Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
â Live Streamingâ Interactive Chatâ Private Showsâ HD Qualityâ Free Actions
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
You spend the last mile white-knuckling a rally towel like itâs the only piece of cloth keeping you from flying out of the cab. San Diego glows Padres-brown and gold outside the passenger windowâflags flapping from tailgates, decals catching the last blue of the sky, every off-ramp clogged with people in jerseys walking like the ground is rolling them toward the same loud place. Bob drives like heâs trying to be cool about having nitroglycerin for a heart: one hand at noon on the wheel, the other tapping a fastball tempo on the shifter. The radio is all mouthâDarvishâs cutter versus lefty thump, Wheelerâs ride at the letters, âbullpen usage will decide it,â the phrase winner takes it all tossed like a penny into a maw of callers and ex-catchers with broken voices.
âI still canât believe you managed to get World Series tickets,â you say, because the disbelief is a hiccup that wonât quit. âGame Seven. Front row. Behind home. Who did you blackmail?â
âNo felonies,â he says, grin pressed into one corner. âNavy favors. A guy who owed a guy. The universe owed me for that month I slept in a tent with a scorpion.â He taps the brim of his brown-and-gold cap with two fingers. âTold you Iâd get you close enough to smell the rosin.â
âYou keep saying that like itâs romantic.â You flip your Phillies cap backward and knot the towel tighter around your wrist. âCar truce expires when we park. After that? Blood-red war.â
âWouldnât recognize you in anything else.â He says it like a joke and then doesnât laugh, like the truth in it got his tongue.
Traffic compresses near the park. Petcoâs light towers spear into the dusk and switch from soft to surgical; the Western Metal Supply building wears a banner the size of a shipâs sailâWORLD SERIESâGAME 7âand for a second you swear the words put weight on your sternum. The parking structure elevator is shoulder-to-shoulder jerseys: a thicket of Tatis 23s, a sea of Machado 13s, a scattering of Soto 22s, your Harper 3 sticking out like a cardinal in a pine forest. A kid in an infant-sized Padres tee stares up at you with the solemnity of a priest. âYouâre brave,â he declares. His dad makes a dying noise. You crouch to the kidâs level and whisper, âWeâre all brave tonight,â and the kid nods like you handed him a spare life.
The doors slide open and the concourse breathes warm on your faceâgrilled onion heat, popcorn salt, spilled beer and sunscreen, ocean air sneaking under concrete. Vendors chant Ice-cold water! Churros! Peanuts! in rounds like a stadium choir. A brass band near Gallagher Square refuses to stop playing âSeven Nation Army.â The concrete hums with 40,000 feet. Bob defaults to logistics when feelings get big. âFood first,â he orders, as if youâre a squad and calories are ammo. Hot dog stand for himâmustard, grilled peppers, nothing silly. Cheesesteak stall for you because you found it in April and bookmarked it like a prophecy. You meet at a cutout where the ballpark opens like a postcard: the grass goggles-green under cathedral lights, home plate a white arrow, the dirt combed to velvet, the mound a small altar somebody burnished by hand. A bullpen catcher pops a warm-up throw; half the concourse flinches like theyâve been kissed.
âLast chance to defect,â Bob says, passing you napkins.
âIn your dreams, sailor.â You bite inâgrease, joy, saltâand talk around it. âBut if you cry later, Iâll lend you the towel.â
He glances away like heâs hiding from the sunshine of you. âDeal.â
Your seats are indecent. The net starts just above your eyeline; you can read the scuffs on the umpâs shoes, the pine-tar gloss on the bat handle in the on-deck circle. The jumbotron detonates a hype reel: Darvish feathering the black; Wheeler sawing men off at the top rail; Harperâs load-and-fire like a siege engine; Machado a human hinge, folding around a backhand and rifling a seed to first. Every clip wrings a different roar out of the building. Lineups roll; you go feral for HARPER 3 and a block of red twenty rows back answers like you rehearsed. Bob tries to sprain his lungs for MACHADO 13. Schwarberâs name gets booed on reflex and then respected when his postseason bombs flash like police lights.
The PAâs baritone booms the ceremonial language and the flag unfurls like a continent. Everyone stands. The anthem skims the rafters and then the jets rip the sky open, carving white seams through indigo. Without thinking, Bobâs hand finds the small of your back; without thinking, you lean into it like gravity.
