alice, if you're wrong about her, we're throwing you into the Seekonk," I
declared. "You'll be picking debris and trash out of your hair for a week." Alice
shuddered and slapped me on the arm - hard.
"Cullen, if I'm wrong, I'll jump into the damn river, okay?" she said with a smirk.
With my threat now idle, I shrugged and shook her hand on it. As the stroke, it
was vital that I develop a good relationship and synchronicity with the coxswain.
Alice and I had built up a sort of unspoken communication; it often felt like we
could read each other's minds. This new girl, Bella, and I would require the same
connection.
With our bet officially struck, I turned my attention to Angela, Jess and Victoria.
"So guys, how're things shaping up for you? I mean, I know it was only the first
day, but any good freshman prospects, or will your boat be exactly the same?" I
asked. "I didn't hear a whole lot of yelling from Coach Esme, so am I right in
assuming practice went well?" The girls all nodded in agreement and Victoria told
me that while there were a few freshmen who seemed to be naturals, it was still
much too early to know. And all four doubted that Esme would break up their
eight unless there was a prodigy among the newbies.
"So, for now we remain intact," said Angela. "Unless we start sucking this season,
Coach has no reason to rock the boat." She snickered at her pun as the others
giggled. "And thankfully Bree's back, so we're already in much better shape than
you guys!" Jess and Victoria made a point of nudging me and Jasper as Rose
nodded smugly in agreement. Their coxswain was good and had been with them
since freshman year. Clearly the women's boat had an advantage over us.
"Oh, I sense a bet comin' on," Jasper drawled with a sly grin. "You girls feel like
making it interesting?" Rose and the others bent their heads together and after a
few moments of hushed whispers, stifled giggles and wayward glances, Rose
straightened up and thrust her chin out.
"Okay, so the terms are: Head of the Charles. Men's varsity eight versus women's
varsity eight," she said, looking to Emmett who was visibly upset that he wasn't
included. "Sorry, Emmett, but it's just easier this way. So if we win or place
better than you guys, you'll all be practicing the next day in the nude." I nearly
spit out my beer. Cocks and balls slapping against legs and slides and…Ugh. "And
if you win -"
"You guys have to clean our apartments for a month!" Emmett yelled. "I mean,
their apartments." We all knew how disgustingly most of the guys lived. It was a
fair trade. Jasper and I considered the terms, and spurned on by an incentive not
to lose at the Head of the Charles, I reached out my hand for Rosalie to shake.
"Deal, Rose. Hope you guys have strong stomachs," I told the girls, who simply
looked at me with pity.
"Man, maybe we should offer the guys some ice packs and powder after their
naked practice," Victoria said with a snicker. "That's gonna hurt." The girls
laughed as Jasper, Emmett and I imagined the squishing, smacking and chaffing
of our packages. Clearly, this was not an option for us.
"Not. Gonna. Happen," I declared.
A/N: So, what do you think of Strokeward? I'm already in love. *sigh* Please
leave me some love for this fun fic! No reviews is like catching a crab – ouch!
Also, follow Strokeward on Twitter!
Glossary of Terms:
Crab - An unfortunate incident when the blade gets caught in the water and the
handle of the oar hits the midsection of the rower; can result in getting tossed
out of the boat. It is caused by the blade not entering into the water fully square,
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