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Funny Fiction Inspirational

Lola doesn’t particularly like him- her father, that is, but says she’s learning to tolerate him. He doesn’t particularly like her either, and he learned to accept her. Accept all the traces of her mother in her, from the stout frame flinching at any conciliatory gesture of affection, to the pinched looks and angry sighs whenever he emerges from the depths of his room, sleeping off his early shift. 

Today is a special day for Gerald. Wimbledon is in the works – three weeks away, and he is in the final stretch of straightening out the grounds. Well, to be clear, he isn’t actually part of the grounds staff. No, he’s “just a gardener” and not even part of the full-time annual team, at that. “A sub,” as Lola would spit to a fellow ball boy or girl who dared proffer a curiosity at the man sullenly waiting for her after training sessions. He’ll feebly wave hello, his soil-stained palm crumpling whenever she rolls her eyes and lurches off with the rest of the returning chosen ones of last years’ crop.

But today is different, Gerald can feel it. The new season’s hiring process is underway, and he is in the last round. He practiced all year long to qualify, the back laundry room of the flat exploding with troughs of ryegrass and fescue in all stages of growth, from germinated seedlings to the wispy ruddy tipped bolts, endless shearings littering the linoleum tiles. He stress-tested the various controls near the dryer, by a drafty window, under a leaky pipe, in the dim corner of the corridor, and even inside the frail part of the wall where the neighbours' shrill singing would parse through. Stress balls, each of varying give, lined windowsills throughout the flat, and seven grippers hung on any available hook taunting him into dexterity x strength drills. He’s ready, all variables neutralized, his mental agility trained to respond to the slightest spin of the elements. His final chance to prove himself capable. No one would ever again question the decisiveness of his slice, or whether his left eye was too lazy to see. 

He was on the A team once before, back when Middle Sundays were never played, the grass courts allowed to rest and bounce back. Back before all of the millions of pounds funneled through the Sports Turf Research Institute delivered “superior product” with the “utmost resilience” and the sod was more art than science. Back when there was a poetry, a wistfulness, a lust for the strawberries and not the photos.

He was a mere scamp in those days. At 23 years old, he was one of the rare youths granted an apprenticeship with the grounds team, yet it wasn’t surprising really. Planting was his life. Work the soil, work your soul, as his father would always say. Of course, his father was more of the potato stock, following in his father’s bootsteps, who followed his father’s father's bootsteps, and so on and so on all the way back into the days of the king’s privilege and such. At the turn of the century, Gerald, inspired by the hopes of a new millennium, tirelessly read every and any public facing gardening tip issued by the Wimbledon Head Groundskeeper for insights into this other world.

Those two years of apprenticeship were the most electrifying years of his life, Gerald would often belch to any lingerer at the bar, blinded momentarily by the fading evening sun while unwittingly facing him. That’s where he met her mother, yer know. Tereza, Czech for harvester, she would smile. Reaper, more like, he would snort. Snuggled in between the strawberries and the cream, flinging bowls callously at stiff patrons, all the while tutting gutturally under her breath “do not understand…I would not pay more 10 koruna, pah, get it in my garden!” Gerald was captivated by her, her round, pillowy figure, straight straw hair and wide teeth shining brighter than all the starched customers and their coins. He hung back at closing one fateful July evening, and as she struggled to heave a soggy rubbish bag into the dumpster, he swooped in, catching the mushy bottom before it fell to the asphalt. She glanced at him quizzically, eyebrow aloft, shrugged and let go. She watched this wiry man lug the remaining refuse up and over the edge, hand on her hip, and eventually asked “Do you like honey?” They spent the remaining evenings of the championship under the stands, exchanging apple crunches for sweet kisses. 

The romance was short, the pregnancy quick, and the relationship severed by his failures. Lola was barely trotting before Tereza, humiliated by her husband’s flooding of the Centre Court in 2009 (“They build you roof and you still ruin us!”), was swooped away by a Serbian grandmaster who saw an opening on the grounds. She ran off promising to bring Lola to Monaco once settled, only to never recall the thought again.

And so, Gerald rebuilt his esteem over the past decade relentlessly slowly, getting odd jobs here and there with local neighbourhood landscaping crews, tending to hope with the excruciating intensity of a desperate and unrepentant man. When Lola’s private school opened up tryouts for ball boys and girls, he funneled her into the aperture. He thanked the determined posture the years of fighting to fit in left her with, setting her a league apart from the overlogged full tuition girls. Her intense focus and utmost respect for authority, built out of endlessly ignoring and snubbing him, made her a natural for the post.

And of course, the three inch bounce. 

The elusive three inch bounce. 

