I Do - PDF Free Download (2024)

I Do $Elizabeth Chandler 2To B. D. We did. 10/10/98 One t"Any messages for me?" I asked as I entered the office for The Pipeline,, our school newspaper. " "None in your box," replied Angela, our managing editor. "We've already given the police all the small, ticking packages and kidnapping threats." I smiled and shrugged. "Another day, another unhappy jock." It wasn't my problem that some of Tilson High's athletes couldn't take criticism. And at that moment I wasn't very popular with the men's lacrosse team--especially their star, Adam Logan, and Adam's many fans. ^"I have trouble imagining Adam Logan wanting to kidnapæ Jane," Kelly remarked. "Kidnappers and their victims have to spend time together." Then she turned and touched me lightly on the arm. Kelly was one of Adam's biggest fans and editor of our People page. She'd also stopped by after dismissal to 2 ˜check her mailbox. She fished out a wad of gossipy notes from her "sources." *"Just teasing, Jane." *"Yeah, yeah," I said. À Tom, our editor in chief, laughed. "Well, I'm sure our budget will cover the ransom," he said. "After a few hours of being grilled by Jane's questions, Adam wouldn't demand much money. He'd probably pay us to take her back." € I grimaced, and he laughed. Tom was a senior, a year older than I--a tall African American guy who both Angela and I'd had terrible crushes on freshman year. Now Angela had something worse than a crush. She was best buddies with him and, being second in command at the paper, the girl he was most likely to lean on, but she also wanted to be the girl he kissed. Tom had more sophisticated tastes, however, and was dating a college girl. That was just as well for me. I needed him as a sounding board and levelheaded editor in chief much more than I needed a romantic interest. €Actually, all of us depended on Tom. Our adviser, a reporter for& The Baltimore Sun, taught journalism the first semester of every school year, then worked as an off-campus adviser second semester--very off campus. Tom stayed in contact with her, but he carried most of the responsibility for our four-page tabloid. It was a lot of work producing a weekly paper, especially for a school with eleven hundred students, but the juniors and seniors who wrote regular columns and did the editing were given independent class time to work and received full course credit. b"Just remember," I said, "if it wasn't for me, we 3 hwouldn't have nearly as many letters to the editor." î"I'm grateful," Tom replied. "Adam's letter ran so long this week, I only had to write one paragraph for an editorial." ¤ "Too bad Logan doesn't spend his time practicing shots in front of a goal instead of on a keyboard," I remarked. "He's got an incredible amount of ability. If he played up to it, I wouldn't get on him." I wheeled my desk chair over to the stack of newspapers that had been released that day. "I guess I should look at what he has to say." z "You mean you haven't read it yet?" Kelly asked, her blue eyes big with surprise. She was always checking the mailbox for letters to the editor to see if people had said anything about her. oe"I didn't want his comments to influence what I wrote this week," I

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explained. Ø"And obviously they didn't," Tom said. "We've got another Jane Hardy analysis, calling it like she sees it." ´ Angela opened a copy of the paper that was sitting on top of her monitor and began reading from my column. '"If you're going to play a run-'em-gun-'em style of game, you had better make sure you've got some bullets--"' "And we don't,"B she and I said at the same time. Page 1 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html " "We really don't," I said, spinning around in my chair, then pushing off from the wall so that I ended up side by side with her. "We're not using our talent. Even our wins have made us look bad. In the first four games this season some of our shots at the goal have been--" 4 ²'"Like Ping-Pong balls lobbed at a goldfish bowl,"' Tom recalled from last week's column. È"And our passing game," I went on, determined to explain why the guys' lacrosse team made me crazy-’'"Is like a game of keep away among our own players,'" Angela remembered. v"So I like to write in images! It's how I reach my reader." OE"Well, you reached the guys' lacrosse team," Angela replied, grinning. d "Instead of writing a letter, I wish they'd prove me wrong with a solid win," I said, then opened my copy of the paper to the op-ed page. "Well, let's see what Logan has to say." Dear Editor, As captain of the varsity lacrosse team, I am writing to protest the poor coverage we have been receiving from your sports editor, Jane Hardy. Each week, instead of writing a clear and unbiased account of our games, she gabs on like a late-night talk-show host. ü"Oh, really," I said. "'Like an obnoxious comedian, she oversimplifies the games so she can make jokes at the team's expense.' f"Sounds like he got his feelings hurt," I muttered. & '"I don't mind her negative comments about my leadership skills.'" I glanced up from the paper for a moment and said, "Like heck you don't." Then I 5 ªcontinued to read. '"But I resent the constant and unfair criticism of my teammates.' Z"Okay, tell me how it's unfair," I commented. ô"He does," Angela replied, "for the next two and a half columns. To be honest, I had no idea jocks could write that much." t I skimmed the letter. "Well, if he wants to convince me, he's going to have to give specific reasons and support them with stats and examples," I said. "All he does here is turn my own statements back on me, using things I've said to take clever shots at me-- talk about sounding like a late-night talk-show host!" ~ But what really annoyed me were statements like, "Knowing the game of girls' lacrosse doesn't prepare a writer for guys' lacrosse." I read it aloud. "What's he implying by that?" I exclaimed. 2 "'If Hardy is truly interested in producing fair and informative articles rather than showing off as a writer ...' yeah, yeah, yeah." I read on silently. "I think you and Adam need to get together and talk things through," Kelly said. 6I glanced up at her. "Why?" file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

v"To make things friendlier between the team and the paper." h"Why would I want to do that?" I asked. Tom snorted. "Because we're a schoolŽ paper," Kelly replied, her face puckering with earnestness. "We're not realÖ journalists, Jane. We're only supposed to tell everyone about the good things we're doing at Tilson High." ^"That would make us a public-relations office." 6 ¢She shrugged. "All I know is that there are a lot of people who like my columns." H "Like your feature about the nasty cafeteria lady who snarls if she has to give change? The woman you described as 'serious in her work and focused on efficiency'?" b"She's mailing the article to her grandchildren." Page 2 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html z"I bet she is." I shook my head. "I hope they recognize her." ¨ But the fact was, I knew there were students who loved Kelly's articles. To me the writing was dishonest, but this didn't bother some people--especially when she said something nice about them the following week. ÐI glanced at Tom, who was turning a pencil over and over in his hands. "What are you thinking?" I asked. 2"Just thinking," he said. J "If you believe we need to smooth things over, you can have Kelly do a feature on Logan in the People section," I suggested, trying to draw Tom out, hoping he'd say, Heck, no.B But he just nodded thoughtfully. Page 3 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html "Could¸ I do a piece on him, Tom?" Kelly asked. "I think a lot of kids would be really interested." NLike the girls Kelly hangs around with, I thought. 4"He's a terrific player--" Could be,$ I added silently. "--and has a great body and a great smile," she went on. "He's interesting--kind of the silent, mysterious type who studies a lot." 7 ‚"Studying makes someone mysterious?" I asked, and Angela laughed. H I knew that Adam was really smart. We'd had one class together--sophomore English. He wouldn't say a word for a week, then we'd discuss a short story and he'd argue his view against anyone---including the teacher--and be totally persuasive. But that's as much contact as we'd had. Since I'd covered baseball sophomore year and those games often conflicted with lacrosse, I hadn't seen him play regularly until this year. ²"I'll think about it, and we can run it by the rest of the staff next meeting," Tom said. pI stuffed an extra copy of the newspaper in my backpack. f"Heading off for the girls' game?" Angela asked me. "Yup. I told Vinny, Sam, and Ellen that I wanted them on the fields and tennis court as soon as the players are. I can't be lagging behind." ê Sam and Ellen were sophomores and already solid reporters. Vinny, an eager freshman and my trainee, was another story. He helped me cover the girls' lacrosse team, whose games were usually on Monday and Thursday, and the guys, who generally-played Tuesday and Friday. If I could've cloned myself, I would've covered every sport---reporting on sports was what I lived to do. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

I pushed hard against the school door, eager to get out into the sunlight. But the door gave way faster than I expected--someone was pulling it 8 îfrom the other side. I started to pitch headlong, then caught myself just in front of the person coming in. Adam Logan. P He was wearing a tattered practice shirt and was carrying an empty water bottle. He stared down at me with intense green eyes, his grip tightening on the bottle. Maybe he thought I'd look away, but I didn't. Then we silently continued on our separate ways, letting the metal door slam between us. 9 Two r "Daisy jane," my grandfather greeted me when I arrived home from school that day. When I was in first grade, back when I went to a different school in a different neighborhood, I didn't like my name. I thought it was boring. Plain Jane. I'm not bad looking, but I was never a pretty little girl who people noticed, like my cousin, Stacy. I have gray eyes and my mother's straight dark hair, which I wore shoulder length. Anyway, I'd thought the name Daisy was beautiful--it was a flower and sounded kind of like Stacy. So what had begun as an affectionate joke among members of my family had stuck as a pet name. But I would've died if anyone other than my best friend, Marnie, had known about it. Ø"Back from the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat," said Grandpa. "How'd the girls lacrosse team do?" V"We won," I replied, hanging my bike helmet 10 ªon the kitchen doorknob, then dropping my backpack on a chair. "Marnie played great." â"Glad to hear it." He lifted the lid off a pot simmering with fresh vegetable soup. "Did you bring my newspaper?" T"Yup. You get to read about me this week." "Really!" h"Three columns," I told him. "Not exactly fan mail." æHe laughed and removed a loaf of hot bread from the oven. "Good. I'll put it in the scrapbook I'm keeping for you." Page 4 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html $ My mother and I had lived with Grandpa for the last three years in a row house just beyond the Baltimore city line. It's a homey neighborhood, the one in which Mom grew up, with clusters of brick houses, row after row of steep slate roofs, covered porches, and big old trees. During my parents' rocky marriage, I'd spent a lot of time here and at my cousin Stacy's house. Here was where I was happiest. ^ After years of fighting, my father had finally left Mom and me, taking all our money with him. The two of us had struggled on our own for a while, but it was difficult. After all, my mother had dropped out of college when she'd been only halfway finished, giving up her dreams of an education and a career in order to marry my father. So when he left us, she suddenly had to find a way to make a decent enough living to support us. ÀPart of our solution was to move in permanently with Grandpa. Mom worked a secretarial job while 11 taking night courses to finish her college degree. And Grandpa, who'd retired about a year ago, now played "mother" to both her and me. \ Tuesday and Thursday nights were Mom's class nights, and I noticed that the file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

shuttered door was closed between the kitchen and dining room. "Is she studying?" I asked Grandpa. rHe nodded. "Another test from that maniac business prof." ª I quietly opened the door and stuck my head into the dining room. Mom was sitting at the table, bent over a textbook, gripping her highlighter. She glanced up at me, her straight black hair tumbling into her eyes. ,"How's it going, Mom?" `"Hi, Daisy. All right," she replied. "Good day?" x "Yeah. An interesting one," I said, then closed the door again to let her finish up. "Marnie got two goals and two assists," I told Grandpa as I unzipped my pack and pulled out his copy of The Pipeline.\ "I'm trying to convince her to cut her hair and play Tuesdays and Fridays for the guys' team," I added, spreading the paper on the bar built against one wall of our kitchen. b Grandpa peered over my shoulder. "Adam Logan," he read. "Isn't he that midfielder you're always talking about? The one you think is loaded with talent and not playing up to it?" Z I nodded. "There are times when he plays like a middie for Johns Hopkins, but he's inconsistent. The team needs him to get his act together and set them on the right track." 12 ˆ "Well, those boys had a rough time with the head coach last year, the one the school fired," Grandpa recalled. "Sometimes it takes a while to recover from mismanagement and adjust to someone new." j"Coach Gryczgowski needs to light a fire under them." . Grandpa started reading the letter and smiled. "Looks to me like you did it for him." He read on, then laughed out loud. "This Logan fellow can write!" P"You don't have to admire him, Grandpa." |"Sure, I do. He can cradle and shoot, and turn a good phrase." ¤I grimaced just as my mother pulled back the shutter door and entered the kitchen. @"Is something wrong?" she asked. |"Your daughter's stirring up trouble again," Grandpa told her. ¨She glanced at what he was reading. "My daughter? Do you mean Jimmy Olsten, Junior?" ÌMy grandfather's name is James Olstenheimer, but he wrote under Jimmy Olsten for the sports section of& The Baltimore Sun. Z "Don't tell me she's written something that other people don't agree with," Mom added with mock disbelief. "I've never known anyone in our family to do something like that." ˆGrandpa gave me a sly look. "The difference is, I was always right." *"Oh, please!" I said. Page 5 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html ¶My mother smiled and helped herself to the soup. "Before I forget, Daisy--Stacy called. She 13 Zwants to stop by and talk about the wedding." Z "Well, that's a new topic," I replied. Since my cousin's engagement, she'd been talking about her wedding nonstop. The big event was to happen on the first of May, a little more than three weeks away, but I felt as if I'd already attended it numerous times. I'd been trying to seem really interested to make up for the fact that I'd declined her invitation to be a bridesmaid. I knew to be asked was an honor, but I just wasn't the type to hold a bouquet file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

