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Authors: Robert B. Parker

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Friends of his mother and father came and went, saying awkward things about sorrow mostly to his mother. Some of the men shook his hand; some of the women patted him on the shoulder. There were no kids. Kids didn’t go to wakes much. The people who worked in the funeral parlor were hovering around, guiding people to the guest book, looking sad. He hated them; they seemed phony to him. They didn’t even know his father.
Then there was a kid, by himself, Jason Green, wearing a suit coat and tie. He walked past the funeral parlor man at the door, who looked at him as ifhe didn’t belong, and came straight up to Terry.
“Hi, ” he said. “I wanted to tell you something.

Terry said, “Thanks for coming, ” as he had already said two dozen times. It was what his mother had told him to say. He too had on a coat and tie. It seemed odd to him.
“My father died when I was ten, ” Jason said. “After a while you won’t feel so bad as you do now. ”
Terry nodded.
“You ’ll get used to it,

Jason said.
Terry nodded again.
“I just wanted you to know, ” Jason said.
“Thank you, ” Terry said. “Thanks for coming.”
CHAPTER 9
S
eated behind his desk in his office, Mr. Bullard looked even bigger than when he was walking around. Mr. Bullard nodded Terry to a seat across from him and sat silently looking at him. He had his suit coat off and his sleeves rolled and his arms folded across his chest. His forearms were huge.
Like Popeye, Terry thought.
“You wanted to see me?” Terry said.
Bullard nodded silently. Terry waited.
“You went to the nurse yesterday,” Bullard said after a time. “Without a slip.”
Terry started to say yes sir, but stopped.
“Yes,” he said.
“Do you know the school regulations?” Bullard said.
“Yes.”
“Then you know that unauthorized visits to the school nurse are prohibited.”
“I just wanted to ask her some questions,” Terry said.
“About steroids,” Bullard said.
“Yes.”
“Why?”
“I’m just trying to figure out what happened to Jason,” Terry said.
“Jason Green,” Bullard said.
He remained motionless, sitting massively with his arms folded.
Trying to intimidate, Terry thought.
“Yes.”
“And you are not happy with the official explanation?” Bullard said.
“I don’t think Jason would take steroids,” Terry said.
“There were traces in his system,” Bullard said.
“But even if there were,” Terry said, “would it make him crazy enough to kill himself?”
“Apparently,” Bullard said.
Terry felt his stomach tighten. His throat felt tight. He took a deep breath and let it out slowly.
“I don’t believe it,” Terry said.
Bullard unfolded his arms and leaned forward in his chair and rested his thick hands on his desktop.
“You don’t believe it,” Bullard said.
“No.”
“And you’re an expert in these matters,” Bullard said.
Keep your feet under you, Terry said to himself. Keep
your form.
“I’m trying to learn,” Terry said.
Bullard drummed softly on the desktop with his fingers. Terry waited.
Okay, keep your jab working,
he thought
. Don’t let him swarm you.
“Mr. Novak,” Bullard said.
Terry waited.
“Mr. Novak,” Bullard said again. “How old are you?”
“Fifteen.”
“Fifteen,” Bullard said, and shook his head.
Terry was quiet. Bullard drummed his fingertips some more.
“I will not try to explain all of this to you,” Bullard said after a time. “There is too much that you don’t know Let me just say this is an adult problem being tended to by adults. I do not want you to have anything further to do with it.”
“I liked Jason,” Terry said.
“We all liked him,” Bullard said. “His death is tragic. And that is precisely why we do not wish to cause his mother more grief.”
Terry didn’t know what to say to that. He was quiet.
“I want you out of it,” Bullard said. “Do you understand?”
Terry nodded.
“I understand what you want,” Terry said.
Bullard slammed the palm of one hand on the desktop.
“And you’ll do it,” Bullard said. “You’ll stop poking your dumb fifteen-year-old nose into things you don’t understand, or you’ll have more trouble from me than you can imagine.”
Jab, Terry thought. Fight smart. Jab and cover.
