The Counterfeit Tackle Read online




  Copyright

  Copyright © 1965 by Matthew F. Christopher

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.

  Hachette Book Group

  237 Park Avenue

  New York, NY 10017

  Visit our website at www.HachetteBookGroup.com

  First eBook Edition: December 2009

  ISBN: 978-0-316-09592-1

  Contents

  Copyright

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  How many of these Matt Christopher sports classics have you read?

  To

  Dominic

  1

  BUZZ stepped into the house and closed the door against the bitter cold air. His cheeks were apple-red. His glasses were clouding over so that he couldn’t see a thing.

  He put the sack of groceries on the table, took off his glasses and set them on the shelf beside the kitchen sink.

  He turned and looked at his twin brother Corky. The two of them looked exactly alike except that Buzz was nearsighted and had to wear glasses.

  “What’s the matter, Corky?” Buzz asked. “Are you sick?”

  Corky was sitting at the kitchen table, his chin cupped in his hands. If he wasn’t sick, his thoughts were a million miles away. He mumbled something that sounded like “Yuh.”

  “Okay, keep it a secret,” said Buzz. “I don’t want to know your troubles, anyway.”

  He took off his cap and coat. It was Saturday, the last day of September, and it sure had gotten cold all of a sudden.

  Dad appeared at the dining room door. His eyes met Buzz’s. He didn’t look especially well, either.

  “Guess I’m to blame for this,” he said. “I bought three tickets for the Bears-Giants game from Ben Welsh, thinking that the three of us could go. But Corky feels he shouldn’t go.”

  Buzz looked puzzledly from Dad to his brother. “Why not?”

  “He thinks that if he doesn’t show up at the Marlins game tomorrow, Coach Hayes will boot him off the team.”

  Buzz wrinkled his nose, a thing he always did whenever he heard something he didn’t like. “Boot him off the team for that? I don’t think Mr. Hayes would do that. Do you, Dad?”

  Dad shrugged.

  Corky lifted his face from his hands and shot piercing eyes at Buzz.

  “Well, he would! You don’t know Coach Hayes the way I do! He’s tough. He doesn’t want anybody to get there late or to miss a game. Just because I got there late last week he bawled me out. He said that if I was late again I’d be benched. Imagine what he’d say if I didn’t get there at all tomorrow!”

  Corky played right tackle on the Otters football team. The season had opened last week and the Otters had beaten the Dolphins 21 to 19.

  Buzz hadn’t gone to the game. He had played basketball on his class team last year and was going to play again this year, but he didn’t care for football. It seemed like just a lot of head-bashing to him.

  Corky was different. He enjoyed football as well as basketball. He liked baseball, too. Buzz didn’t. Buzz would rather swim and fish. And play chess. He was the school chess champion last year. That was a game he really liked.

  “If I were you,” he said to Corky, “I’d go to the game, anyway. I just bet you that Coach Hayes won’t boot you off the team.”

  “But you’re not me,” said Corky, and cupped his chin into his hands again. “And you don’t know Coach Hayes.”

  Dad looked at Buzz. “How about you, Buzz? Will you go with me?”

  Buzz lifted his shoulders and stuffed his hands into his pockets. “Sure. I’ll go with you, Dad. But —” He paused.

  “But what?”

  “Well, Dougie was going to come over tomorrow. We were going to watch television for a while, then play chess. Wouldn’t — wouldn’t Mom and Joan care about going with you?”

  Joan was their seventeen-year-old sister, who was a cheerleader in high school. Certainly she might enjoy going to the Bears-Giants game.

  Dad took a deep breath and let it out heavily. “Well, I don’t know. If Corky plays tomorrow with the Otters, your mother probably would rather see him play. Maybe Joan will go with me.”

  He turned around just as Joan walked in from the other room. “Did I hear my name mentioned in vain?” she said, smiling.

  “It all depends,” said Dad. He explained about the tickets and the problem with Corky. Then he asked her if she’d like to go to the game.

