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Knockout

Page 5

by K. A. Holt


  Talk to me, Levi.

  Tell me about . . . things.

  Mom plops on the couch,

  her head snuggles my shoulder.

  We could talk about Dad.

  We could talk about Tam.

  We could talk about Timothy.

  Or . . . we could just . . . be.

  I have a joke, I offer.

  Her hair smells like outside

  and fajitas

  and shampoo.

  Okay, she says. Shoot.

  What’s brown and sticky?

  I pause for dramatic effect.

  I don’t know. What?

  A stick.

  Timothy slides in next to us,

  stealing my punchline,

  his big body making the couch sag

  into a smile.

  That’s a terrible joke

  Mom laughs.

  And we all sit together

  trying to out-bad-joke each other

  laughing and laughing

  until the oven dings

  and it’s time to eat.

  At dinner it happens.

  My head gets light

  the air

  it seems stuck

  like trying to suck

  glue through a straw.

  Breathin’ easy, Levi?

  Timothy sees it first.

  I nod.

  I want to be OK.

  But the air can’t find a way

  into my lungs.

  Get his inhaler.

  Mom says this to Timothy

  as if I weren’t right here,

  as if I couldn’t stand up and find it

  myself.

  They are in Sick Levi Mode,

  three seconds flat.

  Timothy has my puffer,

  is down on his knees

  beside me,

  dinner forgotten.

  Should I get the Os?

  I take two puffs.

  I take two more.

  The air flows better

  but still not great.

  No oxygen

  I say.

  But really

  I have no say.

  Mom has her purse already.

  Off to the ER we go.

  Oxygen

  Steroids

  Nebulizer

  Oxygen

  Steroids

  Nebulizer

  By the time I can breathe again

  my heart rate is one million

  my head is full of bees

  my hands are shaking

  my palms damp

  my face sweaty

  but the air sings in my lungs

  fills every tiny crevice

  and I feel like a balloon

  like I might float to the ceiling

  stay there a while.

  The doctor says it’s just a bad cold.

  She says we can go home.

  No supersonic jets to Cincinnati

  today.

  Mom seems relieved.

  Timothy does, too.

  But do either of them think

  we could have just fixed me up

  at home

  instead?

  We have everything we need

  and maybe they could trust me

  to say how I’m feeling

  without always packing up

  and running

  to the hospital.

  Home sick today.

  No school.

  It’s a couch potato

  nebulizer

  puffer

  kind of day.

  Timothy stayed home.

  No class for him

  either.

  One of my earliest memories . . .

  I was feeling kind of sick

  and Timothy

  brought me my Spaceship Blanket,

  tucked it around me

  made me feel safe.

  So when he finds it today

  and tucks it under my cheek

  I have this deep deep feeling

  of calm.

  And even though Spaceship Blanket

  is a baby blanket

  for once, I don’t feel like a baby

  at all.

  What’s that?

  He points to the right

  and I turn to look

  while he grabs my wrist

  puts a stethoscope over my shirt.

  Is that a pterodactyl?

  A dragon?

  A princess?

  This little game of distraction

  is silly now

  but I can’t remember a time

  when we haven’t played it.

  I see an angry burrito.

  I see a turtle car.

  I see galaxies swirl.

  The stethoscope is as old

  as me

  and over the years

  Timothy’s gotten as good

  as a doctor

  in hearing weird things

  crackling up

  from my lungs.

  I see a spaceship.

  I see a knight

  who talks with his hands.

  Timothy distracts me

  making sure I’m still breathing easy,

  making sure the oxygen tanks

  can stay

  in the closet.

  It’s like he’s a doctor

  already . . .

  Like Dr. Sawyer

  but with more

  hair.

  I ate soup.

  He ate some, too.

  We watched bad TV.

  (ESPN 5!)

  (No chess.)

  We talked about school.

  I told him

  about Tam and Kate

  (but not about boxing)

  (and not about the chicken head)

  but I did

  mention

  maybe doing

  mascot tryouts.

  He laughed,

  said that sounded fun.

