The scent of cheap hairspray and sun-baked asphalt lingers in the air, a sticky California perfume that clings to the skin. It’s the kind of heat that makes the horizon shimmer, turning the chain-link fences of Long Beach Poly into something that looks like a cage if you stare at it long enough. Under that relentless glare, a teenage girl pulls at the hem of a polyester uniform, her movements sharp, kinetic, and entirely too big for the geometry of a football field

We talk about “making it” as if it’s a sudden rupture in time, but the truth is often written in the quiet, restless margins of a life before the world starts paying attention.
