Pinned (9780545469845)
Page 1
To Mom, Dad, and Aunt Betty. You are the best storytellers that I know. I love listening to the way you all weave a tale. Sound effects. Vivid details. Unique voices. Your stories are as good as any movie. How blessed I was to be born into such a family!
— SGF
Contents
Title Page
Dedication
The Match
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Takedown
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Escape
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Pinned
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Copyright
Here’s what I like about wrestling. You work hard and discipline yourself, and you can be somebody in this sport. And it don’t matter if you big or small. Fat or skinny. Rocking killer grades or not.
A wrestler and his opponent compete for control in a match. A match got three timed periods and a ref to make sure you both wrestling by the rules.
At the start of the match me and my opponent both in neutral position, facing each other. Ain’t neither one of us in control or got no advantage. So right then, it’s possible for either one of us to win.
In the circle. On the mat. During the match.
My goal is to score takedowns, escapes, reversals, and near falls. To control my opponent, and then hold their shoulders to the mat for a pin. When I show up at a match, I come to win.
Did I tell you wrestling is a martial art? Well it is. Anyhow sometime people say I talk a lot. See you next period.
You ever like a boy your friends thought you shouldn’t like? Maybe he short. Or his ears stick out. Or he got a face full of pimples. But you like him anyhow. No matter what they say. That’s how I feel about Adonis. My best friend, Peaches, say I barely know him. She right. But I been watching him, the way you watch the clouds sometimes and see stuff in ’em that nobody else notices.
I wait for Adonis every morning. He ride to school on a van with eight other kids. I watch the driver lower the lift. Down come a boy in a wheelchair that got a tray attached to it. His arms is frozen in place. His head wobbles, like there ain’t no bones in his neck. I try not to stare at the girl coming off next. But I do anyhow. She walking. But not so good. Two canes and leg braces help her get around, but she always look like she gonna fall down.
I’d be embarrassed to ride in that van. Adonis ain’t. You can tell by the way he comes off. Pushing himself. Sitting up straight and tall like he headed to a meeting with the principal or the head of the school board, even.
I wave. He don’t pay me no mind. I go up to him, saying hello. “I saw the van coming, so I waited for you.”
Looking at the pink feather sticking out my hair, he yawns. I stare up at the sky. When he turn his wheels to try to get away from me, I follow. Smiling. Punching the arms of his chair, he stops. “Quit it, Autumn!”
“I just wanna ask you a question.” Inside I’m telling myself to think of something quick and make it good. “Do we got practice Friday?”
Adonis is the team manager. I’m one of the wrestlers. The only girl.
Shaking his head. Talking like he grown, he say, “I’ve texted everyone. The time has changed, that’s it. The date is the same.” His hands go on those wheels, and he’s moving again. Leaving me.
When his new black leather jacket start falling off the back of his chair, I catch it. Handing it to him, I think of all we got in common. Our Snickers bar candy-brown skin. Wrestling. And my friend Peaches — who he don’t like.
I’m standing right in front of him. Smiling. Blocking him.
“Autumn Knight. You agitate me!” His chair is rolling my way, so I move before I get run over. He don’t go inside the building, though. He stop to talk to one of the kids from the van, laughing after a while. He is always nice to them. Always tutoring or working with them to get them better at something like chess or Scrabble. He’s different with me. Always mad like I did something horrible to him. Liking him is a good thing. I tell Peaches that all the time.
“Autumn.” Peaches runs up, hugging me. “A ninety-eight on my human geography test.” She holding up her paper for me to see.
I ask about Adonis. “What he get?”
She cutting her eyes at him. “What’s he always get? A hundred. Plus the extra-credit points.”
Under my breath, I whisper, “One day, he gonna be my boyfriend.” I look over at him. “Seriously — he will.”
When Peaches smiles, you can see her pink gums and small teeth. They not showing now. ’Cause she ain’t smiling. She upset with me, asking why I’m worrying about some boy when I’m behind in school. Reading, especially.
Besides, she say Adonis ain’t good enough for me. “He don’t treat you right. And he’s handicapped. Look. No legs.” She grabbing both my arms, turning me in the opposite direction. “Plus he’s only nice to them.” She points to Roberto Martinez sitting in a wheelchair, with the wind mussing up his long, black hair. “And grownups.” She waving at Mr. Epperson, our math teacher.
She not exactly wrong. Teachers love Adonis. The principal shakes his hand most every time he see him. Adonis will do anything for them and the kids on the van. He always trying to get away from me.
Hugging me, Peaches ask if I’m ready for Miss Baker’s test. I make a face. “I don’t know. I studied.”
She and me like sisters. She come to all my matches. I let her wear my clothes. She help me with homework. I’m teaching her how to cook. We gonna open a restaurant one day. I’ll be the chef. She’ll run the business. We gonna be rich.
