It was a top predator contest—sharks versus lions—and Gentry Field was rocking. More than five thousand students and fans had filed through the main gate, past a new bronze statue of Arthur Gentry in full stride, and were now seated on the red metal bleachers. Smithfield is west of Fremont, and there’s always been a crosstown rivalry. They can’t compete with Muscles High when it comes to the major sports, but they’re just dumb enough to try. A loud contingent of Smithfield fans decked out in navy blue were hooting and hollering for their beloved Sharks to gobble up our Lions. They were waving plastic dorsal fins and screaming that the Lions weren’t going to be state champs but rather stupid chumps, and that our team was too scared to even show up.
“Where the hell are they?” Frank demanded. The game was scheduled for a noon kickoff and it was already 11:40.
“Maybe Muhldinger’s punching a few extra holes in the locker room wall during his pep talk,” I suggested.
“They’re probably waiting to make a big last-minute entrance,” Becca said. The Lions liked to enter their den in style. They always sprinted in through the gate closest to our school while the band played “Fremont Forever”—the starting quarterback in the lead with both arms raised, his seniors running along with him, while the underclassmen and coaches trailed behind. I kept glancing at the gate, waiting for it to swing open and the band to strike up the first notes of the fight song, but seconds just kept ticking away.
I’d been surprised that Becca even wanted to come to this game. She’d had a tough week—her parents had separated, and her dad was now living in a hotel near his dental practice. She couldn’t sleep and didn’t eat much, but somehow she came to school every day, kept getting A’s on tests, and even came to all our weird soccer practices.
We’d had five so far, each one stranger than the next. I guess any kind of physical activity can make you a little better at soccer, but I doubted that these nutty practices would teach us anything about scoring goals or playing tough defense.
Muhldinger had shown up unexpectedly at our Thursday practice. He’d sauntered up just as Coach Percy was finishing a lecture on tactics, and he’d watched, baffled, as our coach drew wavy lines around a big circle on his whiteboard. “What the hell is that?” Muhldinger demanded.
“Lake Trasimene,” Percy explained enthusiastically. “I was telling them about the ambush there in 217 B.C.—the best tactical use of terrain in all of military history.”
Muhldinger studied the whiteboard. “What does Lake Tra-whatever-the-hell have to do with soccer?”
“Lake Trasimene is south of the Po River in Umbria,” Percy told him. “Hannibal ambushed the Romans there in 217 B.C. and killed fifteen or twenty thousand of them, depending on which historian you trust. Livy is more dramatic, but I personally lean toward Polybius because he was Greek and therefore had less reason to exaggerate and embroider, wouldn’t you agree?”
Muhldinger stared back at him as if even trying to answer such a question made you insane. Instead, he growled: “And that is important because…?”
“The Romans never even had a chance to fight back!” Percy said reverently. “Stay hidden and let the terrain do the fighting for you—that’s today’s message. Now we’re moving on to our stretching.”
“Good,” Muhldinger said. “Let me see some calisthenics. Don’t go easy on them, Haskell. Pain in September, trophy in November.”
“Actually, we’re trying to alleviate stress so we use free form yoga,” Percy told him.
Muhldinger glanced at Frank, who’d assumed a position that I was pretty sure had nothing to do with yoga but a lot to do with deep sleep. “When do they actually kick a goddamn soccer ball?”
“We’ll get to that very soon,” Percy assured him. “Do you want to wait?”
Muhldinger had glanced around at the fourteen inferior physical specimens folding themselves into yoga positions and meditating or napping. “No,” he’d growled. “I’ve seen more than enough. But I’ll be at your first game against that girls’ junior high school. And you’d better show me something.”
Now we had come to watch his first game, and even though our soccer team was full of kids who hated football, a surprising number of us had shown up.
Frank, Becca, Meg, and I were standing together on a high bleacher. Dylan was supposed to join us, but his stagehands’ meeting for the fall production of Hairspray must have been running late. Pierre was first tuba in the marching band. Chloe was working her wonders on the pre-game stats that flashed on the high-tech scoreboard.
Game time came and passed. There was a nervous energy crackling through the stadium now—it was clear that something odd was happening. Rumors flew around Gentry Field. According to league rules, it was a team’s responsibility to show up, no matter what. If either team was more than an hour late, they would forfeit. I couldn’t imagine Fremont forfeiting its home opener and ruining its shot at a state championship season. But as the digital clock ticked past 12:30 that began to seem increasingly likely.
