Shapeshifter Finals
by
Jeffrey A. Carver
First published in WARRIORS OF BLOOD AND DREAM
edited by Roger Zelazny
Avon Books, 1995
Copyright © 1995 Jeffrey A. Carver
All rights reserved. This work is the literary property of the
author and a part of his livelihood. You are free to download this story for
your own enjoyment. You may print a copy, if you like, for your own use,
including sharing it with friends. You may not post it elsewhere on the
web. Permission to distribute for any except personal use is explicitly
denied.
Shapeshifter Finals
The crowd roared as the first pair
of wrestlers engaged in competition out on the center mat.
"
Aww-riiiiii-choooo-guyyyys!" "HUGGA-HUGGGA-HUGGGA-HUGGGA!"
"Wickety-(psicry!)-wickety- (psicry!)-wickety-(psicry!)" Hog Donovan peeked
over in the direction of the match, but tried not to get drawn into watching it.
Neither of the contestants in the ninety-three pound class was human, and better
he should keep his mind on his own upcoming match.
"
Gaaiiee! Gaaiiee!" "Brackit-it-it-it-it-it-it-it-it!"
"Wheeeooop-ooop-ooop!" The assortment of cries from the stands was damned
disconcerting, the crowd being over half extraterrestrials. It was the opening
bout, finals round, in the 57,463rd Annual Games of the IntraGalactic Interworld
Multicultural Amateur Wrestling League--and the first games ever to be hosted by
Earth. Hog Donovan prayed that the human fans could drown out all the ETs when
he got to the mat himself. He was as nervous as a laboratory rat on speed, and
he was going to need all the psychological boost he could get.
Hog paced the warmup area in his tights and warmup jacket, trying to still
the butterflies in his stomach. It would be at least forty minutes yet before
they called him to the mat, for the hundred thirty-eight pound finals. An
eternity! Hog threw himself into his warmup exercises and tried to blank out
everything else.
Bye-bye baby, baby bye-bye... The refrain of a popular song repeated
mercilessly in his head, warring with the cheers of the crowd.
Hog grunted, working up a good sweat. Hog indeed! He was long and whiplike,
and bore his nickname only because his old heavyweight friend, Hermie "Harmin'"
Harmon, had dubbed him "Hog" in retribution for his jokes about Harmon's
rhinolike neck. Those were the old days, but the name had stuck...
The crowd roared, and Hog was startled to realize that the first match was
over--the victor a mercurial-skinned creature from Tau Ceti. The next weight
class was up, and--hey!--this was the only other human finalist, a wiry little
Brit named Johnnie Johnson, up against some sort of centipede from the Vega
asteroids.
Hog ducked through to the sidelines to yell encouragement. "
Give 'im hell,
Johnnie!" he hollered as the Earthman trotted onto the mat. His voice was
drowned out by a loud buzzing. Up in the stands, a large contingent of centipede
fans were rubbing their upper limbs together, en masse, cheering on their fellow
Vegan.
Hog suppressed a shudder as he watched Johnnie engage the centipede from a
standing position. All those
legs. And they were so...insectlike. And
quick. With a chitter and a blur of speed, the centipede caught Johnnie's left
ankle with several of its legs, and tripped him for a two-point takedown. The
crowd buzzed in appreciation.
"
Get up! Keep moving!" Hog yelled.
Tap tap. Hog started at the rap on the top of his head, and turned to
see Coach Tagget urging him away from the sidelines. "But coach--"
"Hog, go warm up. Don't fret over Johnnie, you're just scaring yourself."
Tagget rapped him on the skull again. "Don't forget--"
"I know, I know, the brain is the most important muscle," Hog repeated by
rote, as he turned back to the warmup area.
"
Think about your match.
Think," Coach Tagget urged, as Hog
resumed his stretches. After a moment, satisfied with Hog's progress, the coach
left to go watch Johnnie himself.
Think, right. Think about the fact that he was about to wrestle an alien
named Belduki-Elikitango-Hardart-Colloidisan, an Ektra shapechanger capable of
assuming about a thousand different multiworld multicultural body
configurations. He was thinking about it, all right. And he was having trouble
keeping his knees from shaking.
Bye-bye baby, baby bye-bye...
He remembered how smug the Earth promoters had been when the IIMAWL rules
committee had offered to make terran rules the norm for this tournament, in
honor of the hosting world. Of course, none of the promoters had even
thought about the fact that Earth's wrestlers would be competing against
sentient bugs, snakes, gorillas...and shapeshifters...except that they'd finally
decreed a return to the more modest, and protective, tights in place of skimpy
singlets. In other respects, the referees' interpretation of Earth's rules had
turned out to be a tad subjective, to say the least.
"
Johnnie--NO!"
The single shout from the Brit's coach was drowned out by a rising buzz from
the crowd. Hog jumped up, trying to see what was happening. The centipede buzz
crescendoed. Hog ducked through an opening in the sidelines crowd to get a
better view.
Uh-oh. Johnnie was in big trouble. The centipede had him halfway onto his
back, with about six legs pushing his shoulders toward the mat. Hog knelt on the
sidelines, twisting and arching sympathetically as Johnnie struggled against the
inexorable leverage of all those limbs. Johnnie's coach, a wiry little man, was
screaming, "
Scoot out! Scoot out!" and making futile sweeping gestures
with his arms.
Hog cupped his hands and screamed, "
PULL HIS ANTENNAS! PULL HIS
ANTENNAS!"
The match seemed to freeze abruptly, as the centipede cocked its head and
glared across the mat at Hog with all four eyes. Its hairy antennas bristled.
Hog gulped, regretting his impulsive yell. The thing looked as if it might just
abandon the match and come on over and stomp him for his remark. It appeared to
have completely forgotten its opponent.
Johnnie seized the opportunity. For an instant, it looked as though he might
actually grab the thing's antennas--which would have been a definite foul--but
instead, Johnnie managed to get an elbow inside the thing's legs and knock out
several locked joints, loosening the centipede's grip. The crowd buzzed, and the
centipede turned back to its opponent, but Johnnie was already wriggling quickly
out of its arms.
"
That's it! That's it! That's it!" screamed the coach, waving wildly.
Johnnie was frantically trying to complete his escape. He had one leg out now
and was up on the other knee. The human crowd was screaming.
The centipede spasmed with rage and tackled Johnnie with a dozen legs. They
fell together to the mat with a
whump, knocking the breath out of
Johnnie. Before Hog could even rise up on his toes to yell, Johnnie was on his
back under the centipede, the ref was down on five elbows, peering to see if
shoulder blades were touching the mat, and--
slap! tweeeeeeeet!--just like
that, Johnnie was pinned and the match was over.
The centipede humped its back and drew away from its human opponent,
chittering triumphantly. Johnnie sat up, gasping. The centipede crowd went crazy
rubbing their limbs.
Hog caught Coach Tagget's eye and turned away, sighing, to return to the
warmup area. Johnnie had finished in second place. That meant the honor of
Earth, wrestling-wise, rested on Hog. He swallowed, trying not to think about
it. But how
could he not think about it? He was the only human left in
the finals. All eyes, and cameras, would be on him.
As he was stretching his hamstrings, Johnnie walked past, shaking his head.
"Tough luck," Hog sympathized.
The Englishman paused, peering at him with dazed eyes. "Are you the bloke who
got that thing as mad as a raving hornet?"
"I--well--" Hog spread his hands. "I was just cheering for you. You almost
made it out, too. Sorry you didn't--"
"You know what those bastards
smell like, when they're on top of you
and they're mad?" Johnnie wheezed. "Cheeeeeeez-z-z," he whispered hoarsely.
"That was what damn near killed me." Johnnie shook his head and wandered off
toward the clutches of the TV interviewers. "It wasn't the bloody pin..."
Hog saw Johnnie's coach staring darkly in his direction. He went back to his
warmups. Stretch left, stretch right, down, up...
"
Heyyaaah, earthman krrreeepy-krrreeepy..."
Hog turned, wrinkling his nose at a sudden whiff of ammonia. The centipede
was standing beside him, balanced on half its legs, waving the claws on the rest
of its legs in his direction. "Uh--?" Hog managed. "Can I, uh, help you?"
The centipede's antennas waved drunkenly. "
Hoho yassss," hissed the
centipede. "
Krrreeepy-krreeepy earthman sso sssmart! Come sssee me
lataaah."
Poot. It made a loud spitting sound. "
Yahh-heyyy?"
Hog backed up a step. "I don't know what you're talking about--"
The centipede chittered with laughter and sauntered away. "
Lataaaah,
earthman..."
Hog stared after it in disbelief. He jumped when he felt a hand on his
shoulder. Then he heard the familiar sound of his coach tsk-tsking.
"Poor sportsmanship, Hog. That's all that is--poor sportsmanship. What do you
expect from a centipede?" Tagget scowled at the Vegan, who was now parading in
front of its fans, waving its arms in triumph. "Look, why don't you go on back
to the locker room and clear your mind. I'll call you when it's time to come
back out."
Hog nodded with relief. Yes. Back to the locker room. Forget centipedes. Have
a swallow of honey for quick energy.
Bye-bye baby, baby bye-bye...
He trotted back to the locker room, shaking the tension out of his arms.
All things considered, it was actually pretty amazing that Earth had ever
gotten nominated to host the IIMAWL tournament. After all, by 2008 A.D., the
farthest any human had ever gotten from Earth was the Moon. But the interworld
sporting federation liked to give a boost to newly discovered worlds. And Earth
was among the newest--not yet five years a part of the interworld community,
since the Rigellians had landed and made first contact, and promptly proposed
building factories here to employ the locals. In the eyes of the terran
promoters, the tournament was not so much a sporting event per se as a promotion
of tourism and general economic opportunity aimed at ETs who might want to spend
money here. And in that respect, it was already successful, at least to the tune
of a new sports complex for Cleveland and a good crowd of paying ET visitors.
The human wrestling world, on the other hand--the top wrestlers, the Olympic
and AAU winners--had been pretty resistant to the idea, claiming that it was
insane to pit oneself against aliens whose bodies were so different as to render
competition meaningless. Mostly, the sports writers echoed that position,
denouncing the games as blatant sensationalism. Still, there were some good, if
maybe not great, wrestlers who hadn't seen the obvious--and had wound up
entering the competitions that one wag, as
Time was so fond of putting
it, called the "crocodile free- for-alls."
That's the kind of wrestler Hog Donovan was: not great--but sharp,
determined, and something of an iconoclast. He figured he only had a few good
years of wrestling left in him, and he was determined to make the best of them.
And the way to do that was to enter a competition so new, so outre, that the
mainstream wrestling world hadn't caught on to it yet. And maybe, Hog figured,
it would
become recognized, and maybe it would even give
him
enough recognition so that once he'd hung up his tights and joined the working
world, he wouldn't have to work on a Rigellian assembly line building
Lotusflower roadsters.
