Page 3 of The Shadow Club


  The breeze played with the dying leaves above us. The chill got stronger. Before, I had just felt nasty. Now I felt weird. Weird and uncomfortable—with myself, and with that question. Do I wish L'Austin Space had never been born? Yes. Yes, I wished that. As much as I hated myself for wishing that, deep down, really deep down, I did feel that way, and I couldn't change that. It was scary.

  "Cheryl . . . I'm spooked out."

  "Me, too," she said.

  "It's getting cold . . ." I said.

  "Maybe we should go in."

  Cheryl went first, and I followed her down.

  "You really do feel that way, too, huh?"

  "I don't want to talk about that anymore. Let's talk about something nice."

  But we didn't talk about anything nice. We didn't talk much about anything at all. That good feeling we had when we first climbed into the tree house was gone, and wouldn't come back for the rest of the night. We went in, watched ten minutes of TV with her brother, then I hopped on my bike and rode home. I tried to chase that eerie feeling away by burying my head in that first night's homework.

  It worked. By morning the feeling was gone. I felt like my old self and went on as if what we had discovered about ourselves in the tree house that night meant absolutely nothing at all.

  Ignoring that night was a mistake—not the first one, and not the last one either. Maybe that feeling was meant to be a warning, a bright red alarm flashing in our eyes. If it was, we wore both too stupid to notice it.

  The Fire and the Agony

  PEOPLE WERE MILLING around the phys-ed bulletin board before classes. Ours wasn't the only team choosing captains that day, and everyone there waited impatiently for each coach to put up the results.

  I wasn't one of the kids waiting. Sure, I wanted to he captain, but I didn't want to think about it. The more I thought about it, the more worried I would get, and I'd feel miserable until the results went up. Better to think about anything else until then. I thought about my new teachers, my old friends, what I would have for lunch, anything but the track team and Austin Pace in his million-dollar Aeropeds that never got dirty and looked like they came from planet Krypton, or someplace like that.

  I wandered around a bit before the homeroom bell rang, looking for people I hadn't seen the day before. People really do change in one summer. Charlie Garcias had grown likesix inches since June, certain locations on Abbie Singer had begun to inflate, if you know what I mean, and half of everyone I knew seemed to have gotten rid of their braces. I talked to Ralphy Sherman, who said that he made a movie in Hollywood over the summer. Ralphy was always good for a laugh, because he had never uttered a word of truth in his entire life.

  Pretty soon I forgot all about the track team, and was ina good mood—such a good mood that I even said hello to Tyson McGaw. He grunted back, then five minutes later got himself into a fight with some kid whose name I don't remember.

  Watching Tyson get into fights was a school tradition. Personally, I never got into a real fight with him. Like I said before, Tyson fought like an animal, and I wanted nothing todo with that. Just looking at him you could tell that something wasn't quite right; his eyes were kind of far away, like he wasn't seeing you, and his stringy, matted hair was just plain ugly—it seemed no amount of combing could help that. Tyson was definitely not a mother's dream.

  Mr. Greene saw the fight and ran down the hall. Mr. Greene was a vice principal, but doubled as the school guidance counselor, which must have been a tough job, since so many kids go wacko during junior high.

  After Mr. Greene had broken up the fight (which wasn't much of a fight; it was more like Tyson doing an impersonation of the Tasmanian devil), everyone in the hall began to applaud and laugh at Tyson as he continued struggling with Greene. I have to admit, I laughed a little, too—like I said, it was a school tradition.

  Mr. Greene held him as he struggled, then Tyson turned to Greene and screamed out a whole lot of words I don't want to repeat, and started breathing like a bull ready to charge.

  "You know what he did?" he screamed at Greene.

  "What did he do, Tyson?"

  "He called me a slimeball!"

  I laughed right away—I just couldn't help it. It was the way he said it, with all that anger in his voice, long and drawn out: "sliyyyyyym-ballll."

  Everyone laughed, but I guess I must have laughed the loudest, because Tyson broke away from Greene and stomped up to me.

