Archive for the ‘Short Stories’ Category

5
Aug

“CAGED” by Cameron Conaway

   Posted by: admin   in Short Stories

When we touched gloves, I felt the energy of his body. The enigma he had been became human. This was his first weakness, his transformation from a question, a mystery, into nothing more than flesh and blood. I could hurt flesh and blood; I could only punch through the specter of an enigma. The tattoos that covered his body told a story about a boy who wanted to hide behind a skull and cross-bones, a boy afraid of his own fear. But I knew the way the needle bit his skin, the way he clenched his teeth to keep from wincing. I could see the pierced holes in his nose and ears, even his nipples. This was a costume he never wanted to discard; this was the costume I would have to tear from him. As we did the ceremonious glove touch, I realized I had the ability to destroy him. Any weakness he exposed would allow me to end his life with my bare hands, if it weren’t for the rules, if it weren’t for the referee.

*************************************************

When I was fourteen, my father severed all ties to me. He’d fought for custody, tried everything—alcohol, lies, violence. My body was still frail, just starting its own fight with puberty, when I saw dad hurl my sister into the garage door, when I flew at him and ate a backhand. What are you supposed to do? What’s left except to make sure your mom and your sister are safe? I slept each night only after I knew my mother and sister were asleep. I checked the locks repeatedly, got out from the warmth of bed at the slightest stir, and often sat on the porch alone at night, watching, listening to the neighborhood. With my father gone I was the man of the house. Mom worked sixteen-hour days so we could live comfortably, and I desperately longed for a father figure.

At the local movie rental store, like any teenager, I wanted to see what was in the special video section, the one enclosed by thin drywall with the signs “Must be 18 or older to enter.” I thought what I wanted was pictures of slick breasts and asses covered in oil. I walked towards it, glancing every few steps over my shoulder toward the clerk. He seemed uninterested in my guilt, preoccupied with actual customers. Before I reached the porn, I saw a video faced out, with a muscular man in black spandex shorts, blood painting his bronzed, squared chest. This wasn’t what I came in for, but I had to have it. In bold yellow letters it said “The Ultimate Fighting Championship.” And in the lower right-hand corner it read “Unrated: Contains Violent Material.” As such, the clerk called my mother for permission, and I soon had found my new father, “The World’s Most Dangerous Man,” Ken Shamrock.

I played basketball in junior high, but I couldn’t stand the politics. Whoever had parents willing to schmooze the coach played more. Simple as that. Coach always told me to sit beside him, but I purposely sat at the end of the bench, away from coach, away from the team. This space stood for what I wanted; the ability to control my own outcome, to compete when I wanted, to be able to blame myself, and only myself. As a sixth man I led the team in more categories than any other player, but my mom chose to work shift after shift rather than play the political games of soccer moms. Needless to say, I’m a better person because of it.

I quit basketball, bought Ken Shamrock’s book and read about his journey from foster home to foster home. His story was something out of a John Irving novel. I carefully cut out pictures of him and taped them to the ceiling above my bed. I called every martial arts school in the area, but they all focused on the traditional, outdated, and ineffective “flashy” martial arts. Ken often won his fights with submission – a choke or joint-lock – but in Altoona, the small former railroad town I called home, there was not a mixed martial arts school. In MMA all fights begin with the combatants standing, so I decided to take the most basic approach to developing myself as a fighter. I began training at the Altoona Boxing Club. A former barber-shop turned boxing gym; the Altoona Boxing Club has several duck-taped heavybags, an unused toilet against the wall, and the smell of sweat and leather. It was here where I could learn the fundamentals of how to fight standing. Each time I stepped onto the blood-stained blue canvas, each time I hooked my thumb through Everlast wraps, I grew as a man and fighter.

*************************************************

After three months of training I entered a Golden Gloves boxing tournament in Pittsburgh, a city with a reputation for pugilism. The smoky, dimly lit arena and the energized, alcohol-induced crowd cemented my feet to the ground, glued my hands to my ears. The air was so thick two breaths felt like one. I couldn’t throw a proper punch without stumbling around like a drunk, no, more like a person naturally uncoordinated and then drunk. I’d thrown thousands if not millions of these same punches in the gym, but when nerves entered into the picture, like a free throw shooter at the line, I choked. I wanted to grapple my opponent to the canvas like Ken would, but boxing compared to MMA is like checkers compared to chess. Limited to using only punches, I found myself quickly outclassed. I was pelted into the corner like the lone survivor in a game of grade school dodge-ball. Punches kept coming. The air was knocked out of me. My concrete feet stood firmly in place despite my coach telling me to circle-out. Each punch he landed further reinforced the idea that I was a quitter, that I didn’t have the heart to be a fighter. Plus, I couldn’t see. I had been hit with so many punches that my headgear spun around to cover my face; my opponent couldn’t see the eyes he was watering, the nose he was bludgeoning. I heard a pounding metal sound, the bell, I was saved by it. Before starting the second round, already battered mentally and physically, I quit, again.

As a freshman in high school, I found myself in a place where the self-conscious mixes with the rush of hormones and where physical development ranges widely. I became enamored with the vascular bodybuilders on magazine covers, the gorgeous, half-naked women straddling their bulging biceps and smiling, of course.

I’ve always been small. Throughout high-school I looked like I was twelve, and my 5’2” 125lb frame made me insecure to say the least. Supplementing with protein shakes as the magazines said, and hitting the weights in an attempt to make up for what I wasn’t given naturally, my confidence slowly began to build alongside my body.

I joined the wrestling team as a senior, but something still fascinated me about Ken Shamrock making champion fighters cry uncle with ankle-locks. Often he didn’t even throw a strike, instead using his agility, conditioning, and knowledge of leverage to make his opponents submit with grappling holds. It was such a humane way to end a fight with so few rules, both fighters walking away completely unharmed. Literally translated to mean “the gentle art,” jiu-jitsu focuses on using energy displacement and leverage to prey on the places human beings are most vulnerable: the neck and joints. The application of these strategies, imported from jiu-jitsu to MMA, was the work of the legendary Gracie family.

The Gracie’s brought their skills from Brazil and opened Gracie Jiu-Jitsu academies throughout the United States. The most renowned academy is the Renzo Gracie Academy in midtown Manhattan. I still had the itch to learn, to redeem myself through MMA. Even the girl I dated in high-school was a black belt in Taekwondo at a school her family owned. I couldn’t swallow the pill of forgetfulness. My insatiable appetite led me to the video store again and again. I’d rent three, four, five MMA videos, spending the weekend alone,
watching and rewinding, watching and rewinding.

