Extra Basket-Chapter 122 - 109: The End of 3rd Quarter

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Chapter 122: Chapter 109: The End of 3rd Quarter

Jamie clenched his jaw, the echo of the crowd’s cheers pounding in his ears.

"We’re not done. I’m not letting this game slip any further."

He turned sharply, calling for the inbound. Troy didn’t hesitate — the ball flew into Jamie’s hands.

Jamie immediately pushed forward, quick and sharp with each step, his sneakers squeaking on the hardwood. The moment the ball touched his fingers, the court around him felt smaller — like a tunnel closing in. Every noise, every breath, every movement was narrowed down to one thing:

"Score. Fast."

Louie was backpedaling, trying to match Jamie’s speed. But Jamie wasn’t trying to go around him this time. He crossed left, hard, then spun right — a blur of movement. Louie reached out, but Jamie was already past him.

"(This pressure... I’ve felt it before,)" Ethan thought, his eyes glued to the court.

"(It’s like that day... where Alec got awakened..)"

Jamie dashed toward the paint, and just as Brandon stepped up to help, Jamie zipped a bounce pass behind him to Maco, who had cut into the open space.

Maco caught it in stride.

"Finish it," Jamie shouted.

Maco rose up — Aiden tried to contest, but it was too late.

Slam.

The rim rattled. The crowd gasped. Even the Vorpal bench stood for a moment, eyes wide.

72-35. One minute and ten seconds left.

Jamie landed with a glare. He didn’t celebrate.

"Next stop. Next point. We bleed this lead."

Ethan shifted in his seat. He looked over at Lucas.

"Lucas, pay attention to that cut. Jamie’s creating gravity, drawing defenders and opening lanes."

Lucas’s eyes flicked, memorizing everything, Jamie’s positioning, the timing of the pass, the way Maco had read the lane.

"(Got it... So that’s how they’re shifting the defense. It’s not just about skill — it’s rhythm.)"

....

Back on the court, Louie received the inbound again. This time he didn’t rush.

The gym quieted slightly, tension thick in the air.

Louie crossed half-court, and Jamie was already shadowing him, hand low, knees bent, locked in.

"(He’s faster this time,)" Louie thought. "(His steps are tighter. I can’t use the same move again.)"

A quick jab left, then a crossover right but Jamie was there.

Louie hesitated.

Kai cut across the arc, dragging Troy with him. Brandon posted up but Lino pressed tight, denying entry.

Coonie tried to shake Darnell, who stuck to him like glue.

Aiden moved up, offering a screen.

Louie took it.

Jamie fought through it, bumping Louie on the other side — just a moment of contact, but enough to disrupt timing.

"They’re adapting."

Louie pulled back, tried to reset — 12 seconds on the shot clock.

He passed to Aiden at the elbow.

Aiden faked the handoff, then spun into the paint, trying to muscle past Maco.

But Maco held firm.

Aiden stumbled, threw up a tough fadeaway.

Clank.

The ball hit the rim, bounced up.

Lino soared and grabbed the rebound with two hands.

The crowd roared again, Vulture fans waking up.

Jamie caught the outlet and exploded forward, a blur of energy with under 50 seconds left.

"Push. Push. Make them panic."

He darted toward the key, drew both Louie and Aiden — then whipped a no-look pass behind his back.

Straight to Darnell.

Darnell caught it at the wing.

One dribble.

Rise.

Release.

Splash.

72-38.

The Vultures’ bench erupted, slapping the floor, shouting.

"Let’s go! Let’s go!"

Ethan stood now, his heart pounding.

"It’s not about catching up anymore," he muttered. "It’s about momentum. If they end this quarter strong, they’ll come back hungrier in the next."

Lucas nodded slowly.

"(this is like a psychological warfare.)"

Ethan turned to the court again.

Louie was wiping sweat from his brow, signaling for a calm setup.

The pressure was on now not from the scoreboard, but from the fire building inside the Vultures.

Thirty-five seconds.

And counting.

...

Meanwhile, on the Portsmouth Vultures bench, the original starting five sat drenched in sweat, their jerseys clinging to their bodies. The heat of the gym and the pressure of the scoreboard weighed heavily on them. Their chests rose and fell, some leaning forward, others with towels over their heads.

