H
ALIFAX
To the left, displayed with equal prominence, was the prize-winning photo of Louie unconscious in the ring, mouth open, as lifeless as a harpooned tuna.
“Hey,” said Louie as soon as Johnny sat down. “Let's work the ball.”
Johnny struggled to his feet with a sigh. Turmoil was gone, but the essence was the same, here in this shabby sanctuary built on hope, pain, and the promise of salvation. Johnny had laughed when he heard about Ownie nailing MacKenzie, and somehow that punch, landed in front of an entire newsroom, recorded on a surveillance camera, added an outlandish footnote to Turmoil's tragic tale. It was better, everyone decided, to talk about
that
instead of Turmoil's passing, which had been as abrupt and dreamlike as his arrival in the city.
“Did he go straight down?” Johnny had asked Ownie.
“Like an anchor.” Ownie had shrugged.
Thump
.
Johnny checked the glove-shaped clock and noticed that Tootsy had added pictures on one wall, all black and white, some the colour of tea stains. He recognized a few from Ownie's basement: Tommy Coogan posing with a lion in South Africa, Thirsty at a restaurant table with Ownie, Butch with golf balls under his eyes.
Thump
.
Louie was wearing a T-shirt with Marciano's face silk-screened on his chest.
Thump
.
Ownie was working with little Ricky, who had grown five inches. Ricky's body had become confused by the growth spurt, which had left him with gangly limbs, an unfamiliar nose, and adolescent acne. His brother, a wannabe who claimed he'd been shot in one leg, resulting in a badass limp, had been arrested for stealing a car, but the kid was still straight.
Ownie spent ten minutes on balance, getting Ricky's feet properly positioned, the right distance apart. “It's the foundation for everything.” Now the trainer was showing him, step by step, how to throw a complete combo to the head. The left jab followed by a right cross and the left hook. One, two, three.
“You'll catch onto it,” Ownie assured him. “Just practise.” Ricky nodded.
Johnny heard stomping on the stairs. The door swung open.
“Is this the best you can do?” Butch barked accusingly.
“It's better than some of the dumps you trained in.” Ownie turned around.
Two steps behind his brother was Suey Simms, who, after catching up and settling into a chair, urged Butch, “Take your coat off, brother, and stay a while.” Butch removed a thick knit sweater and a salt-and-pepper cap. He eyed the gym suspiciously.
Louie dropped the ball and moved across the room.
“How would you like to go a round with a senior citizen?” Ownie asked Louie. “That man there is so old that you can hear him dying.”
Louie blinked and nodded no.
Slowly, Butch walked over to the heavy bag and instinctively took two shots.
Boom. Boom
. It was the first thing you did in a gym. Some trainers liked their fighters to work on heavier bags, he remembered, some preferred the lighter ones. Butch went into a crouch and threw a barrage of punches, combos to show that his timing was good.
“You can still shoeshine, Butch,” Suey decided. “You can shoeshine.”
Butch squared himself in front of the speed bag and tapped a little tune. Every tap was a note: a slow march from the poor streets, a jig into the Garden. If he wanted to, he could, after all of these years, hear Lou Stillman yelling insults across his gym, he could see the doorman collecting fifteen cents, and he could feel himself sitting on a bench, face coated with Vaseline, waiting his turn to climb into ring number two. In the air was cigarette smoke, a mist of sweat, and nerves. “Slip and slide baby, slip and slide.”
Ownie watched Butch and nodded.
When Butch was eight, Ownie took him into a dressing room where an old sock-peddler, a preacher when he wasn't in the ring, was sitting on a bench reading a Bible. Looking up, the preacher fixed his eyes on Butch and drawled, “My oh my, you're just a little schoolboy. Does your mama know you're here?”
Butch and another schoolboy were supposed to go four rounds before the fights started. The preacher said he'd go in Butch's corner for free. It was cold that night; they must have been out of coal, and a longshoreman was coated with foulsmelling
fertilizer that stung Ownie's eyes. There was moonshine, and horse pictures on the walls, and everyone was talking about a ruckus on the waterfront that morning. While hoisting up a steer in a sling, something had shifted and the animal had plunged over the side.
In those days, the kids didn't get paid; the crowd threw change in the ring. “Look busy,” the preacher urged Butch. “The better the show, the more they throw.”
The room was filled with hawking men on crates and wooden chairs. “Hey, mama's boy,” one taunted. “Where's your titty bottle?”
In the first round, Butch danced around, afraid he'd be hurt, and then the preacher told him: “Man, you're as fast as a wingbird. Ain't nobody goin' to hit you,” and the words sounded good.
Butch and the other schoolboy split four bucks, maybe five, after they counted the pennies and dimes, enough for some grub, enough to fill them up. When Butch came home that night, Ownie remembered, their mother never said a word.
“You know, Butch,” Suey said. “I still think Percy won most of them fights.”
Finished with the bag, Butch rolled across the hardwood floor, past the dusty crosses, past a photo of Turmoil triumphant in a Halifax ring. Butch's nose was flat, the area around his eyes looked like an old stuffed sock. It was all the same, Ownie decided, it was all the same.
“That kid there.” Butch pointed at Ricky, who stiffened, not knowing what to expect. “He looks like he's made of something. Like he could go somewhere.”