  Her brows shot up and her eyes opened wide. “Of course I’d like to go! And if neither of the twins wants to go, can I ask Steve to come along?”

  Steve Post was her latest heartthrob. Two weeks ago it was Terry Slocum. Next week or two weeks from now it could be anybody’s guess who her heartthrob would be.

  “I suppose so,” said Dad. “Buzz doesn’t care about it, and Corky doesn’t dare. I guess it’ll be you, Steve and I, then.”

  All this went on and Corky never said a word. He just sat there with his chin in his hands and his eyes staring off into space.

  Buzz knew that he wanted to go to that Giants-Bears game in the worst way. No one loved football as much as Corky did. He was crazy about those professional football games on television. Now that he had a chance to see a real big-league game in person, he couldn’t. And just because he was afraid that Coach Hayes would kick him off the team.

  Boy, thought Buzz. I wouldn’t be afraid. If I loved football the way Corky does, I’d go.

  This was the first time the two great teams had ever played in Kellsburg. It was a benefit game to raise money for a special fund. It might be the last time they would play here.

  “Come on, Corky,” said Dad. “There’s a good game on television now. Let’s watch it.”

  Later on Buzz put on his cap and coat again and went to the library. The wind was blowing hard and there were snow flurries in the air.

  For several days Buzz had wanted to get a book or two on chess. He knew how to play the game fairly well, but not as well as he wished. The only person he hadn’t beaten at school was Mr. Krum, his math teacher. And that was his aim — to beat the pants off Mr. Krum. Although, of course, he wouldn’t tell it just that way to Mr. Krum.

  He found two books on chess which he thought would help him. While he was waiting for Ms. Larkin, the librarian, to stamp his library card, a boy came up beside him.

  “Buzz, is Corky home?”

  It was Pete Nettles. He was smaller and younger than Buzz and a great buddy of Corky’s, a thing Buzz couldn’t understand. Pete was the dumbest kid on the block. He had just passed last year by the skin of his teeth. Yet Corky liked him.

  “Yes, he’s home,” said Buzz in a not too friendly voice. “Why?”

  Pete blinked a few times and stepped back a little. “I — I just wanted to see him, that’s all.”

  “Well, you’d better not see him now,” said Buzz. “He’s too busy.”

  Pete’s dark eyes hung on to his a moment. Then Pete turned away and headed for the shelves where a label read sports.

  Buzz smirked. Sports. That kid would never be able to do anything. Then he turned back and saw Ms. Larkin looking directly at him. It was a dark, unpleasant look — the
kind Mom gave him when he acted smart at home — and his face turned a bright red.

  “Guess I shouldn’t have talked to him that way,” he murmured quietly.

  “No, Buzz,” replied Ms. Larkin softly. “You shouldn’t have.”

  Ms. Larkin placed his card in one of the books, then pushed them toward him.

  “Thank you,” he said. He picked up the books and left.

  It was snowing harder now. The flakes were like pinfeathers whipping about in the air. They hit his glasses, melted, and left streaks. After a while they bothered him so that he had to take the glasses off.

  “Hey, Corky, boy!” a voice shouted ahead of him. “Hope it stops snowing before our game tomorrow! Don’t you?”

  Buzz saw two boys approaching — Gary O’Brien and Tony Krebbs, members of the Otters football team. They stopped and smiled at him while the snow pelted their faces.

  Buzz started to say something, but Gary was looking at the title of one of the books Buzz was carrying and he laughed.

  “Hey, look at this, Tony! Corky’s going to read up on chess! You don’t expect to play chess like that smart brother of yours, do you, Cork?”

  Buzz’s heart skipped a beat. “I’m Buzz,” he said. “I took my glasses off because of the snow.” He pulled the glasses out of his pocket to prove it.

  Gary’s face colored. “Oh,” he said. “Sorry, Buzz. Thought you were Corky. Come on, Tony. Let’s go.”