*************************************************

It was in college that I fell in love, with poetry. I took the same critical approach to fighting and poetry: both are arts. As I learned about metaphor and acute observation, I began studying exercise kinesiology, researching training strategies and nutritional sciences. I experimented and implemented routines that increased my strength while allowing me to maintain the same bodyweight. At eighteen and picking up extra hours in the produce department at a local grocery store, I began driving to Manhattan when I had the finances. Renzo’s academy is in the basement of a business building; there are no signs posted to advertise. After a few jiu-jitsu tournament victories, I taught an MMA class on the weekends utilizing what Renzo taught me, my boxing experience, and my endless video watching. It began as something selfish. The reason I taught was to learn. Relationships with friends and women were put on hold. I went to school, came home, did homework, trained four hours, and finished the day surrounded by fruits and vegetables.

Just days before I turned twenty-one, I made my MMA debut. With a mixed skill set, a body that had matured—I was now 5’7” and 155lbs—hardened muscles from weight training and healthy eating, the knowledge of jiu-jitsu from world famous instructors, and a residing, pounding insecurity about being small, about being a quitter, about the last time I fought in front of a crowd, and about my father leaving at such a crucial stage, to say I had hunger, I had fire, would be a dramatic understatement.

It was fire that I saw in the eyes of my favorite boxer, Arturo Gatti. Two years before my MMA debut, fate made me pull into a parking garage in Atlantic City facing the wrong direction, and ironically, directly beside his limousine. My sole purpose for the trip was to see him fight. I wouldn’t have known it was him if he hadn’t rolled his window down so I could see his eyes. Shark eyes. I saw his fire. He won the fight despite breaking his hand early in the bout. For my MMA debut I would purposely wear a beanie at all times to distort my appearance, to cast a shadow over the fire of my eyes. I didn’t want anybody seeing my fire until I burned them with it.

*************************************************

My fight would take place April 21st in Columbus, Ohio; MMA is illegal in my home state of Pennsylvania. Two nights before, I sat in the bathtub. A bathtub isn’t simply a bathing cubicle to a fighter. It represents a means to practice timed underwater breath holds. After each exhalation I made sounds like Jean Claude Van Damme in Bloodsport. (As cheesy as this sounds, this is my gauge for correctness.) My mind scattered like ants to fire. Everything seemed to be a sign, and I began to notice things previously unnoticed, like the trail of hair running along the middle of my abdomen. The majority of hairs slanted to the left. I wondered if he’d have a hell of a left jab or left hook. A sip of cold water traveled down the wrong pipe. Gasping for air as my eyes watered, I speculated that the fact I was choking in my tub might mean I would get choked in the cage. “Tap Out or Pass Out,” a poem I wrote in an undergraduate class, came back to me. Outlining a premonition about my first MMA bout, a vision that I’d be in full mount throwing rapid-fire punches, forcing my opponent to his stomach and applying the rear naked choke. It ended with me crying and hearing the applause of a wild crowd. A classic “tell not show” poem, but a great possible outcome to a fight.

Following the bathtub routine I usually throw on shorts and walk into the yard for yoga; it’s always late at night so nobody can see me. This time, it was two in the morning, and having rolled in bed for three hours even Pharaoh, my Jack Russell terrier, was making disgruntled moans. It was cold for mid-April, but my internal temperature was revving from the bathtub heat. On instinct, I dropped my shorts and continued my routine of yoga, downward dogs and all. The moon was blindingly bright. The grass’s cold dew pricked my warm feet, sent an energy through my body and out my freshly shaven head. I looked up, followed the steam’s trail, believed it was being sucked away by a vacuum, the moon ferrying the impurities from my body. Merged with nature, I felt Lacan’s jouissance and finally understood what my professor had been trying to tell me. With chills came normalcy, the cleansing process was complete.

*************************************************

The promoter paid for the hotel room the following night, so it was two beds and a toilet. (I spent more time in the latter.) Before sleeping I became agitated, nerves and anxiety, sub 5% body fat and cutting water. The precise process of weighing-in, too, is an art form. I counted the breaths of my training partners and thought, “Is it necessary to breathe so damn loud?”

The day of the fight. We arrive at the weigh-in and rules meeting early to see the barbaric cage being built piece by piece. It’s unified on television, pristine. Perfectly cut into an octagon shape, the smooth, glossy, promotion-patched floor. I was aroused by this structure; even the name “The Octagon” had a euphonic ring. But seeing it built from the ground up scared me.

Here were workers, specifically hired to piece together an eight-sided steel cage. It seemed absurd. The clanking cacophony of sounds was nauseatingly different from what I expected. With each pound and crank I stepped further and further away from the beauty of the sport. I stepped into the place of an uninformed spectator. I felt ashamed of what I had worked so hard to achieve. I felt proud of my body, the battle it went through, but as for what I was about to participate in, I felt a cold disappointment.

The pounding of metal on metal continued. People weren’t here for me to showcase my talent. They weren’t paying the big bucks to watch my art. They were here for blood. They were here to see testosterone raged men and out of work porn stars as promised by the promoters and by the countless Pay-Per-View channels. They were piling into this arena to see how much punishment a human can take. They were here for the much sought-after (but very rare) broken bones, misshapen noses, and above-the-eye cuts that drip down the face, onto the body, staining white shorts pink. They were gathering, just as people have throughout history, to see a lynching. The racism might have vanished, but the spectacle of watching violence remained.

This primal thirst to see people not only vulnerable, as in a theatrical play, but physically vulnerable, was the sole reason this arena would have a sell-out crowd. The first impression of my dream was one of disgust. I tried to play it smart, get there early, see my environment, adapt to it.

The way I adapted was by sitting on the toilet. From the stall I heard the pounding and clanking. It wouldn’t stop. The fight would begin with a similar sound. I remembered that pounding metal I heard prior to quitting in Pittsburgh.

*************************************************

Fear drives me closer to the source. Having an intimate relationship with what scares me, bridging the distance, is a code I live by. I left the stall, asked the workers if I could get in the cage. I felt it give, bent down with the curiosity of a child picking up seashells, rubbed the material with my fingers.

*************************************************

I weighed-in at 154.7 pounds, made the 155 pound limit, and reached into my book-bag, which had been filled with poetry books during the semester, for olive oil, protein bars, fish oil pills, bananas, and the staple of any smart fighters post weigh-in meal, Pedialyte. My weight was back to above 160lbs. My mind was at ease from confronting the cage, my body too, having absorbed the much needed electrolytes. The dieting, the training, and the asceticism were over.

The promoter posted the fight card outside of our room. I was first. My nausea would soon end and my goal would soon be fulfilled, or at least attempted. I pulled out the Theodore Roosevelt quote I carry in my book-bag:

“The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs and comes short again and again, who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, and spends himself in a worthy cause; who at best, knows the triumph of high achievement; and who, at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat.”

-Theodore Roosevelt, “Citizen in a Republic”, April 23, 1910

The quote has been with me ever since I read it in 9th grade, but I’d never realized it was said on April 23rd, my birthday.

