Blind Your Ponies (39 page)

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Authors: Stanley Gordon West

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When he approached the Garden Café, he scanned the area for the tractor. It wasn’t in sight. He parked his pickup at the curb and hoofed it for the down-home restaurant. He could feel his heart thumping under his wool-lined canvas jacket. There was no way Carl could worm out of this one. But he’d thought that many times before and Carl always found a way.

The café, pungent with the aroma of Coffee and bakery goods, was more crowded than usual for a midmorning Monday, and Mervin felt every eye trace his passage to the locally renowned booth where Carl and his cronies cowered.

“Good morning,” Mervin said, trying to keep his voice normal and failing. He slid into the vacant space that the losers undoubtedly hoped would remain unoccupied that morning.

“I didn’t think you were here yet,” Mervin said and cleared his throat. He regarded Carl, who sat stone-faced. “I didn’t see the ‘D’ out front.”

“It’s in the back,” Carl said in a lowered voice.

“In the
back!
” Mervin exclaimed. “Why is the tractor out
in back
?”

Carl cringed, ducking his face from the locals, who seemed to be relishing this family soap opera. Something in Mervin told him to have mercy, knowing what it was like to lose when your soul ached to win. But another voice in him demanded he extract every ounce of justice after a lifetime of losing to his big brother, After years of ridicule and brutality and humiliation.

“You were lucky,” Carl said under his breath.

“Lucky! Lucky? Hell, our coach tried to hold the Willow Croak boys back so the score wouldn’t be too embarrassing.”

A wave of light laughter washed across the café.

“Luck? Think what it would have been like if poor little Willow Croak had had
six
boys to play against Christian’s twelve,” Mervin said. “It would have been a slaughter. That’s why Willow Croak cuts its team down to five, so they don’t wallop the big schools too bad.”

The chorus of laughter swelled as the locals, who were mostly avid fans of the Class B public school, enjoyed seeing their closest rivals lambasted by the likes of Willow Creek.

“Well,” Mervin said. “Let’s go find the missing tractor.”

Mervin led the way and the three disgruntled Eagle fans dragged their abashed faces after him. Out the finger-worn front door, Mervin paused and fell in behind his seething sibling, who turned up the alley alongside the old creamery building and walked a full block. There on an inconspicuous side street, perched on a low-boy trailer, the classic John Deere endured in mint condition, its single stack skyward and proud, its green and yellow paint glossy, its large lugged steel wheels bright yellow—a powerful emotional symbol of authority to the Painter boys. Carl stopped and stonewalled with his arms folded across his granitelike torso. He had cranked the trailer off his pickup. Mervin hurried to fetch his pickup with the spring in his step and lightness in his heart of a young boy who had finally evened accounts with his brutal big brother.

After hooking up to the trailer—guessing that Carl hoped he’d drive directly out of town—Mervin paraded around the main drag several times, honking and flashing his lights. Then he parked directly in front of the Garden Café. He couldn’t help but swagger through the door to the cheers
and applause of many of the witnesses, some of whom had come out of the restaurant to inspect the impressive antique. Mervin settled in the booth where the three defeated had silently huddled.

“Coffee on me… for everyone!” he shouted, feeling as though he’d pop the brass buttons on his OshKosh B’Gosh bib overalls, drawing another round of applause for his generosity.

Mervin regarded his brother—who brooded fire and animosity in his cold gray eyes—instinctively prepared to duck the punch coming from out of their childhood, hoping it would come so he could defend himself by hammering his big brother into the checkered linoleum floor.

“Now that we’ve finally gotten things straightened out, let’s drink some Coffee,” Mervin said, surprised at his own poise and balls.

“How long you gonna let that ‘D’ set out there?” Carl said.

“Until we’ve had our Coffee and visit. What’s the rush?”

A grinning waitress brought a pot and set it on the table.

“What do you think about the new weed-control deal the county is coming out with?” Mervin asked his brother.

Carl stood, dropped two quarters on the table, and shouldered his way out of the café.

“You better go too,” Mervin said, glancing at Lute and Sandy, “or he’ll be pissed at you. Conspiring with the enemy.”

Sandy scrambled out of the booth and followed his friend. Lute picked up his cup and sipped.

