The
Great Clash
In 1961 I was the sole witness to the greatest fight ever held
in South Oak Cliff (South Dallas). It was one snippy little, blond
hombre, versus the meanest, big-ol hombrette ever to mosey
down a dusty Texas road. My buddy T-Bone and I were just entering
our teens and we just knew, with a sureness only teens possess,
we were the two toughest kids within an hours bike ride
in any direction. Wed often pick fights to build our reputations,
like gunfighters. There were lots of challengers in the neighborhood,
but we never figured on Francis, the girl who lived next door
to T-Bone, giving us a lesson. Not a girl. No way.
Francis
was the same age as T-Bone and in the same grade in school, but
that was where the similarities ended. She was a head taller,
broader shouldered, and thicker by half, outweighing him by a
good forty pounds. Her blue-black hair was parted in the middle
with the sides pulled into dog ears. She was good at sports, but
baseball was her best game. With a great arm, she could put the
ball right on home plate from deep center field with just one
bounce, and she could knock a ball clean over a fielders
head more often than T-Bone or I could. Still, we never took her
seriously, because, after all, she was a girl, and would fight
like . . . a girl. Also, in those days, boys did not fight girls.
It just was not done.
Being kind, considerate southern boys, we dubbed her Fat Francis.
We called her Fat Francis all the time and everywhereneighborhood,
school, churchit didnt matter, just as long as she
was where she couldnt hear us. Not that we were trying to
protect her feelings.
As
a fighter, gaunt T-Bone was a little scrapper. When he punched
with his boney fists, it was like being jabbed with the end of
a broom handle. And I dont know what started the contention
between T-Bone and Fat Francis that day.
It
was Texas-sweltering-summertime and, like everyone else, my family
had our windows wide-open to catch any breeze, and any of the
neighbors business we could get. I was feeling summertime
lazy and boreduntil I heard the loud and threatening voices
coming from across the road at T-Bones house. Was there
a bout about to begin? I looked out the window to see T-Bone and
Fat Francis trying to cower each other by outshouting and name-calling.
There appeared to be a good fight a-kindling so I hightailed it
over there. I knew if I could get there in time and throw some
sticks on the fire, there was a chance for a flame-up. As they
were shouting, they started to bump each other like an umpire
and manager.
In
my full run over there, it took me a second to catch my breath
and say, Whoa there, ol son, as I poked him
on the shoulder. Youre not going to put up with that,
are you, T-Bone? Get her, boy, get her!
Yeah.
Get her, boy, get her! Fat Francis mocked in
a whiney tone as she looked down and faced her opponent, nose-to-forehead.
Then with a slight laugh she turned to me and said, Toothpick-boy
aint gonna get nobody.
T-Bone
was puffed-up-mad, but looked a little unsure. He didnt
know what to do with this girl who continued to insult him. If
it was a boy, hed know what to do. He bumped her again and
said, You . . . you just get outta my yard, Fat Francis.
Uh-oh.
Nobodybut nobodyhad ever called Fat Francis Fat
Francis to her face. Her eyes narrowed and she leaned over
him again, looking down menacingly.
I
saw my opening. Fat Francis?! Hey, girl,
I cajoled, youre not going to let him get away with
that, are you? I figured I was making some progress, cause
it only takes one dog to know sic em to get
a fight going.
Ill
show you fat! she screamed as she came around hard with
a right hand and slapped him exactly on the word fat.
It cracked like a rifle shot. And then there was a stillness.
T-Bone fell back two steps from the shot and shook his head. And
I thought he did look a little silly, this pasty-skin, skinny
boy with a red hand print on the left side of his face.
Taking
back his two lost steps, T-Bone looked up at her, andslapped
her back! Francis looked more surprised than hurt. T-Bone looked
at his offending open hand and appeared stunned himself at what
he had done.
She
countered by grabbing double-fists-handsful of blond hair and
swinging him round and round and faster and faster till he feet
cleared the ground. He got his feet under him and pushed toward
her to relieve the pressure on his head and to reach out and get
some hair himself. Able to stretch out his right arm, he locked
on to her left dog ear.
They
flopped hard on the ground, and commenced to wrestling, rolling,
kicking, scratching, and hair pullingall as they spit out
as bad of names at each other and their mamas as each could think
of. Everything attack-method she used, he used. That is until
they rolled against a tree and he saw his next move. T-Bone dropped
his pet hold on her hair, and using both his hands, pushed her
forearm up square in a patch of poison ivy, and smoked her arm
back and forth in it as fast as he could.
At
one point during the fracas, she lost one of her shoes. As they
rolled around T-Bones front yard, she was able to grab the
shoe and start pounding knots on T-Bones head, all while
holding him close with the other hand full of hair. He twisted
and stretched just enough to reach her shod foot where he yanked
off her other shoe and started whacking every part of her in range.
They ended up on their feet exchanging hammer-shots with the shoes.
Then,
at the same moment, they both staggered back off each other, exhausted,
battered and beaten. They were so out of breath, they couldnt
even cuss each other. Francis turned and limped toward her house,
the shoe/club still in her grasp and swinging at her side with
each stride. Bent-over, slackjawed and still breathing hard as
he teetered back and forth trying to keep his balance, T-Bone
looked up to watch her go. Then he straightened up and easily
tossed the shoe he had of hers back in her yard, well ahead of
her. She stopped and paused a second before turning and giving
a gesture with her shoe-hand in a kind of salute.
For quite a while, there were some signs of the battle-royal.
Francis sported some bruises, and a bad poison ivy rash on her
left forearm. T-Bone had claw marks dug-in from waist to head,
and he lost a hunk of hair in the front. He wound up getting most
of his hair cut off in a flat top, which sort of helped hide the
sparse spot, but made the knots more noticeable.
A
week later, Francis chose T-Bone as her rider in a game of horse.
After a hard-fought battle, they were the last team standing,
and both yelled loud whoops as Francis danced victory circles.
T-Bone bounced along on her back with one hand on her shoulder
and the other fisted high in triumph for the horse championship
of the world they had just won together.
True
Champions all.