Seth Wickersham, ESPN Senior Writer 12y

A DEATH IN THE FAMILY HAS LEONARD LITTLE TRYING TO MAKE SENSE OF HIS LIFE. AGAIN

Tonight's honoree is hiding behind a tree. He stands in the chill fall darkness in his best suit-a beautiful brown suit, a rich man's suit-atop a hill that eases down to a high school football field. Some of the 3,000 people in the stands are here to watch his No. 30 be retired at halftime, some to watch their Asheville (N.C.) High Cougars whip the North Buncombe Black Hawks. The honoree visited with the Cougars before they burst onto the field, telling them about his own time at Asheville, now 12 years gone, about how they should cherish their high school years, about the value of innocence. Tonight's honoree isn't innocent anymore. Each morning and night, he begs and prays for forgiveness. And the forgiveness he seeks has him tucked behind a blue spruce, watching, waiting, wondering. Scared to death.

HE WAS quiet, at first, because he was in shock. It was Oct. 20, 1998. Leonard Little was in Harriman, Tenn., at the home of his mother, Wanda, in her windowless basement, the TV sitting cold. It wasn't clear who he was now, not after what had happened the night before. He wasn't the boy nicknamed Head, the local star who had overcome poverty and an absentee dad and the temptation of easy street money. He wasn't the linebacker who, with Peyton Manning, co-captained the Volunteers and then earned a special-teams spot with the St. Louis Rams. Now he was something ugly. He spent a few days in that basement before someone knocked at the door, a man in his 40s with sandy hair and a warm smile. John Verble's arrival was a surprise. They'd met at Tennessee years earlier, and Verble was a psychologist and financial adviser for several former Vols. Everyone around Knoxville knew him as Dr. John, but Little hadn't talked to him in months. They went upstairs to the family room, and Dr. John asked, "What happened?"

What had happened was this: Little showed up at the Adam's Mark hotel in downtown St. Louis for a surprise party-his. It was Oct. 19, his 24th birthday. Over the next four hours he drank until his blood alcohol level hit .19, nearly twice the legal limit. Then at 10:45 p.m. he hopped into his new Navigator, ran a red light at Memorial and Market and broadsided a blue Thunderbird. The driver, 47-year-old Susan Gutweiler, was headed to pick up her 15-year-old son, Michael, at a Rob Zombie concert. Little looked up at Dr. John, his stare empty, his voice low and flat, and said, "Someone died."

LEONARD LITTLE knows death. It's not that he's morbid or scary or deranged. In fact, he's quiet and shy and sincere, with long, baleen eyelashes that shadow a face hardened by the fallout of disgrace. But Little knows about forgiveness, too. He forgives those in St. Louis who boo him and the protesters who campaigned against him. Most of all, he forgives the 17-year-old girl who allegedly pulled the trigger and brought death back into his life. Little forgives everyone. Except himself. On a Friday in November 2005, Little sits in another basement, this one in his St. Louis condo. He's 31 now. He looks straight at you, but pauses when his eyes fill up. Little has never spoken at length about the events of Oct. 19, 1998, or the days, months and years that followed. Why now? For the answer, Little takes you back a few weeks, to when the Rams were blown out by the Colts on Monday Night Football. After the game, he's in the locker room, still in uniform, when defensive line coach Bill Kollar says, "I want to talk to you." Little hasn't seen the text messages from Dr. John- "Don't check voice mail," "Call right away"-so he figures they'll be on him about the game. Okay, just cuss me out, he thinks. I'll be better next week. Larry Marmie and Dan Linza, the Rams defensive coordinator and security director, are waiting in an office. They tell Little to sit. Linza dials a number, then hands over the phone. It's Little's mother. Her voice is dry. She is sniffling. All she says is, "Jermaine." Little drops to the floor, hands gripping his head. The phone lies close enough to his ears that he can make out two words: "Shot" and "killed."

AFTER THE wreck, they'd sit in the living room every Tuesday and Thursday, and Little would start each session by telling Dr. John that he had so much to say. But then he'd mumble that he didn't know what he felt, flopping from sorry and devastated to lost and scared. Sometimes he'd return to his childhood, wondering why his father, Leonard Sr., wasn't around more. Sometimes he'd talk about the St. Louis media. But he'd never talk about Oct. 19. "I just didn't want to," Little says now. "You think of a thousand things. What if I did this, what if I did that. But the realization is, you did what you did. And I made a mistake." On Oct. 28 Little was charged with involuntary manslaughter for Gutweiler's death. Columnists flayed the rich jock who'd gotten loaded, jumped into his $45,000 SUV and killed someone's mom. Today, Little says, "You might as well say that it was on purpose, because I made the conscious decision to do what I did." Seven years ago, though, he swore to Dr. John that it was an accident, that he was a good person who'd made a mistake. When Dr. John left him alone in the basement, Little wanted to punch those writers. But when you're responsible for a death, are you allowed to be angry? A few weeks into their sessions, Dr. John started taking Little to the gym. They'd do sets of benches, curls, squats. One day, Dr. John led Little to the racquetball court and pulled out a pair of boxing gloves. "LL, put these on."

