Zenith of Desire: The Hollywood Incubus

Chapter 246: CH : 236 Kobe And Shaq



Chapter 246: CH : 236 Kobe And Shaq

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*****

After dropping those credentials, O’Neal puffed out his chest, adding with a booming laugh, "And the music this little guy creates? It is amazing. Honestly, it’s almost as good as the rap albums I make! I will definitely take you over to the sideline to get to know the little guy later when the quarter ends."

At this point in their careers, the toxic, franchise-destroying feud had not yet bloomed between the two stars. Kobe hadn’t uttered his infamous quotes to the press. The two men still operated as close, effective brothers on the court. O’Neal still viewed Kobe as his talented, overly intense little brother, and Kobe still respected Shaq as the dominant, unstoppable big brother of the team.

Hearing Shaq’s glowing endorsement, Kobe felt genuinely surprised. He looked back at the small child sitting in the ten-thousand-dollar seat. The boy remained ’unaware’ that the massive men on the court and the thousands of people in the stands watched him. He hunched over, his silver pen flying across the paper in a blur of furious motion.

’Not only is this kid a movie star and an author,’ Kobe thought, his competitive respect piqued, ’but he also writes all of his own original music?’

But then Kobe mentally processed the second half of what Shaq had just declared—that this child’s musical creation level sat "almost as good" as his rap albums.

Kobe felt a wave of relief wash over him. If the boy’s music only sat on par with Shaq’s terrible rap albums, then the kid offered nothing to be intimidated by. To be honest, Kobe thought the songs Shaq wrote matched the creative level of a distracted primary school student.

Meanwhile, Marvin pretended to just noticed the shifting attention of the crowd around him and the players on the court. His senses mapped the focus of every eye in the arena.

He executed this entirely on purpose.

The frantic writing, the ignored dunk, the dramatic posture—this move served as a calculated, theatrical performance designed specifically to stimulate the curiosity and emotions of the surrounding audience during the lull in the game.

Since the global explosion of his Oscar performance earlier in the year, he deliberately stayed out of the daily tabloid papers, the evening news broadcasts, and the glossy magazine covers. Aside from the strictly scheduled, controlled promotional work for the upcoming release of *The Sixth Sense*, he kept his face hidden while touring Asia in the shadows.

He sat currently in the crucial middle phase of the film’s promotional cycle. He needed to inject his image back into the cultural bloodstream before his face officially reappeared on television screens for the press tour. He needed to remind the American public that he remained present, eccentric, and a genius.

The strategy worked flawlessly. The audience’s strong, sudden surge of curiosity and focused attention already made the mana pool resting dormant in his veins begin to stir and hum pleasantly.

But this viral moment on the Jumbotron served merely as the appetizer. Now, he needed a clean, unforced opportunity to speak out on the spot and control the narrative.

The perfect opportunity arrived quickly. Intermission.

The buzzer sounded, signaling the end of the quarter. The players jogged toward their respective benches.

Shaq, true to his word, grabbed Kobe by the jersey. He pulled the younger guard directly over to where Marvin and Frank sat courtside.

The towering center leaned over the scorer’s table and waved a large, sweaty hand directly in front of Marvin’s sunglasses.

"Hey, Marvin, man!" Shaq boomed jovially, his voice carrying over the arena noise. "This is a professional basketball game, little brother! It is not a good choice of venue to be doing your algebra homework!"

Marvin stopped writing instantly. He capped his silver pen with a sharp click.

He executed a flawless performance of being startled out of a deep, artistic trance. He shook his body slightly, pushed his sunglasses down the bridge of his nose, and raised his head. He looked up at the two towering athletes looming over him. When his gaze locked onto Kobe, he ensured a highly convincing look of pure, starstruck surprise widened his eyes.

"Wow," Marvin breathed, looking up at the shooting guard. "Kobe. That reverse dunk you just executed on the fast break was incredible."

He offered a charming, sheepish smile, rubbing the back of his neck.