  2

  GARY and Tony brushed past Buzz and went on their way, and Buzz went on his. Both of those boys were in his class in school. But they often acted just that way, as if he had the measles or something.

  They liked Corky. Everyone liked Corky. It wasn’t because he played football, either. Or basketball. Buzz played basketball with some of those same guys. Still, it made no difference with them. They’d yell “Hi!” to Corky if they saw him half a mile away. But Buzz would practically have to bump into them before they said “Hi” to him. It wasn’t the same kind of “Hi,” either. It was dead-like.

  Why they liked Corky and not him, Buzz didn’t know. He had one friend — Dougie Byrd. One friend — as long as he was a real friend — was enough for him.

  He got to thinking about tomorrow’s pro football game. He sure wished Corky would go. It would be the greatest thing that ever happened to him. He’d remember it as long as he lived. Who knew if he’d ever have this chance again?

  And then, suddenly, an idea popped into Buzz’s head. A crazy, unbelievable, fantastic idea. But an idea that could work perfectly!

  The more he thought about it, the better it looked, and the faster he hurried home.

  He called Corky into the bedroom and shut the door. He was breathless with excitement.

  “Corky, you still would like to go to the Giants-Bears game, wouldn’t you?”

  “Of course I would! But I told you —”

  “Wait! I have an idea. You can go. And you won’t have to worry about not playing with the Otters tomorrow, either!”

  Corky stared. “Why? Did you talk with Coach Hayes?”

  “No. I’ll play in your place. Without my glasses on no one will know that I’m Buzz! I’ll pretend I’m you!”

  Corky’s mouth dropped open. “That’s crazy!”

  “Sh-h!” whispered Buzz. “Not so loud! No one must know about this. Not even Dad. This is only between you and me.”

  “But you’ve only played football in gym!” Corky said, his voice just above a whisper. “How do you expect to do it?”

  “Look, you play tackle, don’t you? All you do is stand there in the line and try to keep the opponents from running through. What’s hard about that?”

  “Everything’s hard about that,” snapped Corky. “You have to stand just right. You have to know how to block your man. Buzz, you’re not in condition! You could get hurt!”

  “I played basketball all last winter just as much as you did,” said Buzz. “And I rode my bike around this summer more often than you played baseball. You’ve only been practicing football a few weeks. You can’t be in much better condition than I am.”

  Corky took a deep breath. He stuck his hands into his pockets and turned around. He made a complete turn and looked squarely at Buzz again.

  Now a faint smile was on his lips. He began to blink, as if he were ready to cry or something.

  “What if someone catches on? I’ll be kicked off the team and maybe the game will be forfeited.”

  “No one will catch on,” said Buzz. “I’m sure of it. Just a little while ago Gary O’Brien and Tony Krebbs came up to me on the street and thought I was you! I had my glasses off because of the snow. They didn’t know it was me until I told them.”

  Corky took a hand out of his pocket and rubbed it across his face.

  “Don’t you think we should tell Dad?” he asked.

  “Dad wouldn’t let us do it, Corky. He wouldn’t go for anything like that. I know Dad. This has just got to be between you and me. When it’s over with, no one will know the difference. There will be no harm done and you will have seen the Giants-Bears game.”

  Buzz got off the bed and looked directly into Corky’s eyes. “Will you go and tell Dad you’ve changed your mind about seeing the Giants-Bears game, or do you want me to?”

  “I — I think you’d better, Buzz,” said Corky.

  Buzz smiled. “Okay. I’ll tell him.”

  They walked out of the room and down the hall to the living room. Dad was sitting there, reading a hunting and fishing magazine. Buzz went up to him and told him that Corky had changed his mind. He’d decided he’d go to the Giants-Bears game.

  Dad put his magazine down and smiled. “Well, fine. Did you have something to do with it, Buzz?”