Anyway, that was the reason he'd given his parents and his coach, though it
was really only half the story. The other half was that he'd sacrificed and
sweated blood at this sport for over seven years now, and by God, he wanted to
be the best damned wrestler in the galaxy--okay,
one of the best damned
wrestlers in the galaxy--even if only for one brief, glorious moment.
To his own surprise, he'd done well, working his way through four preliminary
rounds, and winning the semifinals just yesterday, narrowly besting a
titanium-boned opponent with twice his strength and half his agility and
intelligence. He was proud of that victory and the semiconductor-medal it had
assured him of, and the recognition it brought to his home planet.
But right now, he had to focus on just one thing--and that was how the hell
to wrestle against an Ektra shapeshifter.
He paced in front of his locker and shook the tension out again. Peering
around the corner of the lockers he saw one of the black-skinned African
wrestlers warming up and he gave a collegial thumbs-up of encouragement before
returning to his own spot. Wait a minute! he thought suddenly. There
aren't any Africans in the finals.
He heard a loud
crack. Uneasily, he peered around the corner again.
The black-skinned being, which was
not human, was separating its joints
as if they were held together by rubber bands. It was pulling its right forearm
out from its elbow, and dislocating its shoulder and stretching it way behind
its neck. The creature grinned a gleaming grin, and Hog withdrew to his own
corner, shivering. A
transformer, he realized. Just like the toys that a
kid could flex and twist until they'd changed from, say, a spaceship to an
atomic monster. What world was this creature from?
Don't think about it. Think about your opponent. How are you going to beat
Belduki-Elikitango-Hardart-Colloidisan?
He'd only seen the shapeshifter once, briefly, in a preliminary round.
"
Belduki's its name, and throttlin's its game," was how the
Plain
Dealer had put it, in pointed reference to its reputed predilection for
near-strangulation of its opponents. That was obviously an exaggeration for
effect; nevertheless, it unnerved Hog, who devoutly regarded wrestling as a
gentleman's sport, safe and well regulated. He'd always scorned so-called
"""professional wrestling""" (he always mentally put several quotes around the
phrase, to emphasize his disdain), in which contestants were slammed to the
deck, or thrown against the ropes, or otherwise theatrically mistreated. Real
wrestling wasn't like that; it was a sport of skill and conditioning and
determination.
It'd come as a shock to learn that in the IIMAWL, there was not entirely the
same sense of careful sportsmanship. Oh, sure, there were some protections: no
contestant could emit chemicals toxic to the opponent, for instance. But with
the contestants so morphically different from one another, monitoring safety was
a lot harder than it was between human wrestlers. One contestant might turn blue
with concentration, another with suffocation. Would a ref who heard that
cracking sound of the transformer recognize it as the sound of breaking bones in
a human? In the end, the IIMAWL claimed to be keeping the sport safe, but it was
Hog's uneasy suspicion that they mostly threw up their hands, flippers, and
toes, and said to hell with it, let's
try to keep them from killing each
other, but if a ref misreads a physiologic sign, what are we supposed to do?
Think about the Ektra, Hog thought, shooting a practice takedown in the empty
space in front of his locker. Think about the Ektra.
The shapeshifter. Actually, he'd been more or less counting all along on
Belduki-Elikitango-whatever being knocked out by Gazoom Gazoom the Indefatigable
Baboon and returning champion, from Veni Five. After his own victory against
Titanium Jimm, Hog had been carefully planning ways to defeat the
baboon...ingenious ways, resourceful ways. And then the stupid baboon had gone
and fallen right into the Ektra's four-armed can-opener in the third period, and
boom, right onto his back.
Slap! Tweet! (Psicry!) The ref called
the fall, and there went all of Hog's planning, out the window. And now
he faced the shapeshifter.
Hog drew a deep breath and blew into his cupped hands. This was no
good--hanging around the locker room, thinking about what could go wrong. He'd
be better off out on the floor, soaking up the psychic energy of the meet. And
where the hell was Coach Tagget, anyway?
Hog reached into his locker, took a long drag from his plastic honey bear,
and slammed the locker shut. For just an instant, as his hand was about to close
the combination padlock, he hesitated. What if he were knocked unconscious and
they needed to get into his locker? Good God, man--stop it! He squeezed the lock
shut with a decisive click.
As he strode up the echoing passageway to the gym, he heard shouts from the
crowd and felt a surge of adrenaline. He broke into a trot, and darted past a
couple of ETs who were half blocking the end of the passageway, and jogged out
toward the end of the arena.
The crowd erupted with a roar of approval. He smiled to himself, flushing
with confidence, then peered over to see what they were actually cheering about.
Tweeeeeeeeet! Slap!
The 133-pound match had just ended with a pin. An alien that looked like a
huge gerbil got up, shaking, from under one that looked like a leaf. The ref
flagged the leaf as the winner.
And Hog was up next.
Bye-bye baby, baby...
Coach Tagget found him just in time to yell something incomprehensible in
Hog's ear, shake his hand vigorously, and push him onto the mat with a whack on
the rear. Hog shook off his irritation at the coach and stepped onto the mat
with a glance at the ref.
A new referee had come out from the table, replacing the one who had just
tweeted the last winner. This ref looked a little like a centaur with
multijointed legs, and big paddle-shaped hands, great for slapping the mat.
Good, Hog thought. The better to signal Hog Donovan winner by fall. None of this
eking out a victory by points. Hog Donovan goes for the whole enchilada.
Starting right now. This is for
Earth, and this is for
Hog. He
swung his arms, huffing. Damn straight.
"You can do it, Justin! Tear his lungs out!" screamed a woman somewhere in
the stands. Hog smiled a little. He couldn't pick her out of the crowd, but he
knew his mother was waving her program wildly, endangering the eyesight of
everyone within reach. His father was just as avid a fan, but he'd be too busy
with the fastcam to spend much time yelling.
A blast of easy listening music filled the gymnasium from somewhere
overhead--a sampler of Earth culture to entertain the ET crowd.
Hog's opponent streamed onto the mat from the opposite side, and gathered
itself up into something resembling a whiplike tree. Its feet, if that was what
they were, stretched out like roots, and Hog could have sworn that the roots
were embedding themselves in the mat. What the hell kind of creature was this?
Ektras didn't make up shapes; they always emulated real species that Ektras had
known, somewhere in the galaxy. Hog puffed into his fist and looked at the ref,
determined not to be distracted by unanswerable questions.
The announcer's voice boomed: "IN THE ONE HUNDRED THIRTY- EIGHT POUND CLASS!
FROM EARTH: HOG DONOVAN--HUMAN!" There was a murmur of approval, plus his
mother's shrieks, but not exactly the thunderous roar Hog had imagined. He
glanced up into the crowd, and saw a row of centipedes sitting on their legs.
"AND FROM EKTRA FOUR: BELDUKI-ELIKITANGO-HARDART-COLLOIDISAN--EKTRA
SHAPESHIFTER!" Hog held his breath, waiting for the cheers for his opponent.
What he actually heard was more like a group indrawn breath of fear.
He noted that the Ektra had sprouted about a hundred suction cups on the ends
of its tree branches. He was going to have a dickens of a time avoiding
those. Hog danced in place, thinking hard--and coming up with very
little, strategy-wise.
Fortunately, he was saved from despair by a voice that boomed out through the
general noise: "HOGMAN, YOU PIN THIS WALKING JELLO-SALAD, AND DRINKS ARE ON ME
FOR THE REST OF THE
YEAR!" Hog grinned despite himself, and at that
moment caught sight of Hermie "Harmin'" Harmon in the front row, shaking his
hammy fists in the air. Harmin' now worked the graveyard shift at Lotusflower
Assembly, hanging transaaactional warp modules under Rigellian interstellar
roadsters. He hadn't wrestled in three years, and his physique now resembled
that of a hippopotamus. Was that what was in store for Hog, after his wrestling
career ended? Lotusflower Assembly, with the rest of the guys? Not if he could
help it...
Hog frowned and stepped into a crouch, facing his opponent.
The shapeshifter waved its branches. The ref gestured with its paddles, and
Hog reached out to grip the nearest branch in a handshake. The suction cups
latched onto his hand, and let go with a
pop. Hog shook off the stinging
sensation. The ref leveled a paddle-shaped hand between the two contestants,
then jerked it away with a
tweet! on its whistle. The match was on.
Hog danced sideways, and forward and back, snatching in quick grabs at the
shapeshifter's branches. He was just testing, seeing if he could get the thing
off balance. The Ektra waved its branches unconcernedly. Its feet remained
planted. Hog circled, trying to make it lift its feet and follow. The Ektra
didn't turn at all; it just waved different branches at him as he circled. Where
the hell were its eyes, anyway--on the leaves? And what would constitute putting
this thing on its back? he wondered.
"Cut 'im down, Hog!" he heard, in the dim distance of the sidelines. Harmin',
cheering him on. His friend sounded as if he was miles away.
"You don't have all day, Donovan--go in after him!" he heard on the other
side. Coach Tagget, offering helpful strategy.
Hog shrugged off a negligent grab by one of the branches, and without
thinking launched his attack. He shot forward, low, grabbing for the base of the
shapeshifter's trunk. It was a purely instinctive move--go for the single-leg
takedown, whether the thing had legs or not. It worked better than he could have
expected: the branches waved madly above him, and some of the suckers came down
on his back. But he got good penetration, and wrapped both arms around the
Ektra's trunk. He got one knee up under him, and lifted, hard.
The Ektra didn't budge. It was holding itself down not so much by its roots
as by a large sucker at the base of its trunk. Hog grunted, trying to break it
free. As he strained, the Ektra's branches were clinging to his back, though
fortunately the fabric of his tights top kept it from getting too secure a grip.
Grunting harder, Hog dug his fingers under the edge of the tree's suction base.
He heard his coach's distant voice: "--the
hell are you doing?"
"Gaaaahhhh!" With a roar, Hog pulled up with his fingers.
Sploook. The
Ektra came loose from the mat, and he had it in the air like a heavy Christmas
tree. He staggered, turning with it, trying to tip it over. The tree was
snatching at his back and his arms. Hog lost his balance and went over sideways,
taking the tree with him.
Even as they fell, he could feel the thing changing shape. By the time they
hit the mat, the Ektra was an extremely slippery snakey thing, sliding out of
his hands. Hog tightened his grip, trying to keep it from getting away. But it
was impossible; it had some sort of coating that made it slick as hell. He
scrambled to follow it on the mat, desperately trying to hold on long enough to
get the takedown points.
"Queeeeeee!" whistled the shapeshifter, and with a convulsive jerk slithered
out of Hog's hands.
"No points!" brayed the ref, prancing alongside.
Hog glanced up in frustration. He was
sure he'd earned the takedown
points, even if he had to concede a one-point escape. Was this ref going to be
an impossible-to-please type?
The glance was a mistake; it distracted him from his opponent. By the time he
looked back, his opponent was gone.
Whufff!
His breath went out with a gasp, and he felt the snake's coils wrapping
around him from behind. How could it have moved so fast? he thought uselessly,
as he struggled to jam his elbows down into the coils to protect his ribs from
the rapidly tightening pressure.
