John Sayles - A Moment in the Sun

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It’s 1897. Gold has been discovered in the Yukon. New York is under the sway of Hearst and Pulitzer. And in a few months, an American battleship will explode in a Cuban harbor, plunging the U.S. into war. Spanning five years and half a dozen countries, this is the unforgettable story of that extraordinary moment: the turn of the twentieth century, as seen by one of the greatest storytellers of our time.
Shot through with a lyrical intensity and stunning detail that recall Doctorow and
both,
takes the whole era in its sights — from the white-racist coup in Wilmington, North Carolina to the bloody dawn of U.S. interventionism in the Philippines. Beginning with Hod Brackenridge searching for his fortune in the North, and hurtling forward on the voices of a breathtaking range of men and women — Royal Scott, an African American infantryman whose life outside the military has been destroyed; Diosdado Concepcíon, a Filipino insurgent fighting against his country’s new colonizers; and more than a dozen others, Mark Twain and President McKinley’s assassin among them — this is a story as big as its subject: history rediscovered through the lives of the people who made it happen.

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Hod goes after him, left, right, left, right, putting everything he has into each swing, hitting shoulder, arm, hip, and once, painfully, the top of the man’s skull.

“You’re looping,” Choynski tells him as he ducks in and steps past. “Hit in a straight line and corkscrew your wrist—” Whap! whap! he demonstrates, snapping Hod’s head back with two effortless lefts. “Put some shoulder in it.”

Hod brings his elbows in and tries to punch straight, Choynski catching the hits on his glove or flicking his head safely to the side at the last moment. By the time the pipe is rapped and he falls back onto the barstool Smokey sets out, Hod’s arms feel like he’s been jacking bedrock for a full shift.

Smokey takes a mouthful of water, then sprays it onto Hod’s face. “Keep your mouf close,” he says. “You like to bite your tongue off.”

“I’m just about blown.”

“That’s cause you holdin your wind every time he hit you or you tries to hit him. Just breathe through it. Don’t want no air trapped in your lungs for them body punches.”

There are men screaming at him over the ropes, telling him he’s a faker and a dub, telling him to lay down, telling him to stay on his feet one more round, telling him he couldn’t punch a dent in a pat of butter.

The pipe is banged again and the stool pulled from under him. He wades in, his arms held further out in front of him. Choynski leaves off from his outfighting, ducking under and in to pound Hod in the ribs. Hod tries to keep breathing, to block the blows with his elbows. He can feel that the other man isn’t putting everything into it, punches landing with no weight behind them. The men around them are booing again and Choynski hits him with a sudden uppercut beneath the chin that staggers him back to the ropes where hands catch him and shove him forward into a shot square in what Smokey called the mark and sure enough Hod’s legs go to water and he dives forward to hug Choynski’s neck.

“Easy, son,” says the battler, bending his knees to support Hod’s weight. “You got to last six.”

“Six rounds?” The idea seems unbearable.

“Your Mr. Smith has some bets down. It’s six or we don’t get paid. You ready?”

“I think so.”

Choynski pushes him free then and snaps two punches, pulled a little so they only sting, to the right side of his face. Hod staggers back, only half acting, and cheers erupt. He steps back in, throwing straight punches with no kick in them, and Choynski smiles and feints and throws some of the same back at him. It is an exhibition, an exhibition of a scientific art he knows nothing about but is willing to pretend at as long as they stay in the center of the ring away from the blood-thirsty sons of bitches surrounding it. Choynski pops him on the nose with his left, a big blue spark before his eyes, but it triggers Hod’s cocked right hooking back over to catch the battler on the side of the jaw.

“Attaboy,” grins Choynski, dancing sideways. “Let em fly.”

Hod thrashes at him left and right and then the round ends and there are cheers and complaints and paper money and gold dust passing hands as he flops down on the stool straining for wind.

“He says I got to last six rounds to get paid.”

“They don’t tell me noner that,” says Smokey, spreading some kind of grease on Hod’s eyebrows and cheekbones with his thumbs. “Can you see out that eye?”

