Following

Table of Contents

Cover/Copyright Introduction Chapter 1: In the Beginning Chapter 2: Starting Strong Chapter 3: Thunderstruck Chapter 4: No-Brainer Chapter 5: The Odd Couple Chapter 6: Defense and Offense Chapter 7: This is the End, Beautiful Friend, the End Chapter 8: The Gathering Clouds Chapter 9: The Silver Lining Chapter 10: Childhood's End Chapter 11: With a Little Help from My Friends Chapter 12: FNG Chapter 13: Home Chapter 14: Scapegoat Chapter 15: Space Available Chapter 16: Friends Chapter 17: Destiny Chapter 18: The Dogs of War Chapter 19: Until We Meet Again Chapter 20: Take the Long Way Home Chapter 21: A Brief Detour Chapter 22: Reconnecting Chapter 23: Summer of Love Chapter 24: Back to School Chapter 25: Behind the Scenes Chapter 26: FNG Again Chapter 27: Summertime Livin' Chapter 28: Agents of Change Chapter 29: Agents of Change II Chapter 30: Escape Plan Chapter 31: Eastbound Chapter 32: Starting Again Chapter 33: Actions Chapter 34: Reactions Chapter 35: Family Matters Chapter 36: Getting to Know You Chapter 37: Meeting the Family Chapter 38: Transitions Chapter 39: Transitions, Part II Chapter 40: Together Chapter 41: Union and Reunion Chapter 42: Standby to Standby Chapter 43: New Arrivals Chapter 44: Pasts, Presents and Futures Chapter 45: Adding On Chapter 46: New Beginnings Chapter 47: Light and Darkness Chapter 48: Plans Chapter 49: Within the Five Percent Chapter 50: Decompression Chapter 51: Decompression, Part II Chapter 52: Transitions, Part III Chapter 53: TBD Chapter 54: Into the Sunset

In the world of Enfield Undrowned

Visit Enfield Undrowned

Completed 4078 Words

Chapter 25: Behind the Scenes

1972 0 0

05 January 1992 - Hardwick Road, Enfield, Massachusetts

“You’ve made incredible progress in the two and a half months we’ve been working together, Darrin.”

“I had to, Coach, if I wanted to stop getting shoved into the boards, dropped to the ice, having my pocket picked...”

“Okay, you ready?” Darrin nodded. Jeff snapped a low pass from the left corner, well to the side of the net. Darrin was waiting in the left slot; he blasted it back at net, sending the puck through one of the small openings of the target tied over the goalmouth. Jeff fed him pass after pass. Darrin placed shot after shot perfectly, changing his targets and scoring goal after goal.

“GO!” Jeff shouted after Darrin scored on the last shot. Darrin broke for the far end of the ice. Jeff moved behind the net they’d been using, retrieving the puck he’d reserved. Darrin came back down the ice at full speed. Jeff played a defenseman clearing the puck out of his end. He passed the puck to Darrin as he curled back out of the zone.

Darrin picked up the pass in stride; he drove back down the ice. He curled around the far net and came back at Jeff, now playing against Darrin. Darrin closed on Jeff at full speed. He shifted to his backhand side to pass Jeff. Jeff leaned to follow; Darrin popped the puck through Jeff’s legs. Darrin cut hard to his forehand side. He was by Jeff in a split-second. Jeff turned in time to see Darrin blast a shot from the top of the face-off circle. The puck entered the net “top shelf,” just under the crossbar.

“YES!” Darrin yelled, pumping his fist. He turned back to Jeff with a wide smile. Jeff skated over and bumped gloves with the freshman, then ruffled his hair.

“Nice job! It’s good to see you’re still sharp, even after the Christmas break. If you don’t make the team next year, I’ll eat my jock.”

“Um, ew, Coach?”

“Alright, maybe not my jock. Maybe one of those pickle-covered abominations you call a hot dog in Chi-town.”

