“Um, great speech, Coach.”
“Thanks. Did you like how I tied you in there with the destiny thing?”
“Uh, yeah. Very inspiring.”
“By the way, brilliant idea moving me to the middle of the sideline. I can do everything I need to do from here. Everything.”
Dealing with Coach’s problems helped me put mine aside and I settled into watching the game. With Josie cheering him on, Trevor continued his inspired play. He tackled the Windham running back on first and second down and then swooped in and sacked their quarterback on third. I was cheering along with everyone else until I remembered that Windham was now going to punt on fourth down. That meant I was about to . . .
“Offense, take the field!” the porta-potty yelled.
We ran out. As I headed to my huddle a big, thick arm grabbed me. It was Bruno. Was he going to tackle me before the play even started?
“Hey Rodney . . .” He paused. “Um, that was fun yesterday. We should do it again sometime. Good luck today.” He smiled awkwardly and shambled off to join his defense.
“Rodney,” Hector called.
“Huh?”
“You going to get in the huddle?”
“Uhh, yeah.” My mind was on Bruno. Was he setting me up? There was no way he had fun yesterday. His nose was still bruised and swollen from where I’d kicked him! Maybe he was trying to get me to let my guard down. Once I did, wham, I’d be flattened.
“Rodney?” Hector called again.
“What?”
“Did you hear the play? We’re running blue dive right on two. You ready?”
I lined up behind Josh.
“Hut, hut!” Hector yelled.
BLAHMMMM! The whole Windham line swarmed inside the blocks. Somehow Hector managed to hand me the ball. I was supposed to run up the middle but all I saw were Windham players. Josh smashed into them and I did my best to follow him, picking up three or four yards before getting dragged down. The Windham players piled on top of me. It was hard to breathe and I felt like a bug squirming under a shoe.
“All right, get up,” a voice commanded. “Come on, get off him.” Who was this hero coming to my rescue? I felt the weight lifting and the air returning to my lungs. Once I could move, I turned my head and saw Bart. He was hoisting one of his own players out of the scrum. Noticing me staring in disbelief, he said, “Nice run, Rodney.”
Another set of hands lifted me up. It was Bruno. “Hey, let me fix your shoulder pad.” He tucked a flap back under my jersey. “There you go. Good as new.”
I couldn’t take it anymore! What were they up to? Next they’d be baking me a pie. “Uhh, thanks.”
“Don’t mention it.”
More confused than ever I returned to the huddle—just in time for a new concern to surface. On the next two plays, it seemed that Windham knew exactly what we were going to do. Even though Mrs. Lutzkraut had shared our playbook with them, there was no way they could anticipate what play we were about to run. Or could they?
I sat down on the bench to give it some thought just as a cheer erupted from the Windham sideline. The Bombers had kicked a field goal and we were now officially losing. I could almost hear Coach Laimbardi sigh from within the john.
The G-Men took the field on offense and I headed into the huddle. My eyes were glued to Hector. Was he wearing a microphone and giving Belicheat our plays? It had worked between Fernando and Trevor at Mama’s Restaurant. Could Hector be doing the same thing? But I knew Hector. He would never do anything intentionally to hurt the team. Still, I watched closely as he ran back from the porta-potty after getting the play from Coach Laimbardi. Before telling us, he began tapping his helmet and waving his arm.
“What do you think you’re doing?” I asked.
“Stretching,” he answered a little nervously.
I pulled him aside. “You’re signaling our plays.”
His eyes widened. “Rodney, I’m not signaling. I’m, well, I’m signaling, but just to my tutor. I told you she helps me memorize all the plays. She said this would help me understand them better, you know, like a learning strategy.”
I took a deep breath. “Hector, you can’t do that.”
“Why not, Rodney? I’ve had a lot of trouble remembering the playbook until I started working with Mrs. Lutzkraut. It doesn’t hurt anything. You’re one of her favorite students and she’s our biggest fan.” He continued blabbering on about how wonderful she was and I knew it would be no use to persuade him otherwise. She was a master at fooling people. She had half of Garrettsville fooled, including my mom.
