Shutout Read online




  ALSO BY BRENDAN HALPIN

  Forever Changes

  How Ya Like Me Now

  SHUTOUT

  SHUTOUT

  BRENDAN HALPIN

  FARRAR STRAUS GIROUX

  NEW YORK

  Table of Contents

  Title

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Warm-up

  Preseason

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Soccer Season

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Postseason

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Acknowledgments

  Copyright © 2010 by Brendan Halpin

  All rights reserved

  Distributed in Canada by D&M Publishers, Inc.

  Printed in June 2010 in the United States of America by RR Donnelley & Sons Company, Harrisonburg, Virginia

  Designed by Robbin Gourley

  First edition, 2010

  1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2

  www.fsgkidsbooks.com

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Halpin, Brendan, 1968–

  Shutout / Brendan Halpin.—1st ed.

  p. cm.

  Summary: Fourteen-year-old Amanda and her best friend Lena start high school looking forward to playing on the varsity soccer team, but when Lena makes varsity and Amanda only makes junior varsity, their long friendship rapidly changes.

  ISBN: 978-0-374-36899-9

  [1. Soccer—Fiction. 2. Friendship—Fiction. 3. Interpersonal relations—Fiction. 4. Family life—Massachusetts—Fiction. 5. High schools—Fiction. 6. Schools—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.H16674Sh 2010

  [Fic]—dc22

  2009032972

  To Casey, Rowen, and Kylie

  Warm-up

  I started playing soccer and being friends with Lena in the third grade; six years later, they both turned on me.

  Well, my body turned on me first. I’m not talking about developing embarrassing boobs and monthly bleeding and hair in gross places. That stuff happens to everybody. What happened to me is Sever’s disease.

  I love saying that because it sounds really dramatic and life-threatening, like I have a disease that’s going to cause part of me to get cut off. If you tell a group of people that you have Sever’s disease, they will make these sad noises at you and tell you how brave you are and stuff like that, which is pretty funny because they actually have no idea what the hell it is.

  What it actually is is heel pain. See why I like saying Sever’s disease instead? Heel pain sounds so wimpy, no matter how you dress it up. I can tell you that after I play soccer, it feels like there’s somebody constantly shoving an eight-inch kitchen knife into the back of my heel, and still it doesn’t sound as dramatic as Sever’s disease.

  Sever’s disease is a condition where your bones grow really fast, and your muscles and tendons can’t keep up. So these short muscles and tendons in your legs get stretched out until they’re really tight, and they pull on the back of your heel until it feels like somebody’s just whacked you on the bottom of your foot with a hammer.

  I know that compared to cystic fibrosis or cancer or any of the other million horrible diseases I could have, Sever’s disease is a pretty easy ride. The best part is that it’s completely curable. The worst part is that the only cure is reaching your full height. I’m fourteen years old and five feet ten inches tall, which is already totally freakish for a girl, so I’m going to be pretty pissed if I don’t stop growing soon.

  My mom understands this pretty well—she gets how hard it is to fit in, how they don’t make clothes for girls my size, especially shoes (you try finding something that isn’t hideous in a size eleven), and she’s always really good about listening to all my complaints and sympathizing. I guess she was fat in high school, which you’d never know to look at her now, but anyway, she gets how tough it is to be a teenage girl.

  Of course, she’s also not my mom. Well, she kind of is. It’s complicated. I think of her as my mom, and she’s the only mom I can ever remember having, but she didn’t give birth to me. My biological mom died when I was two. She was five feet eleven inches tall, which is pretty funny because my dad is only five six. So you can imagine what they looked like together. She wore flats to their wedding and still totally towered over him.

  So the fact that my mom was a freakish giantess (I’m sorry, Mom I Don’t Remember, but it’s just the truth. And yeah, it takes one to know one) means that Dad sees my own freakish gigantism as some kind of great gift because it makes me Mom’s—my late mom, I mean the dead one—walking tombstone or something. Every once in a while I catch him looking up at me all misty-eyed, and one time I made the mistake of going, “What?” and Dad was like, “It’s nothing. It’s just that you looked so much like your mom there for a second.” Stupid me for asking. Now I always know what he’s thinking when he looks at me that way, and it’s annoying.

  So Dad gets all mad when I complain about my height, but then Mom—the alive one—tells him he has no idea how mean girls can be, and Dad says he damn sure does. That’s why he stayed in basements playing Dungeons and Dragons with his geeky friends until he was sixteen, which is a pretty funny picture. I mean, I think about my parents in high school—Dad pale, skinny, and short, sitting in some dork’s basement, and Mom all fat and standing on the wall at every dance hoping to get a pity dance out of somebody, and it kind of gives me hope. I mean, they survived high school and seem to be pretty happy grownups, so I guess I probably will too.

  It’s not always easy to take that point of view, though. In fact, it’s almost always impossible to take that point of view. Especially after they made the cut.

