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Authors: Joseph McElroy

Tags: #General Fiction, #Cannonball

Cannonball (2 page)

BOOK: Cannonball
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It would take a beating, if that is even true of boards? He padded out to the end, bent his knees to snap his springboard and let its give lift him jumping straight up. To come back down and bounce again toes pointed and again. And in midair turned immensely and landed and bounced and—the confidence also of a kid—landed now as if he would go off backward but, settling the board, walked to where he'd started, and about-faced.

What could have prepared you, though, for the jump which was first that high, prancing approach hop onto the almost end of the board to depress its laminated wood-and-fiberglass core so deep—don't I myself know—it might have thrown Umo out into the street had he not landed straight up and let the board lift him—like a tool you should let do its work, as my father, a somewhat unfinished carpenter and craftsperson, in the garage would sometimes say of plane or hoe or knife or tinkering with his stopwatches that would one day time Umo—upward stretched leaping like a crane to the wind rising at first eternally only at the top to become a thing compressed like a spring but turned into like a rock in space or something inevitable: and this was the cannonball later discussed, as we liked to say, the mother and brother of all cannonballs to target a pool in our city: that where he hit you'd have said the water parted six feet down and within four of the turquoise-tiled bottom, indicating in the flushed pit of its absence with strange exactness the concave point of the drain that marked the graded low point of the deep end.

It was like one of our patented earthquakes, but from the air. You wondered the excellent homegrown tiles did not crack their grouting.

A pregnant soul well back of the brink got drenched and stood her ground leaning back on her hips, gray-haired. Two deck chairs almost waterborne I seemed to make look back at me, on one a newborn uncomplaining till saved from drowning.

The sound of the impact like something being permanently fixed blots out of my slow mind for a second the future war, its meaning, and Umo's eventual link to the Scrolls. For what do we need if not distraction from the burdens of our nation, our responsibilities, as my mother put it?

Now kids give the high board ladder space. Umo's feat is something else, that day of the first cannonball. No one wants to go and there's a murmur. A path is parted for him back to the ladder. Someone said, “That's Umo.” So somebody knew him. “Changsta,” someone called. You felt the awe, the silence, the bias. His broad back, bull neck, his confident arms, his hands climbing the silver rungs, holding on, had I seen that back before? Rung by rung, a race apart, brute prophecy was it? A prophecy not easy for me. Someone said, “Cannonball!” Someone older, “He's going again.”

A parent near me, something in how he held himself, T-shirt, a camouflage vest, and you didn't know what else to be inventoried under it because when the man hollered to the big boy to get down off that board, I knew him for an Old Town cop off-duty with children here, hand over his heart maybe. I thought he would do something, it's a free country, you can try: stop the engulfing wave sure to arise from Umo's more than weight that threatened with a second cannonball to evacuate half the water at his end of the pool: a strange but (the kids knew) worthwhile risk, Umo bouncing and bouncing on City equipment. “Big buck, yellow tail,” the off-duty cop-parent said to his little girl—which wasn't the “style” we hoped in our award-winning port city with its melting-pot neighborhoods, its opportunity, its Christian lenders, its Gaslamp Quarter, pink sidewalks, Fashion Valley, and Pacific Beach. The little girl said, “He's Chinese.” “Monkey outa nowhere,” said the man who yelled to Fatso not to go again. “Nobody's out of
no
where,” came a woman's voice, an old party in a hat.

What could have prepared you for what came next? The approach, a surplus some might say or vastness of flowing flesh—secret weapon, yay, but a target surely, the sun itself marking the glimmering, drying shoulders up there, the slick hair. Off-duty cop, his hand inside his vest. A cannonball again? Until it hits the water a dive is not a dive, we know, so swift but sometimes a slowness so divided it might never finish in your mind; and the swan—or
front
dive—that arched upward now from a board bent not to breaking but to some force unforeseen by “the maker,” as we trace performance to the factory, carried Umo up arms at full stretch for all to see, or see from his vista—the city out beyond the Presidio and the Marine Lab and out to shark land and whale country, unknown sea, high it could seem as our much traveled Assemblyman's hang glider riding a broomstick thermal sliding out of the sky it seemed like for a few feet above the sacred peak in Rio harbor:

a cannonball to maybe blast us all out this time,

but no: for suddenly the diver, that human bulk, its arms now at its sides, axled a great diameter impossibly greater than the diver himself and wheeled over into a layout somersaultand-a-half, not tuck, not even jackknife-pike position but layout more distinguished than any stunt for which mysteriously (if you measure it) there could not have been time but, in the gasp of silence or gratitude through which we heard two car horns like another question off the I-8, wheeled the huge spoke of this person's body, its flesh, surplus and all, a devoted unit aiming to meet the water hands first, bring somehow legs and toes following the rest of him to snap upright like a tail—and no less a cannonball, it came to me—hands, head, shoulders, belly, hips into the water—for no real splash at all I must be understood to say, but a perfectly small spurt fountaining a foot high at most and a muffled thud like when you fire a smooth stone end over end out into Otay Lake over the head of an outboard troller and it slips in with scarcely a gulp.

2 I have died

How did he do it? Were we amazed? A spreading faith afoot among the watchers. A vanishing, a death almost, but wait. I saw the cop ship his personal pistol back under his arm. It looked something like the .22 semi-auto my aunt and uncle use, like the old German model. A crowd gathered at the pool ladder looking down there for this alien who seemed to hang under water for the longest time before he took hold of a rung and shot up like a penguin.

“Pouring like a waterfall,” said the old person, thin in a bikini and a down-under bush hat, a light like candle power in her face, an accent sort of English. “He's an animal,” said the off-duty. “Just some of us are better at it,” the old person's reply and then, oddly, “He's on our team,” she adds. And thirty yards away across a corner of pool, Umo looked in our direction, mine.
What did you
think
you were doing here?
The old dame looking my way too, not quite in my eyes but below them, her skin all over spots or like some body painting trade you get in our city, her sandals and a flash of Moroccan gold on the toenails supportive somehow, her hat that of someone you'd visit, an old bird of a person.

And indeed I
had
seen the diver somewhere. Swimming? Swimming away from me, that was it. Slow motion muscled in folds and rolls of flesh, that back—its rolling bulk. His weight not what was said, but a rumor. But it was something you could see.

“Next stop, Olympic trials!” it was I who called out.

“Who'm I swimmin' for?” he shouted over his shoulder—he was sparring with three seniors from my school who needed to push him in and took to shoving and one missed and fell and his brother got mad and lunged and missed and magically fell in like a wrestler who can't help stepping outside the ring. The off-duty parent-cop looked at me: “Who you think you're talking to?” “East Hill,” I called out to Umo.

“East Hill, they got a coach there,” Umo called back again, he knew where I was, it seemed. And this was some days before Umo knew me, I had to think, though it was my father the coach of East Hill Club he had in mind, a USA Swimming affiliate club especially well known to me.

“Got no business up there, keep the fat boy off the board, that's what we need to do,” said the off-duty. Three girls grabbing at Umo's orange backpack, blocked his way, bathing suit gigglers manhandling his friendly flesh. But what
was
his “way”? Would he go again? People wanted it. “A coach, all right,” again he called, “but we need
you
.” Just talk, but why that difference?

Me? Was it me? How old was he? Old for his age. It was the two entries into the water, one exploding, the second silent, or even
im
ploding, we say so familiarly; first, the cannonball, but then that overflowing bulk layered below the armpits slipping through water it seemed to make quiet, to anticipate. It was shock and it was vanishing. What did the diver mean,
We need you
? Nothing, to tell the truth. The sun I realized was behind me. Time itself splits up and is at me from all directions, I was nobody. I needed to get home. But why?

I tried to get around the corner of the pool through the crowd to ask Umo what he had meant. My father's job in mind now, if I could bring him some talent. Help him. “…take over the world, those people,” said my neighbor the cop, not so off-duty after all. “He has a right,” someone said; I turned to see an undernourished guy with an earring and a beard nod to me, “Maybe he has, maybe he don't. See you in court.”

Umo had gone. How had he gotten away?

