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Allen Zadoff: Food, Girls, and Other Things I Can't Have

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Allen Zadoff Food, Girls, and Other Things I Can't Have

Food, Girls, and Other Things I Can't Have: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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What’s worse than being fat your freshman year? Being fat your sophomore year. Life used to be so simple for Andrew Zansky—hang with the Model UN guys, avoid gym class, and eat and eat and eat. He’s used to not fitting in: into his family, his sports-crazed school, or his size 48 pants. But not anymore. Andrew just met April, the new girl at school and the instant love of his life! He wants to find a way to win her over, but how? When O. Douglas, the heartthrob quarterback and high-school legend, saves him from getting beaten up by the school bully, Andrew sees his chance to get in with the football squad. Is it possible to reinvent yourself in the middle of high school? Andrew is willing to try. But he’s going to have to make some changes. Fast. Can a funny fat kid be friends with a football superstar? Can he win over the Girl of his Dreams? Can he find a way to get his mom and dad back together? How far should you go to be the person you really want to be? Andrew is about to find out. From Grade 8–10 —Sue Lloyd, Franklin High School, Livonia, MI END

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As I walk, I take the article about Everest out of my pocket and look at it again. I don’t want it to be real. I want to have imagined the whole thing.

I look at the picture.

This same field. Holt on a stretcher. O. looking down at him.

It’s real.

I walk around to the back of the shed, and I see that I guessed right. O. is back here making out with Lisa Jacobs. They’re really into it, kissing like crazy, her hands moving up and down his back. It’s one of those moments when the guys on the team would say, “Get a room.”

That’s what I say now: “Get a room.”

Only it doesn’t sound funny when I say it. More like I’m angry.

O. spins around, shocked.

I see who he’s been kissing, and it’s not his girlfriend.

It’s April.

It all happens in slow motion:

April’s mouth is moving with no sound coming out. O. is saying, “Um, um, um…” I’m standing there with the article in my hand.

O. finally says, “Andy. Let me explain.”

That snaps me out of it.

“Nothing to explain,” I say.

The article about Everest falls from my hand.

I run.

60. there’s this ringing in my head.

Everything flies through my mind at a million miles per hour. O. and April. April and O.

O. at the party with his arm around me, giving me advice about her. April and me walking in the neighborhood. O. and Lisa Jacobs bumping hips the first time I saw them. All of them in my house, begging my mom, pretending like they’re my good friends.

Why?

Why am I so stupid?

Why for any of it?

The iPhone vibrates in my pocket. I glance at it and see April’s name.

I hold the phone while it vibrates. I imagine April holding my hand against her lips and humming. I let her hum until she stops.

The phone buzzes again three minutes later. This time it’s O. I press IGNORE.

The two of them call me, one after the other, for the next hour.

I don’t turn the phone off. I just keep pressing IGNORE. I want them to know I’m getting their calls.

I’m getting them, but I don’t care.

61. the hole in the middle.

“Are you excited, honey?” Mom says. She’s standing in the kitchen cooking mini bagels. Her fingers are spinning dough, twisting and pinching, again and again, so fast they’re a blur. She’s making enough bagels to fill an oil barrel. Literally.

“Excited about what?” I say.

“The game,” she says, like I might have gotten hit in the head and forgotten who I am.

“Really excited,” I say.

But I’m not excited. I don’t even know what I’m going to do. Not yet.

“Who are all these bagels for?” I say.

“I wanted people to have a healthy snack tonight,” Mom says. “Instead of that crap they usually have at games.”

How does Mom know what they eat at football games? She’s never been to one.

This is not about the game. Mom started cooking after I told her Dad was coming tonight. She didn’t say anything, just walked into the kitchen and took out a five-pound bag of flour.

Bagels are Dad’s favorite.

“Can I have one?” I say.

“Can you eat before the big game?”

“Carbs give you energy,” I say.

“I guess it’s okay,” she says.

Mom letting me have food? This is a first.

