Kendra Adams stared out the front windshield of her rental car, the sun blazing high, baking the featureless country side before her. The road lay ahead, a single strip of asphalt stretching to that billiard table like horizon. On either side of the road, deep green fields of corn stalks stretched tall; corn silk gently fluttering in the breeze, reaching for those golden rays that nourished its slender length.
The sun pierced the windshield, making the rental cars interior temperature soar, getting Kendra to crank the A/C knob to maximum. It was hot, âtoo hot for this time of yearâ Kendra thought.
âOh this kid better be good...getting me to drive out to east nose bleed to check out the game of some âCorn Fedâ farm boy.â Kendra mumbles, wiping the sweaty strands of curly auburn hair from her forehead. Kendra was the sole recruiter for a small, minute even, Division 1 college in northern Maine. For some reason, an alumnus- a very wealthy alumnus- decided the school needed a competitive mens basketball program. To say Kendra was having no luck was an understatement.
Sheâd scoured every junior college and midnight basketball league for an eligible player. Sheâd rounded out the squad with some less than superb b-ball talent. And in the last of her recruiting swing, sheâd driven to small town in the corn belt to see a 19 year old Ju-Co drop out knick named âCorn Fedâ Mark Bliss . Mark was a 6â 5 â forward, said to be blessed with the touch of âPistol Peteâ and the agility of a guy half his size.
Kendra was facing a doubled tough road for being the recruiter for a school that no one heard of and the fact she was a woman. An unfair stereotype. Her basketball expertise bloomed when she married a well known national basketball writer, nearly 30 years her senior. As time went on she got to love the game, know the game better than many others, so much so she was asked to replace her husband when he went into retirement several years ago. She declined, wanting to spend more time with her husband. But two years ago, at age 35 she was lured to the Maine school to help scout the womenâs basketball team. She did such a remarkable job, assembling the menâs squad fell to her responsibility. Now she was away months at a time, leaving her husband at home.
As the corn went by her windows in a never ending emerald blur it just as suddenly stopped. The corn gave way to a vast open space centered on a large farm house and barn. Thrown in, almost like something out of a postcard, the obligatory wind mill. She also caught the glint of numerous panes of glass, cars assembled in a circle around the side of the home.
âOh now what! Donât tell me I have to compete with other recruiters for the âbest kept secretâ.â Kendra said turning off the asphalt onto the dirt road that wound towards the farm house.However as she drove closer, she could tell these werenât rental cars like hers. No these were pick up trucks and jeeps old enough to have a generation of rust peppering the fender wells and bumpers. Stopping the car, Kendra could see most of the pick-ups had âlever actions, bolt actions and pump actionsâ criss crossing the back windows.
âI am in a different world.â She thought, closing the sedans door witha dull thud. Grabbing her briefcase with one hand, the other went about smoothing the wrinkles out of her mini-skirt. Kendra was a woman of simple beauty. Her auburn shoulder length hair got kinked up in the humid air. She spent hours on hotel tread mills and weight rooms keeping shape. At 35 she knew mother nature had a stop watch running on her body. âHolding it togetherâ now required more sweat to keep going. Her waist was trim but still she retained that bit of padding in the places that only she seemed to notice and that drover her mad. Kendra, in all, was the type of woman that looked beautiful without make-up and turned stunner with a simple application of eye liner and lipstick. Kendra also wriggled, walking in high heels over the gravel and cow patty strewn yard, to adjust her bra that uncomfortably tugged down on her shoulders under the weight of her breasts. Kendra sometimes lamented over a possible breast reduction, an idea suggested by her mom who was also âbig bosomedâ and rebuffed by her particularly "breast fixated" husband. Mature, Kendra knew that this was a mans world and she had to find a way to play the game without compromising who she was deep inside. Kendra had a complex spirit with dreams and fantasies, many unrealized. One day she hoped to find the time to play them out. But for now, work dominated her life.
The odd, almost metallic clang, of the bouncing basketball acted as an audible beacon to Kendra, drawing her towards the barn. Slipping inside Kendra found not stalls for live stock and bails of hay, but instead a full sized basketball court. A loose crowd of mostly young women, and few young men, clustered around the court. Chants and âoohâsâ rose up. Kendra found a spot to survey the play on the court. Taking note that every girl seemed to be tall, slender and blonde. Almost cookie cutter fashion.
Standing at the free throw line was a towering, sandy haird young man. His chiseled jaw jutted out, eyes narrowed in a a piercing gaze locked on the netted rim. The ball slipped from his fingers, arching silently through the air and with a gentle swish the silence was broken by cheers. Backpeddling as fast as some ran forward. The game continued for another ten minutes with Mark running circles, and then some, around the competition. His legs long bundles of muscles and sinew, almost a blur as he ran and swirled. Arms lean and defined, Kendra stood stock still in absolute amazement.