  Preseason

  1

  Lena slept over. Except for the times when we were on our separate little family vacations, we spent most of the summer together, and we probably slept at each other’s houses two or three times a week. Lena likes to come to my house because her parents are nuts, I mean even in comparison to most parents. Also she has a crush on my brother. The one who’s fifteen. I mean my stepbrother, except we never use the “step” part unless we’re in a really big fight. The kid sees his dad like three weeks a year. We’ve lived together for forty-nine weeks a year since I was four, so it seems dumb to say he’s anything but my brother. I have another brother, Dominic, who’s eight, but he’s actually my half brother, and Conrad’s half brother too. Neither of us ever uses the “half” with Dominic no matter how annoying he is, which is very.

  But I was talking about Conrad, my brother who has, I know from when he recently mooned me, developed butt hair, which is just about the grossest thing I can imagine. I’m pretty sure I’m into guys, sexual orientation–wise, but the sight of Conrad’s hairy butt really made me question for a while whether that was a good idea. I mean, if I remain heterosexual, I will presumably be called on at some point to be naked with a guy, and he might have a hairy butt. I really can’t imagine being so into anyone that I could overlook that.

  I guess it’s possible that Conrad is just a freak of nature and the only guy on earth who has butt hair. Well, he’s certainly a freak of nature, but I don’t know if that means he’s the only guy with butt hair or not. Okay, this is really grossing me out. Let me talk about something else.

  Like how L
ena was over the night before the cut. We had both been playing our hearts out at soccer practice all week. Some people complained about working that hard in the hot August sun, but we were into that part of summer where the vacations are over and there’s really nothing going on except worrying about school starting, so I was happy to have something to do.

  And I loved soccer. It was fun, and I was good at it. Well, sort of. I mean, before the whole Sever’s disease thing hit, Lena and I were a great offensive team. We’d charge up the field together, her in the center, me on the wing, passing all the way until one of us drew the defenders. Then it was cross to the other one, goal. It never even mattered to either of us which of us actually put the ball in the goal—they were all our goals. I remember Lena coming over after a game one day and when Dad, who’d been at Conrad’s game, asked how we did, we both said, “We scored three goals!” in unison.

  It seems kind of corny now, not to mention unbelievable that we didn’t care which of us had two goals and which had one, but that’s really how it was.

  But then Sever’s disease came to visit right about the time they moved us to playing on a bigger field, and suddenly I went from charging up the wing and crossing to my best friend to hobbling toward the goal, watching defenders pick off a pass I couldn’t catch up to.

  Still, I was lucky, because back then I had Lori as a coach. I was moping after one game because we would have had a chance to tie if I had been able to catch up to Lena’s pass, but I couldn’t, so we lost. Lori took me aside and said, “I want to ask you something.”

  “Yeah?”

  “What do you think about playing goal?”

  “Honestly? I kind of think it sucks. If I wanted to stand around waiting for something to happen, I would have signed up for softball.”

  “Well, listen,” she said, “you have a gift for this game. And I know right now you can’t run the way you’d like to, but I know you’ve scored enough goals that you can read people, when they’re going to pass and when they’re going to shoot and even where the ball is going.”

  “Um. Thanks. I mean, yeah, I guess I get that stuff.”

  “If you want to, I’ll be happy to work with you on this. I know you can be as strong a goalkeeper as you were a forward.”

  Well, that was a pretty good pep talk, and so I did work with Lori on goalkeeping, and I got Lena to shoot on me all the time. Pretty soon we were the Twin Towers—Lena in the front and me in the back, and our team was unstoppable. Well, we would have been the Twin Towers, but Lena’s only five feet four inches tall. So, okay, I was a tower and she was a Ferrari.

  I guess this is going to sound conceited, but we were good enough that I didn’t think it was crazy to hope we’d make varsity as ninth graders.

  All the girls hoping to make the high school teams had been practicing together for the last two weeks, and whenever Lena and I got to play in a scrimmage, we were just as good as we’d always been. And Lena was unstoppable when we ran—I don’t know how she goes so fast on her short legs, but she’s easily the fastest girl on the team, including some of the senior girls who have these incredible muscly tree trunk thighs.

  I, of course, can barely run at all before I start limping. But I did the right thing and talked to one of the coaches, Ms. Beasley, who is the younger and nicer of the two, about Sever’s disease and how I’m probably almost done growing, so it shouldn’t be a factor for long. I do have a hard time running, I said, but just watch me in the goal.

  She made sure I got in the goal during scrimmages, and I saw her talking to scary, crusty Ms. Keezer whenever I made a save. Maybe she was just trying to tell Ms. Keezer about sunblock and moisturizers and how you could be a female sports coach without looking like a dried-up apple doll. But I hope she was talking about my awesome saves.

  Anyway, it was the last day before they made the cut, and Lena was sleeping over. She was mad cheesy all night, trying to involve Conrad in conversations and stuff, and he is either clueless about Lena liking him, which is hard to imagine since she’s so obvious about it, or else he doesn’t like her, which is also hard to imagine since she’s pretty and smart and grew a cup size in like a weekend this summer.