I put one of the bagels on my finger like a ring, and I chew it off. Half makes it to my mouth, and half falls onto the floor.

I think about Mom and Dad at the game tonight. Will they sit next to each other? Will they even speak?

I look at the broken bagel on the floor. Mom’s distracted, so I pick it up and pop it in my mouth. Then I grab two more handfuls so I can eat them alone in my bedroom.

62. dad and his echo.

Mom drops me off in front of school, then she and Jessica go to park the car. Mom wanted to walk in with me, but I told her no. I’m not walking into the big game with my mommy holding my hand. No way.

I’m heading for the athlete’s entrance when I hear Dad’s voice.

“Hey, boy-o. Wait up a sec.”

I feel this burst of excitement inside. Dad came to the game!

I turn around to say hi, and I stop.

There’s a woman next to Dad. She’s wearing a cute dress with a sweater around her shoulders. For a second I think it might be my sister, but it’s not.

It’s Miriam, Dad’s old paralegal.

“How are you?” Dad says. “Excited, huh?”

I love how Dad asks a question and answers it at the same time. It’s like he’s having a conversation all by himself, and he doesn’t even need you there.

“You remember Miriam,” Dad says.

I grunt. I thought Miriam was long gone by now. Why would Dad bring her to my game?

“Your father is thrilled,” Miriam says. “He’s very proud of you.”

“Thanks,” I say.

“And we really want you to visit us when we’re in New York.”

Dad gives her a look.

“What are you talking about?” I say.

“Miriam is moving to New York with me,” Dad says.

“I didn’t know.”

“That’s what I was trying to tell you on the phone this morning.”

“But you didn’t tell me.”

“I tried to call you back,” Dad says. “You pressed IGNORE.”

“Yeah, I was doing a lot of that today.”

There’s a weird moment while the three of us stand there looking at each other. The Dad Gap again.

“Are you getting married?” I say.

“Whoa, whoa,” Dad says, “let’s not get ahead of ourselves.”

Miriam looks away uncomfortably.

“I have to get inside,” I say.

“Of course, of course,” Dad says.

There seems to be an echo tonight. Dad’s saying everything twice.

“Good luck,” Miriam says.

Dad reaches over to hug me, but it feels fake, like he’s just putting on a show for Miriam.

“By the way,” Dad says, “is your mom coming?”

“She’s parking the car,” I say. “She and Jessica.”

“Good, good,” Dad says.

63. roar (of the crowd).

“NEWTS, NEWTS, NEWTS!”

I’m in the locker room all the way in the basement of the school, but I can still hear the crowd. The energy vibrates through the whole building. Friday night. Game night.

Outside it’s excitement. Inside it’s all business.

I’m adjusting my pads when O. slides over towards me.

“How you doing?” he says.

“What do you care?”

“You didn’t answer my calls.”

Before I can say anything, Coach walks through the door wearing a suit. The guys wolf whistle.

“You clean up good, Coach,” Cheesy says.

Coach grimaces. “I must have gained a few pounds,” he says. “These slacks are like a bad hotel. No ballroom.”

“Listen,” O. says to me. “We’ll talk about this after the game.”

“That’s convenient,” I say.

Coach says, “Let’s gather round, gentlemen.”

I’m supposed to keep quiet now, join the crowd, be a good player. To hell with that.

“We do this right now,” I say to O.

“No, we don’t,” O. says.

“We do it now, or there won’t be an after.”

“What does that mean?”

“That means I might not be in the mood to play. Maybe I’m sick of taking your hits.”

“What’s up?” Rodriguez says. “Are you guys having a lover’s spat?”

“Shut up,” O. says. He grabs me by the sleeve and pulls me out of the room.

“Where are you guys—?” Coach is saying as we slam through the door into the empty hallway outside the locker room.

“Everyone thinks you’re a hot shot,” I say, “but I know the truth.”

O. pokes his finger into my chest. “What happened today—it’s not what you think. April was giving me a good-luck kiss, and it got a little heated. No big deal.”

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