Opening her locker, Peaches brings up Emily. Adonis’s girlfriend from last year, eighth grade, at that other school the three of ’em went to. Peaches and Adonis go here now; Beacon Academy. It’s remodeled. Got a greenhouse. Solar panels on the roof. A fly caf.
She talk about Emily all the time. How her brother beat Adonis up. When Peaches gets to the part about the pond and how he pushed Adonis in, I look at the books in her locker. Lined up. Alphabetically. Algebra I. Biology. French III. Human Geography. She in GAT — the Gifted and Talented program. Taking AP and honors classes. Except in math. She flunked that last year. Me and her in Mr. E.’s class. I’m repeating algebra, too.
“Emily had big ones.” Peaches holding her hands out past her chests.
Looking at my chests, I’m wondering if maybe that’s why Adonis don’t like me. “Pancakes,” a girl said about them once. They not that flat. But biscuits ain’t much better.
Peaches get to the part about his wheelchair — how they found it four blocks from where Adonis was. I sit cross-legged on the floor, thinking ’bout practice la
st night. This guy on my team quit ’cause he couldn’t get with wrestling no girl, he said. “Even at practice.” He not the first boy to quit on me. Won’t be the last, either.
Adonis got what he deserved, being tossed in that pond, Peaches say.
Shouldn’t nobody be treated like that, I tell her. “Even if he did snitch on his girlfriend’s brother.”
She pokes me in the side when she see Adonis and Mr. E. up the hall. Talking. Like they do every morning. “He always has to have the highest grades,” Peaches say. “And be head of everything. Maybe people get tired of that!”
I tell her, “A person’s allowed to be smart, you know.”
“He’s not smarter! He just didn’t have six cousins, their parents, plus their two dumb dogs living with him like I did last year!” She slamming the locker so hard, the other ones shake. Stomping off, she say, “That’s why I didn’t pass math. There was too much racket going on at my house!”
Walking up the hall, we both keep our opinions to ourselves. Then who do I see? Miss Baker. My reading teacher. Peaches shaking her head when I duck around the corner. Yesterday Miss Baker showed me my file. I’m three years behind in reading.
I’m a great cook and wrestler. Gonna make Adonis a great girlfriend, too. But reading — that’s gonna take me down. I try not to think about it. Or read too often. That way I feel better about myself.
Wake up, sleepyhead.” Ma nudges me. “You’re dreaming again. Yelling at that girl. Just go ahead. Ask for her phone number. Get it over with.”
Droopy eyed and yawning, I watch her twist her long, thin braids into a tight, neat bun. “What time is it, please?” I mumble.
“Go back to sleep, honey. I’m headed to the hospital.” Ma is a head nurse at Macy Memorial. She looks at the watch I bought her last Christmas. “It’s not quite five yet.”
She kisses me twice on the forehead, reminding me that autumn is her favorite time of the year. And a lovely name for a girl. Before she leaves my room, she says that I may invite her home or to a movie if I’d like. Slowly, closing my door, she asks if I’ll need a wake-up call. Pulling the blankets over my head, I shut my eyes, yawning. “No. And I do not like that girl. I hate her.”
Before our front door closes, I’m dreaming again. I try to keep Autumn out, but she chases me. I have to run fast to get away.
Autumn is wearing track shoes. She says they are magic, superfast. Now she is ahead of me, staring back at my legs.
“Where your wheels at?” she wants to know.
“I have legs. See.” I stop to give her a better look.
“Those are just pretend. I got real ones. Wanna wrestle?”
Poof! My legs disappear along with the track. We are on a mat now, wrestling. The ref counts down, while Autumn’s strong legs push me into the mat. Her arms and shoulders lean onto mine, like steel digging into dirt. “A pin,” she says, kissing me.
“Time’s up. She wins,” the ref tells the crowd. Under his breath he asks how I could let a little girl like her whip me. Then he stares down at my missing limbs. “Oh … you’re handicapped.”
Poof! I am sitting in my chair in the middle of the gym, with everyone staring as if they feel sorry for me.
“I don’t care if you don’t have legs,” Autumn says, walking over to me in my dream like she did the first time we met in real life. “I still think you cute.” Then she tells the audience that I am going to be her boyfriend even if I don’t want to be.
I force myself to wake up, and wonder why I dream about her so often. I despise her. Nothing about her appeals to me. All those muscles. Not to mention her IQ. I’m sure it’s exceptionally low.
Turning down my covers, I look at my thighs. In my dream I had legs; they were hairy. And had muscles. My feet were the same size as Kobe’s — fourteen. Before I transferred from Randolph Intermediate, I never had such dreams. Or missed having legs. They put me in that pond, and changed me. I went from being the supermature, brilliant young man who happened to be in a chair to the boy in the chair who almost drowned.
