The twins came home from school on Friday to a steaming kitchen and a very frazzled mother.
“Hi, girls—ow!” said Mrs. Sackett, quickly banging the oven door closed. “That’s the second time I’ve burned myself in half an hour,” she said, sucking on the back of her hand. “Have I mentioned that I am not a baker?”
“Yes,” said Alex. “But Mom, I appreciate what you’re doing. It’s really important to Daddy, and it’s fantastic how well you’re carrying out your duty as the coach’s wife.”
Ava frowned at her sister and moved into the kitchen to help their mother shovel warm cookies onto the cooling rack. “You make it sound like this is 1955, Alex,” she said. “This must stink, doing all this PTA stuff,” she said to their mom. “When there’s so much other stuff you could be doing.”
Mrs. Sackett wiped her forehead with the back of her hand, leaving a streak of flour behind. “It’s not like your father is kicking back and watching TV,” she said. “He’s working hard too. In fact, when he got home late last night, he stayed up past midnight and baked as many batches as he could stay awake for.”
“That’s so sweet!” said Alex excitedly. “And we’ll help you with the rest, won’t we, Ave?”
Ava was already stacking cooled cookies onto plates to make room for the next batch. It was hot, despite the blasting air-conditioning, and her short hair stuck out in spikes. Alex made a mental note to try to interest her sister in stylish headbands. They’d look so cool and sophisticated on her.
Coach and Tommy returned from practice just as Alex was taking the final batch of cookies out of the oven.
“Mom and Ava are upstairs getting ready,” she said to them. “And I’m about to head up too. There’s sandwich stuff for dinner because we’re heading off to the Activities Fair. Are you going to come too, Daddy?”
Coach shook his head. He looked tired. “I better not,” he said. “I’ll just be ambushed, and this evening is for you girls, not me.”
He headed upstairs to confer with Mrs. Sackett, leaving Alex and Tommy alone in the kitchen. In a conspiratorial whisper, Alex reported on their progress with the anniversary dinner.
“Ava wants a violin player to serenade them at the table,” she said dubiously. “She thinks you might know someone?”
Tommy was thoughtful. “I just might,” he said. “I’ll get back to you on that.”
Ava, Alex, and Mrs. Sackett pulled into a space in the vast Ashland Middle School parking lot, which was already a sea of cars.
“So you girls know what you’re going to sign up for, right?” asked Mrs. Sackett. “Because honestly, I’m exhausted. I have to work the bake sale table for an hour, and then I’d love to get out of here, if you’ll be ready. I think trying to field questions about Daddy’s offensive strategies is going to make me even more tired!”
Alex giggled. “We’ll be fast, Mom,” she said. “I have my list: student government, newspaper, debate team, math club, model UN, and community service.”
“Not the Human Genome Code-Cracking Club too?” teased Ava.
Alex sniffed. “All these clubs are good résumé builders. Besides, I have to have backups if I don’t win the election for class president.”
“Well, I’ll be done in five minutes,” said Ava. “I’m just signing up for one thing.”
As they got out of the car, Mrs. Sackett handed each of the girls a heavy shoe box, which they’d helped line with wax paper and fill with cookies. “Just leave these on the refreshment table and you’re free.”
They entered the double doors leading into the gym. Alex was overwhelmed by the vast crowd of kids and parents roaming from table to table, talking and laughing. Representatives for the activities were stationed at each table to answer questions and direct sign-ups.
After dropping off her box of cookies, Ava set off to find the football table and was soon absorbed into the crowd. Alex looked around, wondering what she should sign up for first, and spotted the cheerleading table, and right next to it, the marching squad table. There was Lindsey, and there was Emily, both surrounded by hordes of laughing, chatting girls. She thought fleetingly of signing up for cheerleading tryouts, but quickly dismissed it. She was too uncoordinated, and at AMS the cheerleading was top-notch. As fun as it looked, Alex knew she would only humiliate herself if she tried out.
She scanned the crowd for Corey. There he was, sitting at the football table, looking gorgeous and jock-y. Her heart gave a leap. Had he seen her? He wasn’t facing her direction.
Oh. And there was Ava, also at the football table, talking to him. Is she really going to sign up for football? Alex thought. It was one thing when it was Pee Wee football in Boston, but middle school football in Texas? She wondered how big of a deal this would be, and how big of a deal Ava could handle. . . .
Ava wrote her name on the clipboard. She was really signing up for football.
She was aware that the boys standing around the table had gone quiet. That they were all staring at her as she put the pen down and straightened up. At least Corey was smiling at her.
“Awesome,” he said. “What position do you play?”
“Kicker,” she replied. “At least, that’s what I was on my old team.”
“That’s a position that requires a lot of finesse,” he said. “And we can sure use some finesse on this team, if you look around.”
