Authors: Anna Staniszewski
Before he'd become a supernatural matchmaker, Marcus had spent his whole life being not enough. Not brave enough, not smart enough, and certainly not strong enough. Nothing like his perfect, fearless sister. The only thing he'd ever been decent at was fixing old model spaceships, but according to Marcus's dad, that hobby was nothing but a “royal waste of time.”
Then, on his thirteenth birthday, Marcus had finally discovered something he was just right at. Of course, it was a shame he couldn't tell anyoneânot even Grandpa Joeâabout being a matchmaker, but his boss Eddie's reassurances that he was a natural were good enough.
Or at least they had been.
Now, Marcus couldn't stop thinking about Lena and what she would say if he told her the truth. For some reason, he thought she might understand.
As he sat at his desk trying to focus on his homework, last night's kiss played over and over in his head. He couldn't believe how easily it had all happened.
He glanced at the book that Grandpa Joe had given him last month before he had to move into the nursing home:
How
to
Win
the
Girl
of
Your
Dreams
. Even though it was faded and musty and used words like “swell” and “boss,” Grandpa swore by that book. “Thanks to this little thing,” he'd said, “I got your grandma to marry me!”
Marcus figured if the moldy guide had helped his grandparents find each other and stay together for over forty years, then it had to help him finally get Lena to like him. Maybe then he wouldn't chicken out every time he thought of asking her out.
But the book wasn't much help at the moment. According to its crackling pages, you were never supposed to kiss a girl on a first date. Last night hadn't even been a date, so now what?
Should he call her? Text her? Show up at her house? The thought of doing any of that stuff made his stomach shudder, but he couldn't wimp out, not when things were finally going right.
He flipped through the book for what felt like the hundredth time.
Don't be too eager
, it reminded him in its friendly font. “When you see her, always bring flowers.” Bingo. He'd wait until tomorrow and bring her some roses from his sister's garden. (On top of all her other annoying accomplishments, Ann-Marie managed to grow the biggest rosebushes in town.)
That settled, Marcus finally gave up on his homework and went over to his worktable, where his latest projectâa vintage moon ship he and Grandpa Joe had found at a yard saleâwas waiting. He'd had to slowly take the model apart to figure out which pieces were missing and then start to put it back together again. There were still a couple of parts he hadn't been able to find, but he was sure he'd track them down. Then he'd reassemble the pieces, touch up the paint, and the ship would be whole again. Maybe once it was done, he'd finally work up the courage to go to the nursing home to show Grandpa Joe the finished product. Since it was identical to a model that Grandpa had had growing up, Marcus knew he'd get a kick out of seeing it restored.
Marcus's phone rang, pulling him out of his thoughts. He put down his tools and said “Hey, Eddie” without checking to see who it was. Now that Pradeep lived in a whole other country, no one else ever called. “Got another assignment for me?”
“You got it, kid,” said Eddie. “I wish all my employees were as excited as you. I will send the details in a minute.”
“I checked on the couple from my assignment last month, and I could still see a spark between them. I think they're going to last.”
“You did a good job with that one,” Eddie said with a distracted chuckle. “What is that? Four out of four?”
“If you count yesterday's, five for five,” Marcus said, his chest filling with pride.
As long as the couple from the movie theater stayed together, he'd be the first matchmaker to have so many successful matches out of the gate. That was a pretty big deal, considering that they'd only lowered the matchmaking age to thirteen a few years ago.
“Of course a hopeless romantic like you is a natural,” Eddie said. “That must be why you already see auras. I did not see my first one until I was a young man of nineteen, and I had already done dozens of matches by then.”
“Wait, you used to do matches?” Marcus asked. For some reason, he'd assumed Eddie had always been a middleman.
“Oh, yes,” Eddie said, his voice growing quiet. “I did for a while, before I got this job.”
“So if I keep doing well, one day I'll get promoted to a manager like you were?” He had never met a fellow matchmaker, and Eddie didn't like to say too much about “the network,” but Marcus was dying to know how it all worked.
Eddie coughed. “Listen, kid. You should probably get going or you will miss your match.” Then, before Marcus could say anything else, he hung up.