Hod’s left eye is swollen, closing to a slit. “Sort of.”

Smokey presses a chunk of ice to it, looks over to where Jeff Smith and his crew sit on a board-and-barrel bleacher. “If it six, you need to rest some in the middle of the rounds. Just get in tight and lean on the man. He be happy to lean back.”

The pipe gongs and they are on again and the boxing lesson continues, sparring back and forth, Choynski hitting Hod with a flurry of half-strength punches whenever the fanatics beyond the ropes get too restless. Hod’s arms are leaden and a couple times he has to backstep, dropping them to his sides to shake them out, Choynski closing but not too fast, before they can go at it again. Hod’s nose begins to bleed, dripping down over his chin and smearing into the sweat on his chest, and he has to breathe through his mouth. But he stays up through the third and the fourth, only in danger in the fifth when he catches the eye of the girl in the green, still watching through the cloud of cigar and woodsmoke that fills the room, and Choynski tags him with another uppercut that knocks him back on his keister.

Rev Bowers is over him, waving his arm and counting very deliberately. Hod manages to get to one knee but the muscles in his legs are gone, and when the Reverend gets to a slow seven he looks to Jeff Smith who looks to the sourdough with the hammer and bong! the round is ended, bettors stomping and shouting with glee or anger, Smokey coming out to lift Hod under the arms and flop him on the stool. The negro mashes a sponge into his face and Hod tries not to gag as the ammonia shoots up his nose to a spot behind his eyes and burns into the cuts on his face. He pushes the sponge away and the sound of the screaming men comes back in a rush and he is furious, furious at himself and ready to fight again. If only he could feel his legs.

“You doin fine, young man,” says Smokey. “You got more heart than head, but you doin fine. Where we at?”

“Nugget.”

“And where that?”

“Skaguay.”

Smokey takes Hod by the gloves and pulls out on his arms. “You hit the boards this round, just stay down. Peoples got what they paid for.”

He is able to stand when the sixth starts, his head clearing, his first two straight lefts landing and then a one-two, bringing his right hard over the top and following with a—

Someone is waving a towel in his face. The breeze is nice. He is sitting on a floor that has tobacco stains on it and blood, blood mixed with sweat on his arms and chest. The fighter from the Pack Train, Choynski, is flapping the towel, smiling and not wearing boxing gloves any more. He leans down and says something, just a noise in Hod’s ear but it’s not clear, nothing is clear—

He’s back in the little room with the French postcards on the wall and there is music and men’s voices from outside and the girl in green, the redheaded girl with the scrawny arms, winces in sympathy as she dabs at his cuts with a cloth soaked in something that stings like hell.

“They call me Sparrow,” she says. “But my Christian name is Addie Lee.”

His shoes and his socks are off, and somebody has pulled the protection out of his trunks and tossed it, stained with blood, onto a chair in one corner. He’s never been this undressed this close to a woman, the whores in Butte having only pulled his pants halfway down, and now he has to haul his knees up so this Addie Lee won’t see him stiff. When he crosses his arms to cover his nipples up it hurts terrible, his ribs on both sides purple with bruises.

“He laid you out pretty good. Hit the back of your head on the floor.”

That, too, hurts terrible, an ache that makes it hard to swallow when she tips his chin and gives him some water. “I go six?”

Addie Lee nods. “Don’t know if them ginks tonight were sorer at you or at Mr. Smith. They waitin for you out there.”

“Mr. Smith?”

She nods again. “The whole crew of em. Celebratin the haul they made.”

It takes a while for him to manage to sit up. Dressing himself is a torture, each move reminding another part of his body how hard it’s been pounded. When he shuffles out into the bar there is Smokey carefully sweeping the floor and Jeff Smith with a drink in his fist laughing and shaking his throbbing hand and Niles Manigault calling him Young McGinty and Rev Bowers and the Sheeny Kid and Old Man Triplett and Suds behind the bar and a fella named Red thumping him on the back which makes the ache in his skull jostle around and a little weaselly one they call Doc.

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