Kid Owner

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Kid Owner Page 7

by Tim Green


  Now I wanted to play. What real football player doesn’t? Practice isn’t the fun part of the sport. Playing is. I got to ride the bench for the first game against Hutchinson and I began to wonder if I wasn’t happier before, the way it was in youth football, hiding from contact and comfortably planted on the end of the bench without any thought of entering a game. Now, it killed me to “ride the pine.” Especially since my new best friend was a monster on the field. When we needed a big play on defense, Jackson burst through our opponent’s line like a bull elephant snapping twigs and slamming either a runner or a quarterback to the turf. On offense, if we needed a critical yard for a first down or on the goal line, everyone knew they’d run the ball right behind Jackson.

  On one touchdown, Simpkin actually grabbed hold of the back of Jackson’s jersey and got dragged across the goal line over and through a pile of defensive bodies. Simpkin spun the ball on the ground and held up a single finger like he was the hero of the day. It made me want to barf. Meanwhile, Jackson chugged right on back to the sideline for some water and a breath of air without bothering to celebrate. It was all business with Jackson.

  He was amazing.

  I was miserable.

  Jackson and Izzy felt for me, and invented reasons for the injustice of it all. “They just don’t get it.” “Hubbard is a numbskull.” “Simpkin is a butt-kisser.”

  Bottom line, I didn’t fit the profile of a quarterback and my hands weren’t getting any better at catching the ball. I was too small to play anywhere else on the field. On defense, I was a hitter, but too short to be effective as a defensive back and too light to play on the line or at linebacker.

  Even I saw that.

  The only one who didn’t mind any of this was my mom. She loved seeing me dressed in my uniform, popping pads during warm-ups for the Hutchinson game like a real football player but safe from any of the live action, where she fretted over the bodies that got helped off the field.

  “You don’t want to be one of them.” She patted my leg as we drove home from the game. I looked at her hand making small circles on my leg, wanting to bite it so she’d stop trying to comfort me.

  “I want to play, Mom. That’s the point.” I huffed and looked out the window.

  “Your friend Izzy doesn’t seem to mind whether you play or not.” My mom said in a singsong voice like a songbird in spring and gave me a wink.

  “Izzy could probably get more playing time than me . . . if they allowed girls.” I banged my head against the window.

  “She’s cute.” My mom tilted her head as if she hadn’t heard a word I said.

  “Mom, I don’t care about that. I want to play.”

  “I think your coaches know their business, Ryan. There’s nothing wrong with being a little undersized. A lot of great people are undersized.”

  I hated when she talked like that. “Whatever,” I mumbled.

  “Look at everything we have,” she continued. “There are a lot of people who wished they lived like you.” She shot a frown my way.

  I wasn’t sure if she meant because I owned the Cowboys or just other stuff, but neither mattered when you weren’t where you wanted to be on a sports team. “Yeah, I know,” I mumbled. I shrugged and sulked the rest of the way home. When we pulled through the gates, my mother gasped.

  I looked up and got a shot of total excitement.

  My mom said, “Oh, no.”

  In my mind, I said, “Oh, yes!”

  22

  The guy wasn’t anything special. His hair was a little too long. His shirt was untucked. He had a California-wild-but-handsome kind of look, but it was the camera that excited me. It was one of those small digital video cameras with a bold little flag on it that read TMZ.

  I had to try hard not to laugh out loud. This was just what I needed to pick up my spirits, a little publicity.

  “You sit here.” My mom’s command was like a thunderclap and I froze.

  She flew out of the truck and went right at the guy. I could hear her yelling through the windshield. It wasn’t pretty, but needless to say, she went up one side of that kid and down the other.

  “You get that camera out of my face, mister. This is private property and you are trespassing. You want to stay out of jail? This video better not see the light of day. Your boss isn’t going to be happy when TMZ is the only outfit banned from the press conference, so you just get back in your truck and get out of here. Go!”

  The guy gave her a casual smile, but his eyes flickered like someone had tickled him with an electric shock and he got in his truck and drove away pretty fast. My mom watched him, then looked at me and shrugged, motioning to me that I could get out.

