Nikki on the Line

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Nikki on the Line Page 1

by Barbara Carroll Roberts




  Copyright

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2019 by Barbara Carroll Roberts

  Interior illustrations © Shutterstock.com

  Cover art copyright © 2019 by Sammy Moore. Cover design by Marcie Lawrence. Cover copyright © 2019 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  Hachette Book Group supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Little, Brown and Company

  Hachette Book Group

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  Visit us at LBYR.com

  First Edition: March 2019

  Little, Brown and Company is a division of Hachette Book Group, Inc. The Little, Brown name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Roberts, Barbara Carroll, author.

  Title: Nikki on the Line / Barbara Carroll Roberts.

  Description: First edition. | New York ; Boston : Little, Brown and Company, 2019. | Summary: Nikki, thirteen, dreams of being a great basketball player but struggles on her new, elite team while also juggling school stress, her non-traditional family, and revelations about her biological father.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2018017611| ISBN 9780316521901 (hardcover) | ISBN 9780316521833 (ebook) | ISBN 780316523615 (library edition ebook)

  Subjects: | CYAC: Basketball—Fiction. | Single-parent families—Fiction. | Best friends—Fiction. | Friendship—Fiction. | Middle schools—Fiction. | Schools—Fiction.

  Classification: LCC PZ7.1.R588 Out 2019 | DDC [Fic]—dc23

  LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018017611

  ISBNs: 978-0-316-52190-1 (hardcover), 978-0-316-52183-3 (ebook)

  E3-20181217-JV-NF-ORI

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  1: Trouble

  2: Some Kind of Heterozygote Advantage

  3: The Most Embarrassing Thing in the Entire World

  4: Special

  5: Hustle Your Butt Off

  6: Ultimate Sacrifice

  7: Roadkill

  8: Mr. Bukowski Wins the Game

  9: Booker

  10: My Paper Dad

  11: More Trouble

  12: Clueless

  13: A Black Hole on the Basketball Court

  14: Genetics Stinks

  15: In Case Being a Black Hole Wasn’t Bad Enough

  16: Working on My Lying

  17: Are We Having Fun Yet?

  18: Mia Takes On LeBron

  19: Field Goal Kicker

  20: Mutants

  21: A Librarian Finds Some Answers

  22: The Three-Point Line

  23: In Case That Other Horrible, Awful Day Wasn’t Horrible and Awful Enough

  24: Game Time

  25: Shooter

  Acknowledgments

  FOR MY FAMILY

  Gary, Wesley, and Helen

  Trouble

  You know how you can tell you’re in trouble?

  You can tell you’re in trouble when you’re standing in a long line of girls in a basketball gym, getting ready to try out for an eighth-grade club team—an elite-level team, the kind of team you haven’t played on before, the kind of team you really want to play on—and you all of a sudden realize you’re staring straight-on, eye-level at the shoulder blades of the girl in front of you. Which means, as far as you can tell, the girl attached to those shoulder blades is a good nine or ten inches taller than you.

  And that’s right where I was.

  And since I knew I was somewhere around five foot four, that meant the girl in front of me had to be over six feet.

  In eighth grade.

  I turned to Adria behind me and nodded toward the shoulder-blade girl.

  “Maybe she’s in the wrong gym,” Adria said, her voice barely a whisper.

  “Let’s hope.”

  We moved forward with the line.

  Girls who’d already gotten their tryout numbers shuffled over to the side of the gym to drop their bags, lace up their shoes, and stretch. Parents were over there, too, setting up folding chairs or camp stools because the bleachers had all been pushed back flat against the walls. With the bleachers pushed in like that, the big gym seemed even bigger than it was, and it felt cold and hollow, every sound bouncing off the walls. Nothing like the cozy little middle school gyms where Adria and I had played county-league games. It still smelled like a regular gym, though, kind of musty, with the leathery scent of the balls and the bite of floor cleaner all mixed together.

  A few girls trotted onto the court to put up shots. Not particularly good-looking shots, I was happy to see. One girl snapped her hand sideways instead of holding her follow-through with her fingers pointing at the basket. Another flipped her hand backward, launching the ball toward the hoop with no arc and no spin.

  Maybe I wasn’t in such deep trouble after all.

  “I wonder who taught them to shoot,” Adria said.

  “Not your dad.”

  Adria grinned. “Lucky for us.”

  A few more girls joined the shooters on the floor. One of them stood behind the three-point line and shot with plenty of arc and plenty of spin, and her first two shots dropped straight through the net.

  Okay, I was still in trouble.

  The registration line kept moving, and the shoulder-blade girl in front of me stepped up to the man handing out tryout numbers—squares of paper with big numbers printed on them.

  “Name?” the man said.

  “Kate Nyquist.”

  “Oh, Kate!” the man said. “Coach Duval told me he invited you to try out, but we didn’t expect to see you. Your father said you always play with older girls.”

  The girl shifted her weight. “He’s letting me play with girls my age this spring.”

  “Fantastic,” the man said. “Love to have you play for the Action.”