“You nailed his ass,” the dairy farmer said. “Never seen him so mad, but a bet is a bet. I hate to admit it, but your team played a helluva ball game. It ain’t just that Norwegian kid neither. You got some ballplayers there. Too bad you don’t have a few more boys. Never get far in that tournament with five or six.”

After absorbing all the glory and celebrity he could milk out of the event with the tractor gleaming in the winter sunlight out front and after proudly paying the tab, Mervin drove slowly out of town and headed for Willow Creek. The John Deere “D” was going back to the place where it first worked the land, where it first lugged down and pulled through the rich topsoil, discovering the purpose for which it had been born.

With a smirk on its face, the old tractor headed home.

CHAPTER 52

At Thursday practice, Sam attempted to keep his excitement off his face without his trademark Aviator glasses. When the boys came into the gym and began shooting, they each did a double take. Sam busied himself over a practice schedule on his clipboard.

“What happened to your glasses?” Rob said.

“I walked into the locker room, caught a horrific stench and I was instantly and miraculously cured,” Sam said. “Twenty-twenty vision.”

“That’ll be the day,” Tom said.

“They break?” Scott said.

“No, I sold them to the Basketball Referees Aid Society.”

Diana came from the girl’s locker room in her baggy grays.

“You get contacts?” Pete asked with a smile of approval.

“Yeah, and I’ll never find them again. I think they slid around onto the back side of my eyeballs.”

“That rocks,” Pete said.

Olaf said, “You are looking—”

“Be careful, be careful,” Sam said. “This could lead to ten extra wind sprints.”

“ … awe-full,” Olaf said.

“Awesome, you dumb Norwegian,” Tom said, “
awe
some.”

“You think this is awesome,” Sam said. “I had a vision last night—my fairy godmother told me not to shave again as long as the team won.”

“Yeah, well I don’t think they allow gorillas to teach in Montana public schools,” Pete said.

The boys laughed.

“All right, listen up,” Sam said. He put his arm around Curtis’s shoulder. “Curtis, your layup broke Christian’s heart. Just when they thought they had us stymied, you stunned them. Your basket was the winning margin. Therefore, I hereby dub you Forget Me Not. Not the flower, but
the player other teams better not overlook, or, when least expected, you’ll make them pay.”

Sam tousled Curtis’s hair.

“Forget Me Not,” Sam went on. “A player never to be taken lightly.”

“Forget Me Not!” the other boys shouted and Curtis turned his eyes to the floor with the color of embarrassment in his face.

“All right,” Sam said, “After stretching, we’re going light tonight, rest up a bit. We’ll walk through some offensive sets, work on the alley-oop and volley ball, and shoot free throws. The bus leaves tomorrow at two. We have a secret weapon for Gardiner. It will blind them like a laser and we’ll be able to shoot uncontested layups all night. The score will be 476 to nothing.”

Sam turned to Scott, who sat on the bench with a cardboard UPS shipping box beside him. When Sam nodded, the team manager picked up the carton and trotted over. Scott opened the flaps and Sam reached into the box.

He lifted the first golden nylon jersey from the carton. It bore the number 55. They responded as one.

“Wow!”

“Olaf, I believe this will fit you.”

Sam handed him the pristine uniform and then pulled out the rest.


All
right.”

“Coool.”

“Awesome.”

“Bodacious.”

“These were supposed to be here weeks ago. I’m sorry you didn’t have them sooner. Before you leave tonight, try them on, make sure they fit.”

Sam paused.

“We know how good Gardiner is. They know how good we are. It will be a terrific game. When you come out of the locker room tomorrow night, I’m wearing sunglasses. Now let’s get to work.”

“How’d you manage this?” Diana asked while the boys examined their uniforms and draped them on the bleacher seats.

“Wainwright. I don’t know how.”

“Wainwright seems to have a lot of pull.”

“I think he also has a lot of money,” Sam said. “But he loves the team.”

She squinted and regarded him.

“Contacts, huh?”

“Yeah.”

“Coming out of hiding?”

He shrugged his shoulders.

“Looks good.”

“Thanks.”

She turned to the boys.

“Okay, on the floor!” Miss Murphy shouted and clapped her hands. All of them, including Sam and Scott, hit the hardwood to do their stretching.

