The | Iron Claw

The morning of the state championship, Kevin Von Erich woke before the sun. Not from nerves—he’d long since learned to swallow those—but from habit. On the ranch, dawn meant work. In the ring, dawn meant the grind. He rolled out of bed, his knees crackling like old floorboards, and pulled on his running shorts. The hallway walls were still papered with faded posters: WCCW , Christmas Star Wars ’82 , David Von Erich vs. Harley Race . His brother David’s face, frozen at twenty-five, smiled down at him.

Outside, the Texas air was already thick and wet, even in spring. He ran the same three-mile loop past the paddocks, past the barn where he and Kerry used to wrestle as boys, their father watching from the fence with arms crossed. No crying. No quitting. You’re Von Erichs. The words had built them. The words had buried them. The Iron Claw

The kitchen light was on. His boys were asleep upstairs. He kissed his wife on the forehead, poured a glass of water, and stood at the window. The ranch stretched out dark and quiet. Somewhere beyond the fence, a horse shifted in its stall. Kevin pressed his palm flat against the glass—five fingers, no claw, just a man’s hand. The morning of the state championship, Kevin Von

Kevin hadn’t had an answer then. He didn’t have one now. In the ring, dawn meant the grind

Kevin moved on instinct. Arm drag. Dropkick. The crowd counted along. He locked in the claw—left hand pressed to the man’s temple, fingers splayed, the gimmick his father had turned into legend. The referee asked if the man gave up. The man tapped. One minute, forty-two seconds.

Then he sat there a long time, listening to the crowd thin out, the janitor’s broom sweeping popcorn from the concrete. On the wall, a black-and-white photo of the old Von Erichs—six boys in matching robes, their father in the middle, all of them smiling. None of the six were still alive except him. None except Kevin.

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