“Don’t knock ‘em ‘till you’ve tried ‘em, Coach.”


“Hey, John, how was your break?” Jeff asked John Kessler when he walked into the coaches’ office the next day.

The head coach sat at his desk with his head in his hands. “It was good until today,” the older man grumbled.

“Why? What happened?”

“Wiznewski’s out. Academically ineligible; almost straight Fs on his report card. That’s going to leave us short at left wing.”

“Man!” The team was well-balanced this year, though only average in performance; they’d needed a spark of greatness before but this was going to cause major problems now. Then a lightbulb went off for Jeff. “Are we allowed to replace him?”

“Sure, but with who?”

“I’ve got an idea. I’ll fill you in at practice.”


Darrin dropped his books on the desk in his dorm room in Hampden Hall. His first full day of classes after the Christmas break was over; he had about two hours before it would be time to meet Coach Knox for his workout session. It was Monday so that meant on-ice leg day. He’d be lucky if he was able to walk back to his room afterwards. A knock at his door shook him from his musings.

“Who is it?” he called.

“Opportunity!” was the reply; it sounded like Coach Knox’s voice. Darrin opened the door and discovered he was right. “Grab your stuff and let’s hit the ice, kid!”

“Wha... ? What do you mean, Coach? Don’t we have to wait for practice to be over?”

“Not when you’re practicing with the team! Let’s go, Whitmore! Move with a purpose!”

“With the team?”

“We’re gonna be late if you don’t pick it up, Darrin!”

Darrin grabbed his already-packed hockey bag, slinging it over his shoulder. “Why am I practicing with the team today?”

“Because there’s an open roster spot for a left winger and I mean to get you on that roster! Let’s go! Shag it!” Jeff led the way to the field house. He directed Darrin into the referee’s changing room.

“Why am I changing in here?”

“You wanna spoil my surprise? Get dressed and start stretching. I’ll come get you.” Jeff hustled to the coaches’ office to get changed himself.

“Where’d you go?”

“You’ll see in a few minutes, John. I found you a winger.”

“Okay...”

Jeff changed in record time. “I’ll see you on the ice, John.” He was out the door before John could say anything. He knocked on the ref’s room door two minutes later and stuck his head in. “You ready?”

“I’m so nervous I think I’m gonna throw up.”

“You’re ready. Let’s go.”

John Kessler looked behind him when Jeff and Darrin emerged behind the bench. “Darrin’s the player you’ve been working with for three months? He’s your special project?”

“You got anyone else ready to take Wiznewski’s spot? Let him prove you wrong, John. I’m telling you this kid’s ready.”

John looked at Jeff like he was shining him on. “Alright, Darrin, hit the ice.” Darrin charged through the boards and joined the team. “I hope you’re right, Jeff. I don’t want to disappoint this kid again.”

“He’s a sniper with rockets in his skates now, John. Just wait.”

John Kessler didn’t have to wait long. In the first round of drills Darrin blew by the defenseman and ripped a slap-shot past the goalie stick-side low. He scored glove-side high the next time. The skating drill proved Jeff correct about Darrin’s speed as well.

Son of a bitch! I thought you were feeding me a line of bull, Jeff, but damn!”

“He just needed some fine-tuning with skating and shooting. Is he back on the team?”

“Damn right!”


Later that week Jeff was reviewing his EMT class notes in his apartment when his phone rang.

“Hello?”

“Hi, Jeff.”

“Hey, Mom. What’s up?”

“Jeff, have you been hearing the rumblings at school?”

“Some low-level stuff with Wanamaker’s name attached, but what’s going on now, Mom? I haven’t really been paying attention.”

“Jay Wanamaker’s trying to get you fired! He’s painting you as a violent, out-of-control veteran who’s not fit to be working with kids!”

“I guess that doesn’t surprise me. Is he doing anything else?” He was counting to one hundred in his head, trying to keep his cool.