Warm-ups sharpen. Darvish looks like heâs rehearsed by a choreographerâcat-shouldered, balanced, elegant even when heâs mean. Wheeler is a blade warmed to a glow in right-center, long toss into violence, then fastballs that knock invisible dust off the air. You and Bob trade terms under your breathâride, cut, tunnelingânot because the words change anything but because naming things makes them less capable of eating you.
âTerms,â you say, because ritual keeps the baseball gods entertained. âLoser wears the winnerâs jersey for a week.â
âLoser buys parade flights.â He clears his throat like he just said something larger than airfare. âFor two.â
âFor two,â you echo, and the echo doesnât fade so much as settle, like a coin at the bottom of a fountain.
Ump brushes the plate, taps his clicker. Realmuto flashes a first sign; Darvish shakes once, nods. Schwarber digs in, cleats chirring in the clay. You can hear it. You can hear your pulse.
âHere we go,â Bob says, and the calm has burned off him. Heâs all spark.
First pitch of Game Seven: 95 on the black, thunk to leather. Strike. The building exhales like a dragon. Darvish treats Schwarber like a thesisâcurve that falls through a trapdoor, cutter that just misses off, ladder fastball he skies to the moon. Out one. Turner chops a slider to short; clean. Two down. Harper steps into a different noise, not louderâdenserâlike weather rolling in. Darvish wonât give him dessert. Harper walks by refusing to eat anything that isnât a meal. Castellanos chases letter-high gas and sits. Top one ends like a door shut gently.
Wheeler takes the ball and the pitch clock becomes a second heart. Kim sees three pitches and swallows a slider he canât recognize in time. Soto walks like gravity loves him more than you. Machado jumps 97 in and turns it into a scream past third; Turner bodies it to keep life from getting rude. Runners at the corners, one out, the sound condenses into a storm cell over home plate. Wheeler goes cruel: riding fastball, then a curve that drops out of the picture like it owes money. Back-to-back punchies end it. You sag against the rail, apologizing under your breath to paramedics for what you will do to your heart tonight.
âThatâs your free threat,â you tell Bob. âNo more corner offices.â
âCute talk from a city that booed Santa.â He grins sideways. âYou want me to buy you a battery now or later?â
âSay âbatteryâ again and Iâll have security carry you out by your shoelaces,â you purr, and a Padres fan two seats down barks a laugh, slaps your shoulder like heâs drafted you.
Second inning trims like a sharp montage. Bohm lasers a liner; Machado turns it into geometryâsnare, set, seedâone out. Stott chirps a single into shallow center; Realmuto rolls a two-hopper; Kim eats it and spits out 6-4-3 like a magic trick. In the home half, a two-out double splits the gap; Marsh knifes it off the wall, the relay is clean, and the would-be run dies under a red stop sign so crisp you taste peppermint. Realmuto steals a borderline sinker with velvet hands; you cup your mouth and thank blue for preserving truth in a dishonest world.
Third inning, both aces wear the lookâeyes flat, pace quick, world reduced to a white square and its sins. Schwarber fights and loses. Turner steals second on a read like telepathy; Harper gets a fastball he lifts to the biggest part of the yard and the ball dies two bricks short into a glove that has no business being there. Wheeler erases the bottom third with two Ks and a chopper Stott throws on the move, momentum like a live wire running up your arm.
âFeels like first crack opens the dam,â Bob says, still staring.
âFeels like youâre jinxing it,â you say, knock the rail three times with your knuckles. The woman behind you knocks too. âSuperstition is free,â she whispers. âAnd cheaper than therapy.â
Fourth is the crack. Padres leadoff single, a loud out that feels like a warning shot, Soto 3â1 and nobody with a mortgage wants to throw him a cookie. Walk. Machado looks like a man who knows what future heâs in and punishes 97 in on the hands, yanking it fair inside the bag. The ball ricochets off that ugly corner and caroms along the line while Petco leans east; two runs score and Machado stands on second like a man who owns mineral rights. Bob is on his feet with both fists up, a sound ripping out of him thatâs clean and helpless. You sit and taste metal andâbecause youâre youâare a little in love with the way joy lights him from the inside. Wheeler depressurizes the inning with a back-foot slider that makes a bench full of millionaires flinch, and you stand because sulking is for April. âPlenty of game left,â you warn, and Bob taps the bill of your cap with an index finger. âYou always say that like a threat.â
Darvish sharpens into the cushion. Bohm gnaws through two death pitches and loses to a parachute curve. Stott grinds a walk. Realmuto murders a fastball to the deepest cavern in left-center, and it dies under the hand of a park engineered by petty gods. âBig yard,â Bob murmurs into your hair. You elbow him in the ribs with concentrated love and malice. He oofs and grins.
