Katie, Batter Up!

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Katie, Batter Up! Page 1

by Coco Simon




  Middle school can be hard …

  some days you need a cupcake.

  Katie’s Cupcake Club friends all have other activities besides making cupcakes. Mia and Alexis are on the soccer team and Emma plays the flute. So Katie sets out to find her sport. Sure, Katie can whip up a great cupcake, but can she cook on the field, too? When Katie makes the softball team, it’s batter up … but is this the kind of batter Katie really wants to be dealing with? What if she makes a mistake? What if her team loses? Katie starts to realize that doing what you love always makes the batter sweeter.

  Katie,

  batter

  up!

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  SIMON SPOTLIGHT

  An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

  1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  Copyright © 2011 by Simon & Schuster, Inc. All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

  SIMON SPOTLIGHT and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  Text by Tracey West. Designed by Laura Roode.

  Manufactured in the United States of America 1111 OFF

  First Edition

  2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

  ISBN 978-1-4424-4611-3

  ISBN 978-1-4424-4612-0 (eBook)

  Library of Congress Control Number 2011940765

  CONTENTS

  Chapter 1: My Cupcake Obsession

  Chapter 2: Do I Really Look Like a Deer?

  Chapter 3: I’ve Got a Plan

  Chapter 4: It’s Supposed to Be Touch Football

  Chapter 5: Outshined by a Kindergarten Kid

  Chapter 6: What’s the Point?

  Chapter 7: I Hate to Admit It, but Sydney Is Right

  Chapter 8: I Discover My Secret Skill

  Chapter 9: So Running Isn’t So Bad After All

  Chapter 10: Callie’s Mad at Me? Seriously?

  Chapter 11: I’m Keeping My Eye on the Ball, I Swear!

  Chapter 12: I Don’t Totally Stink

  Chapter 13: I’m Happy! … I Think

  Chapter 14: Can I Actually Do This?

  Chapter 15: Are You Sure Those Other Players Aren’t Professionals?

  Chapter 16: I Learn Something New About Grandma

  Chapter 17: My Moment in Gym Class

  Chapter 18: I Don’t Mean to Brag, but I Am Pretty Talented After All!

  CHAPTER 1

  My Cupcake Obsession

  My name is Katie Brown, and I am crazy about cupcakes. I’m not kidding. I think about cupcakes every day. I even dream about them when I sleep. The other night I was dreaming that I was eating a giant cupcake, and when I woke up I was chewing on my pillow!

  Okay, now I am kidding. But I do dream about cupcakes, I swear. There must be a name for this condition. Cupcake-itis? That’s got to be it. I am stricken with cupcake-itis, and there isn’t any cure.

  My three best friends and I formed the Cupcake Club, and we bake cupcakes for parties and events and things, and sell them. We’re all different in our own way. Mia has long black hair and loves fashion. Emma has blond hair and blue eyes and lots of brothers. Alexis has wavy red hair and loves math.

  I have light brown hair, and I mostly wear jeans and T-shirts. I’m an only child. And I hate math. But I have one big thing in common with all my friends: We love cupcakes.

  That’s why we were in my kitchen on a Tuesday afternoon, baking cupcakes on a beautiful spring day. We were having an official meeting to discuss our next big job: baking a cupcake cake for my grandma Carole’s seventy-fifth birthday bash. But while we were thinking about that, we were also trying to perfect a new chocolate-coconut-almond cupcake, specially created for my friend Mia’s stepdad and based on his favorite candy bar.

  We had tried two different combinations already: a chocolate cupcake with coconut frosting and almonds on top and then a coconut cupcake with chocolate-almond frosting, but none of them matched the taste of the candy bar enough. Now we were working on a third batch: a chocolate-almond cupcake with coconut frosting and lots of shredded coconut on top.

  I carefully poured a teaspoon of almond extract into the batter. “Mmm, smells almondy,” I said.

  “I hope this batch is the one,” said Mia. “Eddie finally started taking down that gross flowery wallpaper in my bedroom, and I have to find some way to thank him. I would have paid someone a million dollars to do that!”

