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Knockout

Page 3

by K. A. Holt


  Timothy comes in

  eyes down

  backpack swinging to the floor.

  He looks up,

  surprised cat number two.

  Levi. Hi. What are you—

  My face burns.

  A cat on fire.

  I’ve lost my words.

  I try to smile.

  Uh, hi, Timothy.

  Can I borrow your pen?

  I click it

  for emphasis

  but before he says yes or no

  I run

  back to the safety of my own desk

  where I rest

  my forehead on the cool surface

  trying so hard

  to be a cool cat

  who isn’t killed

  by its curiosity

  (or its brother).

  Timothy keeps a journal?

  Who knew?!

  Chess Club has a lot of practices

  like

  so

  many.

  They are all after school

  and sometimes on Saturdays.

  Chess Club is Very Serious

  and Mrs. Rubrick

  expects everyone to

  BE RESPONSIBLE

  and

  NOT MISS PRACTICE.

  Sometimes Chess Club

  makes me sweaty

  because I work so hard

  coming up with strategies.

  Sometimes Chess Club

  makes me sunburned

  because we practice outside

  in the fresh air.

  That’s what I tell Mom.

  Because Chess Club also

  makes me lie.

  I went to that one session

  in the schoolroom

  with no windows

  and lights that went

  bzzzzzzzzzzz

  bzzzzzzzzzzz

  crackle

  bzzzzzzzzzzz

  and Mrs. Rubrick said

  we would move to the library

  for the next session

  and for the next session

  I did move . . .

  behind the school

  and up my tree

  using my bare feet

  and knees

  and I could see the whole world

  and so now all my strategies

  will be whispered to me

  from the tops of the trees

  instead of in a dingy room

  with grim buzzing bees

  of light.

  Should I feel guilty?

  I ask myself this

  from the tree

  that is not Chess Club.

  The squirrel

  that is not Mrs. Rubrick

  looks at me and makes a ticking noise

  like

  tsk, tsk, tsk, Levi.

  Mom thinks

  I’m at Chess Club

  Mrs. Rubrick thinks

  I quit.

  But the clouds don’t think

  about me at all.

  The squirrel has already

  run away

  and my next gambit

  in this game

  is to hang out,

  watch the sky,

  and maybe climb high

  my escape

  a checkmate.

  The giant head comes off

  I squint to be sure

  and yes,

  yes!

  It’s Lunch Kate

  Dolphin Kate

  Shark Kate

  Kate is the one inside the mascot

  doing a bunch of backflips.

  Kate, Tam’s friend,

  the sonar-challenged cheerleader.

  I squint

  I spy

  from my roof-high

  sights

  and is that Tam?

  In the bleachers?

  Cheering Kate?

  It is.

  Looks like Tam’s Chess Club

  is branching out, too.

  Does Tam feel guilty

  for lying about Chess Club?

  She doesn’t know I know

  she isn’t there.

  And she doesn’t know

  I’m here.

  Which is weird, right?

  Because that means

  we’re technically

  lying to each other, too.

  If I had stayed in Chess Club

  would Tam have stayed there, too?

  Is she out cheering on Kate

  because she has nothing else to do?

  I feel itchy

  super itchy inside

  and I don’t think it’s the leaves

  causing it this time.

  Timothy picks me up

  in front of school.

  In the car

  seat belt on.

  How was Chess Club?

  I shrug.

  You’re lucky, you know.

  I look out the window.

  Imagine my skin

  is made of four-leaf clovers.

  Imagine pots of gold

  shooting from the rainbows

  Timothy must think

  spring forth from my butt.

  That you get to do this stuff.

  You’re a lucky kid

  don’t forget

  that.

  I mean, maybe sometimes

  I feel lucky

  when I’m at school

  and make everyone laugh

  or when I’m in my tree

  and I feel like I can breathe

  but there’s something about having someone

  look at you

  with tired eyes

  with

  while they say you’re lucky . . .

  something that makes you feel

  NOT so lucky,

  you know?

  With Timothy looking at me

  I feel trapped

  I feel so far from free

  but I say nothing.

  I watch the cars and other people.

  They look like the lucky ones

  not stuck in here with Timothy.