and wobble down a long aisle on silk-toed high heels, smiling at three-hundred and twenty-five guests. Ò"Stacy said there's some kind of problem," my mother added, frowning a little, spooning soup into a bowl. > Stacy's marriage worried Mom. Twenty-one did seem really young to settle down. I saw what had happened to my mother and would never, ever give up what I wanted to do for some guy. And I was determined not to put myself in a situation in which I was dependent on another person. But Stacy had finished college one semester early and could get a teaching job if her husband left her. And unlike my mother, Stacy's biggest dream had always been to get married. A large, pretty house, several kids, and a last name shorter than Olstenheimer-- that was Stacy's greatest fantasy--all of which would be possible with her fiancé, a successful lawyer named Travis Avery Clarke HI. ¸"Stacy said she'll come by as soon as she's finished at the hairdresser," my mother told me. 14 "She's trying another style?" ^"Travis didn't like the last one," Mom replied. B"Or the one before that," I said. "I know." Mom sighed, then glanced at the clock and gulped down the rest of her soup. Grandpa cut a thick slice of bread from the end of the warm loaf and wrapped it in plastic for her. "Got to run," Mom told us, then hurried off to gather her books and purse. æAfter she left for class, I set the kitchen bar for dinner. Grandpa and I had just sat down when the doorbell rang. z"I'll put out a third place," he said as I went to answer it. ÄStacy came in, smelling like an entire salon. "Your hair looks pretty," I told her. "You mean it?" ø"You know I always say what I mean. It looks great, Stacy. But I liked the last style too. Actually, they look a lot alike." ˆ"It's different," she said quickly. "See? This part around the ear." I studied her for a moment. Stacy had gorgeous, heavy red hair that made her fine features seem all the more delicate. Tonight her hair was piled up high with long, loose pieces curling softly around her face. She looked beautiful and old-fashioned--just like she had last week. I knew what Stacy was doing--the same thing I did when an editor asked me to revise something I didn't want to change--fooling with it here and there, but keeping it basically the same. 15 ®"Come on and show Grandpa," I invited. "We're having dinner. He's setting you a place." Z"I can't eat. I've got to fit into my dress." 2"Veggies won't hurt you." ˜She followed me through the dining room and into the kitchen. "Hi, Grandpa." 4"Some hair!" he exclaimed. \"Do you like this style?" she asked hopefully. @"I'd like you bald," he replied. @ She refused the soup he offered her but sat down between us, the three of us in a row, like people at a counter. After thirty seconds of Grandpa and me slurping, Stacy reached for the fresh-baked bread, pulled off a big hunk of Page 6 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html it, and slathered it with butter. I glanced sideways at her. ^"I'm eating just half the meal," she explained. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

I leaned back on my chair, opened the fridge, and stretched to get the jar of raspberry jam. I'd never understand the way Stacy thinks and she'd never understand me, but we knew each other down to the smallest quirk--and she had always been a sucker for raspberries. ’She globbed the jam on her bread and murmured contently, "I needed this." ’"So what's going on?" Grandpa asked. "Linda said there was some problem." • "A problem with a happy ending," she replied, turning to me. "You know, you were so nice about the bridesmaid thing, Daisy. And you were right--nine bridesmaids would probably have been one too many." 16 â Three would have been too many if I'd been the third one, but I didn't say that aloud. "You've got a million friends, Stacy. I'm glad your best girlfriends are going to do it. It's like the final celebration for all your sleep-over parties." N"Do you remember my good friend Karen?" Â"The matron of honor," I replied, scooping up in my spoon a large amount of broth and vegetables. ""She's pregnant." x"Cool," I said, then started to swallow a steaming mouthful. J"Would you take her place?" I choked. ê"Got to watch out for those lima beans," Grandpa said, although he knew the beans weren't responsible for my gagging. ~"Can't you just let out the dress?" I asked when I'd recovered. ¦"Karen's having some difficulties and needs to stay off her feet," Stacy explained. ’"Then why don't you have one of the other bridesmaids do it?" I reasoned. ž "I don't want to show favoritism. I've known Karen longer than the others, so they understood why I chose her. And they'd understand why I'd choose you since I don't have a sister and you're my only cousin." "Oh." l "You're about a size smaller than Karen, so the seamstress will be able to refit the dress," she went on. "Say yes, Daisy! I'd be so glad to have you up there with me on my big day." 17 ""Yes," I croaked. ÐShe gave me a hug. "It'll be terrific fun. The reception. The rehearsal dinner. The party this weekend!" "Party?" j"I hope you don't have any plans for Saturday night." t Grandpa and I glanced at each other. We had tickets to the Orioles game, and Bob Danner, who'd started pitching before I was born, was going for win number three hundred, a major milestone in baseball. There was going to be national TV coverage and all kinds of old sports stars there. Grandpa and I had box seats. * "It's a prewedding party for Mr. Clarke's business associates. The only attendants invited are the maid of honor and the best man," Stacy went on. "But Karen was bringing her husband, so if you want to bring Daniel, I'm sure that would be all right with Travis and his father." J Daniel was a guy I'd met last summer at a camp outside Washington, D.C., where we'd both worked as counselors. The distance between our homes in D.C. and Baltimore was too far for steady dating--and neither of us wanted that anyway--but we kept in touch by E-mail. Actually, I'd usually E-mail himÜ --sometimes he'd respond and sometimes he wouldn't. That was just the kind of guy he was. But since I wasn't interested in anyone at school, I'd file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

asked Daniel to the wedding as well as our school dance, which was the last weekend in April. OE"It's not really a family thing, Grandpa," Stacy added apologetically. Page 7 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html 18 ”"Then do you think I should go?" I asked, trying not to sound too hopeful. X "Definitely. I'm not going to know many of the guests. They're the Clarkes' business associates and friends and, well, the kind of people you see in the society page of the Sun.l I'd feel so much better with you around, Daisy Jane." N What could I say? Since Stacy had started college, we hadn't seen very much of each other, especially in the last year, when Travis had come into her life. But neither of us had siblings or other first cousins, and we'd spent our childhoods together. I was the closest thing she had to a sister. ’"Sure," I told her, "I'll come--without a date." Why torture anyone else?OE Maybe Danner will have a had night and delay his three-hundredth win, I thought. ~ For the rest of the meal Stacy talked happily about the honeymoon plans, down to the smallest detail. By the time we were finished, I could've led tours of the cruise ship they were going on. ÖStacy glanced at her watch. "Oh, no, I was supposed to meet Travis twenty minutes ago to show him my hair." P"Tell him I think it's perfect," I said. ¬ Grandpa rose to walk her to the front door, and I began clearing the dishes. I scraped food from our plates and bowls, hovering longer than necessary over the garbage disposal, watching it grind up pea pods as if each one were a ticket to Saturday's game. I didn't hear my grandfather return and jumped when he spoke from the kitchen doorway. 19 ""Tough decision." ""Yup," I replied. X"One tough girl, our Daisy Jane. Sweet too." R "Don't make me cry," I told him, then laughed a little. "Well, I'd better call Marnie and tell her to cancel her date for Saturday. She's got a hot one with my grandpa." 20 Three Page 8 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html "YES!" P Marnie's house was three blocks from ours, but I knew exactly where she was standing when I called to tell her she could have my ticket. I could hear Bosco barking the way the little dog always did when someone got her excited and she started running circles around the dining-room table. Eight-year-old Teddy, who usually did his homework there, was complaining loudly, "Don't beat on my head, Marn! Don't beat on my head." H "Yes, yes, yes," Marnie's voice sang through the phone. "Oh, wait a minute, maybe I should ask first why you can't go--have you caught some kind of deadly disease?" 4"Yeah. Maid of honorhood." "What?" ¸I lay back on my bed, putting my bare feet up against the wall, and explained the situation. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

21 l "So," Marnie said, "does this mean you'll have to carry Stacy's train and eat at the long table that faces the guests so everyone knows when you're using the wrong fork?" I guess so. d"What are you going to do with Daniel?" she asked. &"What do you mean?" "I'm pretty sure he can't sit at the bride and groom's table," Marnie explained. "And to be honest, I don't think you want him to." Marnie had met Daniel twice, once on a double date we'd arranged here in Baltimore and another time on a museum trip to D.C., with the same result both times. He talked to me, then she talked to me, then he, then she--but they had nothing to say to each other. Daniel wasf kind of offbeat and liked people to think of him that way. I think he said some of his crazier things just to get a reaction, but at least he was interesting. What I liked best about him was that he didn't get hung up on fitting in and doing what everybody else was doing. I guess it was the artist in him. ¶"You think he might not dress right for a wedding?" I asked, sliding my feet down the wall. n"Does he own a tie? Does he own a shirt with a collar?" $ "Probably not," I admitted, rolling off my bed. "Well, I guess you're right. It's better if he doesn't sit at the head table. He can just mingle." ˜Marnie hooted. "Mingle? Daniel? With the friends of Travis Avery Clarke HI?" 22 h"Stop laughing, Marnie. Why are you so hard on him?" Þ"I don't know. He can be intriguing--if you like artist types--but I guess he's not what I'd pick out for you." Ž"Is there someone on that long list of yours you'd recommend?" I asked. † Marnie dated a lot. She was "a big girl" as my mom would say, tall and strong and blond, and had a big laugh to go with her size. "Every guy's pal, no guy's passion"--that's how Marnie described herself, but even if she'd never had a special guy, she'd had an awful lot of dates. And she was never too shy to ask a guy out. •"You should go out with a jock," Marnie said. "I'm a jock. You like me." ´ "Yeah, but you know how to talk about something other than the great play you made in the last game and your history of athletic injuries," I replied. "Every time I've been out with a guy jock, he's bored me to death." ´"Still, some are awfully cute," she persisted. "Like the one who is sending you fan mail." T"Oh, him." I began to pace around my room. Â"Yeah, him. You two should say nicer things about each other since you're alike in so many ways." †"Excuse me?" I dropped down on my desk chair and rocked back on it. @ "Think about it. You're both stubborn, determined types," Marnie pointed out. "And you both love sports. Plus you've got to admit," she added, "Adam can write!" 23 Page 9 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html š "Yeah, well, you can talk about that with Grandpa on Saturday night while you're watching baseball history being made and I'm walking around eating little finger foodies with people from the society page." ºShe laughed, then said good-bye. I stood up, clicked off my phone, and tossed it onto my bed. OE While we were talking, the last bit of daylight had disappeared. I love file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

clear April nights, when it's too dark to see the flowers but you can still smell springtime--its dense, earthy scent and the heady fragrance of blossoms that seems to float above it. I knelt by my window and pushed it all the way up so I could lean out. Ä I had a ton of assignments to finish tonight, as well as an E-mail to send to Daniel. I wanted to warn him about my official role in the wedding as well as remind him about our school's spring dance, which was the week before. Ò But for a few minutes I stayed at the window, listening to the rustle of delicate leaves, feeling the evening air soft on my bare arms. There's a gentleness about April that made me ache. It seemed like I was always on the run, always working and chasing some goal or another, but April had a way of holding me still. And then I'd begin to hurt and yearn for something I couldn't describe, something I hadn't known yet. All I knew was the ache itself and the strange, sweet feeling it was. B"Keep it moving! Keep it moving!" €"Jeez, you brought your man to him! Middies, where you cutting?" 24 2"Hustle, hustle, hustle!" † The coaches from both teams were yelling. We had one minute to go and the game was tied. We were playing first-ranked Oilman and had a chance to better our record to 4--3. This could be a big win. I was flipping pages and writing without glancing down--notes only I could read. I had the father of a player on one side of me and Marnie on the other, both of them hollering their lungs out with the rest of the home-team crowd. Vinny was standing behind me, one bleacher step up, beating on my back. I'd given up telling him that a writer can't get caught up in the emotion of a game; a reporter has to stay cool like a player, aware of every corner of the field, thinking through the game as the players do. ž "Come on, Adam!" Marnie and Vinny shouted together as Logan gave a little shoulder fake, dodged his defensemen, and made a sharp pass to the crease attack. The attackman quick-sticked it but missed the goal. p"Try it again!" Marnie shouted. "You can do it, Tilson!" Our coach, Mr. Gryczgowski, better known as "Grizzly"--though not to his face--was leaping around the sidelines like a bear dancing to hip-hop. Sometimes he got so excited that the guys had to pull him back from the sideline so he wouldn't step into the game. Out of the corner of my eye I saw Grizzly's arms suddenly go up to his head, as if he wanted to smother himself. The home crowd groaned. A 25 ¶penalty was called against us for a stupid mistake: Our player had stepped into the crease. ®"The turnovers are killing us," I said as the other team cleared the ball up the field. €"We can hold 'em," Marnie replied, "then beat them in overtime." ®"Come on, defense. Slide!" I hollered in spite of my resolve to remain cool. "Get him!" \ In five seconds it was over. The Gilman player face-dodged, then bounced the ball in. Oilman's sticks shot up in triumph. The silence in our part of the stands was deafening. : "Okay, Vin," I said dejectedly. "Time to ask questions." He followed me slowly out of the stands. "I wish we didn't have to interview the guys when we lose." ¨ I glanced back at him. Vinny's eyebrows were pulled together in a worried expression. He'd told Tom he wanted to cover sports, but I had the feeling file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

