Thursday, August 25, 2011

Japanese tanka


Several years ago as I was remembering my childhood in Japan, I conceived of a plan for a book of poems about that childhood, and as I worked out the book in my mind, I realized that I could tell the childhood stories and impressions with tanka, a traditional Japanese form of poetry, and simple illustrations.  I planned to have 35 poems, and as of now I have 26 completed.  I have titled the book Tanka Time.

Beginning with the next blog, I will present the poems in order.  The first nine tankas concern the crossing of the Pacific Ocean on the USS Sullivan, a passenger ship operated by the Navy.  I was five years old when Mother, my sister Debra, and I set out from San Diego, California, for Japan.  My father, a master sergeant in the USAF, was already in Japan stationed at the airbase near Nagoya because of the Korean War.

Below are items related to this blog.

The Seasons of Time Tanka Poetry of Ancient Japan

Tomoshibi; Lucille M. Nixon's Japanese Poem, Tanka Collection and Biography With Her Study of Japanese Tanka Poetry

On This Same Star - Selections From the Tanka Poetry Collection WILL

Saturday, August 13, 2011

a runt takes on a gang member



GRACE UNDER PRESSURE




“Stop throwing your elbow!” In the flag version of American football, it’s permitted to use hands and arms in a blocking set, but it’s against the rules to grab or punch. So, when Cesar kept throwing his elbow into Gumbo’s neck, Gumbo got angry and said, “Stop throwing your elbow! It’s against the rules.” Cesar, who was six inches taller than Gumbo and outweighed him by forty pounds, just laughed and did it again. Gumbo was faster and could move around Cesar if Cesar didn’t do something to slow him down, and the coach was watching another game – four of which were going on simultaneously in their physical education class – so Cesar kept throwing his elbow.

Gumbo didn’t care about winning the game, but he always tried to play as well as he could, and he always tried to play fair. Since the coach wasn’t around to settle the foul play, he decided he’d have to do something himself. The next play when Cesar threw an elbow, Gumbo stepped back, balled up his fist and plunged it into Cesar’s midsection. Cesar gasped and stumbled. Gumbo said, “Two can play that game,” ran past the stunned opponent and grabbed the flag of the quarterback before he could pass the ball. “You’re down!” shouted the players on Gumbo’s side.

Cesar stopped throwing his elbow, but now he couldn’t stop Gumbo and became angry. He tried to push Gumbo down but Gumbo slithered by and pressured the quarterback, whose pass fell short of the intended receiver. The next play, Gumbo pretended to push back, but then slid right, so Cesar, shoving hard, lost his balance and fell down. Again the quarterback had to scramble away from the persistent pest and ran out of bounds. The quarterback glared at Cesar and said, “Damn it! Can’t you stop that little runt!” Then the quarterback pointed at Gumbo and said, “Next time, you’re on my team.”

Gumbo had no specialties, but Gumbo was a survivor. His high school friends all conceded he was very bright; he got good grades, but he didn’t belong to any scholastic societies. They thought he was clever and creative, but he never entered contests; he amused himself with his drawing and his strumming. He was fairly athletic and loved to play sports, but he never went out for teams; he was content to play sandlot pickup games. He was friendly, but he didn’t belong to any cliques. He moved easily between groups, so that’s why Theodosius Umbar was called “Gumbo”: the sobriquet rimed internally with his last name, which was hard to pronounce, and it meant a mixture of foods stewed together with a base of okra, a vegetable that few of his friends liked and some wouldn’t have recognized if they saw it even though they all liked gumbo if they ate it. Okra was prickly; to pick the spiky green spires, workers wore gloves and cut the tough stems with knives, but gumbo was tasty. Besides, no one liked his first name, not even he.

Word that he had stood up to Cesar whooshed around the class. His two best friends, Donnie and David, with whom he often played pickup sports, approached him.

Donnie, a better athlete than Gumbo could ever be, grinned and said, “Did you really punch him in the gut?”

“Yeah, did.”

“Man, he’s a lot bigger than you and built.”

“Yeah, guess so.”

David, who could run like a gazelle even though he smoked cigarettes at the drugstore across the street from the school every morning, said, “You better watch your back, boy. Don’t you know he’s got a gang? Those dudes carry switchblades, chains and brass knuckles.”

“Yeah? Thanks for telling me. That makes me feel a lot better.”

They grinned and playfully punched him on the arm as they strolled to the lockers.

At the end of physical education class, he was in the showers when the Vizal brothers, skinny and squirmy like ferrets, ran up to him and said, “Would you have fought Cesar if it came to that?”

Gumbo said, “Yeah, I guess so.”

Then the two squiggled away.

While Gumbo was putting his clothes on, Cesar loomed over him and said, “I hear you want to fight me.”

Gumbo said, “No, I never said that.”

“It don’t matter. Everybody thinks you want to fight, so I got to fight you.” He said it softly like it was something he didn’t really want to do, but honor and culture had forced him.

“Ok, I guess, if you got to, you got to.”

“Meet me at the drugstore tomorrow morning. We’ll do it there.”

However, Gumbo knew the gangs hung out at the drugstore and that if he fought Cesar there, he couldn’t win because even if he somehow got the upper hand over Cesar, his gang would jump in and Gumbo would be pummeled senseless.

“No.”

“No? Where then?”

“In class.”

“Class?’

“Yeah, when two guys have a problem, coach let’s ‘em put on gloves and box. That way it’ll be fair and square, just you and me and a referee.”

Cesar knew he didn’t need any help to beat such a runt, so he agreed. “All right.”

They went to the coach’s office, knocked on the open door and went in. Their teacher Coach Bruner, a big, broad bear of a man, was also the football coach. His office was plastered with team pictures from all the years Bruner had coached, and the shelves behind him held trophies that his teams had won. He sat at his desk and had looked up at them and smiled. He said, “What is it, boys?”

Gumbo said, “We want to fight.”

Cesar said, “We have to fight.”

Coach, no longer smiling, said, “What’s this about?”

Gumbo said, “He kept throwing elbows in today’s game, so I socked him in the stomach. That’s what started it.”

Cesar said, “So we have to fight.”

Gumbo said, “Cesar wanted to fight at the drugstore tomorrow, but I said we could fight in class. That’d be fairer.”

Coach said, “Right. Besides, fighting at the drugstore could get you expelled.” He looked from one to the other, taking in with a practiced eye their disparity in size and weight. He said to Gumbo, “Umbar, you sure you want to do this?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Colon?”

“Yes, sir.”

“All right, then. I’ll set it up. We’ll mark off a ring in the field. When you get here tomorrow, come in here to get a pair of gloves. Mosco and I will referee.” Augie Mosco was one of his football players who acted as assistant in physical education.

Gumbo’s next class was history, one of his best subjects. He had no trouble remembering dates and places and events and connecting causes and effects. He understood that in warfare, the best trained and most disciplined armies often won over larger armies. He had read about the Greeks against the Persians at Marathon, Alexander’s victory against the hordes of Darius, the Romans against the Gallic tribes, the British against the French at Agincourt, Robert E. Lee’s victory at Chancellorsville, Napoleon’s, at Austerlitz. He also understood that a stubborn resistance, a bloody standoff, was a kind of victory: the Spartans at Thermopylae, the Seminoles against the United States Army, the Texans at the Alamo, the RAF against the Luftwaffe, the 101st Airborne against the Panzers at Bastogne, the American destroyers at Leyte Gulf against Japanese battleships and cruisers.

His history teacher, a Humpty-Dumpty shaped man with a balding head, announced that since Gumbo had all his work in and had achieved the only hundred on the last test, he had a free day to do anything he wanted. Gumbo asked to go to the library.

In the library he found a thin book that he hoped would help: The Basics of Boxing. He checked it out, slid it between his textbooks.

While he stood in line waiting for the bus, other boys came up to him and said, “You really gonna fight Cesar Colon? He’s real strong, you know.”

“Yeah, I know.”

“He’s fought lots a guys.”

“Yeah, I know.”

“You gonna get your ass whipped.”

“Maybe.”

“Whoo, you crazy, dude.”

On the bus, Donnie and David asked, “You’re going to fight Cesar, huh?”

“Yeah, I have to. He won’t let me alone if I don’t fight him.”

“Why’d you want to fight him?”

“I didn’t. The Vizal brothers told him I did. Now, he figures he has to fight me or he’ll look bad.”

Donnie said, “Too bad you aren’t fighting one of the Vizals. Sounds like they’re the ones that deserve a beating.”

David said, “He smokes a lot, so you probably have more stamina . . . if you can avoid getting punched out.”

Donnie said, “Stay away from his right hand. Move around a lot. Make him chase you.”

“In a way,” David said, “You can’t really lose. Nobody expects you to win. So even if he beats the crap out of you, nobody will think bad of you.”

“Thanks, dudes; you really know how to make a guy feel better.”

After dinner that evening, Gumbo secluded himself in his room and read the illustrated book about boxing: He learned several techniques. The first was to hold the wrist straight when punching; otherwise, the puncher could break his wrist. Second, plant the foot below the punching arm and drive through, using the leg to steady and power the punch. Four, keep gloves in front to block blows from the opponent; the best block deflected the opponent’s punch in a glancing manner, so the boxer received less of the force of the blow. Five, move counterclockwise around a right-handed opponent to nullify his best punch. Six, when ducking, duck into the swing, so the other boxer can’t immediately counter with his other hand: corollary, if the opponent is taller and has a longer reach, move inside his swing and give him body punches.

After he read, he practiced those techniques. He held his wrists straight, planted his feet and drove through with his punches, all the while moving counterclockwise and blocking imaginary blows from his opponent, who was taller and stronger. When an imaginary swing came, he ducked inside and punched the imaginary body.

His curious younger sister turned his doorknob and pulled, but he had locked the door, so she went to complain to their mother. The mother, who had heard huffing and shuffling sounds, came to the door, knocked and said, “Theo, what are you doing?”

“Just practicing a new dance.”

“Well, unlock your door.”

“I don’t want Gracie coming in.”

“Gracie, did you hear that? Leave your brother alone. He’s trying to learn a new dance.”

Gumbo unlocked the door because he knew Gracie wouldn’t come in for at least an hour now that their mother had warned her.