  I once asked Timothy

  about when he was in juvie.

  You know what he said?

  He made his voice sound

  tough,

  his lips pinched together.

  He stood up straight.

  He barked out

  MAKE

  GOOD

  CHOICES

  DAVIDSON!

  like he was in the Army or something.

  Then he laughed

  and hugged me out of nowhere

  and whispered in my ear

  If you ever go to juvie

  it would be the worst

  disappointment

  in

  my

  life.

  How could I respond to that?

  Was he including Dad?

  Because the way Timothy acts

  around Dad,

  the way his mouth tightens,

  his fists clench,

  the breath blows from his chest

  in spurts

  I can tell

  Dad has disappointed Timothy

  more than losing ten million dollars

  in the back of a bus

  and watching someone else find it

  and run away with it

  and never getting it back.

  And it would be worse than that

  if I went to juvie?

  W H O A

  He won’t talk a lot about it.

  He won’t say what he did to get there.

  He does say the clothes were scratchy,

  shoes like slippers

  but not soft.

  He says the food wasn’t as bad

  as you’d think

  (but Timothy eats chicken livers

  on purpose

  so I don’t trust his opinion on food).

  He says the guards weren’t called guards

  but they were always guarding.

  He says he read

 
; so many books

  but he can’t read any of the same ones again

  because they make his brain

  taste like juvie

  whatever that means.

  He won’t talk about the other guys, though.

  He won’t talk about how they were.

  Or any of his friends.

  His eyes just kind of drift to the ceiling

  and he bites his lip

  like Mom does

  when she pays bills

  and then he tells me to do my homework.

  Dad and I, in the stands

  Tam is serving

  I leap up

  wave

  holler

  ready for my wink

  when I see Kate

  in the stands

  and in a blink

  she steals my wink!

  Stands right up,

  blocks my view

  and Tam smashes the ball.

  Did Tam notice

  her wink was lost?

  I guess not

  because she goes on to score

  a million more points

  and I look at the scoreboard

  like

  What.

  In my room

  that feeling again

  even with slow easy breaths

  the air gets caught

  stuck like a lump

  at the top of my throat.

  A knock.

  I jump.

  It’s Timothy:

  Can we talk?

  I’m glad he can’t see the lump.

  I’m glad he doesn’t have to know.

  Sure.

  He’s going to medical school.

  What!

  Dr. Timothy?

  What!

  He’s so bossy I guess that makes sense

  but he’s going to have to work on

  his bedside manner.

  Dr. Timothy wanted to tell me

  before he tells Mom.

  He’s going to take the MCAT in a few months

  and then he will pick a school

  (if he passes the test)

  and apply

  and get loans or maybe scholarships

  and go there

  and never have any money

  or free time again

  (not like he has money

  or free time now)

  and then he will be a doctor

  and finally finally finally

  he will be able to save us all

  just like he’s always wanted.

  (He didn’t say that last part

  but it’s true.)

  Mom doesn’t move

  like a rabbit

  trying to be invisible.

  She says

  Medical school?

  Her eyes wide wide wide.

  How will we pay for it?

  I’ll get loans.

  I’ll get scholarships.

  I’ll figure it out.

  But you have to take a test first.

  To even get in.

  Timothy nods again.

  Then . . . you’ll be gone

  at school

  for years.

  Well, I am almost twenty-four.

  Most of my friends have been gone

  for a long time.

  His voice is quiet.

  Mom and Timothy seem to be

  having two conversations

  one with their mouths,

  one with their eyes

  so I get up

  go to my room.

  I feel all mixed up inside.

  When Timothy’s best friend, José,

  joined the Army

  Timothy was so sad.

  He tried not to be.

  He tried to be excited.

  But one night I heard him

  on the phone with Isa.

  (Isa is his girlfriend.)

  (His voice so low.

  Was he crying?

  I don’t know.)

  And I remember so clearly

  he said

  You left.

  José is leaving.

  And I’m stuck here.

  House arrest

  all over again.

  I didn’t ask him to stay here

  and not join the Army.

  I didn’t ask him to stay in his room

  and not save the world.

