LATEST FIGHT CARD TITLE BRINGS THE FUN OF FIGHTS
repost from Fight Card
by
Bowie V. Ibarra
Our latest Fight Card entry has just hit the virtual bookshelves…Bridgeport Brawler is from Dave White writing as Jack Tunney. The cover is by our man down under, David Foster, and the ad banners are generously provided by Bobby Nash…
FIGHT CARD: BRIDGEPORT BRAWLER
Chicago, 1953…Patrick ‘The Hammer’ White – the Bridgeport Brawler – is on top of the world. He is the current heavyweight champion confidently getting ready to defend his crown. All the training from father Tim at St Vincent’s orphanage has come full circle, and Pat isn’t figuring on being toppled from the championship mountain anytime soon.
Having seen his shares of ups-and-downs, Pat believes the ‘downs’ are behind him. However, he has forgotten boxing’s dark side. When mob boss Carmen Amello squeezes Pat’s trainer into forcing the champ to take a dive, the ‘downs’ come back with a vengeance.
In the aftermath of disaster, with only bad choices in front of him, the Bridgeport Brawler is going to have to dig deep if he is ever going to hammer his way back to the top…
Bridgeport Brawler is another two-fisted Fight Card tale …
AMAZON LINK: http://tinyurl.com/outb2d5
Here's a preview of the title:
FIGHT CARD: BRIDGEPORT BRAWLER
e-Book
Edition – First Published July 2014
Copyright
© 2014 Dave White
Cover
by David Foster © 2014
FIGHT
CARD:
BRIDGEPORT
BRAWLER
ROUND
1
CHICAGO,
AUGUST 26, 1953
The Stadium, or the Madhouse on Madison as it had been dubbed,
was sure living up to its nickname. I sat in the locker room getting taped up
and ready for another title defense. The door was closed, and the lockers lined
a long hall of brick and concrete beneath the stands. The noise and banging of
feet from the fans made it seem as if I was standing directly under them, as
the place actually shook and vibrated like an earthquake. The sound echoing
through the place like a fierce thunder storm.
Homer Slade, my trainer,
manager, and best friend since growing up at St. Vincent’s Orphanage for Boys
was quiet. He was a lot tenser than I
had ever seen him before. It was almost eerie, because for as long as I had
known Homer, quiet, was not a word you normally associated with him.
I had been the heavyweight
champ for a little over a year, and tonight marked the third title defense I
was making. I felt great, on top of the world really, but I knew something had
been off with Homer for a while now. I tried to tell myself it was just the
daily pressures of the fight game, but I was kidding myself. Homer was using
again, heroin, opium, it didn’t really matter. I suspected he had been since I first
won the crown.
I was one of the youngest to do
so – a feat, I was proud of. Me, Patrick, The
Hammer, White. The Hammer of
course was not chosen by my mother. Father Tim always told me I was something
special. Six foot two and two hundred and thirty pounds of muscle by the time I
was eighteen.
I had been gifted with size and
strength, and a natural agility you couldn’t teach. Father Tim always shook his
head in disbelief. The nickname came from the large paws I sported. At least
that was what I thought. Homer always said it was because I hit like a twenty
pound sledge. He would know.
Homer came to the orphanage,
all 4 foot of him, when I was ten. Truth be told, he hadn’t grown much since
then. He would barely top five-two. It
didn’t matter though, Homer had size where it counted…his heart. At least he
used to.
When Homer came to the
orphanage I was easily the biggest kid there, having been large even at an
early age. Homer introduced himself by attempting to cold cock me. I remember
the look on his face after he came off the ground and hit me with everything he
had, only to see me smile at him. Homer learned about my fist first hand that
day.
Homer looked like an alien when
he finally came out of it, half his face swollen and purple. It was the
beginning of a binding friendship, even though Father Tim made me run till I
puked for hitting Homer.
I was only five when I graced Father
Tim’s doorstep. The sad part of it was I caused myself to be an orphan. The
memories always stayed with me, haunted me at times. My father had left us that
year. I guess six kids and a battle with the bottle had been too much for him.