“He’s calling for a meeting of the entire high school faculty! He’s going to have the staff vote to ask the Board of Trustees to remove you!” Marisa was getting upset.

“Mom, deep breath. You think that’s really gonna go anywhere? When’s the meeting?”

“Next Monday, the thirteenth, at 6:30pm. It’s going to be in the Feldman Auditorium.”

The gears were already turning. “No worries, Mom. This is gonna all be just fine.”


Jeff and his guest for the meeting entered the Feldman Auditorium just after 6:30 the following Monday evening. His accuser was already railing at the pulpit. Jeff marched straight down the center aisle towards Jay Wanamaker.

“This meeting is for faculty only!”

“Ah, how soon we forget, Mr. Wannabe...”

“It’s WanaMAKER!”

“Whatever. Did you forget about our first meeting? In the weight room?” Jeff pulled his school ID from his coat pocket. “I believe mine says FACULTY like everyone else’s in this room, with the exception of the sergeant here. Anyway, I understand I’m a dangerous and violently unstable veteran who is unsuitable to be around kids?”

“You are! You pointed a gun at four men!”

“Oh, do you mean the four men who broke into my apartment in the middle of the night? Those four men? What, no answer? STREAK! ROLL TAPE!“ The audio of Jeff’s 9-1-1 call sounded throughout the hall, carried by the well-placed speakers and excellent acoustics. When it ended, Jeff took up the story again. “As you heard I remained inside the apartment, just observing, until they smashed the window on my door and entered my residence. I held them at gunpoint until the police arrived and arrested them.”

“You had no call to do that! You could have left!

“He had no duty to leave his apartment, Wanamaker!” Jack shouted from behind Jeff. He made a disgusted noise before stomping past Jeff. He grabbed the microphone off the lectern, causing it to squeal. “For those of you who don’t know me, I’m Sergeant Jack Dwadczik of the Enfield Police Department. Mr. Knox is duly licensed to own firearms, and is well trained in their use; he also knows when not to use them. To answer Mr. Wanamaker’s assertion that Mr. Knox could have left his apartment to avoid confrontation: he had no requirement under the law to leave! NONE!”

“Allow me to quote Massachusetts General Law, Chapter 278, Section 8a for you:”

In the prosecution of a person who is an occupant of a dwelling charged with killing or injuring one who was unlawfully in said dwelling, it shall be a defense that the occupant was in his dwelling at the time of the offense and that he acted in the reasonable belief that the person unlawfully in said dwelling was about to inflict great bodily injury or death upon said occupant or upon another person lawfully in said dwelling, and that said occupant used reasonable means to defend himself or such other person lawfully in said dwelling. There shall be no duty on said occupant to retreat from such person unlawfully in said dwelling.

“If that person had taken one more step towards Mr. Knox on the night in question, Mr. Knox would have been justified in pulling the trigger on his shotgun. All four intruders have since been convicted of multiple crimes, including breaking and entering into Mr. Knox’s apartment. The only crimes committed that night were committed against Mr. Knox!”

“I completely agree, Sergeant!” a new voice called. A woman strode down the aisle from the shadows at the back of the auditorium. She smiled at Jeff on her way by. Wanamaker she ignored, despite his signaling from behind the lectern. She extended a hand, requesting the microphone; the woman nodded to Jack when he handed it to her. “Ladies and gentlemen, I am...”

“Excuse me, Mrs. Hightower... ?” Wanamaker tried to interrupt.

Meredith Hightower ignored him. “ ... Meredith Hightower. I am the Chair of...”

“Mrs. Hightower, please...”

“ ... the Board of Trustees...”

“Ma’am... ?”

“Mister Knox!” she called, silencing Wanamaker.

“Yes, ma’am?” Jeff answered.

“You spent some time in my home state of North Carolina while you were in the Army, did you not?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“If this person interrupts me again, I’d like to ask you to do something.”