A petite girl beside Kendra cooed to a friend, â Isnât he something.â
Kendra silently nodded to the question not posed to her. When a whistle blew the game broke up and the crowd of girls rushed onto the court surrounding Mark. Scattered around the perimeter of the court, stoop shouldered, panting, gasping for breath was the opponents. Wading forward, Mark smiled and high five the adoring crowd of girls. His arms waved over their heads, almost dwarfing them. As Mark made it off the court he cast glance at Kendra. She stared back, not enamored just with the obvious inkling of potential, but the way he looked. It touched something deep inside her. Her heart skipped a beat. She was utterly smitten.
âHello..â Mark smiled as he passed Kendra.
âHi,â Kendra smiled back, putting out a hand, â My names Kendra Adams..recruiter for..â
Marks enormous palm wrapped around her hand. She shivered with excitement.
âGlad you could come by to see me play maâam.â Mark looked down at Kendra as they walked out of the barn, hangers on and giggling girls in tow. Kendra picked up the pace to keep up with the long legged Mark. Kendra quickly gathered her whits.
Standing out in the brilliant sunlight, Kendra couldnât stop looking at his tall, lean, muscular body. She unconsciously licked her lips, twirling her hair. Shifting in place as he walked away. He drover her to distraction.
âWhy am I so attracted to him!?â Kendra thought, but as he walked away and his seeing the way his muscled body moved with purpose, power and a grace she knew.
Just then she felt a tap on her shoulder, she turned to see a chubby, attractive blonde woman, about her age.
âYou must be Miss Adams. Iâm Markâs mother.â
Kendra smiled, flicking the switch to charming saleswoman, â Hello Mrs. Bliss! So glad to meet you. I am so glad I could come out and visit. Lemme talk to you about Mark...â
Night fell over the Bliss farm, insects seem to roar in the absolute quiet of the country side. Since nightfall Kendra spent the hours talking, cajoling and trying to persuade Mrs. Bliss. She could tell to get to Mark, she would need to win over his mom. So to do that she cut potatoâs, snap stringbeans and shuck corn anything to get to talk with Marks mom.
âEver since Mark started growing so tall and playing basketball so well, people seem to come around all the time.â
Kendra looked up from her shucking, â So why is Mark still here? I think if he came out to the college and we could show him...â
Kendra was cut off by Mrs. Bliss whos face awash with unmistakable sincerity.
â Mrs. Adams, Kendra, Mark is still here because he wants too be. He knows I canât handle the farm all by myself. Even with hired help itâs tough. He shouldâve stayed in school. I know...â She stopped, turning back to the stove.
Kendra eyes dropped back to the corn. Every so often sheâd come across a family hardship or heart wrenching story that would make her ache. She could hear in Markâs mothers voice a pain and fear, that her son may have lost an opportunity to have something she nor anyone else in the Bliss family could have. Unlike fellow recruiters Kendra did not offer the stars and moon to every high school kid that could dribble a basketball. Sheâd seen scrupulous recruiters for big time programs offer whatever it took to lure the players to their schools.
Lure was the proper word Kendra thought, very base animalistic sense of competition amongst some recruiters. Cars, money, condoâs, women were all offered to the young men facing life decisions at their most confused part of their life. Many came from hardships, tough lives where the idea of those things being achievable for just bouncing a ball, was a nirvana. Kendra had to keep a moral balance, she knew she wasnât going to get big time players; but she wanted the best, both in athletic and academic talent. That balancing act threw her off quite often.
Through the peeling wallpaper and chipped plaster walls both women could hear the insistent ping of the basket ball.
Through out the afternoon and evening Kendra tried to get Mark to sit down and talk about the college. But to no avail. After a few minutes a friend would come calling and away heâd go, off to play ball again. About 7 oâclock Mark, and several other friends- mostly giggling 19 year old girls, sat around the long kitchen table to feast on the enormous meal Mrs. Bliss made for the crowd. Kendra, for a while began to relax, turning off the recruiter part of her personality to be herself. Still she was uncomfortable. It was Mark. She was unable to look at him, it drover her mad with distraction. His physical presence was powerful and overwhelming. He had as gentle smile and a body that a Greek god would envy. His eyes were shy, darting away each time she looked at him. he almost seemed uncomfortable with the attention from the outside.
Each muscle defined. Each inch of his skin tanned to a bronze. She was mesmerized by the sinews of his neck and the way the veins traced his forearms. Yet he was a quiet young man, not the slightest hint of arrogance. Humble and self effacing, Kendra watched him noticing the way one young woman hovered close to him,