"I’m sorry," Marvin apologized smoothly, projecting the perfect image of an eccentric artist. "I honestly didn’t mean to ignore the game. I was watching. But exactly when you went up for that dunk, when the crowd erupted... a surge of musical ideas suddenly flashed through my head. The rhythm of it. I had to write the notes down on paper before they disappeared into the ether."

Marvin stood up from his courtside seat, extending a hand dwarfed by the athletes.

"Kobe, my name is Marvin Meyers. I am a fan of your work on the court."

Kobe, famously intense and usually guarded around celebrities seeking clout, found his defenses entirely disarmed by the boy’s articulate sincerity. He smiled a rare, somewhat sheepish smile, shaking Marvin’s hand gently.

"Marvin, I know exactly who you are, man," Kobe said respectfully. "My family watched *The Parent Trap* when it came out; it was a global hit. I also read your book, *Ready Player One*. And I bought your mini-album. I have to admit, I loved your live Oscar performance. The piano arrangement... it honestly made me shed a few tears when I watched it on TV. It was powerful."

Kobe had, in reality, only just heard the boy’s name from Shaq two minutes prior. Otherwise, he would have had no idea who Marvin Meyers was; Kobe spent his life in the gym, not watching the Academy Awards. If Kobe had been forced to chat with a random child star without context, he would have felt deeply annoyed and standoffish.

But now, the "unhappy" feeling flew away. This hyper-articulate prodigy was actually a vocal fan of his game.

They established mutual respect.

’By the way,’ Kobe thought to himself, glancing down at the book in the boy’s hand. ’He said a surge of inspiration hit me? What exactly did he write down in three minutes? Is it a new song?’

Shaq, never one to let a moment of silence linger, leaned in and boisterously helped Kobe ask the burning question.

"So, Marvin," Shaq grinned, pointing a massive finger at the leather book. "You said you had a flash of inspiration. What exactly is it? Is it another classical song? Or is it pure, haunting vocals like the stuff on your EP?"

"No, no, no," Marvin corrected. His eyes gleamed with dark, theatrical excitement. "It is not pure vocal music this time, Shaq. It is a full song. Lyrics, melody, the hook. Everything."

Marvin proudly raised the checkbook in his hand for the men to see. It wasn’t a notebook. It was his uncle’s bank checkbook. Every available millimeter of white space sat covered in dense, elegant musical notation and rapid-fire English lyrics.

"I’ve completely finished it," Marvin declared.

The sharp-eyed camera operator working the floor at the scene recognized the magic of the interaction. He smoothly zoomed his heavy rig in. He captured a tight close-up of the expensive bank checkbook in Marvin’s hand, broadcasting the frantic, genius scribbles to the millions of people watching the game on live television across the country.

---

The on-site camera operator sensed a big moment unfolding in real-time. He adjusted the heavy rig on his shoulder and tightened the focal length. High above the polished hardwood of the Staples Center, the center-hung display shifted from a replay of the dunk to a crisp, tight close-up of the young boy sitting courtside.

The high-definition lens captured Frank’s bewildered expression. His empty hands hovered in the air. The camera then settled intimately on Marvin. The lens zoomed in close enough to capture the texture of the expensive, watermarked bank checks. The audience clearly saw the furious, elegant strokes of silver ink.

Up in the TNT broadcast booth, Charles Barkley leaned so far forward over the desk he nearly knocked over his water glass. He squinted at his courtside monitor.

"Hey, Kenny, look at that screen for a second," Barkley said. His voice carried over the national broadcast. "Is that a musical score? Staffs are drawn over the routing numbers. Lyrics are scribbled in the margins! Did our genius kid just finish composing an entire song right there on the hardwood?"

Kenny Smith adjusted his headset. He shook his head in sheer disbelief. "Chuck, that’s Marvin Meyers. The kid who just took home an Oscar and brought the house down at the Academy Awards. If anyone is writing a platinum hit during a fast break, it’s him."

