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A Boy Like You (Like Us Book 1)
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A Boy Like You
Ginger Scott
Contents
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Coming Summer 2017
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Also by Ginger Scott
Text copyright © 2017 Ginger Scott (Ginger Eiden)
All Rights Reserved
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the author. The only exception is by a reviewer, who may quote short excerpts in a review.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or events is entirely coincidental.
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Ginger Scott
For daddy.
“Show me a hero and I'll write you a tragedy.”
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Prologue
I’m not sure which one of us invented the races—Taryn or me. But we run them together. They are ours. When the bell sounds at 3:20 every afternoon, there’s a sprint to the wooden gate in the alley leading to my back yard.
My house is the perfect place for them. I live on the last street, in the last neighborhood, before the rows of corn and cotton begin. My yard is at least twice the size of most of the others in south Bakersfield. It also slopes up maybe eight feet at the end. Daddy says they built the berm to keep the dirt from the farms out of our neighborhood.
I think they built it for racing.
It’s hot outside, but I know that won’t slow anyone down. I bet we’ll have more kids at my house today than we’ve had all year; maybe even the entire third grade will come. It’s the final week of school—only two days left. Everyone in Bakersfield is ready for summer. The pools don’t open until next week, though, which is why our races have become so popular.
“Are you going to run home? Or did you bring your bike today?” Taryn whispers behind me. Her desk touches the back of my chair.
“Brought my bike. I’ll beat everyone there and get the coffee can and tickets ready,” I whisper over my shoulder, ignoring the suspicious glare from Mrs. Grandel. I raise my book on my desk, propping it on its spine so I can watch our teacher and look like I’m reading. “Do you have the trophies ready for tomorrow?”
“Yeah. They’re drying in the garage,” Taryn says, a little too loudly.
“Ladies? Something wrong? Or do you think you can manage to give me five minutes of learning before you completely shut those brains off?” Mrs. Grandel doesn’t have to stand; her voice is loud enough from her chair to make her point, even when her back is to us.
“Yes, ma’am,” Taryn answers for us. I cough out a short laugh at my best friend’s formal response. Ma’am—ha!
“Josselyn Winters, you could stand to learn a thing or two about respect from Taryn. I wouldn’t think her proper answer is as funny as you seem to,” she says, bothering to put her own reading down on her desk and turn her body to point her eyes right at me. I don’t like being embarrassed in class. Everyone is looking at me, including Christopher, the weird kid. My cheeks feel hot as I cross my legs and slide them underneath my seat, shrinking a little. I lean my head to the side, just enough to catch Christopher peeking at me over his book. I scrunch my lips up at him, squinting my eyes, and he looks away quickly.
Good.
Luckily, the bell sounds just as my eyes fall to my desk, and I jerk back to life, springing to my feet, shoving my book in the small cubby under my desktop. Backpack slung over one shoulder, I sprint through the classroom door, down the hall and around the gated fence where the bikes are stored. I didn’t even bother to lock mine this morning, instead just twisting the chain around my wheel to make it look like I had. I wanted to make sure I had time before the others showed up, and my padlock is old—the combination part is really rusty, and it usually takes me four or five tries to pull it loose.
With two hands, I push my bike forward, kicking with one foot as I do, the other planted on the outside pedal. I scooter my way through the main entrance of the school, and as soon as my tire hits the road, I sling my other leg over and begin to pedal fast, not sitting once. I cut through the alley, slowing slightly to make sure I can twist and turn my tires through the bits of glass people throw out here. I flick open the clasp on the gate, pushing my bike through with me, then dumping it on its side in the corner of my yard.
I rush through the sliding door, yelling a quick “Hello” to my mom as I run through the kitchen to my room. I exchange my school bag for the can and tickets then sprint again to the backyard, this time smiling at my mom and stopping for a quick hug and a kiss. She laughs at me and tells me to have fun, shutting the sliding glass door behind me.
I pull the small plastic bag from the can, opening one end a little to let the powdered chalk I’d spent the night grinding up from my box spill out in an even line. Then I walk slowly around my yard, beginning at the gate, curving up along the hill, then back down the other side until I connect the oval. There’s enough left for me to be able to touch up the track tomorrow.
When I step through the gate, I see Taryn rounding the alleyway, her dark hair pulled tightly under a jeweled band and her feather earrings blowing along her skin with her fast walk. She doesn’t look like she should be fast, but she is. She fools everyone at the races, especially the boys. A line of kids trails her, some cutting others off. Our regulars all hold their arms out stiffly, not letting anyone pass. They know better.
Everyone stops at the gate, and I hand the roll of tickets to Taryn, pulling the lid off the coffee can and hugging it in front of my body.