"Queee-ee-eeeee!" chortled the snake, in what sounded like a merry laugh.
Prelude to strangulation? Hog wondered. The next coil whipped around his ankles,
and he fell to the mat like a hundred and thirty-eight pounds of frozen meat.
"Two-point takedown!" whinnied the ref.
"Augggh!" Hog grunted, trying to keep from rolling onto his back. The snake
was trying to get him to do just that, but it didn't have a firm enough hold on
his legs, and he was able to scissor hard and gain some leverage, getting
himself halfway up to his elbows and knees. "Hunhh!
Uunhh!" He was
struggling just to breathe. He could feel himself sliding a bit inside the
slippery coils, despite the pressure. If only he could slide out...
In fact, he was moving a little, squirming in the coils. "
Unhhhh!
Unhhh!" He inhaled as hard as he could, held his breath a moment, then
gasped it out and jammed his elbows hard against the coils. He pushed them down
by about a foot.
The snake tightened like a vise around his hips. His progress stopped; the
coils were smaller than his hipbones. "Auuughhh!" Hog groaned, blinking at the
sight of the ref leaning close, maybe to make sure he was still breathing. If he
wasn't turning purple now, he never would be!
He heard a din and a stamping around him. The crowd was loving it--probably
hoping he got squeezed to death.
Coach Tagget was yelling something, but he couldn't hear what it was. But
another voice reached him through the cacophony: "HAWWWWG--SLAM 'IM TILL HE LETS
GO!" he heard distantly.
Hermie. And good thinking. Hog huffed, raising himself on all fours, lifting
the snake's weight. He suddenly went flat, hitting the mat as hard as he could,
right on the snake's coils. He felt them loosen for an instant, and he squirmed
frantically...
Tweeeeeet!
The snake gave a last squeeze, then relaxed its grip as the ref halted the
action.
"Warning!" brayed the ref. "Slamming is forbidden! Warning number one against
the human!" The ref waved his paddle-hands.
Hog gasped, trying to catch his breath. Warning or not, he had a fighting
start now; they would resume the match from a one- up one-down position. As the
coils unwound, he lumbered to his feet and walked in a brisk circle to shake off
the effects. Then he knelt back down on his hands and knees.
"Shake it off--shake it off!" he heard his coach yell. "Now stay out of those
coils!"
Hog glanced back to see if the Ektra would take another shape. But no--he
could only change shape while the clock was running. That was a regulatory
concession to the nonshifting wrestlers: the shapeshifters had the advantage of
versatility of form, but they were momentarily vulnerable during the change, and
for a few seconds following, while they "got into" their new forms.
"No delay!" called the ref. This time it was yelling at the shapeshifter. The
Ektra seemed to be having trouble deciding how to situate itself on the top
position over Hog: it had no hands or feet to place on or near him. "Rest your
head on his back!" the ref instructed.
"Queeee?" protested the shapeshifter.
"On his back," repeated the ref. "No delay, please."
"Queeee," it answered.
Hog felt the snake's head touch the center of his back. He glanced over his
shoulder and saw that the creature was arching over him from a base of coils on
the mat, and was indeed touching him just on the center of the back. Good. He
just had to move faster than the snake.
Tweet!
Hog launched himself up to a standing position, whirling away. He felt no
resistance. "One point escape!" called the ref. Hog spun around to face the
snake.
"QUAAARRRRRRRRR!" roared the creature that was facing him-- no snake now, but
an enormous, maned animal with a mouth full of large teeth.
(TERROR! TERROR!
I'M BIGGER THAN YOU!) Hog backed away, startled. He tripped on the heel of
his sneaker and fell to his knees. "QUAAAAAAAAAA!" bellowed the Ektra, charging.
(BARE YOUR GNEEPHITZXX...!) echoed its psicry.
For an instant, Hog was paralyzed with fear--like a man who'd stumbled in
front of a rabid lion. Do something, he thought. Get out of its way! Then
something in him snapped, and instead of using common sense and fleeing, he
leaped straight at the charging beast with a bloodcurdling Tarzan-yell. "AAAHH-
AAAUUGGHHHH!" He was going to meet those teeth, and it would all be over before
the ref could tweet his whistle, but he couldn't stop himself.
The Ektra lion halted in midcharge, bewildered by Hog's furious yell.
Hog slammed into it, grabbing it around the neck. The damn thing was all fur
and air; it weighed the same as he did, but at three times his size. The Ektra
went over like a bowling pin, perhaps too surprised to react.
BLAAATTTT!
Tweeeeet! "No points!"
Hog rolled away from the shapeshifter and leaped to his feet. "Whaaat?" he
yelled. "I had him--"
"End of first period!" called the ref, strutting away on its four centaur
legs, ignoring Hog's protest. Hog sighed, wheezing for breath. Damn, this wasn't
looking good. He had to do
something.
"Ref, you blindfolded nag! If that wasn't a takedown, what was it?" came a
scream from the sidelines. Hog kept his back to his coach as Tagget demonstrated
proper Earth sportsmanship. Not that Hog didn't agree with him.
He turned and stared at the leonine alien, whose unreadable eyes were just
shifting from Hog to the ref.
(I crush you.) "Quaaaaaa?" it asked the
ref.
"Call the toss!" whinnied the centaur, holding an oversized poker chip in its
paddle-hand. The chip was red on one side, blue on the other.
"Quaaaa," grumbled the Ektra.
The ref flipped the chip. It fluttered and landed red side up on the mat. "Up
or down?" it asked, pointing to the Ektra, who had apparently called red.
"Quaaa," it said, with a shrug of its furry shoulders.
"Ektra up! Human down!" announced the ref, pointing to the center of the mat.
Hog knelt and assumed the position.
"No teeth, shapechanger!" yelled Coach Tagget as the lion- thing positioned
itself with two large paws on Hog's back and its mouth open, breathing hot,
fetid air straight down on the back of Hog's neck. "No biting allowed!" shouted
Tagget.
"QUAAAAAAARRRR!" answered the beast with a terrifying rumble.
(I SQUEEZE
YOUR--!)
"Get up and away from him!" Hog heard through the ringing in his ears.
The ref peered at the two, raising a flat hand.
Tweet!
Hog scrambled, and felt the lion all over him. It felt heavy, and it was
quick, and its breath made him reel. But it had to be tiring with all that
movement, and maybe Hog could wear it out. He soon realized something, and the
lion must have, too. Except for its teeth and claws, which it couldn't use, it
had no good way to hold onto him other than hugging him in a smothering embrace
and staying on top of him. If Hog could just shoot his legs out to the side and
keep moving...
He felt the Ektra changing shape even as he did so. He made it partway out of
the Ektra's embrace, then lurched to stand up. He turned, hopping back and
away--and was nearly free when he felt a tentacle whip around his left ankle. He
hopped harder, trying to jerk away, but the tentacle was faster. He managed to
turn to face his opponent, and found the tentacle attached to something that
looked as if it had crawled out of a very dark lagoon. God only knew what planet
the original was from. It had a head like a moldy stump and two squidlike
tentacles that sprouted from the head, and it was trying to snake its other
tentacle around Hog's right leg. Hog hopped madly to evade it, and the lagoon
creature responded by hoisting his left ankle to a ridiculous height,
practically to his chin, with the first tentacle. Hog was left hopping like a
crazed ballet dancer, struggling not to lose his balance.
"Krrrreeeee!" screeched the lagoon-thing.
"F-f-f-...says you!" gasped Hog. No, don't talk to it! he thought. Save your
strength, save your strength. He jumped, trying to lever his weight downward to
break free, but the tentacle's grip was tenacious.
"You can do it, Justin!" screamed his mother's voice, from somewhere.
"Get yourself out of there, dammit, Hog! How'd you get into that?" he heard,
from another direction. He was completely disoriented with respect to the room;
he could only focus on the mat, and this infernal creature.
He jumped higher. The tentacle went higher. He still didn't break free, and
now his leg was up as far as it could possibly go, and his hamstrings were
screaming.
"Krrrreeeeee!" urged his opponent.
"Scree you!" Hog retorted angrily.
Tweeeeeeeeet! The ref strode forward, breaking the impasse. It turned
to Hog and waved a paddle in his direction, while braying to the scoring table:
"The use of abusive language is prohibited. One point penalty against the
human!"
"
What?" Hog gasped, limping away from the Ektra.
"References to the opponent's progenitors are strictly forbidden!" scolded
the centaur with the whistle. "Assume the position."
"
Ref--you piece of Arcturan fungus!" screamed a voice from the
sidelines. "
You mold, you donkey! You wouldn't know a foul if it came up and
plugged you--you--!"
Hog ignored his coach's rantings and assumed the position.
The centaur was staring coldly in the direction of the sidelines, but it said
nothing, until the shapeshifter had hunched behind Hog, its tentacles on his
back. A little too
firmly on his back, Hog realized. "Ref--wait a min--"
Tweet!
Hog was a moment slow in moving, and the shapeshifter had its tentacles
around his waist by the time he was into his standup. He was on his feet, but he
couldn't break free, and he began lunging one way and then another, trying to
loosen the thing's grip. He dug his hands down under the tentacles to break
their hold. Yes--he had them loose! "Aarrrrr!" he snarled, spinning and bracing
his feet outward. If he could just arch, he could complete the escape...
He staggered a little, as the Ektra pushed him backwards off the mat.
Tweet! "No points!"
Hog cursed under his breath and returned to the center of the mat. This time
he was ready.
Tweet!
He was up, turning, leaving the lagoon-creature on the mat...except for the
tentacle that whipped out and caught his ankle and jerked his leg high in the
air. "
Gaaahhhh!" Hog roared, hopping...hopping...hopping...
Time seemed to slow and twiddle its thumbs as he danced, evading the second
tentacle, while struggling in vain to escape from the first. He edged slowly
toward the out-of-bounds, and the lagoon-creature slowly dragged him back.
Time took a coffee break. Time went out to an early lunch...
And Hog hopped...hopped...hopped...
Would the period never end? he thought desperately, throwing his weight up
and down with fading strength. Would time never run out on this eternal second
period...?
BLAAATTTT! went the buzzer.
Tweeeeet! "No points!" called the ref.
Hog gasped, as the Ektra released his leg.
"Shake it off, Hog--shake it off!" "Go, Justin--!"
He gulped air as he staggered in a circuit around the mat, before going to
assume the top position for the final period. "Whattza score?" he rasped to the
ref.
"Three to one, Ektra," the ref informed him.
From somewhere overhead, the strains of country-western music filled the
gymnasium.
For Earth, Hog thought dizzily, focusing on the form of the creature before
him. Do it for Earth. Do it for wrestling. For wrestling. For the tricrystal
medal. Just gotta do it, somehow.
You're on camera--the only human left.
"FREE DRINKS, HAWWWG!" yelled Harmin'.
Tweet!
He hurled his weight into the lagoon-creature, hoping to topple it over. His
only hope now was to turn it over for the fall. He felt its weight giving
way...altering shape under him. What the hell was it going to be this time?
