by D. K. Wall
The Lottery
A Novel
D. K. Wall
Copyright © 2019 by D. K. Wall
All rights reserved.
Copyright is a critical part of the creative process. Thank you for supporting the artistic community by reading only properly authorized works.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
All inquiries should be addressed to:
Conjuring Reality LLC
PO Box 1835
Maggie Valley NC 28751
ISBN 978-1-950293-00-1 (Paperback)
ISBN 978-1-950293-01-8 (eBook)
* * *
Library of Congress Control Number: 2019901422
This book is a work of fiction. The story incorporates real locations and entities, but all are used in a fictitious manner. The events of the story, the characters, and Millerton itself are products of the author’s imagination and purely fictional. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Cover designed by Glendon S. Haddix of Streetlight Graphics
Contents
I. Football Friday Night
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
II. Friday
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
III. Saturday
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
IV. Sunday
Chapter 27
Get Alone Together Free!
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Follow D.K. Wall on Social Media
Part I
Football Friday Night
Fourteen Years Ago
1
The four best friends stood shoulder to shoulder in the cold, driving rain. The future stretched only one second ahead in their minds. The hulking man screaming in their faces prevented them from thinking of anything else.
“Your choice. Right here. Right now. Are you winners?”
“Yes, Coach!”
Coach Tommy Burleson stood in the center of the huddle of uniformed teenagers as rain dripped from his navy-blue ball cap, the white-stitched MHS logo a waterlogged gray. Fog puffed from his mouth and hung in the chilled air with each shouted word. “One second on the clock. One play left to run. That’s it. This is all about pride. Ain’t nothing means more than pride, right, gentlemen?”
“Yes, Coach!”
Nathan Thomas bounced on the toes of his cleats, burning nervous energy and keeping his muscles loose in the frigid November air. His shoulder pads clacked against the pads of his teammates crowded beside him. The coach thumped him in the chest with a meaty fist and waved at the three boys closest to him, their dark-blue jerseys covered in mud. “We’ll do it for these four right here. The Fearsome Foursome. Our defensive seniors. They are about to walk onto that field for the very last time as Millerton High School football players. They’ll never again suit up in the blue and white. And we owe it to them to bring this victory home. We’ll do this for our seniors, right?”
“Seniors, Coach!” The surrounding underclassmen slapped the backs of their seniors, a thunderous smack against their soaked jerseys.
The steady downpour and drifting fog obscured the scoreboard at the far end of the field. The speckling of burned-out light bulbs made it difficult to read, but Nathan knew what it said: one second to go, Home 14, Visitors 10.
One second. With a single tick of the clock, his football career would end. Holding on for a victory in their final game, especially against their hated rival who had beaten them every year, would take some of the sting away.
The Fearsome Foursome had first put on uniforms together as five-year-olds in a Pop Warner league in the town’s park. They hadn’t become fearsome yet—barely able to run the length of the field without tripping over their feet—but that was a big step up from the chaotic, muddy backyard tackle fests before that.
Ever since, they’d been a team both on and off the field though football was their uniting passion. But in the blink of an eye, that would come to an end. Charlie Mills, Hank Saunders, and Danny Morgan would join him in walking off the field for the last time. He would never intercept another pass. Never slam an opponent to the ground again. Never play side by side with the boys he considered brothers.
Last play ever. Contemplating that was difficult. Nathan thought nothing mattered more than being on the field, surrounded by his teammates.
The coach wrapped his beefy fingers around Hank’s face mask and pulled the muscular teenager forward, bouncing him off Nathan’s shoulder. Burleson leaned until his head touched Hank’s helmet. Spittle flew from his lips. “Your little brother has run his heart out tonight. Two touchdowns! Has us up by four. Do you want to win this game for your family, son?”
Hank swiveled his head and beamed with pride at his younger brother, Matt, standing a few feet away with the offense, their season already over. No matter the outcome of this last play, they would not take the field again. They were relaxed and loose, celebrating the taste of victory just a second away by leaping in the air and butting chests while whooping in delight.
Matt stood to the side of the chaos, his attention focused on a cheerleader shivering in her skimpy outfit. Colette Morgan blushed and smiled back.
Shorter and thinner than his older brother, Matt possessed the natural speed and grace of a running back. While Hank liked the collisions of defense, his younger brother loved tucking the ball close to his gut and eluding defenders.
The coach used the brothers’ differences to motivate each of them, constantly comparing the success of one with the weakness of the other. Weight-room workouts turned into battles. Locker-room pranks raged. During practice, Matt’s quick feet outmaneuvered his brother in one play, but in the next play, Hank would slam his brother to the ground and stand over him to gloat. At least once a week, a fistfight broke out between the two, stopping practice as the coaches separated them and dispatched them to run punishment laps. Even those laps turned competitive as Matt would taunt his slower, older brother by running circles around him or by jogging backward. More than once, to the exasperation of the coaching staff, they came to blows in the middle of being disciplined.
