Grand Slam Read online
1
JALEN WAS TOO AMPED UP from hitting the championship winning home run to leave the field of Harvard Stadium. He’d never experienced anything so thrilling. Could anything ever again be as exciting?
Then the answer appeared out of nowhere.
There she was, tall and upright, with skin as dark as those enormous eyes. She was elegant and majestic, wearing an electric-blue dress with an inky-black flower pattern. Her cheeks had lost some of the roundness he’d seen in her picture so many thousands of times, but the thinner face made her cheekbones more pronounced, reminding Jalen of his best friend Cat’s mom.
He knew who she was. She didn’t have to say it, even though she did, and the words were the sweetest sounds he’d ever heard.
“Hello, Jalen. I’m your mother.”
Jalen’s eyes darted between this amazing woman in the blue dress and the woman with her, Emery, the private detective he’d hired. Stepping forward, Emery nodded. “Meet your mom. Elizabeth.”
Ever since he could remember, Jalen had longed for his mother’s return. Now, this surprise reunion unleashed a million thoughts and feelings. His mind filled with questions, but his throat choked back any words.
He couldn’t stop looking, comparing himself to her. He was almost as tall as she was. Suddenly his mother flung open her arms, reached out, and hugged him. He hugged her back fiercely, wanting to be sure this was real.
“My baby,” she said with her nose buried in the dark curly hair near his ear. “I am so sorry.”
“Everything’s okay,” he said, overcome by her closeness and fighting not to lose it.
She squeezed him even tighter.
“Did you see my hit?” He pulled back, but she kept hold of his hand.
“I did see—a home run for the win. It’s a good sign.” She smiled, and her teeth sparkled in the late afternoon sun. The bright blue dress she wore reminded him of blue paint in the art room.
“Sign?” he asked.
“For us. That it will be good.” She glanced at everyone standing around them in silence. “Your friends?”
“Yes.” Jalen turned to them, gesturing with his free hand. “JY—James Yager from the Yankees. Maybe you recognize him.”
“I’m sorry that I don’t, but I’m glad to know you. Please call me Liz.” She shook JY’s hand. “When Emery found me, she told me you were helping Jalen with his search.”
“Glad to,” JY said.
“This is Cat, my best friend, and her mom, Mrs. Hewlett, and Daniel, my other best friend.”
His friends shook hands and Cat’s mom said, “So very nice to meet you. You have a fine boy.”
“Fine.” His mother sighed and looked at him with just the hint of a smile. “I have a fine boy.”
“I think we’ll give the two of you some time without us all gawking,” Cat’s mom said.
Emery patted his back and said, “We’ll talk later.”
Jalen’s mom was still holding his hand, but then he pulled away, uncertain how he felt. Unsure how to act.
“What about the team? The bus?” he asked, feeling guilty that thoughts about the game and his dad were suddenly crowding his mind.
“They can wait fifteen or twenty extra minutes,” JY said. “I’ll text Coach Allen. He’ll understand. My gosh, who wouldn’t… it’s your mom.”
Cat’s mom began herding Cat and Daniel and JY and even Emery toward the parking lot.
“I’ll get your gear to the bus, amigo.” Daniel headed to the dugout.
“Thanks,” Jalen called, turning back to his mom.
She reached out again for his hand. Beyond her Jalen could see the rows of seats so recently filled with fans and food and noise and celebration.
“Jalen?”
He knew that she wanted him to look at her, and so he did. “Yes?” Her big dark eyes glowed. A black band held her long curly hair—so like his—off her face.
“At first I didn’t let myself think about you. It hurt too much. And then I had a chance to come back to the States and perform. I have a weekend gig in Boston. When Emery first contacted me, I couldn’t believe you’d forgive me.… I came to the games yesterday, too.” Tears spilled down her cheeks. “I’m sorry to get all jumbled up. I’m just so excited.”
He could see how badly his mother wanted everything to be better—all at once—but he shook his head. “I don’t get it, just not thinking enough about your own son. Not caring enough about me to call or write. Not ever.”