The next morning he ate a large breakfast: two eggs, bacon, hash browns, biscuits, orange juice and milk. His mother said, “My, you’re hungry today.”

As he stepped off the bus, he heard hoots and catcalls directed at him from across the street at the drugstore, but he pretended not to hear them.

The first thing he did when he got to school was return the book to the library.

He found concentrating on his studies in his first few classes to be difficult. In algebra he took a quiz and made some errors in methodology, although his answers were correct. In English, his essay was well-structured and insightful, but he failed to proofread, so had some spelling and punctuation errors. In chemistry, he was content to serve as assistant to his lab partner while she selected ingredients to make an inert compound. His mind was set on the coming fight, and he couldn’t turn the dial completely to other channels.

At lunch, he sat by himself in a corner and ate quickly shepherds pie, French fries, English peas, and peach cobbler, with iced tea. Then he went to the library and skimmed magazines and newspapers, but nothing he read registered. His main goal was just to be alone, so no one else could hassle him about the upcoming fight.

When physical education class came, he went to his locker and began undressing. He reviewed mentally the basics that he had learned the night before. When he was in his shorts, T-shirt and tennis shoes, he went to the coach’s office. The other boys were already filtering out to the fields to get ready for another round of flag football.

The coach was at his desk and tall Mosco was folded into a chair beside the desk. On the desk were two pairs of boxing gloves. The coach saw Gumbo and said, “Well, Mosco, here’s one of them now. So, Umbar, you still want to do this?”

“I have to, sir.”

“Mosco, put the gloves on him.”

The gloves fit tightly as Mosco laced them and made sure they were secure. Then Cesar came in. The coach said, “Colon, these are yours,” and tossed the remaining pair of gloves to him. Mosco helped Cesar put the gloves on.

Mosco said, “Follow me. We’ve got a ring marked off.”

The two boys followed the older boy outside all the way to the back of the field, far away from the other students who had begun scrimmaging. He stopped at some clipped grass where a white ten-foot-by-ten-foot square had been painted.

The coach walked up behind them. “Listen up. You’ll be fighting standard three minute rounds and will fight at least three rounds. Mosco will be the ref. If you step outside the white lines, that’s a point for the other guy. If you clench, Mosco will tell you to let go and you have to let go. No punching below the belt. No gouging eyes. No biting. No kicking. If Mosco calls the fight, it’s over. If one of you says he wants to quit, it’s over. When I blow the whistle, the fight starts. When I blow it again, the round is over. Any questions?”

“No, sir.”

“Ok, touch gloves and get in the ring.”

They stepped in. Gumbo looked at his opponent, who looked back with a hard gaze as if he meant to knock Gumbo out quickly. Gumbo took a deep breath and raised his gloved fists. The whistle blew.

Immediately Cesar stepped in and threw a roundhouse right, but Gumbo had already started moving counterclockwise, so the punch didn’t come close to hitting him. Then Cesar threw a left hook, but Gumbo ducked into and under it and continued counterclockwise. He also pushed Cesar away, and because he was off balance, Cesar stumbled and almost stepped out of the ring, his toes crossing over onto grass. Gumbo thought that Cesar’s arms were so long that he would have trouble getting close, but he kept moving. When Cesar recovered from his stumble and turned around, the look in his eyes had changed. His new look said that he knew he’d have to work harder to put the “little runt” down. Cesar came in punching straight with his left hand, but Gumbo pushed each shot away from his face so they went either left or right. He heard someone breathing hard and realized that it was Cesar, who was expending a lot more energy than he was. Then came a swing that almost caught Gumbo; he had only time enough to throw his head back, so the glove just brushed the tip of his nose and passed by, and Gumbo heard the swish of the air as it passed. Gumbo knew that if the punch had landed he would probably be on the ground with a broken bloody nose. Instead he stepped inside and saw that Cesar’s midsection was open, so he planted his foot and drove his fist into the midsection just as he had learned in the book. Cesar grunted and moved away. The whistle blew.

Gumbo went to his corner and thought that he hadn’t realized that three minutes could be so long. He tried to breath silently, but he was breathing in deep gulps of air. Across the way, he could see Cesar’s chest heaving and his stomach quivering. He seemed to be breathing more heavily than Gumbo.

Just as his breath was coming more easily, the whistle blew again. They stepped back into the ring. Again Cesar attacked immediately, swinging and chasing Gumbo as he bobbed and back-peddled counterclockwise. One punch nicked Gumbo on the top of the head and stung, but to Gumbo the swings seemed wilder, less controlled, and he had less fear of them. Once Cesar came in so hard and wild that Gumbo had no choice but to hug his shoulders and hold on. As he held on, he could feel Cesar’s chest heaving against his and hear the heavy breathing. Mosco grabbed them and pulled them apart. The look in Cesar’s eyes had changed again; now he seemed to be looking at Gumbo with confusion. Gumbo on his part began to notice how heavy the gloves were becoming, but then he noticed that Cesar’s gloves must be getting heavy, too. Cesar held his gloves lower and wider apart than at the start of the fight. Gumbo moved and Cesar turned, but not enough to protect his open flank, so Gumbo drove a left and a right into his side. He expected Cesar to come after him again, but Cesar just stood in the middle of the ring, bobbing a little bit, but mostly trying to get his breath. Gumbo danced around, not knowing what to do. Should he attack? The whistle blew.

This time neither boy tried to disguise his heavy breathing. They both gulped in air as fast as they could. Sweat was running in streams down their backs and chests.

The whistle blew again. They stepped in, but Cesar didn’t rush in. He stood in the center of the ring, waiting. He continued to breathe heavily. Gumbo moved counterclockwise. Cesar threw a left, but it was slow and when Gumbo caught it on his glove and shoved it away, its force was more like a push than a punch. Gumbo realized that Cesar was more exhausted than he was. He moved toward Cesar, and when Cesar did nothing in response, Gumbo rapidly hit him in the midsection – one – two – three – four times and backed away. Cesar did throw a right but it struck Gumbo’s shoulder and just pushed him back. Cesar’s look had changed to resignation as if he no longer thought he could win the fight. Gumbo knew that his punches couldn’t really hurt the bigger boy, but they did send a signal that Gumbo was still willing and able to fight. Gumbo danced around, and although his arms seemed to be turning into slabs of concrete, he once more dipped in and gave a couple shots to Cesar’s midsection. Cesar was now huffing and wheezing a little and seemed to be lifting his arms by drawing his shoulders back. The whistle blew.

The coach stepped between them. “Ok, that’s three rounds. Right now, I’d call it a draw; you both got in some good licks. You boys want to continue or have you had enough?”

Gumbo looked at Cesar with his arms hanging down like broken inverted flagpoles and the gloves not fisted but unfurled, and Gumbo knew that Cesar wanted to quit but could never be the first to say so. Gumbo said, “I’m ready to quit.”

Cesar said, “Me too.”

“Good. Mosco, take their gloves off. Now listen. For fighting in class you both get three demerits. Now shake hands, go back to your teams and play fair.”

The word rushed around that the fight had been a draw. When Donnie and David questioned him, Gumbo said, “I was lucky. He could’ve killed me.”

End of "Grace under Pressure"
 
"Grace under Pressure" was first published in the short story collection A Collection of Nickel-plated Angels, 2008.  This story is based on a real incident during my high school years in Brevard County. 
 
The person I fought subsequently worked out and became even heavier and more muscular. A year or two later while I was home from college, I ran into him one day at a movie theater.  He saw me first and walked over.  When I saw his new buffed physique, my first thought was "Uh oh, what now?" 
 
However, he reached out a hand to me and said, "Jerry, how you doing?"
 
I shook his hand and replied, "Fine, how 'bout you?"
 
"Good.  I wasn't sure you'd remember me."
 
"I remember."
 
We chatted a few moments.  He was married and working as a mechanic.  Then we wished each other well and walked away.  I never saw him again.
 
By the way, the title of the story comes from Hemingway's definition of courage.
 
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Friday, August 12, 2011

A prose poem about nothing

A Russian Stamp Showing al-Khwarizmi

1,0




Bless you, al-Khwārizmī, for the zero, the beginning of modernity, even though others had considered naught. The Chinese had a word for nothing but did not use cipher numerically. The Babylonians tried to figure around zero. The Incas in their quipus tied no knot in the space where the zero would have appeared. The Greeks, philosophically, could not call the void anything, for they found no way to honor nothing. The Romans, more practical, called it nulla or nihil but had no symbol for emptiness. But once we received 0 connected with the Arabic-Indian numerals, we loved nothing, worked nothing in, and did great things with nothing, so we could more accurately figure not only mathematically, but also chemically—the periodic table, astronomically—light years, physically—electricity, atomically—fission and fusion, athletically—nil and love, biologically—DNA, and electronically—binary systems. Where would we be without nothing? I would neither be keying this into a computer, nor taking digital photographs, nor listening to digital music, nor viewing digital television or movies, nor understanding the world better through its interconnected Web. Without it, naught would be possible in this information age, in which you have brought us everything through nothing.



3/12-17/11

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Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Cubans flee the communist island



ADRIFT



Luis giggled from nervousness and anticipation as he and his escapee fellow travelers shoved their raft into the warm shallows. Pedro, who was the serious one, did not giggle: He checked over his shoulder for the headlights of beach patrol vehicles, although the gasoline shortage probably assured that none would be coming that cloudy night. “Silence,” he whispered. They gulped air and pushed harder, scraping the air-filled metal drums over the submerged sand.

At last the raft bobbed up with a wave, pushed by the surf’s surge back at them –stubborn as if still wanting the things of the island, belonging to the island – then dived forward into the trough and crunched the fore drums with a hollow bass echo against the sandy bottom. The rafters stumbled and splashed, taking nosefuls and mouthfuls of salty spray, but clenched the wet ropes binding the metal drums to the wooden platform. The next wave crashed, but this one lifted the raft and them and suspended them for a desperate moment. When their feet hit bottom and scrabbled for purchase, the raft didn’t touch.

They pushed harder; Luis grunted and the next wave lifted their feet permanently from the island.

They scrambled aboard. Luis and Jesus lifted Natasha on their shoulders, so she could roll onto the platform; the men were afraid that the push through the surf had exhausted the pregnant woman, though she was strong for her size. Last on board, thin Guillermo, the youngest, struggled.

