Chapter 9 -- Dessert First
Tuesday September 27
When I returned from my run, I saw that Paul was already here. Chuck hadn't figured out that if he came early, my mom would feed him breakfast. Both Paul and Fritz seemed to take full advantage of the arrangement. I found Mom making stuffed French toast, one of my favorites.
"Morning," she said as she handed me a plate. "What's your plan for the day?"
"After football, I'm going to Granny's West and help Tracy shoot her video blog. I'll grab dinner there."
"I'll tell your dad. It'll save me from having to cook."
"Where is Dad, anyway?" I asked, not seeing him.
"Jack Mass wanted to talk to your dad and Caryn before they had to get to work. He went into the office to do the conference call."
For a second I thought I should be there, but I pushed that instinct down. If I wanted to normalize my life, I had to limit the time I spent dealing with business issues. I knew that meant I had to delegate more, and now was the right time to start.
Duke came bounding down the stairs to let us know Peggy was coming down with the boys. I got up and met her on the second floor to help her carry down Coby and Little David. They'd become a handful. She handed me Coby, and somehow I ended up with Little David as well.
When we got to the kitchen, I handed Coby to his grandma to put him in his high chair. Little David was busy telling me something, so I held him while I ate. I cut him some French toast pieces, and that was soon his whole focus.
"He'll be bouncing off the walls by the time he gets to daycare," Peggy warned.
"Better them than us," I said as I stuffed bacon in my mouth.
"I have a cross-country meet this afternoon. Don't forget that Angie's picking up the boys from daycare and you must get them from her tonight," Peggy told my mom.
Peggy had gotten a partial scholarship at State. She'd worked her way into the top five runners, so tonight was her first away meet. If she held onto the spot, she'd get a full scholarship for the spring semester.
Paul and I finished and left to pick up Brook.
"Honk to let her know we're here," I told Paul.
Paul honked the horn. I had a little grin because apparently Chuck hadn't warned him. Ava stormed out the door with a wooden spoon in her hand.
"Stop her. It looks like she's armed," I suggested.
Paul turned around and glared at me. When she got to the door, I locked it. Ava's glare was much scarier than Paul's. My eyes went wide when he released the lock so she could open the door. What the hell was I paying him for?
"Young man, we talked about you honking your horn to pick up my daughter."
"He did it," I said, pointing at Paul.
Whack!
That stung. When Greg and I were younger, my mom had decided we both needed spankings. It's still hard for me to believe we ever needed punishment, angels that we were, but somehow we'd gotten into trouble. Greg was in middle school, so we were older. Mom hadn't spanked us in a couple of years, meaning she had to be super-mad to take it that far. We usually got the 'wait until your father gets home' routine.
We both laughed when she used her hand, so she'd gotten a belt. That hadn't hurt, either. I still can't believe that we were dumb enough to laugh at her second attempt at punishment. If we'd acted like we were sorry, it might not have gone further. She went to the kitchen and came back with a wooden spoon. That made believers out of us. Since then, we'd never needed another spanking. All she had to do was pull the spoon out now, and we quickly fell into line.
Ava saw she had my full attention.
"Do I have your word that you will come to the door next time?"
"Yes, ma'am."
She backed out of the car, and by the look on her face, I decided I'd better go get Brook. Ava went into the house and closed the door in my face. I was about to knock when Paul honked. I guess I was wrong; he and Chuck had talked. Brook burst out the door.
I could hear Ava as she came to use her spoon on me. I raced Brook to the car because I figured it was every man for themselves. We piled in and were all giggles. Paul had a satisfied look on his face. I vowed I would get even with him and Chuck.
---
Dad had arranged for me to call Mr. Morris at lunchtime. I quickly ate and then found an empty classroom so I had some privacy. I was amused when he answered his phone.
"I've never gotten you when I called," I said.
"It's lunchtime. My secretary went out today with some of the other staff. It's one of the guys' birthday."
"Did you want to go?" I asked.
"No, not really. He irritates me. Let's get down to business. I hear you've started your recruiting visits."
I told him about the trips so far. He didn't see anything amiss except for the man in Oklahoma that wanted to talk to me privately. He thought I'd handled that about as well as I could have. The fight was another matter.
"I'll talk to Ms. Dixon. We need to get something in place that prevents him from suing you civilly in exchange for dropping the charges."
"He attacked me," I complained.
"And you hurt him and have money. That alone makes you a target."
