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    Rebound

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      Win.

      Then stay in the game. Focus. I know it’s been a rough year for you. That’s the worst kind of thing, to lose a father. And a son. I wake up each morning hoping I make it through another day without breaking down, to help me help Alice make it without giving up.

      I just wanted some sneakers, and my dad was gonna get them, and Mom wouldn’t buy me any, and Skinny’s other cousin was gonna—

      SNEAKERS? You’re out here chasing trouble for some sneakers? Son, you better wise up! How you think your daddy would feel about what you done? he asks me, and just lets the question sit, lets it sit long enough for me to completely break down.

      I don’t mind you sitting over there crying, but you gotta say something. Now’s the time.

      I don’t know what to say. I just, I mean, I feel, I thought everything was okay, and then it wasn’t, and then I came here, and it got better, and now I’m empty again, and I’m sorry, Granddaddy.

      Don’t be sorry, be smart. Wasn’t for Smitty, you could be headed to juvie. Or worse, they’d try you as an adult, and your whole life is uphill from there.

      . . .

      What’s going to happen to Skinny?

      What’s gonna happen to you, boy? You gotta focus on righting YOUR life, ’cause you got a right to life. We’re all suffering, and it’s okay to feel what we feel, but we still here. We still here, Chuck.

      Rebound

      We lean

      against the hood

      of his car

      watch

      a few planes

      land, a

      few more

      take off.

      He puts

      his arms

      around

      me, pulls my

      sobbing head

      close to him.

      You know, Chuck,

      he says.

      You’re not always gonna swish.

      . . .

      You gonna miss some.

      Heck, you gonna miss a lot.

      That’s the way the real world works.

      But you gotta grab the ball and

      keep shooting. You understand?

      Yessir.

      I tell you what, though,

      you’ll make a lot more

      than you miss if

      you’re not always going for

      the flash

      and flair.

      Try using

      the backboard, son.

      You got me.

      You got your grandmother.

      You got Roxie.

      You got your mother.

      You got all of us,

      remember that!

      Okay.

      Now let’s get on home,

      ’cause your momma

      and Alice

      probably worried

      to death.

      I’m sorry, Granddaddy.

      Yeah me too, son. Me too.

      Homecoming

      When I walk through

      the front door

      it’s like

      being back

      at the funeral.

      I can’t talk.

      I’m afraid.

      My heartbeat

      is deafening,

      I don’t feel any-

      thing but the tears

      and the arms

      of my

      mom.

      After I hug Grandma

      Mom says,

      Come here, Charlie,

      so, I do,

      and she’s crying,

      and she asks if I’m okay,

      and I’m not,

      and I am,

      and she asks

      what was I thinking,

      and I tell her I wasn’t,

      then Grandma

      starts hugging me again

      and says,

      We are all going to figure this out together, ’cause we’re a family and nothing matters more than family,

      and then we all walk

      into the kitchen

      and she puts

      a plate of leftovers

      in front of me.

      I saved this drumstick

      and burger for you, Charlie, she says, and

      the four of us

      sit at the table

      and they start talking

      about all the antics

      of the cookout

      and no one mentions again

      what I did,

      almost as if they think

      going through it

      was enough punishment

      and consequence

      for me.

      And when I finish,

      my mom tells me

      to pack.

      Conversation with Mom

      Why?

      We’re leaving tomorrow.

      Why? I don’t want to leave, Mom. I was finally starting to have a good time.

      I have to work Monday. But maybe we can come back and visit at the end of the summer.

      But I don’t understand.

      Grandparents shouldn’t have to deal with all this kid and teenager drama. Grandparents are made for good food and jazz and fun. You should have seen your grandmother when she found out you were at the police station. She almost fainted.

      Things were going pretty good until today, though. I don’t want to leave. I’ll be good, Mom, I promise.

      I’m sorry, baby, but we have to leave.

      Just when I’m starting to have a life again, you have to mess things up. It’s just mean, and it’s not fair.

      Maybe your mean, unfair mother misses you.

      . . .

      Charlie, my heart’s been broken too, and I thought you being here would give me time to heal. Boy, was I wrong. It was worse. I need you, son. I love you.

      . . .

      Everything’s going to be okay, she says, and gives me the hug I guess I’ve been needing, ’cause it does make me feel like, for once, everything is gonna be okay.