Natasha centered herself on the platform while the men grabbed their makeshift paddles – plywood rectangles nailed or lashed to broom or mop handles – and paddled north. Because all the men had gloves, they felt they had an edge on other rafters, and this edge would help them to cross the water. Natasha had been a schoolteacher, so she had no gloves, but she could borrow others since only four could paddle at once from the four corners of the raft.

. . . .

Natasha thought of her unborn baby whose growing had prompted their going. As she had felt it grow inside her, she had worried about its future. One night her crying awakened Jesus, who was usually a sound sleeper, and he turned to her and asked, “What is it?”

“I want my baby to have a future,” she replied in a tight, tense voice.

“So do I.”

“I want him to grow up in the United States, where he has a chance for a life.”

“Yes, Nati, but how?”

“People are leaving every day. You know they are. We can go, too.”

“But our visas wouldn’t be approved.”

“There are other ways.”

“Rafts? Boats?”

“Why not?”

“But only the two of us? You’re pregnant. We’d need others.”

She had gotten the first other, Luis, who taught sports at her school. Luis’s eyes had betrayed his dissatisfaction: Every year he had less equipment, and had to make do by fixing the old, and the students had less energy because everyone had less food, and then with the gasoline shortage, team sports had been limited to intramurals. Nati had seen him tossing the equipment around. She had seen him kicking the patched soccer ball around the dusty field during winter. She had cornered him one day and begged, “Come with us, Luis. Together we can make it.”

He had not hesitated. “You are an angel. Sign me up.”

Later, Jesus had found Pedro, whose produce distribution Jesus had inspected many times. One day he had told Nati how as they had chatted – the lack of traffic was mentioned and how Pedro was employing bicycles instead of trucks and how he couldn’t assure a job to even his little brother Guillermo, who had finished high school – Jesus had blurted, “It’s over, don’t you think?”

Jesus said, “He's going north with us, Nati, and bringing his little brother, too. He's got plenty of stuff to build a raft.”

. . . .

An hour into the wash, Pedro said softly, “Let’s stop now for a moment.” Everyone paused and turned to look back at the island, which had been swallowed into the darkness except for a dim glow to the west–Havana. For one moment, they seemed to be praying to some lost god. Pedro lifted his shoulders and sighed. “From now on,” he said, “two should paddle while the others rest. We need continuous progress.” He and his father had fished in the ocean, so he knew they had to push through the Gulf Stream’s liquid locomotion. “Luis and I will paddle first, then Guillermo and Jesus. If any of the men tire early, then Nati can row for a while.”

Jesus lay next to Nati and soon slept. Soon after Jesus, Guillermo drowsed off.

As Luis paddled, he said to Pedro, “Do you know Maria Isabel Rosario”

“You mean the one everyone says is a witch?”

“Yeah. Last year she went to Miami to visit her grandchildren. When she came back, she brought T-shirts stenciled with sports team logos: basketball, baseball, and American football: Bright fish, flaming balls in the colors of tropical islands. I bought one with an angry bird and Hurricanes in orange letters–a week’s wages it cost me, and I couldn't wear it outside.

“She showed me pictures of stores packed with merchandise–more shoes than an army could wear, more appliances than anyone could use in five lifetimes–but most amazing, a meat market overflowing with hams and steaks and roasts and chickens and fish and sausages and pork! Can you believe so much food exists! She said she ate so much she nearly popped!”

Pedro said, “Don't talk about food so much.”

“I was just thinking. Maybe for Christmas we can roast a whole pig–like Grandpa used to do.”

Pedro loved a good meal and had been portly before rationing cinched his belly. He was stouter than most Cubans, thanks to being a produce distributor and able to snatch some extra food. “Hey, Luis, if a patrol boat comes, my wife–that fidelista–will have sent it.”

“How did you keep her from knowing what you were doing?”

“I told her I was working late, but she didn't believe me. She thought I was doing another woman on the side. She accused me. I said, ‘Believe what you want.’”

Natasha woke suddenly and knew not where she was; she thought she dreamed the flying, fluffy clouds and a dark tapestry of twisting zodiac that clouds flew over. She was above the clouds and flying herself over the lights of a city. The swishing paddles and the salty sea smell brought her back to the center of the raft. She sat up. The two paddlers looked back; Luis smiled, then both resumed paddling.

Had the baby kicked? Was that what had awakened her? “Where are we?” she asked.

Pedro replied, “Several kilometers out. The current is helping us now, but it won’t always. It changes. Sometimes west, sometimes north, sometimes, who knows? We must always paddle.”

Natasha looked ahead north toward Florida where her mother lived with a new husband whom Nati had never met. Mama will be happy to see us. We can live with her until we're settled. I hope the new husband is agreeable. To have the grandchild born near the grandmother will be so nice and seems the natural thing. Nati touched her fingers to her belly and said, “I’ll row now for a while.” She sat behind Luis and stroked.

. . . .

Luis, despite his athleticism, was feeling each stroke as the sky lightened in the east. His muscles were tight like ropes wet then dried, and his stomach was as hollow as the drums on which they floated. He heard Pedro say, “Nati, wake the others. We need a break and some food. Feed them first, then send them over.”

Nati tapped Jesus and Guillermo. “Wake up. Breakfast time.”

The two groaned awake, short of usual sleep. Guillermo raised dreamily onto his elbows and blinked. Jesus reached over and touched Nati’s thigh. “Good morning, my love.” She bent down and kissed him on his salty forehead; almost every morning of their marriage, he had said, “Good morning, my love,” and every morning she had kissed his forehead. Jesus pushed Guillermo’s shoulder, “Hey, boy, are you ready? It’ll be our turn soon.”

She handed them a jug of cold coffee. “Take a drink of this, then eat some bread with fish spread or a banana. Then you paddle.”

After the shifts switched paddles, Luis and Pedro ate their bananas and their thin pieces of bread, but instead of coffee, they took long swallows of water from another jug and went to sleep. However, before Pedro slept, he addressed the paddlers. “Keep headed north. If you get hot – and you will – don’t take off your shirts. Have Nati pour water over you. If a boat approaches, wake me up.”

At first, Guillermo passed time watching the small waves dancing and hoped to see some fish. Occasionally, he heard a splash, but could never see what had made the noise. As he paddled, he noticed the water changing from gray to purple to green-blue.

He said, “Jesus, do you know it’s Saturday?”

“I guess so.”

“If I were home, I’d be playing baseball now. My friends and I always play baseball on Saturday. I’m a pretty good fielder.”

“Which position?”

“Right field.”

“Oh.”

“Aunt Lili will be really pissed now because she’ll know Pedro and I are gone.”

“Nothing she can do now. I wonder how long it’ll take to get a job in Miami? I guess we all have to learn English now–except Nati, of course.”

“I guess.”

“The climate in Miami is a lot like Cuba’s.”

“They play baseball, too.”

“And make lots of money doing it. I’d like to go to some games.”

The sun burned hotter each passing minute. Guillermo wanted to take his shirt off, but when he stretched and squirmed, Nati said, “Don’t,” and splashed him with seawater. His muscles struggled to move the paddle because his youthful leanness required more fuel than the others. He found he had to concentrate hard to keep going and he focused on an image: a polished, bright red car–at first, just a box with wheels, but the more he concentrated, the more he began to see details: chrome bumpers, convertible top, a little hood ornament like a winged horse. “Hey, Jesus, when I get some money, I'm going to buy a bright red sports car.” But there was another part of the vision: his buddies standing around admiring the car. That image made him laugh. “I’d like my buddies to see that.”

“How’d you get it to Cuba?”

“I don't know.” Guillermo shrugged his shoulders. By the time he had the car completely constructed in his mind, his shift ended.

The midday sunlight sizzled on the water as Pedro and Luis lifted their paddles.

As he had awakened like a mouse coming out of a hole, Luis had noticed keenly all the parts of the raft, and a single idea came: The raft was a little Cuba supported by the excess of other nations. The 50-gallon oil drums on which the raft floated were Russian; the ropes binding everything together, Polish; the platform of pine, East German; the plastic containers of food, Czech; the canvas bags, Romanian. They were floating on the flotsam and jetsam of communism, just like the island itself. He shivered.

Pedro paddled but kept an eye out for boats. They were out of Cuban waters, but not yet into heavy shipping lanes. The sooner they were spotted, the better. They had brought enough water for six days; but their food would be gone in five. Already one day had passed, so four more days of food remained.

Nati had wanted to teach them some English, and she had mentioned the idea when all had been awake during the change, but the two coming off shift were too tired, and the two going on were too engrossed, so she dropped the idea. Instead, she checked to see that everything on board was secured and tightly packed before she lay down with her husband.

Lying there, looking at his firm body, she wished they could make love then and there.

The second night passed. The men slept soundly when their shifts ended and paddled quietly, earnestly when they worked. Nati slept on and off, and in between she thought about her mother not seen for years. How many has it been? Seven years since Papi had died in prison, imprisoned for black market enterprise, released forever by a sudden seizure which had hurled him against the stone walls and unconscious onto the dirt floor where his cranium had filled with blood from a ruptured vessel. Her reason for staying on the island gone, Mama had waited a year and then disappeared and later resurfaced in Miami.

Nati thought about her father, who had wanted a prosperous life. He had propounded three virtues: hard work, truthfulness, and education. Nati had gotten the education, and for that he threw her a party. He had worked hard as a bus driver, but had little to show for it. He had realized that he could do better with a side business selling smuggled tennis shoes and secret crops of sweet potatoes and corn. He had felt the truth of his personal enterprise superior to the “truths” of the fidelistos. He was not ashamed, so when the block watcher had knocked on his door to tell him that his activities were known, he had said, “Then do you want to buy some corn?” A few weeks later, he had been arrested, claiming no one else had been involved.

Thinking of her father brought her peace because when she measured her action against his values, they matched. Once again, her individual truth was greater than the “truth” of the state. She thought that her father would be proud of her.

Then Nati noticed a light, curling whiff of something, barely perceptible, on the horizon to the east. She stood up shakily in the center of the raft.

Jesus, thinking of the child, said, “What is it?”

“Smoke, I think.”

All carefully stood and gazed eastward as she was. Sure enough, a thin spiral of smoke snaked heavenward in the distance. A boat surely.