“What’s that, ma’am?”

“Would you stomp a mudhole in his ass and walk it dry, please?” she asked in her best Southern Belle voice. She asked with the sweetest smile ever on her face.

“It would be my pleasure, ma’am.”

“Now, as I was trying to say my name is Meredith Hightower, Chair of the Board of Trustees. I can see by your faces that most of you are here to support Mr. Knox, and that you would have voted down any motion to try and dismiss him. I am here to tell you that regardless of the outcome of this meeting, Jeff Knox will remain on the staff here until such time as he chooses to leave us.”

“For those of you who do not know Mr. Knox, allow me to fill you in on who he is. He is a native of this town, of Enfield. His father has owned a prosperous business in town for many years. His mother is Marisa Knox, a long-time and valued member of the middle school faculty. He graduated this school in 1987, his sister in 1988. He decided to enlist in the United States Army, where he volunteered for both the Infantry and the paratroops. He is a combat veteran of both Panama and the Persian Gulf; he was wounded in action in Panama.”

“While he was in the Army, he completed a Bachelors of Arts in history. That’s while he exceeded what is required of a soldier; he earned two early promotions and numerous commendations. He chose to come back to Enfield. He chose to return to Thompkins, to come back here and to do the same thing you do: make our students’ dreams come true. He’s chosen to do that by working with our hockey team. You can vote to do whatever you want. The Trustees have already met and decided what we’re going to do, which is to keep him. Thank you. Good night.”

Meredith handed the microphone back to Jack and started walking up the aisle. Jay Wanamaker darted around the lectern and made one more attempt to speak to her. She stopped, looking him in the eye. “You may want to update your resumé, Mr. Wanamaker.” She left the stunned man and continued up the aisle. She walked to the audio/visual booth. Darrin Whitmore stood when she entered.

“Thank you for the phone call, Mr. Whitmore.”

“Of course, Mrs. Hightower. Coach Knox is the reason I have a second chance to play high school hockey.”

“Make the most of it then.”


That second chance paid dividends for the team as well. The Black Bears went from a team winning half its games to a team burning up the conference. The addition of Darrin was the catalyst the team needed. They stormed the gates during the second half of the season and were seeded third in the conference tournament in mid-February. They cut through the other teams with ease. Their combined margin of victory over three games was fifteen-to-two.

The Western Mass Division II tournament was more of the same for Thompkins. Seeded second, they cut down the seventh-seed, Monument Mountain Regional High School from Great Barrington, in a lopsided six-to-one game. Amherst High fell next, three-to-zero.

Thompkins hosted the Western Mass final against the eighth-seed, their old rival Petersham Preparatory Academy. Petersham, who eliminated first-seeded Greenfield in the first round, knew they had nothing to loose. They knocked the higher-seeded Bears back on their heels by scoring first at the mid-point of the first period. Jeff slapped Darrin on the helmet just before the end of that period. He’d just watched the freshman skate two uninspired shifts.

“Hey!” Jeff called to Darrin when he turned around. “Did I waste three months? Was I wasting my time?”

“No, Coach.”

“You look like you want to go back to the top row!” Jeff said, referring to finding Darrin sitting in the dark in October. “Are you satisfied with that conference championship? Where’s the kid who wanted to play for a state championship? You’re playing for the chance to play at the Garden! For the state championship! Say ‘thank you’ for the one you just won while you reach for the next one!”

Jeff walked back down to the opposite end of the bench while Darrin processed what he’d said. Darrin was the last player off the bench and down the tunnel when the horn sounded to end the period. At the door to the Bears locker room, Darrin turned.

“Coach, can you give us a minute?”

John Kessler looked over at Jeff with a wry grin. Jeff shrugged with a “not my idea” look on his face. John turned back to the freshman. “Go ahead, Mr. Whitmore.” Darrin disappeared into the locker room.

“Why does this seem familiar, Mr. Knox?”

