Million Dollar Baby

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Million Dollar Baby Page 11

by F. X. Toole


  Con had flown in from another flight, coming in on an earlier flight from Vegas. His partner and his fighter were due to arrive in an hour and a half from Los Angeles. They would all be on the same flight going home. Their faction was from L.A. and they flew into Philly for a twelve-round fight at the Blue Horizon for one of the alphabet titles—not a major belt, but if they beat the African, the cut man’s kid was sure to get another shot at one of the majors. Members of a faction always said my and we: we fought; we’re gonna fight; we won; we got beat; my kid. They say we because they fight when their fighter fights and when their fighter gets hit, they get hit. When the fighter wins or loses, they win or lose, and together they feel what that’s like. That’s why he thought of Mookie as his kid and why he said that we were fighting the main event on Tuesday night. And that’s why he knew you had to learn how to win and you had to learn how to lose, and why you had to learn to always do your best. Not try to do. Do. Because these kids put their lives in your hands.

  Con Flutey had never won a major belt; neither had his partner, Odell Blue. Odell trained their kid and as his trainer he would be the chief second, the only one going into the ring between rounds. If there was a bad cut, the cut man would go in and Odell would handle the water and the ice and the grease from outside. Odell had been a ranked fighter with a big left-hand. He had a slight stutter from being hit. If someone wronged him, the stutter took control; it was best not to have wronged him because when Odell couldn’t talk he began to punch. But between rounds during a fight, he spoke to his fighters with no trace of the stutter, and he still had a physique that made women look.

  Odell had suffered a detached retina back when there were only eight weight divisions, starting with flyweights at 112 pounds, and when there was only one champion to each division. He’d been ranked number five as a middleweight when you had to have fifty or sixty fights to get a title shot. He was due for his shot, but then he began to get hit with the right. Unable to slip right-hands, he was also unable to get his big left-hand off, and the nights got longer. When he realized he had to hang up his gloves, he worked the docks in L.A. Harbor fifteen years before he could come back to the gym and start all over as a trainer in a game he’d been at since he was eleven—when the only meat his family ate in Cairo, Georgia, was the rabbit or the coon his daddy brought down with a single-shot .22. Odell was respected by everyone in the game, and people who knew him figured he would have had a champ already. He’d been disappointed more times than an old priest. The cut man knew Odell hated to lose as much as he did, but Odell never quit and neither did the cut man.

  “If I could only get me a white heavyweight,” Odell would say. “We’d be rich, you and me, old man.”

  Con believed him, Odell was that good. He knew how badly white people wanted a white heavyweight champ, how much they’d pay. He wished they had a white boy, too. He would be able to help his own kids that way, help them get a leg up in a world that cared less and less about the things that he cared about more and more.

  So now they were in Philly and Mookie Bodeen was leaving the gym at 157 and 158 and would make the 160-pound middleweight limit easy. Middleweight was Con’s favorite division. Mookie was from South Central in L.A. and raised by his mother, who also had four girls by two other fathers. Mookie hated his father, whoever he was, and loved his mother and his sisters, whom he was sending to beauty school so they could be somebody. He’d promised his mama a house, too, but she was still renting. He was 42 and 3, a left-handed boxer-puncher with 24 kayos. He’d been knocked out twice, once in his second title fight and once in an eight-rounder after he’d lost his first title fight by a split decision in Paris. Dejected, he quit fighting altogether. But then he went broke, tried to manage himself and switched to a different trainer, thinking to blame Odell for his Paris loss. Out of shape, he took an eight-round fight in Tijuana for eight hundred—a buck a round. With strangers in his corner who were trying to earn enough to buy a new tire, he got clocked in five by a 170-pound marine moonlighting out of Camp Pendleton. He quit again.

  But what else was he to do? The fight game is a damning game, but Odell was a forgiving trainer, and Mookie came back to his black daddy and his white grandpa. Yeah, he got stopped in the first round of his second title shot, but now he’d won five in a row, three by kayos. The African’s faction took this fight because they’d seen the tape of Mookie going to sleep in the first round—but they forgot that the first round for any fighter is the most dangerous round in boxing, that everyone is vulnerable in the first.

