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Next. Kevin Waltman
Читать онлайн.Название Next
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781935955665
Автор произведения Kevin Waltman
Жанр Учебная литература
Серия D-Bow High School Hoops
Издательство Ingram
Once I’m back down on earth, the basket support still rocking like there’s been an earthquake, I take one big stride over the kid on the floor, the poor sophomore who thought he’d try to stop me on the way to the rack. I stamp my foot and look around, get a chest bump from Moose that knocks me back a couple steps. Royce and Devin start hollering in approval, but they check that as soon as they take a glance at Starks. Murphy cracks a little smile. But Coach Bolden frowns.
“Man slid over to take away the drive,” he says. He nods at Moose. “You had our best post player wide open underneath.”
This time I can’t contain myself: “Why dump it off when I can do that?”
The players, even Moose, look down at their shoes, and Murphy looks away as if he doesn’t want to witness the crime that’s about to happen. The vein on Coach Bolden’s neck bulges, but he doesn’t scream. Instead, he says, very evenly, “Starks for Bowen.”
Nick hustles back onto the court and pops the ball out of my hand. “Thanks,” he says. He hits just the right tone—not so sarcastic that his contempt is obvious, but just enough of an edge to let me know. And there’s nothing I can do about it but go sit down.
That’s where I stay, on the sideline, for the rest of practice. Until the suicides at the end.
3.
When you’re over-matched on the court, there’s no hiding. When Uncle Kid used to take me down to the park when I was only 13 I’d get in over my head trying to guard some grown man. I couldn’t do it, and everyone knew I couldn’t do it, but I’d get no mercy. They’d single me up every time down.
That doesn’t happen to me anymore, most definitely not between the lines. But when I walk in the house and there’s something I don’t want to talk about with my parents, it feels about the same. Isolated with nowhere to hide. I swear, if I’ve got bad news—a D on a quiz, or, like now, a brutal day at practice—my mom can smell it. Marion East is only about six blocks from our door, and I bet she knows something’s off before I’m halfway home.
“Derrick,” she says, “what’s wrong?” She’s sitting at the kitchen table, where they’ve just finished eating, my plate still there waiting to be microwaved.
“Nothing.”
She repeats the question, this time with a little more concern. My mom has skin as smooth as glass, darker than my dad, and she has these eyes that look almost Asian, so most of the time she’s got a soft, young-looking face. But when she gets serious—or angry—there’s nothing soft.
My dad clears his throat like he’s about to say something, but he knows this is Mom’s show.
“Nothing,” I say again.
She pushes her chair away from the table and folds her arms. “Derrick Bowen,” she says, “you either tell me what’s bothering you or we are going to have one very unfriendly evening.”
With that, my little brother Jayson, who was chilling on the couch watching the Pacers pre-game, snaps off the television and scoots silently to his room. My dad stands, walks across the room to take a seat in his chair, not so he can relax, but so that they’re on either side of me. No escape.
“Coach Bolden,” I say. When it comes out, I know I sound like a whiner. I don’t want to be that player who comes home and moans about how tough coach is, who bellyaches and backstabs until he gets his way. I’m supposed to be the guy who just laces them up and gets back to work. In those summer games a few years ago if I hung my head after a bad game, Uncle Kid would come right over to me, say something like D-Bow, if you don’t like getting beat, you got two choices. Get used to it or get better.
It’s just that, right now, I’d like a little sympathy from my parents.
I explain to them what happened at practice, trying to shade the story a little bit my way. They both react, but neither with what you’d call sympathy.
My mom is all righteous anger. She’s convinced Bolden should be fired. She slams her hand down on the kitchen table and shouts, “That man has to be the most stubborn coach to ever sit on a bench.” So while she’s on my side, it just seems to be an excuse for her to get angry. She’s lived here all her life, moving from place to place in the patch of Indianapolis bordered by 30th, 46th, Meridian and Keystone. She loves it, but she also hates it. She loves the people she grew up with and loves being able to reminisce about her old times at Marion East. She can convince herself into thinking our little three-bedroom house is a better place to live than anywhere else in the city, even better than those mansions on North Meridian. But all of that means she feels free to criticize the area like nobody else. She goes on tirades about store owners who let people loiter, about how the city lets streetlights stay burned out and neglects potholes as big as craters, or about how someone needs to “put the fear of God” into some of the teenagers in the neighborhood. But nothing draws her ire like the subject of principals, teachers and, especially, coaches at Marion East.
My dad stays silent. While my mom rages on about Coach Bolden being blind to talent, he furrows his brow and stares at the floor. He’s a strong, barrel-chested man, tough enough to handle security jobs around here, but it’s a sneaky strength hidden behind his wire glasses, his calm demeanor that looks more like a teacher’s than anything else. Dad doesn’t share my mom’s love of this area, maybe because he feels like they should have better jobs and more money than they do. My dad never finished college, but he’s still the most well-read security guard in the history of the city. And he always says that my mom’s too good a teacher to be trapped in these schools. He’s less likely to say things about the area, but he’s convinced the only good thing about our neighborhood would be leaving it behind. When The Star runs stories on crime or exposés on failing high schools, they’ll sometimes snap some pics of our streets, of Marion East, to accompany their stories. To me, that’s easy enough to ignore. I know there are places in this city a lot worse than the blocks I rep, and it’s like The Star thinks every black guy in Roca Wear is some banger. But my dad gets grim when stuff like that comes up. Cranks out numbers on income levels. Starts rattling off graduation rates at Marion East and shakes his head. Now, when my mom finishes her tirade on Bolden, my dad says simply, “Well, maybe he shouldn’t play for that coach, if he’s as bad as you think.”
Mom stops, puts her hands on her hips and fixes my dad with an icy glare. “And just what exactly does that mean, Thomas?” I’ve seen that stare before, heard that tone. Pops better tread lightly.
Instead of answering my mom, though, he turns to me. “What do you think about Coach Bolden?” he asks. “You want to play four years for him?”
That tone is even worse than my mom’s. It’s the one people get when they ask a question that means something other than what they’re saying. Teachers, coaches, parents—they all do it, like they’re holding something back. I grab an apple from the counter and take a bite, trying to act nonchalant. I shrug my shoulders as I chew and then say, “Sure.”
“Thomas,” my mom says, “let’s not get into this now.” She clears their plates from the table and puts mine in the microwave.
“I’m just asking a question, Kaylene,” he says. “You were the one running down Bolden.”
“Well, I don’t like Coach Bolden, but I’m not going to let whatever happened with him and Kid way back when give you an excuse to mess things up now.”
The mention of Uncle Kid tears it for my dad. He’s slow to anger—unlike my mom, whose temper goes zero to sixty in two seconds—but she’s hit a sore spot with him. He stands, and though he doesn’t yell—he never really yells—he raises his voice just enough. “The only thing that bothers me about my brother is that he’s damn near forty years old and people still call him Kid instead of Sidney,” he says.
There’s