I never minded him leaving. He
was an ass, with a capitol A. Mom was the best though, always doing whatever it
took in order to give us whatever she could. We got by. Luckily the place on
Parnel, in Bridgeport, a vastly integrated neighborhood in Chicago, had two
separate apartments to rent to provide us a small amount of income. Mom
couldn’t work, having four young kids in the house to take care of, but she
took in washing and mending when she could.
I was a twin, as well as my two
other sisters, Eleanor and Elaine, who were three years my senior. My twin was
my sister Patricia. So mom was stuck with four kids under the age of ten. We
also had two older brothers, Ray and Don, also twins, but fifteen years older.
Ray was an alcoholic, and Don
had been killed in a motorcycle accident. I still had his old Indian. I had
restored it to its showroom appearance. It was the only thing, other than me
and Ray, which survived the fire.
I remember it clearly. I was terrorizing
my sister Patricia as she lay in the pull out bed where we slept. She yelled
for me to go to sleep, but I wanted to read the new comic book I had.
I sat there with a lighter I
had managed to swipe from my brother Ray, the low flame barely bright enough to
see under the covers, let alone wake my mom. Patricia kept threatening to get
up and tell. I told her to stuff it, I was almost done. I called her a brat and
that’s when she slapped me, knocking the lighter from my grasp. I threw back
the covers, trying desperately to get the flames out, but it was too late.
I was so focused on trying to put
it out, I never noticed Patricia hung up in the sheets. The bed went up like an
inferno, engulfed Patricia and quickly the curtains and couch. The house being
small and cramped, was a trap for my mom and my sisters. I panicked and ran
through the kitchen and out the back door before I ever realized my family was
trapped.
The screams brought me to my senses, but by
then it was too late. I tried to race back in, but was grabbed firmly in a set
of strong arms, which pulled me away from the place, and out into the alley.
I watched in horror as the
house quickly became a funeral pyre, never noticing it had been Ray who dragged
my away. I had thought he was in bed sleeping, but it turned out he was out
getting stoned somewhere.
I guess I should have been
happy to have one less death on my conscious, but truth be told, Ray was
already dead. He just didn’t know it. Years of drug and alcohol abuse had taken
their toll.
I remember Ray dropping me off
at the orphanage. I didn’t understand at the time why he couldn’t take care of
me? Didn’t he love me? I was his
brother.
I hated him for a long time,
but eventually realized it was because he loved me that he gave me the best
opportunity to survive. Father Tim and the orphanage did the rest. It was
father Tim who eventually convinced me to go see Ray when he was dying from the
big ‘C’. I made peace with Ray, and with myself.
Homer brought me out of my
thoughts by pressing roughly on a shoulder nerve.
I barked at him. “What are ya’
trying to do, take me out of the fight before it even starts?”
Homer was sweating profusely,
almost shaken like the grim reaper was hanging over his shoulder.
“What’s the matter with you
Homer? You strung out again?”
Homer’s eyes bulged as he
started nervously rubbing his hands together so hard I thought the skin was
gonna come off.
“Listen, Pat. I got myself into
some trouble. I need your help, you’re the only one who can help me right now.”
It was then the anvil dropped
on me. A punch so hard to the gut I wasn’t sure I would breathe again.
I knew Homer was using. What I
didn’t know was he was in deep with the mob. A guy by the name of Carmen
Amello. They didn’t come any more mean and ruthless…well not that I had ever
known.
I managed to coax the rest of
the story out of Homer, but wished I hadn’t. Homer had promised Carmen a lay
down, a dive! I couldn’t believe what I was hearing, even as he was spilling
it.
“Please, Pat. Just this once,
and then we can start over, get ya right back in contention and take the crown
back. I didn’t know what else to do.”
Homer started crying. I felt
like joining him, but my tears were tears of anger. I tagged him with a slap to
the face sending him over the training table and crashing to the floor. His
eyes lit up with fear as I advanced on him, grabbing his collar and yanking him
off the grown and staring eye to eye.
“I won’t do it! You hear me? I
worked too hard for this, Homer, I earned it. I deserve it!” I flung Homer away
with all my might, sending him crashing into the wall, semi-consciousness.
I was fuming as I stood over
him, spitting words rather than saying them. It didn’t matter, Homer was
oblivious. I sat on the table and tried to think. How could he do this to me? I
thought we were the best friends in the world.
