night back, he began to argue with his uncle. Their shouts echoed
through the tiny rooms of the house. Boobie was feverish, despondent,
with a puffed-up knee that no longer contained God's gift of speed;
L.V., disappointed that all his work, all his attempts to mold his
nephew into a Heisman winner, had ended up like this.
At 10:30 p.m., Boobie said he was going over to his aunt's house. L.V.
told him he was crazy to go out just after he had had major knee
surgery. "I'm through working with you," said L.V.
"I'm through with you," said Boobie.
"Then get your stuff out."
Boobie did just that, because nothing, not even his uncle, meant
anything to him anymore.
"I miss him, but as time goes on, I'll learn to live with it," said L.V. "It
kind of wears away, but it's somethin' you think about all the time.
Boobie was just like my own."
To Hearne, what had happened to Boobie was strikingly clear. "He
needed special, special, special attention, but he wasn't going to get it
because he wasn't healthy," Hearne said. "He was expendable because
we had a heck of a running back."
With Comer leading the way, Permian won four playoff games. But in
the semifinals, on a bleak December day in Austin, the Panthers lost
14-9 to Carter High of Dallas, and the dream of goin' to state ended
without being fulfilled.
For the last time Coach Gaines gathered the players into a circle. All
around him, bent on one knee, were teenage boys in tears, their great,
compelling belief in themselves punctured.
"I'm very proud of you as a person, I'm proud of you as a team,"
said Gaines.