Authors: Taylor Morris
He laughed. “Well, this is my class.” We stopped in front of Mr. Rickles's room. “I'll see ya later, Sara.” He turned to walk inside his class.
Sara
. He called me Sara, not Thurman. In the space of a single junior high hallway, I had gone from classmate Thurman to girl Sara. He said my name like a breathâ
Saaara
. Totally swoon-worthy.
“'Kay,” I croaked. “Later.” But as I turned to go, I had a moment of bravery. “Oh, hey, Jason?”
He stepped back outside the door, tossing his bangs out of his amber eyes.
“What's up?” he asked.
“If you ever find yourself without something cool to wear, just call me. I know where Coach Eckels shops.”
He smiled. “I'll keep that in mind.”
“Cool,” I said, all casual. “But don't tell anyone, 'kay?”
He nodded and said, “Secret's safe.” He turned back toward his class and, looking over his shoulder at me, said, “See you later, Sara.”
Can You Tell a Friend from a Foe?
You lost a note from your friend, Casey, that had some very private information on it regarding herâgulp!â“feminine freshness” problem. To make matters worse, most of the football team found out. She said she forgives you; now, you need to confide in her about the problems your parents are having. Is there a chance she'll turn on you, just to get even?
a) Slight chanceâI'd be leery of telling her anything too big, too soon.
b) No chance, no way, no how.
c) Big chanceâI can't ever tell her another secret as long as I live.
Â
I was flying. After talking to Jason, I knew that nothing could get me down. Even though my life of late had become a series of ups and downs more stomach-dropping than the Superman Tower of Power ride, I felt that talking to Jason gave me the boost I needed to sail through the rest of the yearâor the
rest of the day, at least. When Coach Eckels had asked me that morning to do the stats, I had wanted to jump right out of my pleather boots. But after the humiliation in Mrs. Everly's class, I was feeling a bit gun-shy. I wanted to talk to
someone
before stepping into the boys' basketball stat world. I longed for encouragement from Arlene or attitude advice from Kirstie. I would have settled for a nice word from Dad.
I hadn't heard from him since he took me to dinner at Luby's. I'd e-mailed him twice over spring break and called his office once but hadn't heard back. I figured he must be back on the road, and there would be a postcard from Louisiana or Oklahoma waiting for me at home.
I called Mom at work to let her know I'd be home late. She cheered me on, as if I'd actually made the team, but somehow it made me feel good. I headed to the gym, where the boys were warming up, shooting baskets from the free-throw line before doing some layup drills. The stands were filling up with parents and students. A bunch of Sam Houston Rebels were stretching and shooting easy baskets at the other end of the court.
All the best guys were on the team, and so was Shiner. I stood for a moment inside the gym doors, watching themâthe irregular
pat-pat-pat
of basketballs hitting the gym floor, echoing with each dribble; the squeaking of shoes on the shiny hardwood court. Guys shuffled around at each end,
arms outstretched, waiting for the ball to be passed to them. I felt a rush just watching them.
Jason was dribbling the ball low to the court. He did a fake right, then went left around Richie Adams before the ball
tip . . . tip . . . tipped
into the basket. As the ball fell through the net, he casually walked away, wiping his forehead with the palm of his hand, then wiping his hand on his baggy shorts.
“Over here!” Shiner yelled. He was wide open, but no one passed the ball to him. He just stood to the left of the court, his hand held over his head like you'd ask a question in class. “Adams! Come on, I'm open!”
Richie ignored him from the half-court line, looking for someone else to pass to. But then Shiner skated across the court, effortlessly stole the ball from Richie, did a spin-turn around Frankie Donnelly, and went in for an easy layup. The ball bounced listlessly when it came down, and Shiner turned to pick it back up.
“I told you I was open,” he said to Richie, and then chucked the ball at him.
I cracked a smileâthat was the Shiner I remembered from when we were kids. He didn't like being ignored, especially when he knew he was right.
The stands were filling up with gawking girls and supportive parents. Kayla Cane sat in the stands at the end of the court where our guys were warming up. She wore a short denim skirt and
flip-flopping heels, and her dark brown hair fell in soft curls over her tanned shoulders. Jessica sat beside her, staring at the courtâapparently she and Richie had broken up over spring break and she was having a hard time getting over it. Kayla was talking to Rosemary, who had pulled her hair back in a studious ponytail. As Kayla yapped, she never took her eyes off the courtâlike she was suddenly interested in basketball. I couldn't help but think,
Maybe now I actually have something these girls are envious of
.
“Thurman!”
I snapped out of my aren't-you-jealous-of-me reverie and saw a red-faced Coach Eckels across the court.
“Get over here, girl!” he yelled.
I shuffled quickly across the court, heels clomping along the way, hoping Kayla, Jessica and Rosemary didn't hear Coach yelling at me.
I'd never run in heels before, naturally, and had a hard time keeping my balance. I noticed the guys looking at me as I stomped past, and I tried to look as confidently hot as I could.
“Thurman, you on the team now?” Richie called out with a smile as I hobbled by. “You couldn't be much worse than our point guard. He sucks.”
I smiled as cute as I could as Shiner yelled, “Shut up, Adams!” Richie laughed as he shot the ball from the free-throw line, missing the basket entirely.
“Camry, get over here!” Coach Eckels hollered at Shiner.