I moved to the sink and filled
a glass with water. I tossed it on his face bringing him around. I helped him
up and sat him on the training table. A couple slaps to the face brought him completely
out of it. The fear was still in his eyes as I stared in to them and spoke.
“Homer, this is the last straw,
you understand? I will do this to save your miserable life, but afterward,
you’re on your own.” Homer’s head sagged, as he meekly nodded. “Now, tape me
up, I guess I’m gonna learn how to take a dive!”
ROUND 2
The noise was deafening as we
walked down the hall toward the ring. I was a hometown boy made good, and the
fans loved it. The previous fights had all been brawls, which had also whipped them
into a frenzy. Amazing how the sight of two guys beating each other bloody
could stir people up.
The bombshell of what Homer had
laid on me had almost made me forget about my opponent. I wasn’t surprised the
mob wanted this guy to take me down. He
was a fellow Dago named Rocko. Not very
original, but the mob was never known for originality, just brutality.
I made my way down the aisle as
the announcer finished introducing Rocko to a loud chorus of boos. I was just
climbing into the ring when he announced me. “In this corner, wearing green
shorts…Patrick The Hammer White!”
He drew out my name loudly and
the crowd, which was already raising the roof, erupted in an ear shattering
roar – stomping their feet and whooping it up at the top of their lungs. I half
expected pieces of the stadium to come raining down from all the thunderous
foot stamps.
I raised my hands and moved
around in my corner stirring the crowd up even further. I looked across the
ring at my opponent. He was as tall as me, but a little thicker around the waist.
Too much pasta. I chuckled to myself.
His hair was dark and greasy
looking, and the unibrow he sported threatened to overtake the protruding cro-magnum
forehead. He looked like he needed a shave, but maybe his five o’clock shadow
was just thicker than most. I noticed the slight curl of his lips as I looked
into the black like orbs, which somehow pierced the shadows of his eye sockets.
His nose was thick and bent to the right a bit, obviously pushed in a few
times.
I smiled as the ref called us
to the center of the ring. I was smiling at my opponent the whole time, I
barely heard the ref’s words. In truth they weren’t much different than all the
other refs I had listened to in countless other fights.
It was strange, I was almost
giddy…slap-happy maybe. I should have been angry at the world, but somehow
something inside just pushed forward and I was okay with everything.
Maybe it was my way of coping
with the fact that in order to save Homer, I needed to take a dive to this mook
across from me. I couldn’t let it bother me. Homer and I were more like
brothers than friends. If taking a dive meant getting him out of trouble, and
hopefully off the drugs…well I guessed I was okay with it.
The bell sounded and Rocko and
I moved to the center of the ring. Rocko charged ahead throwing some wild
arcing jabs I swatted away as I danced around him. He continued the assault, as
I avoided all the blows without so much as a glancing shot. I decided to give
the crowd a bit of their money’s worth. I was gonna dive, but Rocko was gonna
get some pain inflicted upon him before that happened.
I started hammering his
forearms and shoulders every time he threw a jab. I watched the shock on his
face as the pain registered, the numbing effect was always fun to watch when
you pounded an opponent’s arms and shoulders into submission.
Rocko backed off a little, his
arms sagging to his sides as he danced around and tried to shake the feeling
back into them. I spent the rest of the first round just dancing around him and
throwing some meaningless jabs until the bell rang and we headed to our
corners.
Homer jumped in the ring with
the stool, some water, and a bucket. I took a quick swig and swirled it around
my mouth, before purposely missing the bucket and spitting it on Homer’s shirt.
I smiled at him, but he didn’t return the favor. I could tell by the sweat on
his forehead and the nervous twitching of the mustache that bounced on his
upper lip as he spoke.
“Pat, are you sure you’re gonna
throw the fight. I mean if not, I will get out of Dodge now.”
I stood and jokingly jabbed him
in the gut.
“Don’t worry, Homer. I’ll take
the dive, but not until I’ve have a bit of fun, and my Neanderthal friend over
there has taken a little punishment.”
Homer shook his head.
“Hey! I’m doing this because of
your screw-up, Homer, not mine. Doing it my way, the crowd gets their money’s
worth, and I don’t look like so much of a chump!”
I shoved him away as the bell
rang for round two and headed out to the middle.