  I didn’t ask him to live at home

  during college.

  And he didn’t ask us.

  He just did it.

  So he can’t blame us.

  We would be fine without him.

  He wants to smother us

  to keep us safe

  which seems kind of backwards

  to me.

  It glows

  like it knows my name.

  Levi, it whispers.

  Come here, it whispers.

  Read my secrets, it whispers.

  I try to ignore it

  but it’s like those mermaids

  who lure in sailors

  and make them crash boats.

  I know it’s stupid to get closer

  but I can’t stop myself.

  Timothy’s notebook

  right there

  on the kitchen counter.

  I slam it shut

  my breath in an elevator

  stuck

  between floors.

  Slowly I open it again

  the words in black ink,

  messy writing.

  I take Timothy’s pen from my back pocket

  write:

  Close the notebook.

  Find my breath.

  (Try to.)

  Not always,

  but sometimes

  I need calm in my brain.

  I need lightness.

  I need a different kind of air.

  So I find track 9,

  put it on repeat,

  and let the Cat Tornadoes

  lull me

  before they explode . . .

  Sound shards

  rocking me back to my feet

  again.

  I run fast

  jump on Tam’s back

  feet on her spine

  hands on her head

  she yell-laughs

  leans forward

  until I’m sitting on her shoulders

  just like

  climbing a Tam tree

  and she screams

  as she keeps laughing

  which makes Mr. Schoop

  roll his eyes

  say

  Cut it out, you two

  and sit down.

  I AM sitting down, I joke.

  The whole class laughs

  Mr. Schoop

  snaps

  his fingers

  so I sit at my desk

  but Tam winks

  and I wink back

  scoring all the points

  I missed

  the other night.

  From the top of the tree

  today

  I can see

  football practice.

  The guys

  smashing

  helmets crashing.

  The sharp tweet,

  whistled beat,

  jagged rhythm

  for running feet.

  I wonder what it would be like

  to fly

  to smash

  bodies thrashing

  into big piles.

  How would it feel

  your muscles

  and bones

  crushed like stones

  under someone’s heels?

  What if

  you did the crushing

  the stomping

  the running?

  Maybe instead of small

  you’d feel huge.

  Maybe it’s time

  to pick my sport.

  Maybe it’s time to finally choose.

  Kate and Tam are laughing.

  Some joke

  I don’t know.

&nbs
p; Have you seen Kate, Levi?

  I’m looking at her right now.

  No, silly! I mean as the Falcon,

  the mascot?

  Tam is talking fast and excited.

  Kate is so crazy!

  So funny!

  Levi, you should see her.

  That’s me!

  Kate says, pointing to a picture

  on Tam’s phone.

  Craziest kid in the school.

  And when Tam says that

  she looks right at me

  and I think

  hmmm.

  Is that a challenge?

  Lunch is over.

  Tam time over.

  See you later, Levi!

  Kate’s voice is a singsong

  like she’s so super extra happy

  to run off with Tam

  and get rid of me.

  And Tam runs off with her.

  Does she even see me

  wave good-bye?

  Lunch Kate.

  Cheerleader Kate.

  Falcon Kate.

  Crazy Kate.

  She thinks she’s hot stuff, huh?

  Maybe I should show her what hot stuff

  is really like.

  Because I am a secret spy

  who hangs out in trees,

  I know practice

  by the minute.

  I know no one is in the locker rooms.

  I know they’re all far away.

  It’s so easy to sneak in,

  I almost feel bad.

  Almost.

  She’ll never know it was me.

  Kind of a shame, actually.

  I would like some credit

  for making Kate screw up her face,

  for making her red-hot mad,

  for making everyone laugh.

  But then,

  then,

  as I find the falcon head

  turn it upside down—

  as I get out a paintbrush

  I borrowed from art class

  and the bottle of hot sauce

  I borrowed from Mr. Schoop’s desk,

  and my own eyes start to water—

  before I do anything at all

  I wonder if maybe this is too much.

  Maybe it’s mean and not funny.

  I don’t want to hurt her

  I just want to—

  What’s that?

  In the corner?

  Is it—

  No—

  A giant chicken head?

  I laugh

 

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