For an instant, he felt a disgusting slime under him, as the Ektra's form
dissolved. Repulsed, he involuntarily loosened his hold a little, and as he did
so, a hundred and thirty-eight pounds of Ektra bounced up into his chin. He
almost lost his grip, but somehow recovered his balance and thrust himself
against the Ektra with all the strength his legs had left.
Boing.
The Ektra bounced back against him.
Boing.
It bounced away from him, veering unexpectedly to his right, and doing a
backflip out of his arms. He threw himself against it before it could get
completely away, tackling it and carrying it out of bounds.
Tweeeet!
Panting, Hog took a good look at his opponent as it settled, more or less,
into position in the center of the mat. It looked like a large coil spring
inside a knotted sock, and it seemed unable to stop bouncing completely, even in
the starting position. It bobbed and jittered at a sort of idle speed, reminding
Hog of his Uncle Wainwright, who could never sit still, bouncing and gumchewing
his way through entire ballgames--and who had often belittled Hog for choosing
wrestling over basketball. Hog glared at the coil-springed Ektra, and imagined
it shapechanging into his Uncle Wainwright.
With a silent snort, Hog settled behind the Ektra and placed his hands
carefully on its trunk, prepared to tackle it as viciously as he could. The
centaur-ref peered at him for a moment, seemingly unable to decide if his
positioning was legal. Then it flipped its paddle-hand.
Tweet!
Boing.
Hog lunged into the bouncing shapeshifter, and bounced with it,
boing,
boing, right off the mat. He got up glaring even harder. Time was running
out, and it didn't do him any good just to hold the thing down, he needed to pin
it. But how could he pin a coil spring? The one thing that encouraged him, as he
watched it bounce back to the center of the mat, was that it was starting to
look tired. Maybe all this springing was wearing it out.
At the whistle, Hog threw his weight into it again, and landed flat on his
chin. For an infuriating, flustered moment, he thought he had lost the Ektra,
and he scrambled to get up, looking around wildly. Then he realized that the
Ektra was under him; it had splatted out into an enormous pancake with tiny,
starfish legs around its outer edge. He pushed and hauled on it, but the thing
was immovable.
"Turn it over!
Turn it over!" yelled his coach, his mother, somebody.
He couldn't
possibly turn it over--unless he got off it completely and
tried to flip it like a throw rug. But that would be crazy...it was too heavy
and too awkward.
"Warning--Ektra--stalling!" brayed the ref.
"
Hog--you're running out of time! DO SOMETHING!" hollered Harmin',
from somewhere very close to the edge of the mat.
With a snarl, Hog jumped off the pancake and yanked on the edge of the thing.
It went "Querr
reee!" and began contracting into a new shape. Good! Now he
could go to work on it!
The change took place in a dizzying blur, and it was not just a physical
blur. Hog felt a wave of confusion pass through his mind, and he blinked and
found himself holding the hand of, and staring into the large brown eyes of, the
most breathtakingly beautiful woman he had ever seen, or imagined.
(Come...come to me...now...) whispered the psicry. She had long,
golden-brunette hair; and she was wearing a clinging silk wrap that did not
altogether cover her breathtaking...her breathtaking...
...and she was breathing so hard, so
quiveringly hard, and pulling him
by the hand toward her with a smile that made his heart stop.
"Whoaaa--Hog! All riiiight! Go for it, man, go get it!"
The sound of Harmin's voice was strangely removed, as though Hog and
his...opponent?...had been whisked into a private place for a special little
tete-a-tete, with everyone else suddenly a very long way away, miles away,
light-years away.
(Yes, yes...come get it...you will like it very
much...) And, for a fleeting instant, Hog thought that was fine, just fine,
very fine indeed. For the glory of Earth fine. Oh yes.
And then maybe a whiff of oxygen reached his brain, or maybe a whiff of
astringent alien breath, because the hypnotic spell slipped just a little, and
his heart seemed to beat again, and with a start he realized that he was sinking
to the mat, allowing himself to be drawn into the arms of this...about to pull
this gorgeous creature on top of him, this...
"
Get that goddamn tramp off you, Justin!" screamed someone, his
mother.
...Ektra shapeshifter.
"Awwwww, jeeeez!" he panted, struggling to get his brain clear, and realizing
he had about one second before he'd be flat on his back under
this...sex-crazed...
The woman's weight was already shifting for the pin. And his mind was still
fogged...but not quite so fogged that he couldn't make one last, desperate
hopeless move.
He reached down and tickled her in the ribcage.
"
Breee-heee-heeeeeee!" shrieked the shapeshifter, erupting into
helpless laughter and losing its hold.
Hog scooted out from under it, but managed to keep his fingers in there
tickling. He was gasping from the exertion, but his gasps were drowned out by
screams of laughter...
"Kreee-hee-hee-
(stop)-hee-heee-kreee-
(stop)-heee-
hee-hee-
(please stop!)-hee--"
Hog struggled to disregard the psicry pummeling his mind. He hugged and
cradled this creature, far and away more gorgeous than any woman he had ever
even fantasized about, cradled her in a fabulous embrace...tickling mercilessly.
"Kreee-hee-hee-
(stop please stop!)--"
"HOG, TEN SECONDS LEFT!!!"
The thing's laughter was contagious, and Hog fell on her, nearly laughing
uncontrollably himself. And he pressed her back down to the mat, his left arm
crooked in a careless reverse-half- nelson, his right hand tickling just below
those magnificent--
Whack! Tweeeeeeet! "Pin! The match goes to the human!" brayed the
centaur-ref.
And he almost couldn't make himself stop tickling her now that he had her
down, but the roar of the crowd was enough to make him look up in a daze, and
the first thing he saw, past the four legs of the ref, was Harmin' Harmon
jumping up and down like a dancing buffalo. His friend's voice was drowned out,
but it hardly mattered. And the second thing Hog saw was the centaur bending
down to look at him with apparent puzzlement in its eyes.
"Human, I am unsure how you did that," the ref said, waving its paddle-hands.
"But congratulations. And if you don't get up off your opponent, it will be a
shame that you will be required to forfeit the match..."
"Huh?" Hog released the Ektra with a start and sat back on his haunches,
blinking in amazement at what he had done. He stood up shakily, and extended a
hand to help his opponent up off the mat.
The Ektra-woman was pouting as it rose. But after a moment, its lips quivered
and reformed into a smile...and then into a beaming grin.
A grin? Hog
thought.
"
Earth!" "Earth!" "Earth!" "Earth!" "Earth...!" A chant had started in
the stands and was growing in intensity. They were banging their seats now.
"
Number One!" "One!" "One...!"
"WAY T' GO, HAWWWWWG!" bawled Harmin' Harmon, striding up and down the
sidelines, fists in the air.
"
Look at the camera, Justin--look at the camera!" His mother was
practically on the mat, pointing up into the stands at his father and the
fastcam.
Hog grinned weakly and looked back at the Ektra. It was still a dazzling
creature, but her grin had continued to widen, bright teeth sparkling, until the
grin seemed to take up most of her face. And then Hog realized dizzily that her
face was slowly disappearing, leaving
only the grin. And he stood,
blinking, watching the grin fade last of all, until the Ektra was gone
altogether. And Hog turned in bewilderment to the ref, who was looking toward
the scoring table and didn't see any of it happen.
"Justin! Ask it to do that again! Your father missed it!"
Hog turned around, waving in confusion. "Say, uh--" he croaked to his absent
opponent, "nice match!" And found himself thinking, Is it true? Is it really
true? Did I win the tricrystal medal for Earth?
The only human in history to
win a tricrystal? And then the centaur-ref trotted back to him, and hoisted
his hand in victory, and Hog forgot his doubts and waved triumphantly to the
crowd. And when he turned, he saw a large, iridescent lizard rising up as if
from the very substance of the mat and turning to shuffle away.
"Hey, Ektra!" he cried.
"Breee?" said the lizard, looking back.
(We like semiconductor medals
better, anyway. (I lie!) (I lie!)) it whispered in a psicry.
Hog laughed happily and patted it on the back. "Great match, guy. Next time
don't be so ticklish!"
"Breee," said the lizard.
(Done well. Next match I get the home crowd,
okay?)
"Okay. See you around." Hog trotted off the mat, waving again to the crowd,
and fell into the congratulating arms of his mother and Harmin' Harmon. He
hardly even heard their voices, or the voice of Coach Tagget...
"Drinks on me, just like I said..."
"Where'd you learn to
do that sort of a thing with a woman,
Justin...?"
"Donovan, just like I been tellin' you, the brain is the most important..."
But if he didn't hear what they said after that, he did hear the chants of
Earth! Earth! and he could already feel the tricrystal medal glistening
and breathing in his hand. And he heard a centipede voice hissing, "Kreeeepy
kreeepy earthman-- sssee you nexxxt yearrr on Meetsssnepp Fffive, hah-hahhh!
Zerrrro grrravity unlimited, suckahhh...!" Only this time Hog just laughed out
loud and didn't even bother to look as he headed for the cameras, as the Vegan's
voice faded back into the waves of
HOG DONOVAN! HOG DONOVAN! TRICRYSTAL
EARTH...!
Bye-bye Lotusflower, Lotusflower bye-bye!
Afterward for SHAPESHIFTER FINALS
The act of writing this story
brought back surprisingly powerful memories of my own wrestling days at Huron
(Ohio) High School, more years ago now than I care to admit. Many elements of
the story were lifted straight from my own experience. I don't think I'll say
which elements; but one of my former teammates ought to recognize the
hopping scene, since it happened to him.
This story was, in fact, something of a change of pace for me. I generally
write novels not short stories--far future, cosmological, quasireligious hard
science fiction about serious subjects. Artificial intelligence, first contact,
transcendent encounters in spacetime--that sort of thing. The last time I tried
a purely humorous piece was in my prepublished days, and it was in place of a
term paper in graduate school. The professor, perhaps not unreasonably, expected
a more serious effort. The topic, as I recall, was something like: "Coastal Zone
Management in a marine estuary system." A perfect subject for a humorous fairy
tale, no? Well, it seemed so, at 1 a.m. the night before the paper was due. The
professor's reaction was...quizzical. ("What the
hell is this, Carver?")
That was in...let's see, 1974.
Nineteen years later, Roger Zelazny telephoned me one Sunday morning to
invite me to contribute a wrestling story to this volume. (He recalled seeing a
bio that mentioned my unsavory past as a wrestler.) In so doing, he accomplished
three things. No, four:
1) He got me to write my first short story in almost ten years, and
incidentally to try a humorous piece.
2) He got me to reflect back upon a sport that once commanded an astonishing
amount of my energy and dedication, and in the process taught me a lot about
life.
3) He left my wife starry-eyed with wonder: ("
Roger Zelazny's on the
phone! He says he's sorry to interrupt your work time, but he has a question for
you.")
4) He got me out of bed.
Thanks, Roger. Here's to your memory.