Marcus Flynn, the starting point guard, leaned slightly toward Anwar Pafur, the tall and muscular center.

"We’re keeping up," Marcus muttered, eyes locked on the court as Jamie and the second unit played with relentless energy.

Anwar turned toward him, brows furrowed.

"What do you mean keeping up? It’s still one-sided — 72 to 38. We’re left behind." His voice had a frustrated edge. He grabbed the towel from his lap and wiped his face.

"Even with the bench out there, Vorpal’s still in control."

Silas Green, the forward with quick feet and sharper instincts, crossed his arms and stared at the court, jaw clenched.

"Doesn’t matter what the score says. Jamie’s changing the flow. Can’t you feel it?"

"He’s right," Rico Harrow added, the starting shooting guard, sitting with his hands clasped.

"It’s not about the points anymore. It’s the tempo. We were stumbling in the first two quarters, but now..." He glanced at Jamie weaving through defenders again.

"Now they’re on their heels."

Anwar huffed, tossing the towel to the ground.

"Still not enough. They need more than fire. We’re running out of time."

Marcus, ever the steady hand, cracked a small grin.

"Time? There’s a whole second half waiting for us. Jamie’s warming them up. Let him cook."

They watched as Jamie pushed the pace again, zipping another laser pass into the hands of Darnell, who hit a clean jumper.

"We rest now, but Fourth Quarter?" Marcus said as he stood and stretched his legs.

"We come back and finish what we started."

Silas gave a single nod.

"Let’s turn this gym upside down."

The Vultures’ starters may have been benched — but their fire was far from out. The second half would be war.

...

BACK TO THE COURT — 20 SECONDS LEFT

The gym buzzed with tension. Shoes squeaked on hardwood, breaths came sharp and fast, and the scoreboard flashed:

Vorpal Basket — 72 | Vultures — 38

Time Remaining: 00:20

Louie had the ball at the top of the key, his eyes darting between teammates and defenders. Jamie was still on him — low, balanced, reading every twitch in Louie’s body like a hawk.

"He’s not tired," Louie thought, feeling the heat of Jamie’s defense. "He’s still coming at me like it’s the first quarter."

Aiden called for a screen, and Louie nodded subtly.

As Aiden slid over to block Jamie’s path, Louie took the chance — he darted left, using the screen to get a half-step of space.

Jamie recovered quickly, fighting over the screen, but Louie had already shifted the ball behind his back and split toward the free-throw line.

15 seconds.

Coonie cut hard to the wing, dragging his defender with him. Kai faked backdoor, then sprinted toward the top.

Brandon posted up Lino near the block, calling for the ball.

Louie looked up — too much traffic.

Instead, he pulled up.

A quick release. Clean form.

Jamie lunged, fingertips grazing the air — but not the ball.

Swish.

The crowd exploded. A smooth mid-range jumper — cold-blooded and precise.

74–38.

8 seconds left.

Jamie took the inbound pass quickly and charged down the court. His brows furrowed, mind racing.

"No time to reset. Gotta strike fast."

He passed mid-dribble to Darnell, who caught it in stride and slashed toward the basket. Coonie tried to close the gap, but Darnell’s first step was too quick — explosive.

"Go!" Jamie shouted.

Darnell rose, right at the buzzer, and laid it in over Brandon’s outstretched arms.

BEEP!

The buzzer echoed through the gym. The ball dropped clean.

The crowd murmured, some cheering, some silent.

....

3rd quarter end

Score: Vorpal Basket — 74 | Vultures — 40

The buzzer had barely faded before both teams began walking toward their benches. Players traded tired smiles and lazy high-fives, sweat dripping from their brows, jerseys clinging to their backs. Some dropped onto the bench with a sigh, others stayed standing, fired up.

From the sideline, Ethan stood with arms crossed, eyes sharp and focused, still analyzing the last few minutes before the break.

Lucas stood beside him, arms behind his back, eyes just as intense.

"Did you already analyze them?" he asked casually, not taking his gaze off the Vultures’ huddle.

Ethan nodded slowly.

"My analysis is already completed."

...

Meanwhile, on the Vorpal bench, Ryan gave a big grin and slapped a high-five to Brandon, who was still catching his breath.

