Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Mulligan

    Prev Next

    you've ever acted old was 30

      years ago when you were looking

      to hustle somebody on the course.

      You should have seen her. She'd

      listen to these guys talking about

      playing for ten dollars a hole and

      she'd start holding her back or

      massaging her poor "arthritic"

      hands. Next thing you know, she's

      smiling and counting their money."

      "Marty Beck! You never told me

      you were a hustler!" Louise was

      astonished to learn of her lover's

      shady side.

      "It was a long time ago, Lou. Joe

      Baxter finally hired me on at Elk

      Ridge because his members

      started asking for me. I tell you, it

      wasn't easy back then for a woman

      to earn a living at this game."

      "How long were you on the tour,

      Marty?" Shirley asked.

      "About three years."

      "Did you ever play in The Dinah?"

      "Oh, no. The Dinah didn't start

      until 1972. I left the tour in '66."

      "What was it like, Marty?" Linda

      asked. "The tour, I mean."

      Louise settled back on the sofa of

      their three-bedroom condo,

      looking forward to hearing her

      partner talk about such an exciting

      time in her life. Marty sat on the

      floor in front and leaned back

      against her knees.

      "Sometimes it was all I wanted to

      do. Other times, it was… well, it

      was pretty miserable." She felt

      Louise's comforting hand on her

      shoulder as her voice dipped in

      melancholy. "I'll probably never

      forget the way I felt the last day

      I played. When I teed off that

      morning, I was on top of the

      world. It was the U. S. Open at

      Hazeltine National in Minneapolis.

      I was one of only a handful of

      qualifiers in a field of about a

      hundred. Everyone else was

      exempt."

      "What does that mean?" Joyce

      asked. All of the women had

      gathered in the living room to

      hear the tale.

      "It means that most of the golfers

      playing in the Open didn't have to

      qualify because they had won

      tournaments already or they were

      among the top money winners. I

      was neither. I squeaked in after

      finishing fourth at a qualifying

      tournament the week before. My

      best outing on the tour was third

      place at a tournament in South

      Carolina that most of the really

      good players skipped so they

      could have a break. The smaller

      tournaments were my best bet for

      getting a paycheck because it was

      easier to make the cut. But the

      purses were pretty small.

      Sometimes, the winner walked off

      with only four hundred dollars."

      "That's amazing. I bet the men

      were making thousands."

      "Yeah, but the LPGA tour didn't

      have that many big sponsors.

      That's one of the things that

      changed when The Dinah came

      along. All of a sudden, the LPGA

      had a major sponsor in Colgate and

      a public face that people liked.

      The media picked up on it and it

      finally took off."

      "So what happened at the Open?

      Go on with your story," Shirley

      coaxed.

      "Like I said, on Sunday morning I

      felt great. I'd had the best round

      of my whole career the day

      before and was tied for fourth

      place, but just two strokes back

      from the leader. I birdied the

      first hole and scooted up into

      second… and then the wheels came

      off." Marty sighed at the memory.

      "I hit it out of bounds on two and

      dropped a stroke. On six and 13, I

      hit it in the water. I swear, I

      missed a half dozen putts by an

      inch. But I didn't back down. Oh,

      no, not Marty Russell. I kept

      taking chances, and I even

      finished the day with a birdie on

      18, but all told, I'd dropped back

      to 15th place. I took home about

      three hundred dollars, and I mean

      I took it home. Wallace was my

      caddy back then, and he and I just

      threw the clubs in the station

      wagon and headed back to Holland.

      I bet we didn't say five words to

      each other all the way back."

      "That was it?"

      "That was my last professional

      tournament. Wallace and I hired on

      at the club where we played

      growing up. They made him the

      full-time pro and I gave lessons

      part-time and worked the rest of

      the time in the clubhouse."

      "Wait a minute! They made your

      caddy the full-time pro?" Joyce

      was outraged.

      "Yep! And everybody there knew I

      could beat him from the blue tees,

      even Wallace, but that's the way it

      was back then. 'Course, it didn't

      matter much in the long run,

      because we got married pretty

      soon after that and the next year

      I got pregnant with Katie."

      The six women sat quietly, no one

      quite sure what to say in the wake

      of a story like that. The clock on

      the mantle chimed the hour of

      nine.

      "I don't know about you guys, but

      I'm beat. It's really been a long

      day," Shirley said. "And this old body of mine thinks it's midnight."

      "That's because it is midnight

      back in Florida where we got up

      this morning," Linda answered,

      tugging her partner to her feet.