*************************************************

I sent my trainers out like worker scout bees to find my opponent. I wanted to know his build, his style, the way his breath smelled, anything. My task was stealth. I wanted them to find the guy while I hid in the background so I could see him; I just wanted to see him, this thing, this body that stood in the way of where I was and what I wanted. Shortly after, I saw him. We talked strategy. The promoter posted a “revised” fight card. I was still first, but against a different opponent. I sent them out again. The stresses of iambic pentameter couldn’t touch the stress I felt.

*************************************************

At 9pm, the promoter told us the physician they were flying in from Vegas was running late. This meant even more trips to the bathroom. On one trip I found my friends in the crowd and told them that the guy I was fighting looked like he was going to ride a Harley Davidson into the cage. I couldn’t armbar a Harley. They laughed but their laughter faded quickly because of the intensity of the anxious crowd. Seeing their faces wrinkle in that familiar way made me feel warm inside. I went back to the room to get ready.

*************************************************

Around 10pm the physician burst through our training room and slapped a black suitcase on the counter. The shadowboxing stopped. She opened the suitcase to reveal, a defibrillator. I felt blank. A panic planted my feet and I couldn’t move. They called my opponent’s name, and I heard the crowd over the heavy metal music. I watched him walk down the entrance and into the cage. This was a good sign, being introduced second, like a champion. I bounced lightly, completely covered in clothes, the beanie hiding my fire. My music came on.

Something changed in me. It was beyond confidence. I felt indestructible. There was nothing this other body could do to hurt my body. I had done everything possible in training. All doubts were removed. I didn’t doubt my cardio, my strength, my grappling, my striking or mind. The nights spent fighting sleep’s pull into darkness, the fact that I stood up to my dad, the fact that my mother was front row, everything in my life came to fruition and wiped my insecurity slate clean. I didn’t hear the music and I didn’t hear the fans. I felt primal, pure. Like when the moon vacuumed the steam from my head.

I threw my shirt and beanie to the ground. They put the 5oz gloves on and I entered the cage. I paced around feeling the canvas on my feet like I imagined Jackson Pollock would before he engaged with it. After viewing the fight on DVD, I realized this pacing mirrored the black panther I watched for an hour the previous summer at the Pittsburgh Zoo. The referee made me show him I had the bare essentials, a mouthpiece and a cup. He settled into the center: “Are you ready? (looking toward my opponent), Are you ready? (looking toward me), Let’s get it on!”

*************************************************

Sixty-three seconds into the bout my opponent tapped-out to the rear naked choke. His costume slipped off with each hue of purple represented by his face. When he clenched his teeth as he had done at the tattoo parlor, I held the choke with one hand and punched his masked fear with the other. He tapped-out. But it wasn’t until he winced that the ref threw me off, that I let go. The most passionate emotional response of my life ensued. I grabbed my mouthpiece, threw it to the mat, and screamed to the fans, “I told you so, I told you motherfuckers!” The fans were my father. The man who gave up on me when I was just fourteen years old. The man who didn’t teach me to shave, the man who didn’t see me in love, the man who didn’t see me graduate from college, and the man who wasn’t here now, for the greatest moment of my life; the culmination of not only the development of my body, but the development of my mind. The fans, my mother, my friends, everybody screamed my name. The name I share with my father.

Caged – Part Two

The cage was glazed to a silky finish, paradoxical considering its barbarous appearance. Smoothing my calloused fingers over it as though it were jade, I felt a coating on the octagonal cage that had been used to tame it.

As a small boy learning to breed rabbits from my father in the backyard of our Altoona, Pennsylvania home, I remember taming them. “97-98-99-100,” I counted to myself, as I pet their thick, shedding winter fur one hundred times to make them nicer. Despite my frail wrists burning as the repetitions exceeded the halfway mark, I persevered, “tame rabbits would have nice babies,” I told my father. The cage though, it would always be too mean to have offspring. It had been coated, to prevent lawsuits really, so if a fighter’s skin was split-jagged and bleeding, it wasn’t the cages fault. Nothing was.

After my debut fight, I had established an identity. My father, whose name I share, who had been nonexistent for nearly the past decade of my life, no longer subconsciously drove me to impress him. The process of training and subsequent outcome of the fight had removed him, not the way a teacher removes a students’ correct answer from the chalkboard, one swipe, but the way the waves erase a loved ones name, slowly eroding it, until it is as smooth as a Labrador’s velvet ears, yet somehow still gritty sand.

Speaking in front of a crowd brought about bouts of palsy through my in-need-of-WD-40-jaw and down into my trapezius, before finally kicking its shoes off and calling my heart its home. Preparing days ahead of time, I carried water with me like toddler’s carry blankets, making sure I was properly hydrated, I thought, so my mouth wouldn’t be dry come speech time. It never helped. From the time the first person presented their speech, until it was my turn, my mouth filled with thick phlegm, so agglutinative I couldn’t spit or swallow. Even if I drank water just prior to speaking, this gummy paste would latch onto my teeth like the parasites on a shark’s eyes. This, of course, was a precursor to stuttering words I’d read aloud hundreds of times. I could hear myself stutter, but couldn’t stop it, the helplessness of watching a wildfire. “I can fight in cages with thousands watching,” I thought, “but speaking in front of people makes my nuts recede.”

Days later, my friend Cassie invited me to watch her audition for the role of Medea, in Penn State Altoona’s production of Euripides’ play of the same name. “So audition,” I asked Cassie, “is basically a cool word for try-out?” Being a guy surrounded by sports my entire life, I knew all about try-outs. “Just come watch,” she said, “you’ll see.” Cassie has acted in Los Angeles without a qualm, and she was truly audacious, letting herself become completely vulnerable in front of people she was either competing against or complete strangers with. And she reveled in it. I watched her audition; she laughed - the uncontrollable type when you know you shouldn’t and need to hide it or excuse yourself from the room, became a serial killer - brooding, pacing, shoulders hunched, hair a tatter, blank eyes, she bawled - the type where you can’t breathe, the type more a fight with oxygen than the cause. She shook afterwards. I congratulated her with the slap on the back my coaches used to give after I took a charge on the opposing teams biggest player. Later, in the bathroom stall, I too shook. Then cried, tears coming like a flash flood in Tucson.
Fear and insecurity bubbled to the surface of my life, again, like boiling garden-variety spaghetti sauce; thick clumps thrown, sticking, burning. My heart itched and I didn’t know how to scratch it. I entered the realm of fear when I stepped into the cage that April. The best way to confront fear, I had learned, was to knock on its door uninvited, and once in, to head straight for the kitchen, robbing it of sustenance.

I won the lead male role, Cassie’s co-lead, Medea’s husband, Jason of the Argonauts. I researched Jason the way I had anaerobic energy systems for fight training. It helped that he was a warrior. It would be my goal to be a warrior through him, in this other venue, to confront my glossophobia. Rehearsals weren’t until the start of the fall semester, about two months away, and I was taking classes full-time in State College during the summer to graduate in four years with two degrees. This provided ample time to develop ulcers.