Page 10 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html he'd be more at ease doing cheerful, bland features with Kelly. H The players formed lines and shook the hands of their opponents. Vinny and I stood on the sidelines, him shifting from foot to foot, me trying to make a quick count of turnovers. I caught hold of Roger, the team manager, as he tried to slip by. He kept the stats, so I was always bugging him. ´"Our shooting percentage is high this week, Jane. That would be a good thing to focus on." ¸"Right, I've got that," I said. "What I need is the breakdown of our offensive and defensive 26 turnovers, and while you're at it, the percentage of ground balls we recovered." ôRoger sighed, did some calculating, and gave me the numbers. "Of course, they don't tell the whole story," he reminded me. L"And what would you say is the story?" †"Adam Logan--equal to the best of the best in the league," he said. 0 I nodded. "I'd say that's one of them." I turned to Vinny. "Who do you want to interview, Josh or Adam?" Josh, as goalie, was the leader of the defense. ì"Josh," Vinny said. "I don't think he can put together a sentence, so he probably can't write a letter to the editor." Þ Josh liked to give that impression--he liked people to think he was a no-brain guy, a madman out there ready to eat eighty-mile-per-hour balls. But I knew better. He was as fast mentally as he was physically and always gave me good quotes. . "Okay, go to it," I told Vinny. I had to wait to get to Adam since he was surrounded by team supporters. Lacrosse was a popular sport in Maryland and always drew a big crowd, but I think our team captain had won over even more fans than usual, especially the girls in our school. ªWhile I was waiting, I called out to one of our attackmen. "Hey, Ryan, got a minute?" ."Nope," he called back. „I gazed after him with surprise, then circled around Adam's crowd. j"Hi, Jordy," I said. "I have some questions for you." 27 †"Maybe Adam will answer them," he told me, and headed off. "Pablo?" ""Later," he said. z I was getting the cold shoulder. I tried three more players with the same results. What if I couldn't get anything for the column? I didn't believe in writing articles without the subjects' input. Jimmy Olsten's granddaughter gritted her teeth, more determined than ever, but Daisy Jane was getting her feelings hurt. p I made my way toward Adam. "Hi, I've got some questions," I told him. He didn't say anything--just picked up his stick and helmet, tucked his gloves under his arm, and started walking. \"You wouldn't mind answering them, would you?" € "I'll answer any reasonable questions," he replied as he wove his way through the crowd. People were patting him on the back, saying encouraging things to him. I struggled to keep up with him. Z"Nice shot just before halftime," I told him. TI could see his hand tighten on his stick. P"Hey, Adam, great effort!" a fan called. 2"Adam, you were awesome!" file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

`He nodded at the two girls. "Thanks for coming." À"And it was a good assist after the face-off," I added as we made our way between the bleachers. LHis grip on the stick tightened again. >"Do I make you tense?" I asked. r"When you flatter me before moving in for the kill, yes." 28 l"That wasn't flattery," I replied, "it was the truth." Page 11 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html € He swung around and faced me, his eyes such a brilliant green, they were all I saw. "The truth is that the guy assigned to me overcommitted himself and made it easy." He started walking again. ÞI flipped open my notebook and scribbled down his words. They were honest and modest, but not the entire truth. "Of course," I said, walking fast, paging backward in my book to see what I'd jotted down during the game, "that guy overcommitted because in the previous offensive play, you drove in hard from the right side, setting him up so he had to go after you the next time." NAdam glanced down at me, his eyes wary. "Am I right?" 0"This time," he replied. Æ We crossed a bridge that spanned the stream between the upper athletic fields and lower. Several girls were sitting on the railing, dangling their long, bare legs. I could smell the suntan lotion. "Hey, Adam," they greeted him. 2 "Give me a call tonight," one of them said. I kept quiet till we were well beyond the bridge. Girls with silky-soft voices always made me self-conscious. As we started across the baseball field, Adam turned to me. "How about asking what's really on your mind so I can go take a shower?" F"You trying to get rid of me?" Yes. \I was getting annoyed. I tried for a moment to 29 see him through other people's eyes, through the eyes of the girls on the bridge. His blond hair, still wet with perspiration, curled around the edge of his face and back of his neck. His lashes looked thick and golden against his green eyes. A sheen of sweat highlighted his high cheekbones and strong jawline. He had everything going for him, looks, brains, athletic talent, and yet-v "Why do I bother you so much?" I asked bluntly. "There are a horde of people in this school who'll tell you what fast moves you have, what a bulletlike shot, sexy body, and great face---" †"What?" he asked, leaning down close as if he'd missed what I said. "You heard me." rHe straightened up. "Is this a question for your column?" Î "It's something I've been trying to figure out. Why do you get hot and bothered by one person's opinion, especially when everyone else treats you like a hero? I mean, you had to be pretty irritated to write three columns about me." Ä"Four--I cut it back," he said, quickening his pace. "The answer is, I don't know. Next question." ¨"We got half the face-offs today, which is better than previous weeks. Any comment?" D"No, but I'm sure you've got one." file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

Okay, I thought,¦ if he doesn't want to talk about the positive stuff, I'll give him something else.´ "We recovered less than forty percent of the ground balls. What do you think about that?" 30 p"Same thing you do, probably," he said. "Next question." ô "There were eight turnovers in the first half, when you were playing a 2-1-1-2 offense, and five in the second half, when, for the most part, you played the standard 2-1-3. In the second half you got off twice as many shots. Want to talk about that?" Š"I'd have to say we played better in the second half. Next question?" I bit my tongue. Keep cool, I told myself, keep cool ˜"Next question," he prompted. "You've got between here and the school door." $"Give me a break!" ~"Funny, that's something I've wanted from you for a long time." " "Listen, Logan," I replied. "You get out your highlighter and go through my Page 12 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html columns and you'll see I've said plenty of good stuff about you and your teammates. But I'm not a cheerleader. I'm a writer, and my job is to give people who are reading the paper a clear picture." "Of things as you( see them," he said. f"Some of you guys have awfully tender little egos." f "At least I don't have your big one," he answered. "I don't assume that I see things the only way they can be seen. I don't write like I know all about a sport I can't even play." 0We glared at each other. D"Any further questions?" he asked. >"Why waste my time?" I replied. v"At least we agree on something," he said, then walked off. 31 Four Ø"Want to talk about it?" Grandpa asked me Saturday afternoon as we did garden work in our backyard. "Maybe." ¼ It was unusually warm for April, with the temperatures rising into the eighties. We both wore shorts, and I'd put on a tank top with a deep-scooped neck, hoping to start a tan. Grandpa planted poppies along the fence that bordered the back alley, his big hands working slowly, patiently with the delicate seeds, while I viciously attacked some weeds. H It had taken me a while to sort out yesterday's postgame scene, and I'd always preferred to keep things to myself until I'd thought them through. But the more I thought, the more I got stuck on the very same question I'd asked Adam: Why did one person's opinion of me get me hot and bothered? \Other people had said I was doing a great job. 32 † Tom thought so. Some of the teachers I really respected had said positive things about my writing. Last year I'd won a citywide award for a series on soccer. How many pats on the back did I need? R After Vinny had interviewed Josh yesterday, Josh caught up with me outside the locker room. He said Vinny hadn't hit him with the kind of questions I usually asked, and then, without any prompting, he gave me some great quotes. Coach came by and added several helpful insights. As for the guys who had given me the cold shoulder, they were probably just following Adam's lead. So why couldn't I just write off Adam as a jerk? l"Grandpa, did you ever question yourself as a writer?" file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

hHe held a palmful of seeds and gazed at me intently. „"I mean, did you ever wonder if you were seeing things correctly?" ®"In the beginning, all the time," he said. "When I was an old pro, every three months." ˆI groaned. "I was hoping this was just a phase I was going through." ÒI recounted Friday's events, and Grandpa listened as he worked. "So, what do you think?" I asked at last. "I think you still haven't trained Vinny, but you've done a fine job with Josh." ŠI laughed. "Josh is okay--and Adam's best friend, believe it or not." ì"His best friend, and yet he's not taking things personally," Grandpa pointed out. "That's something to keep in mind." 33 I nodded. Page 13 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html "Looking back," Grandpa continued, "sometimes I was right and sometimes I was wrong. I wrote as I saw and tried my hardest to see different sides. The only thing I know for sure, Jane, is that it's the reporters who never question themselves that I worry about." Ð I crawled over to the next set of weeds and started pulling again, feeling a little better. The sun was growing hot and felt good on my back and arms. Grandpa had brought out the radio and turned on the Orioles game. Other people were working in their yards, and another radio echoed the game several gardens down. Saturday-afternoon opera floated down from a higher window across the alley, probably Mrs. Bean's. I glanced up to see our neighbor observing us from her second-floor perch. ^"Your secret admirer is watching you, Grandpa." j"And who would that be?" he asked without looking up. d A widow in her late fifties, Mrs. Bean had always had an eye for Grandpa. She lived in one of the two big end houses that bookended a cluster of five smaller houses directly across the alley from us. She had a good-size third floor, a side yard, and a garage facing the alley, whose gable was an ideal place to mount a basketball hoop. I sometimes thought she'd left up her rim as a lure to Grandpa, who'd still shoot baskets with me. ÄI waved up at her, then turned toward the alley to see whose truck was rumbling over the potholes. 34 ¶A U-Haul parked in front of Mrs. Bean's, and another car pulled up behind the rental truck. "Never mind, it's not you she's waiting for after all," I said, noticing that our neighbor had disappeared from the upstairs window. $ Grandpa raised his head just enough to see the truck. "Guess she's renting out again," he grunted. "Found herself another fellow to do yard work." 8"Looks like it. Oh my gosh!" @Grandpa straightened up. "What?" ´I nodded toward the tall man who'd just gotten out of the truck. "It's Coach Gryczgowski." ^ Four guys from the lacrosse team got out of the car and gathered around him, all of them watching Mrs. Bean coming down the back walk in her black leggings and big flower top. ‚Grandpa stood up. "Is your number-one fan among the moving crew?" I nodded and pointed out Adam, then Josh, who was standing next to him. Pablo, another midfielder, and Billy, a defenseman, had also come. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

Page 14 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html It didn't take long for Mrs. Bean to notice Grandpa watching. "Hel-loo, neighbors!" she called. "Come on over and meet my new tenant." The guys turned around to see who she was waving at. Adam's friendly expression froze. Pablo and Billy glanced sideways at him. Josh grinned. Ô"Everyone, this is Jimmy Olsten and his granddaughter, Jane," Mrs. Bean announced as we entered the alley. "TheL Jimmy Olsten?" Grizzly's clean-shaven 35 \face grew bright, then broke into a huge grin. º"Actually, my last name is Olstenheimer," Grandpa told him, "but that was long for a byline." Î "I can't believe it!" Grizzly exclaimed, his brown eyes opening wide. "I can't believe I'm finally meeting you." He shook Grandpa's hand enthusiastically, then glanced at me. "You never mentioned Jimmy Olsten was your grandfather." ("I earn my own way." ®"Guys," he said to his team, "I used to read this man's sports columns every day in the Sun.n Heck, I still have some of them--I have one with a paragraph you wrote about me," he added, sounding suddenly shy. "He wrote great stuff," Coach went on to his team, "exciting stuff, and started a few arguments along the way." Then Grizzly looked at me and grinned again, as if he suddenly saw the resemblance. |Grizzly turned back to Grandpa. "I read you before you went to& Sports Illustrated\ and was really glad when you came back to the Page 15 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html Sun,"† he added. "But I've always wondered why you gave up the big time." †Grandpa shrugged. "I liked the local scene. I missed my old teams." N "That's how it is in Baltimore," Grizzly agreed. "I still miss the Colts. Do you remember the week before the Colts left town, back in 1984, when you found out that--" Ž They were heading down memory lane--those conversations could go on indefinitely between sports fans. As soon as Grandpa and Coach paused for breath, Adam interjected, "We'll start to unload, Coach." 36 ’"Need some help?" I offered, following the guys to the back of the truck. *"Nope," Adam replied. X"Sure," Josh said. "We can always use help." z"I don't think so," Adam told his friend. "It's heavy stuff." è"Don't worry. I'll find something my dainty little arms can manage," I said to Adam. The other three guys snickered. š Coach had cartons of books and a jumble of furniture that must've been Salvation Army specials. While Grizzly chatted with Grandpa, Mrs. Bean directed us, though she had no more idea than we did where her new tenant wanted things. There were just two rooms to choose between on the third floor, the one to the left of the steps and the one to the right. The bathroom was at the top of the stairway. A microwave and small fridge were all Coach had for a kitchen. \ After ten minutes of lugging stuff up the front steps, then struggling with it for two more flights after that and ending up on the stuffy third floor, all of us were sweating. The guys took off their T-shirts, much to the delight file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