We had to run a play. Once again we were swarmed and I barely made it out of bounds alive. I had to do something quick. Should I tell Coach? Then a better idea hit. I walked over to Hector. “You realize you have to signal Mrs. Lutzkraut the reverse of what we’re doing, right?”
“What are you talking about?”
“Well, she’s facing us, so if you signal left, she thinks right, like a mirror. You see?”
He looked confused.
“What’s the play, Hector?”
“A sweep to the right.”
“Okay, tell her a sweep to the left.”
“Are you sure?”
“Without a doubt. She’ll be thrilled. Remember, I was one of her favorite students.”
“Okay, Rodney.”
As Hector tapped his helmet and shook his left leg, I looked into the stands. Sure enough, Lutzkraut was whispering into her phone, sending the play straight to Belicheat.
When Hector finally snapped the ball, the Windham defense flocked to our left. I bolted out to the right—into wide-open space. I was unaccustomed to so much empty green field around me and almost fell down. I regained my balance and rushed on. The Garrettsville bleachers erupted as I cruised down our sideline. I knew that somewhere out there Jessica and my family and all my friends were cheering me on. I had only the safety to beat. I watched him cutting the angle down. He’d be tough to get around. Then I noticed another Windham player gaining ground on me. It was number ninety-nine! The last thing I wanted was to get slammed by Bart. I braced for impact.
Blahm! I heard the crunch of pads smashing together—but didn’t feel anything. I looked back and saw Bart lying on top of the Windham safety.
“You moron,” Belicheat called to his son. “What did you do?”
“I missed!”
I was coasting toward the end zone. The sound of Belicheat cursing his son was a distant distraction. This was it. One more step. I was in the end zone! Was this really happening? After my embarrassing “Timeout Touchdown” in our first game I didn’t allow myself to believe it—until the line judge blew his whistle, put two arms in the air, and shouted, “Touchdown!”
The crowd went crazy. The Garrettsville band started playing the fight song. The football float drove back and forth behind the end zone. Chants of “Rodney!” filled the air. While I jogged back up the field past the Windham bench I watched Belicheat yank an enormous clump of hair from the top of his head. My mouth couldn’t help itself. “Love the new look. By the way, give Mrs. Lutzkraut my best.” I gestured to his phone. He looked at me for a second and growled before throwing the phone in the grass.
I have to admit, I felt pretty good sitting on the bench at halftime. We were winning seven-three and I hoped I had put an end to Mrs. Lutzkraut’s devious signaling scheme. Best of all, Jessica had been the first one to run up to me when the second quarter ended. For a second I thought she was going to give me a kiss, and perhaps she was, but instead she smiled and asked if she could have my autograph. We both laughed as her friends and Dave and Slim and Rishi and even Pablo gathered around to congratulate me. They were all thrilled . . . except Kayla. “Lucky touchdown,” she managed, refusing to smile. It was actually a relief after Bart and Bruno. At least she was acting like her old self.
Even
tually Slim suggested they go and buy snacks and the group took off, wishing me good luck for the second half. Only Rishi remained behind. He plopped down next to me on the bench and started talking. “So, I heard Toby stayed away today. Far away!”
“Smart move.” I laughed.
“But I see the twins showed up. So, how are they treating you, Rodney? Better than yesterday? Better than you could have ever imagined?”
Ah, I should have known he was behind it. “They’ve been nice. Too nice. What’d you do, Rishi?”
“Remember when one of them tossed my phone into the gorge?”
“Yeah. Throwing phones seems to run in the family.”
Rishi laughed. “I saw that with Belicheat! Anyway, when I got home my dad reminded me that my phone is GPS enabled. We went back out to the Ledges and found it. This morning, when I saw Biff and Bluto pull up—”
“Bart and Bruno.”
“Whatever. Anyway, I went over to them and held up the phone.”
“What did they do?” I asked.
