Chapter IV: Year One
The heat didn’t let up, not for a second as the days pushed on. Summer didn’t just visit—it moved in and made itself comfortable. But the Denton boys? They moved with it.
It only took a matter of days to flip that dusty, cluttered garage into a bootleg iron jungle. It wasn’t fancy—no chrome machines or digital screens. Just a bench press held together with rust and hope, barbells with chipped paint, dumbbells that ain’t matched, a pull-up bar that creaked like it had a grudge. Only thing new was the medicine ball. It was ragged... but it worked.
And now Dale had no excuses...
The very next day, Dale was up before the sun. 4 A.M. Alarm clock never got the chance to scream. He was already lacing his sneakers, eyes half-closed, body still stuck in that purgatory between sleep and drive. He didn’t care.
He was already out in the garage before the birds opened their mouths. Gripping iron. Pushing through reps. Form tight. Breathing sharp. He wasn’t chasing the mirror—he was chasing time.
Because that clock was ticking.
By 5 A.M., Mark would be up. Like clockwork. Pots clanging. Bacon sizzling. Kitchen smelling like a Waffle House explosion. Every morning, without fail, a full spread: eggs, toast, grits, turkey sausage, sometimes pancakes when he was feeling generous. Then he’d slap Dale’s plate on the table like a challenge.
“You lift heavy, you eat heavier.”
Mark never said much during breakfast. Just nodded when Dale cleaned his plate and poured another cup of coffee. Then he’d wipe his mouth, grab his work shirt off the chair, and vanish into his hustle.
Mark might’ve dipped out for 17 years, but he was about that work. He ran sanitation trucks like a general—kept three on the road and a spare for parts. Managed a junkyard that was more organized than half the convenience stores in town. And even on his off days—the two or three he might catch in a month—he ran with Dale.
No excuses. No sick days. No “my back hurt.” Just pavement and purpose.
Dale started keeping track. Every mile. Every pound. Every protein shake. No, it wasn’t pretty. Some mornings his legs felt like soggy noodles. Some nights he laid in bed sore enough to cry. But he pushed through. He had to.
Because school was coming. Because football tryouts were coming. Because life was coming.
The gym workouts, the early morning runs, the chicken and rice meals, the gallons of water, the ice baths in a plastic kiddie pool—all of it became his rhythm. His focus. His revenge on the world that pushed him away from home. From what he knew. From what he was comfortable with.
Still, Dale wasn’t stupid. He wasn’t throwing the “Father of the Year” award at Mark. The resentment didn’t just disappear because they shared eggs and a run route. He had his reservations. Questions that still clung to the back of his throat. Like why now? Why this version of Mark and not the one he needed at seven years old?
But whenever the doubt crept in, Dale would shut it down with five words:
“Just one year. One year.”
That was the plan. That was the mission. Grind out the next 300-something days, get the film, get the offers, and get the fuck outta nowhere. Whether Mark was along for that ride or not... that didn’t matter.
Because this wasn’t about making peace. This was about making a way.
And truth be told, Dale was already starting to see it. The shoulders filling out. The bounce in his step. The hunger in his core that had nothing to do with food. That killer instinct was creeping back in, and not the kind he picked up from Harlem corners. This was different. Focused. Intentional.
The garage wasn’t just a gym. It was a forge. And Dale Denton was back on the grindstone.
One rep. One mile. One year.
That’s all he needed.
Getting registered at Manning High made it official—Dale Denton was now a South Carolina boy. At least on paper. School ID, class schedule, locker assignment—all that bureaucratic jazz that screamed this is your life now.
But in his mind? He was still Harlem. Just on layover. One year. That’s it. That’s all.
His focus was locked in: keep his grades up, make the team, show out, get scouted, and bounce. No detours. No side quests. But the process wasn’t a sprint. It was one long, painful walk through purgatory. So between two-a-day workouts and Mark’s crash course in manhood, Dale allowed himself small pockets of peace.
And that night? That Saturday night, one week before school started? That was his peace.
After a long convo with his moms, Sharnell—who still checked in like she had GPS on his soul—she dropped him a light blessing: $200, no strings attached. Just a little something to hold him over. “Keep your head up, baby,” she said. “And keep your nose clean.”
Cool. Dale had one craving on his mind. Taco Bell.
It wasn’t his first choice, but it was across the street from Manning High and open late. Close. Cheap. Quick. That’s all that mattered. Tossing on a hoodie and shorts, keys in hand, Dale decided to hoof it down the road. It was humid, sticky, the kind of night air that clung to your skin like a guilt trip.
He thought about throwing his headphones on—let some old Dipset ride him into the night—but something told him nah. He was still new around here. Still watching his step. Still learning the rules of this slow-motion town.
Crickets were chirping like they had a DJ. Most of the town was tucked in. Gas stations glowed in the dark like beacons of desperation, and chain restaurants ran off skeleton crews and microwaves. It was dead out here, but not dead enough.