Luis shouted, “Ha! We're gonna make it! Here’s to you, Fidel!” and he raised the fist of his right arm and grabbed his elbow with the other hand in a gesture of defiance at the island.

Pedro put his hand on Guillermo’s shoulder. Guillermo smiled.

The funnel of smoke transfixed them. It became their hope, their fulfillment. The men sat down and paddled harder–all four at once–toward the smoke. Nati said, “I don’t think that’ll help. The boat has to come to us. We can’t catch it.” So they sat and watched as the smoke became thicker and rose higher. Their hearts rose with it. They all smiled and looked at one another.

Then the smoke began to thin and move away to the north. Everyone slumped. Pedro said, “It’s turned into the Gulf of Mexico–heading to Tampa or New Orleans.” They sat for a long time, not saying anything, not moving. Nati’s eyes teared, but she wiped away the nascent emotion with a swipe of her forearm.

. . . .

The third day brought hunger. Jesus estimated that among the bananas, bread, rice, and beans, they were each getting at least 1200 calories a day, but because of the hard work paddling, they were burning it all, plus extra. Therefore, although they weren’t feeling hunger pangs, they began dreaming their favorite meals: yellow rice and chicken, pork with black beans and rice, fried plantains, steamed yuca, baked red snapper with lime juice. Though all dreamed, none dared talk of food.

The third day was quiet, disciplined, with each one grimly focused on each task, thinking separate thoughts. They realized that they had crossed a point of no return. If they tried to go back to the island, they wouldn’t make it, but would end up north or south of Haiti, or maybe in the Bahamas and in many more than five days. They could only push ahead and hope. That realization made them more determined, so always two people paddled.

That night a small storm blew over. They recognized the storm clouds building at sunset and felt the cool wind rising. By twilight, a solid, dark bank of clouds covered the horizon to the east, and that bank preceded by a rain scrim seemed to march relentlessly toward them. At nightfall, the waves danced and spewed little whitecaps, and the raft tossed and dipped. Pedro yelled, “Make sure everything is tied down tight!” They scrambled to and fro and gathered around them things not lashed down. The wind picked up and sprayed salty caps over the raft. Then the rain came with the darkening sky; hard and full it fell, but Nati opened the nearly empty water containers and cupped her hands over the mouth of one, so the rain came down and filled it. The others did likewise. And when the plastic jugs were full, they were recapped and re-lashed while the raft bobbed and bucked. In the middle of the storm, a large king mackerel flopped on board with a swell that washed over the stern. Luis trapped it and held it down until it stopped flopping. Luis didn’t enjoy the catch with pleasure like a lucky fisherman but held the fish desperately with the good luck that comes rarely during a long journey.

The storm passed and the waves receded and left them under a black sky. The rain left them cold and shivering in their sleep until the sun rose on the fourth day.

. . . .

Jesus swigged some of the night’s water-catch and pronounced it palatable, if a little salty – sea spume mixed with the rain. Pedro took Luis’s mackerel and said, “Hah, fortune is smiling on us. This is a good sign. We’re going to make it.” Then he gutted it and quartered it and filleted it and spread the fillets to dry over the deck. Six fillets: one for each man and two for Nati and her unborn.

Guillermo said, “I miss my friends.” The others had little energy to spare, but his brother asked, “What are you saying?”

“Nothing.”

Guillermo’s mind settled on Ignacio and Ignacio’s skinny frame and large brown eyes as if Ignacio were standing near the raft. “You know Nacho, Pedro?”

“The runt that’s always bothering people with questions?”

“Yeah, him. He loves spiders. He’s always got one, but he’s never been bitten. He says, ‘They like me, Guillermo. See. They know I won’t hurt them.’”

“He’s a strange kid.”

“He’d say, ‘If there is no God, why do so many people believe? Why isn’t Maria Isabel Rosario ever arrested? Everyone knows she’s a witch.’

“’If everything is all basically the same atoms, why can’t we be stone one day and water the next?’ I remember that one.”

“Nacho.” Pedro heard this and asked again, “What are you saying?”

“Nothing.”

Guillermo wouldn’t tell since he didn’t want his brother to think him weak, but his stomach gnawed, and he lost strength. Whenever his shift ended, he felt weak and after the small supper, slept immediately. Then, when he awoke, he felt neither rested nor satisfied. He mumbled. “If the stomach is flesh, why doesn’t it digest itself?”

Nati worried about Guillermo. She heard him muttering to himself. “If the world is round, when is our turn coming? I don’t understand that question at all. Why are beauty and evil often together? There is no answer to that one.” When his midday shift ended, he ate bread and beans and fell immediately asleep, but a restless sleep.

The others grew apprehensive at his listlessness, but their own energies flagged, especially after Nati discovered that the last jar of rice was gone. “It must have been washed overboard in the storm,” she said, almost in tears. “We got the fish, but lost the rice.”

“Such is life,” said Luis.

In the night, Guillermo disappeared.

. . . .

When the shifts changed, Nati, who had risen to make breakfast, saw that Guillermo was missing. “Pedro,” she shouted, “your brother is gone!”

“What!” Pedro could not believe and looked back and forth. He cupped his hands and yelled, “Guillermo!”

Jesus and Luis followed, and they yelled in different directions, “Guillermo! Guillermo! Guillermo!”

No reply except the lapping of the waves.

Then they tired, but none could eat or sleep. One by one, they sat on the raft and wept, not only for Guillermo but also for themselves and their weariness and their hunger. Pedro said, “We came so far . . . now for this to happen . . . What went wrong? Did he fall off in his sleep? Did he get confused? My god, how can this be? I need to know.”

Luis commented, “I thought he was acting a little strange yesterday. He kept mumbling people’s names, you know.”

“Yes, but what is it about?”

They had no will to paddle, but the current took them steadily north as they sat on the drifting platform.

They drifted until Jesus said, “Nati, you and I will paddle. Nothing can be done about Guillermo, but we have our own to think of. Come.” They ate their last bananas and washed them down with the briny water. However, after a couple hours, neither could paddle any longer. They drank more water and slumped together, worn out. Luis and Pedro had both finally slept. Nati asked, “Shall I wake them?”

“No, let them wake when they are rested.”

The rays of the noon sun bore down. Jesus saw a hand rise from the water. Guillermo! He thought and raised himself on all fours and squinted into the sun-splashed waves. The flesh was too large for a hand. It was gray-blue and pushed a crest before it. “Shark,” he hissed, startling Nati. She sat up.

The fins rose like the teeth of a monstrous dragon’s jaw until the sea chopped with the slashing triangles. A bump halted the raft an instant. Nati and Jesus grabbed each other as remembered man-eating fish ran through their heads.

Luis stirred but did not awaken.

Jesus could see the closest sharks–long, streamlined shadows gliding silently to and fro underneath the raft–Angels of Death, waiting, cruising, and biding the moment. The churning and turning of the shapes around the raft clocked many minutes. Nati’s fingers dug into Jesus’ flesh; her knuckles whitened.

Suddenly, the sharks left as if recalled to Death’s side.

Pedro’s eyes betrayed his grief and anxiety when he and Luis finally struggled awake. The two ate their final bananas, drank, and paddled. Pedro said to Nati, “You should have shaken me. I had a dream that we should go back.”

Luis, Nati and Jesus shared glances. Pedro’s comment was not unexpected given his brother’s sudden disappearance, but no one knew what to say. They empathized, but everyone knew there would be no turning back.

“I don’t mean to go all the way back to Cuba. I mean we should go back an hour or so. Maybe we’ll see Guillermo.”

Luis growled, “Damn, you can’t be serious. You know that would put the rest of us at greater risk.”

“He’s my brother.”

Nati said, “Pedro, it could’ve been any of us. It just happened.”

Pedro’s voice sharpened a desperate edge. “I really think we should try to find him.”

Luis said, “No way, man.”

“Maybe I can make you.” Suddenly Pedro turned and he had a knife in his hand.

Jesus grabbed a paddle and stood up. “What’re you doing? Are you crazy?”

“Let’s go back! I had a dream. We went back. We found him.”

Nati said, “No, Pedro, we can’t go back. That would be suicide. Dreams are just dreams. What’s wrong with you? You are the one with the sense. You should know this.”

Luis slowly stood and gripped his paddle with both hands as if it were a baseball bat. Pedro flashed the knife at him. “Don’t come any closer.”

Jesus said, “Pedro, put up the knife. What’re you going to do, kill all of us?”

Luis added, “You can’t paddle by yourself. You’d just die out here.”

“Just go back an hour. I won’t hurt anyone.” Pedro’s voice pleaded.

Nati said, “Pedro, Pedro, we might as well all jump in the water and have done with it then. Because if we go back, it will be the same.”

“But, Guillermo . . .” Then Pedro cried, first a tear rolled from his left eye, then his lips curled down, and a great sigh left his throat, and his body shook. He moaned.

Jesus reached over and took the knife away. Luis exhaled and sat down, the paddle across his knees. Nati went over and put her arms around Pedro. No one said anything until Pedro stopped crying. Then he said, “I’m okay now. Let’s paddle.” He grabbed his paddle and pushed it fiercely into the water.

The day seemed long and hot–each minute stretching into an hour, the sun spotlighting every moment with enervating heat–so when at last the sun dipped below the waves, the weary rafters welcomed the night with whispered, rasping prayers.

Nati and Jesus paddled that night, but their motions slowed and weakened and their strokes lessened from the first days. The paddles seemed twenty pounds heavier and the sea fought liked syrup against their shoving. Their throats dried and when they swallowed, little moisture was available, mere cotton teasing their tongues. Shortly after midnight, they surrendered to weakness and huddled together and slept.

. . . .

Hunger woke everyone before dawn on the sixth day, but there was nothing to eat and nothing to drink except the sea-salted rainwater. Luis and Pedro tried paddling, but long before noon, exhausted, drank more water, lay on the platform and let the sun beat them. The sea did not care.

The rafters transformed as if they believed their best hope was to lie as still and quietly as possible like children at naptime under the stern eye of their guardian. Occasionally, one sighed or grunted or moved slightly, adjusting a numb shoulder or aching joint. To a seagull flying over, they looked moribund.

