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Double Team

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by Amar'e Stoudemire




  To my family, my mother, and Hazell.

  You are my inspirations.

  Contents

  Title Page

  Dedication

  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

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Copyright

  I knew this move so well that I was on autopilot as soon as I took that first step. I made a quick shift to my right, rose up as high as I could, and … put my socks away in the top drawer. The clean ones anyway. The dirty ones went in the laundry basket, over a layer of underwear and other stuff that definitely needed to be covered up.

  It was Saturday morning. I’d just gotten back to Lake Wales the night before, too late to worry about this kind of stuff. Now I was moving around my room, putting stuff away and checking for any signs that Dad had been poking through my things while I was gone. I didn’t expect to find any. Pops trusted me, and I trusted him.

  I wasn’t as sure about Junior. We were tight, but I’d caught him playing one of my video games or scuffing up a new ball of mine more than once. I didn’t have to worry about that this time because he had gone on the trip with me. We had gone to visit our mom and our half brother, up in New York.

  It was always nice to see Mom — I missed her a lot — and my little bro was getting so big. He was a little man now! But it was nice to be back in my hometown of Florida, too. I walked around my bed and over to my desk, sorting through the books in my hands instead of looking where I was going. I didn’t need to look: Everything was just where I left it.

  I heard three loud knocks on the front door just as I was hanging up my new shirt that I had bought in New York. I knew that sound. It was my friend Mike, rapping on the side of the door. Before I even reached the kitchen, I knew Deuce would be standing next to him. I opened the door and sure enough, there they were.

  “Hey, Amar’e,” said Mike.

  “Change into some shorts,” said Deuce. “We need to practice!”

  He was holding a basketball, as usual. He dribbled it three quick times to make his point: Bomp! Bomp! Bomp!

  “What,” I said, “no hello?”

  I was just joking. The sound of the ball bouncing on the walkway was all the hello I needed. I let them into the kitchen while I went to change into shorts and sneakers and get my ball. I’d missed playing ball with my friends while I was away. Junior and I hit the courts a few times, but our half brother was still really young. When Mom said, “Why don’t you play some hoops with your little brother?” she really meant “Why don’t you watch him while I go to the supermarket?”

  I got the shorts out of the laundry pile because I was just going to sweat them up anyway.

  We left the house and started walking toward our regular court, in the little town park near my house.

  “House was pretty quiet. Was your dad home?” Deuce asked.

  “Nah,” I said. “It’s his busiest time of year at work. He’s hardly home at all. That’s why it was a good time to visit New York.”

  “’Bout your bro?” said Mike.

  “Already at work,” I said. “He’s got a job now, weekends and after school. Think he’s saving up for a new car.”

  “That’s cool. Too bad he won’t have it in time for next weekend,” Deuce said.

  “Why’s that?” I asked.

  “He could drive us to the next tournament,” said Deuce.

  “There’s another tourney?” I said.

  “Yeah,” said Mike. “And we might’ve, you know, gone ahead and signed you up.”

  “We didn’t think you’d mind,” said Deuce.

  “Safe bet,” I said.

  We took all the hometown shortcuts and reached the court in no time flat. We had the place to ourselves when we got there, so we spread out and took our time warming up. The hoop on one end of the court was bent, so I turned and headed toward the other one.

  “Take the shot!” called Mike.

  He didn’t have a ball. He was waiting for one of us to shoot so he could swoop in and scoop up the rebound. I took a few more dribbles and picked up my pace. Then I rose up and launched a fadeaway jumper, pretending someone was on me tight. “Swish!”

  “Let’s work on pick-and-rolls,” said Deuce.

  That was my favorite move.

  “You guys remember when Carlos and his crew tried to take over this court?” I said.

  A few weeks ago, some older guys had come around and tried to kick us off our own home court. We played a big game to see who’d get to stay.

  “’Course!” said Mike. “We wouldn’t have won if it wasn’t for that pick-and-roll you two pulled off at the end.”

  “Yeah, that was sweet,” said Deuce. “But we need to keep working. These tourney teams can definitely play some D. And the one this weekend is the toughest yet.”

  “I’m on it,” I said.

  “Yeah, right,” said Deuce, doing a quick, slick crossover dribble as he talked. “You barely even signed up for that first tournament.”

  “Yeah, and who was MVP of the last one?” I shot back.

  I had him there. But Deuce was right, too. The teams we were playing now definitely knew their stuff. Whatever play we ran, they’d seen it before. And it sounded like the teams this weekend were going to be even better.

  “All right, let’s do this!” I said, clapping my hands twice.

  “Hold up, hold up,” Mike said.

  I saw another kid edging onto the court. Deuce held the ball and we all turned toward this guy. He looked familiar. He was tall and thin and had a little forward lean to him, like a bendy straw. Then I remembered where I’d seen him. He was the new kid in our grade at school.

  “Hey, Doug-AY!” called Mike.

  Yeah, that was his name: Dougie. Deuce gave him a little wave and he waved back. Then he headed over to where we were standing near the free throw line.