  "You think that's funny, huh?" he yelled, almost ready to pull back his fist and hit me.

  "You touch me, Tyson, and I swear I'll flatten you!" I said. "I'll . . . I'll hang you by your toenails over a bear trap!"

  That one really sent him for a loop. He looked at me with those weird eyes, trying to figure out how that would feel. For a split second, I felt bad for him. Here he was, thin nutty kid in a frenzy, and everyone was laughing at him. He must have felt terrible. I almost felt like saying, "It's OK, Tyson, you're not a slimeball, take it easy," just to make him feel better, but then everyone around me began to laugh even harder, and Tyson stormed off.

  Greene gave me this dirty look that said, "Bear trap? I'll give you bear trap! Bang! Zoom!" and ran after Tyson. Yes, school was the same as ever.

  As the homeroom bell rang, I heard a voice behind me.

  "Jared, I'd like to speak with you for a minute."

  I recognized the voice right away. I turned to see Coach Shuler. You know that feeling you get when you think something great is gonna happen, and your heart misses a beat, and you get shivers down your spine? Well, that's what I felt just then. Why would Coach Shuler pull me aside to talk to me unless he had good news for me about the captaincy?

  "Hi, Coach, what's up?" I said cheerfully.

  "Got a minute?"

  "Yeah."

  "Great. Why don't you come into my office."

  I followed him down the hall, and into the gym, where it was much quieter. Our footsteps echoed in the huge empty gym as we crossed it. It was cold and the air had the sour smell of the floor varnish. We went into the gym office.

  "Have a seat," he said, then he picked up his clipboard and began to look at it. He sat in the other chair, behind the desk. "I totaled up the results," he said.

  "Yeah?" I said, trying to sound like I didn't really care.

  "It was pretty close."

  "Yeah?"

  He looked up from his clipboard. I really couldn't read his expression. He had a poker face, I guess; you could never tell what was in his head. He stalled, keeping me in suspense. I didn't have a poker face; I knew all the expectation was in my eyes. In my lap I had my fingers crossed so hard that my knuckles were turning white.

  "You didn't get it, Jared. I'm sorry."

  At first it was like I didn't quite hear him. My fingers were still crossed, as if crossing them could change what he had said. I still held my breath, but then what my ears had heard made its way into my brain.

  You know that sinking feeling—the kind you get about ten seconds before you realize that you're going to throw up? Well, I didn't feel like I was going to throw up, but that sinking feeling stayed around for a long time.

  Before I went into his office, I had been prepared to lose, but then he called me in, and I was sure that I had won. Why couldn't he have just let me find out when he posted it? I could have handled that. It wouldn't have been so bad; I would have just looked and walked away. But now he had gotten my hopes up, and I couldn't just walk away; I had to sit there and feel lousy.

  "Like I said," continued the coach, "it was a close race. You and Austin were neck and neck all the way." He began to fiddle with his clipboard. If it wasn't his clipboard, it was his whistle, if it wasn't his whistle it was his glasses—he always fiddled with something. "Listen, I know how much you wanted to be captain, and because of all your hard work, I'mgoing to make you a very special offer. As runner-up, you are entitled to something very special, so I'm making you assistant coach."

  "Assistant coach?" I said. It mig
ht not sound so bad to you, but you have to understand that assistant coach was a position usually given to some younger kid who was not a good enough runner to be on the team. He might as well have told me I was team mascot. Assistant coach!

  "That's right."

  "Well, what do I get to do?"

  "Take attendance, get equipment, stuff like that."

  Well, what was I supposed to say to that? Austin gets all the glory and power of being team captain, and I get to take attendance. I tried to be enthusiastic, but I just couldn't, and the coach could see it in my eyes. I didn't have a poker face.

  "Thanks," I said.

  "You don't seem too happy about it."

  "No, I'm happy. I'm just a little upset about not being captain. That's all."

  "Sure, I understand. You can hang around here for a few minutes if you like. I'll give you a late pass for homeroom."

  "Naah, that's OK." I'm sure he could tell by my voice that it wasn't OK. I didn't have a poker voice either.