Shapeshifter Finals
by
Jeffrey A. Carver
First published in WARRIORS OF BLOOD AND DREAM
edited by Roger Zelazny
Avon Books, 1995
Copyright © 1995 Jeffrey A. Carver
All rights reserved. This work is the literary property of the
author and a part of his livelihood. You are free to download this story for
your own enjoyment. You may print a copy, if you like, for your own use,
including sharing it with friends. You may not post it elsewhere on the
web. Permission to distribute for any except personal use is explicitly
denied.
Shapeshifter Finals
The crowd roared as the first pair
of wrestlers engaged in competition out on the center mat.
"
Aww-riiiiii-choooo-guyyyys!" "HUGGA-HUGGGA-HUGGGA-HUGGGA!"
"Wickety-(psicry!)-wickety- (psicry!)-wickety-(psicry!)" Hog Donovan peeked
over in the direction of the match, but tried not to get drawn into watching it.
Neither of the contestants in the ninety-three pound class was human, and better
he should keep his mind on his own upcoming match.
"
Gaaiiee! Gaaiiee!" "Brackit-it-it-it-it-it-it-it-it!"
"Wheeeooop-ooop-ooop!" The assortment of cries from the stands was damned
disconcerting, the crowd being over half extraterrestrials. It was the opening
bout, finals round, in the 57,463rd Annual Games of the IntraGalactic Interworld
Multicultural Amateur Wrestling League--and the first games ever to be hosted by
Earth. Hog Donovan prayed that the human fans could drown out all the ETs when
he got to the mat himself. He was as nervous as a laboratory rat on speed, and
he was going to need all the psychological boost he could get.
Hog paced the warmup area in his tights and warmup jacket, trying to still
the butterflies in his stomach. It would be at least forty minutes yet before
they called him to the mat, for the hundred thirty-eight pound finals. An
eternity! Hog threw himself into his warmup exercises and tried to blank out
everything else.
Bye-bye baby, baby bye-bye... The refrain of a popular song repeated
mercilessly in his head, warring with the cheers of the crowd.
Hog grunted, working up a good sweat. Hog indeed! He was long and whiplike,
and bore his nickname only because his old heavyweight friend, Hermie "Harmin'"
Harmon, had dubbed him "Hog" in retribution for his jokes about Harmon's
rhinolike neck. Those were the old days, but the name had stuck...
The crowd roared, and Hog was startled to realize that the first match was
over--the victor a mercurial-skinned creature from Tau Ceti. The next weight
class was up, and--hey!--this was the only other human finalist, a wiry little
Brit named Johnnie Johnson, up against some sort of centipede from the Vega
asteroids.
Hog ducked through to the sidelines to yell encouragement. "
Give 'im hell,
Johnnie!" he hollered as the Earthman trotted onto the mat. His voice was
drowned out by a loud buzzing. Up in the stands, a large contingent of centipede
fans were rubbing their upper limbs together, en masse, cheering on their fellow
Vegan.
Hog suppressed a shudder as he watched Johnnie engage the centipede from a
standing position. All those
legs. And they were so...insectlike. And
quick. With a chitter and a blur of speed, the centipede caught Johnnie's left
ankle with several of its legs, and tripped him for a two-point takedown. The
crowd buzzed in appreciation.
"
Get up! Keep moving!" Hog yelled.
Tap tap. Hog started at the rap on the top of his head, and turned to
see Coach Tagget urging him away from the sidelines. "But coach--"
"Hog, go warm up. Don't fret over Johnnie, you're just scaring yourself."
Tagget rapped him on the skull again. "Don't forget--"
"I know, I know, the brain is the most important muscle," Hog repeated by
rote, as he turned back to the warmup area.
"
Think about your match.
Think," Coach Tagget urged, as Hog
resumed his stretches. After a moment, satisfied with Hog's progress, the coach
left to go watch Johnnie himself.
Think, right. Think about the fact that he was about to wrestle an alien
named Belduki-Elikitango-Hardart-Colloidisan, an Ektra shapechanger capable of
assuming about a thousand different multiworld multicultural body
configurations. He was thinking about it, all right. And he was having trouble
keeping his knees from shaking.
Bye-bye baby, baby bye-bye...
He remembered how smug the Earth promoters had been when the IIMAWL rules
committee had offered to make terran rules the norm for this tournament, in
honor of the hosting world. Of course, none of the promoters had even
thought about the fact that Earth's wrestlers would be competing against
sentient bugs, snakes, gorillas...and shapeshifters...except that they'd finally
decreed a return to the more modest, and protective, tights in place of skimpy
singlets. In other respects, the referees' interpretation of Earth's rules had
turned out to be a tad subjective, to say the least.
"
Johnnie--NO!"
The single shout from the Brit's coach was drowned out by a rising buzz from
the crowd. Hog jumped up, trying to see what was happening. The centipede buzz
crescendoed. Hog ducked through an opening in the sidelines crowd to get a
better view.
Uh-oh. Johnnie was in big trouble. The centipede had him halfway onto his
back, with about six legs pushing his shoulders toward the mat. Hog knelt on the
sidelines, twisting and arching sympathetically as Johnnie struggled against the
inexorable leverage of all those limbs. Johnnie's coach, a wiry little man, was
screaming, "
Scoot out! Scoot out!" and making futile sweeping gestures
with his arms.
Hog cupped his hands and screamed, "
PULL HIS ANTENNAS! PULL HIS
ANTENNAS!"
The match seemed to freeze abruptly, as the centipede cocked its head and
glared across the mat at Hog with all four eyes. Its hairy antennas bristled.
Hog gulped, regretting his impulsive yell. The thing looked as if it might just
abandon the match and come on over and stomp him for his remark. It appeared to
have completely forgotten its opponent.
Johnnie seized the opportunity. For an instant, it looked as though he might
actually grab the thing's antennas--which would have been a definite foul--but
instead, Johnnie managed to get an elbow inside the thing's legs and knock out
several locked joints, loosening the centipede's grip. The crowd buzzed, and the
centipede turned back to its opponent, but Johnnie was already wriggling quickly
out of its arms.
"
That's it! That's it! That's it!" screamed the coach, waving wildly.
Johnnie was frantically trying to complete his escape. He had one leg out now
and was up on the other knee. The human crowd was screaming.
The centipede spasmed with rage and tackled Johnnie with a dozen legs. They
fell together to the mat with a
whump, knocking the breath out of
Johnnie. Before Hog could even rise up on his toes to yell, Johnnie was on his
back under the centipede, the ref was down on five elbows, peering to see if
shoulder blades were touching the mat, and--
slap! tweeeeeeeet!--just like
that, Johnnie was pinned and the match was over.
The centipede humped its back and drew away from its human opponent,
chittering triumphantly. Johnnie sat up, gasping. The centipede crowd went crazy
rubbing their limbs.
Hog caught Coach Tagget's eye and turned away, sighing, to return to the
warmup area. Johnnie had finished in second place. That meant the honor of
Earth, wrestling-wise, rested on Hog. He swallowed, trying not to think about
it. But how
could he not think about it? He was the only human left in
the finals. All eyes, and cameras, would be on him.
As he was stretching his hamstrings, Johnnie walked past, shaking his head.
"Tough luck," Hog sympathized.
The Englishman paused, peering at him with dazed eyes. "Are you the bloke who
got that thing as mad as a raving hornet?"
"I--well--" Hog spread his hands. "I was just cheering for you. You almost
made it out, too. Sorry you didn't--"
"You know what those bastards
smell like, when they're on top of you
and they're mad?" Johnnie wheezed. "Cheeeeeeez-z-z," he whispered hoarsely.
"That was what damn near killed me." Johnnie shook his head and wandered off
toward the clutches of the TV interviewers. "It wasn't the bloody pin..."
Hog saw Johnnie's coach staring darkly in his direction. He went back to his
warmups. Stretch left, stretch right, down, up...
"
Heyyaaah, earthman krrreeepy-krrreeepy..."
Hog turned, wrinkling his nose at a sudden whiff of ammonia. The centipede
was standing beside him, balanced on half its legs, waving the claws on the rest
of its legs in his direction. "Uh--?" Hog managed. "Can I, uh, help you?"
The centipede's antennas waved drunkenly. "
Hoho yassss," hissed the
centipede. "
Krrreeepy-krreeepy earthman sso sssmart! Come sssee me
lataaah."
Poot. It made a loud spitting sound. "
Yahh-heyyy?"
Hog backed up a step. "I don't know what you're talking about--"
The centipede chittered with laughter and sauntered away. "
Lataaaah,
earthman..."
Hog stared after it in disbelief. He jumped when he felt a hand on his
shoulder. Then he heard the familiar sound of his coach tsk-tsking.
"Poor sportsmanship, Hog. That's all that is--poor sportsmanship. What do you
expect from a centipede?" Tagget scowled at the Vegan, who was now parading in
front of its fans, waving its arms in triumph. "Look, why don't you go on back
to the locker room and clear your mind. I'll call you when it's time to come
back out."
Hog nodded with relief. Yes. Back to the locker room. Forget centipedes. Have
a swallow of honey for quick energy.
Bye-bye baby, baby bye-bye...
He trotted back to the locker room, shaking the tension out of his arms.
All things considered, it was actually pretty amazing that Earth had ever
gotten nominated to host the IIMAWL tournament. After all, by 2008 A.D., the
farthest any human had ever gotten from Earth was the Moon. But the interworld
sporting federation liked to give a boost to newly discovered worlds. And Earth
was among the newest--not yet five years a part of the interworld community,
since the Rigellians had landed and made first contact, and promptly proposed
building factories here to employ the locals. In the eyes of the terran
promoters, the tournament was not so much a sporting event per se as a promotion
of tourism and general economic opportunity aimed at ETs who might want to spend
money here. And in that respect, it was already successful, at least to the tune
of a new sports complex for Cleveland and a good crowd of paying ET visitors.
The human wrestling world, on the other hand--the top wrestlers, the Olympic
and AAU winners--had been pretty resistant to the idea, claiming that it was
insane to pit oneself against aliens whose bodies were so different as to render
competition meaningless. Mostly, the sports writers echoed that position,
denouncing the games as blatant sensationalism. Still, there were some good, if
maybe not great, wrestlers who hadn't seen the obvious--and had wound up
entering the competitions that one wag, as
Time was so fond of putting
it, called the "crocodile free- for-alls."
That's the kind of wrestler Hog Donovan was: not great--but sharp,
determined, and something of an iconoclast. He figured he only had a few good
years of wrestling left in him, and he was determined to make the best of them.
And the way to do that was to enter a competition so new, so outre, that the
mainstream wrestling world hadn't caught on to it yet. And maybe, Hog figured,
it would
become recognized, and maybe it would even give
him
enough recognition so that once he'd hung up his tights and joined the working
world, he wouldn't have to work on a Rigellian assembly line building
Lotusflower roadsters.
