Underdogs

Chapter 8



It’s the sound of my breathing that gets me, pouring down into my lungs and then tripping back up my throat. Perry’s just come in and told me. It’s time.

“You’re up first,” he says.

It’s time and I’m still sitting there, in my old, too-big-for-me spray jacket. (Rube’s got an old hooded jacket of Steve’s.) All is numb. My hands, fingers, feet. It’s time.

I stand up





.

I wait.

Perry’s gone back out to the ring, and the next time the door opens, I’ll be heading there myself. With no more time to think, it happens. The door is opened and I start walking out. Out into.

The arena.

Aggression quivers inside me. Fear shrouds me. Footsteps take me forward.

Then the crowd.

They lift my spirit, as I’m the first fighter to come out.

They turn and look at me in my spray jacket, and I walk through them. The hood is out and over my head. They cheer. They clap and whistle, and this is just the beginning. They howl and chant, and for a moment, they forget the beer. They don’t even feel it pouring down their throats. It’s just me, and the fact that violence is near. I’m the messenger. I’m the hands and feet. I bring it to them. I deliver it.

“THE UNDERDOG!”

It’s Perry, standing in the ring, holding a microphone.

“Yes, it’s Cameron Wolfe, the Underdog!” he shouts through the mike. “Give the boy a hand — our youngest fighter! Our youngest battler! Our youngest brawler! He’ll fight to the end, people, and he’ll keep getting up!”

The hood of the jacket is still over my head, even though it has no string, no anything to hold it in place. My boxing shorts are comfortable on my legs. My gym boots walk on, through the sharp, thick crowd.

They’re alert now.

Awake.

Eager.

They watch me and size me up and they’re tough and hard and suddenly respectful.

“Underdog,” they murmur, all the way to the ring, till I climb in. Rube’s behind meHe’ll be in my corner, just like I’ll sit in his.

“Breathe,” I say to me.

I look.

Around.

I walk.

From one side of the ring to the other.

I crouch.

Down in my corner.

When I’m there, Rube’s eyes fire into mine. Make sure you get up, they tell me, and I nod, then jump up. The jacket’s off. My skin’s warm. My wolfish hair sticks up as always, nice and thick. I’m ready now. I’m ready to keep standing up, no matter what, I’m ready to believe that I welcome the pain and that I want it so much that I will look for it. I will seek it out. I’ll run to it and throw myself into it. I’ll stand in front of it in blind terror and let it beat me down and down till my courage hangs off me in rags. Then it will dismantle me and stand me up naked and beat me some more and my slaughter-blood will fly from my mouth and the pain will drink it, feel it, steal it, and conceal it in the pockets of its gut and it will taste me. It will just keep standing me up, and I won’t let it know. I won’t tell it that I feel it. I won’t give it the satisfaction. No, the pain will have to kill me.

That’s what I want right now as I stand in the ring, waiting for the doors to open again. I want the pain to kill me before I give in….

“And now!”

I stare into the canvas floor beneath me. “You know who it is!”

I close my eyes and lean on the ropes with my gloves.

“Yes!” It’s the old ugly guy who yells now. “It’s Cagey Carl Ewings! Cagey Carl! Cagey Carl!”

The doors are kicked open and my opponent comes trotting through, and the crowd goes absolutely berserk. Five times louder than when I walked in, that’s for sure.

Cagey Carl.

“He looks about thirty years old!” I scream at Rube. He barely hears me.

“Yeah,” he replies, “but he’s a bit of a runt of a thing.”

Nonetheless, however, he’s still taller, stronger, and faster-looking than me. He looks like he’s been in a hundred fights and had fifty broken noses. Mostly though, he looks hard.

“Nineteen years old!” the old man continues into the mike. “Twenty-eight fights, twenty-four wins,” and the big one — “twenty-two by knockout.”

“Christ.”

It’s Rube who speaks this time, and Cagey Carl Ewings has jumped the ropes and circles the ring now like he wants to kill someone. And guess just happens to be the closest guy around. It’s me, of course, thinking, Twenty-two knockouts. Twenty-two knockouts. I’m dog’s meat. I’m dog’s meat, I swear it.

He comes over.

“Hey boy,” he says.

“Hey,” I answer, although I’m not sure he wants one. I’m just being friendly, really. You can’t blame one for trying.

Whatever it is, it seems to work, because he smiles. Then he states something very clearly.

He states, “I’m gonna kill you.”

“Okay.”

Did I just say that?

“You’re scared.” Another statement.

“If you like.”

