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What About Will Page 7


  her house right now.”

  He took off a couple of hours ago.

  I hold my breath,

  waiting

  for Will

  to explode.

  But Nope

  Oh. That’s cool.

  “I thought you’d be mad.”

  Why? He works hard.

  He deserves a little fun.

  My jaw drops.

  I’m, like, stunned.

  What’s wrong?

  “Don’t you think it’s messed

  up that he can make time for

  a girlfriend, but us, not so much?”

  Will’s mouth trembles.

  If his face worked right,

  that would be a huge grin.

  Nope. In fact, if he’s busy with her,

  that means less chance of him

  sticking his nose in my business.

  Oh. Right.

  I get it now.

  He doesn’t care

  about Dad. Or me.

  Will is only worried

  about himself.

  And So

  I’m surprised

  when he actually decides

  to come to my game.

  In fact, he drives me.

  Last weekend of spring break

  and people are everywhere.

  The sidewalks are crowded.

  The bike paths are crowded.

  The parks are crowded.

  I bet the pools and lakes

  are crowded, too.

  “Hey, Will? Remember

  that spring break when

  we camped at Lake Mead?”

  He nods. It was critical that year.

  Hot, I mean. We stayed in

  the water most of the time.

  “And we had ‘hold your breath

  as long as you can’ contests.”

  That’s right. We did.

  “You won all of them.”

  Yeah, but you kept trying.

  “Can you still hold your

  breath for a long time?”

  I don’t know. I haven’t tried.

  Why? He sounds irritated.

  I shrug. “Sometimes I wonder

  about how much you changed.

  Like, how your body works

  and stuff. Is that bad?”

  What difference does it make?

  “I’m just interested.”

  What do you want to know?

  “Well . . . um . . . does

  your head hurt?”

  Not most of the time, but

  I do get hellacious headaches.

  “What about your face,

  like when you try to smile?”

  Does that hurt? No, but

  it’s totally frustrating.

  “That could still get

  better, though, right?”

  He’s Quiet So Long

  I wonder if he’s zoned out.

  I guess he has, in a way,

  working on what to say.

  Anything’s possible, Trace.

  That’s what my doctors say.

  Sure. It’s possible alien mystics

  will visit Earth and heal the planet,

  including me. But I doubt it.

  “Well, I’m going with

  your doctors. I know it

  will. I believe it will.”

  You still believe in Santa, too.

  “I. Do. Not.”

  Wait, that was a joke.

  “I don’t believe in Santa,

  Will, but I do believe

  in you.”

  Good luck with that.

  We both fall silent.

  But I don’t want this

  conversation to end.

  It’s the best one we’ve had in . . .

  forever.

  Mostly Because

  It’s the only one

  we’ve had in, like,

  forever.

  So I ask, “Hey, Will?

  What do you believe in?”

  Dumb question.

  “No it’s not.”

  He sighs. I believe in facts,

  the stone-cold truth.

  Not hypotheticals, fantasies,

  maybes, or what I’d prefer.

  I believe in what I see

  in the mirror, in what

  that means to my future.

  I believe what I hear

  when people say cruel things.

  I believe my life will be short,

  so why not live epically today?

  I try to let all that sink in.

  “Will, are you okay?”

  Depends on the moment.

  I wanted to feel better. I don’t.

  We Arrive

  At my game a half hour

  early for warm-ups.

  Will goes to find

  a shady place on the grass

  while I play some catch

  and do stretches.

  Coach Hal calls us over

  to give us the starting lineup.

  I’m pitching.

  Bram’s catching.

  Cat’s on first base.

  The Padres (that’s us!)

  are the home team,

  so we take our places

  on the field while

  the Tigers get ready to bat.

  From the mound,

  I can see where Will’s sitting,

  looking at his phone.

  But by the time I throw

  the first pitch, Dad and Lily

  still haven’t shown up.

  So they miss watching me

  strike out one batter

  pitch another into a pop-up out

  put a guy on base

  force their best batter into a ground out.

  That’s pretty good,

  if I say so myself.

  Coach Tom agrees. Super-

  duper pitching, Trace!

  Super-duper. Yeesh.

  Now it’s our turn to bat.