Fifth is where your soul moves to a different address. Marsh slaps a single and steals second on a panic-pitch; Turner legs out an infield roller that Machado barehands and only barely cannot beat time with; two on, one out, and Schwarber walks in wearing the sound of dread like itâs tailored. A man in a vintage Phillies jacket two rows up points at the sky and yells, âDo it for my ex-wife!â The section laughs too hard. A Padres lifer in a sun-bleached brown jersey pinches the bridge of his nose and says into his palms, âAnyone but this man.â
Darvish handles Schwarber like heâs defusing a bomb. Cutter away, foul. Curve that snaps; Schwarber spits, eyes bored. Ladder fastball; he swings through, late. 1â2. Two wastes; Schwarber punishes the arrogance by not acknowledging them. Full. Realmuto sets up a hair in, because if you miss out you might live; if you miss in, you die on TV.
Darvish shakes twice, nods.
He misses in.
Schwarber unloads like mythology. The crack isnât sound; itâs a rupture. The ball turns into a certainty long before it becomes a souvenir. Right field stands prepare like theyâve rehearsed catching meteors. You scream because your body decides to run a program older than language. Rally towels whip the air into a gale.
Grand slam. Phillies 4, Padres 3.
You climb Bob without permission, shouting nonsense syllables like youâve been hit by a natural phenomenon. Heâs devastated and beaming because your joy is a disease heâll never vaccinate against. The woman behind youâtherapy enthusiastâgrabs your forearm and shrieks, âRING THE BELL!â A pocket of Philly transplants five rows up detonates into a whirling mass of red towels and questionable dance moves. A Padres die-hard with a tattoo older than you two holds his beer aloft and declares, âStill love you, Friars,â in a voice that makes you want to hug him and not hug him at the same time.
Baseball being baseball, ecstasy gets punished immediately. Darvish dispatches the next two unharmed on three pitches like heâs offended you forgot his name. In the bottom half, Wheeler yields a leadoff single and then paints a 6â4â3 that belongs in a museum. Soto lines a ball that hooks foul by a cigar paper; forty thousand inhale the same ghost and let it go together. He flies to the track, parks there, tips a phantom cap to the deep that denied him.
Sixth swings back cruelly. A blooper falls where equations fail; a seeing-eye single becomes a threat; a two-out, two-strike nibble becomes an RBI when a professional hitter does professional violence to a stubborn pitch. Tie game, 4â4, and your stomach drops like an elevator. Bob shoves both hands under his thighs and sits on them to keep from squeezing you in half. âItâs fine,â he lies. âWe like drama.â Harper tries to end the argument first pitch, unloads on something center-cut and everyone believes together until the ball chooses mortality and dies in a glove on the warning track. Your laugh scuffs into a sob. âPhysics can catch these hands,â you say, and a teenager in a Phanatic bucket hat yells, âSAME, QUEEN,â like an ordination.
The stretch lands and you sing even though your voice is a gravel road. You throw your arm over Bobâs shoulders and lean into the sway with thirty thousand strangers; you donât care if you never get back, except you care with marrow about getting three more outs than they do. After âat the old⌠ball⌠game,â the organ player bangs a flourish like a bar fight.
Top seven: bullpen phone, a man loosening like a tall question mark beyond the fence. Wheelerâs count whistles. Leadoff walkâboo hiss. Sac bunt, old religion. A flare into no-manâs with the audacity of fateâPadres retake a 5â4 lead on a sac fly you despise because itâs smart. Bob kisses his knuckles and tips them to the sky like heâs cashing in favors. âYouâre insufferable,â you tell him, clutching his sleeve anyway. âYouâre adorable when youâre wrong,â he says sweetly, and you promise to trip him on the way to the truck. Bottom seven, Turner legs a single; Harper scalds a one-hopper that should carve a canyon and Manny Machado commits a war crime at third: smothers, plants, flamethrower to second, pivot, double play, inning strangled. âThatâs my third baseman,â Bob crows, and you say something anatomically rude about exit velocity and the devilâs favorite sons that makes a grandmother in front of you sip her beer to stop laughing.