But as competitive as they were with each other, they shared a familial loyalty and would come to each other’s aid without hesitation. Hank might enjoy crushing his smaller sibling in a tackle, but anyone else who hurt Matt had to answer to a fiercely protective big brother. Tonight, the Roosevelt Rough Riders felt Hank’s furious response to every hit they placed on Matt.
Not that the blows bothered Matt. Their defenders—and they always needed more than one—dragged him to the soaked ground repeatedly, but as the referees untangled the pile of bodies, he would spring to his feet with a flashy grin across his muddy face. Nothing made a boy tougher than a bigger brother’s constant harassment, and none of the Roosevelt players walloped him as hard as Hank did.
Burleson released Hank’s helmet and gestured toward Matt and his offensive teammates. “That whole offense has pounded it out all night long. Played our style, yard by yard. Left their
blood on that field. Put points on the board. Given us the lead. With heart, gentlemen. They’ve played with heart.”
“Heart, Coach.”
“And so has this defense. You’ve slugged away all night long. You’re cold. You’re wet. You’re tired. But you’re winners, and winners don’t care about cold, wet, and tired, right?”
“Right, Coach!”
Nathan hadn’t thought of the weather since jogging onto the field with pregame jitters. But he felt like a winner every time he donned the uniform. With all the adrenaline coursing through his body, he would run through fire for his team, so a frigid, soaked field was a picnic.
Burleson dropped to a knee and lowered his volume as though sharing a secret he wanted no one else to hear—a private message just for this team—forcing the boys to lean forward, low into the huddle. “We know their play. Too many yards to run, too little time on the clock. They have to go to their stars—Michael Jenkins’s magic arm to Ricky Ward’s outstretched hands. One last Hail Mary pass.”
He gestured at Hank and Danny. “If Jenkins gets time to set up, he can make that ball sail. So you two will make sure he doesn’t have the time. Force him to scramble and throw off-balance in this rain and wind.”
Hank and Danny gathered a fistful of fabric of each other’s uniforms as they hopped with eagerness. “Yes, sir.”
Burleson waved his arms wide at the seven sophomores and juniors lined up behind their senior stars. “This line will be impenetrable. A solid wall that will not yield. You will tie up their line so bad they can’t peel off and block Hank or Danny.”
Bouncing on their toes, the boys hooted their ascent. “Yes, Coach.”
“And you two”—Burleson stood tall, his ample abdomen jiggling under his soaked sweatshirt, and pointed at Nathan and Charlie—“will make sure neither receiver has an inch of air. Not one inch.”
Nathan and Charlie. Their names had been spoken together as one since long before they could walk. Born just weeks apart to fathers who had always been best friends, they had shared cribs, toys, meals, games, and lives. Nathan’s first real fight had come in the first grade when Toby Gearson had pointed out they couldn’t be brothers since Charlie was black—though Toby had used a much nastier word—and Nathan was white. Nathan bloodied Toby’s nose and stood over the crying boy with his arm around Charlie until Toby agreed they were brothers.
On the football field, they shared the bond of playing the backfield, intercepting receivers or burying them in the turf. They had played together so long that they knew, without asking, what the other was thinking or what he would do. They grinned at each other as they responded to their coach. “Not an inch, sir.”
Burleson cupped his hand around the back of Nathan’s helmet and looked up at the clouded skies. “Your old man is watching. You know that? He’s proud of you. Proud of you on this field tonight. Proud of how you handled yourself every day since he left. Do you hear me, son?”
An ache exploded in his chest as it had so many times since that highway patrolman sat in front of him just over a year earlier, hat in hand, explaining how his father was never coming home. A heroic effort to avoid a broken-down car on a curvy mountain road had ended with his crumpled semi at the bottom of a ravine.
Nathan glanced toward the crowded stands, at the front-row seats his dad and Ronnie Mills had shared for so many years, but Ronnie was sitting alone, with an empty spot beside him on the aluminum bleachers, just as he had all this season and most of last. Nathan closed his eyes to hold back the tears.
Not trusting his voice, he could only nod. Charlie threw an arm around his shoulder pads and squeezed him tightly. Hank and Danny rested their hands on his helmet.
Don’t worry, Dad. I’ve got this. I’ll make you proud.
Burleson pulled Nathan and Charlie in close. “Don’t you dare let Ricky Ward get his hands on that ball. I don’t want to hear his name again until he’s in the NFL. No one has kept him out of the end zone for an entire game until tonight. Years from now, you can sit around on barstools, bragging how you held the great Ricky Ward scoreless in his last high school football game. You’ll have that memory forever, you hear me?”