      The women had agreed to let

      Shirley and Linda have the

      bedroom downstairs; there were

      two more master suites upstairs.

      "I bet we're all awake at four

      o'clock," Marty lamented.

      "You up at four? That'll be the

      day!" Louise took her lover's hand

      and pulled her toward the stairs.

      "We'll see you ladies in the

      morning."

      Marty drifted deeper into her

      funk as she closed the door to

      their bedroom. "I guess I really

      threw a wet blanket on the party

      with that miserable tale, didn't

      I?"

      "You didn't throw a wet blanket on

      things, honey. Everybody's just

      tired tonight."

      The golf pro shrugged. She had

      fought those demons so many

      times, always thinking she'd

      survived it in the end; but it was

      hard not to dream about how far

      she might have gone had she

      played better that day. Louise

      interrupted her reflections with a

      soft kiss to the back of her ear as

      they settled into bed.

      "I love you, Marty."

      "I love you too."

      Over the next two days, Marty

      and Louise played two rounds of

      golf, one with Carol and Joyce and

      another on their own. They

      explored the downtown with

      Shirley and Linda
    , and all six

      women relaxed at the condo from

      the late afternoon until bedtime.

      So far, it was a perfect vacation;

      all of them were completely

      enamored with the beautiful

      desert resort.

      On Thursday, the three couples

      piled into the rented van to go to

      Mission Hills in Rancho Mirage,

      the home of The Dinah. The four-

      day tournament got underway at

      eight o'clock.

      "Wow! Look at all the people!"

      Louise was amazed at the crowd,

      already numbering in the hundreds

      at 7:30 in the morning. Most were

      women, and many seemed to be

      couples like themselves.

      "Wait till Saturday and Sunday.

      There'll be ten times this many

      here then," Marty explained. "I'll get us a program. Why don't you

      go on up and sit with Shirley and

      Linda? You want me to bring you

      anything?"

      "No, I'm fine." Louise began the

      climb up the bleachers to where

      their friends were already sitting.

      She and Marty had walked first to

      the 18th hole to view the bronze

      statue of Dinah Shore and to see

      the Wall of Champions that

      recorded the previous tournament

      winners. Despite the early hour,

      the air was humming with

      excitement.

      Marty shouldered through the

      crowd to the kiosk where the

      programs were sold. Hopefully,

      Louise had brought their reading

      glasses or they…

      "Marty?"

      The blonde golf pro whirled at the

      sound of her name, at once

      spotting her old friend Pat

      Shapiro, now a pro at a private

      Tampa club. "Pat!"

      The two friends hugged warmly.

      "I didn't know you were coming

      this year."

      "It was a Christmas present from

      my new lady. She's sitting up in

      the bleachers. I'd love for you to

      meet her."

      Marty and Pat had played on the

      tour together, the latter woman

      hanging on four years after Marty

      had hung it up. Pat had been good

      enough to land a sponsor, Marty

      thought, but a Jewish surname

      had been the real handicap in

      those days. Over the years,

      they'd run into one another at

      some of the LPGA sanctioned

      teaching and club pro events in

      Florida, and enjoyed now both a

      friendship and a mutual

      professional regard. And Pat was

      "in the family," so to speak;

      though if she'd ever had a

      partner, Marty didn't know about

      it.

      "I'd like to, but I've only got a

      minute. I'm sure I'll run into you

      both over the next few days. Did

      you know Tami was playing?"

      "You're kidding! How'd she get

      in?" Tami Sparks was a recent

      University of Florida grad whom

      Marty had "discovered" as a young teenager. After working with her

      for three years, she'd seen the

      potential and had referred her to

      Pat, who was an outstanding

      teacher and better connected to

      the ladies' pro tour.

      "She won that qualifying

      tournament in Atlantic City last

      month. She's got her handicap

      down to two. I think she's decided

      to get serious about this."

      "God, I hope so. It would be such

      a shame to see all that potential go

      to waste." Tami had given up so

      much of her youth to an adult

      game that she'd almost burned out

      for good. On Pat's advice - and

      against her parents' wishes -

      she'd taken almost a year off

      before turning back to the game

      she loved.

      "Well, she still has to make the

      cut, but she's playing pretty good

      golf right now."

      "That's great. I'll be sure to find

      her and say hello."

      "She tees off at 8:40 on Number

      10 if you're interested. Or you can

      come over to the driving range in

      about 15 minutes to watch her

      warm up."

      "I'll do that. It'll be great to see

      her again," the blonde agreed.