Reaching for A Tale of Two Cities, I think about Ma. She asks me often what I would like to accomplish at my new school. I’d never tell her. Or anyone. What I want is the recognition and respect that teachers used to have for me before I was rescued from the pond. I’ve no interest in a girl who cannot read.
“Oh God. I forgot.” Scrambling for my cell, I send out a text message from Coach, reminding everyone to return their permission slips. Mat practice began a few weeks ago. In November, dual meets and tournaments start. This is my first time as a team manager. I want Coach to value my contribution. And realize that I do everything perfectly.
Of course Autumn texts me back.
I’ma sit next 2 u on the bus.
Ignoring her, I jump into my chair. Unlock my wheels. And take a shower. While warm water rushes over me, I think about her. She did not lose one match last season. Hasn’t read a book since then, either, I’d bet.
When Miss Baker walk into class smiling — like reading is fun — I pick up my pencil and draw two hearts.
Instead of a test, gonna read a play today, she saying. I don’t know what’s worse. A test or reading a play. Both are bad. “Open your books.” She walk over to me, squeezing my shoulder. “Autumn. Read the part of Kayla.”
I tap my pencil on my book. Wondering how many freckles she got.
She winks. “I know you can do it.”
I don’t like to read. It’s boring. I tell Miss Baker this all the time. She say not to give up. She gonna help me read better. That ain’t gonna happen. Teachers tried before. I’m still way behind.
My parents moved around a lot. So I went to a bunch of different schools. Sometimes two in one year. You put your head down a lot after a while and don’t worry about the new stuff they teaching. ’Cause you might not be there for the test nohow. I missed a lot of stuff, I guess.
My goal is to be the best wrestler ever. Not the best reader. I know it’s too late for that.
Miss Baker’s picking at her hair. A gray, curly ’fro, short as the hair on my legs. Then she clear her throat. “Autumn.”
I kick the chair leg in front of me. “Awright. Give me a minute.”
Opening the book slow, I read a little to myself to make sure I won’t mess up. There’s so many words on this page. I know Miss Baker. If I do good on three lines, she’ll push me to read more.
The clock on the wall ticks loud as a bomb ready to explode.
I keep flipping pages. Seeing words I never seen before in my life.
This Kayla’s sure got a lot to say. Five lines on the first page. Seven on the next. God, she never shuts up. “How long is all this gonna take?”
Miss Baker tells me to begin reading on page one and a few other students gonna be Kayla along the way.
“I can’t read with that clock making noise. You got a watch. Why we need a clock, too?”
Miss Baker start counting.
That’s all Jaxxon Teagarden need to hear. He sits up, telling everyone to be quiet. “This is gonna be good.”
I start stuttering right off. “May … may … may … maybe …” It happens when I read out loud. I get so nervous and worried, the words I’m reading double, triple, even.
The laughing comes next. “She … she … she … can’t talk right when she … she … she … re … re … reads,” Patrick O’Malley say, laughing so hard, hiccups happen.
I read just fine inside my head. Maybe it ain’t fast, like the teachers want. Maybe it’s not good enough to sound out big words. But it’s good enough for me. “Don’t use your fingers,” my mother say at home. “You too old for that.” “You don’t know that word?” some kid in one of my other classes will say. “My baby sister know that and she was just born.” Then I come to this class for slow readers and Miss Baker say that reading out loud helps us enoun-ciate better and lets her see how much we improve. But it just make me feel dumb.
I drop the book on the floor. Then kick it.
Miss Baker walks over, rubbing my back. Her brown hands feel soft as baby lotion. “Autumn,” she whispers. “You can do this, baby.”
No, I can’t.
Not right now.
Not today.
Not ever, maybe.
So I pick up my pencil and finish drawing hearts.
Pin him, Autumn. Break his arm if you have to.” Patricia, who Autumn calls Peaches, leaps from the bleachers, shouting. “This is your house. Don’t let no boy beat you here!”
It is our first match of the season. I am sitting on the front row, keeping score. Autumn is on her hands and knees, underneath Randy, in the referee’s position. Pacing the sidelines, Coach warns her to keep her head up. “Escape and begin to gain those points back.”
Randy perspires profusely. The back of his singlet is soaked. Wiping his forehead, he ignores the sweat dripping from his nose.
Off the whistle, Autumn kicks sideways, flips over Randy’s back, standing to gain control.
Everyone is on their feet. Clapping. Stomping. Patricia screams, “Yes! Don’t mess with my girl.”
Seconds later, they launch at each other. Hand fighting, they each wrestle for control. Autumn puts him in a headlock. Breaking free, Randy penetrates, lifts, and drops her.
She’s strong. Coach says those legs of hers could crush someone. They wrap around Randy like swamp snakes, forcing his body to stay put.