  Despite being in great shape and the cut man thinking of him as his kid, Mookie wasn’t a kid anymore. He was thirty-two, and God only knew what would happen to him and his sisters and his mama’s house if he didn’t beat the African. But he was a young thirty-two, and he had a young body and young eyes because he didn’t drink or use drugs. How he escaped those habits, especially after his title losses, the cut man didn’t know. Many didn’t. Well, Mookie did have one habit, pussy, but that didn’t make him a bad guy.

  And now they were fighting a six-foot-two African monster from Uganda, one with a big head and no nose and skinny long arms and legs, arms as long as a heavyweight’s. And he had that big back and rocks for shoulders, and he could crack—twenty-six wins, nineteen by knockout, and no losses. Con loved the Africans, loved their heart, their discipline; and he loved them because they weren’t afraid to love their dream. He loved their courtesy as well, and how in their modesty they cupped their private parts with their hands when coming out of a shower. And he loved how they could fight, and would fight, how they put everything on the line.

  Mookie had two managers, one white and one black, both good guys who’d had him for ten years except for the foolish time he managed himself, foolish because you can’t be the horse and the jockey and win. They’d brought Mookie along, picking the right fights, and though he’d been knocked out, he’d never been beat up, and getting Mookie his title shots was some kind of slick because most managers of champions avoid southpaws like they’ve got AIDS. But the African’s faction wanted to see the African against a name fighter, a boxer who would test him but who was getting old, someone they thought they could knock out with the African’s big right-hand. The African wanted to fight Mookie because Mookie was ranked number five; he was ranked number seven, and by beating Mookie he would move closer to his own shot at a title. The African wanted to win, but so did Mookie, and Mookie was so slick and quick and pretty that people in the gym watching him train would hold their breath or whine or say, “Dayamn.”

  But when Mookie got to Philly, he could hardly walk. Con was unaware of it, but that morning, Saturday, Mookie’s last day of running before the fight, while wrapping up his workout with wind sprints, ten strides into the seventh and last set he felt something go in his left leg, the leg he pushed off on when he jabbed, the leg that generated speed and power. Since Con had arrived in Philly first, he took his walk along the parkway and then returned to his room. He was watching the news when Odell called him from their room down the hall.

  “You better come down, old man. Room 645.”

  From Odell’s voice Con knew something was wrong. When he got to 645, Mookie had his face in his hands. It was like a wake in the room. “What’s up?” Con asked.

  Mookie told him about the leg, how it was killing him, and he showed how he could hardly walk, dragging the left leg like a cannonball was chained to it. Con had Mookie describe in detail what had happened. Mookie added that he’d thought of pulling out of the fight, but that he had come on anyway, hoping Con could fix him.

  Con started with the big question first. “When it went, did you feel it go pop?”

  “No, it just felt like it kind of came apart, or pulled or something behind my knee, and it hurt like a bitch right away.”

  “Well, we’ve got four days. Three, really.”

  “I feel it, but I can’t believe it,” Mookie said, his face long as a casket. “I worked so hard, two months, m
an. I’m in the best shape of my life. Better than for my title fights. They got me a nutritioniss this time. I came down from one-eighty, but what I lost was fat and water and not muscle. Look at my eight-pack,” he said, lifting his T-shirt so Con could see his abdominals.

  “You got no ass, either,” said Con, referring to how Mookie always put on weight in his high behind. It made Mookie smile, and some of the tension left the room.

  Mookie, as if to validate himself, began pulling bottles from his suitcase. “Look, look,” he said, lining up a display of pills and powders and liquids, explaining the function of each and how he’d maintained muscle mass as he’d taken off fat. “I been runnin my drawers off, Con, this ain’t right, I can’t believe my leg was what went, not my leg, my legs is stronger than anything on me, you understan what I’m sayin?, this ain’t right.”