Though my heart itched, that would soon be taken care of. My mind though, somehow fabricated the beliefs of everyone close to me. Everybody thought my MMA (mixed martial arts) debut victory was a fluke; that because he slipped, and I capitalized with the rear naked choke, it wasn’t a legitimate win. In addition, my only consistent outlet to nerves and problems in life is through physicality. I signed on the dotted line for my second fight. I’d be back in the cage on August 19th, one week before rehearsals for Medea.

I prepared my body as Cameron, the 155lb MMA warrior, and as Jason, son of Aeson. I would prepare to slay the dragon of insecurities, and slay the dragon guarding the Golden Fleece.

My training couldn’t be as intense because of my schedule, so I took more to the weights, wanting to become the iron I grunted to lift, and to online MMA instructional videos, hoping to at least retain what I knew. I woke at six most days, trudged along sleepily to an abandoned farm, did sprints through grass that rivaled deep snow in difficulty, making sure to bring my knees as high as the bulbs on the weeds. It simulated my opponents face. Wet bails of hay worked great for overhead throws, which I hoped would improve my ratio of fast twitch fibers. I hoped the increase in strength I picked up from these workouts would cancel out the lack of technicality I’d bring due to lack of sparing and rolling. Essentially, the farm became my training partner. Through my screams and incoherent trash talking - the farm was a great listener.

They called my name first this time, the night of August 19th, and rightfully so. Out of respect for my elders, (my opponent was 32 years old to my 22) I was fine with him entering the cage with the chip of ten years on his shoulders. I had a theory (half serious, half joking) that as a man aged, if he has worked throughout his life, he acquired a functional strength. I even went so far as to believe that on a man’s 30th birthday, he woke up quite a bit stronger than the day before, “man-strength,” I called it. Pound for pound, I knew my opponent couldn’t match my prowess in the weight-room. But my concern about his man-strength was the concern of my friends in the crowd as well.

I met him the night I arrived at the fighter-meeting gym in Columbus, Ohio. Again, I hid my fire under the beanies’ cast shadow, but I overheard him talking about his weight: “About a buck fifty-four” he said with a twinge of southern accent, a bit of an overconfident raspy bar voice. My right knuckles itched with the thought of cascading into his jaw. “Won’t know the dude I’m fightin’ til tomorrow night.” I sensed this was the man I’d struggle in hand-to-hand combat against. He looked soft muscularly.

But I’ll be damned. He came out with a burst of man-strength after my initial off-the-mark jab and aggressively marched me close to the back of the cage with a flurry of whiffed left and right hooks. Nowhere to go, I lept forward, initiated a clinch, wrapping my hands across the back of his head. I felt my head rock back from a crisp inside uppercut. I felt his strength. I tried to stay tight to him to avoid damage. He remained reckless - which had made me desperate rather than him vulnerable. I left the ground for a split second as all the force of my right knee landed into his right inner thigh’s meat. No momentum shift. I continued an out of control strength struggle with someone I couldn’t win it with. I purposely threw a telegraphed knee, left it hanging, begged him to latch on so I could pull guard. He did, put me on my back; diamonds from the cage imprinted my shaved head and neck as I withstood his man-grip, trying to remember to breathe so if I made it to round two, I could be competent. Hanging on was my only hope.

“Grind his face into the cage,” his corner-men shouted, “he doesn’t like that!” “Elbows, elbows, elbow his nose damnit,” their spit flying into the cage as my opponent used his man-strength to drag my body towards them. A chant of “Hock-en-berry, Hock-en-berry” broke out in the crowd. His name. The ground, my opponent thought, were his waters, and he wanted to take me to the deep-end where he could drown me like an anaconda would. They cheered for the aggressor of course.

I shifted my hips, propelled my legs across his head, secured an armbar with the hopes of breaking his limb. As I began extending my body to lock his elbow 180 degrees, I was lifted into the air, shook off, and felt a hammer fist land just below my nose. I heard the Ooo’s of the crowd. Someone yelled, “you’re in control, Cameron.” “Control” reminded me to breathe. Fatigue’s slow, grinding pain overwhelmed me already because I wasn’t breathing as his relentless attack ensued.

“Hockenberry softening up the ribcage,” the announcer said excitedly, as he landed three left hands to my body from on top. I saw the punches in slow motion, felt little to nothing, wondered if I was having an out of body experience. Were the punches seriously damaging?

Cleverness, I found out, comes when your body registers that you are in a life-or-death situation. I trapped his arm, and as he forced the point of his chin into my lips then gums, driving through his legs, using his free forearm and elbow to try to lacerate the soft tissue of my face, I let it happen. As long as it meant he struggled. I grabbed the top of his head and pulled down when he wanted to rise up to reign down punches; I pushed his head up when he wanted to grind his chin into me. It was a game of counterbalances. If I was cut, if I bled, so be it. I was slowly sapping the energy from him, making him overwork to perform unimportant tasks. I used Eddie Bravo’s “Rubber-Guard,” a jiu-jitsu system reliant on flexibility that made my opponent constantly swipe (like a cat to yarn) my leg from resting on the back of his neck. Basically, I annoyed him, like the sibling repetition game:

“Stop it or I’m gonna tell Mom.”

“Stop it or I’m gonna tell Mom.”

“I’m stupid.”

“I’m stupid….”

“Hey!”

The ten-second gong sounded and I continued my game. I focused on getting three or four deep breaths in. I stood up sick. Questioned whether I had enough to take another round of intensity like that if I wasn’t breathing. The seconds between rounds passed and my body - acclimated to sprinting through weeds and resting, sprinting through weeds and resting - began to settle down. I focused on what I was going to do to him rather than how I felt. My right hand itched. I was putting him down with it as soon as the round began.
Round two began with him taking his hands off his knees. I landed a leaping right hook that rattled him. He wiped it off afterwards, and smiled at me, as though he had guacamole on his cheek. I’ve watched enough fights to know that if a fighter smiles after they’ve been hit, it means they are hurt. I threw a right Thai-kick, turning my hips like a can opener and unleashing the density of my tibia into the giving muscle of his left quadriceps. Not wanting to stand and trade, he immediately took me down to the ground, where he found reasonable success in round one. Back into his waters.

Where I annoyed him to the point where he would never, ever, share his toys with me. In fact, he exploded his torso upwards, coming down with the clenched right hand of a bully wanting, needing lunch money. I worked for an omoplata, heard the announcer and fans go wild. I felt the bones in his right arm click and clank like gears. Something gave. Then came that same swiping hammer fist I’d tasted earlier. I slithered to the left, using his anaconda attributes. His fist landed flush into the apron, crunching his knuckles and rolling his wrist forward, a position unable to support his weight.