Many a teen crumbled when the Scherzinger missile glided past the proper height, to be annexed to the wings and eventually off the grounds. Yet Lola held the record for consistency, alacrity and speed, gathering the ire of many a rival. The animosity in the ranks peaked last summer when a renowned Belarusian force held her gaze for more than four seconds in admiration, and even, as legend had it– asked her for a fresh towel mid-match so that the camera may recognize Lola, despite the two neatly folded squares already on her bench. The girl, without missing a beat, nodded in assent and delivered what many credit as the game-saving sweat absorber. 

Yes, Gerald is proud of his progeny, of course, yet deep in his bowels he still feels the regurgitations of past scorns, and longs for absolution. For the past four years as a demoted seasonal gardener, he honed his craft, circulating between the 204 hanging petunia baskets with his wand, quenching window boxes so fastidiously that finally was granted a chance at most essential of the Wimble-scaping garden tasks: shaping topiaries. Typically, this was reserved for the finesse of the full-time team, but the Head Gardener Bertie, having once served on the courts with him during a particularly dry summer, remembered his grit and gave him a bone. 

One topiary.

Nestled in the back corner of The Hill, near the Ticket Resale booth was a scrawnier hedge. Gerald nursed this shrub back into health and saved it from the chopping block, tenderly pruning and shaping its wayward fronds into what became reputed as “the best backdrop” for a quick snap when waiting for a friend by the toilets. Due to the miraculous recovery of this shrub, Bertie put in a kind word to Head Groundsman Milbourne as they looked for two new staff to complete the thirty-five for the new season. 

And so, today is the day. The day to settle the doubts on his manhood, the day to outcompete. The day to qualify to roam the gardens a head above the gnomes, and swag over the courts declaring “Keep off the grass! Staff upkeep only!”

The first two rounds of the interview had been simple; a written test to check basic knowledge followed by a visual identification round to determine the chlorophyllic ailments of patches of ryegrass and prescribe necessary remediations. The final heat is the most excruciating. 

The 8mm snip. 

Not a millimetre more, or you’ll have to face the racket slamming wrath of a newly defeated reigning champion. Not a millimetre more, or your head is on the chopping block. 

This round starts like every other– small, dimly lit room. Shuttered windows. Cold, steely silence. The Head Groundsman sits behind a fold up table while 3 mobile patches of grass parked in the middle in descending order of height, from half a meter to 13mm. Strange, the command these blades hold over men far more ruthless than he.

Gerald seizes the mower wordlessly. The hours, days, months, years spent snipping grass by hand to “get a feel” for the look of 8mm pulse in his muscles. He kneels briefly, thumbs the blades to check their sharpness, and pats the steed acknowledging its might. He straightens, and with an exhale pulls the motor cord. 

He pushes the sputtering horse over the first unruly patch. Ah, easy. There’s extra- room for error. He swipes up in the opposite direction for the stripe. Good. Easy does it, girl. 

Without bothering to look up at his evaluator, he moves on. No need, perfection is the expectation. No “good job” here, just do what you’re supposed to. The next patch was 5cm. Tricky, irregular. He takes a deep breath, steadies his left eye, and pushes through. Looking down, he hesitates, did I miss a blade, but fatefully recognizes the ruse of swinging lamp’s shadow. Another stripe, another set.

And now, the 13mm. Not that the off-season length doesn’t have its merits, but the grass must be tapered to tournament standards. Holding his breath, he hovers the mower over the lip. Suddenly, Rufus, the pigeon preying grounds hawk, screeches, piercing through the walls and he falters, the machine swooping to the right with his buckling knee.

Head Groundsman Melbourne snaps his binder shut, pushes his chair from the table, stands and leaves the room. The two head apprentice groundsmen file suit, casting an eye at Gerald wilting on the floor in disgust. 


*****


The tenth day of the tournament commences, and Gerald is by the strawberries and cream booth, watering one of the majestic hydrangeas. He watched the water dribble down the planter, not caring if they touch the leaves and potentially open her to sun scorch. He didn't care when he set down the watering can in the middle of the path and wandered through Court No. 9 entrance. He didn’t care as he watched Lola fastidiously serve the young American tennis star bounding to great heights. He didn’t care when he saw Lola briefly turn her head and stare past him, a small fleck of dirt that somehow got past the crisp whites in the stands. 

He didn’t even care when he noticed Jenna, second ball girl in command, quietly trail likely half a pound of grass seed over the court as she handed Lola a ball, a sound so slight, morsels so minute, yet so weighted in the echoes of his memory. 

Lola was looking determined, yet a hair was out of place. The summer proved to be a scorcher, validating the weatherman’s theatrics. He does start to care when he notices Lola’s gaze faltering from the heat, avoiding looking at anything directly.

He’s starting to care when he notices a gradually building flock of pigeons cooing over the lip of the railing. 

He cares when this clay flock begins to circle the court.