Rocko was a bit more cautious
this time around, he tried to dance around and shoot jabs at me, but he was
moving in slow motion. I danced around him like he was standing still, tossing
a few half-hearted jabs at him then dancing away like I was avoiding him. He
had little foot work and stumbled about like a Mack truck moving down an alley.
It was then that something
caught my eye in the audience. It was the mobster Carmen Amello and a few of
his goon squad. I caught his eye and he shot me a smile, tipping what looked
like a brand spanking new fedora at me. He accomplished all this without ever
removing what looked like a fine Cuban from his mouth. I felt a sudden bit of
rage forming in me…right up till I saw the large fist hurdling my way.
It was too late to move completely
out of the way, but I did manage to deflect a little of the blow, which still nearly
took my head off. It was a funny feeling for me. I had never been knocked out
before. I’d been sent to the mat once or twice, but this shot had nearly taken
me out.
It was a strange feeling,
almost numbing in a way. Time seemed to stand still and a ringing bounced
around in my head. The mat approached me in a sea of blurred vision, then I
kissed it.
I could hear the crowd oohing
and gasping, but it was like an echo, a strange and distant echo.
I heard the ref counting, “One…two…three…”
He reached eight before I managed to get up.
I shook my head, holding my hands out.
The ref grabbed my head and
looked into my eyes. “Son, you okay?”
I nodded and he waved for the
fight to continue. I spent the rest of the round dancing around trying to clear
my head and keep it attached to my neck. I managed to escape any further damage
as the round ended and I moved to my corner.
Homer used the sponge to wipe
water on my head, allowing it to roll down my body. It felt good, most of my
senses had returned, but my head still throbbed. Homer stood in front of me and
held up a few fingers as he spoke.
“How many fingers you see,
Pat?”
I swatted them away. “Two you
idiot, now get out of my way so I can get back in there.”
Homer grabbed the stool, ducked
under the ropes, and out of the ring.
I stared across at Rocko who wore
a huge grin on his face. I felt a twinge of anger welling up inside of me. I
quickly suppressed it, deciding me and Rocko were going to have lots of fun
before I took my swan dive. He was gonna beat the champ, but he was gonna feel
it for months afterward – months. I pounded my gloves together and headed out
to the center of the ring.
Rocko almost ran at me, the bloodlust
in his eyes as he sought to put me away. He threw jabs and hooks, I blocked, ducked,
and danced around him. He grimaced and chased me around the ring, trying
combinations and finally seeking to bull me in to the corner.
I timed it perfectly, planting
my foot while pivoting my hips and using his own momentum to toss him into the
corner where he had sought to pin me. I stepped in and shot a few left handed
jabs toward his face.
He naturally brought his hands
up to deflect, so I planted a firm right handed shot into his rib cage, causing
his breath and his mouthpiece to fly from his mouth.
I threw a few jabs into his
face then stepped back allowing him come off the ropes. He wobbled toward me,
his eyes almost rolling about in their sockets. I caught the look on Carmen’s
face, the smile no longer glaring at me. The cigar had been removed, an
animalistic snarl replacing it.
I winked at him and shot him my
flashiest smile. I then turned my attention to Rocko. He had shaken the cobwebs
out of his head, but I could see he was holding an elbow against his ribs. I
allowed him to come at me again, absorbed a few of his jabs, even allowed him
to land a few glancing blows, which I made out to be far harder than they were.
I danced around a bit again,
moving away from Rocko like I was trying to clear my head. Truth was I was
feeling sick to my stomach. Needing to take a dive to a piece of scum like Rocko
was goading. He was worthless and had no business winning the title. I tried to
push the thought from my head.
We danced a little more, threw
a few more meaningless jabs, and then the bell rang.
I plopped on the stool as if
exhausted, letting Homer worked on me while he vented.
“What are you doing, Pat? I
understand you not wanting to do this, but I don’t think my heart can take much
more.”
I turned toward Homer. I knew I
must have looked scary. I always did when I felt the kind of rage coming over
me like I felt at that moment. Homer knew as well and wisely backed away from
me.
“I get it Homer,” I said in a
low growl. “I understand perfectly. You couldn’t keep your nose clean, and now I
have to clean your mess up again. But it will be on my terms. You got it? My
terms.”
