The Fallow Season of Hugo Hunter (17 page)

BOOK: The Fallow Season of Hugo Hunter
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Excerpt from
Hugo Hunter: My Good Life and Bad Times

In a span of about three weeks in the spring of 1993, these things happened:

I dropped out of high school.

I took Seyna to Las Vegas and married her.

I signed the contract for my first professional fight.

I had that fight at Caesars Palace, on a card full of other 1992 Olympic boxers—Cordero Montez, Jimbo Duggins, Maxie “Rerun” Robbins, and a few other names you probably remember.

To say that I was intimidated would be, perhaps, to devalue the word. Rationally, I knew that I was set up for success. I hadn’t been in the ring for real since Barcelona, and my opponent that night, an earnest if overmatched fighter from San Bernardino named Leland Briggs, had been handpicked for me. That’s how it is when you’re a hot young fighter making your debut. You get red meat served up for your four-round opener. In the second fight, it’s another opponent on the descent and six rounds, and so on. Somewhere after the first dozen, you start fighting guys who know what they’re doing and can put some damage on you if you’re not careful. Leland Briggs posed no danger to me.

And yet, as I stood in the tunnel waiting for the houselights to come down and the music to start so I could make my way to the ring, I felt on the verge of losing control of my movements and my bodily functions.
I’d
heard whispers in the press before the fight, wondering if I was just a flash in the pan in Barcelona who would get exposed in the pro game, where it’s grown men and no headgear. I had no such fears. I was worried, no doubt about it, but it was rooted in other things: Is the rust gone? Can I set the pace early? Can I get up the stairs to the ring without falling down in front of fifteen thousand people?

Two things let me know I was OK. The first was seeing my sportswriter friend, Mark Westerly, along press row as I made my way to the ring, everybody screaming and the music blaring. I gave him a little nod and he gave me a little wink, and that calmed me considerably.

The second occurred in the first few seconds of the first round. The first jab I threw connected squarely with Briggs’s chin, and I knew then that I was much faster than he was. I backed up after that and invited him in, and sure enough, I saw his own jab coming from way back. I slipped inside it and threw an uppercut to the stomach that knocked the air from him. A minute and thirty-seven seconds into the round, it was over.

I was going to be all right.

31

We collected our tickets at the box office and stepped inside the theater lobby. Lainie waved, and I looked up to see Raj standing against the far wall, under the placard listing the theater’s benefactors. She grabbed my hand and we walked over.

“What are you doing here?” I said. I was mildly surprised. Raj tended to keep his distance from Hugo. Force of habit, I suppose.

Lainie jabbed me in the side. “I invited him.”

God, I could be dumb sometimes. “Good,” I said. “Going to be interesting.”

Raj fiddled with his tie. The kid—hell, any kid—was more comfortable in T-shirts and khaki shorts. I gave him credit for making the attempt.

“Does he know I’m coming?” Raj asked Lainie.

“He doesn’t know
we’re
coming,” she said. “No extra pressure, right?”

Lainie reached for my hand, and then for Raj’s. “Come on, men. Let’s go see a play.”

Any hesitations I had about Hugo’s headlong dive into theater—and I had many, starting with his base irresponsibility of leaving his job at Feeney’s—eroded when I saw him on the stage that night. We sat in a middle row, just out of the reach of the footlights, and we watched him. The few novice moves I picked up on, like a nervous glance at the audience in his first scene, fell away quickly and yielded to a display of remarkable control. I’m not a theater critic. Far from it. But for my money—$17.95 plus a $5.00 lukewarm beer at intermission—Hugo became tragic Mountain Rivera. The performance had verisimilitude, it had depth, it had pathos. It occurred to me, as I sat there, that beyond the obvious parallels between Hugo’s character and his real life, he had been prepping for this role for a long time. Hugo knew how to sell a show, and he was doing it again there on the stage.

Traveling all those years with Hugo, I had occasion to see and meet some famous people. Athletes. Actors and actresses. A few politicians, although most of them stay away from overt blood sports. Some surprise you with their physical dimension, because you’re used to seeing them bigger than life and reality right-sizes them. Some aren’t as glamorous as they’re made out to be. Some are even more devastatingly attractive. My point, I guess, is that the one commonality is their fame alters how they move through the world. A famous person—at least a famous person whose face is his currency—can’t hide in plain sight.
I’d
seen that with Hugo in Billings, and years earlier everywhere else. A current goes through a room or a city street when someone famous enters the scene. The chemistry changes. The way others comport themselves is transformed.

At some point in Hugo’s performance, he stopped being who he was and became who he was playing. I grasped Lainie’s hand and leaned over and said, “My god. He’s wonderful.” She smiled, and I looked beyond her, to Raj, lost in the art his father was making. It was a glorious night.

We went over to Feeney’s after the show—Hugo; Lainie; Raj; me; and his director, Joelette, wh
o’d
approached Hugo about the play originally and most assuredly was not his lover, since she was accompanied by her partner, Hannah.

