Authors: Mike Lupica
C
ROSSOVER
2: Like those hotlines.
C
ON
T
ESSA
44: For troubled teens.
C
ROSSOVER
2: I've only got b-ball troubles.
C
ON
T
ESSA
44: But I hear there's a new girl in your basketball life.
It was true, Danny thought.
News did travel faster than ever in the Internet age.
C
ROSSOVER
2: Who told?
C
ON
T
ESSA
44: I cannot reveal my sourceâ¦Yes, I can, it was Will.
C
ROSSOVER
2: He's got a big mouth even on a Macâ¦And she's not in my life, she's on my dopey team.
C
ON
T
ESSA
44: Dopey? Uh-oh. Somebody's Grumpy tonight.
Tess Hewitt wasn't just a fast typist. She was fast, period.
C
ROSSOVER
2: She won't change anything. We suck.
C
ON
T
ESSA
44: You haven't even played a game yet.
C
ROSSOVER
2: The only time I like playing ball is when I play with Ty.
He waited longer than usual for her reply. Which meant trouble, because the longer she took usually, the longer the reply.
But he was wrong.
C
ON
T
ESSA
44: Get over it.
C
ROSSOVER
2: What?
C
ON
T
ESSA
44: Repeat: Get over it. As in, all of it. Stop feeling so sorry for yourself.
C
ROSSOVER
2: Now you're my coach?
C
ON
T
ESSA
44: Just your IM cheerleader. But on to more important stuffâ¦Do you think Colby's cute?
Danny felt himself smiling.
Just not about the tall girl on his basketball team.
He was smiling through all the magic of computers, all the mojo, his screen to her screen, all the way across Middletown, at this girl.
C
ROSSOVER
2: No.
C
ON
T
ESSA
44: You're cute.
C
ROSSOVER
2: Gross.
C
ON
T
ESSA
44: Things will get better.
They were actually about to get worse.
F
IRST
:
THE FIGHT
.
He and Will had gone to the new Jackie Chan movie at the Middletown Theater, the one with the old-fashioned marquee out front, somehow hanging in there against all the multiplexes in the area, including the new one outside Twin Forks, in the factory-outlet mall that was roughly the same size as Texas.
Danny's mom had brought him and Will, and Will's mom was supposed to pick them up at the Candy Kitchen afterward.
That's where they ran into Teddy Moran and Jack Harty and fat Eric Buford.
Will saw them come in, scoping out the room with his back to the wall in their back booth. He always sat facing the room, afraid he was going to miss something, even if it was only who'd just come through the door.
“Check it out,” Will said. “Terrible Teddy actually found
two
people who wanted to go to the movies with him.”
He said it in his boom-box voice, as if everybody in the Candy Kitchen had suddenly gone deaf.
“You better repeat that,” Danny said, “I think a couple of guys in the kitchen might have missed it.”
“C'mon,” Will said, “you're the one who always says that calling Moran a snake is insulting to a lot of innocent water moccasins.”
There may have been less popular twelve-year-olds in Middletown than Teddy Moran, whose father hosted his own show on the town's AM radio station. But if there were, Teddy was trying his hardest to take the crown.
Somehow Teddy thought his father's celebrity made him one, too. He went through life with even more mouth than Will, as if doing the play-by-play for himself and everybody else. He liked to think he had a lot of friends, but really didn't. In fact, if there was one enduring mystery in Middletown, at least among guys their age, it was this: Why Ty Ross had anything to do with him.
Danny just wrote it off to the fact that Ty would find good qualities in a guard dog.
He even managed to do it with a punk-face like Teddy, with those pig eyes, with a mouth set in a smirky way that made it look as if he were always on the verge of getting a flu shot. Teddy Moran: Who always got a lot braver when he had somebody as big as Jack Harty with him, even though Jack usually seemed to be embarrassed to be in the same area code.
Danny was hoping that if he and Will ignored them, they'd go away. No such luck. Will hadn't just talked too loudly, he'd made the fatal mistake of eye contact.
So the three of them came over and stood near the booth, Teddy in front of the other two. Danny thinking: Yeah, Moran, you're a born leader.
“Hey, Walker,” Teddy said, “is it true you're playing with girls now?”