Round four was slow and
methodical, we moved around the ring feeling each other out. Rocko thought I
was gonna be a pussycat and lay down nicely for him, but that was proving to be
a painful mistake. He had become uncertain as to how much I was willing to hurt
him.
On the other hand, I had come
into this thinking I was still young and had plenty left in the tank to capture
back the title and wreak some havoc along the way. If it meant saving Homer and
hopefully straightening him out, it was a small price to pay
I decided this was the round. I
would make it look good, but I would take the dive. I was tired of the charade.
I just wanted to get it over and then drown my sorrows in a bottle of scotch
and a few buxom brunettes – maybe a blond as well.
I was almost cheerful as I
waded in and threw a few half-hearted jabs at Rocko, which he easily ducked. This
seemed to light a fire under him. He started throwing his own jabs as well as a
few roundhouses and uppercuts. I allowed him to land a few. They actually stung
a bit, but I still grinned at him, egging him on to finish the job.
Rocko attacked me like a man
possessed. He felt he had the momentum, and he did. I was gonna lay down and
relinquish my title. I telegraphed a right hook, which Rocko easily blocked. He
pounded a couple quick jabs into my face. I faked anger and launched a wild
right. He deflected the blow and countered with a combo to my midsection. I
wobbled and acted winded.
Rocko stepped in, faked a left, and then
unloaded a right-handed, straight-armed, shot that I allowed to find its mark.
It hurt more than I expected, shooting jolts of electricity across my jaw and
sending me to the canvas.
I gathered my wits, rolled
about a bit like I was dead to the world. I let the count go to seven this time,
raised up a little and got on my feet. The ref was trying to make sure I was okay,
when Rocko stepped in and gave me a sucker rabbit punch to the back of my head.
It knocked me for a loop and caused me to hit the mat and bounce off it.
Little glitters of light
floated around my head like a thousand stars and the world whirled around me. I
shook the cobwebs out as best I could and got to my feet.
I was enraged by the sucker
punch and all sense of the reality left me. I saw nothing but red like a
charging bull. I pushed the ref out of the way and advanced on Rocko.
He started jabbing at me, even trying
to throw another straight-arm, but I was in a void. I deflected his jabs and
the straight-arm with ease, then stepped in and landing an over-hand shot to
his temple, which buckled his knees.
I moved in and hammered a few
jabs through his gloves as he sought to protect himself. I bent my knees and
powered through my hips with a left-handed hook, which landed in his floating
rib section.
I felt Rocko’s rib give way and
I quickly followed up with a straight right to his sternum. I backed away and
began to pound on his forearms. When he could no longer hold them up, I moved
in and pounded first his right and then his left shoulder, pretty much
crippling him
I smelt blood and stepped in
with a left hook, snapping his head to the side. I followed it with an uppercut,
with every bit of the two hundred and thirty pounds of my frame behind it.
The blow connected solid,
sounding like the big thump you hear when the punter kicks off in a football
game. Rocko came off his feet a good six inches, before finally crumbling to
the mat.
I knew in that instance I had
probably forfeited Homer’s life and possibly my own. It was a sick sensation as
the world around me seemed to move into a vacuum, the sounds distant. I looked
out into the audience and saw Carmen and his goons hurrying down the aisle away
from the ring.
The ref stood over Rocko giving
him the ten count, even though we both knew he wasn’t getting up anytime soon.
I turned toward my corner and saw Homer just hanging on the ropes, a dazed look
on his face.
Homer knew we were done for,
and there was no fight left in him.
The ref finished the count and
the ring was swarmed by reporters as well as Rocko’s trainer and a medic. I
didn’t even turn to see if they revived him with the smelling salts. I just
waded through the reporters who jammed their pencils and pads of paper into my
face. Each one trying to get a few words out of me. I brushed a few of them off
and climbed down from the ring.
Homer was already being
escorted to the locker room, and two of the meat pies hired as bodyguards and
bouncers helped hurry me through the crowd as well.
I half expected to see Carmen
and his goons in the hall as I was guided toward the locker room. Camera bulbs were
flashing still, and loud questions were hurled my way until the entrance door to
the back hallway closed and drowned them out.