  "Listen," he said, "there's always high school."

  "Right," I said, silently thinking how L'Austin Spaccwould win again when we were seniors in high school. "Thanks," I said.

  "Least I could do. You're a good kid, Jared. I feel bad for you."

  "Naah, don't feel bad for me. I don't want you feeling bad for me."

  "Well, I mean that I think sometimes life gives people the short end of the stick, you know, and I think you deserve more."

  "Thanks," I said, for the twelve-hundredth time.

  "See you this afternoon?"

  "Yep."

  "Be early," he said, "so you can take attendance."

  The hall was empty when I left the gym, except for one kid; none other than L'Austin Space himself was standing outside the gym doors. He was waiting for me. It wasn't a coincidence.

  "Oh, you spoke to the coach already, huh?" he said.

  "Yep."

  "So he told you I won?"

  "How did you already know?"

  "He spoke to me first," said Austin. "You don't think he'd tell you before he told me, do you?" Austin waited for an answer, but I didn't give him one.

  "I bet you'll like being team secretary," he said.

  "Assistant coach!"

  "All it really is is team secretary. Hey, I'll make sure to give you lots of memos to type. Maybe you can come over to my house sometime and answer some phones," he said, laughing.

  I turned and walked down the hall. He followed, his Aeropeds gliding across the floor. I wanted to step on them, and leave nice gray tread marks on the snow-white leather toes.

  "It's not secretary," I said.

  "All right, 'gopher' then."

  I stopped. "What?"

  "You know, Gopher: 'hey Jared, go-pher this, hey Jared, go-pher that, hey Jared, go-pher, go-pher, go-pher.'"

  I just scowled at him. He saw the anger in my unpoker face, and laughed. "Just kidding," he said, in the nastiest, most obnoxious tone a person could come up with, then he laughed harder and turned away, his Aeropeds bouncing off down the hallway, squeaking on the floor.

  I felt more humiliated than I'd felt in a long time as I walked down the hall. It wasn't the fact that I was assistant couch that bothered me, it was the fact that Austin knew first, and as usual, made fun of me, calling me "Gopher." It was bad enough to feel hidden in his shadow, but to be humiliated; that was something else. He was twisting the knife.

  How would I feel if Austin Pace had never been born? Let's not talk about it.

  The alarm went off at 1:30. That's right, you guessed it: another school fire. I can't say I wasn't glad to hear the alarm bell; I hadn't been able to concentrate all day because of what had happened that morning. At least now I could feel angry without having to pay attention to teachers at the same time.

  Used to be nobody raised much of a fuss when the fire alarm went off. The teachers would just get the class up and funnel them "in an orderly manner" down the stairway and out into the field. Now it was much quicker, and much more serious. Used to be they were all drills or false alarms, but last year there were three real fires. The last one burned down the gym.

  Now, as we marched into the hall, I could swear I already smelled smoke.

  The scene out in the field was much more chaotic than any of the teachers could stand for. Kids were running in the field, and the neat little rows of classes were breaking down into mobs of kids—a good many of them pressing up against the fence to see the smoke pouring out of the cafeteria. It wasn't a whole lot of smoke, but it was enough to cause a commotion.

  I didn't really care to watch the fire; I had my own problems to think about. If I sound heartless, it isn't because I didn't care about anyone left in the school. I had overheard the principal say that the school had been cleared, and there was nothing to worry about, except for the cafeteria burning down (which, believe me, is exactly what the cafeteria deserved).

  While the cafeteria smoked, I fumed, still filled with the auger Austin had put in me that morning.

  "I don't want to talk about it!" I told Cheryl when she asked me about the track team. She knew exactly what I meant when I said, "And don't ask again."

  "Well, join the club," she said.

  "Why, what's wrong with you?"

  "Oh, nothing," she said. "It's just that the play they're doing this year is Annie."

  "So?"

  "So, guess what snotty little brat is absolutely perfect for the role?"

  "Rebecca's trying out?"

