I swallow. My eyes are hot and sore. He’s never coming home. Why didn’t I see it?
“Maybe we can…” Gran’s voice fails.
When I glance at her, she’s staring into space.
I tell Gran we don’t need my father. Then I try to forget about him by keeping busy—making food for Gran, spinning some tricks, keeping my thoughts focused on the duel.
By three o’clock, I’m more than ready to head out. I have an hour to get there and set up. I check my hair in my bedroom mirror one more time. I’m shoving my yo-yos and extra string into my backpack when Gran appears in my doorway, dressed to go out, her purse on her arm.
“Where are you going?” I ask.
“Will you come to the appointment with me?” Her eyes are cloudy. “I…I could use some help.”
“What appointment?” I clench my jaw. “You never mentioned one.”
“It’s for”—she gives me a confused look—“a test… the doctor…” She starts rummaging through her purse. “I don’t remember exactly.”
“I have a show, Gran.” I shift from foot to foot, eager to get going. She probably has the time or date wrong—that is, if she even has an appointment.
Gran pulls a bent appointment card from her purse.
“Here it is.”
Nancy Layne
has an appointment at
the Eastside Medical Clinic
July 9, 4 PM
“Crap,” I mutter. “It’s today.” Could this day get any worse?
“What’s that, Richard?” Gran says.
Richard. It’s like a punch to the gut. “Don’t call me Richard,” I say a bit too loud. “I’m Calvin.”
“Oh!” Gran’s hand flutters to her mouth. “Did I do that? I’m so sorry. I got jumbled after that phone call…” Her eyes water.
“No, I’m sorry, Gran.” I take her hand. “It’s just that I have a yo-yo show, a really important one. I hate to ask this, but do you think that, if I take you there, you can get a cab home by yourself?”
Gran dries her eyes. “Okay, Richard,” she says.
I sigh. Gran still has Richard, even if I’ve lost my father.
As I’m helping Gran down the steep stairs from the apartment, Spader appears in the alley.
“Mrs. Layne,” he begins, “I’m so glad to run into you.”
“We can’t talk now.” I support Gran’s elbow as she lowers herself down the final step. “We’re late for an appointment at the clinic.” I shoot him a look, hoping he’ll feel guilty for harassing Gran.
Spader frowns, obviously frustrated. “I understand. Perhaps when you get back, Mrs. Layne? I’d like to discuss something your grandson told me—”
“We’ll be gone for hours.” I weave Gran around him, hoping he’ll back off.
“Yes, we’ll talk later.” Gran nods, but I can tell she’s still out of it.
I check my watch constantly on the subway, hoping I won’t be late for the duel. Once Gran is safely delivered to the clinic, I run back to the station, trying not to think about her traveling home alone.
By the time I arrive at Dundas Square, I’m feeling guilty about abandoning Gran, and I’m still shaken by my father’s phone call, but I try to block it all from my mind. Tall buildings with flashing billboards tower over the square. On the south side, water jets into the air through metal grates set into the stone tiles. There’s a massive stage with a mike on a stand at one side and real theater lights suspended from an overhanging roof. Rozelle is on the steps leading up to the stage, doing an interview with Roberta Chow, the reporter from Urban-tv News. A cameraman is filming them while Sasha, Annette and Marshall watch. A few people slow down to check out the scene.
“We’ll start with one of our yo-yo masters performin’ a single-yo-yo trick, which the other has to repeat,” Rozelle is saying to the reporter. “We’ll see who can toss each trick the best. Then they get three minutes to freestyle. Impress the crowd.”
“Who determines the winner?” the reporter asks. Her black hair falls to her shoulders, and she’s got one hand on her waist.
“It’s up to the crowd.” Rozelle grins. “Whoever gets the most noise.”
Sasha smirks as she notices me. Her bruises are either gone or covered with makeup. Marshall breaks away to head over to me, while Rozelle continues her interview.
“What do you think of the redesigned blog?” His hair is dyed black now with blue streaks, although both piercings are still there. “I think it could get nominated for a Webby Award.”
“I, uh, haven’t seen it yet.” I make a fist, thinking of Gran’s computer. “My computer…crashed.” I consider explaining, but it’s easier to lie.