I hopped out the side like our rabbits when I accidentally left the crate open, unleashing a left, right, left hook combination from behind to his kidneys as he crouched on all fours, head tucked in, as I stood above him. No longer did I want to annoy. I wanted revenge on the bully that just tried to steal the peanut butter and jelly my mother packed in my Ninja Turtles lunchbox. His body hunkered just like a turtle, without the dense shell. Strikes came like lightning: silent, rapid, and with the ability to damage. The storm finished when he gasped from a body blow, sucking air that wasn’t there, trying to stand up and grab the tamed cage. The rear naked choke sunk-in, as in my debut, I took the space after exhalation the way an anaconda would; I squeezed with all the passion Cassie used to secure her role. He tapped out. I couldn’t breathe. Started shaking as in the stall after Cassie’s audition. Kissed the soft rigidity of the cage that would temper Jason of the Argonauts.

Caged – Part Three

“This is not a team to lean back and rely on just one or two counter-attacks each half.”
~Guss Huddink

Crippled, war-battered men with missing fingers lean-back in their chair on the porch to relax. Half of a rocking chairs life is leaning-back. Dentophobia people lean-back for orifice-seeking, or producing, syringes. Children, legs asleep from leaning-over their video game controllers for hours on end, lean-back in beanbags to extend playing time. Common phrases we’ve all used or heard: “lean-back and relax” or “lean-back and take it easy.” Rapper Fat Joe topped the charts in 2004 with his song “Lean Back.”

[Chorus]
Said my ni**** don’t dance,
We just pull up our pants and,
Do da Roc-away.
Now lean back, lean back, lean back, lean back.

People around the world watched and mimicked his dance on TV, leaning-back to the rhythm while standing. On 3:00 a.m. trips from Altoona, Pennsylvania to train Gracie jiu-jitsu in Manhattan, my only companion the steam from a mug of green tea, you better believe I leaned-back anytime he called for it. Not just to stay awake.

And so I embraced leaning-back, when it was fun. And I avoided leaning-back when it meant laziness, when it meant rocking and not going anywhere. And my beanbags are still covered in piss from Pharaoh, my Jack Russell. I trained my body not to lean-back, to apply pressure, to make my opponent involuntarily lean-back after a left-hook kissed his temple. I trained to lift-up a 450lb barbell, to press 70lb dumbbells, to explode in sprints through rundown farms in State College, lifting my knees to meet the tips of overgrown grasses. I learned to twist, to jump, to throw, to sweep, to force, to trap, to punish, but never did I learn to lean-back. What’s to learn about it? Loafers lean-back. Even sex usually involves someone leaning back.

Fighters that come forward, stalking - Mike Tyson, Wanderlei Silva, I revere. The shoulders hunched, the trapezius muscle bulging just under the ears - the rolling hills of Pennsylvania. The “my-hands-are-on-my-ears-because-I don’t-give-a-shit-what-you-have-to-say-I’m-coming-to-kill-you,” style.

Top position always seemed dominant; late-night Animal Planet served as reinforcement. Despite victories, I hadn’t tasted being on top in my previous two fights. I never felt overwhelmingly preponderant. A level of control? Yes. Was the notion that the fight could change drastically from my opponent simply turning to face me in the back of my mind? Yes. Paranoia? Check.

And so in the cheap-ass promoter-paid-for hotel in Sandusky, Ohio we discussed a strategy for my third mixed martial arts bout - my first at the dried out and possibly too lean weight of 145lbs. At the start of the bell, we planned on working my feeling out process: landing several Muay Thai kicks to my opponent’s thighs, moving around, seeing how he reacts. Then Whooosh! Shooting in for a takedown - never attempted in my fight career - and initiating the top game. A position I hoped to elbow-slice my opponent’s forehead open with the ease of a hot knife through a ripe Anjou. Pressing the back of his head against the cage. Open up with a flurry until the ref, as happened in my previous two fights at 155lbs, would jump in to save my opponent.

I was on the bottom, taking it. Taking glancing blows, remembering to find my breath as I learned in fight two, and truly being the annoying son-of-a-bitch I’ve come to be known as. Watching him struggle, with a mouth-pieced grimace that resembled a smile, to pin my arms down, to break the grip my legs formed around his bony waste, was déjà vu. Acting as Jason of the Argonauts months prior taught me to be ultimately aware. I heard the baritone Sandusky, Ohio Bike-Week crowd whose voices matched their machine, my stepfather vociferating from the back row, my opponent grunt like the very creatures I watched on Animal Planet. I even heard my breath like the about-to-be-killed silicon-breasted woman in a slasher.

Did I mention that the takedown failed at the beginning? That after landing those two solid Thai kicks he sprawled and stuffed it perfectly? That it resulted in a clinch, where I tried to lift his body high into the air, and fold his head back down through his neck and into his chest? Did I mention how badly that failed? How he held onto the cage to prevent it, which is illegal? How he countered with a gorgeous, textbook knee up through my belly button and into the deepest gorges of my abdomen that took my breath away? How about how I jumped to pull guard to bide time so I could catch my breath only to have him catch me and deliver me to the mat with a thud that had the biker-fans revving like their motorcycle engines? So it goes.

But I felt in the zone, time slowed down. It would only be a matter of seconds before my opponent blew it, and I capitalized, choking him until either he tapped-out or passed-out. “Tap-out or pass-out,” the phrase taped to the ceiling above my bed. I ended the day and started the new with it. It had worked twice, 2-0.

His shoulders relaxed, his intertwined back muscles, the ones I saw glistening under the lights as he rhythmically bounced in the octagonal steel cage, became rippleless.

“Exhaustion,” I thought. “He gassed already.” The fact that I consistently swam until my goggles filled with tears, not chlorine, the fact that I ran hills until my thighs wanted to vomit lactic acid, the fact that I was the better conditioned athlete, had prevailed for the third consecutive time. His dead weight felt easily maneuverable. I remembered corpses from my internship with the coroner. “No, they had rigor,” I thought. “They wouldn’t feel like this.”

Threading his right arm through and under my right leg while working high guard I secured an excellent triangle. Heard the fans scream. Decided not to go all out on it, in order to save my energy for the later rounds.

At that moment he stacked me, driving through his legs until I was forced to support our combined weight on my neck. He pulled out, broke free, landed in side mount. I had never been in so vulnerable a position. Scrambled desperately, regained my guard in seconds, tried to take this battle until the deeper rounds. He seemed to have the same idea. So I made my move to explode, get on top and be dominant based on his passivism. He leaned-back. At the same damn time I forged forward, he leaned-back.

And I found myself in a position I’ve never been in, on top. He had leaned-back, as I’ve read about, to secure a textbook heel-hook. A move named because its lever is the heel, rather than because it shatters knee ligaments, a cast iron wok through a window.