She stretched out her other hand and touched Jalen’s arm, blinking back tears. “I know. I’m sorry. For everything.”
The only response Jalen could muster was to listen to her words and nod, as his eyes searched her face.
“Huh. Well.” His mom forced a smile. “Let’s get you on that bus.”
She turned, and he went with her, still feeling like it was unreal. “Um, what happened? I mean, why did you go?”
“Didn’t Fabio tell you?”
“Dad said you had a dream. He said you needed to go.”
She relaxed a little. “Yes. That’s right. I’m a singer. I had an amazing opportunity. I thought it was worth everything. I believed I could make it big. I still do, but nothing is as easy as you dream it will be. I’ve been so close, Jalen.… I’ve learned that anything worth having never comes easy.”
“I’m gonna play in the big leagues,” he said, jamming a thumb into his chest.
“See? That’s your dream.” She stopped and gestured with her hands. Her long fingers fluttered like wings. “You need to follow that dream. We don’t get many chances to make it come true.”
A jazzy ringtone shattered the moment. His mom fumbled in her purse, found her phone, and listened intensely.
“Oh no!” she said. “I’ll be right there.” She ended the call and looked at Jalen.
“Jalen—I’ve got to run. I’m already late.”
Jalen couldn’t believe it. “But we just met.”
“I’m so sorry, Jalen. I have to go.”
She gave him a quick hug and dashed away.
His eyes followed her until she reached the corner of the stadium.
“Mom!” he shouted.
The flash of her bright blue dress was the last image he had before she disappeared from sight. She never looked back.
2
THE WEIGHT OF CONFUSED DISAPPOINTMENT filled Jalen’s belly, sickening him. Just breathing was difficult. He stumbled toward the team bus, putting one foot in front of the other. How could she just disappear like that? Again? It all felt unreal—until he stepped up into the bus.
Cheers erupted from the team. Kids were jostling in the aisle, slapping him high five and calling him Champ.
“All set, then?” Coach Allen asked Jalen. “Are you all right?”
“Yes. Thanks, Coach.”
“Okay then. Find a seat. We’re ready to roll, Fred.” Coach patted the driver’s shoulder. “Let’s get this team of winners back to Bronxville.” He turned to the rowdy Bandits and shouted, “Gentlemen, we are the team to be reckoned with!”
Jalen found his seat halfway back, across the aisle from Daniel. The bus was big enough for everyone to have his own row, but Daniel was waving to him and slapping an empty seat, so he slid over as the bus hissed and rumbled away.
Daniel was excited. “So…?”
“What?” Jalen asked.
“Why’d you say it like that?” Daniel scowled.
“Like what, Daniel?”
“You said ‘what’ like I was dog doo-doo on your shoe. I just want to know about your mom. Emery said she’s a star.”
Jalen thought about how his mom hadn’t even looked back. “Sorry. I’m not up for it now.” He was too confused to want to talk about her.
Daniel stopped scowling and kept his voice low. “Okay, amigo. You know I’m here for you.”
“How about that game?” Jalen said, anxious to change the subject.
Daniel shrugged. “We won, but Charlie Kimber got pulled from the order so you could bat—his dad saw it and got bent out of shape.”
“What? You think Charlie hits a home run if he’s batting instead of me?”
“I don’t! I’m just telling you.”
“I understand, though,” Jalen said suddenly.
“You understand?” Daniel was puzzled.
Jalen was thinking about how his mom had left him, probably to sing somewhere, when he said, “Kimber’s father cares more about his son than winning a game.”
Daniel was quiet, knowing Jalen well enough to sense that he was serious. Then Daniel got serious. “But that’s not even why I wanted to talk to you. Amigo, you’re not gonna worry about all that after you see this.”
Daniel held up his phone. He had a YouTube video cued up. “I think this thing is about to go viral, if it hasn’t already. It’s got twenty-six thousand views.”
The weight in Jalen’s stomach sank further as he took the phone, because the first frame of the video was his own face.
3
ONE LOOK AT THE YOUTUBE video wasn’t enough. Jalen had to watch again. He wanted to be sure of what he thought he saw.