of Mrs. Bean. I could've made fun of her, but I found myself appreciating Adam from behind, studying the width of his shoulders and the hard muscles that rippled in his back when he lifted a bookcase and carried it up the steps ahead of me. For one moment I wondered what it would be like to put my arms around a back like his. ZOf course, after he put down the bookcase and 37 Ü turned around, there was that same old stony face. It was pointless to try to make conversation, so I headed downstairs, flattening myself against the wall when Pablo and Billy carried a mattress by me, Coach following with the bed frame. € When I got to the alley, Grandpa had gone back to gardening. Josh was sitting on a banged-up bureau. "Will you give me a hand with this?" he asked, hopping off. "It's not heavy, just awkward." þ"No problem," I said. That was before I tried to lift it. For me it was very heavy, but there was no way I'd admit that to him. 2 We tried various grips until we got ourselves comfortable, me on the front end, walking forward, my hands grasping the bureau behind me, and Josh bringing up the rear, making sure the bureau stayed upright. We were at the main entrance on the side of the house when Adam passed by. l"Adam, great timing!" Josh said. "Take the end, okay?" . I was sure that he meant for him to take my place, but instead Josh handed Adam his own end. Now I'd have to die before admitting the task was too much for me. Adam and I watched Josh walk away, as if neither of us could believe we were stuck with each other carrying this thing. z"Are you leading or am I supposed to be pushing?" Adam asked. 0"I'm leading. Let's go." ¼We struggled to get it up the front steps and through the hall without taking Mrs. Bean's door 38 F hinges and wallpaper with us. After pausing for a moment to catch our breath, we started up the first big flight of steps. We were halfway up when the weight behind me suddenly shifted. We careened sideways, crashing against the wall. I heard Adam spit out a word, then try to disguise it as shoot. v"What are you doing?" I asked, my voice hoarse from strain. Page 16 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html „"What am I doing?" he replied incredulously. "You just tipped it." "I did not." "You did so." d"What's Coach got inside this old thing?" I asked. –"Clothes," he said. "Keep going. I'm bearing the weight of this, remember?" ºWe worked to get ourselves upright, took two steps more, then careened toward the other side. `"I didn't do it!" we both said at the same time. r"I think he's got a bowling ball rolling around in here." r"Coach doesn't bowl," Adam replied, then we struggled on. ’By the time we got to the second floor, we were both drenched with sweat. À"I'm going to have to walk backward," I said. "The next set is steeper, and I'm losing my grip." ªWe stopped and I turned around slowly till we were facing each other over the bureau. `"You okay?" he asked, his voice a little gender. ¾"Yes." My legs were wobbly and my arms felt four inches longer than their file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

natural size, but I'd 39 •have to be lying crushed under the bureau before I asked for assistance. h"Take it easy. Take it one step at a time," he said. x The edge of his hair was curling up with sweat as it did during a game. I could feel strands of mine pasted against my face. We made our way slowly up the second and narrower set of steps. T "I can't see where I'm going," I said as I climbed the steps backward, the bureau up against my ribs, me leaning over the top of it. "You've got to do the steering, okay? l "Okay?" I repeated a moment later, when my elbow bumped the wall. "Are you watching where we're going?" I glanced across the bureau at him, meeting his eyes as they darted up to mine. He'd been watching my chest! When I looked down at myself and saw the view Adam had been getting, I nearly dropped the bureau. ú"Hold on!" he shouted at me. For a moment it wasn't clear which of us had a grip. "Jane! Hold on! Are you trying to kill me?" êI would've shouted back, but I was too exhausted. Besides, Adam was blushing, something I'd never seen him do before. V"Okay," I said, "let's get this over with." j We grunted, lifted, and heaved until the bureau was finally sitting level on the third floor. Together we shoved it against one of the sloping walls. I collapsed next to it, leaning back against the wall the way I did in my own room. Adam bent over the bureau, perhaps so he didn't have to look me in the eye, 40 Òand started pulling off the tape that secured the drawers. He opened one and peeked in it, then the next. L"Looking for a bowling ball?" I asked. ´"I don't get it," he muttered, then opened a third. "I don't understand why this was so--" Not that it matters how I look, I told myself. I watched Kelly approach Adam, her notebook open and her pen poised to write, as if she were covering a real story. äI got a lot of pats on my back and thumps on my helmet, and surprisingly, many of them were from guys on the team. š Meanwhile Kelly was gazing up at Adam with large blue eyes, as if every word he uttered was fascinating. She kept tossing her head and laughing at what he said. Both of them were enjoying the conversation. ¬"Jane," Pablo said, "how come you never interview us the way she's interviewing Adam?" €"Yeah," said Billy. "I could get into that kind of questioning." À"I could get into that kind of answering," I countered, "instead of grouchy, three-word grunts." Billy shook his head and laughed. "He's not answering--he's flirting. I've seen that look a million times before. It's how Adam handles girls." 4So what does that make me?à I wondered, and began to remove my equipment. "I'll clean this stuff up for you, Josh, and return it tomorrow." º"Nah, I'll take care of it," he said, taking the pads from me. "You go jump in a hot shower." 62 ØI glanced down at my throbbing arm, glad I had worn a long-sleeve T-shirt. "I need one. Thanks for reffing." z"You know, Jane," he said, "you make our team captain crazy." x"There's not much I can do about that, is there?" I replied. Adam glanced up then, as if he sensed we were talking about him. There was a look of uncertainty on his face. Josh laughed quietly. 0"What's funny?" I asked. ""He is. You are." p I shrugged and waved at Adam with my left hand. "If you still think we file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

writers have it easy, let me know if you ever want to write a column," I called, then headed for the locker room. ÐI would never say writing was a piece of cake, but it sure left you feeling, Page 26 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html and smelling, a lot better. 63 Seven "We're not going through your playground years again, are we?" Grandpa asked later that afternoon when I hobbled through the door with Marnie. ²"Got any red bandages with stars on them?" I asked, then dropped down on a kitchen stool. . "Good thing the wedding isn't this week," Marnie told Grandpa. "She'd be one colorful maid of honor. We should probably get some ice on her right arm." ¨"Better yet, stuff me in the freezer," I suggested. I was starting to hurt all over. ÈGrandpa got out several plastic bags and filled them with ice. "What was the final score?" he asked. h"Marnie and company won fourteen to ten," I replied. ‚"And Jane made her point, one to eleven," Marnie added, grinning. 64 ¬"We hope I did. Postgame tomorrow, when I start asking the guys questions, we'll see." v But as it turned out, Tuesday's away game wasn't a good test because Tilson won a solid victory. In fact, I'd never seen our offense and defense play so well. Naturally, the guys were happy to talk about the game. The most negative thing I could ask was why they hadn't played like this before. Adam's performance was outstanding. As the guys walked to the team bus, there was some quiet joking that I might have to prep him for the next game. Ä By Tuesday afternoon most of my sore muscles had disappeared, but I wore jeans and a long-sleeve cotton shirt that day and the next. I was mapped with bruises, and my right arm was a thing of wonder, black and blue and violet. Ü"I bet Daniel would find those colors inspiring," Marnie remarked when she took a peek at my arm on Wednesday. N That afternoon I was working late in the newspaper office with Tom and Kelly. At our staff meeting earlier we'd decided that if Kelly did a piece on Adam, she'd have to be fair and do features on the best athletes of every school sport. That was more work than she'd counted on, not to mention the fact that half of the candidates were girls and some of the guys were short and had acne. Kelly decided to withdraw the idea. ÄNow she sat two monitors down from me, struggling with another feature on the school cafeteria. As 65 Ô usual on deadline day, Tom was checking over the work that was already completed and on disk. That evening we'd send it over the Internet to a small commercial press. Our two thousand copies would be dropped off by lunch the next day. ê My column was done, but I was struggling with Vinny's, trying to edit it so that it was still his work but actually said something interesting. I had my feet propped next to my computer, a pile of printouts on my lap, and was leaning back in my favorite chair, staring into space--a position that signaled to everyone who knew me that I was deep into my work and shouldn't be disturbed. I didn't hear Adam come in. When he tapped me on the shoulder, I jumped, sending a cascade of papers to the floor. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

€"Oh, sorry," he said, crouching down next to me to pick them up. Ì I never let guys pick up things I'm capable of retrieving myself, but this time I didn't move. Adam's sudden appearance made me feel strange--sort of disoriented. Usually I occupied his territory, but now he stood in the middle of mine, and everything in the office seemed to rearrange itself around him. Maybe I'd been plugged into my computer for too long. "Do these papers go in some kind of order?" Adam asked, still in a crouch, his face a little lower than mine and looking up at me. oe"No. Yes. I don't know. They're old drafts," I said, taking the pile from him. Page 27 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html ~"She gets like this when we're under deadline," Kelly told him. 66 îHe nodded at Kelly, then stood up and opened his gym bag, pulling a folder out of it. "I'll just leave this somewhere." "Another letter to the editor?" Kelly asked, smiling at him with big, velvet eyes that made me think of pansies. I guess guys like that. ä"Actually, it's an article." He turned back to me. "You said, whenever I wanted to write ... I took you up on it." ^"What's it on?" Tom asked from across the room. Ø "Basic lacrosse strategy," Adam said. "It's a guide for people who don't know the sport. I thought it might make it more interesting for the kids who aren't real fans but like to come to our games anyway. Is it something you could use?" H"Ask my sports editor," Tom replied. F"Sure," I said. "It's a good idea." Ô"I can edit it," Kelly offered, standing up and reaching for the folder he held. "Jane's a little behind." ¾"Kelly, it's too late for this week's edition," Tom pointed out. "Jane will edit it next week." ."Edit it?" Adam echoed. àI nodded. "I don't do much to articles by guest writers--check the grammar and accuracy of content, that's all." 6"I know my stuff," he said. l"I just make sure you're saying what you mean to say." Ä"I'll scan it for you, Jane," Kelly said, "and put it into PageMaker. Adam can see how it looks in 67 ¸newspaper columns. Maybe he can suggest some photos from our files that would work with it." L"Is your feature done?" Tom asked her. T"I was just about to print out," she said. TTom glanced at me. "It's up to you, Jane." â "Fine. Great," I said, and went back to work. Kelly was annoying me more than usual. And it bothered me that Adam's presence could break my concentration as easily as it had. We had visitors all the time; I'd never had trouble ignoring them. È I focused on the screen in front of me, reading Vinny's article for the millionth time. I twisted a piece of my hair till my finger was trapped. I untwisted it, then yanked on it. "Spit it out, Vinny," I muttered. "Spit it out!" ÈAdam burst out laughing, and I jumped again. He'd been standing behind me, reading over my shoulder. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

x"Sorry," he said, still grinning. "You sure do get intense." Î"That's great coming from a guy who gets green fire in his eyes whenever he picks up a lacrosse stick." •Adam gazed down at me. There was a soft green light shining in them now. ŠI quickly turned back to my screen. "I think Kelly is ready for you." ˜ "I am." She had pulled a chair close to hers. Adam sat down, and she showed him how to scan in the text, then convert it to our software. I went back to the impossible article on the girls' lacrosse team. 68 Some people on the newspaper say I'm overly conscientious and spend too much time on my work, but Grandpa had always said that the editor's job is not to write over, but to bring out the best in the voice of the writer. And that takes time--with Vinny, a lot of time. I suddenly saw what I needed to do: By simply changing the order of three paragraphs, I could keep the paragraphs intact but show an interesting contrast. I pushed up my sleeves and went to work. "Yes, yes, yes," I said, watching the piece spring into shape. B"Gripe! Jane!" It was Adam again. Page 28 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html oe "What?" I muttered, admiring the way the article looked on my screen, congratulating myself for being an editorial genius. I felt him standing next to me. "You're determined to disrupt my work, aren't you?" æWhen he didn't reply, I looked up at him. He was staring at my arm. The bruise. I quickly pulled down both sleeves. øBut he took my right arm in his hands and pushed up the sleeve slowly, carefully. There was a look of disbelief on his face. 6"It's no big deal," I said. NHe looked as if someone had just struck him.¶ He cradled my arm with one hand and ran the fingers of his other hand softly over my skin. ú"I remember when this happened. I checked you with a wraparound. Why didn't you say something? Why didn't you stop the game?" HI shrugged. "I finish what I start." 69 üStill holding the badly bruised arm in one hand, he pushed up the sleeve on my other arm. I could hear him draw in his breath. Page 29 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html "It doesn't hurt," I said. Which was true--the last bit of pain had miraculously left, the way it did when I was five and Grandpa kissed my skinned knees. But unlike then, I felt a new and deeper ache, a hurting that went to the very center of me. I was aware of each place that Adam's fingers touched my arms. Could the gentleness with which another person held you actually make you ache? † "I bruise easily. Tell him, Tom," I said, wanting Adam to look somewhere other than at me. "Tell him," I repeated when Tom sat back in his chair with that thoughtful but inscrutable look he gets. f"All girls bruise easily," Tom said, winking at me. b I pulled my arms away from Adam and folded down my sleeves. "But Jane bruises more easily than you'd expect," Tom continued to Adam, his voice growing serious, "inside and out." øI reached for my mouse and clicked on print, glad for an excuse to walk to the other end of the room, where the printer was. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