He leaned-back, purposely, like a La-Z-Boy, but to inflict great bodily damage. Dropping a right fist into his orbital bone came to a halt. I wanted it badly. Four seconds left in the round. Pain was near.

My teaching career flashed. Here comes the University of Arizona’s Poet-in-Residence, strutting down the hall… on crutches? My graduate studies appeared. How would I get to school that was well over a mile away? I couldn’t afford - safety-wise or financially - to drive my manual 2000 Hyundai Accent to school everyday. What about a future with my family and kids? Would I be one of those dads that desperately want to play basketball with their son but can’t because of injuries suffered as a young man? Did I mention I broke the ankle he was honing in on three times during my basketball career in junior high? That all the rehab in the world couldn’t get it back to where it was? That the first break was misdiagnosed and therefore healed improperly?

I learned the lesson. Acknowledged it by tapping the mat three times. The yin-yang of Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. The art had slapped me in the face, like the Ferris wheel operator at Lakemont Park dressed as a clown when I was ten-years-old:

“Thanks, come again!”

////END////

“Caged.” Aethlon: The Journal of Sport Literature (Issue XXV:1 Fall 2007/Winter 2008)

Cameron Conaway is a graduate of Penn State Altoona with a BA in English and Criminal Justice. He is the Poet-in-Residence at the University of Arizona’s MFA Creative Writing Program and a member of the 2008 Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth “Crafting the Essay” instructional staff.

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14
Jun

“Soul Mates” by Rohitash Chandra

   Posted by: Rohitash   in Poetry, Short Stories

“An array of energy
weaved with the emotion of joy
encircled the atmosphere
filled with the fragrance
of her skin and hair,
this energy in its metaphysical aspects
is composed of her beauty and all that she is,
not only in the physical,
but from her existence in the spiritual.

Music formed
and flowed from the rhythm of her breath
and the melody of her hearts beating,
a complete song was composed
from the radiance of her inner being.

The song spoke to my ears,
it contained an extraordinary feeling,
of that something which is extra,
which is greater than all of us,
I then knew that this meeting is not of the ordinary,
but the union of our extraordinary companionship
of our previous lives,
we are bound to become one
and the physical separateness is just superficial,
we are and have always been
–soul mates.”

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2
Jun

“Simon and Papa John” by Ed Coet

   Posted by: admin   in Short Stories

 

Simon Gaunt wasn’t your average teenager, even though his circumstances resembled the experiences of some of the most troubled of youth in modern-day America. Simon was the second oldest of three children. Their father, Henry Gaunt, was an alcoholic who couldn’t hold down a job. He deserted his family when Simon was just two years old.

Simon’s baby sister Tammy had just been born. Simon’s older brother Martin was still just a youngster himself. The responsibility of providing for three children was not in Henry Gaunt’s plans. When he left, he never called or visited his family again.

Henry Gaunt did not provide for his family in any way. He didn’t even send birthday or Christmas cards much less presents. He was an irresponsible and self-serving bum. He didn’t care about his family or anyone else.

Simon’s mother, Mary Gaunt, had become pregnant with Mark, Simon’s older brother, when she was a16-year old high school student. She dropped out of school to marry Simon’s father. Mary believed Henry Gaunt’s love proclamations and surrendered her virginity to him while under the influence of some cheap wine. Henry had encouraged her to drink to intoxication.

Mary Gaunt convinced herself that Henry would love and take care of her and their child. She ignored every warning that family and friends tried to tell her. Mary refused to believe that Henry was only interested in sex. Henry reluctantly married Mary only because his parents told him that it was the right thing to do. His parents pressured him to “do the right thing.”

Henry Gaunt kept Mary barefoot and pregnant for five years as they survived on welfare, food stamps, and family handouts. He remained unemployed and in a perpetual state of drunkenness the entire time.

When Mary finally had enough and insisted that Henry stop drinking and fulfill his family responsibilities and obligations, out the door he went! Without a high school diploma, Mary Gaunt was forced to work for minimum wage if she could get a job at all. Half the time she was out of work.

Mary tried to provide for her three children as best she could. She understood the huge mistake that she made in her youthful indiscretions. That mistake would define her life, and that of her children, for many years to come. Without an education Mary Gaunt was destined to a life of poverty living in the Five Points area on the East Side of Denver, Colorado.

Five Points was the projects area that most often was referred to as “the slums” or “the ghetto.” The area was infested with poor sanitation, rodents, and numerous health hazards. On every corner, one could see alcoholics, drug addicts, prostitutes, and freeloaders. All manner of violence and crime was commonplace daily, especially after nightfall. It was an ugly and dangerous place to live. Still, rent was cheap in these run down and rat infested tenements and it was the only place Mary Gaunt could afford to live as a single parent of three children.

Concerned about what would happen to her children if she lived in “the ghetto” too long, in desperation, Mary turned to prostitution to support her family. Mary Gaunt was an attractive woman. She reasoned that with the money she could earn through prostitution she could save up and move her family out of Five Points.

Mary dreamed about finishing high school and picking up a trade of some kind. She fantasized about someday having a socially acceptable job that would enable her to move her kids out of poverty without her having to sell her body.

Every day before she came home, Mary would pray that God would forgive her for the sinful manner in which she earned her living. Her work filled her with shame and guilt. Mary’s parents disowned her. They even turned their back on her children, their own grandchildren, upon learning of Mary’s immoral lifestyle. Mary was terrified that her children would also find out that she was a prostitute. She feared losing their love and respect. Sadly, her secret would have to be revealed to them.

Shortly after Simon’s 8th birthday, Mary was diagnosed with HIV. Her many liaisons as a prostitute would prove to be fatal. A week before Simon’s 12th birthday his mother, whom he dearly loved, died in incredible pain from AIDS.

Now homeless, Simon’s grandfather, John Gaunt, whom they lovingly called “Papa John,” was the only relative that Simon, Mark, and Tammy could turn to. Papa John happily and lovingly accepted them into his humble home despite the fact that he was poor in health and in wealth.

That hadn’t always been the case. Once Papa John had been a true specimen of a man. He was an army paratrooper, a ranger, and a Special Forces intelligence officer. He mastered a variety of martial arts styles while stationed in Japan, Korea, Okinawa and Brazil. Papa John was an accomplished expert in Korean Tae Kwon Do, Okinawa Kaji Kempo, Japanese Sho Do Kan, and Brazilian Ju Jit Su.

He was also a Special Forces master fitness trainer and self-defense instructor. Papa John was not one to boast about his extraordinary physical attributes. He was a humble man, a man of faith.

Only his wife and a few select people knew that that Papa John was the foremost martial artist in the United States Army and perhaps the best in the world. He was so fast and deadly that he could thrust his hand in to a man’s chest, pull his heart out, and show it to him before he died. The Special Forces considered Papa John to be a human secret weapon.