      "Listen, a bunch of us from the

      tour are meeting for drinks at the

      clubhouse Saturday at two o'clock.

      You ought to stop by."

      "Who all's going to be here?"

      Marty hadn't kept up with most of

      the women she'd played against

      week in and week out for those

      three years long ago.

      "Fran, Becky… Mary Jean… and a

      couple of others I can't think of.

      You should stop in."

      "Okay, I'll try. But I'm here with

      five other people and one car, so I

      can't promise."

      The friends said goodbye and

      Marty picked up a program and

      worked her way back to the

      bleachers. "I just ran into a friend

      of mine from Tampa," she said

      cheerfully. She went on to explain

      about Pat Shapiro and Tami

      Sparks.

      "Hey, she's that kid you were

      working with when we first

      started coming down to Florida!"

      Linda remembered the teenager

      that followed Marty all around the

      club.

      "That's her. And she's playing in

      this tournament."

      "You mean to tell me that someone

      you gave lessons to is now a pro?"

      Louise was immeasurably

      impressed.

      "Yes, ma'am! Listen, I'm going

      over to the driving range to say

      hello to her. You guys want to

      come meet her?"

      "I'm not giving up this seat,"

      Shirley pronounced. Their seats

      were in the only patch of shade.

      "Lou?"

      Louise really enjoyed seeing her

      partner so excited, but she

      couldn't help but feel like she

      might be in the way. She didn't

      know any of these women Marty

      was off to see, and Marty might

      cut her visit short because she

      wouldn't want her to feel left out.

      "Why don't you go on by yourself?

      She's a friend of yours and you

      should talk to her without having

      me hanging around. I'll say hello to

      her some other time."

      The blonde woman started to leave

      again when Carol and Joyce

      climbed to their row and sat to

      await the first group of golfers

      teeing off. "You'd never believe

      what we just saw," Joyce said, still

      shaking her head in amazement.

      "What?" the group asked in unison.

      "There's a woman over there that

      looks exactly like Marty did when

      I first met her. She's wearing a

      sponsor's tag."

      The women craned their necks to

      see if they could catch a glimpse.

      "She looked like me?"

      "A lot. At least the way you looked

      back then."

      "You mean before I
    got so old and

      fat." Marty had no problem with

      calling it as she saw it.

      "Marty Beck, you are not old and

      fat! You're… just right," Louise

      argued.

      "Nice try, sweetie," she grinned.

      "I know you love me, but I'm still

      old and fat."

      Watching her lover walk away,

      Louise asked the others, "Why do

      you think she goes on so much

      about being fat? I think she's as

      cute as she can be."

      "I guess people just have their

      own ideas about how they want to

      look," Carol offered. "We've

      probably all added a few pounds

      over the years, but that doesn't

      make it easy to accept the

      changes."

      Louise sighed and shook her head.

      She weighed the same today as

      she had most of her life, but she

      had to admit that things were…

      apportioned a little differently.

      Still, she'd just never been the

      sort to put so much emphasis on

      what was on the outside, and she

      wished Marty wouldn't either.

      As promised, Marty found her

      young protégé warming up at the

      driving range. From about 20

      yards back, she watched as Pat

      quietly instructed the woman at

      the tee. It was hard not to envy

      both of them; Tami for her

      youthful potential, and Pat for her

      mentoring role and ringside seat.

      If the young woman continued to

      play well, they could both ride the

      wave for several years, right at

      the center of all the action on the

      women's tour.

      The decision six years ago to

      hook Tami Sparks up with Pat

      Shapiro had been gut-wrenching

      for Marty. She would have loved

      the chance to get back onto the

      tour, and there was no one in her

      life then who would have tied her

      to home. But the kid deserved a

      real shot, and Pat knew the ins and

      outs of the LPGA better than

      anyone she knew. It would have

      been selfish on her part to try to

      do it on her own just to have the

      chance to get back on the inside

      again. But seeing them here

      together was tough.

      "Well, look who's finally learned to

      keep her head down!"

      "Marty!" Tami dropped her club

      and ran to embrace her former

      coach. "What are you doing here?"

      "I heard that some hotshot kid

      was making her move, and I

      thought I'd better check it out."

      "I can't believe you're here! Wait

      till Mom and Dad find out." Mike

      and Cathy Sparks would always be

      grateful for Marty's guidance of

      their daughter's career.

      "It'll be good to see them again.

      Listen, is it okay if I join your

      gallery on the course? You can say

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026