The Court at the End of the Island
Delicia had been watching the court for thirty-seven days. Not from the bench. From her Bayview living room window, three floors up, where the chain-link fence of the neighbourhood courts sliced the afternoon light into diamonds. She watched the teenagers curse and sweat. She watched the college boys dunk like they were born above the rim. She watched the old men play horse with the quiet dignity of undertakers. She had not touched a basketball since she was twelve years old. That was the year before the accident. The year before the chair. At forty-three, with gray threading her temples and arthritis whispering in her knuckles, Delicia did something that looked like insanity but felt like a door opening. She bought a ball. The woman at the sporting goods store at West Mall smiled the smile people give wheelchair users who say they want a basketball. It was the same smile she got when she told people she lived alone. The that's-nice-dear smile. The you're-very-brave-for-trying ...