"What are you doing?"

"You've got to get this stuff off your chest."

"I'll hurt you."

"Don't worry about that."

Dr. John put on sparring gloves and flipped his palms toward Little. Taped to the gloves were headlines from St. Louis and Asheville papers, columnist pictures included. Little's eyes opened, then narrowed. Gloves still unlaced, he broke: punching, spitting, puffing and swinging, for revenge, for relief

"All this is going to defeat you, Leonard!" Dr. John yelled. "You hear me? You can't overcome it!"

teeth clenched, veins swelling, jaw and neck straining

"You can't win! You won't beat this!"

wheezing, moaning, breath after breath

"You can't "

until he hit Dr. John in the chest, knocking him down. Little fell to his hands and knees, his face damp with sweat and tears.

WHY JERMAINE? Little wondered. His younger brother had left Leonard a voice mail just a few days before, signing off the way he always did: "I love you." Jermaine Little was a little Leonard, same bulky build, same quick feet, same drawl. When he played youth football, Jermaine once wore Leonard's old jersey under his own. Leonard wore No. 1 at Tennessee, so Jermaine wore No. 2. When Jermaine gave up on school and football, dropping out of Coffeyville CC in Kansas, he told Leonard: "I live my life through you."

Jermaine was about to leave a friend's house last Oct. 17, to watch the Monday Night game, when a dispute broke out over $500. A gun was pulled and Jermaine's life was over, just like that. Five hundred bucks? Leonard is a millionaire. Why didn't Jermaine just call?

At 7 a.m. the next day, Little boarded the first flight from St. Louis to Charlotte, where Wanda now lives. He told himself he had to deal with Jermaine's death on his own, like a man, and so the voice mails-from Dick Vermeil, Mike Martz, Joe Vitt, Larry Marmie, from his old coaches at Tennessee, from Dr. John-piled up, unheard. Before the funeral, Little approached the casket and wrapped his arms around it. He held it, then backed away. "I can't do this," he said to no one in particular. Then, he was suddenly in his BMW, out of Asheville, traversing the Blue Ridge Mountains until he found a rock that would be his perch for the next few hours. Finally, he returned to his hotel room, where there were sleeping pills, and he drifted off.

The following day, Little picked up a story about Jermaine's death. Jermaine, 24, was shot once in the side a 17-year-old girl was taken into custody, and wait: In 1999, Leonard Little pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter in the death of Susan Gutweiler, 47, of suburban St. Louis, following a downtown crash.

Don't do that, he thought. Don't connect my brother with what I did. He didn't drive that car. Don't write that Jermaine and Susan are linked. What were they saying, that this was payback?

"Dr. John," he said into the phone a little later, "I just don't know if I can take this again."

THERE WAS a day after the wreck, not long after Leonard collapsed with his boxing gloves on, when he and Dr. John went back to the racquetball court. There were no gloves this time, just three chairs facing each other on the hardwood. Little sat in one and Dr. John took another. Then he pointed to the third. "Leonard, that's the Gutweiler family. What do you have to say?"

Little's breath deepened. He thought about how he could have taken a cab, how the impact sounded, how a husband no longer had a wife and a son no longer had a mother. Then the sniffling started and tears sped down his face. Four five six minutes of silence. Then, finally: "I'm sorry. I wish I could bring her back. I never, ever meant to hurt anybody. I'm sorry."

Little said that he wanted to be a better Christian, that he wanted to prevent drunk driving, that he wanted to talk to the Gutweilers for real.

But he never got closer than that empty chair. He didn't call the Gutweilers in June 1999 after he was sentenced to 90 days in jail, four years' probation and 1,000 hours of community service. On that day, Bill Gutweiler screamed in court that Little's sentence "should at least reflect the misery and loss his conduct has caused us" and not be "a temporary inconvenience to his work schedule." He didn't call the Gutweilers after a Mothers Against Drunk Driving meeting in which he said: "My name is Leonard Little, and I made a mista-" "No," said Michael Boland, president of MADD's St. Louis chapter at the time. "You made a choice, not a mistake. You made a choice that took a person's life."

He didn't call them after the protests outside the Trans World Dome during his first game back, protests Little understood. "What I did was wrong," he told reporters.

And he didn't call as the years passed, when St. Louisans began to see him less as a killer and more as a great defensive end, whose No. 91 jersey hung in stores, whose signature was on a $17.5 million contract, whose name was on a Pro Bowl roster.

Little went to high schools to tell coaster-eyed kids about "the dumbest, stupidest decision" in his life. He accepted the key to the city of Wellston, a St. Louis suburb, for the reading program he founded and helped fund. Next month, he will receive the Ed Block award, given to NFL players by their peers to recognize sportsmanship and courage. And he found a life of his own in the years since he took Susan Gutweiler's.

Today, Little has a 7-year-old daughter whose paintings are tacked to his living room walls. He doesn't celebrate his birthday and doubts he ever will. He welcomes you to hold Susan Gutweiler's death against him because, he says, "I'll never let it go. If you are a person responsible for someone not being on this earth, it's going to be with you a very long time."