Looking over one shoulder, then the other, at Jack and fat Buford, like he'd gotten off a good one.
Will said, “It's easier for us with girls than it is for you, just because they don't run the other way when they see us coming. Or, in your case, smell us coming.”
Teddy ignored him, saying to Danny, “What color are your uniforms going to beâpink?”
Will said, “Did somebody say punk?”
Danny leaned forward and sipped his root beer float, then looked up at Teddy. “Is there some point you're getting to, dude? Or are you planning to go from booth to booth busting chops, and just happened to start with us?”
Jack and fat Buford turned and went to the counter to order, somehow bored by the sparkling conversation.
Teddy stayed. “Hear you're spending a lot of time with Ross,” he said.
“Jealous?” Will said.
Teddy shot him a sideways glance. “Nice hair,” he said. “Come home with me later, you can scrub some of our dinner pots with your head.”
“Holy crap, that's a good one,” Will said. “I've got to get a pencil from one of the waitresses and write that one down.”
To Danny, Teddy said, “One of these days, you and your pals have to get over not making the grade.”
“You're absolutely right, Moran,” Danny said, feeling himself starting to get hot now. “The other thing I've got to do is get my dad to sponsor the team next year, just to guarantee me a spot.”
Garland Moran's station, WMID,
was
the Vikings' sponsor this season.
“Your dad?” Teddy said. “Sponsor a team? With what, his bar tips?”
Will got up first. “Shut up,” he said.
“Now
.”
Teddy Moran started to turn away from them, on his way to the counter, but decided to say one more thing.
“Loser coach,” he said, “for a loser team.”
Danny, in a quiet voice, said, “Hey, Moran,” to get his attention.
So he'd turn.
So Danny wasn't technically blindsiding him with what Will would describe later as a blinding first step, coming out of the booth and up into Teddy Moran, grabbing two fists' worth of Teddy's stupid F.U.B.U. sweatshirt as he did, Teddy thinking F.U.B.U. made him a cool-black white kid, driving him back into the swivel chairs at the counter.
Teddy was bigger and heavier than Danny the way everybody was bigger and heavier, but his lack of guts made it a fair fight.
The two of them went down in the opening at the counter where the waitresses brought out the food, Teddy hitting the floor hard as Danny heard people start to yell all around them, heard Teddy himself yelling, “Get
off
me.”
Danny was on top of him now, had him by the front of the sweatshirt, had his face close enough to smell movie popcorn on Teddy's breath.
He could feel people trying to pull him off, but he wasn't ready to let go.
Still wasn't sure whether he was going to bust him in the face and knock the smirk off it.
“Take it back,” he said.
He knew how lame it sounded as soon as he said it, but it was the best he could do, he could barely breathe, much less think clearly.
Even now, Teddy was still all mouth.
“About him being a drunk, or a loser?”
Now Danny pulled back his right hand, ready to pop him, see if that would finally shut his fat mouth. But Gus, the owner of the Candy Kitchen, the guy that kids considered the real mayor of Middletown, caught his hand like he was wearing a catcher's mitt and said, “How's about we don't make this worse than it already is?”
Will finished the job of pulling Danny off Teddy Moran.
Teddy was already on his feet, safely behind Jack and fat Buford, a complete phony to the end, trying to make it look as if he were trying to get around them and back at Danny, and they were holding him back.
“Truth hurts, huh, Walker?” he said.
Will was moving Danny slowly toward the door.
“You're the one who's going to get hurt,” Danny said. “When it's just you and me, next time.”
“You talk tough for a midget,” Teddy said. “Everybody in town knows the
real
truth about your old man except you.”
Danny tried to turn around, but Will had him in a bear hug, saying, “You're probably only grounded right now. Let's not shoot for life without parole.”
They stood on the corner, Danny breathing like crazy now, gulping in air like he'd just run a hundred-yard dash, Will saying they ought to get out of there, he'd call his mom and tell her to pick them up at Fierro's.
“I should have kicked his ass,” Danny said.
“Everybody in there thinks you already did.”
They walked down the street. When they passed Runyon's, they saw Richie Walker at his usual corner stool, his face fixed on the television set. Danny didn't know what he was watching, but he recognized the look on his dad's face, the one where it looked as if he was staring hard at nothing, all the way into outer space.