He looked up at Daniel. “Who took this?”
Daniel shrugged. “Someone sitting near us.”
“Just some… random fan?” Jalen let out a gust of doubtful laughter.
“Could be. People video all kinds of stuff. But… you think Jeffrey Foxx is behind it?”
Foxx was the Yankees GM who wanted to get rid of JY and who knew that Jalen had been helping the Yankees star boost his batting average by signaling—during JY’s at bats—exactly what the next pitch would be. The rest of the sports world knew Jalen and JY had a connection but thought it had to do with Jalen’s father, Fabio, and what JY called the “lucky calamari” he ate at the Silver Liner before the Yankees games.
Fabio’s Silver Liner Diner had drawn attention not only from a Twitter storm that JY created, but from the regular media as well. The flood of people who wanted to taste the lucky calamari, and a rave review in the New York Times, had prompted an investment group to offer funding that would quickly franchise his father’s restaurant, creating a chain of Silver Liners in different, as yet-unnamed locations.
It was a dream come true for Jalen’s dad, and people were calling Jalen “the Calamari Kid.” But his close friends called him a baseball genius.
Foxx was no friend. He knew JY wanted everyone to think he’d gotten out of his late-career batting slump on his own, not by some trick with a kid that no one could explain.
Even Jalen couldn’t explain it. It just happened. He’d watch a pitcher for a while, and then he’d just know what the next pitch was going to be. Once he got locked in, Jalen could predict every pitch to come.
“I think Foxx would do anything he thought would hurt JY.”
Daniel frowned. “Everyone loves JY.”
“Not Foxx! JY made Foxx look bad when he showed everyone his career is far from finished. And Foxx is one of those people who can never be wrong, even when he is,” Jalen said. “Especially when he is.”
Jalen looked down at Daniel’s phone and saw himself in the video, signaling two thumbs-up—which meant a changeup was coming. The frame swung away from Jalen, then froze, and a circle of light highlighted JY at the plate, staring intently in Jalen’s direction before turning his attention to the Red Sox pitcher. The highlight faded out, the pitch came in, and JY knocked it over the Green Monster, scoring what would be the winning run for the Yankees to beat their division rivals.
Jalen saw himself jumping up, screaming, and hugging Cat and her mom before the shot moved to JY rounding the bases. The YouTube title was: “Squid Kid Gives JY More Than Luck?”
“JY is gonna kill us,” Daniel said, taking back his phone.
“JY? We didn’t post this.” Jalen huffed.
“I know, but all he kept saying was that we gotta keep this quiet, and now everyone is gonna know,” Daniel said.
The problem was big enough to push his mother’s unexpected appearance (and disappearance) to the back of Jalen’s mind. He buried his face in his hands and sighed, because he knew what Daniel was saying was true. And he knew it was likely to ruin everything.
4
DANIEL PATTED HIM ON THE back. “Sorry, Jalen. I had to tell you. You had to know.”
“I’m not mad at you,” Jalen said. “My brain is spinning. That’s all.”
The bus pulled onto the Mass Turnpike. They rode in silence for a while before Jalen raised his head and laughed at the simple idea that had popped into it. “Daniel, this is easy. I just deny it! The whole thing. It could be a coincidence, right? I mean, we know because we know. To anyone else, it’s just gonna seem like a coincidence—me giving two thumbs-up and JY going yard—especially if JY and I both deny it. After all, I’m just a fan wishing him luck, right? Thumbs-up!”
“Yeah, but what about the team?” Daniel pointed out. “They all know. Coach Allen knows. He told the guys it was real, and you just signaled to our lineup when Chris was going to throw a fastball, a curve, or a changeup.”
“But I know Chris’s game.” Jalen smiled. He’d gotten special pleasure out of beating Chris Gamble for the championship. Cat called him Jalen’s nemesis, but he thought that “nemesis” was too fancy a word for Chris. The coach’s son was a bully and his biggest rival. Just the week before, Chris and Jalen and Daniel had been on the same team. Chris’s dad coached them, using his position to give his son every advantage over Jalen.