“Yes sir,” he said.
Bullard pointed a thick forefinger at Terry.
“Behave yourself. I do not wish to have to take disciplinary steps.”
“Yes sir,” Terry said.
“You better believe it,” Bullard said.
“Yes sir, I do,” Terry said.
“All right,” Bullard said. “Now get out of here.”
“Yes sir,” Terry said. “Thank you sir.”
CHAPTER 10
I
guess you were Jason Green’s best friend,“ Terry said to Nancy Fortin. “Weren’t you?”
She shrugged.
“Tell me about him,” Terry said.
“You knew him,” Nancy said. “What’s to tell?”
Nancy was a square-built girl, strong looking, with short black hair. She was in the technical arts curriculum, where Jason had been.
“I didn’t know him well,” Terry said. “He seemed like a nice kid.”
“He was. Lot of people dumped on him, though. He didn’t play sports or anything.”
“Lot of people thought he was gay,” Terry said.
“You?”
“Yeah, I guess I thought so.”
“But you didn’t care.”
“No.”
“I don’t know if he was gay or not,” Nancy said. “He liked to draw and stuff. He was studying landscape design.”
“He wanted to be a gardener, right?”
“Not a gardener,” Nancy said. “A landscape designer. There’s a difference.”
“Oh,” Terry said. “That why he’s in the tech arts curriculum?”
“Yeah,” Nancy said. “I guess. Why wouldn’t he be?”
“Didn’t seem the type,” Terry said.
“We’re not all stupid,” Nancy said.
“I didn’t say you were,” Terry said. “I just figured Jason more for writing poetry and stuff.”
“I guess you figured wrong,” Nancy said.
“I do that a lot,” Terry said. “What are you studying?”
“Culinary arts,” Nancy said.
“Going to be a chef?”
Nancy nodded.
“Not a cook,” she said.
Terry nodded.
“You think Jason killed himself?”
“I guess so,” Nancy said. “Everybody says he did.”
“But would he?” Terry said. “I mean you knew him really well. Would he kill himself?”
“How do I know?” Nancy said.
Nancy always had a tough sound in her voice, Terry thought, like she was mad about something.
“You were his best friend,” Terry said.
She shrugged. Terry could tell she didn’t like talking about this.
“His father’s dead,” Nancy said.
“I know,” Terry said.
“His mother was kind of a problem.”
“Why?”
“She got drunk all the time,” Nancy said.
“Every day?” Terry said.
“After his father died,” Nancy said. “Jason told me she would get drunk every night and pass out on the couch.”
“That sucks,” Terry said.
“Lot of things suck,” Nancy said.
Terry decided not to ask about that.
“You think he was on steroids?”
“I don’t know why he would be,” Nancy said. “And, I mean I loved him, you know? But he sure didn’t look like he was taking steroids.”
Terry smiled.
“No he didn‘t,” Terry said.
“He did take something for asthma,” Nancy said. “I think he told me once it was some kind of steroid. We joked about it.”
“He had asthma?”
“Sometimes,” Nancy said. “The stuff he took seemed to help.”
“And the gardening didn’t bother it?”
“I told you before he was into landscape design,” Nancy said.
“And he joked about taking steroids?”
“Yes, he thought it was funny, you know? How he wasn’t into all that macho stuff,” Nancy said. “But he was taking a steroid.... He didn’t even like sports, or fighting, or weight lifting. He liked to draw.”
“And now he’s dead,” Terry said.
“It’s awful, isn’t it?” Nancy said.
“Yes,” Terry said. “It is.”
CHAPTER 11
I
throw my right at you,” George said. ”You block it with your left, counter with your right.”
Terry did it.
“Or you block with your left,” George said. “And counter with your left.”
Terry did it, pounding the punches into George’s big mitts.
“Keep your right up when you counter with your left.”
Terry did it over. He kept his right hand high.
“Good,” George said. “But what if I come straight in on you?”
He demonstrated with the big mitt.
