Authors: Michael Koryta
“How’d you come up with that person?”
“Looking for people who knew the property at Shadow Wood,” he said, and he was thinking of what it would mean if indeed he had been wrong. Bova’s court date was this week, his charges were serious. How in the hell did Adam go about putting that genie back in the bottle? He rubbed his eyes. He needed more sleep. Needed coffee. Needed a drink, needed—
“Find someone like you,” Chelsea said.
“What?”
“You already said how to do it. You need to find the sort of person who would stand by him no matter what he did, right? Well, somebody had to post bond for him at some point. It wouldn’t have been a stranger.”
He lowered his hand, looked at her, and said, “You’re brilliant, you know that?”
She didn’t smile. Instead she said, “Be careful, Adam. Please.”
Sipes had been arrested in Cuyahoga County, and his bail agent was someone Adam had known for years, Ty Hampton, a black guy who went about six-six and three hundred pounds. Adam had always figured Ty had fewer skips than the average agent because he wasn’t the sort of man you’d want to come looking for you.
“He ran on you, eh?” Ty said when Adam explained what he wanted.
“A little worse than that,” Adam said. “He’s threatening my brother.”
“Really?”
“Yeah.”
“Man, I’m not all that surprised to hear it. Never did like that creepy asshole. I didn’t have any trouble with him, I just didn’t like him.”
“I’ll pay you whatever you think is fair,” Adam said.
“Stop it. If I called you with the same problem, would you want my dollars? Just give me a few minutes. I’ll find it, call you back.”
It took him less than ten minutes.
“Got your name,” he said, “and I hope it helps. Bond was posted by his half brother. Now, this is old information, but I’ve got an address and a phone number. His name is Rodney Bova, and his number was—”
“I’ve got his number,” Adam said.
“What? Damn, not a new name for you, huh? I’m sorry, man. Hoped I could help.”
“You did,” Adam said. “Ty, you absolutely helped. Half brother, you say?”
“Yeah. Same mother, different fathers, that’s what I’ve got in my notes. You sure you don’t need anything else?”
“No,” Adam said. “I’ve already got that gentleman’s number. I keep hoping it will pay off.”
“Good luck, Austin.”
“Appreciate it.”
Adam hung up, and Chelsea raised an eyebrow. “Nothing new?”
“Nothing new,” Adam said, and then he pulled open his tracking software and stared at the red dot that represented Rodney Bova’s existence. He’d been right.
Move, damn it,
he implored the dot silently.
Move. Go to him.
A
FTER PRACTICE KENT AND
his staff met for an hour to discuss the offensive game plan, considering tight end seam routes and quick slants and bubble screens and all of the things that might work if their number-one receiver was done catching the ball. Then they emerged from the locker room and found Colin Mears sitting on the hood of his car, pointing toward them like an accusatory finger.
“What’s he still doing here?” Byers asked, and then Haskins said he’d go talk to him, but Kent shook him off.
“I’ve got it. Go on home, guys.”
He crossed the grass to Colin’s car alone. It was cold out, and the boy’s breath fogged the air. He’d been waiting a long time.
“You all right, son?”
Colin nodded. He had a tennis ball in his right hand. Squeezing rhythmically. Working on his grip strength.
Kent propped one foot on the tire of the boy’s Honda. “Why are you sitting here in the cold, Colin? Last thing we can afford is for you to get sick.”
Colin shifted the tennis ball from his right hand to his left, kept squeezing.
“I want you to know I’ll make plays this week.”
“Don’t doubt it, son. You always have.”
“Not Friday night.”
“You worry more about your stat line or the scoreboard?” Kent said. He was studying the worn tire treads, not looking at the boy.
“Scoreboard.”
“Then you ought to be happy.”
“Yes, sir.” He stopped squeezing the tennis ball, passed it from hand to hand, and said, “What’s the deal with your brother, Coach?”
“Pardon?” Kent looked up now.
“Why were they searching his house?”
Kent was quiet, looking into the kid’s intense eyes, and then he said, “Because they thought it might help. That’s all you need to know.”
“What more do
you
know?”
“Excuse me?”
“You have to know what they were looking for. It’s your brother.”
“The police don’t always tell you what they’re looking for, Colin. Sometimes they don’t even know. It’s about gathering—”
“What sort of person punches a cop?”