  “You realize you could buy a whole new house for a million dollars, right?” Alexis asked. “Probably two or three.”

  “You know what I mean,” Mia replied. “Besides, you know how ugly that wallpaper is. It looks like something you’d find in an old lady’s room.”

  “Hey, my grandma Carole’s an old lady, and she doesn’t have ugly wallpaper in her house,” I protested.

  Emma picked up the ice-cream scoop and started scooping up the batter and putting it into the cupcake pans.

  “We need to find out more about your grandma,” Emma said. “That way we can figure out what kind of cupcake cake to make for the party.”

  “Right!” Alexis agreed. She flipped open her notebook and took out the pen that was tucked behind her ear. Sometimes I think Alexis must have a secret stash of notebooks in her house somewhere. I’ve never seen her without one.

  “First things first,” Alexis said. “How many people are coming to the party?”

  I wrinkled my nose, thinking. “Not sure,” I said. Then I yelled as loud as I could. “Mom! How many people are coming to Grandma Carole’s party?”

  My mom appeared in the kitchen doorway. “Katie, you know how I feel about yelling,” she said.

  “Sorry, Mom,” I said in my best apology voice.

  “The answer is about thirty people,” Mom said. “So I think if the cupcake cake has three dozen cupcakes, that would be fine.”

  “What exactly is a cupcake cake, anyway?” Mia asked. “Do you mean like one of those giant cupcakes that you bake with a special pan?”

  “I was thinking more like a bunch of cupcakes arranged in tiers to look like a cake,” Mom replied.

  Mia nodded to Alexis’s pen and notebook. “Can I?”

  “Sure,” Alexis replied, handing them to her. Mia began to sketch. She’s a great artist and wants to be a fashion designer someday.

  “Like this?” Mia asked, showing Mom the drawing. I looked over Mia’s shoulder and saw the plan: three round tiers, one on top of the other, with cupcakes on each.

  “Exactly!” Mom said, smiling and showing off a mouth full of perfect white teeth. (She is a dentist, after all.)

  Alexis took back her notebook. “Excellent,” she said, jotting something down. “Now we just need to decide what flavor to make and how to decorate it.”

  “What do you think, Mom?” I asked.

  “Oh, I’m staying out of this. This is your project,” Mom replied. “I think I’ll let you girls come up with something. You always come up with such wonderful ideas, and I know Grandma Carole will love whatever you do.”

  “All done!” Emma announced, putting down the ice-cream scoop.

  “Mom, oven, please?” I asked.

  “Sure thing,” Mom said, slipping on an oven mitt. She put the chocolate-almond cupcakes into the preheated oven, and I set the cupcake-shaped timer on the counter for twenty minutes.

  Mom left the kitchen, and the four of us sat down at the kitchen table to work out the details.<
br />
  “So what kind of flavors does your grandmother like?” Alexis asked.

  I shrugged. “I don’t know. She likes all kinds of things. Blueberry pie in the summer, and chocolate cake, and maple-walnut ice cream …”

  “So we can make blueberry-chocolate-maple cupcakes with walnuts on top!” Mia joked.

  “Hey, we thought bacon flavor was weird and that worked out well!” said Emma. It was true. Bacon flavor was a really big seller for us.

  “You know, we don’t know anything about your grandma,” Emma said. “Maybe if you tell us something about her, we can get some ideas.”

  “Sure,” I said. “Hold on a minute.”

  I went into the den where Mom and I keep all our books and picked up a photo album. We have lots of them, and there were pictures of Grandma Carole in almost all of them. I turned to a photo of me and my mom with Grandma Carole and Grandpa Chuck at Christmas. Grandma Carole looked nice in a red sweater and the beaded necklace I made her as a present at camp. Her hair used to be brown like mine, but now it’s white.

  “That’s her,” I said. “And that’s my grandpa Chuck. They got married, like, forever ago, and they have three kids: my mom and my uncle Mike and my uncle Jimmy. She used to be a librarian.”

  “Just like my mom!” Emma said, smiling.