  I notice Will’s still alone,

  and when he sees me look

  his way, he shoots a thumbs-up.

  Guess he was paying attention.

  I wish he would more often.

  Dad and Lily miss watching

  our entire batting order.

  Shawn strikes out.

  Bram walks to first.

  I get a decent base hit.

  That puts me on first,

  moves Bram to second.

  And batting cleanup . . .

  Cat Comes to the Plate

  The crowd of parents

  and kids goes kind of quiet,

  like they didn’t notice

  our team had a girl

  playing first base.

  But the Tigers’ dugout

  starts to buzz about

  our new player.

  Some gasp.

  Some laugh.

  One or two make

  mean comments.

  She ignores it all.

  Decides to bat left-handed.

  That might be a mistake,

  because she seems a little

  off her stride.

  Takes a strike.

  Hits a couple of foul balls.

  Pops one up, but the catcher misses.

  “You got this, Cat,” I call.

  She nods.

  Steps back into

  the batter’s box.

  I’ve got a good feeling,

  so I take a decent lead.

  Bram does, too.


  And . . .

  She slaps one over

  the second baseman’s head.

  It drops for a base hit.

  Maybe even a double.

  Bram runs.

  I run.

  Cat runs behind us.

  People cheer.

  People yell.

  Coach Hal swings his arms,

  telling us to keep on running

  and don’t look back.

  Bram scores.

  I score.

  Cat’s tagged out at third base.

  But we’re ahead, 2–0.

  Dad and Lily missed

  every minute of it.

  They Finally Show

  Halfway through my second-

  inning pitching match.

  I’m doing okay.

  One guy out.

  One guy on base.

  One guy at the plate.

  It’s full count—

  three balls, two strikes.

  One more strike, he’s out.

  One more ball, I walk him.

  That makes me nervous.

  I concentrate too hard.

  Take too long to wind up.

  He calls time-out, steps

  away from the plate.

  I take a couple of deep breaths,

  but happen to glance toward

  Will just as Dad and Lily

  set up a couple of folding

  chairs beside him.

  Dad says something,

  Will jumps up, smiling,

  puts out his hand for Lily

  to shake, and Dad claps

  him on the shoulder.

  Now my attention is there,

  watching them instead

  of the Tigers’ batter.

  Trace! yells Coach Tom. Focus!

  I try. But I throw ball four

  and the batter walks.

  So now there are runners

  on first and second.

  I close my eyes, lecture

  myself. “Dad hardly

  ever comes to games.

  Make him proud of you.”

  It works.

  I strike out the next batter.

  Two down, one to go.

  I can hear Dad cheer,

  and look over that way

  as the next Tiger lifts his bat.

  I see Dad take some money

  out of his wallet, hand it

  to Will. No, Dad, no. And now

  Lily reaches into her purse.

  No way! Not her, too!

  Trace! shouts Coach Tom.

  I Pitch

  Without thinking.

  Without aiming.

  Without a solid windup.

  CRACK!

  The ball whizzes

  past my head.

  I’m too slow to react.

  Everyone’s yelling.

  Running.

  Throwing.

  Sliding.

  One Tiger scores.

  Another one scores.

  The one who hit winds up

  on third, with a triple.

  It’s 2–2.

  And it would be up to me

  to try to keep it that way

  with some decent pitching,

  except Coach Tom walks

  out to the mound.

  Sorry, Trace. You seem a little

  distracted. We’re bringing in Cat.

  You take her place on first.

  He waves and Cat trots over.

  Face hot, I hand her the ball.

  She’s pitching now. That’s fine.

  I just hope I can scoop up

  grounders and handle fly balls.

  Cat throws well. The guy on third

  scores, but that’s on me, and

  she gets us out of the inning

  only one run behind.

  As we go to the dugout,

  I chance looking at Dad, who

  smiles and waves, pretending

  I didn’t mess up royally.

  Will, I see, is gone.

  The rest of the game, I play

  okay, my teammates play better,

  and by the time it’s all over,

  we manage to win, 5–4.

  Coach Hal calls us over

  for the postgame pep talk.

  Way to go! You guys rock!

  Couple of flubs, but nobody’s

  perfect. Go celebrate a game

  well played. I’ll see you at practice.