“Let’s just say we came to an arrangement. I won’t show the video to anyone as long as they leave you alone during the game. After all, I can’t have anything happen to my number one client! What do you think?”
“I think you’ve been hanging around the Boss too much, but I like it.”
“The funny thing is that there’s actually no evidence!” Rishi was clearly enjoying himself. “Apparently,” he laughed, “I never pressed ‘record’ during all the excitement yesterday. Can you believe—”
“Shhhh. Keep it down,” I whispered.
“Why? Who’s going to hear me? The twins are on the other side of the field.”
“Hello, boys.” We spun around. Mrs. Lutzkraut stood above us holding a hotdog in one hand and a plastic bag in the other. Fear gripped my chest. How long had she been standing there? “Such a marvelous game, Rodney. Something tells me the second half is going to be even better now . . . thanks to your friend Rishi. A lot better. Makes me think of a famous saying.”
“Go team go?” Rishi suggested.
“Not quite. I was thinking, ‘Loose lips sink ships.’ It’s an old expression that means be careful what you say, because you never know who’s listening. The enemy might be lurking about. For example, Rodney, someone might be hiding in a park spying on you on a perfectly sunny afternoon. Which reminds me. Halloween is just around the corner. I thought you could use this.”
She tossed the plastic bag into my lap and walked off. I looked inside.
“What is it?” Rishi asked.
I was too shocked to answer. He grabbed the bag and looked for himself. “What’s the big deal, Rodney? You act like you never saw a clown mask before!”
Chapter 17
OUR NEW SECRET WEAPON
What a difference fifteen minutes can make. At the end of the first half I was on top of the world. I had scored a touchdown and Bart and Bruno were acting like a couple of teddy bears. Now I was about to take the field pretty certain that they had just found out Rishi was bluffing about his video.
If that wasn’t bad enough, Mrs. Lutzkraut wanted me to know she was the one who had spied on Jessica and me that day. Yes, she was doing everything possible to rattle me—and it was working! If she had overheard me in the park, it meant she knew all about the Boss. It meant she knew that tonight’s dinner with the Chicago gang had to go smoothly. And it meant she knew I had promised the Boss a good restaurant review from my mother.
“Rodney, Coach wants to see you!” Joe shouted.
Suddenly hearing my name brought me back to reality and the fact that we had a game to win. I ran over to the porta-potty. “How’re you doing in there?” I asked.
“Maybe a little better but not good enough to come out. Listen, I’m really depending on you, Rodney. Every coach in Ohio will be laughing at me if we lose today’s game. Someone told me they’re already calling it #TheToiletBowl on Twitter. Please, Rodney, keep the team focused and pumped—and win one for Garrettsville!”
I promised I would try, but despite Coach Laimbardi’s rousing pep talk the second half was nothing like the first. The twins were reinvigorated and eager to chase and crush me at every turn. It was clear why Notre Dame was interested in them. Only Josh was able to match their strength and ferocity. Why couldn’t he have a nice big twin? Better yet, triplets! Three monstrous Joshes working for me! I had little time to dream. I spent every second running with one thought in mind. Survival!
The game wore on and while Bart and Bruno had yet to rip my head off, the outlook grew bleaker. We fell behind ten-seven and I sat out the end of the third quarter feeling pretty gloomy. It was beginning to look like all of Garrettsville would be at Mama’s tonight demanding free food from the Boss. Just what I needed.
Someone else was also feeling down. Even from the bench I could hear the porta-potty whine to Coach Manuel, “Those two sons of his are wrecking balls and I can’t think of anything else to do. Belicheat really is a much better coach than me. I’m never leaving this stinky john. I’ll be buried in it in shame!”
“Interesting game so far, Rodney.” Wendy Whizowitz had come over and was squirting a concoction into Josh’s mouth. “Want some?” she asked. “I made it myself. It’s much better than Gatorade and far more nutritional.”
“Uh, okay.” I figured at this point I had nothing to lose. She squirted some through my facemask into my mouth. “Aaarraah!” My mouth was on fire.
