Excerpts from Crash by Jerry Spinelli
BACKGROUND: Crash
is about a middle-school kid named Crash who bullies another kid. The kid he
bullies is named Penn Webb, and Crash often calls him by his last name. this
first scene is from the beginning of the story, page 2 in fact, when the main
character, Crash, is outside and sees Penn walking down the sidewalk.
It was a sunny summer day. I was
in the front yard digging a hole with my little red shovel. I heard something
like whistling. It was coming from a funny-looking dorky little runt walking up
the sidewalk. Only he wasn’t just walking regular. He was walking like he owned
the place, both hands in his pockets, sort of swaying lah-dee-dah with each
step. Strollll-ing. Strolling and
gawking at the houses and whistling a happy little dorky tune like some Sneezy
or Snoozy or whatever their names are.
And
he wore a button, a big one. It covered about half his chest. Which wasn’t that
hard since his chest was so scrawny.
So
here he comes strolling, whistling, gawking, buttoning, dorking up the
sidewalk, onto my sidewalk, my property, and all of a sudden I knew what I had
to do, like there was a big announcement coming down from the sky: Don’t let
him pass.
Background: In the
next section we find that Crash and Penn are about to compete against each
other in a school race. Webb’s parents and his great-grandfather, Henry Wilhide
Webb III, have come to watch Penn run. Crash is looking at the three of them in
the stands, thinking of his own grandfather, Scooter. Until now, Crash has
continued to bully Penn.
The stands were empty. A school
bus moved in the distance beyond the football goalpost. Under the crossbar and
between the uprights, like in a framed picture, stood three people.
For
once, Webb’s parents didn’t look so old, not compared to the man standing
between them. He was shorter than them, and real skinny, like the prairie winds
were eroding him away. But he was standing straight and by himself—no cane, no
walker, just two legs. Nine-three years old. Maybe it was the Missouri River
mud.
The
thought came to me: they would have liked each other, Scooter and Henry Wilhide
Webb III. Two storytellers. Both from the great flat open spaces, one a prairie
of grass, one of water. Both came to watch when no one else was there.
Background: We are
still before the race, and Crash is thinking about Penn’s great-grandfather.
Why exactly was he here? Did he
know about me? Did he know his great grandson could not win the race-off, and
so would not run in the Penn Relays?
I
wondered if Webb felt safe in his great grandfather’s bed.
The
cinder track crunched under my feet. There were five of us in the race: me,
Webb, two other seventh graders, and a sixth grader. The coach put us in lanes.
Me and Webb were side by side.
Again,
he hadn’t said a word to me all day. We milled around behind the starting
blocks, nervous, shaking out our arms and legs, everything as quiet as if the
coach had already said, “Ready.”
The
other team members—jumpers, throwers, distance runners—had all stopped their
practicing to watch. A single hawk, its wingtips spread like black fingers,
kited over the school, and suddenly I saw something: a gift. A gift for a great
grandfather from North Dakota, maybe for all great grandfathers. But the thing
was, only one person could give the gift, and it wasn’t the great grandson, not
on his fastest day alive. It was me.
I
hated it being me. I tried not to see, but everywhere I looked, there it was.
The
gift.
“Let’s go, boys,” said the coach.
A
voice closer to me said, “Good luck.”
It
was Webb, sticking out his dorky hand, smiling that old dorky smile of his. No
button. I shook his hand, and it occurred to me that because he was always
eating my dust, the dumb fishcake had never won a real race and probably didn’t
know how. And now there wasn’t time.
“Don’t
forget to lean,” I told him. His face went blank. The coach called, “Ready.”
I
got down, feet in the blocks, right knee on the track, thumbs and forefingers
on the chalk, eyes straight down—and right then, for the first time in my life,
I didn’t know if I wanted to win.
“Set.”
Knee
up, rear up, eyes up.
The
coach says the most important thing here is to focus your mind. You are a
coiled steel spring, ready to dart out at the sound of the gun. So what comes
into my head? Ollie the one-armed octopus. He didn’t disappear till the gun
went off.
I
was behind—not only Webb, but everybody. No problem. Within ten strides I
picked up three of them. That left Webb. He was farther ahead of me than usual,
but that was because of my rotten start.
At
the halfway mark, where I usually passed him, he was still ahead, and I still
didn’t know if I wanted to win. I gassed it. The gap closed. I could hear him
puffing, like a second set of footsteps. Cinder flecks from his feet pecked at
my shins. I was still behind. The finish line was closing. I kicked in the
afterburners. Ten meters from the white string we were shoulder to shoulder,
breath to breath, grandson to great grandson, and it felt new, it felt good,
not being behind, not being ahead, but being even, and just like that, a half
breath from the white string, I knew. There was no time to turn to him. I just
barked it out: “Lean!” He leaned, he threw his chest out, he broke the string.
He won.
Thanks, you helped me.
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