  He listened,

  he told me about Isa calling.

  He told me about José

  in Afghanistan

  still.

  We talked more

  and ate more soup.

  And I wonder

  why does Timothy

  only seem to know me

  really (or take time to know me?)

  when I’m not breathing easy?

  Breathin’ easy?

  Tam pops through my window

  plops on the floor

  grabs a pillow

  props up her head.

  Does your mom know you’re here?

  Sneaking into a boy’s room?

  We both make horror show faces

  and laugh.

  Just heading home from the game.

  No chicken tonight.

  So Kate was happy.

  I try not to frown.

  Five seconds in and already

  Kate

  is somehow here, too.

  Isn’t there anywhere

  she isn’t?

  Did we win?

  I don’t even know!

  She laughs again.

  Feeling better?

  Yeah, but Mom thinks I’m dying.

  Again?

  I half-smile.

  She half-smiles back.

  You’re like a zombie, Levi,

  all that almost dying and coming back.

  Zombies have to actually die

  and then come back.

  You did that, too.

  Shut up.

  She hands me a candy bar

  two bites missing.

  You look alive to me.

  No zombies here.

  I take a double shot from my inhaler

  shrug.

  I feel at least one-quarter human,

  three-quarters zombie.

  Well, I’ll take it.

  She stares at the ceiling.

  I stare at the ceiling.

  And I try my best

  to actually breathe easy.

  I have
so much to tell Tam that

  I can’t find the words

  to say anything.

  This morning

  my alarm

  my blanket pulled over

  my head

  my eyes

  won’t open

  too early

  too early

  but school

  but school

  always school

  sit up

  look out the window

  face the day

  and I see it

  on my desk

  Timothy’s notebook

  weird.

  Mom must have messed up,

  given it to me instead of him.

  I should return it.

  I shouldn’t open it.

  But the mermaids sing

  and there I am

  in my pajamas

  Timothy’s notebook on my lap

  open.

  How did that happen?

  Timothy wrote that

  under my Hi, Mom!

  A page is folded down.

  It wasn’t folded before.

  As if the mermaids want me to say something,

  I grab Timothy’s pen from my desk

  and I write:

  I slide the journal under his door

  just before

  I leave for the bus.

  Feeling better?

  Dad asks this

  when I get into the car

  toss my backpack

  on the floor.

  I nod.

  Think you’re up for some boxing?

  I shrug.

  I’m TOTALLY up for boxing.

  Totally up for feeling the beat

  in my feet.

  Totally up for dancing

  with my fists.

  But I still feel weird about telling Dad.

  For some reason

  this “who discovered boxing first” fight

  is a fight I want to win.

  What’s Timothy up to these days?

  He sneaks that one in.

  I could say

  Studying for doctor school.

  I could say

  Driving me crazy.

  I could say

  Making sure I do my homework,

  leaving me his journal,

  keeping me breathing easy.

  But I just shrug.

  I figure Dad can ask Timothy.

  I’m no informant,

  I’m no spy.

  He’ll have to break down the wall

  or climb over it

  to catch Timothy’s eye.

  I see the dudes laughing

  huddled up

  watching me

  not even pretending not to.

  It’s not like I don’t know

  my arms are skinny

  my legs are skinnier.

  It’s not like I don’t know

  my head is

  my chest so thin

  you can count all the ribs.

  It doesn’t mean I don’t try hard.

  It doesn’t mean I don’t hit harder

  like my muscles

  are huge and dangerous

  able to kill turds like those guys

  with a single hit.

  So I just punch the bag

  hard

  harder

  hardest

  and pretend I don’t see.

  The bag is every dude here

  the bag is Dad

  the bag is Kate

  the bag is Timothy

  the bag is Tam

  the bag is me

  Bet you fifty bucks

  you can’t hit my face

  says a boxing guy

  with a nose the size of Cleveland.

  He smiles at the others

  and I just sigh.

  Have these guys

  seen any movies,

  ever?

  Can’t they see how clichéd they are?

  Jeez.