Adam sat down next to Kelly again. She read parts of his article aloud from the screen, praising it, and in fact, what I heard was very good. æ I checked over my hard copy, then saved the file, but my mind was elsewhere. My verbal one-on-ones with Adam were safe when I was sure he was an egotistical jock who had trouble taking criticism. But now knowing how vulnerable he could be, how 70 ¤emotional he got about people he felt responsible for--his teammates and even me-- I< suddenly felt vulnerable too. ¤As soon as I handed my disk to Tom, I said good-bye to the three of them and fled. f "Stacy!" I exclaimed, surprised to see her as I walked my bike through the back-alley gate. She sat on our swing, a bench that hung from an A-frame. "What's up? Where's everyone?" ¸"Your mom's studying. Grandpa's starting dinner. They said you get home late on Wednesdays." ž I put down my kickstand and pulled off my backpack, carrying it over to the swing. "You've been to the salon again," I observed. "New style." Her hair was pulled back sleekly against her head. "Turn around." ~She did, showing me a tight bun coiled at the nape of her neck. š"Very sophisticated," I said, sitting down next to her. "Has Travis seen it?" 4She nodded. "He loves it." "And you?" "Hate it." |"Then don't wear it. If Travis likes a bun, let him wear one." * She laughed. "You always make things seem so easy, Daisy. But they're not." She fingered a magazine that had a picture of a bride on the front of it. d"You must have a library of those by now," I said. ^"The salon let me have it. They're awfully nice 71 to me." ¼"With the business you've been giving them lately, they can afford to buy you a subscription." Page 30 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html She rocked the swing with one foot. "While I was in my hairdresser's chair, I filled out this survey," she said, opening the magazine. î I leaned against her to see what it was. " 'Axe You Meant for Each Other?'" I read. There was a list of multiple-choice questions that continued onto the next page; some of the answers were circled in red ink, others in blue. "Which color is you?" J"Red," she replied. "Travis is blue." Z"Travis filled this out?" I asked, surprised. ê"No, I did it for him," she said "He's entirely predictable. I had an easier time answering for him than for myself." b"Let's see." I skimmed the questions and answers. `If you unexpectedly inherited $10,000, you would B(a) Invest it in the stock market >(b) Put it in a savings account J(c) Buy your mate an extravagant gift L(d) Throw a party for all your friends "Stacy had circled (a)b in blue--Travis would invest the money--and both (c) and (d)b in red--gifts and parties were her choice. That seemed accurate to me. I found myself wondering for a moment what Adam would have file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

circled, then quickly put that out of my mind. 72 Â While I was reading through the questions, Grandpa joined us. Stacy explained the survey to him, then pointed to a grid. "Here's how you figure out the score. The highest you can get is fifty, meaning a match made in heaven." >"What was your score?" I asked. Page 31 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html "Six." "Oh."4 Where was her match made? I wondered. T "You know, Stacy, I've never put much stock in this kind of thing," Grandpa told her. "I don't mean you shouldn't be asking yourself questions. You need to pay attention to even the little conflicts and doubts you might have and decide if they mean something more. But I wouldn't worry about this." B "Maybe you should get Grandpa to fill out the survey," I suggested to Stacy. "Have him circle answers for him and Grandma, and see how they match up." I turned to him. "Mom said you guys were really different, that Grandma didn't like sports very much and you weren't big on the symphony." oe "True enough," he replied, "but we enjoyed each other's differences." He stooped to pull a weed. "Besides, we had one sure sign we were meant for each other. At least, that's what your grandmother claimed." d"What was it?" Stacy and I asked at the same time. J"When I kissed her, her toes curled." My cousin and I instinctively pulled our feet up on the swing and held our toes. ŽGrandpa laughed, threw the weed aside, then headed back to the kitchen. `"Okay, Daisy," Stacy said, giggling, "close your 73 Reyes and imagine you're kissing someone." DThat's dumb," I said. "You do it." F"No, both of us," she urged. "Why?" 0"Come on, Dais. Please?" º I closed my eyes and imagined myself kissing Daniel. Then I grabbed my toes, making sure they were straight. But in the meantime the hands that so gently cupped my face and held it close had morphed into Adam's. With a start my eyelids flew open and I shook the image from my mind. I wasn't quite ready to know what my toes thought of Adam just yet. 74 Eight X At lunchtime on Thursday, I was working through a pile of articles I was supposed to have read by my next class. "I should never have signed up for honors history," I said. N Marnie snuck a bite of her sandwich, keeping an eye out for Ms. Wong, our extrasensory librarian who could be back in the magazine stacks and still smell ham on rye. "That's what you get," Marnie replied, "for trying to schedule yourself out of Issues of Health & Conscience with Nurse Hatchet." Ö "Well, it worked, didn't it?" I grinned up at her. "Finally! Here comes Angela," I said, catching sight of our friend as she entered the library. "The paper should've been here an hour ago." Angela wove her way among the wooden tables. "Hot off the press," she announced, dropping two copies of the paper between Marnie and me. I reached for one. "Thanks, Ang--" I broke off, 75 file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

pstartled by what I saw on the front page. "What's this?" 4Marnie burst out laughing. R "Hardy and Logan Face-off," the headline said. The big, page-one photo showed Adam and me in a classic lacrosse shot, both of us wearing fierce expressions on our faces. ²I stared at it. A funny picture of me covered with mud and looking crazed, hanging in the Pipelineˆ office, was one thing; this was another. Marnie burst out laughing. V"More photos inside," the caption promised. ¤I quickly turned the page. An article recapping the match led off the sports page: V Sticks cracked and mud flew as season-long rivals Hardy and Logan took the field Monday afternoon, each determined to annihilate the other--or at least Page 32 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html shut each other up. n"Vinny didn't write this," I said. "Neither did Kelly." 0"Ellen," Angela told me. dThe sophomore who covered tennis for me-- traitor! "And Sam." ’"Sam!" I exclaimed. He was the baseball reporter I had trained last year. But I had to treat it like a joke. That's all it was, the staff having some fun. Marnie couldn't stop laughing, and I knew everybody in the 76 Tschool who followed sports would enjoy it. ÐI had gotten a hoot out of being a target in our April Fools' issue. So why did it feel so personal now? àI turned back to the first page. Did I really get that manic, determined look on my face? Is that what Adam saw? €"These papers were snapped up in the cafeteria," Angela told us. B"That's great." I forced a smile. ( "Well, final delivery," Angela said, and headed over to Ms. Wong. I glanced up at the library clock, then silently rose to return my stack of books. 2 Marnie watched me. She had finally stopped laughing. "Jane?" she said when I returned and picked up my backpack. The bell rang. "I'll walk you to class." ("You don't need to." Fortunately Marnie reads me well and knows when to ignore what I say. I was glad she was with me as we headed down the locker-lined hall. F"Great pics, Jane!" someone called. "Thanks." I didn't answer. I wasn't sure. ¾"Why didn't you let him know that you were as surprised as he was and not very happy about it?" I played with my sleeve, pushing it up and down my bruised arm. He could get a rise out of me so easily. "What difference would it make?" Z "Maybe a lot," Marnie replied. "The coach and vice-principal stuff is just Page 34 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html stuff, just an excuse to vent. I think the problem is that Adam's taken this incident personally." Z"He takes everything personally," I told her. š"Everything related to you," she pointed out, then hurried to her next class. Š Mr. Yelton was his old reliable self. He lectured me for several minutes, then told me to keep up the good work with the paper and sent me on my way with a late note that did not require detention. ¼The rest of the day I got a lot of teasing, and I wondered what Adam was getting on his end. I 80 Žwondered, too, what Mr. Clarke would say if he saw this week's edition. Â Fortunately the girls' lacrosse team played that day, as did the guys' baseball team. There was a tennis match too, so I kept busy after school running from place to place, talking to my reporters and avoiding guys' lacrosse. ¶When I arrived home late that afternoon, Grandpa was cooking and Mom was studying as usual. 4 "Stacy called," Grandpa told me. "Something about getting the maid-of-honor dress fitted tomorrow. You need to call her back. Where's my paper?" he asked. Z"It's coming," I said, unzipping my backpack. t"You've got E-mail, hon," Mom called from the dining room. äI handed Grandpa the paper, then sat down next to Mom to retrieve the mail. I heard Grandpa explode with laughter. T"Can you keep it down in there?" I fussed. "Nice photo, Daisy Jane! I want a print of it autographed by you and Adam. I'll hang it next to my Cal Ripken and Johnny Unitas." ž"Wait till you see the pictures inside," I muttered, then clicked open my mail. d Another burst of laughter drew my mother out of her chair. She stood next to Grandpa and read. She started laughing too. "That's my little girl," she said, "all sugar and spice." °"Yeah, yeah," I replied, clicking the mouse again. Daniel's letter came up on my screen. 81 Dear Jane, < Doing this fast--waiting for plaster to dry. My 3-Ds are awesome these days; wish you could see them. You gave me the dates of the wedding and spring dance too early, so I forgot to write them down. Sorry I can't come. Said yes to other things. I hope this doesn't mess you up too much. Page 35 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html Daniel :"Men are scum," I said aloud. RGrandpa and Mom looked up from the paper. V"Does that include old men?" Grandpa asked. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

Î"Bad news?" my mother said, coming to stand behind me and laying her hand on my shoulder. "May I read?" "Sure." ¸She scanned the note on the screen, then remarked gently, "He didn't give you much warning." Ü "I don't need a date to go to the dance," I told her, "and I don't need an escort for the wedding. I'll go and have a good time anyway. But Daniel's attitude is starting to get to me. He's thoughtless. He's... careless with other people." ò"He's young," Mom replied, touching my cheek lightly. "Though I realize my saying that doesn't make you feel any better." ¤"This is what will make me feel better," I said, and clicked Daniel into oblivion. 82 Nine J I had to cover the guys' lacrosse match on Friday afternoon, so Stacy made the appointment with the seamstress late that day and said she'd pick me up from the game. €"Why don't you come early?" I suggested. "Adam will be playing." Â Stacy had never been big on sports, so I didn't think she'd attend the game. But I hoped she'd mention it to Travis or Adam's mother and somebody from home would find a little time. Why it mattered to me that Adam got family support, especially after the obnoxious things he'd said on the stairway--well, that was something I didn't want to think about. è The next afternoon Stacy surprised me, showing up during halftime. I'd just finished a quick interview with Grizzly and was sitting in the stands directly behind our team bench. Vinny was sitting behind the opponent's bench with instructions to 83 î concentrate on the other team's play. Even if this strategy didn't produce more focused writing, it would at least keep him from thumping on my back. Kelly and Angela sat with me, and it was Kelly who pointed out Stacy walking along the sidelines. 8"Who's that girl?" she said. v"You mean the one who just blew in?" Angela asked, smiling. Ú It was one of those breezy spring days when tree blossoms streamed down like pink and white confetti. The wind made Stacy's red hair wild and her short skirt almost impossible to hold down. She walked along the sidelines, searching for me, unaware of the fact that spectators weren't supposed to be meandering through the players when they were prepping for play. The guys on our team watched her with curious expressions on their faces. I waved to get her attention and get her off the field. J"Hi, Daisy!" she called out brightly. lAdam, who was talking to Coach, turned around quickly. à "Excuse me," she said, stepping up on the bleachers in the small space between Pablo and Josh so she could sit next to me. They looked at each other and grinned. Adam rubbed the back of his neck and turned back to his conference with Coach. 6 I introduced my cousin to Angela and Kelly and, of course, had to explain the Daisy thing. Stacy settled down on the bleacher seat and scanned the players. ˆ"Which one is Adam?" she asked. "They all look alike in their hats." 84 N"Helmets," Kelly corrected her sweetly. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

ü"In the white jersey, number twenty-four," I said, pointing as the guys took the field. "His friend, Josh, is number fifteen." Page 36 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html „Stacy stood up. "Go, Adam!" she hollered. "Show'em how it's done!" nSeveral guys on the bench turned around to look at her. ˆ"Not that I know how it's done," she said, plopping down next to me. B"You'll catch on," Kelly replied. ÀI sure hoped so because as delicate as Stacy looked, she could project her voice like a foghorn. " The guys strode to their starting positions, with Grizzly shouting last-minute instructions and encouragement. The two face-off men bent over their sticks. The ref placed the ball between them and backed off, and the second half began. We lost the face-off but alertly intercepted a pass and brought the ball upfield. Angela filled Stacy in on the basic rules of the game while I scribbled down notes. L "Hey!" Stacy cried out as Adam cradled the ball and a defenseman tried to check him. "That's no fair! He's got a longer pole. Why, he could take that thing crabbing!" ŽI explained to her that the various positions used different equipment. ðShe was quiet for a minute. "That boy's hitting Adam. Foul!" Stacy cried out, jumping to her feet. "Foul, ump! Call it!" ^Grizzly glanced over his shoulder at us. Angela 85 dlooked at me, her dark eyes dancing with laughter. – Although Stacy was protective of Adam on the offense, she eventually became adjusted to the roughness of the game, and as the score seesawed back and forth, she grew bloodthirsty when we were on defense. "Kill 'em!" she shouted at Adam as he checked a guy. "Shove it down his throat!" ºShe kept the game chatter going into the fourth quarter. "Zing it in there! Make him eat it!" Out of the corner of my eye I could see some of the guys on the bench, laughing. â With three minutes to go and a tie game, the rest of the crowd was getting whipped up. Coach, who'd been hollering through all four quarters, went into his final-minutes frenzy, crouching down, leaping up, covering his head, waving his arms. "Would you look at him!" Stacy said, laughing, as if she had been sitting perfectly quiet. "It's like he's playing in the game himself." d"He is," I said. "That's Grizzly, our head coach." B"Grizzly, as in bear?" she asked. X"His last name is Gryczgowski," I explained. N"Jeez, that's worse than Olstenheimer." N"Come on, sharp passes!" Marnie called. @"Why'd he do that?" Stacy asked. @ I thought she meant our crease attackman. "Because he was losing his cool and trying to do it all himself. We need to look for our cutters and be more patient." ˜"No, I mean why did your coach just throw a glass of water in his own face?" 86 4"Same reason," I told her. Thataway,º I silently cheered on Adam as he cut through the middle and quick-sticked the incoming pass. F "Goal!" shouted Angela and Kelly. The guys on the sideline jumped up and file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