  “What a rat,” she said.

  “Why, Mom? Why can’t I be on TV? Just a little?”

  “Because you’re twelve years old.” Her face turned to stone again. “And I’m your mother. And if I can’t stop this whole thing, I can at least protect you from the worst of it, Ryan. You’ll understand when you’re older.”

  I hated that line, but she softened the situation a little by suggesting that we go to the new X-Men movie and that I invite Izzy and Jackson over tomorrow to watch the Cowboys game.

  The Cowboys opened their season the next day in Chicago. I’d wanted to go, but because things weren’t legally final yet, my mom wanted me to stay home. But Izzy and Jackson came over to watch on our big-screen TV, which was the next best thing. My mom didn’t even come inside to check on the score. Instead, she sat by the pool, getting some sun and reading her book. That made me mad, but I kept my cool because I wanted to enjoy the game. I was rewarded when Kenny Albert, the Fox announcer, mentioned me as the new kid owner and said how everyone was waiting for my press conference. I felt like I was ten feet tall.

  “Hey, they’re talking about you!” Jackson shouted, spraying pretzel crumbs across the couch. “No way, man!”

  23

  I looked at Izzy. She bit her lip and gave me a nod to let me know she’d heard them mention my name on TV. I didn’t know why she couldn’t be more happy than that, but obviously I had no idea what made girls tick. The moment passed and we went back to rooting hard, and I got annoyed whenever the Cowboys made a bad play.

  “Fusco’s gotta catch that ball!” I growled when the linebacker missed an easy interception that would have kept the Bears out of the end zone. Instead, I had to watch Martellus Bennett do his orange dinosaur dance.

  “You can cut him in a few weeks if you want!” Jackson’s excitement was contagious. He was giddy with the power I might have.

  “You gotta be fair, though, Ryan.” Izzy nodded seriously, which I loved. “You can’t just go cutting guys for one bad play. Mark Fusco makes that catch nine out of ten times.”

  “I will.” It was a thrilling promise to make.

  I was taking the whole thing personally. That’s how it’s supposed to be, right? And sometimes I even forgot I owned the team. I was just rooting as a fan. It was thrilling, too, because they had the lead most of the game.

  It was in the fourth quarter when things started to get close. Then, with only a minute to go, they dropped behind because of a Bears field goal. My stomach knotted up as the offense took the field. When John Torres dropped back, even I saw the blitz coming.

  “Throw it!” I shouted, shocking my friends.

  Torres didn’t throw it. He got sacked and fumbled. After a very painful minute of pulling bodies off the pile, a Bears player emerged with the ball, holding it high like the prize it was. The referee signaled first down for the Bears and their offense danced out onto the field to kneel on the ball and run out the clock. That’s when the announcers started talking about how the Cowboys’ Coach Cowan hadn’t lived up to expectations in the previous two seasons and that if he couldn’t get them to the play-offs, this might be his last. They also talked about what a new owner might mean for all that. I waited on the edge of my seat to have them drop my name again, but they never did.

  “They talked about me
like I wasn’t even a person!”

  “Well, when the time comes,” Jackson said, looking uncomfortable, “you’re gonna have to get rid of someone. That you know, right? That’s what everyone is grousing about. They’re acting like it’s your fault and you haven’t even had your hands on the controls yet.”

  “My father did, though.” It was beyond strange to be so closely associated with a man I’d never even met.

  “When is that press conference your mom set up?” Izzy asked.

  “She wants to wait until the deal is final. There’s all this paperwork, court stuff, or something crazy like that. Once I do, though, Jackson’s right. I will have to make a decision.”

  “That make you nervous?” Izzy asked.

  I shrugged. “I don’t know. I’ll have you to help me, right?”

  Izzy’s smile outshone the sun and I couldn’t wait to get the whole thing going. I wished my mom wasn’t so stuffy about it all. I was going to own the team and there was no sense wasting so much time waiting for a bunch of lawyers.