And as the first pigeon swoops in at the tennis star's feet, Gerald definitely cares when Rufus’ ruthless screech pierces the stadium. The young American, in heat of battle, does not notice the swarm above or the vermin below. She bounds after the volley only to buckle backwards over a smug pigeon. She smacks her head into the net post, racket soaring into the rafters.

 A frenzy of opportunistic birds erupts at the scene, competing to peck up any remaining morsels, the order out of order, while a smug pigeon settles into the crook of the American’s clavicle to clean its toes.

“KKKEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAAWWWWWWW” Rufus pierces once more, closer, gaining speed.

Gerald double sprints to the court as Lola, caught amidst the tizzy of duty and squawking valiantly tries to save her post, arms flapping, skin scratching. Amidst the flurry of feathers, she glimpses her father bounding towards her, eyes glinting, mouth gaping, pits sweating. 

Within an instinct, she bounces a lime green missile to him. 

Gerald loads his dexterous right hand, follows Rufus’ descent straight into the heart of America, and lobs it.

“KEEP OFF THE GRASS, VERMIN.”


Later, the young tennis star would proclaim on the news that “a British groundsman saved me within 8mm of my life,” and Gerald, with the highest honor bestowed to a servant of the Wimbledon courts, could proclaim to a young apprentice-in-training, “No, that was not correct. Please, leave.”


June 25, 2024 15:38

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17 comments

Alexis Araneta
17:58 Jul 09, 2024

What a fun, engaging read ! It's especially astonishing finding out that you only found out about groundkeeping at Wimbledon by research. Splendid stuff !

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Red Herring
15:24 Jul 11, 2024

Thank you Alexis!! Yeah, it was great for getting hyper specific semi-ridiculous details like the hawk or petunia baskets. I had never gone down the rabbit hole that far before--- definitely recommend it for sourcing material!

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Daniel R. Hayes
20:11 Jul 08, 2024

Great story, Red! I really enjoyed this one! :)

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Red Herring
14:17 Jul 09, 2024

Ah thanks Dan! I've been feeling a little demoralized with this whole pursuing writing thing; a lil motivational lull. This perked me right up!! THANK YOU! Hope your hopes are going well!!

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Daniel R. Hayes
17:41 Jul 09, 2024

I know exactly how you feel. Writing can be a very isolating thing and that's why I like Reedsy because you can get some interaction on your work. You're a great writer and I'm glad that you're still putting out great stories!! :)

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Red Herring
15:23 Jul 11, 2024

Wow, thank you Dan, that means a lot! It's one thing for your loved ones to say "you go girl!"; complete strangers is another. I'm taking intermittent breaks from Reedsy; I realize getting too sucked into the competition aspect detracts from the other stuff I really want to write (not limited to prompts/characters). Are you working on anything besides the prompts?

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Daniel R. Hayes
22:02 Jul 11, 2024

Well, let me just say that your stories are so good! Taking breaks from Reedsy is almost a must thing to do because it takes your focus away from bigger projects. I am currently finishing my second novel, "Hot Head" which is a dark horror fantasy. I'm giving it one last read through after the final edits to make sure it all flows well. I also have 2 other books finished in my Mr. Macabre series. The first book went to number 3 on Amazon's best selling sales charts in the U.S. Horror Fiction category, which shocked me. That book did really g...

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Red Herring
14:40 Jul 23, 2024

Nice!! I really enjoy the humorous horror vibe you got, I'm working on my own short stories in a femme thriller style. And WOW, CONGRATS!! That's HUUUUGEEE!!!! What a hit of validation!! I'll look for it, what kind of marketing did you do? Do you have a Proper Job on top of it? I'm a teacher and nervous that when I go back I'll lose momentum. #1 goal of the summer is just to have a No Zero Day and write/edit even a sentence. Doing pretty well on it, even if it's painstakingly slow. (Excluding weekends). Have you checked out Flash Fictio...

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Daniel Rogers
02:59 Jul 02, 2024

Did you research the world of ground keepers of Wimbledon, or do you have personal knowledge? It's a great story of a little know world. Great job.

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Red Herring
11:40 Jul 02, 2024

I went on a real deep dive. There’s a lot, maybe too much, to read. The world is as fastidious as the sport! I’m not a sports person in any way, opting for the non team sports when I had to. Initially this was going to be an entirely different piece. I looked up what kind of courts Wimbledon had and was hooked. Thanks Dan, appreciate the read!!

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Kristi Gott
22:06 Jun 25, 2024

Unique, high quality writing, clever characterizations and plotline, very entertaining. The close attention to detail in describing Gerald and his distinctive character and goals is well done. The reader is drawn into Gerald's life and hopes, and feels empathy rooting for him. The underdog and the goals he wants to achieve are described with interesting details. Story flows well. Well done!

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Red Herring
01:47 Jun 26, 2024

Thanks Kristi!! What a beautiful comment 💗 my gratitude overfloweth.

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