As he sits in his living room, talking about lives lost, it starts again: the choppy breathing, the eyes watering, the pauses. He reiterates that he realizes what he did and that he's paid his debt: "There's nothing you can do to bring back a loved one." That's what Dr. John said when Little called, wondering if his actions in October 1998 had caused Jermaine's death.

"No," Dr. John said. "They're separate."

Little would like to believe so, but when he thinks about Jermaine, he thinks about the Gutweilers. He wishes he'd reached out to them in 1998. Dr. John wishes the same. But Little says he didn't know what to say, or if it would help them. So he stayed silent, and more than seven years have passed. If the Gutweilers sat before him today, he's still unsure of what he'd say. He might talk about how "I was young and stupid and I'm very, very sorry." But he wonders. "What would the girl who's accused of shooting and killing my brother say to me?" he says. "I don't know. I mean, I really don't care, because I already forgave her. As hard as it was for me not to talk to my brother again, not to see him again, I still had to forgive her. If I didn't, how can I say I believe in God?"

NOW HE knows how it feels. That's what Bill Gutweiler says he thought when he read that Little's brother was murdered. He sits in a St. Louis restaurant, where he orders a salmon salad and the waiter says, "Oh, the usual." Gutweiler is 60, with frail, bony shoulders and glasses that magnify his brown eyes. He holds a framed picture of a tanned, pretty woman smiling beneath a swarm of spiraling brown hair as she holds her toddler son. He wants you to know Leonard Little wasn't the only one whose life changed on that October night.

Gutweiler needed sleep medication too. He saw a shrink too. He wanted to know how God could allow this too. He wondered if he was cursed too. He wanted to lash out too, dreaming of punching, spitting and swinging at Little. Bill had known Sue since she was 13 and he was 18; they eloped three years later. They were married 31 years. Gutweiler stares off into his Oct. 19. He and Sue watched a Seinfeld rerun, he dozed off and she left to pick up Michael at the American Theater. It was an easy drive from their suburban home: Highway 55 into downtown; cross Market and you're there.

The phone rang. It was the police, saying Michael was waiting outside the theater. Was anyone coming to pick him up? Bill leaped out of bed and rushed downtown. He saw the flashing red lights reflecting off the Arch, off the buildings. And then, a Thunderbird. He pulled over and hopped the yellow tape, screaming, "That's my wife's car!" Susan had already been taken to the hospital, the sergeant said. Bill was back in his car, turning the wrong way down one-way streets, heading to St. Louis University Hospital Michael! He'd forgotten to pick him up.

The next day at noon, when a group of doctors appeared, no one needed to tell Bill his wife was gone. When a car killed his 7-year-old daughter, Jill, in 1980, a group of doctors appeared. He knew.

Picking at his salad, Gutweiler's hands start to shake, but his eyes stay dry. He doesn't cry when he talks about driving from the Adam's Mark valet lot to the spot where Little hit Susan, just to feel what it's like to fly through Market and Memorial at 46 mph, the speed police estimated Little was going. He doesn't cry when he talks about how his freelance photography jobs took him to Rams games, sometimes within feet of Little, and how once home he'd delete every shot containing a blue-and-gold No. 91 jersey. He doesn't cry even when he talks about how he went back on antidepressants in April 2004, after Little was charged with a second DUI. Never mind that on a tape recording of the sobriety tests, Little sounded coherent and clear, or that Little was acquitted by 12 St. Louis-area jurors who knew about Susan. In Gutweiler's mind, Little was guilty. Again.

Little wants forgiveness? Keep praying, crying, donating, whatever. "I don't think I'll ever be quite right," Gutweiler says. "What did I do to be so lucky to have all these people in the first place, and why was I so unlucky as to lose them?"

He looks down. "I think this is because of his brother getting killed. He obviously didn't feel this way all these years. So maybe this is a change of heart. Maybe he really knows what it's like. Maybe him and his brother were really close. I don't know."

Gutweiler drops his fork, and the waiter takes away the salad, half eaten.

HE EMERGES from behind the tree. Alone, he walks down the hill toward the Asheville High sideline. A man in a Cougars jacket stops him and says, "It's great to see you." As the band marches on the field at halftime, the crowd stays put. No one yells for a picture or an autograph. They just stare, a jury of 3,000, which is what tonight's honoree expected. He knows folks here read the headlines, and he thinks they hate him.

He walks to midfield, and a man says into the mike, "Tonight, we welcome back former Asheville great and current St. Louis Ram Leonard Little!" Some mumble. Most clap. The honoree receives a framed red No. 30, a photographer snaps and that's that. The band flares up, the teams sweep onto the field and a small gaggle of people wait. An older woman stares at him as he signs his way down the line. She's not holding a pen or paper, and when he finally reaches her, nothing clicks. She's not from his past, not an old teacher or family friend. Her head tilts. "I've prayed for you," she says.

And Leonard Little's arms open.

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