Marcus stared at his phone for a minute, trying to figure what he'd said wrong. He'd never asked Eddie about his past before, but it was clearly a sore topic. He wanted to apologize, but he had no idea what to apologize
for
. Sadly, a lot of the conversations he had with people ended that way. If only he'd inherited Grandpa Joe's talent for talking to people and making them laugh. Instead, he'd only managed to figure out how to get people to laugh at him.
Marcus sighed and threw open his bedroom door. He almost tripped over his sister, who was doing some kind of weird stretch in the middle of the hallway, one foot up on each wall.
“Hey!” Ann-Marie said. “Watch it!”
“Can't you do that in the basement?”
“No,” she said, huffing. “Dad gave me some new stretches, and he said this one should be done in a hallway. Besides, Mom's working on another trash sculpture downstairs. It reeks.” She looked past him. “Ew! Do you still have that gross terrarium on your desk? That turtle died, like, a month ago!”
“So?” He quickly shut his bedroom door behind him.
Ann-Marie snorted. “Are you gonna cry all over again if you have to get rid of it?”
Marcus felt his cheeks go hot. The worst moment of his life had been seeing George, the turtle he'd had since he was a little kid, lying lifeless in the corner of the terrarium. The second worst moment of his life had been a minute later when his parents and sister had witnessed him bursting into tears. His dad had barely looked at him for days. After all, Ann-Marie had broken her toe during a track meet last year and still managed to win her race, all without shedding a single tear.
He picked his way through the hallway, weaving around the free weights and exercise mats his dad was always bringing home for Ann-Marie to try out. When Marcus went past the living room, he noticed that two more medals had appeared on the mantel, meaning the last visible family photo with Marcus in it was now covered up.
As he passed a rowing machine near the couch, he gave its leg a frustrated kick. No wonder he couldn't make any new friends. How was he supposed to invite anyone over when his mom's weird eco-sculptures were always smelling up the house and his dad had turned the living room into a cross between a gym and a shrine to all his sister's accomplishments?
His phone beeped. Half an hour to get to the park. Marcus grabbed a piece of cold pizza from the fridge and inhaled it, then washed it down with some orange juice.
“Where are Mom and Dad?” he called to his sister.
Ann-Marie let out a groan that probably meant she was contorting herself into some ever-weirder stretch. “Visiting Grandpa again before Dad takes me to the track later. Are you ever gonna go with them?”
Marcus coughed. “What? Yeah. I'm busy, that's all.” His mom had assured him that Grandpa Joe was going to be okay after the heart attack he'd had a few weeks ago, but Marcus had been avoiding visiting him. The thought of Grandpa in some all-beige nursing home like the ones on TV, surrounded by old people who didn't even know their own names, was unbearable. Grandpa didn't belong in a place like that. “Tell them I went to the park, okay?”
“Since when do you like nature?” Ann-Marie asked.
“I have to, um, study some leaves for a project.” Marcus tried to base his lies as much on the truth as possible so he didn't get caught. Still, making up excuses seemed to get harder every time he had an assignment.
“Leaves?” his sister asked, finally sitting up. Her face was flushed from being upside down for so long. “I don't remember a project like that.”
“Yeah, it's for science. It's new.”
She tugged her hair out of its ponytail and cornered him. “I'm so glad I'm in high school. We don't have to do dumb stuff like that anymore. In my honors English class, we're⦔
And then something strange happened. As Ann-Marie went on about how interesting and challenging and amazing all her classes were, for a moment, Marcus saw a blindingly bright light shining from inside her. It made her whole chest light up as if she had a lamp lodged in her rib cage.
“Um, Ann-Marie?” Marcus asked. “Are you okay?”
She didn't seem to hear him as she babbled on about her English project. And then, as suddenly as it had appeared, the light started to fade. Marcus blinked, still seeing the outline of it on the backs of his eyelids. And then it was gone.
What on earth was that? He'd seen auras when he was matchmaking, but those only showed up when he was looking at people who were assigned to him. And this hadn't been a hazy outline around someone's head. This had been something else.
But then Marcus's phone buzzed, reminding him that he was running out of time to get to the park. As he dodged around his sister and rushed out the door, he temporarily forgot all about the strange light he'd seen.
