No one explains what the numbers mean. Maybe they are her own private countdown. Maybe they are the judges’ secret language—tenths of a point held in reserve, degrees of difficulty waiting to be unlocked.
First run: 1–10 . She flies—handspring, twist, landing stuck like a nail driven into wood. The crowd exhales. Somewhere a judge nods once, sharp.
The gymnasium holds its breath.
She does not say which score was higher. The numbers are already gone from the board, but the air still hums with the shape of her leaving it.
Later, in the cool-down area, Nastia unwraps her grips. Someone asks what the numbers meant. Nastia Muntean Sets 1 10 1 15
Nastia Muntean walks to the end of the vault runway, chalking her hands in small, deliberate circles. She is seventeen, all sinew and focus, the kind of quiet that makes crowds lean forward. On the scoreboard, the numbers flicker: – 10. Set 1 – 15.
Second run: 1–15 . She changes something invisible—the angle of her block, the breath before the jump. This time she hangs in the air a heartbeat longer, as if the vault itself has decided to keep her. When she lands, her feet say done . No one explains what the numbers mean
She smiles. “The first set,” she says, “was for my mother. The second was for the girl who told me I couldn’t.”
She sets her jaw.
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