Anyway, that was the reason he'd given his parents and his coach, though it
was really only half the story. The other half was that he'd sacrificed and
sweated blood at this sport for over seven years now, and by God, he wanted to
be the best damned wrestler in the galaxy--okay,
one of the best damned
wrestlers in the galaxy--even if only for one brief, glorious moment.
To his own surprise, he'd done well, working his way through four preliminary
rounds, and winning the semifinals just yesterday, narrowly besting a
titanium-boned opponent with twice his strength and half his agility and
intelligence. He was proud of that victory and the semiconductor-medal it had
assured him of, and the recognition it brought to his home planet.
But right now, he had to focus on just one thing--and that was how the hell
to wrestle against an Ektra shapeshifter.
He paced in front of his locker and shook the tension out again. Peering
around the corner of the lockers he saw one of the black-skinned African
wrestlers warming up and he gave a collegial thumbs-up of encouragement before
returning to his own spot. Wait a minute! he thought suddenly. There
aren't any Africans in the finals.
He heard a loud
crack. Uneasily, he peered around the corner again.
The black-skinned being, which was
not human, was separating its joints
as if they were held together by rubber bands. It was pulling its right forearm
out from its elbow, and dislocating its shoulder and stretching it way behind
its neck. The creature grinned a gleaming grin, and Hog withdrew to his own
corner, shivering. A
transformer, he realized. Just like the toys that a
kid could flex and twist until they'd changed from, say, a spaceship to an
atomic monster. What world was this creature from?
Don't think about it. Think about your opponent. How are you going to beat
Belduki-Elikitango-Hardart-Colloidisan?
He'd only seen the shapeshifter once, briefly, in a preliminary round.
"
Belduki's its name, and throttlin's its game," was how the
Plain
Dealer had put it, in pointed reference to its reputed predilection for
near-strangulation of its opponents. That was obviously an exaggeration for
effect; nevertheless, it unnerved Hog, who devoutly regarded wrestling as a
gentleman's sport, safe and well regulated. He'd always scorned so-called
"""professional wrestling""" (he always mentally put several quotes around the
phrase, to emphasize his disdain), in which contestants were slammed to the
deck, or thrown against the ropes, or otherwise theatrically mistreated. Real
wrestling wasn't like that; it was a sport of skill and conditioning and
determination.
It'd come as a shock to learn that in the IIMAWL, there was not entirely the
same sense of careful sportsmanship. Oh, sure, there were some protections: no
contestant could emit chemicals toxic to the opponent, for instance. But with
the contestants so morphically different from one another, monitoring safety was
a lot harder than it was between human wrestlers. One contestant might turn blue
with concentration, another with suffocation. Would a ref who heard that
cracking sound of the transformer recognize it as the sound of breaking bones in
a human? In the end, the IIMAWL claimed to be keeping the sport safe, but it was
Hog's uneasy suspicion that they mostly threw up their hands, flippers, and
toes, and said to hell with it, let's
try to keep them from killing each
other, but if a ref misreads a physiologic sign, what are we supposed to do?
Think about the Ektra, Hog thought, shooting a practice takedown in the empty
space in front of his locker. Think about the Ektra.
The shapeshifter. Actually, he'd been more or less counting all along on
Belduki-Elikitango-whatever being knocked out by Gazoom Gazoom the Indefatigable
Baboon and returning champion, from Veni Five. After his own victory against
Titanium Jimm, Hog had been carefully planning ways to defeat the
baboon...ingenious ways, resourceful ways. And then the stupid baboon had gone
and fallen right into the Ektra's four-armed can-opener in the third period, and
boom, right onto his back.
Slap! Tweet! (Psicry!) The ref called
the fall, and there went all of Hog's planning, out the window. And now
he faced the shapeshifter.
Hog drew a deep breath and blew into his cupped hands. This was no
good--hanging around the locker room, thinking about what could go wrong. He'd
be better off out on the floor, soaking up the psychic energy of the meet. And
where the hell was Coach Tagget, anyway?
Hog reached into his locker, took a long drag from his plastic honey bear,
and slammed the locker shut. For just an instant, as his hand was about to close
the combination padlock, he hesitated. What if he were knocked unconscious and
they needed to get into his locker? Good God, man--stop it! He squeezed the lock
shut with a decisive click.
As he strode up the echoing passageway to the gym, he heard shouts from the
crowd and felt a surge of adrenaline. He broke into a trot, and darted past a
couple of ETs who were half blocking the end of the passageway, and jogged out
toward the end of the arena.
The crowd erupted with a roar of approval. He smiled to himself, flushing
with confidence, then peered over to see what they were actually cheering about.
Tweeeeeeeeet! Slap!
The 133-pound match had just ended with a pin. An alien that looked like a
huge gerbil got up, shaking, from under one that looked like a leaf. The ref
flagged the leaf as the winner.
And Hog was up next.
Bye-bye baby, baby...
Coach Tagget found him just in time to yell something incomprehensible in
Hog's ear, shake his hand vigorously, and push him onto the mat with a whack on
the rear. Hog shook off his irritation at the coach and stepped onto the mat
with a glance at the ref.
A new referee had come out from the table, replacing the one who had just
tweeted the last winner. This ref looked a little like a centaur with
multijointed legs, and big paddle-shaped hands, great for slapping the mat.
Good, Hog thought. The better to signal Hog Donovan winner by fall. None of this
eking out a victory by points. Hog Donovan goes for the whole enchilada.
Starting right now. This is for
Earth, and this is for
Hog. He
swung his arms, huffing. Damn straight.
"You can do it, Justin! Tear his lungs out!" screamed a woman somewhere in
the stands. Hog smiled a little. He couldn't pick her out of the crowd, but he
knew his mother was waving her program wildly, endangering the eyesight of
everyone within reach. His father was just as avid a fan, but he'd be too busy
with the fastcam to spend much time yelling.
A blast of easy listening music filled the gymnasium from somewhere
overhead--a sampler of Earth culture to entertain the ET crowd.
Hog's opponent streamed onto the mat from the opposite side, and gathered
itself up into something resembling a whiplike tree. Its feet, if that was what
they were, stretched out like roots, and Hog could have sworn that the roots
were embedding themselves in the mat. What the hell kind of creature was this?
Ektras didn't make up shapes; they always emulated real species that Ektras had
known, somewhere in the galaxy. Hog puffed into his fist and looked at the ref,
determined not to be distracted by unanswerable questions.
The announcer's voice boomed: "IN THE ONE HUNDRED THIRTY- EIGHT POUND CLASS!
FROM EARTH: HOG DONOVAN--HUMAN!" There was a murmur of approval, plus his
mother's shrieks, but not exactly the thunderous roar Hog had imagined. He
glanced up into the crowd, and saw a row of centipedes sitting on their legs.
"AND FROM EKTRA FOUR: BELDUKI-ELIKITANGO-HARDART-COLLOIDISAN--EKTRA
SHAPESHIFTER!" Hog held his breath, waiting for the cheers for his opponent.
What he actually heard was more like a group indrawn breath of fear.
He noted that the Ektra had sprouted about a hundred suction cups on the ends
of its tree branches. He was going to have a dickens of a time avoiding
those. Hog danced in place, thinking hard--and coming up with very
little, strategy-wise.
Fortunately, he was saved from despair by a voice that boomed out through the
general noise: "HOGMAN, YOU PIN THIS WALKING JELLO-SALAD, AND DRINKS ARE ON ME
FOR THE REST OF THE
YEAR!" Hog grinned despite himself, and at that
moment caught sight of Hermie "Harmin'" Harmon in the front row, shaking his
hammy fists in the air. Harmin' now worked the graveyard shift at Lotusflower
Assembly, hanging transaaactional warp modules under Rigellian interstellar
roadsters. He hadn't wrestled in three years, and his physique now resembled
that of a hippopotamus. Was that what was in store for Hog, after his wrestling
career ended? Lotusflower Assembly, with the rest of the guys? Not if he could
help it...
Hog frowned and stepped into a crouch, facing his opponent.
The shapeshifter waved its branches. The ref gestured with its paddles, and
Hog reached out to grip the nearest branch in a handshake. The suction cups
latched onto his hand, and let go with a
pop. Hog shook off the stinging
sensation. The ref leveled a paddle-shaped hand between the two contestants,
then jerked it away with a
tweet! on its whistle. The match was on.
Hog danced sideways, and forward and back, snatching in quick grabs at the
shapeshifter's branches. He was just testing, seeing if he could get the thing
off balance. The Ektra waved its branches unconcernedly. Its feet remained
planted. Hog circled, trying to make it lift its feet and follow. The Ektra
didn't turn at all; it just waved different branches at him as he circled. Where
the hell were its eyes, anyway--on the leaves? And what would constitute putting
this thing on its back? he wondered.
"Cut 'im down, Hog!" he heard, in the dim distance of the sidelines. Harmin',
cheering him on. His friend sounded as if he was miles away.
"You don't have all day, Donovan--go in after him!" he heard on the other
side. Coach Tagget, offering helpful strategy.
Hog shrugged off a negligent grab by one of the branches, and without
thinking launched his attack. He shot forward, low, grabbing for the base of the
shapeshifter's trunk. It was a purely instinctive move--go for the single-leg
takedown, whether the thing had legs or not. It worked better than he could have
expected: the branches waved madly above him, and some of the suckers came down
on his back. But he got good penetration, and wrapped both arms around the
Ektra's trunk. He got one knee up under him, and lifted, hard.
The Ektra didn't budge. It was holding itself down not so much by its roots
as by a large sucker at the base of its trunk. Hog grunted, trying to break it
free. As he strained, the Ektra's branches were clinging to his back, though
fortunately the fabric of his tights top kept it from getting too secure a grip.
Grunting harder, Hog dug his fingers under the edge of the tree's suction base.
He heard his coach's distant voice: "--the
hell are you doing?"
"Gaaaahhhh!" With a roar, Hog pulled up with his fingers.
Sploook. The
Ektra came loose from the mat, and he had it in the air like a heavy Christmas
tree. He staggered, turning with it, trying to tip it over. The tree was
snatching at his back and his arms. Hog lost his balance and went over sideways,
taking the tree with him.
Even as they fell, he could feel the thing changing shape. By the time they
hit the mat, the Ektra was an extremely slippery snakey thing, sliding out of
his hands. Hog tightened his grip, trying to keep it from getting away. But it
was impossible; it had some sort of coating that made it slick as hell. He
scrambled to follow it on the mat, desperately trying to hold on long enough to
get the takedown points.
"Queeeeeee!" whistled the shapeshifter, and with a convulsive jerk slithered
out of Hog's hands.
"No points!" brayed the ref, prancing alongside.
Hog glanced up in frustration. He was
sure he'd earned the takedown
points, even if he had to concede a one-point escape. Was this ref going to be
an impossible-to-please type?
The glance was a mistake; it distracted him from his opponent. By the time he
looked back, his opponent was gone.
Whufff!
His breath went out with a gasp, and he felt the snake's coils wrapping
around him from behind. How could it have moved so fast? he thought uselessly,
as he struggled to jam his elbows down into the coils to protect his ribs from
the rapidly tightening pressure.
