well . . .â
Then I realized I didnât actually know how to finish what I was trying to say. In fact, I didnât have any clue as to what I should say to him at all.
But Mr. Cosentino, obviously the father of the son, saved meâas Joey had so many times. He shook my hand and smiled.
âOh! Ryan Dean! Joey used to talk about you all the time! Itâs so nice to finally meet you,â Mr. Cosentino said.
And as I shook Mr. Cosentinoâs hand, standing there in the slight drizzle that fell over Pine Mountainâs parking lot, bleeding from my stinging right knee, I thought, Hmm . . . I wonder what Joey said about me, because it couldnât possibly be good, since Joey was constantly saving my butt from terrible fates only a half-wit loser could get himself into, like fooling around with another girl when I was madly in love with Annie Altman, or gambling and being talked into drinking alcohol with Joey and some of the other guys on the team, or having my face busted open a couple of times by getting into stupid fightsâwell, not stupid fights , because God knows Iâd always win in a stupid fight, just look right here at my torn school pants and bloody right knee and thereâs all the proof youâd need, but . . . I really just wanted to know what Joey told them about me!
But I couldnât say anything at all because I was so choked up over the fact that I was actually shaking hands with my best friend Joey Cosentinoâs father.
Then Mr. Cosentino leaned toward the car and said, âSheri, Nico, this is the boy Joey told us aboutâRyan Dean. Remember?â
I still needed to know what, exactly, Joey had said.
Doors opened on the other side of the van, and I realized that I was now actually afraid of talking to the Cosentino family, but I had kind of painted myself into a corner. And I also managed to get a bloody knee and torn pants in the process.
I got choked up like a thirteen-year-old girl at a boy-band concert when Nico got out of the van and stood between me and Mrs. Cosentino.
He eyed me up and down. He was as unsmiling as heâd been inside the headmasterâs office.
âYou ate shit over there, bro.â
Okay, so my knee was pretty bloody and Nico just broed me for the second time in less than fifteen minutes.
âI . . . Uh . . . Mrs. Cosentino, itâs very nice to meet you. And, Nico, Joey used to keep a picture of you in his room. Thatâs why I recognized you. And I just . . . I . . .â
Mrs. Cosentino nodded and smiled at me. âI understand, Ryan Dean. Really. We know how much you all meant to Joey. Really we do, honey.â
Joeyâs mom melted my heart.
Nico began sidling his way back into the van. He said, âWell, nice meeting you. We got to go, though.â
And my voice cracked when I said, âI know you probably have to leave, but if you ever come backâmaybe to watch us play rugby or somethingâit would be . . . I mean, Iâd really like to maybe hang out and talk to you, Nico. Or, you know, we canât have phones and stuff, but if you wrote a letter to me here at PM, Iâd write you back. Or draw something. I draw.â
And then Joeyâs brother, Nico, turned back from the edge of the vanâssliding door and said, âThanks, bro, but I donât really need to talk about things.â
Then he climbed inside and pulled shut the door.
Mr. Cosentino gave me an embarrassed glance, and Joeyâs mom looked a little hurt and saddened.
And before they left, she said to me, âIâm really sorry about that, Ryan Dean.â
Yeah. Me too.
CHAPTER NINETEEN
âWHAT HAPPENED TO YOUR PANTS?â
Sam Abernathyâour team manager and the guy I had just nearly filed divorce papers onâcaught me on my way into the locker room as he carried out two heavy baskets of water bottles for Coach M. The kid
Aravind Adiga
Joanne Rocklin
Rebecca Crowley
Amit Chaudhuri
Paul Reiser
Ann Mayburn
Yasunari Kawabata
Rebecca Lorino Pond
Amy Lynn Green
Aimée and David Thurlo