Someone threw a crumpled napkin at him, and the tension near the table eased. Ava felt a swell of gratitude toward Corey. She headed off into the crowd, feeling them staring at the back of her as she did so. She knew they were talking about her. About the new girl who thought she could play football.
Sometimes Texas felt like a foreign country. It wasn’t like a girl on a football team was exactly an everyday thing back in Massachusetts, of course, but there, after the first few days of practice, everyone sort of got used to the idea, and it wasn’t such a big deal. Would the same thing be true here, where football itself was so much more important? She hoped so. But she somehow doubted it.
Someone whacked her over the head with a rolled-up poster. She turned. It was Jack.
“I hear you signed up for football,” he said, grinning at her mischievously.
“News travels fast,” she said. “I only just signed up forty-two seconds ago.”
“Yeah, well, it’s going to be on the eleven o’clock news tonight.”
“Come on, seriously?” she scoffed. “Is it really something people are talking about? Should I be freaked out?”
“Nah,” he said, shaking his head. “I was just talking to a couple of guys on the team and they know I”—he paused, considering his words—“they know I know you,” he finished.
What had he been about to say? Ava wondered to herself. Had he been about to say “they know I like you?” She shook her head almost imperceptibly. That was dumb. Of course he didn’t like like her. Theirs was a mutually respectful sports friendship. Besides, her life was complicated enough.
“Um, I think your sister is over there waving at you,” said Jack, gesturing with his chin.
Ava followed his gaze. Alex was standing by the stage, giving Ava a look, one that Ava knew meant her twin needed to talk to her.
“Yeah, we probably have to go rescue our mother from the bake sale table,” she said to him. “See you later.”
Ava could feel her cheeks getting warm as she left him. This was totally dumb. She already had a kind of, sort of thing with her friend Charlie, or at least, she had when she left Boston. They’d been texting each other pretty often before school had started, but lately, life had gotten busier, and the texting had been less frequent.
She joined Alex near the stage. “Everything okay?” she asked her sister.
“Yes and no. I keep getting these looks from Lindsey, and I think it’s because Corey might just possibly like me. And I might just possibly like him.”
“No, really?” asked Ava with a hint of sarcasm, but it was lost on Alex.
“Well, I’m not positively positive yet. It is true—no, it is incontrovertible—that he is really cute.”
“Does that mean true?”
“Yes. But the thing is, I feel like if I let on that I like him, that’s going to make Lindsey mad, and I really want to stay on her good side, so I’ve been trying to avoid him since we got here. But he keeps showing up when I don’t expect him to and—ow! Why did you just kick me?”
Ava raised her eyebrows meaningfully. Alex’s blood froze, and she turned oh-so-casually to her left.
Corey was standing right next to her.
“Hey,” he said to Alex.
“H-h-hey!” said Alex breathily, her face turning bright pink to the tips of her ears.
Ava tried to sidle away, but she was semi-trapped between the corner of the stage and a French Club sign-up table. She turned toward the table and pretended to be engrossed in a French menu, but she kept her ears open.
“So, like, I assume you’re going to the game next Friday?” Corey asked. Then quickly he added, “Because, I mean, obviously you are because your dad’s like, the coach.”
Ava turned slightly to look at him out of the corner of her eye. He was blushing! He was staring down at his shoes with his shoulders hunched and his hands plunged into his pockets. It looked like he really did like Alex. That was fine with Ava; now that she knew Corey was supportive of their dad’s team—and Ava playing football!—she approved of him.
“So, pretty much everyone in our grade goes to Sal’s Pizzeria after the game? And I was wondering if you wanted to, like, hang out there after too?”
“Like a date?” Alex blurted out.
Ava cringed inwardly.
Corey was looking right and left, as though seeking an escape route in case he had to sprint away suddenly. “Well, sort of. Everyone is going to be there too but, like, yeah, I guess it’s like a date.”
There was an excruciating silence. Ava ducked down to the table, trying to look like she was completely absorbed in the sign-up list for a bus trip to an upcoming production of Albert Camus’s La Peste.
“Um, well, uh, maybe that would be fun,” stammered out Alex. “I just need to, um, check with my parents, because it’s my dad’s first game and all. I don’t know if we’re doing some family thing or something.”
“Okay, cool,” said Corey, and darted away as quickly as he had appeared.
“Ava!” hissed Alex. “That was so—I was so—awkward! And what if Lindsey saw?” She whipped her head around to look at the cheerleading table. Sure enough, Lindsey was staring at her.
Ava followed her sister’s gaze. This time, the look on Lindsey’s face was less angry and more . . . hurt. Ava almost felt sorry for her.
Ava sighed. “Come on. Let’s go rescue Mom from the bake sale.”