Night was no relief though cooler. Strength dribbled out their bodies. They drank a cup of water each, but no one had energy to paddle or talk. They didn’t speak what they had begun to think: that perhaps they wouldn’t survive, that perhaps they would perish, and that perhaps their flesh would shrivel, their hearts would weaken and life would leave their carcasses annealed to the planks of the raft.

. . . .

By dawn, they knew the sun was not their friend, but a merciless eye, burning and searing. Each woke, drank some water, then lay back again, fearing the dehydration that weakened their bodies and minds. The sun burned their eyes. The salt crusted their skin. Their tongues swelled. Their breath came hot. No one talked. No one paddled. Aboard the raft was only the slow, occasional movement to get some water and then return to immobility.

Shortly after noon, Nati felt herself swooning, but she was already lying down, so she merely passed from a state of exhaustion into a state of disorientation and dizziness. Although she was slightly nauseated, her dominant feeling was that she was tied to a rack and the rack was spinning into a chasm, but she could do nothing. Her arms were tied and she couldn’t raise her head. If she tried to open her eyes, the sun scorched her retina and forced her to squeeze down her lids and cry. She passively wondered, Is the world burning? Is this the last day? The end will not be undesirable. The hunger will go away. The heat will abate. These are things to be hoped for. And the baby will never know the sorrow of the earth. She heard a droning, humming sound and thought, Is the planet rending itself? Are we about to be hurled into the abyss? The sound grew and then diminished and then grew again. Someone whispered into her ear, “Los Gusanos!” Yes, she thought, the worms. After death, the worms. That is what we all end up as – food for worms. Another voice rasped, “Los Hermanos!” Yes, the worms are our brothers, have been our grandfathers and grandmothers, and will be our sons and daughters. Then Jesus’ voice said, “Nati, open your eyes. We’re saved.” Her lids retreated until a crack of light let in the sky and she saw a body descending on white wings. So there are angels after all, she thought. I am ready. Let them come. Take me to the promised land.

End of "Adrift"
 
I wanted to capture the struggle and time in between two possibilities: Nothing is more representative of such than a move from one life to another.  Of course, I chose the Cuban experience because it is one with which I am familiar because I have heard the stories of people I have met here--associates, students, and others.  It is a human story that happens every day in many ways.
 
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Sunday, August 7, 2011

Skateboarding into a future

X-GAMES



A dark adolescent shape in bulky, subfusc hooded sweat shirt, red helmet and loose billowing workout pants whooshed swiftly through his neighborhood of droopy lidded windows in its first gradual awakening in the yawning morning shadows.

From awareness and long practice, Rodney Muhammed Jefferson moved expertly through the streets. He smoothly coursed the sidewalks and safely crossed the intersections. He rolled in curving lines around the obstacles – grates, torn-up concrete, bubbling asphalt, clumps of obstinate grass, wine bottles, beer cans, the legs of sleeping homeless, persistent pimps and pushers and prostitutes, gangs of indolent youth – until he reached the park that shimmered beyond the neighborhood like the pennant-streaming pinnacles of Camelot.

Once in the park, he stripped off the loose over-clothes and revealed a light bright red shirt and floppy green shorts and light red shoes that seemed to grip his red skateboard. Then, also, his tight corn-row locks tipped with red and green beads could hang free like banners.

The skateboard was his métier, his Excalibur. On the parabolic plywood fields of the park’s skateboard center, he ruled. Other competitors nicknamed him “Air Rapper” and called him “A-Rap” because his large hang-time loops spoke to them eloquently of lightness and elegance. He and his buddies would gather and spend the day rolling up and zooming down the wooden half-pipe, but when they reached the apex of the wood and launched themselves into the thin oxygen of the sky, Rodney’s skate would rise like a rocket as if his feet were glued to the board and he would soar high above the others, spinning again and again and, like a cat, fall to ground with wheels touching softly on the slope and his legs bent to grace the landing. Then the others would hoot and shout in awe of his expertise.

His fame had echoed beyond the borders of the park and the neighborhood, so sometimes skateboarders from other neighborhoods, Black or Latino, would arrive to challenge him, but he would always vanquish them, and raise his swift steed, its wheels still whirling, above his head in triumph as his friends chanted “A-Rap! A-Rap!” No one could go faster or higher or do more 360s.

One fateful day came a wonder never expected.

A-Rap and his buddies had paused for a snack and a rest and had chosen a mighty oak with benches circled around it where they could relax in the shade. As they lay back noshing and rehashing the skills displayed in each acrobatic maneuver of the day, a breeze stirred and cooled them.

Suddenly, before them stood a white boy encased in silver. His long hair was the color of blanched spaghetti and his eyes were almost invisible they were so light gray and his skin was smooth and ivory. His shirt was cloud white with sparkling silver letters that stated “Albino Roller Coaster.” In his left hand hung a silver helmet. He wore tight silver shorts and silver shoes. Strapped to his back was a silver skateboard. Around his neck hung a silver chain with a silver cross that glittered in the shifting light of wind-sighing leaves. His board was lettered, his shoes were embroidered, and his cross was embossed – all with the silver abbreviation ARC.

His pink lips spoke these words, “I hear you dudes are pretty good.”

Sir Glide, the physically most imposing of the group, rose to the words. He said, “Yeah, we good. How ‘bout you?”

“They call me ARC because my trajectory seems to follow the orbit of the earth. The abbreviation is short for “Albino Roller Coaster” because of my lightness and my thrilling rides. I have a challenge for one of you.”

“What’s that?”

“Choose one to skate against me today. If he wins, then he gets my silver necklace, but he has to return the favor next week. Next week he has to come to my grounds and challenge me there. And he has to bring the sliver necklace and something equally valuable to him. And as I came here alone, he has to go there alone prepared to spend the weekend. Home and away.”

The circle grew tighter. Sir Glide said, “A-Rap, you want to take him on?”

A-Rap stood and announced, “I accept the challenge. My name is Air Rapper.”

ARC said, “I’ve heard of you. Good. Let’s get it on.”

ARC unstrapped his skateboard, buckled his helmet on his head, and he and A-rap led the others back to the gaming center. The boards were cleared for the contest.

Then they rolled, their wheels whirring over the wooden structures. The first rounds they were like twin angels, flying equally high into the sky, their legs bent, their arms spread like wings for balance, their hair streaming like ribbons.

Below them on the solid earth the others stood agape.

Then in the final event A-Rap soared, but ARC hesitated a split-second, lost momentum and could not gain air. His wheels came down while A-Rap’s still rode the air.

The spectators chanted, “A-Rap! A-Rap!”

Graciously, ARC took the silver necklace from around his own neck and rolled to A-Rap. He said, “You win, dude. The silver is yours. Next Friday you have to come to my place.”

“How do I get there?”

ARC handed him a folded piece of paper. “Here’s the address. Bring stuff for the weekend. You’ll be my guest.”

Then he was gone as suddenly as he had come. The others gathered around A-Rap to marvel at the silver cross. Belly Jelly, the fattest of the group, said, “Man, I’d just keep that bling and never go uptown. I mean he don’t know your real name or where you live.”

Sir Glide said, “Belly Jelly, a man can’t do that. A-Rap’s got to honor the agreement. His honor is our honor.”

The others chorused, “That’s right!”

Nick-O-Lo-Deon, who watched a lot of TV, said, “Some of us could go with you. Make sure you safe.”

A-Rap said, “No, I have to go alone.”

* * *

His mother, wearing the purple shirt Rodney had given her that read “Queen-King” in gold because she was both mother and father to him, was a little skeptical even though she had never known Rodney to be dishonest, to lie or to steal. She held the silver necklace and crucifix in her hand. “Looks real dear. Let me see that address.”

Rodney handed her the note, written on white stationery with silver “ARC” curved in the upper right-hand corner. On top of the ARC was a tiny silver skateboard.

“Looks legit. Someone from that address, even a kid, could afford something like this. You sure you want to do this? You’ll be out of your element.”

“Isn’t going beyond your usual boundaries what growth is about?”

She smiled at him and said, “Sweet Rodney, you are my heart and my hope. You’ve always seemed wise beyond your years. I’ve always been able to trust you, so I’m going to trust you in this, too. Ok, go and with my blessing, but you call me every day, so I know you are all right. Now, wait here.”

She went into her bedroom and returned with a heavy gold chain whose links glowed under the incandescent light. “This was your father’s, god rest his restless soul. He had a fancy that investing in gold jewelry was a hedge against inflation. He’d have wanted you to have it. It’s heavier than the silver chain, so it’s probably worth twice as much.”

Rodney held the gold chain and could feel the magnetic earth pulling it down as if his father were grabbing at it from his grave. “It’s real heavy. You sure you want me to take it?”

“It’s yours, Rodney, to use as you see fit. You beat the albino once. You can beat him again. I believe in you, Rodney. Now let’s plan your route.”

* * *

The next Friday morning Rodney set out on a journey that took him farther than he had ever gone before. He wore the dark clothes that made him inconspicuous, and on his back was his red backpack, inside which were the gold and silver chains, a bottle of water and four changes of clothing, and, buckled to the pack, his red helmet. He carried his red skateboard. In his pockets he had his cell phone and $40 that his mother had given him.

He had to descend into the bowels of the municipal dragon, ride the subway rattling through dark tunnels and past lighted platforms where multitudes entered and exited. Neighborhoods, languages, dialects, sounds and smells fluctuated with each stop, so he knew he was moving farther and farther from home. The last stops had fewer riders until the train stopped at the end of the line where he and a few other dark riders got off, but no one got on.

He emerged into a world strange to him. The buildings weren’t so tall, and the streets were clean, every plant neatly trimmed or pruned. He glanced back toward the towers of the city, but they were far away, as if home were but a boyhood memory.

From there he had to catch a bus, which came minutes later. He mounted and the bus surged outward farther away from the city into the exurbs. Soon the buildings were fewer and fewer while trees and fence rails grew in number.