“Hey, I just chewed him one for skating like he’d rather be watching the game, John. I never suggested he pull a ‘me.’

“Well, we’ll see what kind of results he gets. I may be looking at a future captain.” John looked at his former captain for a minute, not saying anything.

“What?”

“Nothing.” Not yet at least, John thought.

Whatever was said by Darrin in the locker room achieved the desired effect. There was ferocity in the Bears’ charge when they came out for the second period. Petersham’s fire died like someone dumped an extinguisher on it. The one-nothing deficit soon became a four-to-one lead for Thompkins.

The beatings continued in the third period and Petersham’s morale didn’t improve. Thompkins was already up six-to-one when Darrin received a pass from the Thompkins defense as he curled back up ice. He bore down on Petersham’s defense as he’d done to Jeff in January.

“C’mon, kid,” Jeff whispered to himself. “Fake him right out of his jock.”

Darrin began to lean left. The defending player bit on the fake. Darrin cut hard right. His defender fell and Darrin was all alone inside the blue line. He ripped a shot over the goalie’s right shoulder and the goal lamp lit. Jeff pumped his fist while the Thompkins players celebrated.

“Was that the move that convinced you?” John asked over the roar of the crowd.

“Indeed it was, John.”


Jeff looked out over Boston’s sprawl the following week; it was covered in eight inches of snow in mid-March. He was doing the tourist routine, visiting the Prudential Center’s observation deck. He’d lived his whole life in Massachusetts, Army time excepted, and hadn’t done any of the touristy things available in Eastern Massachusetts. There was so much history, U.S. history, within twenty miles of this very spot. Maybe he’d visit Concord and Lexington tomorrow if they won tonight’s game.

“Hey, sailor, you come here often?” asked a friendly voice.

“Your grandfather would wash your mouth out with soap for calling a paratrooper ‘sailor, ‘“ he replied, hugging Heather. He kissed Jane on the cheek.

“Pfft. Grampy is a big ol’ softie. Why, I’m the apple of his eye, I am.”

“More like a pain in his ass. What are you ladies doing here? Not that I ever mind seeing you two.”

“You’d best be happy to see us, mister. What are we doing here? We’re stalking you, of course. Seriously though, we just happened by the joint and thought the view from the observation deck would be cool to see. We came out to cheer you and the boys on.”

“I’m glad you did. How did your internship at Georgetown go, Heather?”

“It was okay; I got a glowing evaluation which will help when I get to Graduate school in a year or so.” Jeff raised an eyebrow. “I want to spend time in Greenwich next year with Mom and my grandparents now that Mom’s retired. I’m still angling for my Ph.D., don’t worry. I’m sorry I wasn’t here for you at the end of the summer, by the way. Have you heard from Allison?”

Jeff shrugged. “A Christmas card with a letter. I was glad to hear from her; I’d sent her the same thing. I won’t lie to you, Heather: the end of the summer hurt. I love her, and I know she loves me, but we’re headed to different places. I’m sure you know what your grandfather would say about the situation.”

“‘Suck it up and drive on, Airborne.’ Fits the situation, doesn’t it?”

“It does. Now, I don’t know about you two, but I’d like to see Faneuil Hall and Quincy Market. Are you two coming along?”

“Only if you buy lunch.”


Thompkins punched their ticket for the Division II State Finals that night with a win over Methuen in the semi-finals. They were facing Nauset Regional in the finals tonight. As in 1985 Thompkins was on their spring vacation break; Jeff heard there were bus loads of Thompkins fans coming. The Garden would be loud tonight.

John and Jeff reviewed what tapes were available of Nauset’s games. They developed a strategy they hoped would be effective. That task started the morning after their semi-final win; they finished up by 11:30 the morning of the finals. Jeff opted to walk to the U.S.S. Constitution on that mild March day to tour the historic warship and fill the time. Then he toured the U.S.S. Cassin Young, a World War II destroyer, also docked at Charlestown. He returned to the hotel at three p.m.

