Read Lay-ups and Long Shots Online
Authors: David Lubar
As a preteen, Terry Trueman considered himself a tremendous athlete, playing sports constantly in his neighborhood in the northern suburbs of Seattle, Washington. Only as he got into high school did he discover that his calling in life was not professional sports but typing poems, short stories, and novels in his basement with two fingers (he never took a typing or keyboarding class). Trueman does not regret the change in career directions, but his fanatical love of sports morphed into an almost psychotic ‘fanhood’ of all Seattle/Pacific Northwest teams (the Mariners, Seahawks, UW Huskies football, and Gonzaga hoops). Terry Trueman lives in Spokane, Washington, and travels the world extensively, talking about writing and watching ESPN every night in his hotel room. His wife, Patti, can usually handle his sports TV addiction . . . usually.
by
Terry Trueman
I’m twelve years old, and Brad Slater and I have played . . . I don’t know . . . maybe ten million games of HORSE in our lives. We’re playing right now. If you don’t know, HORSE is a basketball game, usually played between two players, where player 1 makes a shot and player 2 has to make that same shot. If you make the shot, whatever shot you like, a lay-in or a long shot, then it’s your turn to shoot first again and your opponent has to make the same shot as you. If player 2 misses he gets a letter, first miss an H, second miss an O and so on until you’ve spelled out HORSE, at which time the game is over and you’ve lost. If you don’t have much time you can play PIG; if you’re vulgar you can play the game by spelling out some obscene or profane swear word. Unlike regular basketball, HORSE doesn’t require dry pavement to dribble on or sidelines to keep you in bounds, no rebounding or assists, steals or traveling violations; it doesn’t demand anything other than a ball, a hoop and two or more players.
I’ve never beat Brad before,
never,
ever,
E-V-E-R
at HORSE,
at PIG
or any other
version of the game with
any other word.
Truthfully,
come to think of it,
I’ve never beaten Brad
at
anything
athletic.
But today
I’m up over
Brad’s
H-O-R-S
with my
H-O.
It’s like a
good poem,
no
it’s
a great poem
a perfect poem,
a rare and nearly impossible and
utterly
unimaginably, divine poem.
I’m
beating
Brad Slater—
I never, ever
thought
this could
happen.
Dry leaves skitter along
the asphalt;
the breeze
blows in my face.
My feet
tingle in my
athletic shoes
H-O-R-S
to
H-O . . .
“Your shot,” Brad says
tossing me the ball.
I catch it,
smile, set up
fifteen feet away,
and
launch my
fade-away
jumper . . .
Swish.
Brad grabs the rebound
walks to my
spot,
takes a few deep
breaths,
judges distance,
wind,
humidity,
takes another
deep breath
and finally
lets fly—
the ball
almost goes through
but circles the hoop and
rims out.
That’s E for Brad
H-O-R-S-E.
The way we play, after the final letter in HORSE, the loser gets to choose whether to take the shot again or make the winner repeat the shot, making it a second time; it’s like having to win by two points in Ping-Pong or volleyball or tennis—a confident player usually tries the shot a second time, and Brad is nothing if not confident, but today, now, a fifteen foot fade-away jumper is not an easy shot—Brad eyes the distance again and then . . .
“Prove it,” he says
throwing me the ball.
I stand
fifteen feet
from the hoop. . .
This length of jumper,
much less a fade-away jumper,
is a hard shot;
he thinks I’ll miss.
But
suddenly
a Robin flies
over our heads
twittering,
his eye
staring
straight into my eyes
I think he’s
smiling,
and the grey clouds
move
so slowly
that I’m sure
the sky,
silent,
watches us—
I
grab the ball
and
don’t let myself think
about . . .
You have to make it
You have to win
Nothing
in the world
can stop you now
for once
in this single moment
you
can’t lose,
not this time . . .
No,
all these thoughts
may come later,
if I make it,
But for now
I grab the ball,
hold it
lightly
in my skinny fingers,
glance at the hoop
and
I leap,
rising high
into the air
raising my arms above
my head
as though offering
this shot to
God,
and I fade away
like a man falling
from a high cliff,
like a song’s last refrains
like
the way one’s
breath must
finally seize
at the hour of one’s
death—
And from this fading
falling, flying
I
shoot—
A tiny click
as the ball nicks the
metal hoop
yet slams
through!
All the universe is
silence
except for the ball
bouncing
once,
twice, a third time
and a fourth
each bounce smaller than
the one before it
Bounce---bounce--bounce-bounce-bounce-bounce
until it lies,
motionless, on the
dark ground.
“You win”
Brad says,
trying to sound
relaxed and cool.
Now, quickly
“Wanna play again?”
I almost say,
sure,
but the word catches in my throat
“Nah, I gotta get home.”
“Really?” Brad asks
I’m almost certain
I can hear
pain,
pain,
P-A-I-N
in his voice.
“Yeah,” I say,
staring right at him
“We’ll play again
tomorrow.”
“Okay” Brad says
feigning
calm,
faking
indifference,
“See you tomorrow then,”
he says,
his tone
anguished.
I say
“Okay.”
I hold my
smile
until I’m out of his sight.
then the breeze
blows in my hair;
my feet dance
as I walk
six inches above the earth.
My heart beats
with the strangest rhythm,
one I’ve never
felt before:
pride,
joy,
victory—
I am twelve
years old
and I don’t
realize
that
nothing,
nothing,
n-o-t-h-i-n-g—nothing
will ever
taste
this sweet
again.
When CS Perryess is writing, he can never predict who’s going to walk onto the page. The day Amanda Jackson showed up, he recognized her as an alternate version of a much-appreciated BMX-riding former student. He was pleased to discover that as the story moved along, Amanda grew into someone with the potential to be as strong and wonderful as the student he remembers so fondly.
CS Perryess has a great life in a foggy little California town with his wonderful wife, Ellen, a stream ecologist and volunteer at the local animal shelter. He rides his bike to work, to the local farmers’ market, and every so often to the hardware store where people laugh at him when he’s lashing ten-foot lengths of pipe to the bike frame.