vitamins?â I asked.
âYouâve always hated vitamins,â my mother said. âWhen you were little I even tried to get you to take those chewable ones, the ones shaped like little bears and bunnies.â
âI was hoping that instead of bears and bunnies you could get me some vitamin C, and A and some E andâmaybe you should just get me the whole alphabet.â
âIâll get you whatever you want, but why this sudden interest in vitamins?â she asked.
âYou canât run an engine without putting in the right fuel. Thatâs what Coach Barnes said. I need vitamins to build up my strength.â
âYour strength? Youâre as strong as an ox,â she said.
âI want to be stronger than an ox. I only have fourteen weeks until our first game. Thatâs fourteen weeks to make it happen.â
That didnât seem like nearly enough time. I had no time to waste.
Chapter Six
I paused at the door to the weight room. The door was locked and there was a little touch pad to enter the code that would open it. It was a four-digit codeâa very easy code to remember. One, one, one, one. Coach Barnes had told us that one was the only number weâd need to know because number two and up were for losers. I punched in the code and there was a loud click as the lockreleased. I pulled the door open. I expected that the lights would be off. Instead the hall was well lit and the door to the weight room was open. Had somebody gotten here before me? I heard the sound of weights being lifted. Who was it? Was it Caleb or Robbie or one of the other guys? Then again, it couldnât be Caleb. If he were here heâd be sitting on a bench, but not actually lifting any weights.
I poked my head through the door. There was a manâa big manâon a bench doing presses. He was focused on the bar he was pumping and didnât see me. He was grunting as he lifted, and his musclesâhis big musclesâflexed. His arms were gigantic and his chest was as thick as a tree trunk. His head was shaved and shiny, and that made it harder to judge his age, but I figured he was in his twenties.
I did a quick count of the weight he was lifting, adding up the plates. There were over three hundred pounds on the bar! And he wasnât just lifting itâhe was pumping it up and down, up and down, like his arms were pistons in a car. It looked like he wasnât evenworking that hard. How many had he done and how many was he going to do?
At that instant he lowered the bar into the cradle. He sat up, saw me and smiled. There were a couple of big, angry-looking zits on his face.
âGood morning. You have to be Michael,â he said.
âYeah, I am. How did you know?â
âCoach Barnes told me that he thought youâd be the first one here.â
He stood up. I was surprised. He was really built, but he was short. I was a full head taller than he was. Somehow, when he was sitting on the bench, his muscles all big and bulging, I thought he was taller.
âIâm Tony,â he said, offering me his hand. We shook. His grip was strong and powerful. âIâm the strength coach.â
âWe have a strength coach?â
âYou do for the summer. Iâve been hired to create and monitor an individual program for every member of the team.â
âYouâll tell us what weights we should use?â I asked.
âWhat weights, what machines, how many reps, how often and in what order. But Iâll be doing a lot more than that. Iâll be looking at your diet, vitamins and food supplements.â
âThatâs great. I was just telling my mother this morning that I needed some vitamins.â
âYou do, but tell her to save her money. Weâll supply everything.â
âEverything?â I asked in amazement.
âEverything except for the most important thing, and that you have to supply.â He tapped me on the chest. âThe