“Oh, I like, mate, but I’ll like it even more when they cart you out of here on a stretcher.”

“Is that right?”

“Definitely.”

In the end, he smiles again and returns to his corner. Frankly, I’m quite sure he’ll beat the skin off me. Cagey Carl. What an idiot, and I’d tell him so if I wasn’t so afraid of him. Now there’s only me and the fear and the furled footsteps I take to center ring. Rube stands behind me.

Now I feel naked, in just my dark blue shorts, my gymmies, and with the gloves on my hands. I feel too skinny, too bare. Like you can read the fear on me. The warm room filters across my back. The cigarette smoke breathes onto my skin. It smells like cancer.

Light is on us.

Blinding.

The crowd is dark.

Hidden.

They’re just voices now. No names, no blondes, no beers or anything else. Just voices drawn toward the light, and there’s no way to liken them to anything else. They sound like people gathered around a fight. That’s all. That’s what they are and they like what they are.

Both Carl and I sweat. There’s Vaseline above his stare, which grinds its way into my eyes. It dawns on me very quickly that he really does want to kill me.

“Fair fight,” the referee says, and that’s all he says.

Then it’s back to the corner.

My legs rage with anticipation.

My heart turns.

My head nods, as Rube gives me two instructions. The first: “

The second: “If you do go down, be sure to get up.”

“Okay.”

Okay.

Okay.

What a word, ay? What a word, because you can’t always mean it when you say it. Everything’s gonna be okay. Yeah, whatever, because it’s not. Everything hinges on you yourself, which in this case, is me.

“Okay,” I say again, feeling the irony of it, and the bell rings and this is it.

Is it? I ask myself. Is this it? Really?

The answer to my question comes not from me, but from Cagey Carl, who has made his intentions excessively clear. He sprints over to me and throws out his left hand. I duck it, swing around, and get out of the corner.

He laughs as he chases me.

All round.

He comes at me, I duck.

He swings and misses and tells me I’m scared.

Toward the end of the round, his left glove finds its way through, echoing onto my jaw. Then his right finds me, and another one. Then the bell.

The round is over and I haven’t thrown a single punch.

Rube tells me.

He says, “Just a hint you can’t win a fight without throwing any punches.”

“I know.”

“Well?”

“Well what?”

“Well, start throwin’ a few.”

“All right.” But personally, I’m just glad I survived the first round without being knocked down. I’m ecstatic that I’m still upright.

Second round. Still no punches, but this time, late, I hit the canvas and the crowd roars. Cagey Carl stands over me and says, “Hey boy! Hey boy!” That’s all he says as I struggle to my knees and stand. Soon after, the bell rings. Everyone knows I’m scared.

This time Rube abuses me.

“If y’ gonna carry on like this there’s no point bein’ here! Remember what we said that morning? This is our chance. Our only chance, and you’re gonna blow it because you’re scared of a little pain!” His face snarls at me. He barks. “If I was fightin’ this guy I’d have dropped ‘im in the first round and we both know it. It takes me twenty minutes to beat you, so get interested an’ pull y’ finger out, or go home!”

Yet stillI throw no punches. Boos emerge from the crowd. No one likes a coward.

Rounds three and four, no punches. Finally, the last round, the fifth. What happens?

I walk out, my hammering heart smashing through my ribs. I duck and swerve and Cagey Carl lands a few more good punches. He keeps telling me to stop running, but I don’t. I keep running, and I survive my first fight. I lose it, on account of throwing no punches, and the crowd wants to lynch me. On my way out of the ring, they yell in my face, spit at me, and one guy even gives me a nice crack in the ribs. I deserve it.

Back in the room, the other fellas only shake their heads.

Perry ignores me.

Rube can’t bring himself to look at me.

Instead, he punches the raw meat that hangs down around us as I take my gloves off, ashamed. There’s another fight before Rube goes on. He punches hard and waits and we know. Rube will win. He has that about him now. I don’t know where it came from — maybe that fight in the school yard. I’m not sure, but I can smell it, right up to the time when the other fight’s over.

When Perry tells him, “It’s time,” Rube punches one last pig and we go to the doors. Again, we wait, and when Perry’s voice comes to us, Rube bursts through the door.

Perry yells again: “And now, I think you’ll see something tonight that you’ll talk about for the rest of your life! You’ll say that you saw him.” All quiet. All quiet and Perry’s voice lowers. Serious. “You’ll say, ‘I was there. I was there that first night when Ruben Wolfe fought. I saw Fighting Ruben Wolfe’s first fight.’ That’s what you’ll say….”

