girls but couldnât read them.
âBaseball?â he said. âItâs February! Thereâs snow on the ground!â There. That was a good, noncommittal answer.
âSo?â Logan asked, looking at him as if heâd said fish sticks were best when made out of people.
âThe all-city sixth-grade tournament is coming up,â explained Jenny. âWe lost it last year. Weâre starting early.â
Logan straightened. â We didnât lose anything. Last yearâs sixth graders did. But weâre going to get it back this year. We have the best pitcher in the city.â
âThatâs you, I assume?â Max said, half to himself. He knew this boyâs type.
There was that look again. âNaw, dude. Iâm shortstop. What about you?â He looked Max up and down in a way that reminded him of the way his mom picked out tomatoes in the grocery store. âWe really could use a left fielder.â
âWell, um, I donât really play baseball.â
No one seemed to know what to say to that. Everyone suddenly looked down at their trays.
âI mean, I like baseball and everything,â Max said quickly. âBut Iâm not very good at it. You know.â He looked at Molly and laughed in what he hoped was a charmingly self-deprecating manner. âEveryone says I throw like a girl!â
The two girls turned their heads toward him slowly. Logan let out a long whistle.
Max grimaced. Heâd just made himself sound like a total loser. âI mean,â he said quickly, âI play tennis.â
Logan blinked. âWhat?â
âTennis. You know.â He mimed a forehand for their benefit. Max actually had a very good forehand. But this is the sort of thing thatâs hard to show in mime.
Logan scrunched up his face. âMy mom plays tennis.â
Max did not know what to say. Many peopleâs mothers played tennis. It did not mean there was something fundamentally wrong with the sport itself.
âAnyway,â Logan said, âI gotta run to the library. See you later, Molly, Jenny. Andââhe turned to Maxââyou too, Venus!â
Max blinked. Oh. âMore like Serena,â he muttered defiantly.
Logan looked at him, and then a smile spread across his face, and it was the most delighted evil smile Max had ever seenâsort of like how Lex Luthor might look if he unwrapped a present Christmas morning and found the keys to global thermonuclear destruction.
âRight!â Logan said, laughing. âSee you, Serena.â
He left. Max looked at the two girls, who were distinctly not looking at him.
âSerenaâs better,â Max explained.
And then silence, great and terrible, and Max felt himself fading into the wall, and along with it, all his prospects for a happy middle school life. Jenny shifted, then said she better go to the library too and got up and left, giving her friend a look that told Max that Molly was definitely hanging out with him because she was assigned to. He stuck his fork in his mac and cheese and attempted to jiggle it.
âSo,â Molly said after a pause, âwhereâd you move here from?â Her voice sounded flat. Max didnât understand. Was the tennis thing that dumb?
âUm, upstate New York. A little town called New Hartford. Youâve probablyââ
Mollyâs eyes grew large. âThatâs where Beau Fletcherâs from!â
Oh. Right. âYeah, I know.â
And then Molly looked up at him again. âDid you ⦠know him?â
And there was that spark in her eyes againâMax might even go so far as to call it a glow. And it would be a terrible terrible thing to extinguish that glow again; why, Max didnât think he could live with himself.
âKnow him? I mean.â Max shifted. âOh, well, I donât like toââ
As he talked, he was aware that his sentence was a runaway train picking up
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