  Con had him strip to his underwear, the little Frenchie kind. Mookie had the body of a twenty-two-year-old, with jackrabbit legs and a series of deep indentations from his solar plexus down to below his belly button. But his face was so sad that Con touched it, patted it like the face of a hurt child, and not knowing whether he was lying or not, said, “Don’t worry. I can fix it.”

  “You really can?”

  “Damn straight,” he said, but this time he knew he lied. “Now, tell me. You sure it didn’t go pop?”

  “If it did, I didn’t hear it or feel it.”

  “Did it make you flip?”

  “No, man, it made me sad.”

  “I mean did it knock your dick in the dirt.”

  “No, I just grabbed my leg and limped down to still. It ain’t my handspring, is it?”

  “If it was your hamstring, your dick is already in the dirt. Have you told anyone?”

  “Just you and Odell.”

  “Good. Did anyone see you limping into the hotel?”

  “No,” said Odell. “I told him to walk right.”

  Con had the kid lie on the low bed and asked more questions, lightly touching the leg and watching Mookie wince. What he liked was that there were no bunched-up knots in the muscle or the tendon. He went to his room for the medical kit that was his private emergency room. It had everything from cough drops to diaper pins, from adrenaline chloride solution 1:1000 for cuts to Nupercainal ointment, ass medicine that he used to soothe scraped faces and rope burns after a fight.

  “I’m going to give you codeine,” Con said, returning to room 645. “It won’t show up in your piss test this far from the fight, so don’t worry I want your leg to stop hurting so I can get down into it, okay?, like a dentist into a tooth.”

  “You the doctor.”

  Odell watched it all, his face and good eye expressing nothing.

  Con got his alcohol-based lineament and the extra-virgin olive oil he used to lay down a slippery base. It made the skin supple when he gave a massage, and it made the black kids glow and feel happy with their pretty selves. Now he’d use the olive oil only from below Mookie’s ass to his Achilles tendon. Trainers were usually careful not to massage a fighter too close to a fight because they wanted him hard, physically and mentally, didn’t want to cut off the flow of adrenaline to the mind and tissue, didn’t want to siphon off the warrior’s edge. But Con had to go after Mookie’s leg, had to soften it up, or there wouldn’t be a fight.

  “Ice?” asked Odell, not waiting for an answer, going out the door to the ice machine with one of Con’s 11-by-12½-inch lock-top plastic bags.

  By then Mookie had given himself over to Con in the complete trust fighters will give to their handlers. It always touched Con, whether something went wrong with their hands in the gym or when he was in the corner working to stop the flow of blood in less than the one minute he had between rounds. It made him love his fighters close to the way he loved his own children. He worked very slowly on Mookie, reaching into the wounded tissue an eighth of an inch at a time until the back of his kid’s leg was like pudding and Mookie could walk around the room free from pain.

  “You fixed the muhfuh!” shouted Mookie. “You the king!”

  “Maybe it’ll tighten up,” said Con, “but we’ll go back at it. I think we got a shot.”

  “But you said you could fix it,” said Mookie, doubt in his voice.

  “I did fix it. Now let’s see if I can keep on fixing it.”

  “What about my weight? I got to sweat.”

  “We’ll be okay if we eat right and go light on liquids. Then we go to the gym two days before the fight, stretch like I show you, shadowbox, punch the mitts, and see what happens.”

  “It feels fixed now,” Mookie protested.

  “Let’s hit it with more ice and some more hurt juice and walk it.”

  “It fixed, man.”

  “Wait. Wait and see.”

  They napped, Odell and Mookie keeping their room so hot Con could hardly breathe, especially with the fumes he was eating. Con kept the window open in his room.

  “You bloods got no blood,” Con would always say.

  “We cold, you crazy,” Mookie or Odell would always answer.

  Much of the pain had been relieved and Mookie was able to nap, but the leg did tighten up some while he was sleeping. Con worked on it until it was loose again, inhaling alcohol and wintergreen fumes because he had to bend down so low to work on the leg. After two days he was half sick from the fumes, but the leg appeared to be a hundred percent and each hour Mookie was more sure of himself.

