Read an Excerpt
  A Secret Edge 
 By Robin Reardon  KENSINGTON BOOKS 
 Copyright © 2007   Robin Reardon 
All right reserved. ISBN: 978-0-7582-1927-5 
    Chapter One 
                  Dream a Little Dream    
  It's like most of these dreams, when I'm lucky enough to  have them. The other boy is a little taller than me, dark hair  where I have blond, and deep brown eyes where mine are  blue. His touch electrifies me, and my back arches in response  to the kisses he plants on my neck, my shoulders, my belly.  
     And then I'm sitting up, alone.  
     I throw myself back down onto the bed, embarrassed,  wanting to cry. Wanting to dream it again. The boy had been  no more recognizable than any of the others. So I guess he  was no more or less attainable.  
     I hate what happens when I'm determined to dream  about girls. Which of course I should be doing if I'm trying  to be like the other guys I know. Girls are what they dream  about. But no matter how hard I try, the girl always turns out  to be David Bowie. I barely know who David Bowie is! Just  from a couple of tunes and that weird movie I saw at the retro  theater last year. But there he is in my dreams, sharp bones of  his face, lank hair, scrawny body, calling up feelings every bit  as strong as the dark-eyed boys who haunt me.  
     I'm sixteen years old, for crying out loud! Shouldn't I be  having normal dreams by now? I don't mind the sexiness of  the dreams, but the sex of the people in them ismaking me  crazy. I'm dying to ask someone about this, but there's no one  I can think of to talk to. Not Aunt Audrey, that's for sure. I can  just imagine her response.  
     "It's called a wet dream, Jason."  
     "Yes, Aunt Audrey, I know that. I've been having them for  years. But why is it always boys in them?"  
     "Don't worry about that. It will pass. It's just a phase  you're going through. Did you take the sheets off the bed?"  
     But I do worry about it. I think it means I'm gay.  
     Really, you could ask Aunt Audrey anything, she's so gentle,  so even tempered. And there's something about the fluffy  style of her "prematurely" (she's careful to stress that when she  mentions it) gray hair that gives off a soft warmth.  
     But if I tell Aunt Audrey, there's no way not to tell Uncle  Steve as well. And then I'd have to be prepared for a no-nonsense  answer. Matter-of-fact doesn't come close to how he approaches  life and everything in it. I don't want a no-nonsense approach  to this question. No-nonsense makes it seem like nothing is  more important than anything else. Even me.  
     But that's not fair. All right, they won't let me have my  own cell phone ("When you can afford to pay the bills yourself,  young man ..."), but I know they care for me. I mean, if  they didn't, would they have kept me? I was dumped on their  doorstep at the ripe old age of two, after my parents died in  the car wreck that didn't do more than scrape my tender baby  skin in a few unimportant places.  
     Aunt Audrey has told me that I'm like the child she and  Uncle Steve couldn't have. But we have an understanding, he  and I. I don't bring him anything that isn't really important,  good or bad, and he doesn't make me feel silly for bringing  something to him.  
     Aunt Audrey may be easier to talk to, but she can be  tough as nails when she needs to be. Even a crisis wouldn't  faze her. I know she's cool in a crisis, because the surgeons at  the hospital want her more than any of the other nurses  when they're in the operating theater. But-I need more  than her usual cool reaction, so I don't bring this question to  her.  
     So she wields a knife, in a way, where she works, and-unbeknownst   to her-I wield one where I work as well.  School.  
     Okay, wielding a knife is overstating it. I just carry the  thing around. I'm probably giving the impression that my  school is a dangerous place, which it isn't. We don't even have  metal detectors, or I couldn't carry it. But I decided a long  time ago that I wasn't going to run all the time, away from  the bullies and the tough kids who think I'm easy prey just  because I have this baby face and I'm not very tall. If they believed  I was gay, it would be even worse.  