  Buzz nodded. “Yes. I talked to him. I convinced him that he ought to go.”

  “Good. You’ll probably be a diplomat when you grow up. Now go and talk to your sister. It’ll probably be disappointing news to her and to Steve.”

  Buzz shrugged. “I’ll tell her,” he said. “Maybe she hasn’t called Steve yet.”

  But Joan had called Steve. She wasn’t too disappointed at the news. She’d call Steve again, she said.

  “Are you going to ask him to go on that third ticket?” said Buzz. “Or are you going?”

  Joan’s green eyes glimmered. “I’m going, of course.”

  After breakfast on Sunday morning, Buzz and Corky dressed in their oldest clothes and went out to the backyard. Buzz had his glasses off. It was cold but it wasn’t snowing, nor was there snow on the ground.

  Corky showed him how to get down in tackle position and how to throw a block.

  “When you’re out there you get in between Peter Monino and Gary O’Brien,” said Corky. “Peter plays guard and Gary end. Get down like this and drive ahead with short, digging steps,” he explained. “Never hold your man with your hands. Just block him from trying to get through. When the other team has the ball, you have to get through to tackle the ball-carrier. Drive your man out of the way with your shoulders. Like this.”

  Corky showed Buzz exactly what he meant.

  They were out there for nearly fifteen minutes. Then Buzz realized that someone had walked into the yard and was standing nearby, watching them.

  Buzz and Corky stopped and looked to see who it was. It was Pete Nettles, holding a Sunday newspaper in his hands. He was staring silently from Buzz to Corky, a very puzzled look on his face.

  “Hi, Pete,” Corky said, smiling. “Buzz and I are getting a little workout.”

  Pete’s eyes lit up. “Hi, Corky! Who do you think is going to win today?”

  “The Giants,” said Corky, grinning. “I’ll bet you a sundae.”

  Pete smiled. “I’ll bet on the Bears,” he said. “But I’m not talking about that game. I’m talking about the Otters game.”

  Buzz looked at Corky. Corky’s face turned pink.

  “Oh, we will, of course,” said Corky. “Who do you think?”

  “You’d better no
t bet on that one.” Pete laughed. “It’s against the law!”

  3

  DAD, Corky and Joan left for the Giants-Bears game immediately after lunch. Buzz could hardly wait for them to leave. The Otters-Marlins game began at one-thirty and he didn’t want to be late. He couldn’t be late.

  He went into the bedroom and put on Corky’s football uniform. It was brown with white trim and already had some smudges of dried mud on it. Number 76 was in great big print on both the front and back of the jersey.

  He put on his own shoes and walked out of the room, carrying the football shoes and helmet in his hands.

  He walked into the kitchen. His mother turned from the kitchen sink where she was doing the dishes. Her eyes went wide and Buzz thought that she was going to faint.

  “Corky! I thought you — Why, you devil! You’re Buzz! With that uniform on you had me fooled!” She wrung the suds off her hands and continued staring at him as if she couldn’t believe what she saw.

  “Just what do you think you’re doing with that uniform on?” she cried, provoked. “You don’t think for one minute that you’re going to play in place of Corky, do you?”

  “Please, Mom. Not so loud. Yes, I told Corky I’d play in his place. You saw how anxious he was to see the Giants-Bears game, Mom.”

  “But this is ridiculous, Buzz,” said Mom. “You just can’t take Corky’s place like that. Now go back into your bedroom and take off that uniform. Don’t stall another second. Go on! Get!”

  Buzz took a step backward. He started to choke up.

  “Mom,” he pleaded, “please let me do this. I promised Corky. We look so much alike it’s as if we are one person, anyway. Even you didn’t recognize me right away. It’s not that I’m going to commit a crime, Mom.”

  She looked at him for a long while. Gradually, the anger faded from her eyes and face.

  She took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “You didn’t tell your father about this, did you?”

  “No. But I’ll tell him — afterwards,” Buzz said seriously.