  As Everyone Leaves

  Head down, eyes on the ground,

  I shuffle over to where

  my coaches are standing

  together, talking.

  “Sorry I messed up.”

  Everyone has off days,

  says Coach Tom.

  Coach Hal nods. Just a couple

  of bad pitches. You hit well.

  “Glad I did something right.

  My dad is here for once.”

  That’s what broke your

  concentration, I bet.

  And you collected yourself

  after. That’s important.

  Okay, I feel a little better.

  “Thanks, Coaches. See you later.”

  When I turn, Cat is a couple feet

  away. I think she’s waiting for me.

  Probably wants to rub it in.

  But no. She says, Good game.

  “Coulda been better. But thanks.

  You were pretty good, too.”

  You want to meet my dad?

  He’s right over there.

  I look where she’s pointing.

  “No way! Your dad is Victor

  Sánchez?” I’d recognize him

  anywhere. “He’s awesome!”

  I happen to think so. He was

  a decent third baseman, too.

  So, you want to say hi?

  “Heck yeah! Too bad Will left.

  He used to be a big Dodgers fan.”

  Who’s Will?

  “My brother.”

  He’s not a fan anymore?

  “No. He says sports are boring.”

  Why?

  “It’s kind of a long story.”

  Cat’s Cool

  But I barely know her.

  I’m not ready to talk

  about Will with her.

  I don’t talk about him

  with very many people.

  Dad. Mom. Bram.

  That’s about it.

  But she’s waiting,

  obviously curious.

  So I say, “I think it’s just

  his new crowd, really.

  They’re not the sports type.”

  That’s too bad.

  “Yeah. It is. But I am.

  Think your dad would

  give me his autograph?”

  Pretty sure he’d be happy to.

  What will I have him sign?

  A baseball? My gear bag?

  Hey, I know. My glove!

  Cat’s Dad

  Is, like, famous. At least,

  if you follow baseball.

  He was a superstar third

  baseman before he retired

  after last season.

  “Be right back!” I tell Cat.

  I run to inform Dad I’m about

  to meet one of my sports

  heroes. I can’t believe it!

  And neither can Dad.

  Think it would be okay

  for us to come, too?

  “I guess.” But I don’t wait


  for Lily and Dad, in case

  Victor Sánchez is in a hurry.

  Instead, I reverse course

  and sprint over to where

  he and Cat are waiting.

  My stomach’s doing backflips.

  Victor Sánchez offers his hand

  and mine shivers as I shake it.

  “H-h-hi. I’m Trace.”

  Very nice to meet you, Trace.

  You played a good game.

  He watched.

  He said I did good.

  Oh, yeah.

  “Th-thanks. I’m, like,

  a really big fan. So is my dad.

  Oh, this is my dad. And Lily.”

  They do the introduction

  thing, then Dad says,

  I didn’t know you lived in Vegas.

  We haven’t been here long.

  LA was becoming unlivable,

  and I had no reason to stay.

  Well, we’re lucky to have you.

  And you, too, young lady.

  Looks like talent runs in the family.

  Questions pop into my brain:

  Why did they move here?

  Why did they move now?

  School will be out

  in a few weeks,

  so why not wait

  until summer?

  Too Many Puzzles

  For one day.

  At least now

  I know who

  her father is.

  Before we break

  this party up, I ask,

  “Mr. Sánchez? Would

  you please sign my glove?”

  Sure. Have a pen on you?

  “Uh . . .”

  Who carries a pen

  to play baseball?

  I do, says Lily, reaching

  way down inside her bag.

  I have to work hard

  not to roll my eyes.

  She would, of course.

  Then again, I’m glad

  she has one, because now

  I own a guaranteed genuine

  Victor Sánchez signed glove.

  I’ll keep it forever!

  “Thanks! This is awesome.”

  I’ll go get our chairs, says Dad.

  Meet you two at the car.

  See you again, Mr. Sánchez.

  Victor. Please call me Victor.

  First-name basis. Nice.

  We head toward

  the parking lot.

  Lily chatters about

  the weather and how

  surprised she was that

  Little League baseball

  could be so exciting.

  Victor (!) pretends

  to be interested.

  Cat and I fall back

  behind them.

  Finally, she asks, Hey.