Once, while on a secret military mission, Papa John was shot twice while saving the lives of two fellow soldiers. They were being held hostage by terrorists. Papa John killed five of the seven terrorists in hand-to-hand combat, all by himself, prior to being shot.

The two remaining terrorists, upon witnessing what happened to the other five, didn’t stick around to see if their bullets had killed Papa John. They were too afraid of Papa John’s extraordinary martial arts abilities. Papa John received America’s highest award for valor, the Congressional Medal of Honor, for the heroics he displayed on that particular mission.

Few people took notice when the President presented it to him. The citation had to be classified due to the secret nature of the operation. While presenting Papa John with the Medal of Honor, the President openly wept. He said America had never had a more courageous, selfless, and patriotic hero than Papa John.

Sadly, because of the secrecy involved in his military missions, the public could not know about his heroics. Papa John was medically discharged, under honorable conditions. His combat wounds forced his medical retirement. He was provided with a small veteran’s disability pension.

Papa John recovered from the bullet wound in his chest but the second bullet logged in his spine. It paralyzed him from the waist down. Beth, his wife, worked as long as she could to help out financially.

Sadly, Beth Gaunt was diagnosed with breast cancer. She died just two years after Papa John’s discharge from the army. Papa John was devastated. He loved Beth so deeply that he would never fully recover from her loss.

It was hard for Papa John to go on living. Wheelchair bound, Papa John lived on his small VA pension in a tiny Five Points apartment where a seemingly ungrateful society could care less about his war wounds, heroism, and national service. Only Simon and Tammy, and his deep faith in God, gave him the will to go on.

Time passed by quickly and Martin, Simon’s brother, turned 19 while serving a 20-year sentence in the Texas State Prison. He had been convicted of trafficking in illegal drugs and narcotics. Martin Gaunt had already served two terms in a juvenile detention center for possession of illegal drugs, involvement in gang activities, and repeated expulsion from school for poor attendance, failing grades, and a long history of inappropriate behavior.

Unbeknownst to Papa John, Martin had already been involved in drugs and gang activity while his mother was still alive. Martin was a drug addict. He developed his drug addiction through involvement in the East Side Raiders or ESR as they called themselves. ESR was a gang that recruited its members locally. They tried to establish a sort of perverted community bond.

The ESR recruited young. They focused on teenagers who were immature, impressionable, gullible, and easily led. Gang leaders slowly initiated and grew them into the gang. By the time they were old enough and mature enough to understand what they had gotten themselves in to, they had already developed a drug habit and a history of involvement in criminal activities. The gang was like an “evil” family that they needed to feed their out of control drug habits. They also needed to maintain a protective gang shield because rival gangs soon targeted them.

Once in the ESR you were committed for life. You could never quit or leave. The gang, fearful that you would tell what you knew about gang activities, would kill you and even members of your family if you tried to leave the ESR. The ESR was extremely violent.

For its youngest members, the ESR leaders made gang life seem like a brotherhood that looked out for each other. Nothing could be further from the truth. All loyalties were for the ESR, even before family and God. Few members actually believed in God. Those few who did have faith dared not mention God in gang circles.

Papa John was determined not to let Simon and Tammy fall into gang activity and drugs like their older brother Martin did. He decided to teach Simon the many martial arts skills that he himself had mastered. Although Papa John’s disability prevented his performing many of the techniques he had mastered, he still had them committed to memory. He still knew how to explain and teach them. Papa John wanted Simon to be able to protect himself and his younger sister.

On Simon’s 16th birthday, Papa John finally told Simon about his years in clandestine Special Forces operations. The stories intrigued Simon, but he wondered if it could all be true . Papa John also showed Simon the Medal of Honor that was given to him for bravery above and beyond the call of duty. Simon admired it even though he didn’t understand the medal’s full significance.

Papa John made Simon promise to never reveal the secret skills he would teach him. Simon promised to keep the secret always, and Simon’s word was his bond.

Papa John combined social skills and morality lessons, based on his Christian faith, with Simon’s martial arts instruction. He taught Simon the evils of drugs, alcohol, and gang activity. He taught Simon that no matter how poor he was he could never justify getting involved in criminal activities. He taught Simon the importance of studying hard and how a good education would be his ticket out of poverty.

Simon listened carefully. He was a very good student. He was also a very good person. Papa John explained that the martial arts were for self-defense and defense of the weak only. He explained how many people fight out of pride and lose their honor as a result. He explained the importance of being non-violent and humble.

Papa John said there was no shame in walking away from a fight. He said that it was dishonorable to stand and fight, out of sheer pride, just so that other people wouldn’t think you were a coward. Papa John said, “Doing the right thing is much more important than risking hurting someone or getting hurt yourself, just so others will think that you are a tough guy.” He also said, “If there is any means of escape, you must leave, even run away before standing and fighting.”

Papa John taught Simon to fight only as a last resort when he had no possible means of escape. The only other time fighting was permissible was in defense of the weak or the defenseless. Examples included coming to the aide of an elderly person who was being assaulted, a defenseless woman in peril or a handicapped person being attacked. Papa John made sure that Simon understood and believed these important values before he taught him any of the deadly martial arts skills.

For two years Simon learned the martial arts in secret from Papa John. He learned advanced techniques that were not taught in local karate schools., techniques that weren’t even known by other martial arts instructors. His training was intense and rigorous. It involved a great deal of conditioning.

Other than school, homework, chores, and church, Simon spent all his remaining hours learning, practicing, and studying martial arts from the world’s foremost martial arts master: Papa John.

At the age of 18, Simon had learned everything that Papa John had to teach him. He was even better than Papa John had been in his prime because Papa John also taught Simon how to avoid those few mistakes that he himself had made. Simon was now the most accomplished, the best, and the most dangerous martial artist in the world. But nobody but he and Papa John knew it. That’s the way they both wanted it.

Two weeks after Simon’s 18th birthday, and eight weeks before he was scheduled to graduate from high school, Papa John died of a massive heart attack. He was given a poor man’s funeral, but with military honors. Simon wanted to do more, but this was all he and Tammy could afford. Only Simon, Tammy, and a priest attended Papa John’s funeral service.

However, much to Simon’s surprise, an official-looking staff car with four shiny silver stars imbedded in a red plate pulled up to the burial site at the veterans’ cemetery where Papa John was being buried. As the bugler played taps, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, America’s highest ranking general, got out of the staff car and walked up to Papa John’s coffin. For several minutes he solemnly stood at attention giving a rigid and respectful hand salute to the coffin where Papa John laid in rest.

Receiving a folded American flag from the honor guard, he walked up to Simon and said, “I am here representing the President of the United States, myself, the United States Army, and the American people. On behalf of a grateful nation, I offer this flag to you in memory of Papa John, the greatest secret hero in American history. May he rest in peace.” Then the general departed. Simon now knew with certainty that all the stories Papa John had told him were true . He and Tammy cried uncontrollably.