Sirens sounded, and they weren’t ambulances but rather fire engines and police cars. They raced into the parking lot, and from the bleachers we could see Fremont police and firemen sprinting into our school building. People around us speculated that someone had gotten sick or violent inside, but I couldn’t dream up a scenario that would keep all members of the football team inside the building.
Then Dylan found us and told us what he’d heard. “Someone locked them in.”
“In where?” Meg asked.
“The Keep,” he explained. Our locker room is in the oldest part of the school, the basement. It was built more than a century ago, and there’s a small room in the very back of the locker room nicknamed the “Keep” because it’s like a castle keep—the oldest and strongest part of a fortress. Fremont teams traditionally gather in the Keep for pep talks and good luck. It has no windows and just one heavy old door. “But the Keep door is always open,” I said.
“You might not have noticed, but it’s got a thick iron hasp and a loop built into it that look like they belong in the Tower of London. Somebody brought in a humongous padlock and locked the team inside.”
“Can’t they cut the lock?”
“They tried. It’s thick anodized steel.”
“Why don’t they just take the hinges off the door?” Frank asked.
“They tried that, too, but nothing’s worked so far,” Dylan said. “I heard they’re trying to melt it now with an acetylene torch.”
Seconds ticked on. The bands played. The cheerleaders did routines. But all eyes were on the digital scoreboard that now read 12:47.
I spotted my father down on his usual bleacher, standing with his friends. He looked tense and frustrated, as if he were witnessing a car crash but couldn’t help save anyone.
12:50 came and the bands had stopped playing. The stadium was eerily still. I imagined the football team crowded into the Keep, standing around the locked door, watching their season tick away.
“I can’t believe this is actually happening,” Dylan said.
“Yeah,” Frank agreed. “It’s freaky and kind of sad.”
“But interesting,” Becca said softly, so that only we could hear her. “I’d like to see Muhldinger’s face.”
“I’m sure it’s not pretty,” I told her. “But if they do forfeit the game, I’m sure he’ll appeal it. It’s not his fault someone locked them in.”
“Lots of luck with that,” Dylan said. “I remember when the Green River bus broke down and they arrived here seven minutes late. Muhldinger held them to the letter of the law, and said it was their responsibility. They appealed and lost. He’s been a real hard-ass to the other coaches in the league for years. I’d like to see him try to explain to them why he deserves a second chance because he got trapped in his own locker room.”
12:55 came and passed.
Then at 12:57 the far gate swung open and the Lions sprinted through it. They weren’t in their usual carefully choreographed formation. Instead, they ran in a panic, like they were late for the last bus home. Muhldinger was near the front of the pack, his face scarlet with fury. He sprinted over to the officiating crew and they had a quick conference with the Smithfield coach. Then the teams lined up for the opening kickoff and the game was on.
Fremont had clearly been knocked off stride. Smithfield jumped out to a two-touchdown lead, and when the Lions tried to claw their way back the game got rougher. My old friend Rob Powers had lost out in the battle to be starting quarterback, and because he was fast and a superb athlete he was on the kick coverage team. Halfway through the second quarter he was hit from the side and knocked to the turf so hard that he was carried off the field on a stretcher. I was glad to see him moving his arms and legs, but he was clearly in pain.
At the half, Smithfield led thirty to fourteen, and it seemed like Fremont’s predicted state championship season was going to end before it began.
I don’t know what Muhldinger told the Lions during halftime, but they came out so fired up it almost looked like they would burst into flame. Man for man, they were a much better team than Smithfield, and they fought their way back through old-fashioned smash-mouth football. They took over the line and made crunching tackles that knocked three Smithfield players out of the game.
Muhldinger urged them on, screaming like he was possessed. Watching him pacing up and down the sideline, I realized how much this football team meant to him—it was literally his life. The Lions finally tied the game in the fourth quarter and won it on a thirty-yard field goal as the last seconds ticked off the giant digital clock above Gentry Field.
Our home crowd gave a cheer, but it came out more like a collective sigh of relief. The band played our victory fanfare, but somehow it sounded a little sad, almost like a dirge. Fremont was supposed to be the best team in the state of New Jersey, but the Lions had used one of their nine lives to get away with a squeaker, and everyone knew it.
What was worse, someone had tried to sabotage our season, and it was clearly someone who knew Fremont High School well.