Kent stopped talking. He stared at Colin for a few seconds and then turned his face back to the field, where the blank scoreboard stood in ghostly silhouette, bare-limbed trees weaving in the wind beyond, and, out farther, the gray-on-gray line of the horizon, Lake Erie.
“Adam has some issues with his temper. Always has.”
“The police went there looking for something, and he didn’t want them to find it. He
punched a cop,
Coach. Who does that?
Instead of helping them, he tried to stop them. Why didn’t he want them there? Why didn’t he—”
“They were going through my sister’s things,” Kent said, and his own voice was angrier than the boy’s, it was his lace-up-those-shoes-and-head-for-the-bleachers voice. “That’s one of the things you don’t understand, son, and you should begin to consider them before you start theorizing. Tell me this—how would you feel if someone started going through Rachel’s room without explaining it to you? That’s how Adam felt. I’m not defending his reaction, and I won’t. It was a poor choice. He’d admit that. But he’s got some problems with his temper, and the police found a sore spot. That’s what happened. That’s all. He’s as committed to helping find this guy as anyone, Colin. I can promise you that.”
Colin nodded. “Okay. It just… it surprised me.”
“It shouldn’t have. You understand the situation better than most. Rachel went to see him asking for help and she… she was less than truthful. You already know this.”
“Yes, sir. I just wondered if he knew something. If you knew something. Because if there’s anything you can tell me, it would help so much to have an idea of what’s—”
“Police don’t make a practice of sharing information with civilians. I know that it’s hard. Remember that. I’ve been there. I wish to God you weren’t there right now, but there’s no stepping backward. We put our heads down and move forward. That’s the only choice.”
“I’m trying.”
“I know you are. It’s not a matter of effort, son. It’s not something you can control.”
The tennis ball slipped from Colin’s hand. He tried to catch it on the bounce, missed, and then it rolled under his car. Kent blocked it with his foot, picked it up.
“How many of those have you done?”
“Had three thousand when you came out. Lost track then.”
Kent had been ready to head home, but he looked at the kid now and then tilted his head in the direction of the locker room.
“Let’s watch some video, shall we? A lot to work on.”
Colin slipped off the hood of the car and they walked together into the locker room.
“You want to see Adam?” Kent asked, the words out of his mouth without a thought.
Colin looked both surprised and afraid. “Talk to him?”
“No. I mean on tape. See the kind of player he was.”
The kid looked anything but enthused, but he said, “Sure.”
“I’ll just show you the last drive,” Kent said. “Then we’ll look at Saint Anthony’s.”
He wasn’t sure why he wanted Colin to see it so badly. Maybe it was just a chance to leave a different image in the boy’s mind from the one on the front page of the paper. That image wasn’t fair to Adam, it was a preserved lie, nothing more.
The man’s name is Clayton Sipes,
Kent wanted to say.
He killed her, and I brought him here. It’s got nothing to do with Adam.
He couldn’t say that, of course. He could play the video, though, could show Colin what Adam had been once, before he’d been the man in handcuffs and bloodstains on the front page. Kent hadn’t watched it in years. He didn’t like watching it. Hadn’t even at the time, really; the only person in that stadium from Chambers who had not enjoyed every moment of the championship-winning drive was now their head coach. He’d had the tape converted to DVD years earlier, and now he slipped the disc into the player and turned on the projector and then it was 1989 and the Cardinals were playing Angola Central, the unbeaten and top-ranked Tigers.
“He played both sides of the ball. Fullback on offense. Best blocking fullback I’ve ever seen in high school. If you stayed behind him, you’d gain a lot of yards without breaking a sweat.” He fast-forwarded through the first three quarters—Chambers had scored first, Angola answered with two in the second quarter, then fumbled to start the third and Chambers converted and it was all tied up. The Tigers made a beautiful drive, meticulous and precise, put it in the end zone early in the fourth and then went for two and got stuffed: 27–21 with 10:41 left in the game.
“Here we go,” he said, and pressed
PLAY
.
The Chambers return man botched the kick, then got lit up and driven into the turf at his own four-yard line. The Angola fans were going crazy, and on the sidelines Walter Ward stood with his arms folded and his eyes flat. Kent was there, too, clipboard in hand, and he remembered that he’d felt sick, that he was suddenly just fine being the backup.