  He had this complicated handshake that was like: bump fists, hook fingertips together, up tap, down tap, and another fist bump. I was surprised when Mike and Deuce both knew it. He turned to me last. His hand was out, ready for the fist bump, but I just nodded. I hadn’t caught all of the parts to their handshake, and anyway that wasn’t the kind of move I came here to work on.

  Mike must’ve figured out what I was thinking because he said, “Dougie’s been practicing with us while you were away. He’s a good guy.”

  “Cool,” I said. “I’m Amar’e.”

  “I know,” he said. “I’m Dougie.”

  “I know,” I said. We both smiled, but I still didn’t shake his hand. I wasn’t being mean: I still had no idea of the order!

  Anyway, there were four of us now. I thought we should keep working on the pick-and-roll, with defenders on both players like in a real game. It got even more complicated with all that traffic coming together at one spot. But they all wanted to run two-on-two right away.

  “Yeah, come on, STAT,” said Deuce. “We worked on all that stuff the whole time you were gone.”

  That didn’t help me much, I wanted to say, but I didn’t mind playing two-on-two. I kind of wanted to see what Dougie could do other than bump fists. I’d get a close look, too, because he wound up being my teammate.

  “He’s a pretty good distributor,” said Deuce, meaning he was a guard.

  “All right,” I said. “We get the ball first.”

  �
��Why do they call you STAT?” Dougie asked as we waited for Mike and Deuce to line up and check the ball back to us.

  “It’s kind of a nickname,” I said. “My dad gave it to me. It means Standing Tall and Talented. It’s, like, part nickname and part reminder.”

  “Cool,” he said.

  Dougie played with the same forward lean he had when he walked. His head was always a little in front of his body. It made him look kind of like he was trying to read an eye chart, but it gave him a wicked head fake. Deuce bit on one right off the bat, and Dougie snuck by him and laid it in to give us an early lead.

  We were playing make it, take it, because the trash talk was better that way, and I scored the next bucket. I got decent position down low. Then Dougie bounced the ball to me and I worked Mike over with a quick up-and-under move. It was harder than usual because of Mike’s new size. He’d grown a lot in the last few months, though most of it was sideways. Just like that, we were up 2–0.

  It was a pretty good game after that. Mike and Deuce pulled out all the stuff they’d been working on while I was gone — and Deuce stopped biting on that head fake. So the game got better, but the outcome didn’t change. That two-point lead grew to three and then four. We didn’t even know what we were playing to, but we knew where this one was headed.

  After a while, I drained a jumper to make it 8–4. It was a fadeaway jumper that I didn’t even need to fade away on: Mike wasn’t on me that tight to begin with.

  “Too easy,” I said. And no offense to anyone — Mike and Deuce were my best friends, and they played hard — this is just the way we talked when we played.

  “Let’s switch ’em up after this,” said Deuce.

  “Sure,” I said, but I knew it wouldn’t matter.

  It wasn’t 8–4 because of Dougie. He was all right, but he was kind of an in-between player. He was a little slow for a guard and pretty skinny for anything else. I guess being away for a week made it a little easier for me to see what was going on. Yeah, we were all getting better. We could run pick-and-rolls and baseline screens and half a dozen other things. But I was getting, well, betterer. That wasn’t a real word, but it was still a fact.

  Dougie and I ran a pick-and-roll of our own that forced our defenders to switch off. Mike was covering Dougie now: no real advantage there. But Deuce didn’t have the height to cover me. I rose up and drained a jump shot I didn’t even need to jump on.

  “Gonna let anyone else score?” Mike said.

  And from the way he said it, I knew it wasn’t just trash talk. He had meant it.

  We played until late afternoon. We were all wiped out by then, and I needed to get home and eat lunch. Things had gotten tense during the game. Sometimes that happens, even if it’s just because of a foul or something. I wasn’t too worried. Mike, Deuce, and I had been friends for a long time — and a lot of games. In the past, we’d always been good at shaking it off.

  Right now, I needed to shake off this hunger. I was starving! I kept picturing my fridge, trying to remember what was in there and decide what I’d eat first. The more I thought about it, the faster I walked. Then I remembered a slice of pie I’d seen on the bottom shelf. If I didn’t get home soon, I’d drool all over myself.

  And then I got home and forgot all about it. Dad’s truck was in the driveway. I’d barely seen him since I’d been back, just a little the night before. I pushed through the door, and there he was, sitting at the kitchen table. He had a fork in his hand and a little plate in front of him with some plastic wrap balled up off to the side.

  “Aw, man, Pops,” I said. “I was going to eat that!”

  “Eat what?” he said, scooping up the last bite of pie and popping it into his mouth. “Still plenty of food in there, anyhow.”

  I made a move toward the fridge, but he was too fast: “Wash up first!” he said.

  Man, I really needed to work on my first step.

  When I got back, my hands were cleaner than Dad’s plate. But the pie wasn’t the only thing that was wiped out. Dad was slumped back in his chair. He still had his work clothes on, the sleeves rolled up on his green shirt.