Nathan joined his shaky voice with Charlie’s steadier one. “Yes, Coach.”
His own eyes misting over, Burleson patted Nathan’s helmet and turned his attention to all eleven defensive players. His breath formed clouds in the cold air. “Boys, no matter what, after this play, we’ve finished our season. I’m proud of all of you.”
The boys threw their arms over each other’s shoulders and howled. The pounding rain splattered against Nathan’s face and hid his unbidden tears. Friends. Brothers. The only family he had.
Burleson stretched his arms wide and challenged the team with his booming voice. “How about one more story for our seniors right now? Stop these sons of bitches from scoring, and you end Roosevelt’s season. They expected to come in here for an easy win and be in the playoffs next week. Ricky Ward might be playing college ball this time next year, but you’ll make sure his last high school game ever is a big fat loss.”
The referee approached to signal the end of the timeout as Burleson stoked the flame of his team. “You’ve said no all night. And with this last play, you have the chance to change their history. To send them back to Charlotte and their glowing skyscrapers, all quiet in their fancy buses. Back to their shiny locker rooms. Back to watching everyone else in the playoffs. I’m tired of losing to them year after year. I’m tired of watching Ricky Ward score touchdowns. And I know you’re tired of it. So change it. The future is in your hands. It’s your choice. You control your destiny, gentlemen.”
The rain-soaked home crowd rose to their feet, stomped on the metal bleachers, and roared their encouragement to their gladiators as the team broke the huddle and swarmed onto the field. Friday night in the small North Carolina mountain town of Millerton was high school football night, and the town turned out, no matter what the win-loss record and no matter what the weather. No opponent inspired the fans as much as Roosevelt High School, the hated rival from Charlotte, the sparkling city rising while small manufacturing towns like Millerton declined.
Charlie trotted through the muck beside Nathan. “You good?”
Nathan grinned and pointed at the sky. “I have to be. My old man is watching, right?”
Charlie gestured toward the stands where Ronnie stood among the crowd and screamed his support. “Yeah, well, my old man is watching, and he’ll kick both our asses if we let Roosevelt win this thing again. I can’t stand another night of hearing him talk about how they beat them every year.”
“Don’t even think it. Ricky Ward ain’t getting into that end zone. Not tonight.” He tried to sound confident, but the butterflies in his stomach churned.
Ricky Ward was being recruited by a dozen colleges though rumors were strong that he was University of Georgia bound. Nathan and Charlie were being recruited by none. No matter what happened in the next second, the superstar would play football again—in college and likely in the NFL—while the two Millerton boys would be relegated to the stands for the rest of their lives.
The hype around Ricky Ward—and everyone used both his names as though he were already some superstar—grew each season as he danced and twisted around every defender who challenged him, scoring repeated touchdowns and dazzling the crowds. No one stopped him. Defenders might get a few tackles, even a rare interception, but no one had kept him out of the end zone an entire game since his sophomore year.
Millerton High School had been no exception. For three years, late in November, Nathan and Charlie faced Ricky on the field, and each year, his speed and footwork proved too difficult to contain.
The Roosevelt game was always the last of the regular season, taking on a festive atmosphere though they went to playoffs each year and Millerton did not. Since the schools alternated hosting, the Millerton Mountaineers traveled to Charlotte every other year and played with the skyscrapers gleaming against th
e night sky, an intimidating sight for boys from a small town. Their field was manicured, well drained, smooth, and used only on game nights. In the shadow of their fancy concrete stadium, their practice fields glistened with thick green grass nicer than Millerton’s game field.
For last year’s game in Charlotte, reporters and recruiters had packed the glass-enclosed press box to watch Ricky elude his defenders time after time under those glaring stadium lights. Nathan, stinging from the death of his father, hadn’t played well in weeks. Sensing the weakness, Roosevelt sent Ricky to Nathan’s side of the field play after play, and he racked up four touchdowns. The ride home to Millerton in that creaky school bus was miserable after the season-ending drubbing by their hated rival.
They played this year’s game at Millerton on the pitted field used by soccer and football teams, JV and varsity, practice and games. The constant wear left ruts and large dirt patches absent of grass, an uneven field that slowed the all-star receiver in the best of conditions. But tonight’s nasty weather, a remnant of a late-season tropical storm that came farther inland than expected, gave Nathan an additional advantage.
He had practiced so many hours on this field that he knew where each hole and divot lay hidden in the standing water. Nights in deer stands had acclimated his body to the freezing temperatures. Days of trout fishing in frigid waters had kept his cold, taped hands as nimble in tackling as in removing fishhooks. Endless childhood games in the creeks and hills around Millerton had prepared him for the muck of tonight’s battle, making the mud-soaked uniform a badge of honor.