Marshall’s smile fades fast. His eyes look wounded.
“But I hear it’s great,” I add.
That’s not enough for Marshall, I can tell. I should have found a way to check it out. An awkward silence hangs between us till he finds an excuse to escape.
I’m disappointing everyone, it seems. Rozelle slides over to me, a grin plastered on her face. “The talent ain’t supposed to be late,” she hisses through her smile.
“Personal emergency.” I shrug. As if I owe her an explanation.
“Yeah, right.” Her eyes narrow.
“You think I’m lying? I don’t need—”
She grips my arm and squeezes hard. “Don’t even think ’bout disrespectin’ me today.”
My face gets hot, and my throat tightens. Before I can think of a comeback, Rozelle is gone, the reporter is in my face and the cameraman is aiming his lens at me.
“Roberta Chow reporting for Urban-tv Community News. I’m here at Dundas Square with Yo-Yo Prophet Calvin Layne before the big face-off for the title of Local Yo-Yo Master. How do you feel about taking on Black Magic today?” She thrusts the mike closer.
“Uh, okay,” I mutter, still furious at Rozelle.
“Black Magic won the World Yo-Yo Contest in the one-handed division two years in a row,” she continues. “How do you plan to beat him?”
“Just, uh, throw my best.” I glance around. “Is he here yet?” I vaguely remember watching his routines online, but I see no one who matches my memory of him—tall, thin, maybe twenty years old, Latino and way better-looking than me.
“He’s over there.” Roberta Chow nods. “Are you still predicting you’ll win?”
My stomach tightens as I recognize him. Black Magic is dressed in dark leather pants and a form-fitting T-shirt that ripples over his six-pack. He’s wearing fingerless gloves and leather boots, with a yo-yo holster strapped to his waist.
“Sure, I will.” I plaster on a smile.
“The Yo-Yo Prophet confirms his prediction,” Roberta Chow says to the camera. “We’ll soon see how accurate he is.”
She signals the cameraman to cut the shot, and I’m hustled to center stage along with Black Magic, who’s more than a two heads taller than me.
He’s catching a limited-edition, top-of-the-line, gold-plated yo-yo, which I know sells for over $300. I pull out my lame neon yo-yo and slide my backpack to the side of the stage.
Rozelle saunters toward the mike, her hips swinging and her earrings jangling. As she passes, she hisses in my ear, “You better hit this, Yo-Yo.”
Hit this or I’ll hit you, she means. And for once, I don’t want to be in front of the crowd that’s beginning to gather. I don’t want to try to please them, make them throw money, predict their lives.
Maybe it’s the dream, or my dad’s phone call, that throws me off. Maybe it’s Marshall, Rozelle, the reporter— all in my face. Maybe I’m just tired of holding myself—and Gran—together.
But the camera is catching my every movement, every twitch, and the reporter is keeping up a steady stream of commentary that I can barely hear over the noise from the crowd.
“You ready, kid?” Black Magic has that day-old stubble girls supposedly like, while I can’t even grow a single facial hair. “Let’s see what you got.”
I manage a
nod. My breath quickens. This guy has so much more experience than I do. Why did I ever predict I could win?
From the side of the stage, Annette cues a Teknonaut tune. As the music starts, my blood pumps faster. Rozelle grips the mike.
“Yo, people! Check it out!” Her voice booms across the square, making people stare. “We got two yo-yo masters dukin’ it out. The Yo-Yo Prophet and Black Magic are ’bout to battle to the death.” She shifts her hips and nods at us. “Kick it, boys.”
Black Magic looks at me expectantly, but my hands are too jittery. “You can go first,” I say, hoping I sound generous.
Black Magic winks at me and then hurls out a wicked variation of a double iron whip that could knock me flat.
The crowd hoots, and someone lets out a long whistle.
“Your turn,” he says.
15
My throat constricts. I can’t get enough air. I’ve never tried to throw a double iron whip, forget about his damn variation. I’m doomed.
“That was Black Magic kickin’ butt!” Rozelle hoots. Whose side is she on?
Black Magic salutes the crowd, which brings more whistles and applause.
“What’d ya call that move?” Rozelle thrusts out a hip.
