(This is the third part of a trilogy, beginning with The Wedding and The Engagement, both of which are listed under the Interracial heading. Please read those installments for all sub-text and character development.)
*
I've been madly in love with Arthur Jay since I was a freshman in college. My name is Teralynn House. And when I first saw Artie, I thought:
"This is the man for me!"
He was fine in a goofy sort of way. He was one of those bruthas who was fine without knowing he was fine, you know? It was like he didn't give a flip about his looks, thinking that people who are overly concerned with looks aren't worth being overly concerned over. I'd known my share of pretty boys. I agreed with him.
He was a basketball player, too, a street player, always walking around with a Spaulding Top Flite under his arm, always challenging people to play, but not really good enough to play for the school team, or at least he wasn't confident enough to try out. But I loved watching him play. He was fluid and quick, with a great first step and a nice mid-range game. I know that sounds kind of mannish. I know the lingo because I too am a player.
Artie and I made the classic lover's mistake--we became friends before we gave lust a chance to take hold. That may sound counter-intuitive. Lovers always run the risk of failure. Friends, REAL friends, won't take that risk. A REAL friend is better than a lover because a REAL friend always looks out for the interests of the other person. Lovers are in it for their own personal gain. It's true. Love is a zero sum game. There are winners and there are losers. Having sex is the very beginning of heightened, unrealistic expectations. No REAL friend ever comes away with a broken heart.
My first week at Delaware State I found myself alone out behind the dorms, shooting jumpers on a rim without a net. I had a full ride scholarship, but I wasn't telling anyone about it, preferring in all cases to be under-estimated. I refused to room in the jock dorm, too, figuring that I'd get a better chance at real college life in the freshman dorm.
So I'm out there working on my step-back, off-hand, pull-up jumper. This redbone brutha rolls up. He looks like Prince, only taller. He's got a leather Spaulding Top Flite under his arm. That let me know something right there. No one plays with a leather Top Flite on an outdoor asphalt court. The ball costs too much. He had his name written on the ball in block letters, too, which let me know he paid money for it. He hadn't stolen it from his high school or his local YMCA.
He watched me shoot for a minute or five. Then he challenged me to play one-on-one.
That's when I knew this nigga was crazy. Even my older brothers don't challenge me to play one-on-one. I can ball.
Somehow I was reluctant to play him. I didn't know him. Sometimes a brutha will challenge a sistah to play just so he can D her up. And by D, I mean DICK. He'll challenge all my jumpshots and force me to drive. As soon as I put the ball on the floor, he'll body me up and force me to back him down like Barkley. Then he'll rub his dick up against my ass, pretending to play Defense. He'll use his hands to keep me centered. He'll call me a bitch-ass nigga if I call the foul. I know that game.
This brutha could see that I was knocking down jumpers with my off hand. If I'm swishing shots with my left hand, my right hand has to be off the chain. There's not many guys that can beat me in a jumpshooting contest. He'll have to close me out on each possession and body me up on the way to the hole, IF he's quick enough to recover from my up-fake. Not many are.
I accepted his challenge. We played to fifteen by ones, win by two, winners take it out. When the score got to be fourteen all he had the ball out. He pump faked me, dribbled right, faked a mid-range jumper and drove to the rim. I knew he would try to finger roll, and I knew I had hops, so I went to pin his shot on the backboard. He lost me with a head fake and knocked down a short turn-around jumper.
"Good shot," I said.
The next possession he jab stepped left and hit a soft pull up jumper from the key. I'd blocked that same shot three points before, so I didn't think he'd have the courage to try it again. (If it had been me, I would have head faked and driven to the hole, so I assumed a smart player would do the same. He fooled me. It was another good shot.)
He won the game. He wanted to run it back, but since I'd lost (and I hadn't expected to lose) I offered to buy him an ice cream cone at Baskin Robbins. I mean, I'd been working out for two hours before he showed up. I was tired. I thought the better part of valor would be to acknowledge his victory. He said, no, he wanted to shoot around some.
So I left him there and went and got some ice cream.
Later that night I ran across him again in the dormitory lounge. He had that same Spaulding Top Flite with him (he hadn't used it on the blacktop) and he was bouncing it between his legs as he carried on a loud trash talking session with some other guys. When he saw me, he said:
"Here she comes now!! I betchu not one of you niggas can beat her playing. NOT ONE."
I just shook my head. I didn't want them to know I was a scholarship player on the school team.
These guys just looked at me with appreciation. I'm 5'11". I've got a nice rack, but I keep the twins compressed with a sports bra, so although Artie's friend's first impulse was to look at my breasts (like most men) they immediately reverted to my face (again, like most men). I'm not ugly. I'm also not "hippy". If I had a sistah's butt I wouldn't be a good open court player, as my ass would tend to weigh me down. It would telegraph my direction whenever I went to cross someone up in open court. Too, I had my hair tied off into a couple of thick braids, and I tied these together at the base of my neck. I had those little sweat beadies along the edges of my forehead. I wore a floppy Dallas Cowboys t-shirt that covered the silky line of navel pubic hair that men always peek at. I didn't have that pubic line anyway. I shaved it. And I'd been playing ball all day, so I stank. Men like that. It's like a key to enter the player's fraternity, this unwashedness without the associated feminine embarrassment.
All in all I got the impression that I'd made a good first impression. Artie introduced me as if he were introducing his sister. We'd just met earlier that day. I didn't know then that this first impression with 'the fellas' would follow me for the rest of my school days.
They invited me into the conversation. Artie had been telling them that I could hit step back jumpers with either hand. None of them believed him. He handed me his Spaulding Top Flite and dared any of them to try to cover me. Remember, now, this is in the dormitory lounge. There wasn't any basket to shoot for.
I politely declined. What am I, his pet?
So this nyugga starts describing my game strategy!!
"If she drives right and dips the shoulder, she's going to shoot the step-back leftie, like Harden. If she drives left and dips the shoulder, she's going to shoot the step-back rightie. She always shoots with the hand closest to the rim. But if she goes to the hole it's the opposite, because she'll position her body between you and the ball, which is the right thing to do."
I'm getting frantic because, you know, I don't want these guys knowing too much about my game. But then I thought, "What can they do about it?"
Really, what COULD they do? I actually AM a player. A real player is confident in his/her game. This is what I could never understand about Artie. He's a player, too. He wasn't at school on scholarship. His parents were footing the bill. I thought he could have walked onto the school team and saved his parents some ducats, maybe not freshman year but definitely as a sophomore.
The next thing I know, all of us are out back, on the court, in the dark, and the money is up. Artie is betting I can score against any one of his friends. What could I do? He's got a Jackson riding on me each time the ball is in my hands.
I think I made him about sixty bucks. I knocked down two jumpers on the first two challengers and I took the third guy to the hole. After that, no one wanted to bet him anymore. All his friends advised me to try out for the women's team. Artie advised me to try out for the MEN'S team. (And this nigga BEAT me and wouldn't try out for the men's team. Hypocrite.)
I didn't much appreciate being used like that. Soon enough they would find out I already played for the women's team and want their money back. I didn't want to be a part of that. So, on the way back to the dorm I pulled Artie's coat and told him of my status. He got this excited look on his face and shushed me.