“We just say he had some obvious tells,” Jalen said, “and we were kidding about helping JY in a Yankees game. No one is going to think I can really predict the next pitch, especially if I deny it.”
“But Coach Allen? He knows,” Daniel insisted. “JY told him.”
“I think we know Coach Allen is a diehard fan. He won’t hurt JY.”
“Maybe,” said Daniel. Jalen sat back and closed his eyes.
After a time Daniel tapped him on the shoulder. “So, you gonna tell me about your mom, or what?”
Jalen opened his eyes but kept them focused on the back of the seat in front of them. “I don’t know.…”
He couldn’t say the words that kept running through his mind and wouldn’t stop: Why did she come back into my life for five minutes and just run away again?
“She’s so pretty,” Daniel offered after a moment of silence. “And… she seemed really nice,” he added, obviously struggling to find the right thing to say.
“Yeah, well. She is.” Jalen didn’t want to talk about his mom.
“Yeah. Duh. Right?” Daniel laughed with obvious discomfort, then changed his tune. “Hey, what about the smackdown you gave Chris? Bam! See ya!”
“Anyway, we’re celebrating, right? Listen.”
There were shouts of the players joking, and laughter up and down the aisle.
“Amigo, we didn’t know these guys a week ago, but now we’re part of the team,” Daniel continued. “We’re Bandits!”
“Come on,” Daniel said. “Let’s go to the back. Gertz and Fanny are doing some kind of finger-puppet show.”
“Nah. You go, though.” Jalen didn’t bother to look, but he moved over to his own side of the aisle so Daniel could get out. He sat down and laid his head against the window before closing his eyes.
Daniel slid across the aisle and put his hand on Jalen’s shoulder. “You should come, amigo. You’re the big star.”
Jalen kept his eyes shut. “Thanks, Daniel, but this thing with my mom… She got some phone call and just… disappeared.”
“I mean, she’s okay, right?” Daniel asked.
“I don’t even know.”
“Let me know if I can do anything,” Daniel said.
Jalen only shook his
head. Daniel stood up, paused for a second, then gave Jalen’s shoulder a thump before he disappeared into the back of the bus.
When he was alone, Jalen tilted the seat all the way back and closed his eyes again. It wasn’t sleep that he was after. Instead, on the movie screen in his mind, Jalen replayed every minute of the time he’d spent with his mom. He saw the sparkle in her dark eyes and studied the smile at the corners of her lips.
It hurt to think he might never see her again. Jalen scolded himself for being negative. She’d come back.
She had to.
5
JALEN HAD NODDED OFF, AND he woke to find someone shaking him. He looked up at the Bandits star pitcher, Grady Gertz, offering his winning smile.
“Hey,” Jalen said. “Some game!”
Gertzy laughed, closed both hands, and popped them open. “BOOM!”
Jalen BOOM-ed him back.
Gertzy was tall and thin but solid. He waved his hand breezily through the air. “Bet the other team bus is a lot quieter.”
Jalen laughed.
“That’s my man.” Gertzy gave Jalen a high five before he reached into the bulging pockets of his uniform pants to take out two cans of soda. He cracked them open and shoved one at Jalen. “So, you gonna tell me if it’s true that James Yager showed up after the game? Daniel would neither confirm nor deny.”
Jalen hesitated. “Yeah. He did.”
“Maybe next time you can introduce me and Fanny?” Gertzy wiggled his eyebrows.
“Sure, Gertzy.”
“Awesome. Hey, drink up. Here’s to champions. Today, and for the rest of the summer.”
“Champions!” Jalen clinked his can against Gertzy’s and took a sip. “How’s Daniel doing with the guys?”
Gertzy snorted. “He’s hilarious. That was an awesome catch he made at the end of the game. I think it was good for his confidence. But on to a more important subject: Did you guys actually put a bag of rabbit turds in that Chris Gamble’s lunch?”
Jalen burst into a grin. “He told you about that?”
“Ugh! I would’ve paid money to see it,” Gertzy said. “Some serious hot sauce, right?”