  “You done for the day?” I asked as I pulled a plate down from the cupboard above the sink.

  “Nope,” he said, letting out a long, slow breath. “Got another job in about” — he looked down at his watch — “about right now.”

  Dad had his own lawn-care company, and Saturdays were always his busiest days. A while ago, we saw a sign over in Lakeland that said SMALL BUSINESS SATURDAY. We both laughed: Every Saturday was Small Business Saturday when you owned a lawn-care company. The main reason was that Dad’s customers liked to be home to “help out.” From what I’d seen, that consisted of about 20 percent telling Dad and his guys what needed doing and about 80 percent getting in the way and nitpicking. That made the long hours a little longer.

  Dad looked down at the empty plate and gave himself a few more seconds. Then he took a deep breath and stood up. “See you tonight,” he said.

  “Okay, Dad,” I said. “Don’t forget to give ’em the bill.”

  “I never do!” he said on his way out the door.

  I heard his truck start up as I was leaning into the fridge and filling up my plate. I heard it pull out as I sat down. I looked over at his empty chair, and I was really glad he got that last slice of pie.

  I was back in school on Monday. I’d missed time the week before, but I still had to keep up with the assignments. Deuce was a really good student, too, and he let me know about the reading and homework and all that over the phone. And Mom did the rest. I’d have one foot out the door, and she’d turn me right around with a quick “You finished that homework, right?”

  Most of it I didn’t mind, like history. I really liked history. And English, too, because I’ve always liked reading. Sometimes the assignments were less fun, but it didn’t matter. Mom made sure I did them all, just like Dad did when I was home.

  Anyway, every class I went to, I handed in a thick stack of homework first thing. Most of my teachers were happy I’d done it, but I think a few of them were annoyed because now they had to grade it all. Especially our science teacher, Mr. Norris. He got a really sour look on his face when I handed in my work. I wanted to say: “Hey, if you just give me all A’s, you won’t have to sweat it.” But I didn’t. We called Mr. Norris “Mr. Bore-us” because he had zero sense of humor.

  Anyway, I sat with the usual crew at lunch: Mike and Deuce, plus our friends Tavoris and Marcus. They spent the whole time catching me up on what had happened while I was away. Dougie joined us, too. He was actually standing there for a while before we saw him.

  “Come on down,” I said once I noticed him hovering over us. We scooted over and made some space. He didn’t have much to say, though. I guess he was still getting to know everybody.

  He did say one interesting thing, right before the bell: “You guys ready for the tournament?”

  Mike, Deuce, and I all answered at the same time.

  “Sure,” I said.

  “Maybe,” said Deuce.

  “Think so,” said Mike.

  “You need to get your story straight!” said Marcus.

  “What we need to do is practice,” said Mike.

  “Can’t today,” said Deuce. “How about tomorrow?”

  “Sure,” I said.

  “No problem,” said Mike.

  “You should sign up, too,” Deuce said to Dougie.

  “Yeah,” I said.

  He just shrugged: “It’s three-on-three.”

  “What about these two?” I said, nodding over at Tavoris and Marcus.

  “Don’t look at me,” said Marcus. “I just talk a good game.”

  We all laughed at that, too: He was the biggest motormouth in the whole grade.

  No one was home after school. Dad’s truck was long gone, and Junior’s beat-up old car was nowhere in sight. I didn’t have a car, but I had my Mongoose bike. I loved to skateboard, but is there anything better than the
speed of a bike? It can’t go as far or as fast as a car, but it never gets stuck in traffic. Anyway, it was another nice day in Polk County, so I decided to take it for a spin.

  What I liked best about riding my bike was just thinking. I could go anywhere I wanted. Well, not Miami or anything, but anywhere in town. And I could just be by myself and think.

  I thought about something else. Deuce couldn’t play today, but Mike could. Used to be, the two of us would hit the court on our own. This was before the tournaments, before the practices. We’d go there just for fun and maybe some one-on-one. This time, neither of us had even mentioned it.

  I kept pedaling. I had a lot to think about.

  The rest of the week zipped by. It usually did when I was catching up on stuff. Pretty soon it was Saturday morning: tourney time! This one was called the High Flyer 3-on-3, and the signs all said: A CONTEST OF WILLS AND BATTLE OF SKILLS. That sounded good to me!

  “Check this out,” said Deuce, pointing to one of the signs. “I wonder how we will do. Will we win?”

  “That’s not what they mean by ‘a contest of wills,’ you nerd,” said Mike.

  “Yeah, and you’re not what they mean by ‘skills’!” said Deuce.

  We were all in a good mood. The next practice had gone better than that first one. Dougie wasn’t there, so we couldn’t play two-on-two and mostly just worked on plays. We’d been running a lot of baseline stuff that we were sure would work here today, and our plays were looking pretty sharp.

  We’d arrived a little early because my dad had dropped us off on his way to work. We’d already signed in and stretched out. “We should check out the rims,” I said.

  “Yeah, I’m going for an eagle-eye view,” said Mike, raising the ball above his head like he was getting ready to throw down a monster two-handed jam.

 

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