We took a high-top table and grabbed some menus. Hugo looked like he had been lit up from inside. He threw an arm across his son’s shoulders and said, “It’s great to see you, bud.”

Frank swept by and asked what we were drinking. I ordered a couple of pitchers of Slumpbuster.

“We’re doing a pulled-pork sandwich special,” he said. “Fries, tots, or salad on the side. Eight ninety-nine.” He kept looking sidelong at Hugo, who noticed.

“Frank,” he said, his eyes still caked in makeup designed to make him look older and broken.

“Hugo.” Frank nodded and left.

“That was weird,” Joelette said.

“Forget it,” I said. I figured
I’d
talk to Frank later, tell him what a revelation Hugo had been. In a week and a half, the play would be over and Hugo could get back to work at the bar. Surely that was still doable. This didn’t have to be a major impasse.

Frank dropped by again with the beer, and I poured the glasses one by one and sent them around the table.

“You old enough for this?” I asked Raj.

“As of ten days ago,” he said.

Hugo slapped his forehead. “Shit. I forgot.”

I shoved the beer across to Raj before this could derail us. “Belated birthday beers are the best,” I said.

“Pretty pithy poetry,” Lainie said, leaning into me.

“Enough,” Hannah tossed in. “I’m thirsty.”

I lifted my glass. “To Hugo.”

“To Hugo!”

Through dinner, I watched Hugo and his son. It was strange—beautiful but strange—for me to see them together again after so many years of dealing with them as separate entities. Raj had done some growing up in my house, when I still had a family there to wrap around him. Sam Wynn’s checkbook had managed to disengage that closeness, but it hadn’t stopped Raj, over the years, from stopping me at some school sporting event and asking about his old man.
I’d
always been glad to oblige, even when the news wasn’t so good. I was subversive like that.

Now, they dropped in and out of the table conversation, a rollicking, rolling stream, and confided in each other in between. I couldn’t hear them over the din, but it was plainly deep and honest, the gesticulations carrying import, the attentiveness carrying investment, the intimacy carrying love. I leaned right and found Lainie’s ear. “Look at them,” I said.

She turned and smiled at me. “I know.”

“You did that. That happened because of you.”

She wrapped an arm around my back and pulled me in.

Our dishes cleared away, Hugo clapped his son on the thigh and said, “I’m gonna hit the head.”

“Too much information, Pops, but OK.”

Hugo eased off the barstool and moved around the table, giving Joelette and Hannah shoulder squeezes. When he got to Lainie, he drew her in and planted a kiss on her cheek. I got the sock to the arm. Anything more would have been inappropriate for the venue.

We watched him head off toward the men’s room with a hitch in his get along, and I turned back to Joelette and said, “How did you know?”

“Know that h
e’d
be a great Mountain Rivera?”

“Yes.”

“I didn’t,” she said. “Honestly, I thought h
e’d
sell some tickets.”

“Don’t ever admit that,” Lainie said, laughing. “Take the credit.”

The metallic clatter of silverware hitting the tile floor brought a shattering silence to the bar. I saw Raj’s face go slack, like the muscles in his jaw had been severed, and I turned to see Hugo, kneeling on the floor with Amber, reaching for the forks and knives that had scattered across it.

“Leave it be,” Amber said, her voice stretched thin by anger. “You’ve done enough.”

“I just—”

“Leave it!”

Frank, wh
o’d
been at a table near the door, came hustling by and said to Raj, “Come get your dad.”

When they reached the scrum, Frank leaned over and cupped Hugo under the arms and dragged him up. Raj took things from there and guided him back to our table.

“Take him outside and wait for us,” I told Raj. Hugo looked spent, dazed, like h
e’d
evacuated from the moment.

“What just happened?” Joelette said.

I couldn’t believe
I’d
missed it. Over the course of an hour or so, Hugo had gotten himself drunk. Hell, we all probably had a little too much. Problem was, only Hugo among us couldn’t handle it. From there, the course had been predictable enough.

Around us, the other customers slipped back into their own worlds and conversations. “W
e’d
better pay and get out of here,” I said to Lainie.

I was settling the bill with cash when Frank came by.

“You shouldn’t have brought him,” he said.

I looked my old friend in the face. It was twisted, emotional, irrational.

“We were celebrating,” I said. “He’s gone now. No big deal.”

“A dozen other places you could have gone,” Frank said, voice rising. “Why here?”

“Because you’re his people,” Lainie said. I turned to look at her. She was every bit as pissed off as he was.

“Lady,” Frank said, “who the fuck are you?”

That tore it. I took a swing at Frank, an act dumb as dumb could be. Had Hugo been there, he might have instructed me on the need for a strong defense to back up one’s offense, but he wasn’t, and I didn’t, and the lights went out quickly after that.

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