      Can we stop by KFC?

      Why don’t you get your stuff together and we’ll see about that, she says, laughing.

      I need a bag for my comics.

      Just put them in the same bag you brought them in.

      I have a bunch more now. I found Dad’s comics.

      These were your father’s? she says, picking them up off the bed.

      Yes.

      Did your grandmother say you could take these?

      I’ll ask.

      . . .

      . . .

      I miss him so much.

      I know, Mom, I say, and then I give her the hug I think she really needs.

      So much. Thank you, Charlie. Thank you for this.

      We’re on the same team, Mom!

      I know, honey.

      . . .

      What’s this? she asks, picking up the notebook that CJ gave me.

      Oh, it’s nothing, I snap, snatching it back from her.

      Charlie, is that a diary?

      No, it’s not a diary, it’s a notebook. It’s private, I say, packing it at the bottom of my suitcase.

      Okay, she says, smiling, and turns to walk out the room.

      Mom?

      Yes, honey?

      Is Skinny going to be okay?

      Your grandfather says he’s on his way home too.

      Cool.

      Now hurry up, then go on in there and give your grandmother another kiss and tell her you love her. Your grandfather, too. He may be Iron Man, but he was as scared as she was.

      . . .

      Come on, pack up your clothes.

      Mom, I was wondering?

      Yes?

      Would it be okay, if you, uh, stopped calling me Charlie?

      Charlie, what are you talking about?

      I go by Chuck now.

      You what?

      I just prefer it.

      Whatever, Charl—Chuck!

      6:00 a.m.

      I wake up

      to walk

      to the lake

      and listen

      to Granddaddy

      go on and on

      about random things

      one last time

     
    ; but he’s not

      in the living room

      this morning

      and his music

      isn’t playing

      either

      so I go

      to the kitchen

      to get a cookie

      and I look

      out the window

      and see him

      and my grandmother

      in the backyard

      picking peaches

      off the ground.

      Peaches and Hope

      What are y’all doing back here? I ask, walking out the back door.

      We’re milking cows—what does it look like we’re doing?

      Your grandfather and I are getting peaches, Grandma says.

      Off the ground? Are they good?

      They’re immature, Chuck. Weak. Scabs and stinkbugs sucking the life out of ’em, he says, like he’s not really talking about the peaches. But there’s a few good ones here. There’s hope.

      There’s always hope, Grandma adds, winking at me.

      My back’s killing me, and my knee’s acting up. C’mon over here and help us out.

      Percy, the boy is about to leave. Let him be.

      Good ol’-fashioned work ain’t never hurt nobody, Alice. Look, son, he says to me, aim high, reach for the sky, take your piece of this world, and make it into something sweet.

      Yessir, I say, understanding what he’s really saying. Do y’all mind if I take my dad’s comics?

      Sure, Charlie. He would’ve wanted you to have them, Grandma says.

      And go see your cousin before you leave. She woke me up last night trying to talk to you.

      What’d she say?

      I’m not your secretary, boy. Go over there and find out.

      Bet

      After breakfast

      I go to Roxie’s

      to say goodbye.

      I try to shake

      her hand

      but she hugs me

      instead

      then says,

      I’m glad you’re all right. That was stupid, though.

      Yeah, I know.

      Did you get in trouble?

      Not yet.

      They probably think being in jail was enough of a punishment.

      It was.

      Thanks for playing this summer.

      Thanks for playing with me.

      And teaching you?

      You didn’t teach me.

      I did so.

      You just kinda helped. I got natural talent.

      That’s a lie.

      Let’s go play one more game, then, and see.

      Don’t waste my time.

      Bet you I’ll beat you.

      Bet me what?

      I don’t know, ten dollars.

      You don’t even have ten dollars!

      I do, I say, pulling out my wad of crumpled bills.

      Nah, I want the ball.

      What ball?

      The Globetrotters ball.

      I’m not giving you that.

      ’Cause you’re scared, and you know this girl’s gonna shoot your lights out.

      I’m not scared.

      Then let’s go ball.

      Bet.

      One-on-One

      I miss

      my first jumper.

      She grabs

      the rebound, shoots

      a bank shot

      right in my face.

      In your face, Chuck!

      I try my double cross again

      but this time slower,

      and it works

      just enough

      for me to glide

      by her

      and lay up

      an easy bucket.