     Anyway, dream over, I massage myself into something resembling  calm and roll away from the wet spot. And before I  know I'm asleep again, the alarm goes off.  
     The day begins like any typical day, despite how important  it will turn out to be. Despite the fact that it will change  my life. Aunt Audrey has already left for the hospital and  Uncle Steve is still in the shower by the time I'm dressed-his   schedule at the vocational school where he teaches math  is later than Aunt Audrey's-so I grab something from the  kitchen and gnaw on it while I'm dressing. I could catch the  bus that picks up kids who live over a mile away from  school-I'm a mile and a half-but unless it's pouring rain, I  walk. And I walk superfast, to keep my breathing in shape for  my favorite "subject." Track. It's spring-training time. I don't  pretend I'm Olympic material. I just love it.  
     I love the long-distance run, when you feel like you're  about to die and if possible you'd hurry it up because you feel  like crap, and then suddenly you reach this place where your  mind and body are the same, no difference, no boundaries,  and you feel like there are no boundaries for you anywhere. I  also love the short dashes, the sharpness of my senses as I wait  for the signal, the huge burst of energy that the signal releases,  the feeling that, once I'm under way, no one can catch me. Most  guys are much better at one or the other-distance or dash-and   it's true I'm faster on the dash. But I love all of it.  
     Most of all I think I love it because now, now that my  knife and I have scared most of the goons away, I run because  I want to. Not because they want to make me.  
     Today after school the trials for track intramurals start.  One thing I'm competing in is the hundred-yard dash, but  my real goal is to be anchorman for our relay team. Anchor is  the last of four runners, always the fastest. So, yeah, I want to  be picked for best.  
     My last class of the day is English Lit. We have this teacher  who seems to think everyone should be able to write. But,  you know, some people just don't have it in them. Not everyone  who can construct complete sentences is a writer, and  many kids can't even do that. I guess Mr. Williams is trying to  improve this situation, and I wish him luck, but-really.  
     Take that kid who always sits halfway down the room beside  the wall like he's trying to avoid being noticed. If you sit  at the front, you look too eager; at the back, you're hiding and  really begging the teacher to pick on you. So Robert Hubble  sits halfway down. But he can't bring himself to sit in the  middle of the room. He has to hug the wall, like if he were  put to it he'd know what was behind him.  
     Actually, he looks like the kind of guy who'd know what  to do if he were up against it. He's tall, heavy in a powerful  way, with a face so homely it's almost attractive. Not your  typical A student. And he can't write, that's certain. I've heard  some of his attempts. But he seems like an okay guy, just not  someone I have much in common with.  
     I glance at Robert as Williams is giving us today's in-class  essay assignment: write a character sketch of Jesus. Robert's  jaw falls, and he fixes a kind of empty stare at Williams. I can  imagine him saying to himself, "What? You want me to do  what?"  
     I dig in. I love this stuff. I might be a writer when I finish  college. Who knows?  
  
     I stop at my locker on the way to the trials to pick up  books I'll need for homework tonight. As I slam it shut, I'm  greeted with the unpleasant grin of Jimmy Walsh.  
     Once upon a time, in a far-off land, I was pretty good  friends with Jimmy Walsh. Most of the kids in class liked him.  He had this really confident air about him, he was good in  sports, and some of the girls thought he was cute.  
     He used to read over my shoulder to get my math answers  in fifth grade; that's how I first got to know him. At first  I didn't like that, but then one day he stood up for me when  this other kid (whose name I've forgotten, which is fine with  me) deliberately threw a softball right at me. It was between  innings, and I'd just made it to home base and put our team  ahead. The guy pitching for the other team was pissed because  he'd thrown too late to put me out. The catcher threw  the ball back to second base, where the batter was headed,  and put him out, but I'd made it. There was this signal that  went between the pitcher and the second baseman just as the  teams were starting to exchange positions. I didn't think anything  of it until the ball came smacking into my ribs.  