Down on the court, the reality of the situation played out with a distinct lack of broadcast polish.

Shaquille O’Neal stood towering over the courtside seats. A towel draped around his neck. He looked down at the small book in the boy’s hands. His eyes narrowed. A playful, theatrical jealousy washed over his features.

"Hold on, hold on," O’Neal boomed. He pointed a finger the size of a breadstick at the checkbook. "Are you sitting here telling me that Kobe’s little dunk just now inspired you? And you wrote a whole song on the spot?"

"That is correct," Marvin replied, his voice smooth. He betrayed zero intimidation at the seven-foot giant looming over him.

"Why not me?" Shaq demanded, folding his arms across his broad chest. This presented the crux of the issue; Shaq loved the spotlight, and he loved music. Being bypassed for his younger teammate stung his entertainer’s pride.

He struck a sudden, exaggerated strongman pose, flexing his enormous biceps for the crowd. It drew a ripple of laughter from the nearby rows. "Marvin, look at this. I am stronger. I am handsome. I am more charming, and I put on a much better show than this kid Kobe. You should be writing a symphony inspired by the Diesel!"

Kobe Bryant stood a few feet away with his hands resting on his hips. He simply stared at his teammate.

"..."

Marvin looked at the flexing giant. An amused glint danced in his eyes.

"..."

Ignoring the eccentric display, Marvin turned his attention directly to Kobe. The young shooting guard possessed an intense, quiet fire that Marvin recognized immediately. The aura belonged to someone entirely consumed by their craft, driven by a relentless urge to conquer their chosen domain. Marvin respected that.

"Kobe," Marvin said, his tone shifting. It no longer sounded like a young fan. It carried the resonant, mature weight of an equal acknowledging a peer. "You have rare dedication. You will become a superstar in this league. I believe in you."

O’Neal instantly inserted his large head between the two of them, breaking the serious moment. He winked broadly at the camera. "Hey now, there’s a superstar already standing right here!"

Kobe ignored his teammate’s antics. He offered Marvin a genuine, appreciative smile. "Thank you," Kobe said softly. Coming from an unyielding competitor, the acknowledgment carried weight. Kobe took immense pride in his work ethic. Seeing a globally recognized musical prodigy—someone who clearly understood what it meant to obsess over a craft—validate his potential resonated deeply with him.

Seeing that the two of them completely ignored his comedic efforts, O’Neal felt a surge of showman’s indignation. He rolled his eyes, let out a huff, and suddenly reached down. He snatched the checkbook right out of Marvin’s hands.

"Hey!" Frank protested, finally finding his voice as an NBA center stole his banking information.

Shaq didn’t listen. He turned and jogged his frame directly toward the scorer’s table. He reached over the bewildered sound engineer, grabbed the live arena microphone, and waved it high in the air.

"Ladies and gentlemen of Los Angeles!" Shaq’s voice thundered through the stadium’s PA system, vibrating the floorboards. "Do you want to know what our resident genius, little Marvin Meyers, just did sitting in the front row?"

The giant screen overhead cut to a split view: Shaq held the microphone on one side, and a frozen frame of the intricate musical notes written across Frank’s checkbook displayed on the other.

The audience, already buzzing with the electric energy of a tight game, scratched their heads.

But Shaq’s sheer enthusiasm acted as an infectious catalyst. Their curiosity burst forth into a wave of noise.

"Say it, Diesel!" a fan yelled from the lower bowl.

"What did he do?"

"We want to know!"

"Shaq, you idiot, stop holding the ball and tell us!" shouted a heckler wearing a Timberwolves jersey.

"Shut up! Don’t you disrespect the big man!" a Lakers faithful fired back.

"Mind your own business!"

The brief, good-natured hostility rippled through the stands, creating a chaotic hum. But before any arguments broke out over the spilled popcorn, O’Neal brought the microphone back to his lips, his timing impeccable.

****

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