Danny staring hard at him.
What had Teddy meant?
The real truth?
Danny was grounded for the next week, not even allowed to attend practices. He pleaded his case to his mom as soon as Mrs. Stoddard dropped him off at home that night, telling her what Teddy Moran had said, explaining that Teddy had lied when he told
his
mom that Danny had jumped him from behind.
He knew it wasn't going to help his case even a little bit, but he finished by telling her that if anybody in town deserved to catch a good beating, it was Teddy Moran.
“Are you finished now?” Ali Walker said.
“Pretty much. Yeah.”
“You're right. He
is
a jerk. He happens to come from a long line of jerks, the biggest being his father. And having told you that? You're still busted, kiddo. You know my position on fighting.”
He did, reciting it to her now the way he would have the Pledge of Allegiance. “The only thing fighting ever proves is who's the better fighter,” he said. “And you usually know that before you start.”
No phone privileges after dinner for a week. No after-homework television.
No computer of any kind unless it involved homework, which meant no instant-messaging.
“No IM!” Will said at school on Monday. Mock horror. “No tube? She's turned you into the Count of Monte Cristo.”
What felt like one of the longest school weeks everâno computer privileges always made him feel like he was stranded at night on some kind of desert islandâfinally came to an end. His dad stopped by Friday afternoon, telling him that he'd scheduled six games so far, the first one on the first weekend in December, the last of the six the Sunday before the Christmas holidays began. He also said that despite a lot of bitching and moaningâhis dad's wordsâfrom Middletown Basketball, Colby Danes was leaving the seventh-grade girls' team and joining them.
He was at the front door when he turned and said, “Oh, by the way, one other thing? We're scrimmaging the Vikings tomorrow afternoon at St. Pat's.”
“We'll get killed!” Danny said.
“I figure.”
“You don't care?”
“Listen,” he said. “I know
they'll
care, even though I'm not letting them use the scoreboard. They're not even supposed to keep score in a scorebook, though I figure they'll find a way. They're going to rub your faces in it. I just want to see what we've got, and who I should be scheduling, especially if it turns out we don't get into the league.”
“The league hasn't told you yet?”
“They say they're still quote, considering my request, unquote.”
“While they do, the Vikings get to use us as tackling dummies.”
“It's just a scrimmage, not the Final Four.”
Danny said, “More like a car wreck, if you ask me.”
He felt like a jerk, talking about car accidents in front of his dad, as soon as the words were out of his mouth.
The stupid jerk of all jerks.
Inside his stupid head, he pictured himself using both hands trying to grab the words out of the air and stuff them back inside his mouth.
“What I meant⦔
“Relax,” Richie said. “I know you didn't mean anything. But it's not a car wreck, kiddo. It's just basketball. I used to think it was a matter of life and death, too. I found out the hard way that it wasn't.”
It turned out to be a
train
wreck.
Mr. Ross hired a couple of refs Danny recognized from sixth-grade travel. Mr. Harden worked the clock. The Vikings wore black practice jerseys Danny didn't even know they had, with their own numbers on the backs and everything. Danny's team wore white T-shirts.
No spectators, not even parents. Just the players, the two coaches, the two refs.
In the huddle, Will said, “The refs want to know what our team is called.”
They all looked at each other.
Will said, “I never really thought Rugrats was all that catchy, to tell you the truth.”
Danny said, “How about the Warriors?” He looked up at his dad. “As in the Golden State Warriors.”
For a moment, a blink of an eye, it was as if it were just the two of them, getting ready to play one-on-one in the driveway. His dad looked back at him, and winked. “Works for me,” he said. “Warriors okay with the rest of you guys?”
“Why not?” Will said. “We'll be like the real Warriors. Just much, much smaller.”
Richie had them put their hands in the middle, told them not to worry about who was winning or by how much, to play hard, have fun, work on their stuff.
When they broke the huddle and lined up to start, Danny looked around at the five starters for the Vikings, seeing how much bigger they were, knowing how much
better
they were. Then he leaned next to Will's ear and said, “Holy crap. Who
picked
these teams?”
The Vikings went with Ty, Jack Harty, Andy Mayne, Daryll Mullins, Teddy Moran.