“Solid gold, brother.” Ownie made it sound as certain as anything in life.
Ricky lowered his head and smiled.
Here are the old names I picked out of the papers. My favourites are Ransom for a man and Fairy for a woman. Ivy Delight had a nice ring, along with Princetta. I didn't find any starting with X or Y, and just one K. I noted that many of the women's names ended with A.
Your father.
Ada, sister of Ida
Adelbert
Adret, mother of Vernetta, Raya, and Tahirah
Albina
Alfretta
Alma, sister of Burns
Alonza
Alonzo
Aloysius
Alpha
Alpheus
Althena
Alvil
Ambrose
Amedee
Amilene
Ancil
Annison, father of Enos
Annora
Arabella
Ardeth
Ardis
Arizonia
Artamus
Arvilla
Arzelie
Asa
Aseph
Audley
Auldon, brother of Mercie and Lovitt
Avelena
Aveling
Avonne
Avora, sister of Rhea, Lela, Phebe, and Willoughby
Azade
Beda
Bent, father of Eudora
Bernetta
Beryl
Beulah
Bowman
Brenna
Bryson
Budia
Burnett
Burnley
Byrnus
Cantley, brother of Arvilla and Fielding
Chestena
Cloe
Clotilda
Colena
Corrilda
Delle
Delma
Delmer
Delphina, sister of Elta and Melda
Demmick
Denson
Dimerize
Dimock
Dolena
Donelda, sister of Guilford
Doran, brother of Elva and Meda
Dorette
Dorina
Drucella
Easterby
Eben, brother of Spurgeon
Eckhardth
Eden
Effie
Egon
Elbridge
Elden
Eldena
Eldibert
Eldora
Electa
Eleda, sister of Nina and Roxella
Eli
Eliam
Elisha
Eliza
Ellard
Elliwishes
Elmor
Elva
Emelda
Emery
Emiline, mother of Electa
Enos, brother of Amos
Ensley
Erdine
Erema Flo Ella
Ervina
Esau
Estella, daughter of Elisha, sister of Elta
Ettrick
Euphemia
Evelina
Everine
Ezekiel, husband of Radie
Fairy
Fenwick
Fielding
Firmin
Flavian
Flossy, sister of Daisy and Fowness
Ford, husband of Minerva
Garnetta
Gezina
Gideon
Glenola
Gonzo
Grampian Bella
Hance
Handley, husband of Melitta, son of Amos and Linnie, brother of Mamie and Goldie
Harlen Elvert
Harmia
Havelock, husband of Orien, predeceased by first wife, Gezina
Hennessey
Hezekiah
Hibbutt
Holgar
Horatio
Hulda
Hulga
Idaline
Idella
Ilean
Imogene
Ina
Inez
Iola
Iona, sister of Vergie, wife of Orville
Ivor
Ivy Delight, sister of Ancie and Opal, wife of Cannice
Jacinth
Janetta
Jeromia
Johnena
Jovita
Kelton
Laliah, sister of Alvah
Lavin
Lavinia
Lawney
Leander
Leila
Lemuel
Leontine
Leoro
Leota
Leoutrah
Lermoa
Leta, sister of Laurena
Lexena
Lezin
Liah
Lillias
Locklin
Lomer
Lorena, daughter of Beulah
Lorinda
Lottie
Lovitt
Luelle
Lyda
Lylla, daughter of Lyman
Lyman
Mabelle
Mafalda
Maisie
Manetta
Manley
Marcella
Marcellin
Maritta
Marvel
Mayford
Mayola
Meda
Medley
Mehetabel
Melba
Melda
Melitha
Melzena
Mercie
Merdina
Meta
Minna
Moody
Moya
Moyle
Murdena
Murna
Muroye
Myrna
Nedra
Nema, sister of Nonie, Ardith, and Nan
Nettie
Neva
Nona
Nuala
Oda Belle
Olena
Ona
Oneita
Ora Generva, sister of Kelton
Oran
Orellia
Orien
Orinda
Orlea
Ormal
Orphima
Orris
Parmenas
Parmilla
Pemmiuphy
Perley
Phares
Pharonie
Philson
Princetta
Prior
Proctor
Queenie
Raeburn
Ransom, son of Odessa
Rathbone
Relief
Remegius
Retha
Roblin
Roboam
Rosamond
Rosella, sister of Angel
Roswell
Rowena
Rowlin
Rustin
Sedella
Seretha
Seth
Seward
Silvanus
Spurgeon
Stairs
Stricklen
Suther
Sylvan
Teemis
Thursa
Tressa
Treva
Truth
Tuddyd
Ula
Ulric
Uriah
Vally
Vanetta
Venette
Verner
Vernetta, sister of Hulga, Locklin, and Moyle
Verona, daughter of Addie
Vesta
Vida
Vina
Viola, sister of Elva
Volney
Wanetta
Wilda
Willard Bazel
Williamina
Woodbury
Wynn
Zachariah, father of Titus, Judson, and Hosea
Zena
Zillah
Zita
Not old, but worth chucking at you:
Pussy, Rango, Chicks, Huck, Skippy, Tootsie, Scruffy, Doll, Checker, Dooks, Ebb, Duff, Snorky, Dancie, Bun, Goose, and the brothers Spud, Babe, Sunny, Bub, and Lol.