Prologue
As the gymnasium fills, the buzz and chatter of the waiting crowd fills me with a strange energy. Despite everything I have told myself – how it doesn't matter, how I don't care – how school participation for the tournament is basically mandatory – I'm finding it ridiculously easy to become swept up in the moment.
Normally, I'm not one for competition. I've spent most of my life watching my brothers tussle over everything. Every. Little. Thing. The easier chores. The bigger portion of meat. Who was the faster runner. Who had the better girlfriend. As the youngest, I wasn't expected to participate in these games: I just got sucked into – bribed, cajoled, threatened into - rooting for one over the other.
That was until I was persuaded to join the wrestling team this year. I say persuaded because – to be honest – there are better things for me to do with my time; these just aren't things anybody else considers important. Wrestling runs in the family and I'm – like both my brothers – naturally strong. I've got the right build, a certain favorable leg-to-body ratio and a fair amount of self-discipline. So, I was recruited and my mother insisted I do it. By and large, it's been effortless and, in its way, fun.
The tournament at the end of the school year is another matter. I'm naturally averse to elimination competitions, and I had no desire to participate in one. These guys I trained with, hung out with, encouraged – beating them at this sport I never cared about in the first place just didn't hold any appeal. But as the competition has gone on – and I'm still in it – the appreciation of the crowd, the thrill of accomplishment, of proving my strength, has started to have its effect. I'm excited, anticipatory – at one with the crowd, whether they cheer for me or against me.
And I honestly think I have a chance at winning this thing. There's just one competitor left. I know his every trick; I know his every vulnerability. I've been watching him for years – my older brother, Ryan. And yes, he's a little taller than me. He's a little stronger. But I have surprise on my side – the baby brother he's been roundly ignoring – and despite the year we've spent together in training and practice competition, I've seen the shock on his face as I've won round after round this week. So – I suspect he hasn't really been paying attention to the way I perform.
I look down the locker room – he and I are alone in here right now. He's slumped down a little, eyes closed. Well – I don't even know what time it was when the door slammed and mother started yelling at him and he finally pushed his way into our bedroom. It felt pretty late.
As if sensing my gaze, he looks up suddenly and half turns to me. So, I can see the shiner – god damn it.
"What did you do this time?" I ask, exasperated.
He shrugs. "Does it matter?" Then, resentfully: "I'm eighteen. I can stay out as late as I want."
I sigh. It doesn't work that way – and he knows it. He's still in high school. There's a curfew – not of her making. And it's not just that he's her son – he's an employee of the family bakery, and she's his boss. Why does he do it? If it's Will's example ... our older brother left home after a huge confrontation with mother; but he was in the right. Ryan compounds her sins by committing his own. I think about pointing this out – she hits him when he defies curfew, when he skips school – that one time – that one really dreadful time – when he was nearly busted for shoplifting. But, at the same time, I suspect that he wouldn't be this way if it wasn't for her heavy hand in the first place. He's surly and rebellious, and every strike she blows seems to entrench him even further.
"You've got to get along with her," is all I can say. "What are you going to do if she throws you out of the house after school?"
He shrugs again, but the look on his face speaks volumes about the bleakness with which he views his future. He doesn't really care for working at the bakery, but since Will only works part time, and I've still got two more years of school, it really is going to fall on him, heavily, as soon as school lets out in a couple of weeks. No more wrestling – for which he has been the star and darling of the school the last couple of years. Just working for mom and dad, his life filled with the tedium of making bread.
"Maybe I'll get lucky and get reaped to the Games this year," he says, wryly.
"Why would you even say that?" I ask him angrily.
He opens his mouth, but his answer is lost to opportunity, as coach enters at that moment and gestures for us to follow him.
My eyes sweep the gym as I enter behind my brother. The student body is sitting on the bleachers, chattering and laughing. It is the best time of the year. Spring is full on – finals are still a couple of weeks away – the Reaping ages away, barely to be thought about. Everyone is, of course, divided into their cliques, which makes it easier for me to look for … yes - there. I have no idea – if she cares, really, about the wrestling; she's compelled to be here, same as everyone else. There are people who do care – my friends, some girls who have started to take notice, now that I'm a "jock." But isn't that how life is? The one person you really show off for probably doesn't even notice. Probably isn't even impressed. Yet – despite myself, despite all reason or any rational pep talks I might give myself – I perform for her.
Before I know it, our names are announced, mine and Ryan's. The Mellark brothers, competing for the championship. I stare at him as we wait in the neutral stance, and he gives me an ironic look. I get a good look at the black eye, and I swallow, ruefully.
The first round goes exactly as I pictured: because he's taller than me, he goes for the head lock. I attempt the suplex, grappling forward for the bear hug. For what seems like forever, we are locked together, holding our stances – at a mutual impasse. But I use my better center of gravity to get the leverage and I finally throw him down.
He really didn't expect this, and there is now anger, as well as incredible surprise, on his face. In the second round, he lunges for me almost quicker than the count, overpowers me – for a second we are struggling evenly, but my feet slip out from under me, and he wins the point.
Before the third round, it seems like we are staring at each other for an eternity. The crowd noise is intense, amazing – yet, it starts to recede into a strange near-silence between us. I can hear him breathing heavily – angrily. He wants this, more than anything; and he is off-put that he has to beat his little brother to get it. It's not just that he's underestimated me. He's underestimated the game – how painful it can be to win, as well as to lose.
But I understand. It's all knotted together ... The fact that he's being thrown into life, all unprepared and unwilling. The years of an angry upbringing: maybe we chose different ways of dealing with it, but at the end of the day it was a mutual experience, and we should have been allies – all this time – but we weren't. And it's almost too late.
The fact that I don't care – not really – about winning. Not at his expense. Not to impress some girl. Not to satisfy my friends. To win would be every bit as painful as to lose – maybe more so, this time.
He's quick at me again, but he used up so much of his strength on the last round that he doesn't quite get a good grip on me. I plant my feet and envelope him into a hug: my brother.
I am strong – a wall against him; I feel it. But I soften my stance, just a little, and my body twists as he gets the head lock. I'm pinned to the mat, my nose flat against it so I can hear my breath sucking in all around me. He wins.
He wins.
I smile through the award ceremony. I have the silver medal and I've got two years left, anyway, to wrestle in school. I'm good at it, and, in this world that is so restrictive – so narrow of opportunity, and perhaps of happiness – that's something to grasp. It's in losing to my brother that I actually see the true value of the thing. Very strange.
My eyes sweep the crowd again. She's still here – she hasn't wandered out, bored of the spectacle. I tell myself that in my current state of heightened realization it really doesn't matter to me whether or not she was impressed or even entertained by the sport.
People tell themselves things.