Sadly, he was right. I'd heard of more than one person suing someone when they got hurt committing a crime.
"Now, there are several items I have to go over with you, and I need you to pay close attention," Mr. Morris said.
Oops ...
"Do you recall the game where the young man was following you around as a part of the 'Make a Wish' endeavor, where he streamed the videos of you in the game and at halftime to your social media account?" he asked.
Damn, why did he have to sound like James Earl Jones doing Darth Vader?
"Yes, why?" I asked.
"Did you forget that you have to separate your sports from everything else so that the NCAA doesn't get mad at us?"
I hadn't really thought about that when I did the live streaming. These rules were so stupid, but I had to play their game if I wanted to play ball in college.
"How bad is it?"
"Before you worry too much about it, let me tell you what happened. Your friend Lily, who also now runs the Lincoln High sports website as a supervised student project, thought that site was too limited and came up with the idea of creating separate social media accounts for you.
"Before she did that, however, she did something you haven't done yet, even though I work for you. She asked if it was okay," Mr. Morris said, getting in his dig.
Sometimes lawyers were a pain in the backside.
"She talked to Frank and explained her concerns. He called me, and we thought her solution would work. I called the NCAA and got their blessing," he prattled on.
I only had so much time to talk. I guess he thought he was billing me by the minute, which he was.
"What was the solution?" I asked to move the conversation along.
"You now have two accounts, one for David A. Dawson, the actor, model, and everything not related to sports. The other is for Dawson#11. In the future, if it involves a Lincoln High uniform, if it involves a picture of a sports arena, if it involves a football or a baseball, it had better be separate, it cannot involve 'David A. Dawson' or any promotional activities. Frank will monitor it, and if he has any questions, I told him to call me so we can discuss it."
"I'm sure between Lily and Frank they'll make sure I don't do anything to upset the all-powerful NCAA," I said.
"I talked to the NCAA about the sports photos you have displayed at your restaurants. They would prefer that you take them down until you graduate college."
"Are they going to have a problem with anything I do to promote my businesses?" I complained.
"They understand that you have interests in several companies. You can help promote them as long as you don't do it as David Dawson the quarterback or baseball player. I suggest that you do it under your stage name, David A. Dawson. That way everything is crystal clear," Mr. Morris said.
"They'll be okay with that?"
"Yes."
"Even the videos I did for my mom's real estate company?" I asked.
"They're all good. Caryn told me that you received the money through your LLC and then donated it to charity. As long as you run it through your business, you're okay. Just don't accept money directly for promotional activities like that. I can justify that because it's business-related," he assured me.
"I understand, Mr. Morris. I have something else I agreed to do."
I told him about helping Tracy with her video blog.
"It should be okay since it's a class project. Just be sure to use your stage name. We don't want there to be any confusion about that," he reminded me.
Before I got off the phone, he told me he'd contacted the recruiting coordinator for Southwest Central State and had a talk with them about us not wanting any misunderstandings. Of course, the recruiter denied any knowledge of anything that might be an issue and would do everything in his power to make sure nothing improper occurred. Lawyers!
Mr. Morris explained that he needed to have the call logged so if the NCAA ever decided to give us a hard time, we could show we did our due diligence. Personally, I felt he was just running up his bill. I would probably be glad he'd done it if the NCAA decided to come after me, though.
---
Football practice was much better than last week. People were flying around with a purpose; they were much more mentally engaged. Our biggest rival, Eastside, was this week's opponent. Their West Coast passing offense was hard to contain for high school teams. They counted on a short passing game to try to get their most skilled runners open in space. Their offense was designed to gain yardage after the catch, or YAC.
To run that kind of offense, you need a quarterback who sees the field well, makes quick decisions, and is accurate in his short throws. To stop it, you have to keep everything in front of you and somehow disrupt your opponent's passes.
Coach Rector was hammering our defensive line to keep a clock in their head. He coached them to get their hands up at two seconds after the snap so they'd either force the quarterback to change his throw or swat the ball down. They also needed to stay in their lanes so if the pocket collapsed, the quarterback would have nowhere to run.
He coached the linebackers and secondary to close quickly once the football was out of the quarterback's hand. They'd seen on film that Eastside worked the referees to get pass-interference calls. It had bailed them out several times.
He also wanted us to make sure they knew it when we tackled them. We focused on the proper way to tackle someone with force. He coached us not to hit them in the head or crush them if they were defenseless. Once they made a football move, after the catch, you could lower the boom.