“Oh, that’s the Tabasco sauce I added,” Wendy explained. “It really gets Josh going.”
“ArrrHHHOOOOOO!” he howled, kicking over the water jug.
“Great stuff,” I croaked. “You should patent it.”
“I might one day. I call it Wolf Juice because of Joshy’s howl. What’s going on with your coach?”
“Some sort of stomach issue.”
She seemed to think for a minute. “I might have something for that.”
“Another special formula? You’re brilliant!” I shouted. “You’re like the best scientist.”
“I wouldn’t go that far.” She reached into her purse and pulled out a bottle of Pepto-Bismol.
“Hey, that’ll work.” Not wanting to waste another minute, I ran over and knocked on old Doodie Calls. “Coach, I have something for you.”
The door cracked open and I slid the bottle in. I heard a couple of gulps and moments later the door banged wide open. From the Garrettsville stands a cheer erupted as the coach emerged into the sunshine, whacked himself in the stomach, and shouted, “I feel like a new man! Perfectly regular. Take that, Belicheat! Good work, Rodney.”
My lips cracked into a smile. I don’t know if my happiness was from having our coach back or from his pink Pepto-Bismol mustache. “Actually,” I told him, “you have Wendy to thank for your, er, regularity. She had the bottle in her bag.”
“Excellent work.” He smiled at her and then paused. “I’m sorry, we can’t have friends on the team bench.”
Wendy ignored him. “Have you considered running a reverse? I’ve noticed they’re over-pursuing. It’s actually rather interesting. On average, they’re 3.2 meters out of containment position. As I noted on my tablet, this happens on 83 percent of the plays run to the left. Now, running to the right is interesting on a whole other level. If you use the distributive property . . .”
Coach Laimbardi rubbed his head. “Got any aspirin in that bag of yours?”
Again Wendy ignored him, instead going into tremendous detail about how the distributive property could be used to our advantage.
“Who are you again?” Coach asked.
“I’m Wendy Whizowitz.”
“The reverse is a good idea. You got any more clever schemes?”
“Well, I’ve written a whole book of plays.” She held up a binder.
“May I?” Coach Laimbardi asked. Wendy handed ov
er the book. Coach began to read. His eyes grew wider and wider. He licked away the pink mustache as he read and eventually bit down on his bottom lip. “You wrote all these?”
“Yes. Last night during the PBS NewsHour.”
“I love this single-wing counter-sweep on page sixty-three.”
“Oh, that one. Yes, I conceived it from Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle.”
“Heisenberg?” Coach asked. “I’ve heard of Heisman . . .”
Wendy smiled. “Besides Plato, there’s nothing I’d rather read.”
“I like Play-Doh,” Josh said.
Wendy smiled at him. “See? We have so much in common.”
“Well isn’t that just darling!” The unmistakably sarcastic voice came from several feet away on the track. My heart began to race. With her usual fake smile, Mrs. Lutzkraut asked Coach Laimbardi, “May I approach the bench?”
“Uh, sure,” he answered, “as long as you’re not packing any cookies.”
The second she joined us she dropped the nice act. “This girl,” she hissed, pointing at Wendy, “is NOT allowed to be here during the game. You should know better.” Somehow Lutzkraut had noticed that the school’s smartest student was coaching the coach.
Laimbardi tried to be reasonable. “I really don’t see the harm in—”
“Don’t see the harm?” Lutzkraut exploded. “What if a football should strike her? She’s not covered by the school’s insurance policy like members of the team. It’s a lawsuit waiting to happen!”
Coach Laimbardi stared at her long and hard. “That’s where you’re wrong,” he finally answered. “Wendy Whizowitz is a member of the team. She’s our new offensive coordinator.”
I snuck a peak at Wendy, who was smiling proudly. “Congratulations,” I whispered.
Coach Laimbardi wasn’t through with Mrs. Lutzkraut. “In fact,” he continued, “the only one standing here who doesn’t belong on the team is you! Now please return to the bleachers at once or I’ll be forced to call over Dr. Stone.”
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