down. Those on the field punched the air with their fists. Pablo thumped Adam on the back. v"Adam just scored a goal," I said to Stacy. "We're one up." 8"Bear is hugging everybody." >"You mean Grizzly," I told her. ºThe players set up for a face-off. "Come on, hold them now!" Angela was yelling. "Hold them." $ "Thirty seconds!" Coach hollered at the guys, running a hand through his thick, curly brown hair. "Thirty seconds! ... Twenty-five ... twenty ..." BStacy was counting down with him. Page 37 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html ‚The other team passed the ball quickly. Their middy set a screen. ."Josh!" hollered Coach. ª Josh blocked the shot with his foot, but another player scooped it up and passed it out to a cutter, who fired a second bullet. Josh dove, skidding on his stomach, and stopped the ball. The whistle blew. We'd won! ¾"Catch up with you in a bit, Stacy," I said, then jumped down to the field to begin interviews. ˆ They went well. Our performance hadn't been sterling through all four quarters, and the guys were honest about it. Josh, as always, gave me the most useful quotes. He leaned on me comfortably, his 87 ¤ forearm on my shoulder as if I were a shelf while we talked and I jotted notes. When I looked up, I saw Adam about fifteen feet down the sideline, staring at us. Josh saw him too, and I heard him laugh quietly. €"What's funny?" I asked Josh. "And don't say, 'He is, you are.'" nJosh grinned down at me without answering and moved on. R I headed toward Adam, but Kelly got to him just before I did. There was no point in trying to have a conversation as long as she was there to give a positive spin to each of our statements, making sure Adam knew how much she admired him. I continued on toward Coach, but Adam caught me by the arm. ÈHe quickly let go of it--maybe he remembered it was the bruised one--and pulled me back by my shirt. Marnie came over on Saturday morning just to hang out. We shot baskets in the back alley and talked about next week's dance, to which neither of us had a date. Ð"What exactly happened with Daniel?" she asked. "I already told you. I sent him to electronic oblivion." R "You didn't tell me why." I took my favorite shot from the alley speed bump. "It seems he forgot to write the dance and wedding on his calendar. Now he has other plans." –"He sure has a way of forgetting whatever someone's counting on him to do." î "I know," I said, passing the rebound to her. "The thing is, I saw how he was with the little kids at camp. Half the time he was so caught up in his own stuff, he didn't pay attention to them. I don't know why I thought he'd be different with me." 95 rMarnie took a jump shot from the edge of a large pothole. Swish, bang --through the basket and off the trash can. "Love is blind," Marnie said, opening the gate to Mrs. Bean's yard to retrieve the ball. L"It wasn't love. It was--" I shrugged. :"Convenience?" she suggested. f"Living in two different cities is not convenient." "Unless you like distance," Marnie observed, and tossed the ball out to me. "Unless you feel a little safer with distance between you." &"What do you mean?" d"With forty-something miles between the two of you and® with Daniel's way of file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

doing things, there's no chance of you relying on him, is there?" °I didn't answer, just bounced the ball steady and low to the ground, scattering pebbles. • "Jane," she said, "you know how you dislike it when someone helps you. You know how being dependent on another person scares you. Well, there's no chance of that with Daniel. He's totally unreliable." I nodded and continued to dribble the ball, as if I were trying to bore a hole in the concrete. "Sometimes I wish you didn't know me so well." À"But I do, and I'm your best friend anyway," she said, then laughed and swiped the ball from me. Ä We played a sloppy one-on-one, and once again the ball landed in Mrs. Bean's yard. We raced each other through the gate, pushing and shoving and laughing. I got to the ball first, and Marnie tried to wrench it out of my hands. 96 æ"Jump ball," called a deep voice. We looked up. Coach was standing on the back porch. At least, a version of Coach. D He hadn't shaved yet, and the dark curls on one side of his head--probably the side he'd slept on-- were flattened and pushed in funny directions. His jeans, which were far tighter than anything he wore to PE class, had holes in them, and his sweatshirt was frayed around the neck and sleeves. He came down the steps, holding on to his coffee mug like it was a life-support system, being trailed by his overweight cat. F"Hey, Big Mama," I greeted the cat. ¾"Is this the kitty you trapped in the bureau drawer?" Marnie asked as we knelt down to pet her. ¬ Coach nodded, then crouched down next to us. "Here's where she likes to be scratched," he said, running his fingers very gently around the back of the Page 41 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html cat's ears. "And under the chin--don't you, baby," he murmured. DBig Mama flopped over on her side. À"Oh, yeah, you like that," Coach said, his voice tender. "You like that sweet ol' belly rubbed." T Marnie glanced sideways at me, sucking in her lips, trying not to laugh. I wondered if Coach had selected the heart-shaped ID tag that dangled from the cat's pink collar. | We let Big Mama smell us, then petted her tummy and chin as she stretched back luxuriously on the warm concrete. Coach stood up. "You have new buddies," he said to his cat, sounding pleased, 97 æthen headed toward Mrs. Bean's garage, emerging from there a few minutes later with a rake and a bag of grass seed. 4"Need some help?" I asked. ö"Thanks, but no thanks," he said. "This is part of the apartment deal--I pay almost nothing for rent. Besides, I enjoy it." x As he started to rake, the cat leaped to its feet and hopped up on the picket fence to watch. "My supervisor," he told us with a smile, then went back to work, whistling softly to himself. è Marnie and I returned to the alley and played a round of horse. We had just started a second game when a car turned down the alley. The driver was swerving left and right, desperately trying to avoid the potholes. I didn't know who it was--no one on our alley owned a Mercedes, and the reflection of trees and sky on the tinted glass kept us from seeing who was inside. Marnie and I quickly moved over to the fence, but the driver stopped and parked the file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

car in the center of the alley. A door opened. ,"Travis!" I exclaimed. Ø"Watch the doors. Don't bang them against the fence," he said as Stacy and Adam got out from the other side. ä"Hey, Daisy," Stacy called cheerfully. "We just picked up your shoes for the wedding and decided to drop them by." "Not one of our better ideas," Travis remarked. "There are no parking spaces on your street. There are none in this neighborhood." 98 ¬"It's Saturday, and everyone's home," I explained. "Travis, this is my friend Marnie." b"Nice to meet you," Marnie told him. "Hey, Adam." "Hi, Marnie. Jane," Adam said, coming toward us. He handed me a box of shoes. "I'm glad I'm not the one who's got to hobble around on these." ¬"Daisy, I found the most fantastic purse for you," Stacy said. "Wait till you see it!" Z"Watch the doors," Travis reminded her again. žShe pulled several shopping bags out of the car and began sorting through them. 4"Hey, Coach," Adam called. DCoach waved but kept his distance. îStacy's head suddenly popped up. "Hi, Grizzly," she said, looking surprised to see him. "I didn't know you lived here." "Just moved in." X Adam introduced his stepbrother to Coach, who came over to the fence, still holding on to his rake, and shook Travis's hand. "Congratulations. Best wishes for the big day." ÀTravis nodded and glanced up at Mrs. Bean's place. "Nice house," he said. "Not much to keep up." r"Actually, I just rent the third floor," Coach explained. "Oh." "Which really Page 42 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html isn'tN much to keep up," Coach said, smiling. Ü"Here it is, Daisy," Stacy said, removing the lid from a store box. "The purse to die for. What do you think?" 99 ò "Uh, well ..." I thought it looked just like Stacy. It was violet satin, the same shade as my dress, about six inches wide and shaped like a heart. A huge, violet satin rose was sewn in the center of the heart, and silver, sequined leaves sprouted out from it. A braided rope with tassels was attached to the heart's exaggerated humps, so I could hang the purse on my shoulder. ” "It's great," I lied, removing it from its box to show Marnie. It was the last purse in the world I would've chosen. But it was Stacy's wedding; I'd carry it if she wanted me to. "Thanks! Thanks a lot." |I caught Adam looking at me, a glint of amusement in his eyes. Ä"Stacy," Travis said, taking the purse from my hands, "this is the tackiest thing I've ever seen." .Everyone turned to him. ^"What do you mean?" Stacy asked, sounding hurt. ¨ "Just what I said," he replied. "It's like that pink, heart-shaped pillow with layers of lace you picked out for the ring bearer. It's like the blue-and-pink flower arrangements you suggested for the head table." file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

˜"Blue and pink flowers grow together in gardens all the time," Stacy argued. ´"It's like the hole flowered wallpaper you picked out for the downstairs bathroom. Tacky." Ö"The wallpaper may be old-fashioned," Stacy admitted, "but it's pretty. You know I'm the sentimental type." b"Sentimental is one thing; tasteless is another." 100 ÊI felt like kicking him. I could see Adam's hand tense, the way it did when my questions angered him. Coach stared at Travis for a long moment, then said, "Well, I've got a lot of work to do," and headed for the other side of the yard. Î"Good thing," Marnie whispered to me from behind. "Travis would look terrible with a rake in his back." Ö"There's no such thing as tasteless, Travis," Stacy told him. "There are simply a lot of different tastes." "Well, yours is certainly different, different than the taste of most of my friends who will be attending the wedding," he said. ¢I'd had enough. "Do you want to use that?" I asked Travis, pointing to the purse. ""Definitely not." "Good," I replied, taking it back from him, "then I can. Stacy, I'll put this inside with the shoes. Thanks for dropping them by." –I headed toward the house with both boxes, and Marnie silently followed me. P"Jane," Adam called after me. "Wait up." I kept walking. r "I want to talk to you," he said. "I've just been put in a real bad mood," I warned him as I reached the steps of our back porch. "Like I've only seen you in a good one?" I spun around. •He grinned. It was a totally disarming smile. I took a step back and up. 101 –"One more step," he said, laughing softly, "and you can be taller than me." L I guessed he'd noticed my tactic when he'd blown up at me on the school stairs. I stepped down to pavement level. "It'll be easier to kick you in the shin from here." ˆ That sunlit smile again. The light in his eyes was making it hard for me to act huffy. Then his face grew serious. "Listen, what I wanted to tell you was that I'm sorry about acting like a jerk Thursday. I jumped the gun on you, thinking you knew what the rest of the staff had done, even thinking you had set me up for it." Page 43 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html ZI glanced sideways at Marnie. "Who told you?" ô "Kelly. I feel really bad about it. Even if you had been part of the joke," he continued, "I should've had more of a sense of humor. I'm sorry about what I said. Lately it seems like--I don't know--like I've been taking everything way too seriously." üI saw Stacy and Travis getting into the car with grim expressions on their faces. I wondered if Travis ever said he was sorry. : "It's hard not to take stuff seriously," I said, "when other people are expecting big things from you. Even more, when you're expecting a lot from yourself." I saw the surprise on Adam's face, as if he couldn't imagine that I would know how he felt. His green eyes wouldn't let mine go. @"So, uh, what kind of purse will youv be carrying?" I asked, before I became file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

totally mesmerized. \"Something in black satin with leather roses." 102 I laughed. J"Adam!" Travis hollered from the car. 2 "Coming." To Marnie and me he said, "Next time I help them with errands, I'm bringing a referee's whistle." He jogged down the path and through our gate. ôMarnie leaned against the stair railing, a coy look on her face. "I wonder if Adam's got a date for the dance," she mused. F"Why? Are you planning to ask him?" t"I wonder if he's got a date to the wedding," she went on. ¶"Kelly would know," I said as I climbed the steps to the back door. "She knows everything." •Marnie caught up with me. "Why don't you ask him? To the dance, I mean." "Yeah, right." n"And then to the wedding," she said. "Marnie, be real." p"Give me a good reason why you shouldn't," she insisted. 8"Because we're just--just--" "Friends?" pI pulled open the door. "More like the best of enemies." J"Oh. Then what have you got to lose?" 103 Page 44 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html Eleven Ô Sunday afternoon mom and I sprawled out in plastic lawn chairs in the backyard, both of us wearing our comfy old jeans, studying. Well, she was studying; I was making up for lost sleep. When the cordless phone rang, I nearly capsized. ú Mom picked up the phone. "Hello ... Stacy?" she said. "Stacy, slow down. What? Slow down, hon. Take a deep breath. Yes, Daisy's right here." Mom handed me the phone, holding her hand over the mouthpiece. "I can't make head or tail of what she's saying." "Hi, Stacy." Æ "Daisy," she gasped into the phone, "you've got to help me. My ring is in the garden. They have tulips, hyacinths, all these azaleas and paths, I don't know what to do, I don't know why they have to plant so many darn pansies." d"Back up," I said to Stacy. "Whose garden? Where?" 104 "I don't know where,"f she wailed. "Somewhere behind the Clarkes' house." "I'm trying to learn," he said. ÖAt halftime I told Vinny to interview whatever players he thought important. I got blurbs from the coaches. Page 52 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html ¼ I spent the second half trying to see the game from the bleachers where Vinny and I were sitting, but I kept seeing the action through Adam's eyes. It felt as if every defenseman that checked him checked me. I felt every bang and knock. Every shot he took, I took, willing the ball past the feet of the goalie. It was a relief when the game was over. V"We'll do follow-ups from halftime," I told 123 p Vinny, and hightailed it to the coach of the opposing team. I got some good quotes, and for a moment I felt like myself again. Then, on my way back to Grizzly, I passed Adam and Kelly. J"Quarter to eight?" I heard Adam ask. „"Five of," she said, smiling. "We don't want to arrive too early." & I knew they were talking about the dance. Unfortunately Grizzly turned away at that moment to greet a parent. I quickly pretended to read my notes. z"Hi, Jane," Kelly said. "We were just talking about tonight." "Good." 2 "Are you going to the dance?" she asked. "Yes." I flipped a page in my notebook, though I hadn't read a word of it. * "We are too," she told me. "Great." þ"I guess you're waiting to interview Adam," she said to me, then laid her hand on his arm. "We can talk tonight," she told him. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