  “You a witch doctor, old man, a voodoo-hoodoo man.”

  “Old but pretty.”

  “Prettiest white man I seen.”

  So that’s the way it went, and when it was time they went to the gym in good spirits. The gym was in West Philly, at the very bottom of the ’hood, and after stretching like Con showed him, and after a complete workout, including eight hard rounds on the punch mitts, Mookie was wringing wet. He weighed out at 157, still three pounds under the 160 limit. The leg held.

  “You did it, old man,” said Mookie.

  “Wait.”

  The leg was fixed. Con knew it would be when it didn’t tighten up after the gym work. They didn’t have to pull out of the fight, and Mookie would get his shot. Except for the managers, with whom Odell and Con were always square, the leg injury never happened as far as the promoter, the Boxing Commission, and the African ever knew.

  Mookie was in the shower. Odell smiled his shy smile and looked down the way he always did when he had something to say from his heart. “You didn’t believe,” Odell said to Con. “I believe, but not you.”

  “Yeah, I believed.”

  “No good.”

  “I believed, but I didn’t know until now,” said Con.

  “Once I see you wif him, you talkin wif him the way you talk an’ all, and once you start workin on the boy, I knew.”

  “I’m glad you did.” Con nodded to the shower. “Anyway, Mookie’s in shape, and that helped a ton, and we were lucky.”

  “Yeah, he in shape, but you the man.”

  Odell had stuttered a little, and Con knew how hard it was for him to say what he felt. Con was always surprised at how many ways he’d found to love Odell, so different in color and features and in so many other ways, and yet so much the same.

  “You think about it,” Odell had once told him. “We got the same daddy. He love us bof.”

  Factions travel around the world sometimes, and people often say that they wish they could see the places fight guys get to see. But fight guys get to see airports, fly in tight seats, and mostly stay in second-class hotels, eat in second-class joints. Time zones turn them upside down, and sometimes the seasons are in reverse. When the fighter works, the fight guys work with him; when he rests, so do they. In Paris or Tokyo or Philly they will take walks after eating, but then they go back to their dark rooms and watch bimbo TV shows to keep their minds off the fight, even when the language is one they don’t understand.

  It wasn’t exactly the same with Con—he liked his mind to be working, not numb. On Sund
ay he was able to go to mass in the Chapel of Saint Peter and Saint Paul’s domed cathedral at Eighteenth and Parkway. Walking back to the hotel, he saw the Free Library. He had read all his life, educated himself that way, and hoped he’d be able to go back on Monday. Being in the library would fill him with peace. But on Monday Mookie’s managers flew in, and what with Mookie’s TV interview, there was no time to go back to the library.

  He and Odell got to take a walk downtown for breakfast because Mookie didn’t eat and stayed in his room—it would have been too painful to tag along and have to look at food he couldn’t eat. But he was so happy about his leg he didn’t mind being alone. When asked by other blacks why he had a white man in his corner instead of a brother, Mookie would repeat what Odell always said about Con. “He a hell of a man.”

  The next day, Tuesday, the day of the fight, the weigh-in was at 9:00 A.M. Between the weigh-in and their eleven o’clock meeting with the boxing commissioner, Odell, Con, and Mookie’s managers took Mookie in a cab downtown, where they fed him Irish oatmeal and a stack of pancakes. Before his breakfast, though Mookie hated it, he drank a big glass of grapefruit juice for the potassium in it and to help regain fluids in his system. Walking back to the hotel with the others, Con noticed a poster advertising an exhibit at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, one featuring Michelangelo and Rodin together. Short of going to the Casa Buonarroti in Florence, or maybe to the Metropolitan Museum of Art on an if-come trip to New York, Con had come to believe that at his age he would never stand before a Michelangelo. But here he was, just half a mile away. He hoped he could get there, but on the day of the fight, time would be tight.

 

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