"Hit that sucker! Hit! HIT!"
I ran windsprints until I began to feel that my legs were going to undergo
spontaneous decomposition (at the same instant my lungs burst into flames,
probably). Lenny Barongg, one of our tailbacks, had a mild sunstroke and
was mercifully—for him, at least—excused for the rest of the week.
So I saw Arnie, and he came over and took dinner with my folks and Ellie
and me on Thursday or Friday nights, he checked out a ballgame or two with
us on Sunday afternoons, but beyond that I lost sight of him almost
completely. I was too busy hauling my aches and pains to class, to practice,
then home to my room to do my assignments.
Going back to my football woes—I think the worst thing was the way people
looked at me, and Lenny, and the rest of the team, in the hallways. Now that
"school spirit" business is mostly a lot of bullshit made up by school
administrators who remember having a helluva time at the Saturday-
afternoon gridiron contests of their youth but have conveniently forgotten that
a lot of it resulted from being drunk, horny, or both. If you had held a rally in
favor of legalizing marijuana, you would have seen some school spirit. But
about football, basketball, and track, most of the student body didn't give a
shit. They were too busy trying to get into college or someone's pants or
trouble. Business as usual.
All the same, you get used to being a winner—you start to take it for granted.
Libertyville had been fielding killer football teams for a long time; the last
time the school had had a losing record—at least, before my senior year—
was twelve years before, in 1966. So in the week after the loss of Luneburg,
while there was no weeping and gnashing of teeth, there were hurt, puzzled
looks in the hall and some booing at the regular Friday afternoon rally at the
end of period seven. The boos made Coach Puffer turn nearly purple, and he
invited those "poor sports and fair-weather friends" to turn out Saturday
afternoon to watch the comeback of the century.
I don't know if the poor sports and fair-weather friends turned out or not, but
I was there. We were at home, and our opponents were t e Ridge Rock Bears.
Now Ridge Rock is a mining town, and while the kids going to Ridge Rock
High are hicks, they are not soft hicks. They are mean, ugly, touch hicks. The
year before, Libertyville's football team had barely edged them out for the
regional title, and one of the local sports commentators had said it wasn't
because Libertyville had a better team but because it had more warm bodies
to draw on. Coach Puffer had hit the ceiling over that, too I, I can tell you,
This, however, was the Bears' year. They steamrollered us. Fred Dann went
out of the game with a concussion in the first period. In the second period,
Norman Aleppo got a ride to the Libertyville Community Hospital with a
broken arm. And in the last period, the Bears scored three consecutive
touchdowns, two on punt returns. The final score was 40-6. All false
modesty aside, I'll tell you that I scored the six. But I won't put realism aside
with the modesty: I was lucky.
So… another week of hell on the practice field. Another week of Coach
yelling
Hit that sucker
. One day we practised for nearly four hours, and
when Lenny suggested to Coach that it might be nice to have some time left
for doing homework, I thought—just for an instant—that Puffer was going to
belt him one. He had taken to jingling his keys constantly from hand to hand,
reminding me of Captain Queeg in
The Caine Mutiny
, I believe that how you
lose is a much better index into character than how you win. Puffer, who had
never been 0-2 in his coaching career, reacted with baffled, pointless fury,
like a caged tiger being teased by cruel children.
The next Friday afternoon—that would have been September 22nd—the
usual rally during the last fifteen minutes of period seven was cancelled. I
didn't know any of the players who minded; standing up there and being
introduced by twelve prancing cheerleaders for the umptyumpth time was
sort of a bore. It was an ominous sign, all the same. That night we were
invited back to the gym by Coach Puffer, where we went to the movies for
two hours, watching our humiliation by the Tigers and the Bears in the game
films. Perhaps this was supposed to fire us up, but it only depressed me.
That night, before our second home game of the year, I had a peculiar dream.
It was not exactly a nightmare, not like the one where I woke the house
screaming, certainly, but it was uncomfortable. We were playing the
Philadelphia City Dragons, and a strong wind was blowing. The sounds of
the cheers, the blaring, distorted voice of Chubby McCarthy from the
loudspeaker as he announced downs and yards, even the sounds of players
hitting other players, all sounded weird and echoey in that constant, flat
wind.
The faces in the stands seemed yellow and oddly shadowed, like the faces of
Chinese masks. The cheerleaders danced and capered like jerky automatons.
The sky was a queer gray, running with clouds. We were being badly beaten.
Coach Puffer was yelling in plays, but no one could hear him. The Dragons
were running away from us. The ball was always theirs. Lenny Barongg
looked as if he was playing with terrible pain; his mouth was drawn down in
a trembling bow like a mask of tragedy.
I was hit, knocked down, run over. I lay on the playing field, far behind the
line of scrimmage, writhing, trying to get my breath back. I looked up and
there, parked in the middle of the track field, behind the visitors' bleachers,
was Christine. Once more she was sparkling and brand-new, as if she had
rolled out of the showroom only an hour before.
Arnie was sitting on the roof, crosslegged like Buddha, looking at me
expressionlessly. He hollered something at me, but the steady howl of the
wind almost buried it. It sounded as if he said:
Don't worry, Dennis. We'll
take care of everything. So don't worry. All is cool.
Take care of what? I wondered as I lay there on the dream playing field
(which my dreaming self had, for some reason, converted into Astro-Turf),
struggling for breath with my jock digging cruelly into the fork of my thighs
just below my testicles.
Take care of what?
Of what?
No answer. Only the baleful shine of Christine's yellow headlamps and Arnie
sitting serenely crosslegged on her roof in that steady, rushing wind.
The next day we got out there and did battle for good old Libertyville High
again, It wasn't as bad as it had been in my dream—that Saturday no one got
hurt, and for a brief while in the third quarter it even looked as though we
might have a chance—but then the Philadelphia City quarterback got lucky
with a couple of long passes—when things start to go wrong,
everything
goes wrong—and we lost again.
After the game, Coach Puffer just sat there on the bench. He wouldn't look at
any of us. There were eleven games left on our schedule, but he was already
a beaten man.
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