The fans around you become their own roster. To your left, Navy Dad in a faded camo cap keeps stats in pencil on a program and explains leverage index to his daughter like itâs bedtime math; she nods solemnly every time someone throws a slider in a 1â0 count. Behind you, Therapy Woman hoards napkins and passes them like communion. Across the aisle, a bachelor party in dishwater brown tries to start the wave and gets booed by an old man who hisses, âNot in a one-run game, heathens,â with priestly authority. A kid with a glove bigger than his face turns to you and asks, âIs Schwarber going to do another one?â and you whisper, âIf we are very good,â and the kid clasps his hands like he can bribe the sun.
Eighth opens on a wire hum in your spine. The Philliesâ bullpen is stitching the inning with dental floss. Leadoff single, a thunderous lineout that turns into a throw-âem-out at first when the hitter forgets physics, a walk on a slider that misses by eyelashes. Realmuto guns down a steal attempt like time travel, ball in glove before the runner knows he is only a photograph of speed. You are on the rail, hoarse, barking âDONâT TRY TEN!â like youâre his lawyer. Final out floats into Marshâs mitt with a mercy you do not question. Bottom eight, two outs, a runner on first, and Harper strides up to a sound the building learned in a past life. First pitch: not his. Second: borderline; he chokes on it and spits. Third: he tattoos a double into the left-center gap, a seam-splitting, cut-the-field-in-half kind of swing. Runner scores standing. Tie game, 5â5. You climb Bob like a tree and he groans into your shoulder, âYouâre going to bruise me,â and you answer, âYou knew the risks when you invited me,â and Therapy Woman gifts you both a napkin like itâs a blessing.
Ninth is a nightmare where you remain awake. Padres load the bases on walk-bloop-walk, two outs, and the reliever flips a 3â2 breaking ball that starts a hair off and stays a hair off and the hitter lunges and half-swings and home plate rings him up and the brown-and-gold lower bowl experiences collective spontaneous combustion. You are unwell. Bottom nine, two on, two out, the closer finds a cutter that kisses the black twice and steals your future. Your brain mutely labels a new emotion: fear married to love married to certainty you canât prove.
Ten.
The top of the tenth is insultingly on-brand: single, sacrifice, intentional walk, one out, bases loaded, the ballpark breathing like a lung collapsing and reinflating under a hand. The relieverâkid face, old eyesâsaws a bat in half and the bloop lands harmless; two outs. Full count. Realmuto sets up off the plate, a fishing lure; he gets a bite; he catches and hides the catch like a magician. Strike three. The building flickers. You hug a stranger so hard his glasses fog. Bob doubles over the rail with his cap over his face and laughs this wrecked laugh of a man being vivisected by hope and choosing not to die.
Bottom ten. Walk. A swinging bunt that dies fair in grass like it knows a story, safe by a step because the first baseman thought about tomorrow for a breath. Brown-and-gold gnashes teeth and prays; pockets of red stand on seats and chant something untranslatable to outsiders. The closer looks like he can feel his pulse in his gums. A single through the four-hole loads them. Bases drunk. Nobody out. You can taste metal. You can taste sugar. You can taste history if you bite down hard enough.
Schwarber walks to the box and the sound changes. Not volumeâdensity. Your hand clamps Bobâs forearm. He winces. âHe canât do it twice,â he says, begging, bargaining.
âHe can,â you rasp. âHe will.â
First pitch: waste up and away. Ball. The crowd grinds its teeth. Second: cutter away; Schwarber watches like heâs bored of disobedience. 2â0. Catcher goes out, says theater to calm a city; everyone stands around pretending to share a secret. Back behind the plate, third pitch leaks middle and Schwarberâs a tick late, foul straight back; the net trembles; your bones ring. 2â1. Fourth: splitter dies early; 3â1; arithmetic crawls over everyoneâs face at onceâmust-throw fastball territory. He shakes once, twice, looks like a man looking into a mirror and not recognizing the version of himself who gives this pitch. Nods. Realmuto squats. Stillness like a held breath.
Fastball, middle-in, trying to saw hands before history can write itself.
Schwarber writes anyway.