     "Hey!" I heard through a fog of pain. "What d'you think  you're doin'?" It was Jimmy's voice. I turned a little, saw him  throw his hat on the ground, and then he launched himself  bodily into the pitcher. The coach broke it up pretty quickly  and wasn't any too pleased with either of them, but he'd seen  me get hit so he knew what it was about.  
     I had no objection to letting Jimmy cheat off my math assignments  after that. And we were friends, sort of-considering  that we're pretty different people-for a couple of years  before it started to cool off. He used to come over to my  house for dinner and stuff, and I was at his sometimes. His  parents and my aunt and uncle never made friends in any particular  way, probably because they didn't have even as much in  common as Jimmy and I did.  
     The beginning of the end was when Dane Caldwell moved  into our school district. Dane had to make a splash right away,  I guess, because it didn't take him long to start looking for people  to pick on. You know the type? It's like he's got to prove he's  a man by pushing real hard at anyone or anything that doesn't  measure up to some masculine standard in his head. I guess I  didn't measure up, because it wasn't long before he started  pushing at me.  
     I'll never forget the day he turned Jimmy against me for  real. I was fourteen and starting to look good as a runner.  Starting to be competition for Jimmy, actually, and I'd just  proven it by beating him in a race during phys ed. And Dane  was smart. He didn't taunt me. He taunted Jimmy.  
     "Walsh, you gonna let that sissy boy beat you like that?"  
     There was a little more exchange between them that I  don't remember now, and nothing happened right away. But  on my way home from school that day, they followed me.  Both of them. If memory serves, I put up a pretty good fight;  I'd been in a few scuffles in years gone by, and maybe I'd  never be a fighter, but I was no chicken, either. But finally  Dane got my arms behind me and held me.  
     "Give it to him, Jimmy!" he shouted.  
     I looked right at Jimmy's eyes, panting through gritted  teeth, and said, "Don't let him do this to you. Don't let him  turn you into a bully."  
     He plunged his fist into my stomach. And again. And I'm  not sure what happened after that, except that some lady came  out of nowhere and yelled at them. They ran, and she half  carried me down the street and into her house.  
     "Who were those boys?" she demanded. "What are their  names?"  
     I was in a hell of a lot of pain at this point, but I managed  to say, "Never saw them before." Even today I'm not sure why  I lied. Some misplaced loyalty to Jimmy, maybe. Anyway, she  made me give her my home phone number, and Aunt Audrey  came to get me.  
     And the demands for information started all over. "Jason,  I insist you tell me! Those boys have to be punished."  
     By now there was no doubt in my mind that I had to  keep quiet. I mean, think of the terror campaign they'd have  gone on if I'd ratted! Thank God Uncle Steve reacted differently;  I think he understood.  
     "Audrey, if the boy doesn't know them, he doesn't know  them." Then to me, "You okay, son? How bad are you hurt?"  
     "I'll be all right. Really. It hurt a lot before, but it's better."  And it was better, sort of; but what hurt the most was knowing  that Jimmy had let Dane make his dark side too powerful  to be my friend anymore, probably forever.  
     The next day at school it was like Jimmy had never stood  up for me for anything. From then on, every time I saw him  or Dane, and especially if they were together-which was the  case more and more-they'd make these smirky faces. Pretty  soon they started calling me sissy and wuss, and they'd do things  like push my tray off the table in the cafeteria. The school  year was almost up, and I knew I wouldn't have either of them  in many of my classes next year, but I was starting to get a little  worried. It was bad enough when I was little, getting picked  on and slugged occasionally. But a ten-year-old can hurt you  only so bad. When the bully is fifteen, it raises the stakes. It  wasn't out of the question for me to get really hurt. And I was  beginning to feel afraid, which of course is like waving raw  steak under the nose of a hungry dog.  
     That's when I decided to arm myself. I searched eBay  until I found someone willing to let me pay for a switchblade  with a bank check. Now it goes with me almost everywhere.  Not many people know about it, but I do. And that's what  counts.  