  I try to walk away

  but the guy jumps in front of me

  points to his nose

  Fifty—

  but he doesn’t finish

  because I surprise him

  W H A M

  right into the slant

  of his giant schnoz.

  Blood explodes

  the guys all yell

  WHOA

  and HOLY#$%^^*!, BRO

  and the guy staggers back

  dripping surprise.

  I wasn’t wearing a glove

  my fingers hurt

  but I don’t want it to show.

  You said fifty bucks

  I shake my fist

  but my voice is strong.

  The guy goes to his locker

  pulls out a bill

  wads it up

  throws it at me

  I catch it

  smile.

  How was practice?

  Fine.

  I think of the hit

  of the money in my pocket.

  Great, actually.

  And I smile.

  In fact,

  Dad,

  I was wondering . . .

  can I go to more practices?

  Maybe a couple of times a week?

  Dad bites his lip

  looks at me

  then back at the road.

  Don’t think I can afford that, kiddo.

  It’s not like you’re trying out for the Olympic team

  or something.

  But I’m glad you’re having fun!

  Wait.

  What?

  But Dad.

  You wanted me to do this.

  You want me to box,

  to be a man,

  to be the fly-fly-flyweight

  champion of the world.

  I don’t have the cash, Levi.

  I am low on moola, benjamins, smackers.

  But.

  But.

  I can’t think of a response.

  He wanted me to do this.

  And now I want to do this.

  He’s created this monster

  and he doesn’t want to feed it?

  Its blue cover

  familiar now

  I don’t even care that

  it isn’t mine.

  I sit at his desk

  and I use his pen,

  the one I stole:

  I close it.

  Leave it on his desk.

  Find a sport, Sport!

  Be more sporty, Sport!

  Oh, you found a sport, Sport?

  Good job, Sport!

  Wait, your sport costs money?

  Well, sorry, Sport.

  I wanted to encourage you, Sport,

  but I didn’t think you’d actually do it,

  Sport.

  So.

  Here I am

  in the leaves

  of my tree

  mind churning

  fists clenching

  breathing

  thinking

  breathing

  thinking

  and then it comes to me

  and I climb out of my tree.

  He made me start boxing

  now let’s see him stop me.

  Hey, Levi.

  Hey, Coach.

  Whatcha doing here?

  Uh . . . boxing, silly.

  Yeah, well, your dad

  only signed you up

  for two classes a month.

  It’s OK. I’ll stay. He’ll pay.

  Side-eye.

  No, really,

  it’s fine.

  All right, then,

  get in there.

  I smile.

  Dad won’t mind

  right?

  By the time he finds out

  I’ve added extra practices

  he’ll be superproud

  that I love to fight.

  Right?

  See, you need to guess:

  What

  is

  he

  t
hinking?

  Coach points at the kid in the ring

  across from me.

  Get in his head.

  Trick him with your moves.

  But don’t let him trick you

  with his.

  I nod

  bite hard

  on my mouth guard.

  And then

  We dance

  back and forth

  to and fro

  our feet hopping

  sliding

  to music only

  we can hear.

  The beat

  beat

  beat.

  The drum

  drum

  drum.

  The hum

  hum

  hum

  of two heartbeats

  becoming one.

  My fist connects.

  His does, too.

  Pain explodes

  in fireworks

  in sparkles

  in blazes

  I suck in

  deep breaths

  more energy

  to ignite

  for him

  sparkles in his nose

  blazes setting fire

  to his raw flank.

  I move from minute to minute,

  hour to hour,

  a hop skip jump

  from one second

  to the next,

  and my earbuds scream

  The Band With No Name,

  a soundtrack

  moving me along,

  giving me big beats

  like ellipses . . .

  connecting me to the moments

  strewn about my days.

  Cheerleader practice.

  Mascot practice.

  If I walk to the boxing gym

  I get to watch everything

  as I go past.

  It’s different than in my tree

  watching tiny people

  scatter around.

  From up close I see the routines

  hear Coach Ellison

  see Kate

  and how hard she works.

  Tips and tricks for me

  and the chicken head.

  It’s nice to get my blood pumping

 

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