  I flipped the pages in the photo album and found a picture of Grandma Carole in her white tennis outfit, holding her racquet.

  “Mostly she loves sports and stuff,” I said. “She runs, like, every day, and she won track medals in high school. She goes swimming and plays tennis, and skis in the winter, and she likes golf even though she says there’s not enough running.”

  “Do sports have a flavor?” Mia mused.

  “Um, sports-drink-flavored cupcakes?” Alexis offered.

  “Or sweat-flavored cupcakes,” I said, then burst out giggling.

  “Or smelly sneaker-flavored cupcakes,” Mia said, laughing.

  “Ew, sweat and sneakers … those are so gross!” Emma squealed.

  “But I guess she does like sports most of all,” I said. “She’s always trying to get me to do stuff with her. Because I am soooo good at sports.” I said that really sarcastically, because the exact opposite is true. Now it was Emma’s turn to giggle.

  “Yeah, I’ve seen you in gym,” she said.

  “It’s even worse than you know,” I confessed. “When she tried to teach me to ski, I wiped out on the bunny hill—you know, the one for little kids? I even sprained my ankle.”

  “Oh, that’s terrible!” Emma cried.

  “And when I played tennis on a team with Grandpa, I accidentally whacked him in the head with my racquet.”

  Mia put a hand to her mouth to try to stop from laughing. “Oh, Katie, that would be funny if it weren’t so terrible!” she said.

  I nodded. “He needed four stitches.”

  “So I guess you don’t take after your grandmother,” Alexis said.

  “Well, not the sports thing,” I admitted. “But everyone says I look exactly like she did when she was younger. And she’s a good baker, too. She used to own her own cake baking business.”

  Alexis stood up. “You’re kidding! Why didn’t you tell us?”

  “I just did,” I said.

  “But she’s a professional,” Alexis said. “It’s not going to be easy to impress her.”

  “Yes, the pressure is on,” Mia agreed.

  I hadn’t thought of that before. “Well, we’ll just have to make a superawesome cupcake cake, then.”

  Alexis sat back down. “Okay, people, let’s start jotting down some ideas.”

  We tried for the next few minutes, but nobody could think of anything. Then Emma looked at her watch.

  “You know, I need to get home,” she said. “It’s my turn to make dinner tonight.”

  “We need some more time to come up with ideas, anyway,” Alexis said. “Let’s schedule another meeting.”

  “Let’s do it tomorrow,” I suggested. But Alexis and Mia had whipped out their smartphones, and Emma took out a little notebook with flowers on it—and they were all frowning.

  “Alexis and I have soccer practice tomorrow and Thursday, and a game on Friday,” Mia reported.

  “And I have concert band practice on Wednesdays and Fridays,” Emma said. Emma plays the flute, and she’s really good at that.

  “Sorry, Katie. You know spring is a busy time of year,” Alexis said.

  “Yeah, sure,” I said, but really, I didn’t. I don’t really do anything besides the Cupcake Club, and it’s not just because I have cupcake-itis. I’m no good at sports, and I’m not so great at music, either. When we learned how to play the recorder in fourth grade, I ended up making a sound like a beached whale. My teacher made me practice after school, after everyone went home.

  Just then the cake timer rang. I put on a mitt and opened the oven door. All the cupcakes in the pan were flat. They should have gotten nice and puffy as they cooked.

  “Mom!” I yelled.

  Mom rushed in a few seconds later. “Katie, what did I tell you about—Oh,” she said, looking at the deflated cupcakes.

  “What happened?” I asked.

  “This looks like a baking powder issue to me,” she said. She put the pan of flat cupcakes on the counter and picked up the little can of baking powder. “Just as I thought. It’s past its expiration date. You need fresh baking powder for your cupcakes to rise.”

  I felt terrible. “Sorry, guys.”

  “It’s not your fault,” Emma said.

  “Yeah, and anyway, Eddie’s not finished taking down that wallpaper yet,” Mia said. “We can try again next time.”

  “Whenever that is,” I mumbled.

  Emma, Alexis, and Mia started picking up their things.