Marcus was panting by the time he got to the end of his street. He was going to have to run all the way to the park to avoid being late. And that was only if he got past Caspar Brown's house without a problem. If he missed his assignment, wellâ¦Marcus wasn't sure exactly what would happen, but Eddie was always talking about “maintaining the balance of the universe.” If a couple wasn't matched when it was supposed to be, that couldn't be good for the balance of anything.
As he rounded the corner, Marcus held his breath, praying Caspar wouldn't be outside. His stomach sank when, sure enough, he spotted an ape-shaped boy in the middle of the street. In true simian style, Caspar was hurling rocks into a nearby pond.
Marcus froze in his tracks. Should he turn around and go the long way instead? If he ran at full speed, maybe he could still make it to the park on time. At least Caspar hadn't see himâ
“Hey, Marcus! Come over here!”
No no no no no!
Marcus spun around, trying to flee, but Caspar was on him in an instant. “Where are you going?” he asked, grabbing his shoulder with a meaty paw.
“I-I've gotta go,” Marcus stammered. “I'm late.”
“I don't see you around anymore. And what happened to your sidekick? Did he get shipped off to nerd camp?”
“He moved,” Marcus said, wishing Pradeep were here with him now. His friend would have made a goofy joke and lightened the mood so Caspar would let them go. Now Marcus was on his own.
His phone buzzed. Ten minutes until the match. “I really have to go,” he said, trying to wriggle out from under Caspar's enormous grasp. The two of them were in the same grade, but Marcus was convinced that Caspar had been held back in kindergartenâprobably twice. How else could he be so much bigger than everyone else?
Caspar didn't let go. Instead, he yanked the phone from Marcus's hand and sneered at it. “Where'd you get this piece of junk? Did your mom find it in a landfill?”
“Give it backâ”
“I saw her Dumpster diving behind the school last week. What are you guys, homeless or something?”
Heat flared in Marcus's chest, like someone had lit a torch in his lungs. “She's an artist,” he said through clenched teeth. “She uses that stuff in her sculptures.” He took a step forward and tried to snatch his phone back, but it was too late.
Caspar's lips stretched into a grin as he wound his arm back and flung the phone toward the pond. It landed in the mosquito-infested water with a soul-crushing
plop
.
Marcus stared. Oh God. His phone. It was his only way of contacting Eddie.
He realized that Caspar had finally let go of his arm, so he scrambled over to the edge of the pond. He could make out the shape of the phone on the bottom, like a rectangular pebble.
“You gonna go diving for trash like your mom does?” Caspar called.
Marcus wanted to punch him. He wanted to jump into the water, grab the phone, and throw it in Caspar's face. Instead, he took one more look at his ruined phone and turned away. Then he ran as fast as he could.
⢠⢠â¢
By the time Marcus got to the park, he was gasping for breath and his entire body was shaking. He couldn't tell if the shaking was from exhaustion or rage. If he missed his match on top of everything that had happenedâ¦
No. He was going to make it. He didn't know why he was so certain, but he knew that he still had another minute.
Even though he couldn't double-check the info on his phone, he spotted his target right away: a young woman with short dreadlocks and a nose ring, her face framed by oval glasses.
Olivia
Monroe, age 26
.
The way she sat on the park bench slowly untying and retying her running shoes told him that she needed a “love boost,” as the manual called it. He squinted, searching for the grayish aura that normally hovered around his targets and the feeling of loneliness that usually went with it, but nothing changed. That didn't matter. Marcus was sure it was her.
As he got closer though, he realized that without his phone, he wouldn't know the exact time to zap Olivia. He had no idea who she was going to be matched withâmaybe the guy eating a bagel on a nearby bench or the tall woman across the streetâbut if he didn't make the connection at the right moment, he'd miss his window. He'd have to try to do it by feel.
Marcus took a shaky breath and concentrated on getting the spark into his fingers. It flared almost right away, much more quickly than it had the other times. For some reason, it was darker in color than normal. Closer to purple than red. Maybe that meant his matchmaking powers were getting stronger. Good! The more powerful that first jolt, the more time the two people had to get to know each other before the spark wore off. That would definitely keep his success rate high.
He stood there for a second, breathing everything in. He knew somehow that the moment was almost right. He moved his hand into position behind Olivia's shoulder andâ
BAM!
Something smashed into his chest and sent him sailing back through the air. His hand barely grazed Olivia's neck before he fell to the ground. And then everything went dark.