About a mile into the walk, Dale spotted a Shell gas station, one of those joints with the full convenience store inside. He figured he’d stop in for a couple of Powerades to balance out the sodium bomb he was about to order from Taco Bell.
As he approached, the door flew open, damn near hitting him in the chest. Four white kids barreled out, 3 guys and a girl to be exact, loud as hell, talking trash and bumping shoulders like they were escaping a movie scene. Couldn’t be older than seventeen, maybe eighteen. Same age as him.
They piled into a black Toyota and peeled out like they just robbed the place.
Dale? He ain’t blink.
Just stepped inside, grabbed two Powerades, slid to the counter, paid in cash, and bounced. Smooth. Quiet. Just like the streets taught him: Mind ya biz and keep it pushin’.
That was the plan. Until a squad car pulled in.
Cherry lights spinning. Siren off. But that presence? Loud as hell.
Dale glanced once, heart skipping a half-beat. Couldn’t be me, he thought. Right?
Wrong.
A door swung open and a middle-aged Black officer stepped out. Could be local PD. Could be State Trooper. Light brown uniform. Belt stacked with authority. At this point, they all look the same.
“Excuse me, boy!” the cop called out, his voice sharper than it needed to be. “You there! I’d like to have a word with you.”
Dale clenched his jaw. Closed his eyes. Let out a sigh so deep it pulled from the soles of his feet.
He froze in place. Didn’t run. Didn’t talk slick. Just stood there. Because this ain’t new. It was just new here.
“How ‘bout you turn around,” the officer barked again. “Let me see your face. Hands where I can see ‘em.”
Dale turned slow, Powerade bag in hand, hoodie still down, no sudden moves.
“Is there a problem, officer?”
“I don’t know. You tell me. It’s nearly eleven o’clock. What you doin’ out this late?”
Dale blinked. His brow twitched.
“I ain’t know I needed a permit to be out.”
“Don’t give me no sass, boy!”
The trooper stepped closer, puffed up like a rooster with a badge.
“We got a call about some teenagers loitering out here. You fit the description.”
“Your math don’t add up, boss man. It’s just one of me. Maybe you should go talk to whoever called you… or check the cameras. You barking up the wrong tree.”
The moment the words left his mouth, Dale knew he hit a nerve. Trooper wasn’t built for logic. He was built for control.
“Get up on that wall,” he snapped. “Arms out. Legs spread. Now.”
“Yo, what?” Dale stepped back, disbelief coloring his voice. “You serious bruv?”
“I said—Wall... Now.”
“This some bullshit,” Dale muttered. He was just about to play along, let the cop have his little moment, when a Ford Explorer rolled into the lot. Faded blue. Dusty.
Mark...
Like divine intervention in sneakers and work boots.
Inside the store, the commotion had drawn the cashier to the door. She peeked through the glass, wide-eyed but silent, hands clenched.
Mark stepped out of the car, eyes cutting through the situation instantly.
“Jett?” Mark called out. “Jett! What’s goin’ on?”
The trooper looked over his shoulder. His shoulders dropped a little. Recognition softened his face.
“Got a call about some punks up to no good.”
“Yo, Dad!” Dale shouted. “Tell him to get off me! I ain’t do nothin’!”
“C’mon, Jett. There’s gotta be a mistake,” Mark said, walking up. “That’s my boy. He just moved down here from New York. He ain’t even know his way around yet.”
Jett’s face twisted, surprise flickering.
“This your boy?”
“Yeah. The one I told you about—the football kid. Let him go.”
A pause. Tension hung like a thundercloud.
Then the cashier finally spoke.
“It wasn’t him,” she said through the glass. “It was four others. They took off in a black Toyota. I saw it.”
Jett let it register. Took his time. Let the weight of embarrassment settle in before he finally backed off.
“Mark, I like you. You always been straight with me. But this boy got a mouth that needs fixin’. I hope you handle that.”
Mark nodded. Tense smile.
“Oh, trust me, I know, and I will. You know I will. Dale—go on. Get in the car.”
Dale looked at Jett. Looked at the cashier. Then Mark. Grabbed his bag and got in the truck. And to top it off, the officer didn't even budge to apologize for the mishappening.
His body was calm, but inside? Rage. Fire. Shame. Humiliation.
Dale sat in the passenger seat, silent, staring out the windshield like it insulted him personally. Eyes locked on that cashier still peeking out the window.
Questions started spinning: Why didn’t she speak sooner? Did she call the cops and change the story once she saw him? Was it a mistake—or a cover-up?
Didn’t matter.
Dale didn’t want the answers. Because the answer was always the same: this place ain’t home.
After smoothing things over, Jett proceeded his investigation inside the store. Mark climbed in and started the car, eyes tight with thought.
Dale didn’t speak. Didn’t need to.
That night added another brick to the wall Dale was building inside. Another reason to get the fuck out of nowhere.
He thought about his mother. Her voice on the phone. The $200. He thought about Harlem. His friends. His girl and if she would wait on him. He thought about football. School. The gym. The plan.
And then he whispered to himself, “Just one year...”