Football

Football
by Edeyn Hannah Blackeney

Titles with more than one word, are not General Audiences due to content or emotionally
-- a title that DOES have only one word, is safe for everyone to read.


Without fail, as long as the weather held out, the boys would go out to the field and play flag football for P.E. I, of course, had to go with them despite my internal protests. Oh, I did well enough and if my team won, I'd whoop and holler like the rest as we went back inside to grab our books and head home. If my team lost, I'd grumble and shuffle back to the lockers to grab books and head home.

I never showered there. I couldn't bear it. That's why I took P.E. seventh period.

I realized early on that I had no clue what was going on. What was a 'down' and why did I want one first? I would run back and forth up and down the field, sort of blending into the tromping group of 20 to 30 boys. There were far too many to have organized teams and the coach was always the quarterback. Why is it called that anyway? I learned the first day not to call him the 'thrower' and to try to remember that.

Then one day it happened. Despite my attempts at becoming invisible, the ball was coming straight for me and I knew that I had to catch it. I mean, I could have 'fumbled' (see? I learned that one!) the ball, but that just went against my grain. I am a juggler... I do not let flying objects hit the ground.

So, it hit me in the chest as my arms tightened around it.

"Run!" shouted my teammates.

"Run!" shouted the coach.

"Run!" shouted my own voice in my head.

"Run!" shouted everyone.

And I stood there.

I panicked.

My shame was now known, or so I thought.

Oh no! They'll know I'm a girl now! They'll... They'll... wait... why is that bad?

So one of the other team ripped the flags from my hips.

"Why didn't you run?" he asked.

"Why didn't you run?" asked my teammates.

"Why didn't you run?" asked the coach.

"Why didn't you run?" asked everyone.

I took a breath and admitted... "I... I didn't know which way to go..."

That's when the taunting started.

Oh, yeah... this is why that's bad.

They didn't know I was a girl at all.

No, in fact, they thought of me as less than a girl... I was a boy that didn't know how to play football.

When I made it back to the locker room, my books were in the shower, and it was running.

I sighed and fished them out. I could dry them at home.

I grabbed my bag and headed toward home.

The three I normally walked home with had a girl scout meeting -- where I wasn't allowed to go -- so I was walking home by myself that day.

I think I was about two blocks from school when the first rock hit me.

I didn't cry.

I wouldn't let them have the satisfaction.

Fists. Shoes. Knees. Elbows. Bookbags, backpacks, duffels, even a brick.

When they got bored, I lie there aching, bleeding... just... sorting my thoughts.

I stood up and dusted myself off and stumbled the block more to the library. I went in the back door and straight to the bathroom so the librarians wouldn't ask what happened. I think it took over half an hour to clean up the blood and dirt. I rearranged my ripped clothes and even ripped them a bit more in strategic places so that my excuse would work.

I exited the bathroom and as I walked past the desk, one of the ladies called out and said I had a book in that I'd requested. I stopped and while I was signing my name, she took in my appearance.

"What happened to you?"

"Fell down the hill behind the bleachers."

"Again? You are the clumsiest boy in town... you should be more careful! Look where you're going."

"I know," I mumbled, and putting my book in my nearly ruined backpack, I tossed a, "thanks," at her and was out the front door with the little shop-bell ringing on my way.

I was almost home when I heard the talking.

"Here he comes. Pansy little shit doesn't know what football is, my brother says."

"Let's show him what it is, eh guys?"

"I dunno, he's just a middle schooler..."

"What's he gonna do, tattle on us? C'mon, it's his word against three of us. Dogpile!"

I heard the snap of my frames and just went numb. I lay there until they all got up and were tired of jeering at me, and wandered off. Then I just waited more.

I picked up the two halves of my glasses, and pocketed the earpiece that had snapped off.

By the time I made it home, my friends had long since gotten home from Girl Scouts and I saw a note that one had called when I sat at the table to do my homework, and could see my younger sister in the living room watching TV.

As soon as I came in the back door, she knew. She knew as soon as she saw me, everything that had happened. I held a finger to my lips to shush her, but then SHE came in.

"About time! You know your mother doesn't buy food and cook it just to throw out when you're not here for dinner."

"Yes, Grandma."

"And you broke your glasses again! Do you think this family is made of money?"

"No, Grandma."

My sister was diligently paying attention only to the television. I dropped my bag next to her and the still soggy books tumbled out through the ripped side of the backpack.

"You just can't take care of anything, can you, moron?"

"No, Grandma."

"Don't you sass me, you little... what did you do to your clothes? Your books, your clothes, your backpack, and the wasted food! Grab 'em!"

"But Grandma..."

"No backtalk!"

I grimaced and bent over and grabbed my ankles. Three swats for the books. Three swats for the clothes. Three swats for dinner. Three swats for the backpack. Three swats for backtalk. Three swats for sass. Three swats for being late and making her worry. SIX swats for the glasses.

I stood up. She glared at me as I looked back just as numbly as the rest of my life had become.

"Why can't you be more like your sister?"

I don't know. Oh, I wanted to, so much!

The floodgates burst. Slowly at first, just a trickle of tears.

"Oh, GAWD! I didn't mean it literally you sissy! Get out of my face!"

With a kick, she sent me into the living room, where my younger sister was smirking at me. Tears flowing freely now, I looked back into the living room at the relief it wasn't her on my sister's face. I sniffled and sobbed and wandered into the room I shared with my sister, at least until she wanted to change.

Her bed was on one side of the room and the pallet of blankets that served as my bed was on the floor on the other side.

I lay down and screamed into my pillow as I let it all out, finally, and slept until I had to leave the room so my sister could play her radio. I went to shower then, and after, I went outside and fell asleep against my favorite tree. I fetched up inside sometime around midnight.



If you liked this post, you can leave a comment and/or a kudos!
Click the Thumbs Up! button below to leave the author a kudos:
up
72 users have voted.
If you liked this post, you can leave a comment and/or a kudos! Click the "Thumbs Up!" button above to leave a Kudos

And please, remember to comment, too! Thanks. 
This story is 1282 words long.