“Okay, racers. We’ve decided to hold a tournament. Everyone who gets a ticket will be in the race today. Tomorrow will be the championship…for trophies! If you don’t get a ticket, then you can sit at the top of the berm and watch. Stand still, and I’ll walk down the line.”
Taryn rips a ticket off for her and me first, and I stuff mine in my back pocket so I don’t lose it, following behind her as she hands out tickets. The kids in the front are the same ones who have been with us since the beginning, since we started the races last summer: the Marley twins—who usually win—Taryn’s cousin Emily, and Noah Santos, the boy who kissed me in kindergarten and then got me sent home for the day for punching a boy in the face.
The weird kid is here too. Christopher has gone to my school since the middle of last year. He’s a foster kid, and he’s living with the Woodmansees. They have a lot of kids—twelve, counting Christopher—and half of them are foster. That’s not what makes him weird, though.
He wears the same brown, corduroy pants every day, and by Fridays, you can tell they haven’t been washed. His hair is a dull bro
wn, and it’s a little longer than most of the boys in our class, and it curls up on the ends, resting on his neck. It’s always sweaty. He also hums while he eats, and he sits alone at a table near the trashcan and exit for the cafeteria. When kids walk up to throw away their things, he hums louder, but never looks up. I tried sitting with him a few times last year, because Taryn dared me. The first time I sat at the table with him, he stopped humming completely. He also stopped breathing. When he passed out, I screamed for the teacher on duty. When the paramedics came to check him out, Mrs. Woodmansee showed up too. She just took him home. He was out of school for the rest of the month.
Today is the first time he’s shown up for our races, and it surprises me. I can tell Taryn’s noticed him, because she glances at the small roll of tickets in her hand and then back up at the line—there’s enough for him to make it into the race. Our race. She stops a few kids short of where he is and turns to face me, her expression giving me all I need to know.
“Just let him have one,” I shrug and whisper, leaning into her enough that the other kids can’t hear.
She takes a deep breath, then looks down at the five tickets left in her hand, her fingers slowly clasping around them, folding them into her palm.
“He’ll ruin it,” she sighs.
Her head moves up, her eyes trained on my hands, and then there’s a flash of an idea that crosses her face, her eyebrows raising. “Give me the can,” she says, reaching for it and tugging it quickly.
My brow pinches, but I give into her easily. While I’ve always been the fearless one with the muscle, Taryn has always been the one with the ideas. I let her lead often, and I let her lead now.
With the can in her hands, she spins around, tearing apart the last five tickets and putting them inside before holding the can above her head and backing away from the line a few steps.
“We have five tickets left. Five golden tickets,” she says.
“They don’t look gold,” Conner Marley, one of the twins, says from behind her. She glares at him and growls through her teeth.
“Shut up, Conner! I know they’re not really gold. I meant it like as in special, okay?” she scolds him, her long, dark ponytail slapping against her shoulders as she turns to face the rest of the line. Conner mimics her behind her back. It makes me laugh.
“These are the last tickets into the tournament. To get one, all you have to do is answer a trivia question correctly. Are you ready?” she shouts.
A few of the kids yell yes, but most of them just blink and stare at her, waiting with nerves in their bellies, their hands twisting in front of them, not sure if they should just shout answers out or raise their hands. Taryn steps on top of a jagged wooden crate that has lived in my alley for almost a year, and everyone quiets down when she does. Somehow, the extra foot of height has given her authority.
“Question one: What is my favorite color?”
The second the question leaves her lips, four girls from the end of the line shout out “Purple!” Taryn picks her favorite of the bunch, a quiet girl named Megan, who skips forward to claim her ticket.
“Second question: Who won the race yesterday?”
There’s a longer pause this time, mostly because everyone who was at the race yesterday is already standing behind us with tickets in their hands. Conner and Kyle Marley begin coughing, and eventually a few of the boys clustered near Taryn pick up on their hint. The first one guesses Conner, but he’s wrong. The next boy guesses Kyle and is awarded the ticket.
“Question number three...whose house is this?” I smirk at her question, but keep my face low so I don’t give anything away. It’s funny how many of the kids have no idea where they’re at. They just know they had to be here.
This answer takes longer, and Taryn starts to make a ticking sound, as if time is running out. Finally, a shy girl in a dress raises her hand, and Taryn nods at her to speak. “Is it…your house?” she asks. Taryn tilts her head to the side and bunches her face before looking at me. I raise my hand in the air as if I’m stretching, then point a finger to myself, over my head. “Oh, I mean…it’s…it’s hers. It’s her house!” the girl quickly corrects. She doesn’t even know my name, which irritates me a little, but it doesn’t seem to bother Taryn. She pulls one of the tickets from the can and hands it over. I guess I don’t know that girl’s name either, so at least it’s even.
“Two left. Who’s going to win this one? Hmmmmm, let’s see,” she says, hopping down from the crate and taking a few steps along the line. Everyone is incredibly quiet, waiting for her next question.