  The game ended and we went out back. I gave my mom a scowl when we walked by the pool, but she either didn’t care or didn’t notice from behind her sunglasses.

  One of the other good things about Jackson is that you pretty much always have to have a good time with him. Soon we were flopping around in the pool, doing splash contests. Neither of us could come close to Jackson’s torrential geysers.

  We laughed and swam and then laid out on big lounge chairs with thick cushions. It lightened my mood.

  “You sure know how to have fun, Jackson,” Izzy said. It was like she read my mind.

  “Yup,” Jackson said, staring up at the sky. “Look at that cloud! It’s a doggone dragon.”

  “Fun is his middle name,” I said.

  “Remember Simpkin and Markham, Little Man? What they said about swimming? What’s wrong with those guys?” Jackson raised up to look at me.

  “A lot,” I said.

  “What are you talking about?” Izzy asked.

  I told her all about the first day of practice. It was the day before school started, when Jackson showed up.

  A FEW WEEKS AGO . . .

  He was already out on the field. I could hear the coach yelling at him, and Jackson—because he was taller than the coach—was looking down and taking it.

  “This is the seventh-grade team, son. The middle school.” Coach Hubbard lowered his sunglasses so he could lock eyes with Jackson. Coach Hubbard looked like a hippo, right down to the thick molars filling his mouth, the big belly, and the few random bristly whiskers beneath his snout.

  And then he launched into a tirade about how hard we all were going to have to work if we wanted to play football for him.

  As the other players filtered out onto the field, Coach Hubbard continued his speech.

  “Now, I know you all are used to winning.” Coach Hubbard continued to scowl. “Yeah, I saw you play. Coached by a couple fellas who know their business, so my expectations are high this year. Fact is, I don’t plan on losing a single game this year with this group. And I know that means beating undefeated Eiland Middle, along with all the others.”

  Coach Hubbard let that sink in and surveyed his players as if daring anyone to deny his prediction.

  “That’s right, Eiland. Haven’t lost a game in five years, but that’s gonna be over now. You are gonna break them. We are gonna break them together. That’s what this season is about: Ben Sauer Middle beating Eiland. Making history.”

  Coach Hubbard glared at us some more, then introduced Assistant Coach Vickerson, who basically restated everything Coach Hubbard had said, only he said it all louder.

  Finally, Coach Hubbard blew his whistle and we began. They worked us hard, invoking the name of Eiland. We sweated and we ached. We breathed in dust until our snot was brown and we chopped our feet through agility drills until our sides split with pain. After half the team had collapsed, it ended. As we trudged off the field, I felt a big meaty hand on my shoulder. I looked up at Jackson.

  “Hey, Little Man.” He was huffing.

  “Hey. You were really sweating out there. You have time to go for a swim back at my house?” I grinned.

  “Okay. I’ll swim.” Jackson gave a curt nod like he’d made a big decision. Jackson and his mom lived by themselves, too, only in a small apartment on the edge of the school district.

  “Nice.”

  “Can I get a ride?” he asked.

  “Sure,” I said.

  “I can swim in my shorts, right?”

  “Of course.” I laughed.

  We changed in the locker room and headed out. We had nearly reached the school parking lot when I realized that a cluster of teammates had surrounded us.

  Bryan Markham walked along on the other side of Jackson and he chuckled before he spoke. “Hey, dude, how old are you, anyway?”

  “Twelve.” Jackson studied his own feet as he walked, speaking soft and low.

  “Come on, bro.” Bryan gave him a little slap on the arm. “You look like you’re eighteen.”

  Jackson shrugged. “I got big bones. Hey, you guys going to Little Man’s house to swim?”

  “Little Man? Oh, Minna Zinna. . . . Swim?” Bryan chuckled silently. “Haven’t been to his house since second grade. My little sister has pool parties.”

  Jackson kept looking to me. I shrugged and sighed and turned to go, eager to get away and used to avoiding confrontation. Jackson followed me while the rest of them laughed. There was nothing funny. It was just a mean and sneaky way to insult us.