ÊI glanced up as far as the number on Adam's jersey. "Vinny's covering players. He'll be around soon." Ú"Why Vinny?" He leaned sideways to block me when I tried to move on, lowering his head until I looked at him. h"Because he wants to learn and is doing a good job." ˜"Not the same kind of job as you," Adam replied. "You know you're the best." ¸I pulled curly shreds of paper from the spiral of my notebook. Wonderful. I'd finally gotten 124 †his respect for me as a reporter just when I wanted something else. "Thanks. I see Vinny heading this way. Hey, Coach!" I called, chasing after him before another parent got hold of him. I spent a lot of time questioning Grizzly that day. What I really wanted to ask was, "Are you as miserable as I am?" but we stuck to lacrosse. Josh walked me back to the school building. I wondered if Marnie had said something to him because he draped his arm casually around my shoulders and told jokes on the way, as if he was trying to cheer me up. Pablo passed by and gave me a high five. Jordy did the same. Yeah, the team accepted me now, respected me now. Heck, I was like one of the guys. NIt was enough to make a tough girl cry. 125 Thirteen Daniel arrived an hour late that evening, which was no surprise to me. "Looking good, Jane," Daniel said when I opened the door. * I hoped so. I was beginning to have second thoughts about the outfit Marnie had talked me into, a very short skirt with opaque stockings and a skimpy kind of top. I'd added a pair of earrings that Angela had given me, big-dangle jobs like the kind I was always admiring on her. |"Come in a sec and say hello," I invited. "Hey, Mom? Grandpa?" ÐGrandpa rose from the couch to shake Daniel's hand, studying him with the interested eyes of a reporter. Daniel's hair was several inches longer than mine and pulled back in a ponytail with thin braids woven through it. He wore full-cut pants and a 126 È long, oversize shirt that was collarless and open at the top, accentuating the multicolored necklace he wore. Fortunately for Daniel he was a big guy with a good-looking face, so he could get away with things like funky jewelry. Z Mom came in from the kitchen to greet Daniel and told him how much she liked Page 53 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html the beads around his neck. We left before she got a good view of the new tattoo on his left ear. ž Daniel had driven his old family station wagon, which looked as if it had traveled cross-country several times--pulled by oxen. Tonight the backseat of the wagon was filled with shirts, pants, and underwear. H"What are the clothes for?" I asked. "To wear," Daniel replied. "I didn't have time to pack a suitcase, so I just threw them in the car. Actually, I didn't have time to do laundry either," he added as he pulled out of the parking space. "But Aunt Katie's a sweetheart--she won't mind washing them." V"You're staying at her house this weekend?" He nodded. "Aunt Margaret won't have me back. You know, I'm glad we're doing this," Daniel said. "I've missed hanging out with you." "Really?" file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

"My parents are glad," he explained. "They think you're a good influence on me." "Oh." ‚"They wish I'd date more ordinary girls," he went on. "Ordinary?" 127 –"They like you because, well, they think you've got your head on straight." J"I see. Turn right at the stop sign." Z He did, without stopping first, without looking to see if a car was coming from the left. The unhappy driver of that car, who had the right-of-way, blasted us with his horn. j "What I'm saying," he went on, "is that at the School of Arts we're all, like, flying into passions. You never know who's going to do what. But you, Jane--you're nice and reliable." I winced. Z"You're the kind of girl a guy can count on." P"You mean because I stop at stop signs?" ~"Some of the girls at school, they're fantastic," he continued. PI wished he'd keep his eyes on the road. b "Totally fantastic, morphing all the time, but they wear me out. Not you. At camp last summer I always knew where you were coming from. In your E-mails too. You're always Jane." Page 54 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html Daisy,` I felt like telling him. "Turn left." I sighed. 0 "That's why I decided to come tonight. I kept thinking about how it was at camp, not wild or anything, just kind of easy and sweet. You're good for me." :"We're here," I said bleakly. B I'd hoped that having a date and dressing differently would give me confidence when I met up with Kelly and Adam. Now I felt as attractive and exciting as a nun. 128 * Daniel and I parked and slipped into the gym during a slow dance. It was dark, so it was hard to see who was with whom. Some couples swayed with their heads on each other's shoulders; others were shyer and danced a little straighter and stiffer. I noticed a couple who'd been turning clockwise suddenly turn in the opposite direction, as if the guy wanted a second look at Daniel and me. The guy was Adam. D A moment later Kelly twisted her head around to see who Adam was looking at, then gave me a little wave. I waved back and turned quickly to Daniel. "Let's dance." L As soon as Daniel and I found the rhythm, I closed my eyes. I wasn't feeling romantic; I just didn't want to see Kelly and Adam. I guess I should've realized that Daniel would lead pretty much the way he drove. We hadn't been swaying long when we plowed into another couple, Pablo and his girl. ."Sorry, Pablo," I said. ÚHe glanced from me to Daniel, looking Daniel up and down as if my date had just landed from another universe. Ø The song faded and the lights came on, making everyone blink for a moment. The band was taking a break, and people started heading out of the gym. I spotted Marnie and Josh across the way and pulled Daniel in their direction, dragging him away from Kelly and Adam and several other guys on the lacrosse team who were staring at him. Marnie and Josh met us halfway. 129 ê"Hi, Daniel!" she greeted him. She looked great in her tight pants and file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

midriff top. "We've been looking for you two." ˆ"Just got here," I told her, then introduced the guys to each other. ŽJosh studied Daniel's ear for a moment. "Is that a tattoo or stitches?" ’Daniel wasn't offended. "A tattoo that's supposed to look like stitches." "Oh." "It symbolizes creation," Daniel explained, "the cutting and healing of it, the stitching together of old and damaged things in a new way." TJosh looked at Daniel as if he were crazy. æ"Sooo, how about getting some air?" I suggested, and we made our way to the wide set of steps outside the building. ¦ I knew that with Josh there, some of the guys from the lacrosse team might come over to talk, but I never expected the reaction we got. They checked out Daniel from head to foot. I suddenly had a half dozen "big brothers" who wanted to know who I was dating and what he was like. In a matter of minutes we'd formed a large group on the school steps. Daniel ate up the attention, talking about life in Washington, his school, and the cool stuff he and his friends did. – I remembered how exciting his life had' seemed the first time I heard about it at camp. But I'd heard the same thing several times over now, and it was getting boring. I wanted to escape but was stuck in 130 ²the middle of the crowd, so I sat down, enjoying a bit of solitude in the forest of legs. øA minute later Adam's face peered at me between some of those legs. He'd also sat down on the steps. "How's it going, Jane?" 4"Okay. How about for you?" "Okay." OE"Good game today," I told him. "The whole team is playing solid ball." Page 55 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html öHe moved his head to one side as Kelly reached down to scratch her leg. "I didn't see you there at the beginning," he said. "Oh, well, I had stuff to do in the office." I shifted around. Daniel was leaning against me, his hand resting on the top of my head. |Adam glanced upward at him, then said, "So how's Stacy doing?" "She's all excited about the new house and the furniture she and Travis have picked out. I think maybe we were wrong about her and Coach." "Maybe." HWe sat in silence for a few moments. †"Those are different clothes than you usually wear," Adam observed. ¦I pulled my legs up a step and wrapped my arms around them, feeling self-conscious. „"Sort of artsy looking, I guess," he added. "Artsy and different." ^"I don't have to dress the same way every day." r"No," he replied, "but I like the way you usually dress." 131 x"I don't dress according to what guys like," I said quickly. pHe shrugged. "I was just curious about why you changed." "Does it bother you? Do you like to think of me as reliable? A girl you can always count on to be the same? Good old ordinary Jane?" RHe looked bewildered. "What do you mean?" ®"Oh, never mind," I said, standing up suddenly and almost knocking Daniel off his step. P"Girl, you look hot," Angela said to me. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

vShe and Tom had joined our group. He was talking to Daniel. P"Thanks, Angela. I needed to hear that." ¶Out of the corner of my eye I saw Adam's head pop up between people as he rose to his feet. R"Those dangles look fabulous," she added. 6 "Yeah, the person who picked them out has great taste." I leaned closer to her. "Where's you-know-who?" I whispered, referring to Tom's college girlfriend. ²"Had a big paper due. What a shame," Angela said softly, then smiled an incredible smile. ø The band began playing again, and everyone started to drift back toward the gym. Daniel and I climbed the steps with the others, then I felt Kelly at my elbow. She put her arm around my waist as if we were best buddies. "He is so cool," she said to me. JI looked at her blankly for a moment. h"He's so different," she explained, "so intriguing." ,"Oh, you mean Daniel." 132 ”She laughed as if I'd been playing dumb. "You make a really great couple." ÐDaniel turned to her and smiled. Adam, who was trailing her and listening in, wore no expression at all. à I was glad to get inside the dark gym. I danced every song with Daniel, hoping to lose myself in the music, hoping to forget that Adam was dancing with someone else. The gym grew more crowded as kids who came stag stopped by. The chaperons were kept busy with couples making out in the corners. We were wall-to-wall and steamy when the band announced its second break. &I checked my watch. One more hour,ø I thought, hoping it would pass quickly, then someone tapped me on the shoulder. "Mind if I have this dance?" Marnie asked. 0Daniel looked flattered. Ì"No problem," I said. I stepped back to see if Josh was free, but he'd already taken Kelly by the arm. V That left Adam. The two of us stood there looking around as if we'd never been to a dance before and didn't know what to do with ourselves. Then he smiled and walked over. Page 56 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html V"Looks like you're stuck with me," he said. † The music started, one of those tear-jerking movie theme songs, and we began dancing awkwardly. He held me as if I were made of glass and left enough space for a third person to dance between us. "This is really uncomfortable," I said after a minute of the worst dancing I'd ever experienced. I could see Marnie laughing at us. 133 j"I'm not sure how to do it with you," Adam confessed. P"The same as you'd do it with any girl." ¤"I'll probably step on your foot," he said. "And I've already banged you up once." ¨"With a lacrosse stick," I reminded him. "You're not hiding one somewhere, are you?" Ä"No." He pulled me closer, then closer again, glancing at me twice as if to make sure it was okay. My body was almost touching his. I could feel his arms around my back, one hand resting lightly against it. Who'd have thought that such a barely file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

touching, shuffling-back-and-forth dance could make me all quivery inside? We kept this up for another minute. Suddenly I saw Josh and Kelly veering into us. I pulled back a little, but at that same moment we got slammed from the other side by Marnie and Daniel, sandwiched between the two couples. Adam instinctively held me tight, his one hand cupping my head protectively. j"Oh, sorry," Marnie said, sounding in no way sincere. ( Both couples moved away, but Adam's hand still held my head against his chest. I could feel his long fingers in my hair. I got goose bumps all over. Don't let go, I thought, don't let go. î He didn't. We danced and he held me tight, his arms wrapped warm and strong around me. I felt him lower his chin, moving his face closer to mine. I don't know when I shut my eyes. When I opened them, he was looking at me intently, his face so near 134 lto mine, I could see the curl of every golden eyelash. Z His eyes cast some kind of spell on me. He was looking at my mouth. That ache I felt on April nights was finally becoming defined. It had a focus: Adam's mouth, Adam's kiss. 0"Daisy," he said softly. ðThen the music stopped. It was as if the magic carpet beneath me had been suddenly jerked away and I plummeted to earth. ØThe lights came on and I pulled away, feeling shaky all over. I was in deep, way too deep. Where was Daniel? OE"Daniel?" I said, turning around quickly. "Daniel?" I wanted to leave. H As soon as I snatched him from a startled Marnie, I suggested to him that we take off. "Let's go somewhere else," I said, "somewhere where all these people aren't." •"Hang loose, Jane," he told me. "There'll be time to fool around later." V Adam, who'd been reclaimed by Kelly, looked over at me with cold green eyes. What was his problem? I wasn't his date--just how many girls did he want to kiss in one night? ^ We headed outside again, where I had the pleasure of watching him and Kelly slip from the view of a chaperon and head across the playing fields in the direction of the bridge. An hour later I got to watch them slow dance to the most romantic song of the evening. They looked perfectly in sync, with Adam's eyes closed 135 ^ the entire time. As if that weren't bad enough, my miserable view of them was continually interrupted by Daniel, who was trying like mad to make out with me. Where was a chaperon when you needed one? The old nose block lost its effectiveness on the third attempt. His lips met mine and stuck there. The kiss was as uninspiring as the good-night embraces I remembered from camp. I Page 57 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html came down hard on his foot. "Oops," I said sweetly. ‚ The short ride home lasted forever. We talked about Daniel, and Daniel, and Daniel--his artwork and his dreams for the future. We spent a half hour parked in front of my house, talking about the same--which, of course, was preferable to kissing him. But when he saw me fumbling with the door handle, he swung into action. ¨ "Sorry," he apologized, reaching for my face, turning it back toward him. "You get me so wound up, talking about stuff. You're such a great listener and all, you make me forget what girls are always waiting for." file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