“The magic whip.” He grins.
Rozelle smirks and then bellows to the crowd. “Who wants to see the Yo-Yo Prophet crack a magic whip?”
A weak cheer leaves me feeling more than useless.
“This here’s a duel for real, folks.” Rozelle tosses her hair, which she’s straightened to hang to her shoulders. “The Yo-Yo Prophet has gotta repeat the trick, or lose a life!”
Maybe she’s trying to rev up the crowd. Maybe she wants him to win. Either way, I’m frozen in place, staring out at the audience.
Faces zoom in and out of focus. Joseph seems to be moving his mouth in slow motion, and I hear the slurry words, “Go, Yo-Yo!” Eleanor Rizzo is clapping. Marshall is scribbling in his notebook, probably about how crappy I am. I recognize Geordie—I can’t believe he came. My eyes leap over Sasha. I can’t take her venom right now.
How do I get out of this?
Then I see the gray-eyed girl near the front. She’s waving up at me and looking awesome in a silver top that makes her eyes glimmer. I shake my head, clearing a mess of thoughts.
I predicted she would come. And she did.
I predicted I would beat Black Magic. And I will.
My breathing slows. Time speeds up. Sound rushes back in. I hear Rozelle going on about dueling to the death. The crowd is getting worked up, probably eager for blood. What am I afraid of? I’m the Yo-Yo Prophet.
I pitch out my yo-yo, hoping for the best. I struggle through a jade whip, which is less advanced but the most I can do. No one but Black Magic and I know the tricks, so what does it matter?
Except that the camera is recording my moves. And there may be other yo-yo fanatics watching.
The crowd claps a bit. I try to breathe. The sun beats down, making me sweat. The giant billboards flash. The music’s techno beat hammers at me relentlessly.
“The Yo-Yo Prophet cracks it!” Rozelle bellows across the square. “Let’s see you bust another move!” She winks at me.
The cameraman zooms in. Joseph is cheering louder than anyone. I gulp in some air and perform his favorite trick.
“Buddha’s revenge,” I say. It’s a solid effort.
The crowd applauds. I feel lighter, higher.
Black Magic matches the trick—no problem. With his tight leather pants and long black hair, he looks so damn cool, like he has nothing to prove.
We’re even now, with two tricks each, when Black Magic throws out a Yuuki slack. It’s a trick first performed by Yuuki Spencer at the World Yo-Yo Contest. When he threw it, the audience went wild.
So does this crowd.
It’s a master-level move. Although I’ve tried it before, I’ve never done it successfully. I straighten my shoulders and go for it anyway.
“Yuuki slack.” I nod to Black Magic, Rozelle, the crowd, like I’m facing a firing squad. I launch into the trick. It starts with a trapeze and moves into a double or nothing. The secret is to pinch the string while it’s looping, slackening it and then whipping the loop back and forth between your hands while rotating the yo-yo.
I bomb, sending the yo-yo into a spin-out.
“Shit,” I mutter.
The crowd doesn’t boo me off the stage, but they don’t cheer much either.
“Ouch!” Rozelle struts the stage. “That’s one for Black Magic. The Yo-Yo Prophet better pull up!” She shoots me a warning glance. Maybe she is rooting for me after all.
I guess she wouldn’t want me to fail. Or would she?
The torture continues with three more tricks, which I barely manage. It’s obvious to everyone that Black Magic is a pro, and I’m not.
When the crowd has built up to about a hundred people, Rozelle announces that round one goes to Black Magic, although I can make it back in round two. Freestyle.
I’m doing my best to ignore the reporter and the camera as Rozelle tells the crowd, “Each of these boys gets three minutes to showcase their best. All you gotta do is cheer for your favorite.”
“You first.” I nod to Black Magic, figuring I better see what he’s got so I can try to outdo him.
Black Magic conjures a slew of master-level tricks that rage against me. Double suicide. Reverse trapeze whip. Kamikaze. Superman. Tricks I can’t even follow with my eyes.
He starts into a ladder escape, popping the yo-yo in and out of a triangle formation in the string so fast that gold sparks seem to shoot from his yo-yo.
It’s an awesome routine—he’s even invented new tricks. It casts a spell over the screeching mob.
