The Boxing System: I Became the King of the Ring-Chapter 31: The Road to the Bronx
Danny’s van rumbled through morning traffic as Brooklyn faded behind them. Javier pressed his face against the cold window.
Tommy couldn’t sit still. His hands twisted the straps of his gym bag like they might snap. His leg bounced against the van floor in a rhythm that matched nothing but his nerves.
"Relax, kid," Danny said, catching Tommy’s reflection in the rearview mirror. "You keep that up and you’ll be tired before we even get there."
The pickup came at 6 AM sharp. Danny had pulled up to Marcus Garvey while the other residents still slept in their beds. Javier and Tommy had crept through the dormitory like burglars, grabbing their gear and slipping out into the cold morning air.
Now they drove through neighborhoods Javier had never seen before. The street signs changed from names he recognized to Bronx territory that might as well have been another country.
"Where exactly are we going?" Tommy asked for the third time.
Danny’s knuckles were white on the steering wheel despite his casual tone. "Already told you. Bronx Boxing Academy."
"But who runs it?"
"Caleb Dawson. Toughest trainer in the Bronx."
Javier watched Danny’s face in the rearview mirror. His jaw was set too tight for casual conversation.
"You two got history?" Javier asked.
"Fifteen years of back and forth. We both got fighters who went pro. Sometimes we get along, sometimes we don’t."
The van bounced hard over a pothole. Danny cursed under his breath and tightened his grip on the wheel.
"His fighters talk trash about Brooklyn boys," Danny said. "Call us weak. Time to shut them up."
Tommy bounced his leg faster. The van filled with angry energy that had nowhere to go yet.
The radio played salsa music that nobody really listened to. The van smelled like old leather gloves and hand wraps and the kind of nervous sweat that came before something important.
Javier’s stomach twisted as they drove deeper into unfamiliar territory. This wasn’t like sparring at home where everyone knew each other.
"How good are these guys?" Tommy asked.
Danny shrugged. "We’ll find out."
Twenty minutes later, they arrived at the Bronx Boxing Academy which wedged between an auto repair shop and a corner store. The building looked bigger than Gleason’s and the equipment visible through the windows was definitely newer.
Expensive cars lined the street. The sound of heavy bags being worked echoed all the way to the sidewalk.
"Damn," Tommy said under his breath.
Danny parked and turned off the engine. He sat there for a moment, drumming his fingers on the steering wheel.
"Look," Danny said. "These guys are gonna try to get in your heads. Don’t let them."
Javier grabbed his bag. Tommy fidgeted with his straps like they might come undone.
The cold air stung their faces as they got out. Javier could hear his heartbeat in his ears. Tommy walked close behind him like he was afraid of getting lost.
Danny stopped at the entrance. Through the glass, they could see fighters moving around inside. Everyone looked focused and serious.
"Ready?" Danny asked.
Javier nodded. Tommy made a noise that might have meant yes.
Danny pushed open the door. The noise hit them immediately - bags being pounded, speed bags rattling, voices calling out instructions in Bronx accents.
The gym went quiet. Every fighter stopped what they were doing and looked at the three strangers who’d just walked in.
Nobody said anything for a long moment. Javier felt like he was being examined under a microscope.
**************
The gym door slammed shut behind them. The noise hit differently here - sharper, hungrier.
This place reeked of success. New leather and fresh paint instead of the decades of sweat baked into Gleason’s walls. Heavy bags hung like soldiers in formation while fighters worked combinations that looked deadly smooth.
Tommy’s shoulders went tight. Every guy here was built and moved like violence was second nature.
Javier counted heads. Twenty, maybe twenty-five fighters. All business. The speakers pumped something with heavy bass that made the whole room pulse.
Out of the office, someone walked money in a tracksuit. Gold chain catching the lights, haircut that probably cost a hundred bucks, swagger that said he owned everything he touched. Caleb Dawson.
The handshake with Danny turned into a contest. Neither man backing down, both grinning like wolves.
"dese your Brooklyn prospects?" Caleb asked, eyeing them like meat.
Tommy’s attempt at a smile died on his face. Javier locked eyes with Caleb and didn’t blink. The older man’s eyebrows climbed.
"Dis one’s got balls," Caleb said, sounding like he approved.
The organization here was military. Hand wraps done identical. Equipment that still had tags. Sponsor decals covering every surface like NASCAR.
Corner men in matching gold-trimmed shirts. Water bottles in perfect formation. Towels folded like they were going to inspection.
"More rules than lockup," Tommy muttered.
Caleb played tour guide through his empire. "Meet my killers."
Kevin "Lightning" O’Brien - hands moving so fast they blurred. Sixteen years old and already looked like he could take your head off.
Antoine "Iron Jaw" Washington - every punch sounded like a gunshot. Sweat pouring but breathing easy.
Dmitri "The Hammer" Volkov - stretching like rubber but built like a truck. Arms thick as most people’s legs.
Handshakes all around. Each Bronx fighter measured them while playing nice.
These guys owned the ring area like kings. Danny and Caleb swapped war stories that were really threats.
Tommy noticed you had to ask before touching anything here. At Gleason’s, you grabbed what you needed. Here, hierarchy mattered.
Javier felt his holey sneakers and stained shirt like spotlights. Everybody else looked sponsored.
"Just came back from Albany," Caleb said, chain glinting. "Kevin dropped three kids in one tournament. Antoine cleaned d house in his division."
Danny fought back with Gleason’s glory days but sounded defensive.
"Ancient history though," Caleb added, his smile sharp as glass.
Tommy’s confidence leaked out like air from a punctured tire. His hands trembled before he even touched equipment.
Javier understood. This wasn’t friendly competition. This was a public execution dressed up as sparring.
Training stopped. Fighters circled the ring like sharks smelling blood. The atmosphere shifted from practice to performance.
Tommy tried wrapping his hands. Dropped the cloth twice. Started over. Everyone watching made his fingers useless.
Caleb’s voice cut through everything when he spoke. The music seemed to duck down respectfully. 𝒇𝒓𝒆𝒆𝙬𝒆𝒃𝓷𝒐𝓿𝙚𝙡.𝒄𝓸𝒎
"Ready for some Bronx education?" he asked.
Corner men claimed prime viewing spots. Anticipation crackled like electricity before a storm.
One sharp clap from Caleb. The gym got cemetery quiet.
"Showtime," he announced, grinning like he was about to watch his favorite movie. "Kevin - take the skinny one. Antoine - teach the other boy how we do business up here."