      Whoa, Roxie! You might need some makeup, ’cause what Chuck Bell did to you

      was just UGLY! I say, bopping my head.

      She laughs (a little)

      and we go back

      and forth

      like this

      till the score is

      eleven to nine,

      and she wins

      and I lose

      but it’s the closest

      I’ve ever come

      to beating her,

      to feeling like

      maybe

      I’m finding

      normal

      again.

      Keep your ball, Chuck! But gimme that ten dollars, she says, laughing and punching me in the arm.

      Goodbyes

      Grandma hands me

      a whole peach pie.

      Alice, that’s my pie, Granddaddy screams from the porch.

      She shushes him.

      Mom starts

      our car.

      Thank you, Grandma, for letting me stay here this summer. I’m sorry about what happened.

      You just be a good boy, listen to your mother, and come see me from time to time, okay, Charlie?

      Yes, ma’am.

      Now go on up there and say goodbye to your grandfather.

      Yes, ma’am.

      Conversation with Granddadddy

      Do me a favor and listen to jazz, Chuck. It’s the glue that holds us together when we’re falling apart.

      I don’t know, Granddaddy. Mom doesn’t like me being exposed to a lot of sax and violins, I answer, and he laughs so loud, he almost falls out of his chair.

      You take care of yourself, son.

      I will. I guess I’ll see ya, Granddaddy.

      I, uh, love you, Grand—

      Yeah me too, Chuck. Me too. Now take this, he says, handing me a record. And don’t give your momma too much trouble. You’re lucky to have her.

      What’s this?

      What’s it look like?

      A record.

      Then that’s what it is.

      This is for me?

      I gave it to you, didn’t I? Stop asking silly questions.

      Who is Horace Silver? I ask, looking at the record. Oh, wait, this is the song you play all the time, right?

      . . .

      Why are you giving it to me?

      Why do you think?

      I don’t know.

      I used to play it for your daddy when he was little. I want you to have it now. Promise me you’ll play it.

      Yeah.

      “Yeah” is for your friends.

      Yessir. Thank you for the album, Granddaddy. Which song is it?

      The greatest jazz song ever, Chuck. “Filthy McNasty”!

      June 14, 2018

      JB’s been trying

      to break

      this record

      for years,

      but fifty free throws

      in a row

      is impossible,

      I keep telling him,

      even for the best

      basketball player

      in the state,

      even for the number one

      Tarheel recruit,

      even for the son

      of Chuck Bell,

      but this dude

      won’t listen,

      thinks today

      is the day.

      What a SUCKA!

      Conversation

      This is the one, Filthy, he hollers.

      Yeah, I hear you talking, JB.

      Who’s Da Man?

      Not you, fool! I’m going back inside to help Mom clean up.

      Hold up—don’t you want to witness history?

      Nah, I’m good on the history.

      But I’m doing this for us. This is probably the last time we’re gonna see each other in a while.

      I’ll be in Colorado, not Cambodia.

      I heard they don’t let freshmen leave the campus for a year, though.

      It’s the Air Force Academy, not prison.

      But we’ve never really been apart before.

      You’re always so lugubrious, man. Gimme the ball!

      . . .

      As in: When we leave for college, Mom’s gonna be all lugubrious too.

      Sad?

      Naw, man, like REALLY, REALLY SAD.

      . . .

      Give me the ball!

      Your playing days are over, Filthy. You’re washed up, a clam, a crab. No game, just lame
    .

      But I can still take you to the glass, fast, and on blast. Give it to me!

      How much you wanna bet you miss it?

      I’m still supersonic classy, downright in your face McNasty. Once you floss, you never lose the cross. And I’m still the boss.

      I bet you don’t make it.

      How much?

      Fifty dollars says you miss.

      I’m not betting fifty dollars.

      Dad’s ring.

      C’mon, son, you know I’m not giving that up. Why would you even say that?

      You afraid you’re gonna miss. I knew it.

      Naw, I’m just not stupid.

      Okay, you miss it and I get to kiss your girlfriend.

      Apparently you are stupid. And sexist. Geesh!

      Twenty dollars, then.

      Bet.

      Air Ball

      He turns around

      tosses me the ball.

      Don’t hurt yourself

      Watch this, I say.

     


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