"Queee-ee-eeeee!" chortled the snake, in what sounded like a merry laugh.
Prelude to strangulation? Hog wondered. The next coil whipped around his ankles,
and he fell to the mat like a hundred and thirty-eight pounds of frozen meat.
"Two-point takedown!" whinnied the ref.
"Augggh!" Hog grunted, trying to keep from rolling onto his back. The snake
was trying to get him to do just that, but it didn't have a firm enough hold on
his legs, and he was able to scissor hard and gain some leverage, getting
himself halfway up to his elbows and knees. "Hunhh!
Uunhh!" He was
struggling just to breathe. He could feel himself sliding a bit inside the
slippery coils, despite the pressure. If only he could slide out...
In fact, he was moving a little, squirming in the coils. "
Unhhhh!
Unhhh!" He inhaled as hard as he could, held his breath a moment, then
gasped it out and jammed his elbows hard against the coils. He pushed them down
by about a foot.
The snake tightened like a vise around his hips. His progress stopped; the
coils were smaller than his hipbones. "Auuughhh!" Hog groaned, blinking at the
sight of the ref leaning close, maybe to make sure he was still breathing. If he
wasn't turning purple now, he never would be!
He heard a din and a stamping around him. The crowd was loving it--probably
hoping he got squeezed to death.
Coach Tagget was yelling something, but he couldn't hear what it was. But
another voice reached him through the cacophony: "HAWWWWG--SLAM 'IM TILL HE LETS
GO!" he heard distantly.
Hermie. And good thinking. Hog huffed, raising himself on all fours, lifting
the snake's weight. He suddenly went flat, hitting the mat as hard as he could,
right on the snake's coils. He felt them loosen for an instant, and he squirmed
frantically...
Tweeeeeet!
The snake gave a last squeeze, then relaxed its grip as the ref halted the
action.
"Warning!" brayed the ref. "Slamming is forbidden! Warning number one against
the human!" The ref waved his paddle-hands.
Hog gasped, trying to catch his breath. Warning or not, he had a fighting
start now; they would resume the match from a one- up one-down position. As the
coils unwound, he lumbered to his feet and walked in a brisk circle to shake off
the effects. Then he knelt back down on his hands and knees.
"Shake it off--shake it off!" he heard his coach yell. "Now stay out of those
coils!"
Hog glanced back to see if the Ektra would take another shape. But no--he
could only change shape while the clock was running. That was a regulatory
concession to the nonshifting wrestlers: the shapeshifters had the advantage of
versatility of form, but they were momentarily vulnerable during the change, and
for a few seconds following, while they "got into" their new forms.
"No delay!" called the ref. This time it was yelling at the shapeshifter. The
Ektra seemed to be having trouble deciding how to situate itself on the top
position over Hog: it had no hands or feet to place on or near him. "Rest your
head on his back!" the ref instructed.
"Queeee?" protested the shapeshifter.
"On his back," repeated the ref. "No delay, please."
"Queeee," it answered.
Hog felt the snake's head touch the center of his back. He glanced over his
shoulder and saw that the creature was arching over him from a base of coils on
the mat, and was indeed touching him just on the center of the back. Good. He
just had to move faster than the snake.
Tweet!
Hog launched himself up to a standing position, whirling away. He felt no
resistance. "One point escape!" called the ref. Hog spun around to face the
snake.
"QUAAARRRRRRRRR!" roared the creature that was facing him-- no snake now, but
an enormous, maned animal with a mouth full of large teeth.
(TERROR! TERROR!
I'M BIGGER THAN YOU!) Hog backed away, startled. He tripped on the heel of
his sneaker and fell to his knees. "QUAAAAAAAAAA!" bellowed the Ektra, charging.
(BARE YOUR GNEEPHITZXX...!) echoed its psicry.
For an instant, Hog was paralyzed with fear--like a man who'd stumbled in
front of a rabid lion. Do something, he thought. Get out of its way! Then
something in him snapped, and instead of using common sense and fleeing, he
leaped straight at the charging beast with a bloodcurdling Tarzan-yell. "AAAHH-
AAAUUGGHHHH!" He was going to meet those teeth, and it would all be over before
the ref could tweet his whistle, but he couldn't stop himself.
The Ektra lion halted in midcharge, bewildered by Hog's furious yell.
Hog slammed into it, grabbing it around the neck. The damn thing was all fur
and air; it weighed the same as he did, but at three times his size. The Ektra
went over like a bowling pin, perhaps too surprised to react.
BLAAATTTT!
Tweeeeet! "No points!"
Hog rolled away from the shapeshifter and leaped to his feet. "Whaaat?" he
yelled. "I had him--"
"End of first period!" called the ref, strutting away on its four centaur
legs, ignoring Hog's protest. Hog sighed, wheezing for breath. Damn, this wasn't
looking good. He had to do
something.
"Ref, you blindfolded nag! If that wasn't a takedown, what was it?" came a
scream from the sidelines. Hog kept his back to his coach as Tagget demonstrated
proper Earth sportsmanship. Not that Hog didn't agree with him.
He turned and stared at the leonine alien, whose unreadable eyes were just
shifting from Hog to the ref.
(I crush you.) "Quaaaaaa?" it asked the
ref.
"Call the toss!" whinnied the centaur, holding an oversized poker chip in its
paddle-hand. The chip was red on one side, blue on the other.
"Quaaaa," grumbled the Ektra.
The ref flipped the chip. It fluttered and landed red side up on the mat. "Up
or down?" it asked, pointing to the Ektra, who had apparently called red.
"Quaaa," it said, with a shrug of its furry shoulders.
"Ektra up! Human down!" announced the ref, pointing to the center of the mat.
Hog knelt and assumed the position.
"No teeth, shapechanger!" yelled Coach Tagget as the lion- thing positioned
itself with two large paws on Hog's back and its mouth open, breathing hot,
fetid air straight down on the back of Hog's neck. "No biting allowed!" shouted
Tagget.
"QUAAAAAAARRRR!" answered the beast with a terrifying rumble.
(I SQUEEZE
YOUR--!)
"Get up and away from him!" Hog heard through the ringing in his ears.
The ref peered at the two, raising a flat hand.
Tweet!
Hog scrambled, and felt the lion all over him. It felt heavy, and it was
quick, and its breath made him reel. But it had to be tiring with all that
movement, and maybe Hog could wear it out. He soon realized something, and the
lion must have, too. Except for its teeth and claws, which it couldn't use, it
had no good way to hold onto him other than hugging him in a smothering embrace
and staying on top of him. If Hog could just shoot his legs out to the side and
keep moving...
He felt the Ektra changing shape even as he did so. He made it partway out of
the Ektra's embrace, then lurched to stand up. He turned, hopping back and
away--and was nearly free when he felt a tentacle whip around his left ankle. He
hopped harder, trying to jerk away, but the tentacle was faster. He managed to
turn to face his opponent, and found the tentacle attached to something that
looked as if it had crawled out of a very dark lagoon. God only knew what planet
the original was from. It had a head like a moldy stump and two squidlike
tentacles that sprouted from the head, and it was trying to snake its other
tentacle around Hog's right leg. Hog hopped madly to evade it, and the lagoon
creature responded by hoisting his left ankle to a ridiculous height,
practically to his chin, with the first tentacle. Hog was left hopping like a
crazed ballet dancer, struggling not to lose his balance.
"Krrrreeeee!" screeched the lagoon-thing.
"F-f-f-...says you!" gasped Hog. No, don't talk to it! he thought. Save your
strength, save your strength. He jumped, trying to lever his weight downward to
break free, but the tentacle's grip was tenacious.
"You can do it, Justin!" screamed his mother's voice, from somewhere.
"Get yourself out of there, dammit, Hog! How'd you get into that?" he heard,
from another direction. He was completely disoriented with respect to the room;
he could only focus on the mat, and this infernal creature.
He jumped higher. The tentacle went higher. He still didn't break free, and
now his leg was up as far as it could possibly go, and his hamstrings were
screaming.
"Krrrreeeeee!" urged his opponent.
"Scree you!" Hog retorted angrily.
Tweeeeeeeeet! The ref strode forward, breaking the impasse. It turned
to Hog and waved a paddle in his direction, while braying to the scoring table:
"The use of abusive language is prohibited. One point penalty against the
human!"
"
What?" Hog gasped, limping away from the Ektra.
"References to the opponent's progenitors are strictly forbidden!" scolded
the centaur with the whistle. "Assume the position."
"
Ref--you piece of Arcturan fungus!" screamed a voice from the
sidelines. "
You mold, you donkey! You wouldn't know a foul if it came up and
plugged you--you--!"
Hog ignored his coach's rantings and assumed the position.
The centaur was staring coldly in the direction of the sidelines, but it said
nothing, until the shapeshifter had hunched behind Hog, its tentacles on his
back. A little too
firmly on his back, Hog realized. "Ref--wait a min--"
Tweet!
Hog was a moment slow in moving, and the shapeshifter had its tentacles
around his waist by the time he was into his standup. He was on his feet, but he
couldn't break free, and he began lunging one way and then another, trying to
loosen the thing's grip. He dug his hands down under the tentacles to break
their hold. Yes--he had them loose! "Aarrrrr!" he snarled, spinning and bracing
his feet outward. If he could just arch, he could complete the escape...
He staggered a little, as the Ektra pushed him backwards off the mat.
Tweet! "No points!"
Hog cursed under his breath and returned to the center of the mat. This time
he was ready.
Tweet!
He was up, turning, leaving the lagoon-creature on the mat...except for the
tentacle that whipped out and caught his ankle and jerked his leg high in the
air. "
Gaaahhhh!" Hog roared, hopping...hopping...hopping...
Time seemed to slow and twiddle its thumbs as he danced, evading the second
tentacle, while struggling in vain to escape from the first. He edged slowly
toward the out-of-bounds, and the lagoon-creature slowly dragged him back.
Time took a coffee break. Time went out to an early lunch...
And Hog hopped...hopped...hopped...
Would the period never end? he thought desperately, throwing his weight up
and down with fading strength. Would time never run out on this eternal second
period...?
BLAAATTTT! went the buzzer.
Tweeeeet! "No points!" called the ref.
Hog gasped, as the Ektra released his leg.
"Shake it off, Hog--shake it off!" "Go, Justin--!"
He gulped air as he staggered in a circuit around the mat, before going to
assume the top position for the final period. "Whattza score?" he rasped to the
ref.
"Three to one, Ektra," the ref informed him.
From somewhere overhead, the strains of country-western music filled the
gymnasium.
For Earth, Hog thought dizzily, focusing on the form of the creature before
him. Do it for Earth. Do it for wrestling. For wrestling. For the tricrystal
medal. Just gotta do it, somehow.
You're on camera--the only human left.
"FREE DRINKS, HAWWWG!" yelled Harmin'.
Tweet!
He hurled his weight into the lagoon-creature, hoping to topple it over. His
only hope now was to turn it over for the fall. He felt its weight giving
way...altering shape under him. What the hell was it going to be this time?
