“No. Why are you standing in front of my house right now?”
“I saw you lying on your roof. Behind that big tree over there across the street, I politely waited for your love partner to leave.”
I just stare up at Boy21.
He was spying on me, which should freak me out, but for some reason I don’t feel angry. I’m mostly curious about why he came to my house at all.
“Can we sit up there together and identify all we see in the cosmos?” he asks, and then points toward the roof.
I don’t know why but—suddenly, almost involuntarily—I nod once, and then he follows me into my house.
My dad—who picked up an extra one-to-nine-a.m. Friday-night shift and is therefore leaving for work—says, “Are you the new kid?”
“Is that the English-language human term you will call me, Earthling?” Boy21 says. “New kid?”
“Did he just call me Earthling?” Dad says to me. His expression makes him look uncomfortable, like he’s squinting directly into the sun.
I shrug.
“Your grandparents are worried about you,” Dad says to Boy21, staring in disbelief at the N.A.S.A. T-shirt. “Coach called asking if you were here. I’ll just give him a ring back now to let him know where you are.”
Dad goes into the other room to make the call.
From his wheelchair Pop says, “The neighborhood people don’t know you, son. It’s not safe to walk across town at night alone.”
“Nothing on this planet can possibly harm me,” Boy21 says.
Pop says, “I wish that were true, but it ain’t.”
Dad returns and says, “Coach is coming to pick up Russ. You two can wait out front if you want to talk. But I need to go to work now.”
When my dad leaves, we sit on the front steps and Boy21 says, “I’d like to sit with you on your roof in the future and teach you about my home—outer space. You have a calming presence, Finley. Would it be possible to sit on your roof with you in the future?”
No one has ever told me that I have a calming presence. Maybe people think it, but they just don’t say it. “Sure,” I say.
I like the words calming presence much more than White Rabbit or dumb mute.
Calming presence.
I search his face, trying to determine if he’s making fun of me or being ironic, but he’s not—he’s one hundred percent serious, or at least I believe he is.
We sit in silence until a tired-looking Coach pulls up ten minutes later, smiles an embarrassed thank-you to me, and takes Russ away in his truck.
I lie awake all night thinking about Boy21.
11
THE NIGHT BEFORE SCHOOL BEGINS Erin and I are making out on my roof when suddenly she pulls away and says, “Is that Coach’s truck?”
I sit up, peer down over the edge of the gutter, and see the old Ford.
“Finley!” Dad yells from the living room.
Erin and I slide through my bedroom window and jog down the stairs.
“Hope I’m not interrupting anything,” Coach says. He and Dad share a smile.
“No,” Erin says. “Nothing at all.”
“Take a drive with me, Finley?” Coach says.
“Sure thing.”
“We’ll only be ten minutes, Erin. Promise,” Coach says.
“No sweat.” Erin plops onto the couch and takes the remote control from Pop’s hand, because he’s passed-out drunk again with my grandmother’s rosary beads wrapped tightly around his left fist like brass knuckles. There’s a green Jameson whiskey bottle between his legs. “I’ll just watch some TV with my favorite senior citizen.”
Dad shakes his head at Pop’s state, but no one says anything.
As we get into Coach’s truck, I see sweat beads on his forehead and dark spots on his shirt where he has sweated through the fabric. It’s a hot sticky night, but I can tell Coach is nervous.
He drives me around the block, and then parks with the engine running, the air-conditioning on full blast, which feels nice because we don’t have air-conditioning at my house.
“Are you still willing to help Russ?” Coach asks.
I know what he wants me to say, so I say it.
“Good. Here’s the situation,” Coach says. “It took some convincing, but the boy’s agreed to stop talking about outer space and go by Russ Washington. No more Boy21—at least not in school. But given the stress of classes and a new environment, there’s no guarantee that he might not slip back into his routine, so I want you to stick by him. I want you by his side every second of the day. If he has to take a leak, you go with him. Understood?”
It sounds like Coach is preparing me to mark a man in a basketball game, because he’s raising his voice like he does in huddles. He’s being more forceful, and it’s like I’m not doing him a favor anymore, but just doing what I am supposed to do as a member of the basketball team. I’m willing to help, but I feel like the circumstances have changed somehow. Or am I just being paranoid?
“What if we’re not in the same classes?” I ask.
“Don’t worry about that. What time should I tell Mr. Allen to drop off Russ?”
“Drop him off where?”
“At your house, so you can walk to school together.”
Erin and I always walk to school together alone, and that’s my favorite part of the day. I like talking to Erin first thing in the morning, and kissing her too. I think quick and say, “Can Mr. Allen drop Russ off at Erin’s house around seven twenty?”
“Done.”
This way, I can go to Erin’s at seven and spend at least twenty minutes with her alone. It’ll mean waking up a bit earlier, but I don’t mind.
“Finley.”
“Yes.”
Coach reaches over and squeezes my shoulder. “This Russ—he’s special. His doing well here at Bellmont means a lot to me. His father was a close friend.”
I nod.
“You won’t let me down, right?”
“No, sir.”