Rodney checked his map that he had printed on his computer. He didn’t want to miss the correct stop: Cornish Lane. When the bus passed Wessex Trail, Rodney knew he was close and stood, gazing ahead to see the next stop. To be safe, he pulled the cord which rang the bell, so the driver would know to stop at the next stop.
Rodney stepped down into a world without buildings, so he was momentarily disoriented. Across the street were a gravel road and a small street sign that read “Cornish Lane.” The road was gated with wrought-iron doors and a white stone and concrete fence ran in either direction as far as the eye could see. He crossed the street and walked up to the gate and saw it had no handles to pull. He looked around and saw an electronic voice box. He pushed the button on the box. A few seconds later a female voice said, “Yes, may I help you.”

“I . . . I’m here to see ARC. . . . He invited me to skate.”

“Your name?”

“A-Rap.”

“One minute.”

A minute later the voice said, “Come up, please.” The gate clicked and the two doors began to part, each moving to opposite sides of Cornish Lane. Rodney stepped in past the gates and began to walk.

Cornish Lane curved ahead, but he could as yet see no house. Lining either side of the road were large trees, stout trunks towering beside the road and bushy heads of green leaves shading the road and tall green hedges that not only added more shade but hid whatever was on either side of the road, so he felt as if he were in a long tunnel.

He walked, his shoes crunching the gravel beneath. Although he couldn’t see beyond the hedges, he could hear animals running and snorting and barking and neighing and people’s voices, shouts and laughter. At one point, he stopped and tried to peer through the hedge, but it was too thick, so all he could distinguish was movement, but no exact forms.

Twenty minutes later he saw at the end of the long curve an immense white house like a chateau with turreted towers and conically capped towers and balconies and bay windows. For a moment he thought about turning back, but his curiosity overcame his intimidation, and he marched ahead until he stood at the apex of the loop of the long drive.

A long concrete walk led to the front door. He strode to the door and pressed the doorbell. Although he heard no ringing or buzzing, a minute later a middle-aged woman dressed in a maid’s blue-aproned uniform opened the door.

She said, “Mister Arapa?” with a slight Latina accent and looked around for a vehicle.

“Yes.”

“Come in. Clay is outside, so let me show you to your room. Follow me.”

He followed her through the foyer lined with art work, paintings on the walls, statues beside the walls, and up a long, curving, carpeted flight of stairs to a third floor. When she reached the last room at the end of the third-floor hall, she stopped, opened the door and said, “This guestroom is yours. Can I get you some iced tea or a soda? That’s a long, hot walk up the drive.”

“Something clear without caffeine?”

“I’ll be back in a moment. Make yourself at home.”

* * * *

By the time the maid had returned with his iced drink, he had surveyed the room, and wondered at the riches that ARC’s family must possess. Each piece of walnut furniture had been carefully selected to match the other pieces. Maybe they had been bought as a set. The lighting fixtures, whether on the ceiling, walls or free-standing lamps, were all shaded with rose glass. The heavy drapes and bedspread and seat covers were a matching burgundy; the deep carpet, sienna. Thus, despite the white walls, his room was rosy and warm. When he held up the clear drink, even it seemed to have turned into rosewater.

He unpacked his backpack and put his clothes neatly into the chest-of-drawers. He set his cell phone and the gold and silver chains on the dresser. He shucked the dark clothes and hung them and his helmet and his backpack in the closet, where he also laid the skateboard.

Then he went to the window and pulled the drapes back, revealing French doors opening onto a small balcony with a wrought-iron railing. He went out and stood on the balcony and looked down. Below was a wide patio and connected to it a large rectangular swimming pool with pale blue water. Beyond the patio in a broad green yard were tennis courts, a basketball court, a soccer field, a putting green and driving range; at the end of the driving range were stables at which he could see people bringing in horses and rubbing them down. To the right was a concrete structure that he recognized immediately: a skateboard park.

He marveled that one family could own all that he saw. How wealthy must they be?

Then he called his mother.

“Mom, I arrived safely. They gave me a real nice room. This place is huge.”

“How do you feel?”

“I’m fine, but I’m getting hungry. Probably should’ve stopped for a sandwich.”

“I’m sure they’ll feed you soon. Where’s your friend?”

“I think he’s outside somewhere . . . maybe riding horses. He may not even know I’m here.”

“Do you still have the money I gave you?”

“Of course, didn’t stop anywhere.”

“Ok, I love you.”

“I’ll call you tomorrow. Bye.”

No sooner had he clicked off when he heard people walking down the hall. He looked out of his room and saw ARC and two white girls walking toward him.

“Hey! A-Rap! How are you, dude?” ARC greeted him.

“Fine. I just got here . . . a little while ago.”

“What did you bring to the challenge?”

Rodney took them into his room and showed the gold chain.

“Whoa, dude, that is cool. Must weight a pound,” said ARC as he hefted the necklace. “Are you hungry?”

“A little.”

“Then come with us. Merci’s getting some sandwiches and stuff for us out at the pool. Did you bring swimming trunks?”

“No.”

“No problem. I’ve got some you can wear.” Then ARC introduced the girls. Pointing at the auburn-haired girl, he said, “This is my sister Sam, and this blond cutie here is her best friend Trish. She’s going to be my girl someday, right, Trish?”

“You wish.”

Sam said, “Don’t listen to Clay. We don’t belong to anybody.”

“Glad to meet you. My name’s Rodney.”

They stopped at Clay’s room, which had white drapes and silver carpet and seemed lipid like clear water except for the framed skateboarding posters and photographs. Clay went in and brought out a red bathing suit and handed it to Rodney.

“Here, this should fit and it’s your color.”

“Thanks.”

“You can put it on in the bathhouse by the pool.”

The bathhouse was another marvel containing not only cubicles for changing clothes and restrooms but also showers, a sauna, a hot tub and a whirlpool. When Rodney exited, he dropped his street clothes by an empty lounge chair and then leaped into the pool.

One summer his mother had sent him to a summer camp where all the campers received swimming instruction, but that was several years ago. In all the time since, he had never had the opportunity to swim, and only once been near clean deep water, when he and some friends had gone to the ocean in winter when it was too cold to swim.

He felt water around him again, and it was wonderful – cool and soothing. He went down to the bottom, opened his eyes so he could see the light refracting through the chop, and then pushed up toward the surface. As soon as he broke the surface, he saw three bodies launching themselves into splashes bombarding around him. He laughed, climbed out and returned the action, curling himself into a dark ball that exploded amidst their squeals and laughter.

At the edge of the pool a hand reached out and touched his right shoulder and tugged. Sam pulled herself next to him. Her glistening face, her gleaming smile and her sparkling emerald eyes so close startled him. “You’re cute, Rodney” she said. “Do you like white girls?”

“I don’t know.”

Another rougher hand touched his left shoulder. Rodney turned his head and saw Clay’s face grinning at him. Clay said, “Come on. Let’s get some food.”

Beside the pool on one table a platter was piled with sandwiches; next to it an ice chest brimmed with cold drinks. Varied chips filled other bowls. The blue-aproned Merci had apparently come and gone unnoticed while they had been swimming. Gaily the children gathered and heartily they ate, giggling and telling stories.

Across the table, Sam flashed her eyes at him.

Then Clay said, “Rodney, tomorrow we duke it out for the silver necklace. My chance to win it back. And on Sunday, we’ll duel for the gold necklace.”

“Ok.”

“There’s just one thing you have to do.”

“What’s that?”

“Whatever happens to you here, you have to tell me.”

“No problem, Clay.”

“After we eat, we can play some computer games.”

“Ok.”

The girls disappeared after the meal while Rodney followed Clay inside the house until they had entered a large game room and were standing before a wall-sized video screen. Clay picked up two remote game controls and said, “Try it out.”

The computer game became the first contest. Rodney had played computer games in arcades and had a few games at home, but his mother wouldn’t let him play until his homework and chores were done, and if the weather was good, he went outside to skate. Only the short, cold winter days and long, rainy spring days kept him inside; then he’d pick up a video game and work the buttons against a friend or the computer. He had never played before such an immense screen, so when the game clicked on, he felt as if he were entering the maze that he saw before him.

The game Clay chose, Stronghold, had their avatars dressed in modern combat armor and armed with automatic weapons that were a combination machinegun-rocket launcher-grenade lobber-flame thrower; they also carried various ninja weapons for close combat, including an assortment of knives. The two of them had to work their way through a labyrinth and were beset with a series of encounters with monsters and enemy soldiers. The keys to winning were staying alert, being swift and agile with the buttons, and choosing the right weapon for each particular enemy. The death of an enemy added hundreds to their scores. They had to watch each other’s backs and move cautiously along the corridors. Their goal was to find a treasure, radio for help from gunship helicopters, and hold off their attackers until the treasure could be safely lifted away with their riding the cable along with the treasure until they were free of the stronghold maze.

Actual cash prizes could be won because scores could be downloaded onto the game company’s website. The highest score from any week won $150; from any month, $500; from a year, $6,000. The highest score from a decade won $60,000. Around the world, the company had fifty million players who had each spent $99.95 for the game and twenty-four million who had paid $100 to join the Strongholders Club, so they could compete for the prizes.

“The top gun,” said Clay as they warmed up with a few practice battles, “is somebody from Taiwan, who calls himself “Golden Dragon.” He’s won thirty-eight weekly prizes, seventeen monthly prizes, two yearly prizes, and has the top score so far through the decade.”

“Have you ever won?”

“Yeah, for one week. I played on Saturday with my friend Tom, and we were hooked in, like we could do no wrong, ran up the score higher than I’d ever gone. So I checked the company scores and saw mine was higher than any posted for the week, downloaded it and the next week got the check for $150. I had to share it with Tom, of course.”

“What did you do with the money?”

“Dad made me invest it with him in Google stock.”

The first game Rodney’s avatar made a wrong turn down a corridor and caused Clay’s to be killed and then his was overrun by ogres. The second game they did better, but Rodney’s was killed by a crossbow arrow in the throat after they had passed the fifth corridor; Clay’s struggled on for two more corridors until it was blown up by sappers.

“Damn those sappers! You can never know when they’ll pop up.”

They played twice more, their best effort getting past the ninth corridor, so they could see the gleam of the first treasure beyond the tenth. They fought their way to the end of the tenth corridor, called in gun ships, and were successfully fighting off a stream of attackers – harpies, Mongol warriors, gryphons and modernized Nazis – when the sappers tunneled underneath them and set off an explosion that ripped their avatars apart.

Clay grinned at Rodney and said, “Whoa, dude, we got close that time!”