“So I inside your left and you can’t block me?” George said.
“I get... a big fat ... lip,” Terry said.
He was breathing very hard.
“You might,” George said. “But if you check me, maybe you won’t.”
“Check,” Terry said.
“It’s a move they use a lot in martial arts,” George said.
“I’m only... interested... in boxing,” Terry said.
“Not so different,” George said. “Get your hands up. We’ll go through it slow motion. Stick your right hand at me, straight on.”
Terry did, slowly. George diverted the punch slowly with his right hand, dropping his left at the same time.
“Just move the punch away. Not far. Just make him miss ... and now, with your left you come up in a half circle and block him hard and get a nice shot at his head with your right. On the street you might use your elbow. It’s right there handy.”
They practiced a few times. Terry kept forgetting to drop his left when he checked with his right. His arms would tangle.
“Damn,” Terry said.
“How many times you got to throw a punch,” George said, “‘fore it’s part of the muscle memory?”
“Three, four thousand,” Terry said.
“You done it seven times now,” George said.
“Looks easier,” Terry said, “when you do it.”
“It is easier when I do it,” George said. “I done it a million times.”
Terry nodded. They worked some more on check-block. And at the end of the session, Terry sat on the chair and George took off the gloves for him. Terry unwrapped his hands and caught his breath.
“How long we been doing this, George?” Terry said.
“Five months,” George said.
“I’m nowhere near a boxer yet,” Terry said.
George shrugged.
“And I don’t want to get into a fight with anybody in the school yard or something,” Terry said.
George nodded.
“But if I did, you know,” Terry said, “I’d have a plan. I might win or I might not, but I would sort of know what I wanted to do.”
“Good to have a plan,” George said.
They were quiet as Terry unwrapped the self-sticking tape from his hands and wrists.
“It makes you feel, like, calm,” Terry said.
“Calm is good,” George said.
Terry balled the tape and dropped it into the wastebasket in the corner.
“You ever scared, George,” Terry said, “when you were fighting?”
“Every fight,” George said.
“The whole fight?”
“No,” George said. “Once you get into the first round, you sort of lose the fear thing. First round you figure out if you got a legitimate chance to beat this dude or if you pretty much gonna concentrate on surviving.”
“You didn’t always think you’d win?”
George smiled.
“I could always hit,” George said. “So I always had a chance, but you know pretty quick whether you as good as he is.”
“How about a street fight? Not when you were a bouncer, but just, you know, some guy gives you grief, and you pop him?”
“You a professional fighter, Terry, you ain’t supposed to be popping people on the street. Law give you trouble on that,” George said. “Besides, most street fights be about proving something. You a fighter, you know what you can do. Ain’t no need to prove it.”
Terry nodded. His hands were unwrapped. His breath was back to normal. The sweat had dried. Still he stayed in the chair.
“You’d think it would be the other way,” Terry said. “But it’s like, the more you know about fighting, the less you fight.”
“Maybe the less you be fighting about nothing,” George said.
He put the big sixteen-ounce gloves onto the shelf and turned and looked at Terry for a moment. Terry thought he was going to say something, but he didn’t. He just looked at Terry silently and nodded as if to himself.
“Don’t be worrying ‘bout the check-block thing,” George said after a while. “You gonna get it.”
SKYCAM IV
G
loria Trent stood on the front steps of the Cabot town hall. Her husband was beside her, and several others. A small group of reporters, including one television crew, was gathered in front of her.
“I have devoted my life to simple things, ” Gloria Trent said. “To my family, my husband, who
is here with me today, and my daughter, who is now completing her freshman year at my own school, Taft University. I have also devoted myself, as my family responsibilities permitted, to public service, first as school committee chairperson of this lovely town, and then as the chair of the Cabot Board of Selectmen. Today, with my daughter away at school, I have more time available for my
second love, and with the enthusiastic support of
my husband and daughter, I’m announcing my
candidacy for the Republican nomination for gov ernor of this great commonwealth.”

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