  "I don't even think she has to. They'll just look at her and give her the role."

  Cheryl continued to complain at me about Rebecca and other things. I turned to look at the school. The firefighters were standing by the fire truck, doing nothing in particular, which meant that the fire was not a big one and had been put out right away. The cafeteria had been saved, although it would probably smell like smoke for the rest of the year.

  We all knew there would be no more school that day; not till they were positive there was no fire left, and the building had a chance to air out. Still, they couldn't let us go home until 3:00, and so the school yard began to resemble a junior high school riot, with kids playing all sorts of unruly games that made the teachers all start pulling out their hair.

  " . . . a club," said Cheryl.

  "Huh?" I asked, not having heard her.

  "I said we should form a club of all the kids who are second-best."

  I laughed. "Yeah, right . . . and one by one do away with everyone in our way!Mwaaah-ha-haa!"

  "No, I'm serious. We could have a club just for fun-- something that only we could have, and none of the 'unbeatable' kids could be in it, a second-best club!"

  "That's a stupid idea," I said.

  "No it's not! We could all go and do things, and have fun, and really make the 'unbeatable' kids jealous that we thought of it before they did. We'll be one up on them for a change."

  "Yeah? Who would be in this club?"

  "I don't know. We'd have to think about it for a while, and come up with some names. I'll bet there are lots of kids who'd want to be in it—my brother, for instance."

  "Nobody else'll want to do it. They'll laugh at us."

  "But if they don't, Jared, we could be starting something big, a secret club that will go on for years after we've gone on to high school!"

  I thought about this. Cheryl always had a way of convincing me of things. But this time she wasn't the one who convinced me. It was someone else.

  "Hey, Jared," someone called. It was that familiar voice, a voice I didn't want to hear. I could almost see those Aeropeds and that red hair, and those long bony arms.

  "Hey, Jared, wanna race?" asked Austin. "First race of the season."

  So this was it. The challenge. Austin was always the one to challenge first. Usually he waited until the second week, when he had seen me run and was absolutely sure he'd be able to beat me. This time he asked on the second day, and there were too many kids around for me to turn down the challenge.
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  "Don't you think it'd be better if we waited till the field was clear?" I said.

  "Isn't this clear enough?"

  I turned around. Sure enough, the field was clear enough to race. Austin had come over with about ten kids, and more kids were joining us, because everyone knew what he was up to, and everyone knew about our rivalry.

  "Maybe we should wait until your legs grow some more," he said. Everyone laughed. I laughed, too; better to be laughed with than laughed at, right? Inside I wasn't laughing, though.

  "Fine, then," I said. "Right now."

  Austin smiled that crocodile smile. "Greg, go about sixty yards, and judge us." Greg Miller, one of the new seventh graders on the team, obeyed, as if he had been given an order by God.

  So this is where it begins, I thought, this year's competition. This year's war. I felt strong, I felt ready to run, I felt like I always felt when I raced with Austin—that maybe this time I would beat him.

  We got down into starting position, then Austin got up.

  "Wait," he said, and took off his precious shoes, then his socks. He was going to run barefoot. "OK." He got back down. "Ready to lose?" he asked.

  I didn't answer.

  Martin Bricker got ready to start us, as more and more kids turned to watch. Even teachers were watching. So this is where it begins.

  "On your mark . . . get set . . . go!"

  I took off like a bullet, cutting through the wind and pounding the grass with every last bit of my strength. I didn't turn to look, but I could see in the corner of my eye that we were neck and neck.

  Ten yards were gone.

  I looked toward Greg, down the field, and concentrated on turning everything I had into power.

  This is for every time you beat me in races as a kid!

  I pushed harder.

  And this is for when you came back to do it again last year!

  I pushed harder.

  And this is for how you made me feel this morning!

  I pushed harder.

  We were still neck and neck.

  Thirty yards were gone. Thirty to go.

  The cheers faded away behind us.

  And this is for challenging me in front of the whole school, and this is for everything you'll ever try to do to me for the rest of our lives, and this is for those stupid running shoes you wear!