“I know! Question number four,” she smirks, glancing at me, then facing the line again. “Who was Joss’s first boyfriend?”
“Taryn!” I shout, my eyes wide and my mouth a hard line. That same burn from before—when everyone was staring at me in class—is back on my cheeks. I hear a few giggles, and I turn quickly to try to find where they’re coming from. I’m mad that I’m not wearing my hair up today, instead the dirty-blond strings stick to my bare arms and neck. It was hot out, and I wore my favorite yellow tank top, but I was running late for school this morning, so I forget to pull my hair back. I look tougher with my hair that way, and right now—I want to look tough.
The giggling continues, but eventually one of the boys from the end of the line shouts out Kyle’s name, and Taryn hands him a ticket. Kyle chuckles, muttering something about how it was only a dare at his birthday party a few months ago, and how I kiss like a duck. I kissed him on the cheek because Taryn pushed me into it, and I hated every second of that day where everyone called me his girlfriend. I never want to be anyone’s girlfriend again—especially Kyle Marley’s. I turn around and kick him in the shin.
“Owwwww!” he whines. He quits talking about me, and my duck lips, though. I secretly hope his shin is bleeding under his jeans.
Oblivious to the drama she fueled, Taryn continues with the giveaway, holding the final ticket above her head. My stomach feels sick from the embarrassment moments before, and I take the can away from her so I have something to hold in my hands. I lean against the brick wall of my yard and pull some of the ends of my hair in front of my face to look at the split ends.
“Last chance. All you need to tell me is Joss’s middle name,” Taryn says to an oddly quiet alleyway full of kids. I don’t like that she’s using me, but I know she wants to make this question hard. I’m not sure anyone will know it, besides Taryn, so my guess is that the last ticket will just go unused.
I push off from the wall and slide my feet slowly in her direction, drawing a line in the dirt along the way as I drag the heel of my shoe forward. I turn to Taryn and meet her gaze, her left cheek pulled high into a smirk.
“Five seconds left,” she says, ticking again…like a bomb.
I reach out to take the ticket from her, and the second it meets my fingers, one syllable destroys what we thought was the perfect plan.
“Grace,” Christopher says, reaching his hand up and pulling the ticket promptly from my hold. He never looks up, and he pokes the small paper into his front pocket along with his hand as he moves to the opposite side of the wall to stand next to the other racers.
My eyes flash wide to Taryn’s, and her mouth forms an O. “Say that’s not your name!” she whispers, but loudly enough that the few kids near us hear. They all snicker because nobody really wants Christopher here.
“But it is my name. Taryn! Why’d you have to ask that?” I say, stepping in closer to her. My heart is thumping as I look at the faces of the kids around us, a few of them turning to leave now that he’s in the race.
“How was I supposed to know he’d know that? How does he know that?” she says, her eyebrows raised.
“I don’t know! I never even talk to him!” I’m being loud now, and the voices behind me have all quieted. I turn around with my lips pushed together tightly to see Christopher standing against the wall, the final ticket held in front of him. He’s turning it over in both of his hands.
&n
bsp; “Let’s get started,” Taryn says, walking past me, through the gate into my yard. The kids with tickets begin to follow her, and the ones who have stayed to watch begin to climb up the top of the berm, sitting along the block wall that lines the alley.
“Here,” Christopher says behind me. We’re alone in the alley, and I know the other kids are going to make a joke about it. I turn halfway, not wanting to completely look at him, and shrug for him to come on in.
“No, really. Here,” he says again, his hand touching my shoulder. I twitch from the feel and spin to face him, his hand holding the ticket up for me to take. “I…I don’t really want to race,” he says, his eyes focused on the ticket pressed between his thumb and index finger. His lashes are long, and it keeps his eyes from my view, but I can tell from the soft slope downward on his mouth that he’s sad, and my stomach drops seeing it.
His hands are dirty. His thumb has already left a smudge on the top of the ticket. My eyes move down to his pants, and I notice he’s wearing new shoes—bright white Nikes that practically glow against the dingy brown of the material on his legs.
“Are those new?” I ask. His eyes come up to mine slowly, and I notice that they’re glossy, kind of like mine are when I hear Mom and Dad arguing at night and I try to drown out their voices with my blanket. He’s trying not to cry.
“Yeah, I got them yesterday,” he says. His eyes are blue, like mine, but lighter.
I can hear Taryn calling racers to the line on the other side of the wall, and I can feel my heartbeat in my stomach. I should take the ticket and just let him go. He’s still holding it out for me, his elbow propped against his stomach as he holds his arm between us. But his eyes are sad, and he got new shoes. He wore them today—here, to my house, for my race, where he knew everyone would make fun of him. Where he knew nobody really wanted him.