“What you’re about to see,” he said, “is not the brand of football we play. But it worked.”
Adam was the last one out, his teammates already lined up as he entered with trademark slow swagger, a gentle bounce to his step, shoulders swaying side to side, head bobbing.
“Promise package,” Kent said. “That’s what this was called.”
One wide receiver, split out right, one tight end, and a three-man backfield: two tailbacks, one left and one right, and a fullback ahead of them, a fullback who would never touch the ball, who was there just to lay the wood. That was Adam.
“Why ‘promise package’?” Colin asked.
“Because we never lied out of it. Never tried to fool the defense. It was Coach Ward’s baby that year. He loved it. From the first practice, he told us that we would never give them anything but what they expected when we went to that formation. It
was a psychological thing, it was pure intimidation. We were saying,
Here we come, and you can’t stop us.
The fullback is Adam. We called him the prophet. Those were the plays—prophet left and prophet right.”
“Prophet?”
“When he took the field offensively, he told the defense exactly what was coming, that we intended to run it right down their throats.” The name caught on Kent’s ear now, though, it called up a memory of Clayton Sipes:
If Gideon was the sword, then I’m the prophet.
Colin said, “Coach? What are you thinking?”
“Nothing,” Kent said, but what he was thinking was that he’d talked about this play in his visit at Mansfield, he’d talked about this season and this play and the way being steadfast and diligent led to victory, the way you had to absorb the hits and shake them off. Prophet right, prophet left, he’d explained it all, explained the reward of the grind, the reward of endurance.
Colin’s stare brought him back, and he tried to shift his mind from Sipes to football.
“It was a strange approach, because usually you treat play calling like a chess match. Out of this set, though, Coach Ward wanted it to be clear to every team that we were essentially saying,
Stop this if you can.
They usually couldn’t, and that’s the height of frustration for a defense. It breaks you down. Physically, sure, but more so mentally. Once you break their spirit, you own the ballgame.”
First snap, and on the first run, Adam caught a linebacker who was standing too high, planted him in the turf, and Chambers was out to the twelve already, eight yards on the play.
“Wow, he could hit,” Colin said.
Kent nodded. “Big kid, but just
hard.
Not gym muscle. There’s a difference. You know that. Some guys are naturally hard. Coach Ward always called it loading dock muscle.”
Second snap. A brutal collision. Three yards. First down. Now out to the fifteen.
“I was waiting for a change here,” Kent said. “I figured we’d gotten our backs away from the goal line, would open it up a little bit more. But…”
Prophet left.
This time Angola brought a safety on a blitz, and he got through the line almost simultaneously with the handoff and dropped the runner. Chambers went back into promise package, back to prophet left. Gained four yards. Walter Ward refusing to blink.
Sixth carry, prophet right, fifteen yards, first down. Adam hit an Angola linebacker so hard going around the end that, two decades removed, Colin Mears winced. Seventh snap, prophet left, a bigger hole this time, fourteen yards gained, getting across midfield. Even on the poor audio of the old tape, you could hear the buzz in the stands, because everyone got it by now—Ward was going to make Angola prove they could stop this.
Eighth snap, nine yards, and the Chambers fans were beginning to roar.
“He has a broken hand from this point on,” Kent said.
“Your brother?”
Kent nodded. “I was the only person who knew something was wrong.”
“How did you know?”
Kent picked up the remote and rewound. “Adam used Jim Brown’s technique.”
Colin understood, because they’d talked about it before. A lot of kids—a lot of pros, even—liked to pop up after suffering a massive hit, to show how tough they were, show that they weren’t hurting. The problem with that approach was that sometime you
were
going to be hurting. Then the defense knew, and they fed on it, grew strength from your pain. Jim Brown, the Cleveland
legend, who took more abuse from defenses than maybe any other running back in history, had developed a system for that: he stayed down, rose slowly, and limped back. Every play. The defense never knew when he was hurting because he looked the same after every hit. He gave them nothing emotionally, nothing they could feed on. It was very different from the way Kent coached football—speed, speed, speed—but if you had the hitters, it was effective. Demoralizing. The defense played to hurt you, and they wanted to know when they had.