"Damn, you were dominating the game back there!" Ryan said, wide-eyed.

Brandon smirked and wiped his forehead with a towel.

"I won’t give you my chocolate, Ryan."

Ryan scratched the back of his head, laughing sheepishly.

"Hehehe, got caught."

Nearby, Aiden was panting, his chest rising and falling steadily. His arms rested on his knees as he leaned forward.

Josh Turner looked over and nodded approvingly.

"Nice game you played out there, Aiden."

Aiden looked up, gave a quick thumbs-up.

"Gotta do what I gotta do."

At the end of the bench, Evan approached Louie, clapping a hand on his shoulder.

"You were incredible out there. Looks like Ethan’s training is paying off."

Louie grinned wide, confidence pouring off him as he raised both arms dramatically.

"Heh, who do you think I am? I’m Louie Gee Davas — streetball prodigy, remember that!"

With that, Louie turned and jogged over toward Ethan.

He stopped in front of him, still catching his breath but wearing a big smile.

"Ethan!! How did I do?"

Ethan looked up at him, calm as always, and gave a small nod.

"You did good."

Louie beamed, proud of the praise. Then he looked at Lucas, who was watching the scene with a flat expression.

Louie tilted his head, a smug look on his face.

"Heh."

Lucas raised an eyebrow.

"Call me senior, junior..."

Louie snorted a laugh.

"hmmm Senior... my ass"

The mood lightened around the Vorpal bench. Despite the pressure, the players were energized, bonded. It wasn’t just talent keeping them ahead — it was chemistry.

..

Meanwhile, across the court, the original Vultures starters were watching the court from their bench.

Anwar Pafur, arms crossed, shook his head.

"Tch. What a joke."

Marcus Flynn, their starting point guard, muttered,

"We’re keeping up, though. They’re not running us out completely."

Anwar turned to him, visibly annoyed.

"I said... What do you mean keeping up? It’s 74–40. We’re getting smoked."

Silas Green, cool and composed as always, added,

"Doesn’t matter. 4th quarter is ours. That was just warm-up. Let’s remind everyone who we are."

Rico Harrow, the shooting guard, tightened his headband and cracked his knuckles.

"Time to take back the game."

.....

Back on Vorpal’s side, Ethan remained standing as the team sat, drinking water and listening to the coach’s instructions.

He looked out over the court again.

"First half... controlled. 4th quarter... we seal it."

Lucas nodded, stepping forward slowly.

"And I’ll be on the floor this time."

Louie chuckled as he took a sip of water.

"Let’s see what you got, senior."

The second half was about to begin.

New fire. New energy.

The real fight was just getting started.

...

In the upper section of the gym bleachers, where the crowd wasn’t as packed but still buzzing with noise, Charlotte Graves sat with one leg crossed over the other, her arms folded as she watched the scoreboard flash:

Vorpal Basket — 74 | Vultures — 40

She wasn’t cheering, wasn’t clapping. Just watching — cool, calm, and analytical.

Her phone was off. Her attention? Completely locked in.

The camera zoomed across the court for halftime coverage, passing by Lucas, seated on the bench next to Ethan. Charlotte’s sharp eyes narrowed just slightly.

"Hoh..." she murmured under her breath.

Her lips pressed into a thin line. Her little brother, the same kid who used to sneak out late at night to shoot hoops behind their apartment building was now part of a real match, sitting beside Ethan their friend.

She watched as Lucas smirked at Louie and said something snarky, and Louie shot back with the energy of a born showman.

Charlotte sighed through her nose and leaned forward slightly.

"Lucas..."

She thought back to the countless times he bragged to her about copying NBA players’ moves off YouTube.

"If you’re serious about winning this..."

She eyed Ethan Albarado closely now, calm, composed, that calculating look.

"...then you’d better follow that guy’s lead."

Charlotte looked at the scoreboard "74 to 40..." she whispered, lips curving just slightly into a smile.

"That’s to be expected..."

Her hands tightened around her water bottle as she leaned back into her seat.

"Let’s see what you do in the Fourth Quarter, little brother. Show me what all those late nights were worth."

"And Ethan... Show them who you are"

To be continue