T
HEY JOURNEYED THE
125 miles to Gardiner, a small village with a mining-town ambience that was dissected by the irrepressible Yellowstone River. The enduring settlement perched on both sides of the river’s gorge like squatters hanging on by their toenails, the portion of town south of the river rumped up against the very edge of Yellowstone National Park. In fact, from the expansive, newly constructed gym, if the wind was right, one could nearly spit into that natural preserve where undoubtedly elk and bison and coyote turn an ear at the faint echoes of crowd noise wafting across the snow-glazed foothills on cold winter nights.

The Broncs came out shining in their new uniforms and Sam, as promised, wore sunglasses for their warmups.

“You going snot-nosed on us, Sam?” Fred Sooner, the Gardiner coach, said. “What’s with the shades?”

“My team is so dazzling I can’t look at them without sunglasses.”

“Yeah, well they
do
look better,” the burly coach said. “At least it won’t look like we’re playing the Salvation Army tonight.”

Fred gazed across the floor at Diana, who fed the ball to the boys running layups.

“Tell me, Sam, how do you get an assistant coach like
that.

“Well, first you have to lose ninety games in a row and then the heavens feel sorry for you and send a biology teacher.”

The game started and the fans were into it immediately. Most of the ruckus came from the Willow Creek delegation, led as usual in delirious vocal decibels by Axel, Andrew, Grandma, Amos, and as of late, with
unmuzzled emotions, John English. Sam and Diana—becoming more animated and vociferous on the bench with each game—glanced at each other out of the corner of their eyes during the first quarter when the boys played up to their new uniforms and then some, transcending all over Gardiner’s new gymnasium and all over Gardiner’s wide-eyed players.

They looked smooth and relaxed and disciplined, a graceful flow of gold and blue, hustling on defense and moving with a gilded fluidity that overwhelmed the skilled Bruin players. Olaf had a monster dunk and slapped a Gardiner shot into Yellowstone Park. Fred Sooner was visibly alarmed. He called a time out in a panicked effort to slow down this Willow Creek onslaught which left the home team trailing early, 15 to 6.

Gardiner gradually climbed back into it during the second quarter, finding the range from outside while the Broncs’ defense shut down their two best scorers from around the paint. Fred Sooner came up alongside Sam as they walked to the dressing rooms at halftime.

“Your boys can be had, Sam,” he said with a tenuous smile and hustled off with his players.

In the locker room Sam pondered Sooner’s words as he tried to anticipate the opposing coach’s moves. Willow Creek led 43 to 36. Three players had two fouls, including Olaf; the zone defense was working, taking the Bruins out of their usual offense.

“What’s the key to this game?” Sam asked the newly eligible Dean as they huddled prior to returning to the gym.

“That we have more points than they do,” the goggle-eyed freshman answered with a high-pitched enthusiasm.

“No, no, how many times do I have to tell you?” Sam said, panning disappointment on his face. “The key to this game is that you don’t get your new uniforms all sweated up and wrinkled. You have to wear them tomorrow for the team pictures.”

The boys laughed and lightened up.

“Keep doing what you’re doing,” Sam said in the team huddle. “I don’t know where you learned to play like that. I taught you much worse.”

Coach Sooner hadn’t been bluffing. In the third quarter his boys demonstrated their great acting skills. With Glenn Tuomey, a secondstring center, they attacked Olaf. The angular 6’2" boy would work into the paint, pivot,
and drive deliberately into Olaf, throwing up his arms and ball with little hope of hitting the basket. The ref called a foul on Olaf. Sam came off the bench.

“offensive foul! offensive foul!” he shouted, backed by the vocal dissent of the Willow Creek battalions.

At the other end, Ben McShane, the 6’3" junior, rode Olaf’s back, and when the towering Bronc center made a move with the ball, the defender flopped backward onto the floor as if he’d been hit with a twelve-pound sledge. The inside ref called an offensive foul on Olaf.

“Give him an Oscar!” Diana shouted.

Sam held his head in his hands, unwilling to believe these Class C refs couldn’t see through this obvious sham, while the visiting spectators poured outrage down on the referee.

The rest of the third quarter turned into a nightmare. Gardiner didn’t shoot until they had a boy near Olaf with the ball, and he would take it straight at Olaf. Though the Bruins picked up several offensive fouls, had many shots stuffed down their gizzard, and lost Tuomey with five fouls, it worked. With twenty seconds remaining in the third quarter, Olaf was whistled for his fifth foul.

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