     The look on Jimmy's face right now as we stand here by  my locker, like he thinks I'm the scum of the earth, makes me  glad that knife is with me. It gives me the courage to look  blankly at him, like I don't give a shit what he thinks of me,  as I give my locker combo a few turns. I'm about to walk  away when he decides he'll have to speak first.  
     "Running today, are ya?"  
     I don't answer, so he has to try again.  
     "Think you'll beat me? Think again."  
     I turn my back on him and walk-saunter-away. He's in  the competition for short dashes. Not relays. But I'm trying  out for short dash as well, and I'll beat him if I can. He's fast,  but his performance is inconsistent.  
     On my warm-up jog around the track, I pass by the high  jump. There's only one guy there, practicing, someone I don't  recognize. At first I think he's black, but as I get closer I see  he's more likely from India or something. His hair has a beautiful  gloss to it, and his face-intense with concentration-transfixes   me. It's a big school, over three hundred in my year  alone, and there are lots of guys in my class year I don't know.  But I'm surprised I've never noticed this fellow before.  
     I slow to a walk and watch as he starts his run. He's so  graceful, it's almost like slo-mo. There's no doubt he knows  just where he wants to take off from, and there's no doubt he  does it. And then he's soaring. I'm motionless now, except for  my eyes, which are following him in this incredible flight. His  body twists slowly, gently, and when he lands, every part of  him is where it should be.  
     I'm still there, staring, when he walks around from behind  the jump. He sees me. He just stands there, poised and perfect,  staring back at me. It's like he wants me to admire him.  Maybe he does.  
     I shake myself out a little and jog back to where Coach  Everett is gathering the runners. But I can't shake the face of  the high jumper. The arched black eyebrows, the curve of the  full lips-these stay with me.  
     There will be only one relay team from our school in the  intramural competitions, so only four of us will be picked as  finalists. But there are about seventeen guys waiting to compete,  so we do a few elimination heats.  
     We're down to eight guys in no time, which means that  we'll race four and four against each other. Then Coach will  mix us up and we'll do it again to get the final team. In relay,  it isn't just speed that counts. If you drop the baton in the  handoff-well, it's pretty much over. You still pick it up and  run, but just so you can say you did.  
     For the first of these final heats, Coach puts me in the  starting position. Not what I want, but it's the second fastest,  and you have to get off to a good start, so there's some glory  in it. We win.  
     Mixed up again, I'm anchor this time, but we don't have  the inside track. This means we start farther ahead, but it's  harder on the curves anyway. Maybe it's just a psychological  thing, but it seems real. Those of us in nonstart positions jog  off at angles toward our posts to wait for the baton.  
     Since I'm anchor, I see the whole race as it happens.  Denny Shriver is our start, and he gets a really good launch,  exploding from the line like a champagne cork. He's handing  his baton off to Paul Roche ahead of the other team's handoff,  so we're in great shape. I almost don't want this, because I  shine better if we're a little behind, but I'd rather have a sure  win than risk wishing for a slow runner.  
     For some reason Paul is in some kind of frenzy and he  runs like I've never seen him. He gets to Norm Landers way  ahead of the other team. Paul is about to hand off just as I'm  starting to dance a little so that I'll be ready to pace with  Norm when he approaches me, and suddenly the baton is on  the ground. I can't tell whose fault it is. It doesn't even matter.  What matters now is how quickly Norm can pick it up  and how fast I can run. Our lead is gone.  
     I don't even look at the other team's runner. I don't allow  myself. Right now the baton is everything. In a minute, the  finish line will be everything. Norm's pumping toward me,  grimacing with effort. And then all I can see is that baton.  
  (Continues...)  
     
 
 Excerpted from A Secret Edge by Robin Reardon  Copyright © 2007   by Robin Reardon.   Excerpted by permission.
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