  The girl took her number, mumbled “Thank you,” and walked away.

  I stepped to the front of the line, looked up at the tryout-number man, and waited for him to ask my name.

  His gaze stayed pinned on Kate-the-giant.

  I waited, waited, then finally stretched up on my tiptoes. “I’m Nikki Doyle.”

  “Hmm? Oh, right.” The man still didn’t look at me. He shoved a number at me, found my name on his clipboard, and wrote my number down, then looked over my head at Adria. “Name?”

  “Adria Lawson.” She took her number.

  We joined the big clump of girls and parents by the side of the gym and dropped our gym bags.

  “Am I wearing an invisibility cloak?” I said.

  “We’re all invisible next to that girl.” Adria handed me her number and turned so I could pin it to the back of her shirt. “You think a lot of these girls have played on club teams before?”

  “You think a lot of them were invited to try out?”

  Adria held up her hands, fingers crossed. “Please don’t let that be true.”
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  Parents were talking to one another now, saying stuff like, “Played on a Nike-sponsored team last year” or “Duke coach watching her,” and saying stuff to their daughters like, “Good luck” or “Try hard” or “Do your best,” except one mom, who, honestly, looked kind of like a bulldog. She was bending down, her face about three inches from the face of her bulldog-looking daughter, growling, “Don’t let anybody get in your way.”

  My mom wasn’t there to say “Good luck” or anything else. She worked some Saturday mornings, so I’d come with Adria and her dad. And since he’d coached our county-league teams ever since we were in second grade, he hadn’t said something dumb like, “Try hard” (Really?); he’d said, “Be aggressive. Attack the hoop. Move your feet and keep your backsides down and your hands up on defense.” And to Adria he’d said, “And stand up straight. Don’t slouch.”

  I turned so Adria could pin my number to the back of my shirt, then scanned the gym, doing a quick count of the girls. Thirty or so. All different skin colors—brown and tan and white. Skinny and stocky. Loud and quiet. But all with one thing in common, it seemed—tall. Making me feel like an ant in a field of giraffes.

  I rubbed my hands along the sides of my shorts, scrunching up the shiny fabric with my fingertips. I’d never felt short before. Not in county league. And anyway, I was a point guard, and point guards don’t need to be tall. They need to be good ball-handlers and make accurate passes and call the right plays, and I was good at all that stuff. They also need to get the ball to the girl who can score, which on our county-league teams was usually Adria. And I was great at getting the ball to Adria when she was open.

  But some of these tall girls had to be point guards, and all other things being equal, taller is better in basketball. I knew that. Everybody knew that.

  I took a long, slow breath, blowing it back out long and slow, the way you’re supposed to before you shoot a free throw, then stood up extra straight and squared my shoulders. So what if these girls were all big? So what if I’d never played on a team like this before? I’d been the best point guard in all of county league. Adria’s dad always said so. A lot of people said so.

  I could be better than these girls, too.

  I could be one of the best.

  I had to be.

  A whistle blew.

  The tallest man I’d ever seen stood in the middle of the floor, waving us over.

  I sprinted onto the court, beating out the giraffes to plant myself directly in front of the man, which was maybe not the best idea, since looking up at him from that angle was pretty much like looking straight up a tree.

  “Ladies,” the man said, “I’m Coach Duval, and this is the Northern Virginia Action. I’ll take ten girls on this team. We’ll play fast, up-tempo ball, but it’ll be team ball.” He paused and looked around at us. “Let me say that again. Basketball is a team sport and the Action plays team ball. If you want to be the only star of the show, this isn’t the team for you.” He paused again, as if giving girls a chance to leave, but no one did. “Okay, how many of you want to play varsity ball in high school?”

  I raised my hand. So did all the other girls.

  Coach Duval nodded. “So let me tell you something. I’ve coached eighth-grade club teams for twenty years. Some girls who play on my teams decide it’s too much work. Decide they’d rather be shopping or hanging out doing nothing. But the girls who stick with it, every single one has made her high school varsity team. Quite a few played in college. What do you think got them there?”

  “Talent,” a girl said.

  “Yup. What else?”

  “Size and speed,” another girl said.

  “Well, yeah. What else?”

  There was a long pause, then Kate-the-giant said, “Hard work.”

  “Bingo.” Coach Duval pointed at her. “You want to play at the next level, you have to work hard. Doesn’t matter how much talent you have, how big you are, how high you can jump. So hear me now. On the Action, we work hard. We have a lot of fun, but we work hard. Every practice. Every game. You don’t like to work, you need to find another team. You got me?”

  He picked up a basketball from the rack beside him, palming it in one hand, his fingers, dark brown against the orange ball, reaching way around—about like me holding a softball. Then he looked straight down at me. “You ready to show me what you got?”

  I stood frozen for a moment, until I realized he expected me to answer, and managed to squeak out, “Yes.”

  “Then let’s warm up.” He handed the ball to me and tossed a few more to other girls. “Line up single file, dribble the length of the court, make a layup. Right hand first. Go.”