“Almost made it.”

“Those sappers.”

Rodney was finally tired and said he had better go to bed. Clay acceded, but he took Rodney to the kitchen for a snack of fruit and cheese first. Then they parted company to prepare themselves for tomorrow’s contest.

In his room, Rodney disrobed, showered and donned the new purple-and-gold striped pajamas that his mother had bought him for the trip. He slid under the covers and on his back lay thinking about all that had happened that day when a knock on his door broke his memories.

“Yes?” he said.

“Rodney, it’s me Sam. Can I come in?”

“Sure, but I’m in bed.”

Sam opened the door and then softly closed it behind her. She wore a silk lilac robe over a T-shirt and pajama shorts. She had washed and brushed her hair, so it fell over her shoulders in shining streamers, and her green eyes sparkled and her smile gleamed. She fell across the bed covers, so she could look up at Rodney’s face just a couple feet away, and said, “Are you tired?”

“Yeah, a bit.”

“Do you think you’ll win tomorrow?”

“I don’t know. Clay’s very good, but I’ll try my best.”

“I hope you win because Clay’s such an egotist.”

“I like him.”

“Oh, don’t get me wrong. I love him dearly, but I just want to see him taken down a notch for once.”

“I can try, but I can’t promise a win.”

Sam reached in a pocket of her robe and pulled out a long, shiny scarlet silk ribbon. With the ribbon came an aroma of sunshine and forests. She put the ribbon in Rodney’s hand. “Will you do me the favor of wearing this tomorrow?”

“Wearing it?”

“In your beautiful dreadlocks. Win for me.”

“Yes, I’ll do it.”

“But you can’t tell Clay where you got it. He’d get very angry.”

“Ok.”

Then she pulled herself toward him and with sweet breath and a caress of her lips kissed him on the cheek. She said softly, “I like you a lot, Rodney.” Then she left, but the aroma of sunshine and forests had filled the room. As he fell asleep, Rodney could still sense the essence of the scarlet ribbon that lay next to him atop the bed covers.

So, he wore Sam’s ribbon entwined in the lock in the center of his back. He wore all red – shirt, shorts, socks and gloves.

At breakfast at the long table in the long kitchen, Clay asked him, “Nice ribbon. Where’d you get it?”

“Brought it.”

“Smells like Sam. Like the perfume she wears.”

“I wouldn’t know.”

“So, what did you do last night?”

“Took a shower and went to bed. I was very tired. It was a long day.”

Clay’s glance held skepticism, doubt and puzzlement, or maybe it was Rodney’s guilty mind that colored the other boy’s look.

At the skating park as they warmed up, the ribbon fluttered out the back of his red helmet. Trish and Sam came to watch, but Rodney after a cursory wave tried not to look their way. He wanted to concentrate on his moves.

Then the two boys went at it. Clay took the initiative and said, “We do ten rides, each selecting one and then the other. First run, a simple up and over and half turn.”

Like two race cars, one red, one sliver, they left the edge in unison and together made the swoop, the turn, and settled back on the parabolic track and stopped on the lip of the starting line. Tie.

Rodney said, “My turn: up, turn, hang ten, reversed landing.”

This was a trick Rodney had performed many times and he nailed it, but Clay’s landing wobbled and he slid off course and had to jump off and grab his board to make the starting lip. He breathed deeply and said, “One up for you. Now a high arc and head-over roll.”

That was something that Rodney had done only a few times. Perhaps because the concrete park was unfamiliar, he went too high and after the roll found himself leaning too far forward. He retracted for the landed, but it was awkward and he had to put a foot out to regain balance. Clay’s run wasn’t perfect, but he retained balance.

On the lip, Rodney said, “Even again.”

After the fifth run, they remained even, and took a break for liquids. The girls said, “Looks even to us.” The boys nodded.

Rodney had decided to save his best for the next day, so the moves he offered were not his most spectacular, merely designed to make Clay work. Clay’s tactics seemed almost the same as he chose tricks that were fairly standard and would have been challenging only to novices. Their attempts to outdo the other were limited to trying to soar higher and nail the landings better.

The last five tricks were harder, but once again neither gained an advantage, so they stood even. Rodney said, “What does a tie mean?”

“It means you keep the silver necklace. Nothing changes hands after a tie. Tomorrow we’ll roll for the gold.”

Again the foursome ate lunch by the pool and swam. Sam pulled her chair next to Rodney’s right. Trish sat on his left, leaving Clay opposite him.

Clay said, “Tomorrow will be a harder day.”

Rodney said, “I guessed that.”

Sam said, “Would you like to ride horses after lunch?”

“I’ve only ridden once before . . . at summer camp.”

Trish said, “Come on. Let’s go riding.”

“I warn you. I wasn’t very good at it.”

“If you can skateboard so well, you ought to be able to stay on a horse.”

“Skateboards can’t look back at you.”

Everyone laughed.

Sam said, “If you want, ride behind me.”

And that’s the way he rode after he squeezed behind Sam as she sat on top of a big gray horse named Tiffany. Sam flicked the reins and kicked the sides of the horse, which set off at a trot. Behind them came Clay on a white horse and Trish on a chestnut, but those two passed the gray as their horses were urged into gallops.

Sam kicked and yelled, “Giddyap!” Tiffany spurted forward to race with the other horses.

Rodney held on, feeling the power and mass of the rhythmically striding horse beneath and the warm, slim sinewy body of Sam, around which his arms were looped. His dreadlocks and the red ribbon fluttered behind him. He was exhilarated and couldn’t help laughing. Sam returned his laughter, and yelled, “Do you like it!”

“It’s great!”

The run ended in water: Tiffany slowed, so Rodney was able to lift his head and relax his arms to his sides and saw that Sam was walking it into a small lake. Trish and Clay were already there, their horses’ necks angling toward the water for a drink. Sam let Tiffany drink, too.

Rodney said, “You’re really lucky to have such a beautiful place to live.”

“I guess so. I don’t really know. It’s all I’ve ever known.”

“Where are your parents?”

“They’re in Europe . . . on business, I think. They travel a lot.”

“Who’s in charge at the house?”

“We have a governess who lives with us. She’s nice, but she checks on us to make sure we’re behaving. She’s also in charge of the servants.”

“How many servants do you have?”

“Housekeeper, chauffeur, groundskeeper, hostler – that’s it. If those need any help, temps are hired.”

“What’s a hostler?”

“He takes care of the horses.”

“Why would you misbehave when you have everything you could want?”

“We don’t have everything,” she said, her voice showing some annoyance.

“What don’t you have?”

“Well, we don’t have parents that are always here. Are your parents always there?”

“My mom is, but dad’s not around.”

“Divorced?”

“No, he’s dead.”

“Oh. I’m sorry.”

Then they heard splashing and looked toward the sound to see Clay walking his horse to them. Clay shouted, “Ready to race back?” Almost at that instant, Trish whipped her horse out of the pond and off they ran.

Sam turned Tiffany and said, “Hold on. Here we go.”

Tiffany lunged forward after the chestnut and the palomino. Rodney held on, once again enjoying the noise and speed of the beast and the feel of his arms around someone he was beginning to like very much.

At the end of the ride, the hostler was standing by the stables to take in the horses after the children had dismounted. Trish spoke Spanish to him when she handed him her reins. Then the four returned to the house.

Rodney was tired and announced, “That was great, but I’ve got to take a nap.”

Clay said, “See you at supper.”

Rodney showered, put on his pajamas and lay on the made bed, not wanting to mess it up. He fell asleep quickly and slept soundly.

He woke only when something tickled his nose and forehead and he heard a familiar voice saying, “Come on, Rodney. Time for supper.”

He swept his hand over his face and opened his eyes. Two large feathers, one white, one blue, hovered above him, and beyond the feathers two faces loomed. He refocused and saw Trish and Sam holding the feathers.

He sat up.

Sam said, “You were really gone.”

In a sleepy voice, Rodney said, “Why don’t you two get out, so I can get dressed?”

Trish said, “Or, we could dress you.” She smiled and put her face closer to his.

“No, I don’t think so. Go on. I’ll be down in a few minutes.”

With laughter, the two girls went out and shut the door.

Rodney got up and found his cell phone and called home.

“Rodney! How’s it going?”

“Not too bad. We skated for the silver necklace today and tied, so I kept it. Tomorrow we go for the gold.”

“That’s terrific! Everything else ok?”

“Rode horses.”

“Oh, be careful.”

“No, it was cool, Mom.”

“Are you getting plenty to eat?”

“Of course. How’s everything there?”

“Kind of boring without you here, so I’m just relaxing. You’ll be home tomorrow, right?”

“Yeah, I’ll leave here in the afternoon.”

“Ok, I’m making a pot roast with potatoes and carrots for dinner tomorrow. And I’ll bring something home from the bakery to celebrate.”

“I haven’t won anything yet.”

“That doesn’t matter to me. I’ll be celebrating my young man coming home.”

“Ok, Mom, see you.”

“I love you, Rod,” she said just before he clicked off.

Saturday’s dinner was a rich, savory affair supplied by a caterer. The children ate in the dining room with the governess, who was a Dutch woman in her thirties. She had a faraway look as if she were thinking about someone or something that might be coming soon.

The housekeeper Merci oversaw the setting and serving, assisted by the caterers. After the governess and children had been served, the caterers took the remaining food outside to the patio, and set up a buffet for the rest of the servants.

Rodney didn’t know how to behave toward the governess since he was unsure of her status. Was she considered a member of the family? Was she in charge like a superintendent? She seemed fairly casual, but he decided not to speak to her without her providing an opening.

During the dessert of custard cream pie, the governess asked, “What are you children planning for after supper?’

Sam said, “Games.”

“What kind of games?”

Clay said, “Maybe something different.” He turned to Rodney, “Do you play chess?”

Rodney nodded, “I learned on the computer, but I haven’t played much with other people. A couple games at school or in the park.”

“But you know how it’s played, so we can play a game or two.”

Sam said, “Use your medieval set. It’s so imaginative.”

Clay said, “We should play for something.”

“Wait a minute,” said Rodney. “I don’t know how good you are. If you’re a lot better than I am, then I should get a handicap.”

“We can play a trial game, first.”

Sam said, “What about me and Trish? Let’s play in pairs. Rodney and I against you and Trish.”