  Or maybe he likes her and just doesn’t know what to do about it, which is totally fine with me, because the two of them together would make my life awkward, not to mention gross.

  Lena and I were in sleeping bags in a tent in the basement (yes, we’re corny, and yes, there are perfectly good beds upstairs, but we have more privacy to talk in the basement and besides we like to have these little imaginary campouts like we’re six years old). We were talking about the cut.

  “I think we’re both gonna make it,” Lena said.

  “I don’t know,” I answered. “Remember that big speech Ms. Beasley gave about how the younger players almost never make varsity and we have to pay dues and blah blah?”

  “Yeah, but, I mean, not to be conceited, but we are pretty good. I feel like we’re definitely in the top half of the girls there,” Lena said.

  “Yeah.” I hoped that was true, but it was hard to believe with all these senior girls running around being awesome.

  “Well,” I said, “I think we’ll probably only make JV, but that’ll be cool because we’ll get to play a lot, and we’ll be together.”

  “Yeah,” Lena said. “But it would be even cooler if we were together on varsity.”

  “Yeah,” I agreed, “it would.” We lay there for a while not talking, and even though I kept telling myself that ninth graders almost never make varsity, I could see the whole thing clearly—Lena up front, me in the goal, all the way to the state championship. The team had missed going to states last year, but this year they’d have the crucial puzzle pieces in place: us. We’d be just what they needed to push the team to the next level.

  “What are you thinking about?” Lena asked.

  “I was just imagining winning the state championship.”

  “I would totally take off my shirt like Brandi Chastain,” Lena said.

  I laughed. “I think you might get suspended if you did that.”

  “Well, we could both do it,” she answered. “Then it would be like this great team moment of triumph, and even if we got suspended we could hang out and watch Bend It Like Beckham all day.”

  “Yeah, you know, I think I’d rather not turn this great moment of triumph into a great moment of humiliation when I strip off my shirt and everybody points and laughs and the league makes me pee in a cup to prove I’m female.” Yeah, boobs are embarrassing, but I think actual boobs would be somewhat less embarrassing than these little pointy nubs I’ve got.

  Lena laughed. “You so need a confidence boost, girl. I swear I have no idea how you look in the mirror and see what you see.”

  “A gigantic freak?”

  “Yeah, that’s what you see. I see this pretty girl with a supermodel body and a brain in her head that guys are going to be totally falling for next week.”

  “You sound like my dad,” I said.

  “I didn’t say anything about you looking like somebody who’s dead,” Lena answered, and that was one of those things your best friend can say and it’s funny and if anybody else said it you’d want to punch them.

  “I guess you’re right. Well, thanks. That’s a nice fantasy. Almost as good as us making varsity and winning states.”

  “It’s gonna happen,” Lena said. “Just wait till tomorrow.”

  I drifted off to sleep imagining saving the tying goal in the state championship while my own personal cheering section of really tall guys—maybe the basketball team?—watched from the stands and held up homemade signs with my name on them.

  2

  We got up early, and Lena made goo-goo eyes at Conrad across the breakfast table while he read the sports section. It made me slightly nauseous, and I might not have eaten, but I knew we’d be running all day and I’d need my strength.

  “So, did the Sox win?” Lena asked.

  “Four–thre
e over the Jays,” Conrad replied as he took another bite of a poppy seed bagel. He had these little smears of cream cheese with dots of poppy seeds on his cheeks. He looked completely ridiculous. I thought about saying something to him, but I was afraid he might give one of his typical responses, like “And you’ve got something really ugly on top of your neck—oh, snap, it’s your face!” Moron. How could Lena possibly like him? She was frantically trying to find something, anything else, to say after Mr. Scintillating Conversation had relayed the score of last night’s game, but Mom came in and shut her down, or possibly saved her from saying some awkward, embarrassing thing that she’d kick herself for later.

  “You girls all ready for your big day?” Mom asked, making herself a cup of herbal tea. I guess she had a big meeting or something, because she was wearing a suit. I looked at her and tried not to think about how unfair it was that I would never inherit those curves.

  “Sure,” I said. “You look great, by the way.”

  “You think? I was feeling like this skirt made me look a little hippy.”

  “At least you have hips,” I answered.

  Mom smiled. “Okay, Manda, you and I can play dueling bad body image later, maybe when Conrad’s not around.”

  “Like he notices.” I pointed to Conrad, who was still completely lost in the sports section.

  “Point taken, but it’s still bad form. Lena, how are you feeling about today?”

  “Okay. Nervous,” she said.

  “Well, you girls are great, but just remember how high school sports work. Seniors are going to get those varsity spots, and it’s the right thing for the coaches to do. You’ll want it that way when you’re a senior.”

  I rolled my eyes. “Yeah, we heard that the first five times you said it, Mom.”

  Mom smiled. “Okay, okay. It’s going to be hot today—make sure you take two water bottles each.”

  Lena and I held up our huge bottles, already filled with ice water. “Excellent, girls. You have to stay hydrated. What about you, Conrad?” Mom asked.