  Balls boomed off the floor, sneakers screeched, the basket rims rattled and clanked, all the noise multiplying, echoing off the walls.

  When my turn came, I sprinted down the court, my dribble low and crisp, my eyes up, the way Adria’s dad had taught me. I jumped to make a layup, and the ball rolled around the rim once, twice before dropping through. I got back in line just as Kate-the-giant started up the court. She didn’t look like she was running very fast, but her long legs gobbled up the floor in a few strides and she had to slow down to keep from plowing into the girl in front of her. She barely had to jump to get her hand up near the rim, and her ball rolled across the lip of the basket and fell straight through.

  I was having a hard time not hating her.

  Our layup line kept going. Most of the girls looked okay but nothing special, which wasn’t surprising since there aren’t a lot of ways to look special doing layups.

  Unless you were Kate, of course.

  Or Adria. She stood out on the basketball court no matter what she was doing. Her long, long arms and legs made her look like she was flying over the court instead of running. Like maybe gravity didn’t apply to her. Even my mom, who was clueless about sports, said Adria made basketball beautiful.

  I was glad she was my best friend. Otherwise I’d have to hate her, too.

  “Kate,” a man’s voice said, sharp and loud, cutting through the noise in the gym.

  She stepped out of line and walked over to a man who had to be her father—same thick blond hair, same stilts for legs. They had a short conversation, during which Kate shook her head several times. The only thing I heard was her dad say, “Reverse.”

  The girl behind me tapped my shoulder. “Go.”

  “Sorry.” I sprinted down the court for another layup, caught my ball after it dropped through the net, and turned to watch Kate.

  Her big strides ate up the court again, but when she got near the basket, she jumped sideways beneath it and swung the ball up backward over her shoulder. It tapped the backboard and fell through the hoop.

  “Whoa!” the girl behind me said.

  Coach Duval blew his whistle. “Okay, move your line to the other side of the hoop. Left-handed dribble. Left-handed layups. And we don’t need anything fancy. Just regular layups.”

  Kate stared down at the court, her face suddenly splotchy red. She brushed past me as we moved our line, and even though I was still hating her, I couldn’t help saying, “That was sweet.”

  She looked up. “Thanks,” she said, so quietly I barely heard her.

  Her dad leaned against the side of the gym now, frowning, arms crossed. Not very happy his daughter wasn’t allowed to do reverse layups, I guess.

  A lot of the other parents didn’t look super happy right then, either, especially the bulldog mom, who stomped back and forth along the sideline, looking like she wanted to bite Kate on the leg. “JJ can do a reverse layup,” she barked to the woman next to her. Then she whipped around and shouted, “Intense, JJ. Get intense.”

  I turned back to the court. A couple of the girls out on the floor fumbled with their left-handed dribbles. One completely lost her ball, and another jumped off the wrong foot to shoot her supposed-to-be-left-handed layup with her right hand.

  And, okay, I know it was mean, but that made me happy.

 
Because I’m left-handed.

  And just like every other lefty in the world, I’d spent my entire life learning to do things right-handed, because, duh, that’s how the world works. So when it came to handling a basketball with my right hand, it was no big deal.

  But, double-duh, right-handers never have to do anything left-handed.

  Unless they play basketball.

  And that’s why some of the girls on the court were looking as clumsy as actual giraffes trying to dribble and shoot with their left hands.

  We finished the layups, then dribbled around cones and ran catch-and-shoot drills and stuff like that. Then finally, it was time to scrimmage, to actually play basketball. The best part of any tryout.

  Or practice.

  Or anything.

  Coach Duval put me on a team with Kate and three other girls I didn’t know. One of them kept dropping the ball or throwing it out of bounds, but the other two were good, and Kate was fantastic. Also unselfish, which I hadn’t expected from a girl as good as her. On the first play of our first game, I had the ball at the top of the key, and Kate set a pick, motioning me around. I dribbled in close, crashed my defender into Kate, and popped out on her other side. No one stepped between me and the hoop, so I drove straight in for a layup. Left-handed, of course.

  “Sweet, Nikki!” Adria called. “Keep—”

  “For crying out loud, Kate,” her dad’s voice boomed, drowning out Adria. “Call for the ball and take the shot.”

  But Kate just smiled a shy smile and slapped my hand. And I had a hard time hating her after that.

  We ran down the court to play defense, but as soon as a girl put up a shot, Kate blocked it and swatted the ball out to me. I drove up the court, spotted one of our teammates sprinting ahead, and fired the ball up to her. The girl jumped for a layup, which she missed, but Kate came blasting up behind her, caught the rebound, and tipped it back in.

  Everything else fell away—my worries about the giraffes, the parents yelling, every thought about anything other than what was happening out on that golden wood floor, with the ball in my hands, directing my teammates to cut across the court, then Kate setting another hard pick, motioning me around, then rolling to the hoop with her hand in the air, and my high lob over all the other outstretched hands to find Kate’s, and her pretty pivot around her defender to put the ball up and in.

 

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