“Deal.”

The chess set that Sam had called for was amazing. It came in three carved cherry wood boxes. The board box was carved with dragon shapes, both Western and Eastern dragons. Opened, the board was four-feet square, and the squares were large alternating tiles of pale green jade and black onyx. Of the other two boxes, one was carved with crosses of various kinds in Celtic flourishes; the other, with crescent moons and rising suns inside arabesque shapes.

“Let’s toss a coin for the pieces,” Clay said. He withdrew a large silver coin from a small drawer in the board box. “You call it.” He flipped the coin into the air, so it turned over and over like a flat moon.

“Tails.”

The coin fell back onto the carpet, hit on an edge, bounced, turned another rotation and landed heads up. “Heads. I’ll take this box.” Clay chose the box with crosses.

Rodney slid the other box over and squatted before it and raised its lid. He was astonished. Inside the box were sixteen pieces, each set in its own receptacle. He pulled them out and set them on the board, where Sam arranged them. Each piece was a Chinese character carved appropriately for its status. The rooks were differently colored pagodas with silk pennants; the knights, mounted Chinese warriors—one with bow and arrow, the other with lance and shield; the bishops, a Confucian scholar and a Buddhist monk; the queen, an empress in silk dress; the king, an emperor in all his glory. The pawns were various commoners, but individualized: a fisherman, a farmer, a laundress, a laborer, a waitress, a smith, a butcher, a mother holding a baby in her arms. The pawns were two inches tall; the rooks, bishops and knights, four inches; the king and queen, six inches.

Rodney said, “These pieces are amazing. What are they made from?”

Sam, who had helped him set up the pieces, said, “Soapstone.”

Rodney looked across at Clay’s pieces, just as varied and colorful as his, but representative of Western medieval people. “This set must cost a fortune.”

Clay said, “Dad sent it here from Europe.”

Thus the games began: East against West, Sam and Rodney against Trish and Clay. The couples consulted before each move, cupping their hands and whispering in each other’s ear. One thing Sam whispered into Rodney’s ear was, “Clay doesn’t play chess as often as he plays video games or skates, so we are pretty evenly matched. Remember, to win, sacrifices must be made. The key is to set up a sacrifice in which a less valuable piece is traded for a more valuable piece until we have an advantage of either pieces or position.”

Early Sam and Rodney managed to trade a pawn for a knight and then a knight for the bishop on the light squares. Once they had a diagonal advantage, they castled and set the king so he was protected diagonally by pawns and bishops and horizontally by the rooks, and they set the queen and remaining knight loose to hunt.

Meanwhile, Clay and Trish tried to maneuver to attack the fortified king, and lost their other bishop and knight to pawns. Frustrated, they tried to advance their pawns for crowning and lost them to the queen or knight. Finally, they got one pawn home, but it was taken and they wound up trading rook for rook. Their situation was now hopeless with only two attacking pieces against five, two pawns against five.

With the Western king in a precarious position with the Eastern queen and knight checking around him, Trish and Clay had to use their queen and rook as blockers; inevitably queen sacrificed for queen. But now the board was open. An Eastern pawn, the fisherman, advanced home and was queened; the Western rook had to take her and sacrifice himself to the Eastern rook. Then unopposed, the housewife advanced to queenhood. Now the Western king was doomed. In six moves he was cornered and checkmated.

Sam and Rodney hugged and slapped their hands together.

Clay said, “That was the trial run. The next game counts.”

In the real game, Clay and Trish were more circumspect and more careful to conserve their power. Pawns were traded for pawns, bishops for bishops, knights for knights. However, impatient, they advanced a formation intended to draw the Eastern queen into an ambush, but they lost track of the dark bishop, which swept through their formation and took knight, pawn and rook before being cornered by the Western queen. But with the queen in a stopping position, others pieces were lost to the Eastern queen who roamed the opposite corner.

It seemed as if Sam and Rodney would win again, but cleverly their opponents slid the king into a position where he couldn’t move, quickly sacrificed their remaining attacking pieces and drew a stalemate.

Sam and Rodney were astounded. Rodney said, “How did that happen? We should’ve won.”

Sam said, “We lost our focus because we thought we were way on top.”

The third game proceeded slowly, each side protecting itself, playing cautiously. Then Clay opened up a pawn, allowing both the queen and a bishop egress onto the open board.

Sam cupped her hand and said into Sam’s ear, “I’ve seen this move before. Put the right knight out, forcing them to trade the bishop or the queen for the knight. It’s a ruse to trick us into opening our light bishop up for a double attack. Without both pieces, their attack is stalled and if they stay where they are, we can send our queen left on a raid.”

But Rodney said, “No, if they stay where they are, we can move a pawn in their way, forcing them to a losing choice. They’ll have to take either the pawn or the knight. Either way it’s our advantage because they’ll lose at least the bishop.”

With such a bad choice, Clay and Trish took the knight and lost the bishop, but then the loose Eastern pawn advanced into a position diagonal to a rook and a pawn in front of the king, leaving only a defensive move to protect the rook. The Eastern mother pawn took the Western carpenter pawn, forcing the rook to take the mother pawn, blocking a check. But that left the Eastern queen a diagonal run to the left Western rook, so in a blink as often happens in games, the table had turned. What had begun as an advance by the West had turned into a counterattack by the East, sending Clay and Trish into frantic whisperings, trying to adjust. But before they could block her, the Eastern queen gobbled up two more pawns and a knight.

Sam squealed in delight, “She’s a Pac-man queen!”

With both diagonals and verticals into the corner now covered, Rodney and Sam advanced their left pawns, trying to force the West into suicidal blocks, but Clay instead tried to build a wall around the king, but to no avail. By the time the wall was built, the East had crowned two more queens, an overwhelming power. Now—eight attacking pieces (three of them queens) to four—all the East had to do was advance and force tradeoffs that the West could not afford.

Clay tipped his king over. “We concede.”

Sam said, “What do we win?”

Clay looked at them, pondering the question. “We never really said, so it could be anything. But I think I have something.” He stood up and went to a cabinet.

The others began boxing up the pieces and closing the boxes.

From the top of the stairs came the governess’s voice. “Clay, Sam, it’s time to get ready for bed.”

Sam yelled, “We’re finished! We’re putting everything up now!”

Clay walked over, carrying a smaller version of the ornate cherry wood board box half the size of the one they had played on; he handed it to Rodney. “From what you said, you don’t have a set of your own, so take this. Each side has a drawer containing the pieces.”

Sam said, “What do I get?”

“Aw, Sam, you get to use everything I have whenever you want it. But I’ll get you something nice when I think of it.”

Rodney said, “Thanks, Clay.”

“You’re a competitor, dude. I’ve got to hand it to you.”

“I had help.” He nodded at Sam, who laughed and touched his arm.

In his pajamas again and under the covers, Rodney marveled at all the material things that Clay and Sam had. Yet, they weren’t selfish. They shared easily. They gave things away that most people would cherish, but to them seemed like nothing much.

What surprised him the most was how much he liked the brother and the sister. As wealthy as they were, they weren’t full of themselves. They had lived a relatively pampered life, yet they were not without empathy for others. And Sam, she was a wonder. She seemed to really like him, and he found her so special, so naturally herself and so open to him. He wondered what their parents were like.

Then his door cracked open and in slipped Sam wearing the silk lilac robe over her night clothes. She softly shut the door and went to the bed and slipped under the covers with him. They kissed.

She said, “I couldn’t knock because I was afraid Ms. Everrood would hear.”

“The governess?”

“Yes. You don’t mind my coming, do you?”

“No, Sam, I don’t mind at all.”

“Do you like me?”

“I like you a whole lot.”

“Good. I like you, too. Do you think we could be friends?”

“We’re already friends.”

“More than just friends?”

“I think so, but we live a long ways from each other.”

“We can keep in touch with our cells and email, and we go into the city almost once a month, so you and I could find a way to meet. And you can come to visit out here, can’t you?”

“Sure . . . sometimes.”

She kissed him again and slipped off the bed and stood next to him. She pulled a long green ribbon from her pocket and handed it to him.

“Will you wear this for me, tomorrow? Wear both ribbons in your hair?”

“Of course.”

“But don’t tell Clay where you got it.”

“I won’t.”

Then she disappeared out the door, leaving the green ribbon that smelled like her.

The next morning Clay questioned him about the new green ribbon, but Rodney said he’d had it all along. That day he wore green: shirt, shorts and socks. The green and red ribbons flew like streamers from his locks. As before, he acknowledged the girls, but kept his focus on the skateboard.

His skating was deft; he was in a zone. His mind saw openings just as it had when he’d played chess the night before. He took the openings, so the outcome was never in doubt, although Clay tried some daring routines.

After lunch, Rodney packed his things, putting the gold and silver chains and the jade and onyx chess set inside his bulging backpack.

But he didn’t have to take the bus. The chauffeur drove him and Clay and the girls, in the white limousine to the subway entrance. All the children got out to say farewell. Sam hugged him and kissed him, and she whispered, “Call me . . . soon.”

He whispered back, “Count on it.”

Clay walked him to the descending stairs and said, “I don’t think you were completely honest with me, but you won fair and square. You won everything, but promise me one thing.”

“What’s that?”

“Don’t ever lie to Sam.”

“I won’t.”

Then Rodney rode the dragon home, his mind full of the weekend, and especially the girl who had stolen his heart.

* * *

At home, his mother hugged him and kissed him, but everything seemed different somehow, but he knew that his home hadn’t changed; he had.

He showed his mother his prizes. She said, “The chess set is beautiful. Where are you going to put these gold and silver chains?”

“I’m going to sell them and use the money.”

“For what?”

“I’m going to buy some Google stock. We can set it up together on an e-trade site.”

“My man,” she said, almost breathlessly.

“And next year, I want to take a foreign language in school . . . probably Spanish.”

“My man.” Her eyes had started to tear.

“And, Mom, would you mind if I dated a white girl?”

“No, honey, I don’t mind . . . as long as she’s good enough for you.”

“She is.”

“But, Rodney, remember: there are plenty of worthy black girls out there.”

“I know, Mom, just like you . . . but I like this one.”

“My man.” She began to cry openly. “My man.”

End of X-Games.
 
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