The only things keeping the Terriers from being competitive being the rules of basketball, the laws of gravity and the will of God. Big Dick Buster, sophomore starting point guard was the lead enforcer of that will.
It had been a miserable game, in all aspects. Dicky had shot the ball twelve times and only made two shots. He turned the ball over five times and only dealt out three assists. It was a catastrophe. A failure in leadership from a coaching and a player perspective. They lost on Coach Jordan’s strategy and with the ball in Richard’s hand. The guilt was well deserved. The accountability he felt in his heart had been completely earned.
Big Dick had lost them the game. Nothing was said in the aftermath. The loss had been too great for anybody to say anything at all. That had just been the moment. Richard knew that silence was always temporary.
The door to the school gym opened up unceremoniously and Richard threw his backpack on the gym floor. It was still early. The school had just opened up and students had begun trickling in. Class wouldn’t start for an hour. Coach Jordan had an arrangement with the custodial staff. They opened up the gym a bit early and the basketball team got to practice their shots and run their drills. The hope was that if they kept running drills, eventually they’d be running up the score. How much was hope worth? How long did hope last?
Richard, in his dress shirt and with his black and green Boston Celtics basketball stared at the otherwise empty court.
Empty, barring another person…
“Didn’t figure you the early bird Donnie-Boy.”