The hall was empty except for
several maintenance people and a few reporters lucky enough to have backstage
passes. They knew better than to ask me any questions until after I had been untaped,
showered, and dressed. Then they would get first dibs at the conference Homer
gave after every fight. I wasn’t sure they were gonna be happy with this
conference, because I wasn’t sure if Homer would even give one.
I pushed open the door of the
locker room and Homer was just sitting on a bench staring at the floor. I found
myself speechless for the first time since me and Homer became friends.
Part of the reason we were such
good friends was we never kept secrets from one another, no subject was taboo.
Homer never hid the drug use from me. And as much as I hated the fact he did drugs,
I didn’t condemn him for it.
However, he had goofed up this
time. Being the friend I was, I should have saved him, even though it meant
taking a dive and losing the title. But that didn’t matter. The title wasn’t
why I knocked out Rocko. My simple inability to control my temper caused it.
Father Tim always warned me a fighter who couldn’t control his temper, could
never stay on top, no matter how talented he was.
I had controlled it though – at
least up until tonight. I let it loose outside the ring once in a while, but
once I stepped into the ring it was buried away in some deep recess of my mind. Father Tim’s words had stuck with me. I was
always in control in the ring. So why, of all nights, was this the night I
chose to let the temper out? I guess the fact that I needed to throw a fight
cost me the strength I had always used to suppress it.
It didn’t matter now. Now I
needed to figure out a way to save my friend and get us the out of Chicago,
maybe even the country. Homer looked up at and shot me a half-hearted smile.
“Pat, I don’t blame you a bit.
I did this to myself, I never should have expected you to take a dive, never
should have asked.”
“No, but you did.” I found
myself at a loss for words. Nothing I could think of sounded right or would
help the matter. “I just lost it.” I shook my head. “I should have been a
better friend and controlled myself, taken the dive. I’m sorry, Homer. I truly
am.”
I stared at him for a minute
and noticed for the first time how much he had aged over the last few years.
Homer was five-foot-five on a good day, but was always built like a fireplug. I
had watched him take out many guys who thought his shortness meant he was easy
prey. They had learned the truth the hard way.
Now, he was different – the
dark curly hair showing some spots of grey, the bags under his eyes as well as
the dark rings, and the paunch that now hung where once a washboard had
existed. The drugs had really taken their toll on him, making him look ten
years older than he was.
I felt a deep sense of sorrow
in my gut. Not just that I hadn’t taken the dive, because as his friend I hadn’t
found a way to stop him from the drugs. If I had, maybe things would have
worked out differently.
I found myself thinking back to
the days at the orphanage, but Father Tim always said to never dwell on the
past. “What’s done is done,” he would say. “You can’t change it, only learn
from it.”
Homer broke me out of my
thoughts.
“Take a shower, Pat, and get
changed. Let’s get the post-fight conference with the reporters out of the way.
Afterward, I think we should go out and paint the town. There are a few bottles
of scotch with our names on them somewhere.”
“Homer, we need to get you out
of here. Carmen will be looking for you – and it won’t be to pour you a few
fingers of scotch, trust me.”
“Forget it, Pat. It’s time I
started taking care of my own problems. I’ll get things squared with Carmen. It
might take a while, but I’ll figure out a way to pay him back.”
I shook my head. “Not so sure
that’s the best idea. Carmen isn’t known for his generosity.”
“Don’t worry about it, champ.
Tonight is about you keeping the title. Tonight we paint the town red.”
He never knew how true those
words would turn out to be.
================
Check out more of the 'Bridgeport Brawler' at the Amazon link HERE.
And if you like outstanding fight stories, then ZBFbooks.com has some picks for you. Pick up your copy of the 'Pit Fighters' series today in paperback or kindle. Follow the adventures of the fighters in the south Texas fight stable, San Uvalde International, in 'Baptism by Fire' and 'Double Cross'. Get them HERE. The stories feature a Scottish boxer trying to make a name for himself again.
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BOWIE V. IBARRA is the author of the acclaimed 'Down the Road' zombie horror series from Permuted Press. He earned a BFA in Acting and a MA in Theatre History from Texas State University. His latest titles explore superhero themes, including 'Codename: La Lechusa', 'Room 26 and the Army of Xulhutdul', and 'Tejano Star and the Vengeance of Chaplain Skull'.
Network with Bowie at his official website, ZBFbooks.com, the leader in Tex-Mexploitation literature.
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