Chapter 6
I.
The calculus test was a farce.
There was an hour allotted for the test. At 15 minutes in, I had finished. I knew everything was right, but I spent five minutes going back over it. I didn't find any errors. I looked around the room. The boys were still all head down in their test. The other girls were all looking around the room. I went back to my test and changed an answer, so it was wrong. If there were a bunch of 100% on a test of this level, there would be accusations of cheating. The wrong answer would cost me four percentage points. It was still going to be a solid "A".
I looked at Susan. She was erasing an answer and changing it too. Another girl just turned hers back over to make a change. She flipped through the test. Then she tapped her pencil three times. Stopped then tapped it three times again. She waited. One of the other girls flipped through her test. She then tapped her pencil five times, paused, then tapped it five times again. In the end, all the girls got 96% on the test, but all had different questions wrong as the one they missed. When the bell rang, half the boys were still working on their tests. The girls averaged 96% on that test. The boys averaged 78%. It was just a sign of things to come.
The rest of the day was something of a blur.
Until last period.
Gym class.
I usually loved gym class. Having it as my last period was great too. Being a three-season athlete, I was always excused early on game days. There weren't any games right now. Spring sports had just started practices. I played lacrosse in the Spring.
I really had wanted to play baseball.
I had been pretty good in the local Little League. I was the tallest player on our tournament team and a solid hitter. I also pitched, but mostly played third base. My long arms gave me an edge defensively. We'd gone to regionals and lost in the finals.
I went to sign up the next year, and they told me that I needed to sign up for the softball league. I didn't want to play softball. I wanted to play baseball. I knew I could have made a fight of it, but Mom was sick. It would be wrong to take energy away from anything she needed. I told my dad I would try lacrosse with the girls instead of softball. I was a passable defender, and eventually got good enough to start on the varsity. Still, I cut school every opening day.
Today gym class would be interesting. It was nice day, so we were on the turf soccer field. Our gym teacher, well, he was a drinker and late in the day classes like ours were a challenge for him. He tossed me a soccer ball and a bag of mesh jerseys in two colors and asked me to take the class down to the field, split them up and have a game He told me he'd be in his office if we needed anything.
We got down to the field. There were twenty of us -- ten boys and ten girls. One of the boys made a joke that we should play boys vs girls. Among the ten boys, six were varsity soccer players. I started to speak. I didn't really want to do that. Marybeth Mueller -- the other girl whose boyfriend was absent today, spoke up, "You fag bitches want to put some skin in the game?" Marybeth didn't mince words.
One of the guys spoke up as a joke, "Sure let's bet your clothes vs our clothes."
Marybeth didn't flinch. "Losers run back through the quad." I had hoped to avoid anything too physical today. I didn't really know what I could do yet, and I knew I had some experience with my new, uh, skills. I'm not sure the other girls did. To be honest, I didn't know if this had happened to all the other girls, though it had happened to all the ones I'd spoken to. My fate was seal by what happened next.
Stan Johnson, clean-up hitting third baseman on the varsity baseball team (who by the way I stuck out three times in little league) spoke up, "I can't wait to see Midge's tit's flapping through the quad. This is going to be a joke." He was laughing his head off.
There was only one thing to do.
I flipped him the ball and said, "Boy's kickoff."
II.
Stan was right -- the soccer game was a joke.
I don't remember the exact score; I stopped counting when it was 12-0. The boys were totally outclassed by our strength, speed, and coordination. The girls ran them ragged for an hour. They were all sweat-soaked and exhausted by the time the game was over. Most of the girls had hardly broke a sweat.
My favorite moment was a throw-in I made from just over the midfield line. I really just wanted to see how far I could throw it. I saw Marybeth on the far side of the field. She had a guy on her, but, somehow, I could tell by the way she was carrying herself, that she intended to break for the goal. Soccer wasn't my game, but I could sense the weight of the ball, the wind, even the temperature and humidity. I knew, intrinsically, where to put the ball. I brought the ball back over my head and threw it. It sailed across the field. A week ago, I couldn't have kicked a soccer ball that far.
Marybeth broke for the goal on the throw. She dusted the poor boy assigned to guard her. Another guy charged and decided to challenge her for the ball -- big mistake. I think he thought to knock her down while she was focused on the ball. She ran into her at full speed. The dude went flying. Marybeth barely broke stride. Her kick connected with the ball in the air. The goalie had a bead on it, but it was a powerful kick. It hit him square in the chest and carried him into the goal.
The look on the goalie's face when he got up, wind knocked out of him, was priceless.
"That's the game," Marybeth told the ragged, defeated boys, "Time to pay up, losers."
What happened next was a little scary, but also a little funny.