  The other kids gave him some space, wary of a boy so big, but Bryan wasn’t afraid of anything. He stood nearly as tall as Jackson, and even though he was hardly as thick, he had muscles that the rest of us dreamed of. Bryan had been king of sixth grade and no one expected anything different in seventh.

  “But you probably like that kind of thing, right, Jackson?” Bryan sneered from behind us. “You got kindergarten written all over you. That’s probably why you’re gonna hang out with Minna. He looks like a kindergartner and you probably act like one.”

  I admit that I’d felt a prickle in my spine at that moment because I knew that, muscles or no muscles, king of sixth grade or not, Jackson could smash Bryan like a roach if he wanted to. So, when Jackson stopped short and stood tall, I expected that the balance of power in the world I’d come to know was about to shift.

  24

  PRESENT . . .

  Izzy stared with her mouth open. “Jackson beat the stuffing out of Bryan? I didn’t hear about that.”

  I shook my head, trying not to look too sad, and continued my story. “Nah, he just asked me if I’d farted.”

  “What?” Izzy looked shocked and she let out a giggle.

  I laughed. “I know. He said, ‘Little Man, did you just fart or something? ’Cause I swear I just heard a fart.’”

  “Awesome,” Izzy said. “What’d Bryan do, then?”

  “He just stuttered a little and muttered like the mutt he is,” I said, and then I explained Jackson just a little bit more to Izzy.

  Jackson didn’t care one bit about whether anyone thought it was beneath his age to swim in my pool. He might as well have been in Disney World with Space Mountain all to himself. He jumped and splashed and hooted and flopped about. He loved the water and he loved my pool. I couldn’t get him out of it, not that I wanted to.

  We’d been swimming at my pool every day after practice ever since. We’d swim until dinnertime. My mom, thrilled that I had a friend who seemed to genuinely like me as much as the pool, treated Jackson like royalty, fixing us food and drinks and always inviting Jackson to stay for dinner. Could he eat? Like no one I’d ever seen. Even my mom’s jaw went slack at the sight of him tearing through a second steak from the grill or polishing off an entire loaf of garlic bread.

  The other nice thing about Jackson was his manners. He put me to shame. “Yes, ma’am. Thank you, ma’am. May I please have some more, ma’am? That was deliciou
s, ma’am.”

  When I met his mom—she’d come to pick him up in her small battered Chevy just before dark—it wasn’t hard to see where he got his politeness from. She was a big, tall woman who spoke softly and with such sincerely appreciative words that my own mom couldn’t see her without asking her in for coffee, tea, or a meal—none of which she’d ever accept.

  And surprisingly, my mom, who was never one to let go of things, wouldn’t argue.

  In sixth grade I found myself kind of on the outside, especially late in the year. So, Jackson’s sudden appearance was as welcome to me as it was to my mom.

  When I told Izzy that part, I looked at her and sort of blushed. I don’t know why. I guess I felt a little ashamed, even though I knew she liked me anyway.

  Despite his size and prowess on the football field, Jackson had a sensitive side. He liked it when we watched corny old Disney movies like Escape to Witch Mountain and Swiss Family Robinson, or even the animated stuff like The Lion King or Beauty and the Beast. I also found out—and only by something his mom blurted out one time—that Jackson loved music. Not Jay Z or Taylor Swift kind of music. Jackson played the violin, which was just bizarre to me. None of the kids I knew who played in the band or orchestra were killer linemen.

  Jackson only let me hear him play that thing once, and he made me swear I wouldn’t tell our teammates.

  When I finished, I looked over at Izzy. She had this faraway look. Jackson had his face to the sun and his eyes closed, pretending not to listen, even though I knew he was.

  “That’s pretty cool,” Izzy said.

  “Yeah, a lot of good stuff has happened these past couple of weeks,” I said.

  She laughed. “I guess so. You’re suddenly a billionaire, you own the best team in the NFL, and you’ve got a super cool best friend.”

  I looked over at Jackson, and try as he might, he couldn’t help busting into a huge grin.

  I turned to Izzy. “And you.”

  “Me, what?”

 

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