Fighting Ruben Wolfe.

So that’s his name.

Fighting Ruben Wolfe, and what the crowd does see is Rube walking toward the ring, in Steve’s jacket. Like everyone else so far, they can smell it. The confidence. They see it in the eyes that peer out from his hood.

His walk is not bouncy or cocky.

He throws no punches to the air.

No step, however, is out of turn.

He is straight ahead, straight out, straight and hard, and ready to fight.

“Hope you’re better than your brother,” someone calls.

It hurts me. Wounds me.

“I am.”

But not as much as that. Not as much as those two words from my own brother’s lips, as he walks on, without flinching.

“I’m ready tonight,” he talks on, and I am aware that now, he speaks only to himself. The crowd, Perry, me — we’re all just out therefocused. Now it’s just Rube, the fight, and the win. There is no world around it.

Typically, his opponent jumps into the ring, but that’s about it. In the first round, Rube knocks him down twice. The bell saves him. In the break, all I do is give my brother some water as he sits and stares and waits. He waits for the fight with a slight smile, like there’s nowhere else he’d rather be. He makes his legs rise and fall very slightly and very fast. He does it over, over, over again, before jumping up and going out, fists raised. Fighting.

The second round’s the last round.

Rube catches him with a great right hand.

He punches his lungs out.

Then he goes under his ribs.

Even in the neck.

Shoulder.

Arm.

Anywhere legal and uncovered.

Finally, he goes straight through his face. Three times, until the blood rants and raves on its way out of the other guy’s mouth.

“Stop it,” Rube says to the ref.

The crowd roars.

“Stop the fight.” But the ref has no intention to do so, and Rube is forced to bury one last punch onto the chin of Wizard Walter Brighton, and he falls cold to the canvas.

All is loud and violent.

Beer glasses smash.

People shout.

A drop of extra blood hits the canvas. Rubes stares.

Then another roar does a lap around the factory floor.

“That’s it then,” Rube says when he returns to the corner. “I told ‘em to stop it but I guess they like the blood. That’s what people’re payin’ for, I s’pose.”

He climbs out of the ring and is given instant worship by the crowd. They pour beer on him, shake hands with his glove, and yell out how great he is. Rube reacts to none of them.

At the end of the night, we all file back into Perry’s van. Bumper won in five but the other blokes all lost, including me, of course. The ride home is all silent. Only two fighters hold a fifty-dollar note in their hand. The others have a little bit of tip money in their pockets, thrown into their corner at the end of the fight. All of them except me, that is. Like I’ve said, it’s clear that no one likes a coward.

Perry drops everyone else off first and lets Rube and me out at Central.

“Hey Rube,” he calls.

“You can fight, boy. See y’ next week.” “Same time?”

“Yeah.”

Perry, to me: “Cameron, if you do what you did tonight next week, I’ll kill you.”

Me: “All right.”

My heart falls to my ankles, the van takes off, and Rube and I walk home. I kick my heart along the ground. I feel like crying, but I don’t. I wish I was Rube. I wish I was Fighting Ruben Wolfe and not the Underdog. I wish I was my brother.

A train passes above us as we walk through the tunnel and onto Elizabeth Street. The sound is deafening, then gone.

Our feet take over.

Out on the other side, on the street, I can smell the fear again. I can pick up the scent. It’s easy to find, and Rube smells it too, I can sense it. But he doesn’t know it. He doesn’t feel it.

The worst part is the knowing that things have changed. See, Rube and I had always been together. We were both down low. We were both scrap. Both no good.

Now Rube’s a winner, and I’m a Wolfe on my own. I’m the Underdog, alone.

On our way through the front gate back home, Rube pats me on the shoulder, twice. His previous anger has calmed, probably on account of his own great victory. We brace ourselves for the questions of why we’re so late for dinner. It doesn’t happen, as Mum’s doing an evening shift at the hospital, and Dad’s out walking. The first thing Rube does is hose the blood off his gloves in the backyard.

When he comes into our room, he says, “We’ll have dinner and then walk Miffy, right?”

“Yeah.”

My own gloves go straight back under my bed. They’re spotless. Squeaky clean.


“Rube?”

“Yeah?”

“You’ve gotta tell me how it felt. Y’ gotta tell me how it felt to win.”

Quiet.

All quiet.

Voices of Mum and Dad wander down at us from the kitchen. They’re talking to Steve, because I hear my brother’s voice as well. Sarah sleeps in her own room, I guess.

“How’d it feel?” Rube asks himself. “I don’t know exactly, but it made me wanna howl.”





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