The minutes until the pre-game dinner ticked by slowly. It was like he was six again and waiting for Christmas. The team gathered at 5:30 for the meal. They left for the Garden after dinner; the puck would drop at 8:05. The locker room was silent while the team dressed. John gave a quick speech after their warm-up skate.

Jeff grabbed Darrin when they returned to the ice. “Here it is, Darrin, the chance you told me you wanted back in October. Here it is right in front of you. What are you going to do with it?”

“Leave it all on the ice, Coach. If I have anything left at the end of the game, I’ll have wasted it.”

“Then go out there and win.”

If Jeff thought Darrin was fast before, it seemed he’d found another gear that night. His teammates adjusted to his increased speed; they hit him for breakaway after breakaway. Only Nauset’s goalie kept them in the game.

“Gee, this looks familiar doesn’t it, John?”

“I’m not as young as I used to be. I don’t know if my heart can handle that kind of game again.”

The teams skated to a scoreless tie the first period. John gave the team another little speech during the intermission. Jeff saw Darrin whisper to his center while making motions with his hands; both were nodding when they put their helmets back on for the second period.

The teams lined up for the face-off to start the period. The center readied himself to draw the puck back to his defense, or so it seemed. Instead he punched the puck forward with his stick; Darrin swooped through the circle to collect it. He streaked past the Nauset defense and buried the puck in the back of the net.

The Thompkins crowd went nuts. The Garden sounded as if it would shake apart. Darrin’s counterpart on the right wing scored a minute later. You could see the Nauset Warriors deflate while Thompkins celebrated; they never recovered. Thompkins added an empty net goal at the end of the third: Nauset tried pulling their goalie to swing the momentum in the game, but it cost them another goal instead.

Thompkins and their fans counted down with the scoreboard. The players spilled over the boards and piled onto each other while the valley fans took up the Thompkins fight song once again. Meredith Hightower pounded on the glass along with Nora Whitmore. John and Jeff slid themselves out to the pile. Darrin Whitmore grabbed Jeff in a hug when he slid near.

“Holy shit, Coach! Holy shit!

“Congratulations, Darrin!”

“Thank you for giving me this chance!”

“I didn’t give you anything, Darrin. You earned this; you earned this with hard work. Don’t ever let yourself think otherwise.”


“One championship as a player and one as an assistant coach. Pretty good, Jeff,” Paul Ezekiel commented as they worked together the following weekend.

“I’m not sure which felt better to win, Paul. The one as a player winning it with my teammates or this one, helping one of the players realize a dream.”

“So what’s next for you? EMT work?”

“The hockey coach, John, was also my baseball coach in high school; he’s asked me to help him out with that as well this year. I’ll start looking for an ambulance job after the season. My buddy Gene is already working as an EMT out in Springfield; I’ll see if his service is hiring at that point.”

A high school-aged girl walked into the store before either could bring up another topic. Her black hair was cut short, pixie-style. Her bright, blue eyes locked onto Paul as she passed through the door. She strutted over to the register where both men stood. The beauty pulled Paul down for a very long, very hot kiss.

“Hi,” he muttered when they untangled themselves.

“Hi,” she responded in a husky, throaty voice.

Jeff watched with amusement, as well as a little wistfulness. “Now that you’ve checked the young lady’s tonsils, Paul, do I get to be introduced?”

Paul cleared his throat. “Ah, Jeff, I’d like you to meet Hillary Bynes. Hil, this is Jeff Knox, my supervisor.”

“Very nice to meet you, Miss Bynes.”

She nodded in reply. “Hil’s the head cheerleader at VRHS this year,” Paul informed him.

Man, Heather’s gonna be insufferable when she finds out.

TheOutsider3119's work is also available in ePub format at Bookapy.com

This is the direct link to the manuscript on that site.
Please Login in order to comment!