Coach smelled like my dad's deodorant. He was wearing baby blue shorts, the kind with a plastic zipper and two snap buttons on the wide elastic band that all the older coaches wore, a white golf shirt with a Bowie Bandit over the heart, a shiny silver whistle with a light blue rubber tip and a matching lanyard around his neck. With the clipboard in his hand, it was standard coach uniform.
“Dern it, Camry! You watch that mouth of yours around the females, boy. You hear me?” As he yelled, spit gathered in the corner of this mouth. I watched nervously for some of it to fly in my direction.
“Yes, sir,” he mumbled, clearly embarrassed.
“Sit down here for the rest of warm-up.”
Shiner slumped to the bench with a heavy sigh.
“And no attitude!” Coach Eckels snapped at him.
He turned to me, screwing his eyes up and down, inspecting my outfit.
“What in heaven is this?” he asked, his eyebrows scrunched together.
“I didn't have anything to change into,” I explained.
“And what in the gordon-jack-seed is that?” he asked, pointing behind me. There were several black scuffs on the basketball court tracking my path across the court like footsteps in the snow. I groaned and looked down at my discount culpritsâbetrayed, once again.
“Take those things off,” Coach Eckels demanded. “You think this is a beauty pageant?”
“No, sir.”
He let out a heavy sigh. “You never wear black soles on a basketball court. Next time wear tennis shoes with white soles, jeans, and I'll give you a shirt. And get here a half hour before game time, Thurman, not five minutes. Got it?”
He directed me to the end of the bench, where the benchwarmers waited, hoping to be called into battle. I took off my boots and tucked them under the bench, exposing my Rudolph socks, while Hector, the guy who filled in for the last stat girl while he sat out on grades probation, showed me what to do and how to keep score. Then he looked down at my socks; the googley-eyed Rudolph ogled up at him.
“Nice,” he snickered. I curled my toes in and pulled my feet under my seat while tugging at the hem of my skirt. Insulted by a benchwarmerânot a good start. But then I reminded myself of No. 3 on my list: being nice. So I smiled as genuinely as possible and said, “Thanks, Hector.” He snickered in response.
My job was pretty easy. Coach Eckels gave me a clipboard that had a little picture of the basketball court on a piece of paper. When one of the guys made a shot, I wrote his number on the court to mark where he shot from. If the basket went in, I circled his number. In the margins, I wrote down the
numbers of the guys who fouled and a notch for each additional foul. I stared at the paper, wondering how many times I'd write down number 32âJason's number.
“Huddle up!”
All the players ran to the sidelines, where Coach Eckels stood with his hands on his hips. Once they were gathered around him, he looked around frantically.
“Thurman!” he bellowed.
I slid over to him on my socks.
“Where's the ball?”
I stared up at him through unblinking eyes. “Sir?”
“The ball! The ball!” His face turned bright pink, and spit gathered again at the corners of his mouth.
I looked at all the practice balls rolling lazily around the court like lost papers in a breeze and wondered if he wanted me to go get one for him.
“I'll get it,” Jason called as he hustled over to the ball rack where one ball remained: The Ball.
How stupid of me to forget. Knowing about The Ball was practically part of the Bowie curriculum, as important as knowing the details of Santa Anna's defeat at San Jacinto. During the day, it sat in the display case at the front entrance to the school with all our trophies and pictures of semifamous people who had gone to our school, like city council members and a Channel 4 news anchor. I passed it every day without even
noticing. The Ball was taken out of the case for every game. It was more important than wearing white-soled tennis shoes or knowing the words to our school anthem.
The Ball was used in the 1989 state championship game in which we defeated the Judson Jets. We were crowned state champs for the first, last, and only time so far in Bowie history. Since then we hadn't even made it to the semifinals. In the 1988â89 sports season, Bowie didn't win a single football, baseball, or volleyball game, and our best placement in track was usually a distant third or fourth. But the basketball team exploded because they were led by Enzo Vincenzo, the tallest kid in the county and the best player we'd ever had. He was also one of the dumbest guys aroundâhis bad grades were legendary, but this was before they made the no-pass, no-play rule in Texas schools, so nobody cared how awful his grades were as long as he kept winning games. Enzo scored an average of forty-two points per game, and the final score usually only went up to the sixties. For all practical purposes, he
was
the basketball team.
Enzo led the team to the finals, but three days before the state championship game, he twisted his ankle running down the stairs at his house. They say that when Enzo showed up at school with a cane, teetering down the halls like an old man, teachers stopped and wept. The principal shook his head and said, “We almost made it . . . almost.” Coach Randolph, the
basketball coach at the time, even considered forfeiting the game rather than sending the team in like soldiers with no weapons.
But the team refused. In the three days they had before the game, they practiced before and after school. The principal even let them out of their sixth- and seventh-period classes so they could go to the gym and start working on new plays. The town was somber: Everyone knew they'd lose, but they loved the boys for their determination. The Bowie basketball team of 1989 was full of martyrs, and the town's collective chest swelled with pride.
The night of the game, all of Ladel traveled to the downtown convention center, including my parentsâthat was the night they met. My dad was a student at Ladel Senior High, and Mom had driven up from Weatherford High with some friends. They happened to be sitting near each other, my dad with his buddies and my mom with her girlfriends; none of them had ever cared about basketball before that night. The excitement of a championship win filled the hearts of every Ladel citizen. The whole townâeven the smaller ones surrounding itâwas exhilarated, cheering for these mere boys. By the third period, when the Bandits were leading the game by four points, the whole arena pulsated with the energy of an atom bomb. Mom said it's a wonder she heard a word Dad said to her; it was so loud, you couldn't hear yourself think.