“Time!” Rozelle shouts. In my daze, I realize that she’s been using a stopwatch.
I’m trembling, waiting for her to call the start of my lousy routine, but the crowd won’t stop chanting Black Magic’s name.
That’s when I see the gray-eyed girl, staring dreamily up at him.
I turn away.
Forget her, I think.
“Yeah, folks! Now that’s a cheer.” Rozelle throws me a concerned look. “But wait till you see our own Yo-Yo Prophet!”
The crowd screams and yells for Black Magic.
I am so dead.
Rozelle raises one arm to start the countdown. Her bicep quivers. I snap to attention, fingers tingling, every muscle tense.
“Now.” She lowers her arm.
I throw out my yo-yo like a life preserver into the ocean and then dive in after it.
No thoughts, just my hands working the string, the yo-yo flying. I’m throwing strong; my sleepers last forever. I do a shockwave. Cold fusion. Laceration.
I’m in the zone. I can do this, I think. I can beat this sucker.
That’s my prediction. It has to happen. I have to make it happen.
I move into the beginning of my most ambitious sequence of tricks. My grand finale will stun the crowd, make them scream only for me. I shoot my yo-yo skyward, soaring above the crashing ocean waves. My yo-yo extends gloriously on the string. It grips, ready to reverse direction. Then my string breaks.
“No-o-o-o!” I yell.
Time slows down. The string jerks in a crazy snake-like dance. My yo-yo arcs high over the crowd, heading for the jets of water that spurt from the ground into the square.
I fumble for my backpack—my extra yo-yos.
“I can start again,” I plead.
There’s a free-for-all as a few people scramble toward my wayward yo-yo like it’s some kind of trophy.
The crowd starts chanting Black Magic’s name. Rozelle is shooting daggers my way.
“It’s just a broken string,” I say.
The crowd won’t shut up. They keep cheering, “Ma-gic! Ma-gic!” It goes on and on. No one cares that I’ve pulled another yo-yo from my pack. No one wants me to try again.
Rozelle fires me a desperate look. She hollers, “The winn
er is…Black Magic!” Her eyebrows knot.
My shoulders slump. The crowd roars even louder.
The reporter leaps onto the stage—a hunter closing in on her kill. She’s got her mike ready, questions already forming on her lips. She positions herself next to me as the cameraman follows her up. Rozelle stomps over to Black Magic and congratulates him, although she’s red-faced and glowering.
“How do you feel about your first failed prediction?” The reporter drives the mike into my face. The cameraman has me in his sights.
“I guess I’m not one-hundred-percent accurate all the time.” I shrink away.
The reporter nods and swivels to Black Magic. “It looks like you crushed your competition. Are you surprised by today’s events?”
Black Magic shrugs. “Strings break. It doesn’t mean I won. The kid is pretty good.”
The crowd doesn’t agree. They yell his name, ask for more. The gray-eyed girl calls up to him, “You smashed that routine.” She lifts her silky blond hair off her neck and lets it fall in a slow cascade.
Black Magic ignores her. He slips his yo-yo into his holster. “Tough luck, kid,” he says to me before he saunters away.
The music ends abruptly; the crowd is thinning. I try to slide away too, crawl into a crack in the granite slabs of the square, but Sasha is suddenly onstage, blocking my escape.
“This isn’t the first prophecy he’s gotten wrong,” she says loud enough for the reporter to hear. “The whole thing’s a joke. He’s a joke.” She glares down at me through mascara-laden eyelashes.
I grind my teeth. This day is bad enough without Sasha getting in my face. “What’s your problem?” I say to her, not caring who hears. “Why are you always out to get me?”
“Because I’m sick of covering your ass,” she hisses and turns to the reporter. “He can throw a yo-yo” — she smirks—“most of the time, but everything he predicts…” She gestures toward Annette over by the speakers. “We have to make it happen.”
“What are you talking about?” I glance at Rozelle, whose jaw is clenched as she glares at Sasha. My palms are sweaty. What has Rozelle done this time?
The reporter perks up. She positions her damn mike in Sasha’s stupid face. “Are you calling Calvin Layne a false prophet?”
The Yo-Yo Prophet Page 11