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Paige first noticed her weeks ago, a figure standing just beyond the edge of the locker room, quiet as a shadow but impossible to miss once you really looked. Wren Calloway never spoke, never waved, never made a fuss-she simply waited. Every game, every practice, her presence was constant. Paige couldn't explain why, but seeing Wren there, always patient, always steady, felt like a small anchor in the chaos of the court.
She was unassuming in a way that made her feel familiar immediately-her hair usually pulled back in a simple ponytail, minimal makeup, a calm, thoughtful expression that seemed to watch without judging. Her eyes, sharp but kind, tracked Paige's every move from across the hallway, and even when the crowd roared and teammates celebrated, Wren's presence remained a quiet, steady heartbeat.
Paige noticed the little things: how Wren shifted her weight from one foot to the other during long games, how she tucked a stray lock of hair behind her ear, how her lips curved in a small, almost invisible smile whenever Paige made a play. She never sought recognition; she didn't need to. Paige found herself looking forward to the games not just for basketball, but for that brief, grounding glimpse of Wren, standing there without demand, a quiet reminder that someone could see her-not for her stats, not for her fame, just for her.
There was a serenity in Wren's patience, a kind of silent devotion that was almost dizzying in its simplicity. And Paige, amidst the noise of the arena and the pressure of every game, realized she'd been drawn in slowly, in ways she hadn't anticipated, by someone who simply knew how to wait.