of the game.
I wonder what heâll do when he figures it out!
Stealing
The thunder
Of a stick check
To his right shoulder.
I bear the pain in silence
For fear that Brontë might see,
Scraped knee
Hidden by my jeans,
I could leave but choose to stay,
To surreptitiously sustain the blows,
Because if I am now Tennysonâs project,
Itâs my right to make him my project as well.
Final whistle,
A Raptor victory!
Tennyson scored three goals,
And barely broke a sweat while doing it.
I kiss Brontë in the excitement of the moment.
Can she tell that Iâm drenched beneath my Windbreaker?
And what if
When I get home,
Uncle Hoyt sees me,
Notices all the fresh bruises,
And knows that Iâve taken things,
From far beyond the bounds of our family?
I shudder
At the thought of him
Knowing about my secret life.
I could tell myself it would be all right,
That he could do no worse than heâs already done,
But thereâs a pit in my uncleâs soul,
and Iâve never seen the bottom.
I hope I never do.
30) STUFF
Brewster said I should always be the rag doll, but I never liked that much. I told him Iâd rather be Plastic Boy instead, cuz thatâs a good name for a superhero.
âYouâre no superhero,â Brew told me, âand donât go thinking that you are. Think rag doll , not superhero.â
He says that cuza the time I jumped off the roof and broke his arm. Maybe heâs right, though, on accounta I canât be Plastic Boy since I donât stretch. Still, I wish I could have myself a cooler secret identity for the times when Uncle Hoyt goes foul.
I wanted to tell Brontë-saurus about all that stuff, but Brew said, âA secret identityâs gotta stay secret.â
âEven from her?â I asked.
â Especially from her,â he saidâalthough I canât see why cuz they had been talking so much, itâs like theyâre inside each otherâs brains.
Brontë-saurus swims good. I know this because of the time I taught her to do a cannonball, and then I beat her in a race across the pool. It was a great day, but it got a little scary because she saw all that stuff on Brewâs bodyâthe stuff weâre not allowed to talk about, like my secret identity. She wanted to know how he got all the bruisesâshe thought it was Uncle Hoyt hitting him and stuff.
âCody, does Uncle Hoyt beat me?â Brew asked me while looking in my eyes. âTell the truth.â
And so I did just like he wanted. I told the truth.
âNo,â I told Brontë-saurus, âUncle Hoytâs afraid of Brewster,â which is Godâs honest truth. Uncle Hoyt never hits Brewâ¦but thatâs only a half of what the truth is, and a half-truth is worse than a lie cuz itâs harder to figure out.
I could tell she knew something, but she didnât know what she knew. I could also tell that Brew wanted her all lost and confused about it, which meant they werenât inside each otherâs brains as much as I thought, which made me feel good.
That day at the pool was fine and sunny and cold, just like the day Iâd jumped off the roof. That was back in first grade before I had any sense. See, I was tryinâ to work my way up to it bit by bit. First I jumped from a chair, then I jumped from the porch, then I practiced jumping from the kitchen window over and over till I could do it and land on my feet easy.
The next step was the roof. Thatâs what you call logic.
So I got the ladder out of the shed and climbed up there,and I guess when I was climbinâ thatâs when Brew got home from Saturday schoolâwhich he goes to a lot since heâs always getting tardies because of the times Uncle Hoyt gets odd and wonât let him leave the house in the morning.
The thing is, that day I took the ladder and climbed up on the roof, I didnât even know Brew was home. Wasnât like I did it on
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