  “We can talk about your grandma’s cupcakes at lunch on Friday,” Alexis said. “Everybody come with some ideas, okay?”

  Emma saluted. “Yes, General Alexis!” she teased.

  “Ooh, if Alexis is the general, can I be the cupcake captain?” I asked, and everyone laughed.

  When my friends left, the kitchen was pretty quiet. Mom went into the den to do some paperwork, and all that was left was me and a pan of flat cupcakes.

  As I cleaned up the mess, I thought of Alexis and Mia and Emma all going off and doing stuff—stuff that I couldn’t do. They were all multitalented, and the only thing I was good at was making cupcakes. It made me feel a little bit lonely and a little bit like a loser.

  In fact, it made me feel as flat as those cupcakes.

  CHAPTER 2

  Do I Really Look Like a Deer?

  After I cleaned up I did my math homework while Mom made dinner, but that did not exactly improve my mood. In fact, when I sat down to eat I was feeling flatter than ever, even though Mom made tofu and broccoli in sesame sauce, which is superdelicious. (And please don’t go hating on tofu. It’s got a bad rap, but that stuff is pretty tasty. You should try it sometime.)

  But that night even the deliciousness of tofu couldn’t get me out of my mood. Mom noticed right away. She always does. I think it’s because it’s just the two of us in the house most of the time. Dad left when I was little, and I don’t have any brothers or sisters, like I said before. If I had a big family, like Emma’s, I could probably sulk through dinner without being spotted. But Mom started with the questions right away.

  “What’s wrong, Katie? Did you get enough sleep last night? You weren’t up reading under the covers again, were you?”

  “No, Mom, I’m not sleepy,” I said.

  “Are you feeling sick? Does your throat hurt?”

  “No,” I said, picking at some tofu with my fork. I didn’t look up from the plate.

  Then Mom changed her tone. Her voice got softer. “Okay, honey. If there’s something you want to talk about, I’m here.”

  That understanding mom voice always gets me, even when I don’t feel like talking. I put down my fork.

  “It’s kind of hard to expl
ain,” I said. “It’s just … Mia and Alexis and Emma all do other stuff besides the Cupcake Club. Like play soccer and flute, and Emma walks dogs … and I don’t do anything. Besides the Cupcake Club, I mean.”

  Mom didn’t say anything right away. Then she said, “Well, you do well in school, and the Cupcake Club takes up a lot of your time. But maybe doing a different kind of activity isn’t a bad idea. Is there something you’re interested in?”

  “That’s the problem,” I said. “I’m not good at sports. I’m just not. I’m the worst in my whole gym class. And I could never play an instrument like Emma. Remember what happened when I learned the recorder?”

  Mom cringed. “Oh dear. I see what you mean,” she said. “But sports and music aren’t the only things the school offers. I’ll tell you what. After dinner let’s get on the computer and look at the school website. Okay?”

  “Okay,” I agreed. It actually sounded like a good idea. Why hadn’t I thought of that before? There had to be something that I would like.

  So after we ate (I ate every single piece of tofu on my plate) and cleaned up the dishes, Mom set up her laptop in the kitchen. I’m not sure why, but we seem to do everything in the kitchen. It’s like if the house had a heart, it would be the kitchen, you know? (Okay, I know that sounds a little weird. Maybe I’m eating too much tofu.)

  Anyway, we went on the Park Street Middle School website and clicked on “Activities and Clubs.” There was lots of stuff to choose from. We went down the list alphabetically.

  “How about the chess club?” Mom asked.

  “Boring,” I said.

  “The drama club?” Mom suggested. “You’re very funny, Katie. You’re always entertaining your friends.”

  That was a pretty nice compliment, I thought. But I had one objection. “I can be funny in front of my friends. But on a stage? No way. I would totally freak out.”

  “Are you sure?” Mom asked. “You don’t know until you try.”

  I tried picturing myself in front of an auditorium full of people, and I got sweaty just thinking about it. “Nope.”

  “All right,” Mom said. “How about the debate team?”

 

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