The swing is violence sanctified. Hips clear, barrel flattens the world, contact is the absence of doubt. The noise becomes a rupture that erases language. You donât track the ball with your eyes; you track it with the way humanity around you pivotsâright field rising like a wave, heads tilting in unison, mouths opening into the kind of smile people wear when the universe finally picks a side. The arc climbs high enough to get its passport stamped, pure enough that people are celebrating before it leaves the frame. Then it leaves the frame.
Walk-off grand slam.
You are already airborne. You are already straddling the seat, then him, then air again, then anything with mass because mass is the only proof you didnât evaporate. Fireworks ricochet off the night. Confetti unzips above you like a red snowstorm. âDancing On My Ownâ detonates from a PA that sounds giddy. On the field, bodies are color and limbs and joy; somebody disappears under a cooler; somebody else loses his hat and never notices. The bell graphic on the board rings so hard you feel it click the bones in your feet into place.
You cry and laugh and extend the duration of your own life by screaming. Bob is wrecked and grinning, hands on your waist, your new championship hat crammed down to your eyebrows. âPhilly forever,â you gasp, not sure if youâre announcing, commanding, or praying.
âGuess Iâm going to a parade,â he says, voice wrecked to gravel, smile soft like he was built for this moment and just found out.
Your section becomes a temporary family. Navy Dad writes âGSâ in tiny letters on the scorecard and then actually fist-pumps. Therapy Woman kisses you on the cheek, leaves a confetti print behind. Bachelor Party offers you a plastic lei, then apologizes to the old priest for trying the wave, and gets absolution because even he is laughing. The Padres tattoo guy raises his beer to you and says, truly, âSee you next year,â and you salute him with respect because hearts like his are why stadiums matter.
The walk out is a river of sound. The city outside has decided to be a chorus; horns sync to chants, phones light up like constellations, somebody climbs a stop sign and sings off-key, somebody else hands you a slice of pizza like communion. Bob keeps a hand at your back and you keep two fingers laced in his belt loop like you were issued to each other by a benevolent quartermaster. Under a streetlight, confetti has drifted into little red galaxies. He tucks one piece into your cap band like planting a flag.
âYou were insufferable,â he murmurs, thumb sliding over your cheekbone to brush away a glitter bit.
âYou were adorable in defeat,â you say, lifting his chin with a knuckle. âSan Diego should be proud. And mildly concerned for your blood pressure.â
âPhilly should be afraid,â he counters, leaning in. âYouâre going to be unbearable for months.â
âStart hydrating now,â you advise. âParade cardio is a contact sport.â
He kisses you there, loud city and louder hearts, and when he breaks heâs smiling in a way you want to frame. âFor two,â he says again, quiet and sure.
âFor two,â you answer into his mouth.
Back in the truck, the afterglow sits with you like a warm animal. He pulls onto the freeway and laughs without moving his mouth, a sound made of releases. You flick the brim of your new hat, rest your head back, and watch the fireworks afterimage sew itself into the dark behind your eyes.
âStill think smelling rosin isnât romantic?â he asks at a red light, side-eyeing you with the kind of fondness that could do structural damage.
âI think tonight made everything romantic,â you say. âEven you.â
âEven me?â He feigns injury.
âEspecially you.â You lace your fingers with his the way seams lace a perfect four-seamer. âJust wait until we get to Philly. Iâm going to teach you how to yell properly.â
âIâve been in combat zones,â he says.
âCute,â you reply. âTry the Broad Street Line after a clinch.â
He laughs so hard he has to wipe his eyes. âGod help me.â
âHe did,â you say, squeezing his hand. âHe gave you me.â
âAnd you gave me thirty thousand people screaming in my ear,â he says, glancing at you, traffic a river of brake lights and bliss. âAnd I think I liked it.â
âAdmit it,â you murmur, the bell still ringing under your ribs. âYou love me like you love a one-run lead.â
âNo,â he says, and the corner of his mouth lifts. âMore. One-run leads make me nauseous. You just make me loud.â
You grin, let the night run a hand down your spine, and count the seams of the future the way you counted pitchesâsoftly, ruthlessly, as if believing hard enough can bend air. In the morning there will be flights to book and a jersey to lose a bet to and a shameless parade route to memorize. Tonight there is rosin and confetti and the taste of victory sitting sweet on your tongue, and a man beside you who lost beautifully and held you up anyway, and a city that will be telling this story to strangers for the rest of its noisy life.