All through school, kids picked on and made fun of Simon. They made fun of his clothes and his shoes. Being so poor, Papa John could only afford to buy second-hand clothes from a local thrift shop. They also made fun of Simon because he studied and received good grades. They called him a geek, a nerd, and a number of other profane names. They called Simon a coward because he would walk and sometimes run from fights.

The so-called good kids would have nothing to do with Simon because he was poor and lived in the bad part of town. They knew Simon’s brother was a convicted criminal. Many of them heard the rumors that Simon’s mother was a prostitute and that his father was an alcoholic bum who deserted them. They joked about it in pure meanness. Their cruel objective was to offend and upset Simon.

The local gangs, especially the ESR, left Simon alone because they thought he was a coward and weakling. They didn’t want to recruit such wimps into their gang. They also knew Simon would have nothing to do with drugs, tobacco, or alcohol. Simon was spit on, tripped, pinched, poked, scratched, bitten, slugged and had objects thrown at him. All he ever did in response was to turn the other cheek and just walk or run away. Simon did this even though he knew that he had the ability to wipe them all out if he really wanted to. Even on those few occasions when Simon became angry enough to fight, he remembered the promise he made to Papa John. Then he would back off, controlling and composing himself. Simon loved and respected Papa John more than anyone. He could never break his promise to him.

Simon and Tammy still lived in Papa John’s apartment after he died. One day as Simon approached the apartment, he heard a horrifying scream. It was Tammy pleading for someone to help her.

Simon dropped his books and rushed to the apartment door with world-class sprinter speed. The door was locked. Simon yelled “Ki Aii!” Then he leaped into the air and did a turning back kick into the door. His kick landed with such power that the door burst into slivers. The sound of the cracking hard wood door could be heard a block away.

Simon saw three members of the ESR holding his sister. Butch, the gang leader, was unzipping his pants. They were about to gang-rape Tammy. Simon instinctively knew this was one of those rare occasions when fighting was acceptable. He knew that Papa John would approve of his intervening to help his desperate sister.

Simon quickly went into action as Butch called out to the gang members - “Get him!”

The first gang member to reach Simon was the recipient of a flying sidekick into his throat. All one heard was a quick “ugh” sound as his limp body flopped to the floor with blood flowing from his mouth. Two gang members tried to hold Simon as the third attempted to stab Simon with a knife.

Simon did a flip between the two-gang members who were holding his right and left arms and shoulders. This caused them to crash their heads together. They were both knocked out cold. Simon then did a crescent kick with such speed and power that it knocked the knife through the wall while breaking the arm and dislocating the shoulder of the gang member who was holding it.

Then Simon cupped his hands and with lightening speed hit another gang member’s ears so hard that the pressure caused his eyes to pop out of his head, blinding him. His pain was agonizing. It was a scary, bloody, ugly sight.

Engulfed in fear and horrified by the lightning speed with which Simon had utterly destroyed four of their fellow gang members, all of whom were known to be big and tough, two of the remaining three ESR gang members jumped out of the nearest window. They jetted away with the speed expected from anyone who genuinely feared for their lives. Both gang members soiled themselves from shear fear and the terror of what they had just witnessed.

Now all that was left was the ESR gang leader Butch. Butch was the biggest, meanest, baddest, toughest, and the most feared of any gang member. At six feet seven inches tall, Butch towered over Simon. He weighed 275 pounds. Every ounce of Butch was solid muscle from many years of heavy bodybuilding and illegal steroid use. His muscles bulged everywhere. When he flexed, his shirt split open in the chest and in the arms. It seemed as if his muscles popped out of other muscles. His fists were huge, like fire plugs. He hit like a sledgehammer. As if this were not enough, Butch was also a black belt karate master in his own right.

Butch gritted his teeth. He shouted to Simon, “Prepare to die, punk!” Then Butch lunged forward. It didn’t matter. Unbeknownst to Butch he had just picked a fight with Simon Gaunt, grandson and student of Papa John Gaunt. Butch was about to find out that Papa John had trained and developed Simon into the most dangerous man alive.

Simon met Butch with a flurry of reverse punches, chops, and backhands that were so fast that they would have looked like a blur on even a slow-motion camera. In a split second, Butch’s face looked like it had been through a meat grinder. Blood splattered everywhere. This was followed with a jumping front snap kick, turning back kick, and two roundhouse kicks, all delivered with lightning speed.

The final spinning back kick and reverse punch to the side of Butch’s face knocked out both rows of his teeth and fractured his skull. The crackling sound of broken bones and body slams could be heard by police approaching from across the street. Tammy had called the police while the fight was in progress.

Butch’s entire body flew through the air. His body hit the wall with such force that it imprinted in the wall before it fell to the floor totally limp, like a huge bag of potatoes.

As the police ran inside, they pulled a gun on Simon. Simon was standing over an unconscious and utterly defeated mass of blood and broken bones previously known as the ESR gang leader Butch.

As Simon was preparing to thrust a final spear hand in to the chest of Butch, he paused when hearing the voice of his sister. Tammy cried out, “No Simon! Stop! You’re all I have left in this world. Please stop, Simon!”

Simon looked at the police and then at his sister. “Are you alright Tammy?” When she indicated that she was just fine, Simon backed away and said, “Okay, Sis. I won’t dishonor you or the memory of Papa John: enough is enough.” Simon then held out his hands so the police officer could hand cuff him.

The police officer said, “That won’t be necessary, Simon. Your sister explained everything to us. We also caught the two ESR gang members who fled during the fight. They’ve confessed everything too. It was clearly a matter of self-defense. Thank God you were there to protect your sister. You saved her life Simon. These guys weren’t just rapists, they were also killers.”

Tammy ran to Simon. She firmly embraced her brother. She cried, hugged, and kissed him on his forehead and cheeks. All the while she cried in relief saying, “Thank you, Simon. Thank you, my dear brother.”

A rival gang murdered Mark, Simon’s older brother, in a prison gang fight. Simon graduated from high school with honors. So did Tammy a year later. Tammy married a doctor. She went on to become a schoolteacher who specialized in working with troubled children. Tammy was very happy and she kept in touch with Simon regularly.

Simon became a Special Forces intelligence officer in the United States Army. He was honored to follow in Papa John’s footsteps. Simon was also happily married. He had a son of his own whom he named “Little John,” after Papa John.

A lot of kids thought Little John was a bit of a patsy who always ran from fights. One day a neighbor heard a loud “Ki Aii” from behind the privacy fence next door. As he climbed to look over the fence, he saw Simon shaking his finger disapprovingly at Little John.

Little John stood curiously silent with a sorrowful look next to a tree that had just been split in half. There was no ax or saw in sight.

Copyright © 2007 by Ed Coet
 
 

 

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