I have dived, but am only a swimmer now, and often know what it is I am seeing. Or I know what I can do—I thought I did—and can tell a rumor flying a mile away.
Thirteen going on fourteen
was hard to credit, and somehow true. By the Fall of my junior year I had again spotted Umo—swimming at Ballast Circle on the south side and at Balboa Knoll on the east. That huge flip turn at the far end, and he comes up in a sweeping breaststroke only now, mid-lap, to medley into a freestyle rolling to swamp neighboring lanes at will, yet somehow not entirely
in
the water, riding it, his broad back rolling not all that much; a skimmer, too, was how you remembered him, a force if he felt like it, puffy eyes slit straight across, not “slant” (as immigrant watchers even in our Pacific city will term them), but concentrating and relaxed the citizen lap-swimmer with limited time, a purpose, a timeless habit I realized was what had made me notice in the first place months before I saw him go off a board. And
not
notice (if that is possible).

What did Umo bring, so free, though homeless it was said?

He made me want to speak.

As I do.

You want to do something with the rumors they cook up, anyone from family to the highest levels as you must know. But was that it? Speak for yourself is more it. I wondered if from his people or country, his years equaled half again as many of ours, somewhat as we reckon the human age of the African osprey we learned about so long as it avoids being pulled under by big fish it preys on from the air: so Umo's thirteen, our twenty, the way we do with dogs or space-naut relatives who come back ten years younger, is more like it, or those very old Tibetans once upon a time. Already he was said to be Mongol Manchurian (was that Chinese?), rumored older—in his twenties—even Muslim, and encountered one day on a corner near my school, the first Fall month of my junior year—then gone. Where did he get to? Water his medium that first summer, Mexico-based, Baja trucking; but from the other side of the world was where he “was originally from,” as my mother likes to say, and “illegal as all get out”; mystery man (and kid); joker not quite, for my money. Young crook we heard.

I saw him throw his legs out and sit down on the end of a high board in August that gave so far he might have slipped off. Only to rebound onto his feet, sit down again and go higher now. Maybe well-over-three-hundred-pound teen, his greatness a specialty, was how others saw him and were moved by him, not his everyday life, like me. The diver we'd been maybe waiting for. In our public pools. It wasn't me, certainly. Swan, back one and a half, and my once-upon-a-time favorite, the half gainer that launched you out into a forward-flying back dive, Coach yelling, “Out too far!” as if I didn't hear.

Later, twists were the secret—and now I thought as if in our ancient sea life we had come out of the water exposing all of our body plane by plane, elbow by elbow. A plain full twist, arm across chest first pointing the way, like a sworn loyalty, a beauty. As I was in the end called upon to explain at the Hearings in front of another audience, maybe hungry for competition and the failure of others where they imagined I was telling all I knew about competition. For Umo comes up and what might have been his last dive and, it was thought, the insurgent enemy's last-minute targeting of the suddenly important Scrolls and their early first-century witness to Christ's work ethic to go with all the other witnessing to whoever. His food-fasting vision and good sense, never losing your cool with a rival or over-broadcasting your edge to a pretty woman come to a well with her bucket, experience you don't just have but learn from. Nine thousand miles away in that other seamy, medium toxic though chlorine-rich pool, deep within a deposed leader's palace or very vitals, Umo makes his approach along the board. The double cluck of a chamber at the ready behind me I hear and forget the Scrolls, catch gun oil on the humid air, a hint of burn, a scent of black manganese phosphate I would swear if I could believe the user had found the means to re-rustproof her barrel like back home, or was it a smell of salted raw flesh that haunted my bowel, my balls? We were awaiting momentarily the Scrolls, my orders said, rumor rife in Administration circles already of early first-century Christian, by all reports either a young Roman or Jesus's brother, who, on a friendly footing, had interviewed him on a range of issues, sustainable risk prediction, wind, water, capital punishment within reason, turning always back to the talent that begins as a small-case seed but placed in good earth cannot but grow great, can't miss. Why was I at pool level shooting a dive and not down below at Scroll reception-point among the archaeologists et al?

BOOK: Cannonball
10.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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