For an instant, he felt a disgusting slime under him, as the Ektra's form
dissolved. Repulsed, he involuntarily loosened his hold a little, and as he did
so, a hundred and thirty-eight pounds of Ektra bounced up into his chin. He
almost lost his grip, but somehow recovered his balance and thrust himself
against the Ektra with all the strength his legs had left.
Boing.
The Ektra bounced back against him.
Boing.
It bounced away from him, veering unexpectedly to his right, and doing a
backflip out of his arms. He threw himself against it before it could get
completely away, tackling it and carrying it out of bounds.
Tweeeet!
Panting, Hog took a good look at his opponent as it settled, more or less,
into position in the center of the mat. It looked like a large coil spring
inside a knotted sock, and it seemed unable to stop bouncing completely, even in
the starting position. It bobbed and jittered at a sort of idle speed, reminding
Hog of his Uncle Wainwright, who could never sit still, bouncing and gumchewing
his way through entire ballgames--and who had often belittled Hog for choosing
wrestling over basketball. Hog glared at the coil-springed Ektra, and imagined
it shapechanging into his Uncle Wainwright.
With a silent snort, Hog settled behind the Ektra and placed his hands
carefully on its trunk, prepared to tackle it as viciously as he could. The
centaur-ref peered at him for a moment, seemingly unable to decide if his
positioning was legal. Then it flipped its paddle-hand.
Tweet!
Boing.
Hog lunged into the bouncing shapeshifter, and bounced with it,
boing,
boing, right off the mat. He got up glaring even harder. Time was running
out, and it didn't do him any good just to hold the thing down, he needed to pin
it. But how could he pin a coil spring? The one thing that encouraged him, as he
watched it bounce back to the center of the mat, was that it was starting to
look tired. Maybe all this springing was wearing it out.
At the whistle, Hog threw his weight into it again, and landed flat on his
chin. For an infuriating, flustered moment, he thought he had lost the Ektra,
and he scrambled to get up, looking around wildly. Then he realized that the
Ektra was under him; it had splatted out into an enormous pancake with tiny,
starfish legs around its outer edge. He pushed and hauled on it, but the thing
was immovable.
"Turn it over!
Turn it over!" yelled his coach, his mother, somebody.
He couldn't
possibly turn it over--unless he got off it completely and
tried to flip it like a throw rug. But that would be crazy...it was too heavy
and too awkward.
"Warning--Ektra--stalling!" brayed the ref.
"
Hog--you're running out of time! DO SOMETHING!" hollered Harmin',
from somewhere very close to the edge of the mat.
With a snarl, Hog jumped off the pancake and yanked on the edge of the thing.
It went "Querr
reee!" and began contracting into a new shape. Good! Now he
could go to work on it!
The change took place in a dizzying blur, and it was not just a physical
blur. Hog felt a wave of confusion pass through his mind, and he blinked and
found himself holding the hand of, and staring into the large brown eyes of, the
most breathtakingly beautiful woman he had ever seen, or imagined.
(Come...come to me...now...) whispered the psicry. She had long,
golden-brunette hair; and she was wearing a clinging silk wrap that did not
altogether cover her breathtaking...her breathtaking...
...and she was breathing so hard, so
quiveringly hard, and pulling him
by the hand toward her with a smile that made his heart stop.
"Whoaaa--Hog! All riiiight! Go for it, man, go get it!"
The sound of Harmin's voice was strangely removed, as though Hog and
his...opponent?...had been whisked into a private place for a special little
tete-a-tete, with everyone else suddenly a very long way away, miles away,
light-years away.
(Yes, yes...come get it...you will like it very
much...) And, for a fleeting instant, Hog thought that was fine, just fine,
very fine indeed. For the glory of Earth fine. Oh yes.
And then maybe a whiff of oxygen reached his brain, or maybe a whiff of
astringent alien breath, because the hypnotic spell slipped just a little, and
his heart seemed to beat again, and with a start he realized that he was sinking
to the mat, allowing himself to be drawn into the arms of this...about to pull
this gorgeous creature on top of him, this...
"
Get that goddamn tramp off you, Justin!" screamed someone, his
mother.
...Ektra shapeshifter.
"Awwwww, jeeeez!" he panted, struggling to get his brain clear, and realizing
he had about one second before he'd be flat on his back under
this...sex-crazed...
The woman's weight was already shifting for the pin. And his mind was still
fogged...but not quite so fogged that he couldn't make one last, desperate
hopeless move.
He reached down and tickled her in the ribcage.
"
Breee-heee-heeeeeee!" shrieked the shapeshifter, erupting into
helpless laughter and losing its hold.
Hog scooted out from under it, but managed to keep his fingers in there
tickling. He was gasping from the exertion, but his gasps were drowned out by
screams of laughter...
"Kreee-hee-hee-
(stop)-hee-heee-kreee-
(stop)-heee-
hee-hee-
(please stop!)-hee--"
Hog struggled to disregard the psicry pummeling his mind. He hugged and
cradled this creature, far and away more gorgeous than any woman he had ever
even fantasized about, cradled her in a fabulous embrace...tickling mercilessly.
"Kreee-hee-hee-
(stop please stop!)--"
"HOG, TEN SECONDS LEFT!!!"
The thing's laughter was contagious, and Hog fell on her, nearly laughing
uncontrollably himself. And he pressed her back down to the mat, his left arm
crooked in a careless reverse-half- nelson, his right hand tickling just below
those magnificent--
Whack! Tweeeeeeet! "Pin! The match goes to the human!" brayed the
centaur-ref.
And he almost couldn't make himself stop tickling her now that he had her
down, but the roar of the crowd was enough to make him look up in a daze, and
the first thing he saw, past the four legs of the ref, was Harmin' Harmon
jumping up and down like a dancing buffalo. His friend's voice was drowned out,
but it hardly mattered. And the second thing Hog saw was the centaur bending
down to look at him with apparent puzzlement in its eyes.
"Human, I am unsure how you did that," the ref said, waving its paddle-hands.
"But congratulations. And if you don't get up off your opponent, it will be a
shame that you will be required to forfeit the match..."
"Huh?" Hog released the Ektra with a start and sat back on his haunches,
blinking in amazement at what he had done. He stood up shakily, and extended a
hand to help his opponent up off the mat.
The Ektra-woman was pouting as it rose. But after a moment, its lips quivered
and reformed into a smile...and then into a beaming grin.
A grin? Hog
thought.
"
Earth!" "Earth!" "Earth!" "Earth!" "Earth...!" A chant had started in
the stands and was growing in intensity. They were banging their seats now.
"
Number One!" "One!" "One...!"
"WAY T' GO, HAWWWWWG!" bawled Harmin' Harmon, striding up and down the
sidelines, fists in the air.
"
Look at the camera, Justin--look at the camera!" His mother was
practically on the mat, pointing up into the stands at his father and the
fastcam.
Hog grinned weakly and looked back at the Ektra. It was still a dazzling
creature, but her grin had continued to widen, bright teeth sparkling, until the
grin seemed to take up most of her face. And then Hog realized dizzily that her
face was slowly disappearing, leaving
only the grin. And he stood,
blinking, watching the grin fade last of all, until the Ektra was gone
altogether. And Hog turned in bewilderment to the ref, who was looking toward
the scoring table and didn't see any of it happen.
"Justin! Ask it to do that again! Your father missed it!"
Hog turned around, waving in confusion. "Say, uh--" he croaked to his absent
opponent, "nice match!" And found himself thinking, Is it true? Is it really
true? Did I win the tricrystal medal for Earth?
The only human in history to
win a tricrystal? And then the centaur-ref trotted back to him, and hoisted
his hand in victory, and Hog forgot his doubts and waved triumphantly to the
crowd. And when he turned, he saw a large, iridescent lizard rising up as if
from the very substance of the mat and turning to shuffle away.
"Hey, Ektra!" he cried.
"Breee?" said the lizard, looking back.
(We like semiconductor medals
better, anyway. (I lie!) (I lie!)) it whispered in a psicry.
Hog laughed happily and patted it on the back. "Great match, guy. Next time
don't be so ticklish!"
"Breee," said the lizard.
(Done well. Next match I get the home crowd,
okay?)
"Okay. See you around." Hog trotted off the mat, waving again to the crowd,
and fell into the congratulating arms of his mother and Harmin' Harmon. He
hardly even heard their voices, or the voice of Coach Tagget...
"Drinks on me, just like I said..."
"Where'd you learn to
do that sort of a thing with a woman,
Justin...?"
"Donovan, just like I been tellin' you, the brain is the most important..."
But if he didn't hear what they said after that, he did hear the chants of
Earth! Earth! and he could already feel the tricrystal medal glistening
and breathing in his hand. And he heard a centipede voice hissing, "Kreeeepy
kreeepy earthman-- sssee you nexxxt yearrr on Meetsssnepp Fffive, hah-hahhh!
Zerrrro grrravity unlimited, suckahhh...!" Only this time Hog just laughed out
loud and didn't even bother to look as he headed for the cameras, as the Vegan's
voice faded back into the waves of
HOG DONOVAN! HOG DONOVAN! TRICRYSTAL
EARTH...!
Bye-bye Lotusflower, Lotusflower bye-bye!
Afterward for SHAPESHIFTER FINALS
The act of writing this story
brought back surprisingly powerful memories of my own wrestling days at Huron
(Ohio) High School, more years ago now than I care to admit. Many elements of
the story were lifted straight from my own experience. I don't think I'll say
which elements; but one of my former teammates ought to recognize the
hopping scene, since it happened to him.
This story was, in fact, something of a change of pace for me. I generally
write novels not short stories--far future, cosmological, quasireligious hard
science fiction about serious subjects. Artificial intelligence, first contact,
transcendent encounters in spacetime--that sort of thing. The last time I tried
a purely humorous piece was in my prepublished days, and it was in place of a
term paper in graduate school. The professor, perhaps not unreasonably, expected
a more serious effort. The topic, as I recall, was something like: "Coastal Zone
Management in a marine estuary system." A perfect subject for a humorous fairy
tale, no? Well, it seemed so, at 1 a.m. the night before the paper was due. The
professor's reaction was...quizzical. ("What the
hell is this, Carver?")
That was in...let's see, 1974.
Nineteen years later, Roger Zelazny telephoned me one Sunday morning to
invite me to contribute a wrestling story to this volume. (He recalled seeing a
bio that mentioned my unsavory past as a wrestler.) In so doing, he accomplished
three things. No, four:
1) He got me to write my first short story in almost ten years, and
incidentally to try a humorous piece.
2) He got me to reflect back upon a sport that once commanded an astonishing
amount of my energy and dedication, and in the process taught me a lot about
life.
3) He left my wife starry-eyed with wonder: ("
Roger Zelazny's on the
phone! He says he's sorry to interrupt your work time, but he has a question for
you.")
4) He got me out of bed.
Thanks, Roger. Here's to your memory.