N"I'm not waiting for anything, Daniel." vHe pulled me closer. It was as if he couldn't hear anything he didn't say. OE"Daniel, listen to me--I'm taking back the invitation to the wedding." ¬"The wedding will be a bore," he agreed, "but we can cut out early and have some fun." ¦"No, no, we can't." I pushed him back a little. "Daniel, we're not really a match." 136 j"I know. We're opposites, but you're so good for me." b"Maybe ... but you know what? You're not good for me., And that counts too." zHe looked at me with a confused, almost childlike expression. @I patted his hand. "Good night." 137 Fourteen v At eleven-thirty on Saturday morning, three hours past my natural waking time, I finally made it downstairs. Grandpa was sitting at the kitchen bar, reading recipes and making a grocery list. I opened a cupboard, pulled out a box of croutons, stared at it uncomprehendingly, then put it back and took out my cereal. h"Should I ask how the dance went?" Grandpa inquired. 6"I wouldn't if I were you." J"Want to hear the morning headlines?" "Sure." N "Your mom's gone off to the mall, Marnie has called twice, Stacy is over at Coach's--dropping off cookies to thank him for last weekend's heroics-- and the Orioles are going for their seventh in a row this afternoon." He smiled, then took his cookbook out on the back porch to read. Grandpa knew 138 ºwhen to leave me alone and how to find a place to hang out in case I suddenly wanted company. I poured my cereal and started spooning it down dry, then dumped some sugar on the already sweetened flakes. The last time I'd glanced at my alarm clock the night before it had read 4:05 A.M., which meant I'd spent at least four hours thinking about Adam, reliving the dance with him, remembering how it was to look into his eyes and how it felt to have him gazing so intently into mine. ÌThat look had to mean something, didn't it? It had to mean as much as a walk to the bridge with Kelly! But then I'd remembered Billy's words when Adam was being interviewed by Kelly after our one-on-one match: "I've seen that look a million times. It's how Adam handles girls." During the last dance Adam had put his arms around Kelly and closed his eyes. Maybe when he didn't¶ look, it meant something--it meant it was the real thing rather than a moment of flirting. &I'll get over this,î I said to myself, sorting through the newspaper, looking for the sports section. Mixed in with sports was a single sheet of legal paper folded in half. I opened it up to a diagram, rotating the paper in my hands, trying to figure out what it was. ì"Grandpa--" I carried my cereal and the diagram outside and sat down next to him on the top porch step. "What's this?" Ì"Let's see--oh, that's the seating chart for the wedding reception." He pointed to a long, rectangular Page 58 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html 139 file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

fblock. "There's the head table, where you will be." ÒI read the names hand-printed on the chart. Adam and I were seated on either side of the bride and groom. Ò"Your mother and I will be making faces at you from over here," Grandpa added, pointing to a round table. < I saw that Daniel's name was written next to Mom and Grandpa's--I'd have to let Stacy know that had changed. My aunt and uncle were seated on the other side of Daniel. Next to Uncle Jake was another familiar name: Kelly! Adam had asked her to the wedding! I drew my breath in slowly and let it out again, trying to ease the tightness in my chest. Was I going to hurt like this every time I knew they were together? z"You're not looking forward to this, are you?" Grandpa asked. "No. Are you?" $He shook his head. >"What's worrying you?" I asked. h"A lot of things," he replied. "You're on the list." ö"What's worrying you about the wedding?" I said, not wanting to talk about me. "Do you have doubts about Stacy and Travis?" ø He didn't answer right away. "Yes," he finally admitted, "but I learned long ago not to give unwanted advice and opinions to adult children. Now I'm learning all over again why it's so hard to keep your mouth shut. I hope Stacy is right and I'm wrong." >"That makes two of us," I said. 140 ~ A few minutes later Marnie drove the family Jeep down the back alley, demonstrating the expertise of a resident who knew the potholes by heart. She parked behind Stacy's car, then hopped out. "It was unfair and dead wrong." fI blinked. I was too surprised to do anything else. d Marnie opened her copy of the paper to see what I'd written. When she bit her lip and glanced sideways at me rather than leaping to my defense, I began to read over her shoulder. „My heart sank. "It's the wrong draft. I E-mailed the wrong draft!" r"I told you there was an explanation," Josh said to Adam. l But Adam was really angry. "The wrong draft? Not quite the spin you wanted?" he asked. "Why can't writers just tell the truth?" His eyes blazed. "Is that too boring for you, Jane? Do you have to be the center of attention with your articles? You're always manipulating things, always trying to get a reaction!" ¼"I had another version," I began, "one that was really positive; I mean it was actually too--" ªI broke off. How could I explain the situation without admitting my feelings for him? À "Too positive?" he finished the sentence for me. "I have trouble imagining that." There was more than anger in his eyes, a darker shade of something, but I didn't know what it was or what to say back. I saw him swallow hard. øIn a quieter voice he said, "I don't understand you. I can't figure out what goes on inside your head." Then he walked away. °When the cafeteria door closed behind him and Josh, Marnie observed, "He'd be shocked to 159 Xfind out what's going on inside your heart." zI leaned back against the wall. "I can't believe I did that." ÀI told her why I'd written the different drafts, but she knew me so well, she'd already guessed. ¦ Later that afternoon I came clean with Tom. Talk about embarrassing! His handpicked sports editor falling for a jock and unable to keep her head on straight! I told him what I thought we should do, and he said it was my decision. He also did his best to shore up my self-respect, which was abysmal at that point. An hour later, while Vinny and I were covering the girls' game, I told him that he was now full-time reporter for guys' lacrosse. The column was his baby. ^"You mean--every game?" Vinny asked, surprised. |"Yup. And we have a shot at the play-offs. You'll enjoy that." F It wasn't an easy choice for me. I was the girl who was never going to let a guy stand between me and what I wanted. What I wanted was to write about sports, and my favorite sport was men's lacrosse. But I knew it was the only fair choice. The guys on the team didn't need clever put-downs or doses of file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

praise. They deserved solid analysis, like the kind I could produce consistently before, well, before I fell in love. ì I stayed late after the girls' game, working on an article about it, proving to myself I could still write decently about some team. When I arrived home, dinner dishes were piled in the sink. Mom had gone to class, and Grandpa was watching the Os 160 Page 68 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html ¬game in the living room. I microwaved a leftover square of casserole, then joined him. ¬"No entrance to the ballpark without your ticket," Grandpa said, holding out his hand. Æ"Before I give you a copy of the paper, I need to tell you what's happened. And I'm not ready yet." He glanced sideways, his eyes sweeping over me in a quick, parental check to see if anything was catastrophically wrong. "Okay," he replied. "You've been granted a free pass to the press box. Find a seat quickly. Surhoff's on first, and I think this pitcher's losing it." He was. While I ate my dinner, we watched several innings of wild scoring, then Grandpa suggested we take a walk. He said he hadn't done his miles for the day, which I knew was an excuse. Walking would make talking easier because we didn't have to look at each other. Ü We strolled up and down the blocks of our neighborhood, and for the third time that day I told my miserable story. But I fudged: I didn't mention Adam, just that I'd become good friends with a few of the guys. I waited for Grandpa to ask me how that was different from being good friends with Marnie, but all he said was, "Sounds like you did the right thing, Jane." t"It hasn't been fun," I replied, kicking at a loose stone. X"I'm sure. Have you said anything to Coach?" *"You think I should?" bI guess Grandpa heard the reluctance in my voice. 161 "You don't have to tell Grizzly the exact reason you've struggled to keep your objectivity. You don't have to give a name and jersey number." lI glanced up at him, surprised. Had he figured it out? Ø"Maybe I should get this over with now," I said as we started down our back alley. "Coach will still be up." r Grandpa left me at Mrs. Bean's gate. A minute later our neighbor answered the door, wearing a silk gown with green parrots all over it. When I said I wanted to talk to Coach, she muttered something about no parties on Thursday night but let me go up. I stopped at the door that led to the third floor and knocked. Ð"Coach?" I called. "It's Jane." I pushed open the door, called again, and walked up the first few steps. ¤ "Sorry to bother you. I know it's kind of late," I began. Then I realized the bathroom door, which lay directly ahead of me, was closed and water was running--shrieking through the pipes, actually. I hesitated. "Hi, Daisy." ´I took another step up. "Stacy! I didn't expect you to be here--I mean, to be here still." My cousin was sitting at a square table, her feet up on another chair, looking very much at home in the eating area of Coach's living room. ª"When Grizzly got back from school, we ordered some pizza," she said. "Want a file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

piece?" "No thanks." 162 4 I saw the box on Coach's microwave. On top of the small fridge were five green soda bottles with red candles stuck in them. They looked like Christmas, and now that the bathroom pipes had quieted some, it sounded like Christmas. I listened a moment longer. "Are you playing carols?" 4"Perry Como," she told me. ÆAs long as I can remember, Stacy had this thing for Perry Como, a singer from Grandpa's generation. r"It's the only tape of his that Grizzly owns," she added. ,"I can't imagine why." v She smiled and shrugged, the way she always did when I ribbed her about her tapes of old romantic songs. I felt as if I was looking at the cousin I used to know, with her red hair in a ponytail high up on her head, her shoes off, Page 69 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html her favorite kind of socks peeking out of her jeans--knit ones printed with rosebuds. Ò"Grizzly's washing dishes in the tub," she said. "He probably couldn't hear you with the screechy pipes." I glanced toward the bathroom, then walked over to the table where she sat. "What do you have there?" I asked. "Looks like sports photos." žShe held one up, grinning. "This is Grizzly when he played for Loyola College." ¦ "Cool." She moved her feet, and I sat down for a closer look. They were lacrosse pictures, and despite the fact that the players were wearing "hats," as Stacy called them, she could point out Coach in every one. 163 ð "I'm going to mat some of these for him," Stacy said. "He needs something up here to make it more like home. But it's a challenge to figure out how to hang things with this big, sloped ceiling." Her eyes were bright; she loved this kind of project. "He needs some pictures of Big Mama, maybe a collage. And I was thinking about a mobile--that would hang nicely in this space." ^"Did Mama come home?" I asked, glancing around. \"She's sleeping in the bedroom. Go say hello." I found Big Mama nestled in the blankets of Grizzly's bed. Her front paw and her tail were wrapped up, and she had some fur to grow, but she purred when I petted her and blinked at me with contented eyes. "Get better, old girl," I whispered. "He needs you." ÜOn my way out of the bedroom I knocked on the bathroom door. "Hey, Coach. It's Jane. Big Mama's looking good." æ The door opened. Coach was kneeling in front of the tub, bubbles clinging to his arms, a tall stack of multicolored dishes next to him. "Hi, Jane. I was trying to keep the noise down." He saw me eyeing the dishes. "I kind of let them pile up." BI laughed. "Need someone to dry?" "No thanks." Ž"Um, I need to talk to you about something. About the article I wrote." ˆ"In that case, come on in," he invited, and handed me a clean towel. 164 ® I knelt down next to him and we went to work, him washing, me drying and stacking the dishes on his wicker hamper. I explained to him about the different drafts, pretty much the same way I'd explained it to Grandpa. file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Faazy/Desktop/EBOOKS/New%20Text%20Document.txt[5/2/2010 8:45:32 PM]

When I'd finished, Coach asked, "Could you give me a copy of the first version you wrote, the positive draft? I'd like to read it to the team." "Uh--well--" I wondered if my interest in Adam would be obvious. I knew I'd devoted at least two paragraphs to his offensive efforts. "I'll tell you why," Coach said. "The boys were talking a lot about your article at practice today. They really took it to heart." "Oh, jeez." Ò "See, it's not only you that's gotten to know and like them. They've come to like and respect you, Jane. You're not just some writer whose opinion they can squawk about--not anymore. What you think and say truly matters to them now." ”"I never thought about it that way." I dried a plate till it was polished. What the heck, I thought,b Adam's so angry he won't- hear any of it anyway.t "Okay, I'll drop off the draft during homeroom tomorrow." We finished up the dishes and carried them back into the living-room area. I wished Grizzly good luck in Friday's game, then headed home. ¼As I lay in bed that night, trying not to think about Adam, my mind turned to Stacy. It seemed 165 „ strange for a bride, two days before her wedding, to be hanging out with a single guy who was not her fiancé. But tonight was Travis's bachelor party--his last fling, as they say. It was only fair for Stacy to have her last fling too, with her rosebud socks, red candles, Perry Como, and a Page 70 ABC Amber Sony Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcsonylrf.html tenderhearted guy named Grizzly. 166 Seventeen | Before the game against Dulaney on Friday, Vinny hung around me at the office and talked a lot. He seemed as nervous as he was pleased about his new responsibility, his whole face glowing pink. He wanted to know where I'd be sitting at the game. With Angela, I told him, and higher up in the stands than I used to sit. ’When the game began, it was weird not having to watch every second of it. ´"You know, you don't have to look at me when I talk," Angela said. "You never did before." 4"It's nice to act normal." "Just don't get out of practice," she told me. "You're still a sports reporter." l When halftime came, we were winning 7--5, but the other team had fought back from five goals down. The tide of the game was turning in Dulaney's favor. I watched Vinny buzz around to 167 ˆinterview players, wishing I could shout down some questions to him. Adam was standing on the sidelines, toweling off his head, glancing around as if he was trying to find someone. He went over to speak to Vinny. `Angela leaned closer to me. "Can you read lips?"

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