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Gabe — St. Jude’s resident genius—is back for his final year of middle school. As an eighth grader, he must fulfill a community service requirement and decide if he will attend a high school for science and math.
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By Marilee Haynes
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Haynes, Marilee.
Genius under construction / by Marilee Haynes.
pages cm
Sequel to: a.k.a. genius.
Summary: “Eighth-grade genius Gabe discovers how his giftedness can serve others”- Provided by publisher.
ISBN-13: 978-0-8198-3126-2
ISBN-10: 0-8198-3126-3
[1. Genius-Fiction. 2. Gifted children-Fiction. 3. Catholic schools-Fiction. 4. Middle schools-Fiction. 5. Schools-Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.H3149146Ge 2014
[Fic]-dc23
2013031122
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events, and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.
Many manufacturers and sellers distinguish their products through the use of trademarks. Any trademarked designations that appear in this book are used in good faith but are not endorsed by, authorized by, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.
Cover design by Mary Joseph Peterson, FSP
Cover art by Tracy Hill
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.
“P” and PAULINE are registered trademarks of the Daughters of St. Paul.
Copyright © 2014, Marilee Haynes
Published by Pauline Books & Media, 50 Saint Paul’s Avenue, Boston, MA 02130-3491
Printed in the U.S.A.
GUC VSAUSAPEOILL11-2710011 3126-3
www.pauline.org
Pauline Books & Media is the publishing house of the Daughters of St. Paul, an international congregation of women religious serving the Church with the communications media.
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For my husband—Love always
It’s here. The first day of eighth grade. My last year at St. Jude Middle School. I’m still mostly the same me I was on the last day of seventh grade. Still kind of short. Still more than kind of smart. And still completely confused by girls.
There’s nothing I can do about the short part—I checked. And the smart part is mostly okay. But the girls part. I have a plan for that—avoid them as much as possible.
That’s the what of the plan, anyway. It’s the how part that’s a little fuzzy. Because out of the 314 students at St. Jude Middle School, 183 are girls. That’s 58.28%. More than half. So avoiding them could be a problem. And as any engineer would tell you, every plan, no matter how well designed, has problems—or obstacles. The biggest—and loudest—obstacle to my plan sits next to me, almost shoulder to shoulder.
“We’re here. Can you believe we’re actually here?” Linc says for at least the seventeenth time. This time he mixes it up by elbowing me hard in what would be my bicep if I had one. All of a sudden he does have biceps—and triceps and pecs and other muscle-like things that mean he’s stronger and also a little more dangerous to sit next to than he used to be.
“Of course I can believe it. We’ve been here for seventy-nine minutes now. Which, by the way, is more than enough time for both my butt cheeks to go completely numb.” It’s also more than enough time for my hair to double in size since it’s August and the humidity is 87% and, well, that’s what my hair does.
“I know, but it’s so worth it.”
And the truth is he’s right. Because for the first time ever, we’re sitting on “the rock.” The enormous rock in front of school that only eighth graders can sit on. It’s some kind of St. Jude Academy Middle School rule—unofficial, of course—that goes back to the dark ages even before my dad was a student here. And because Linc is Linc, he said we had to be first this year. And because Linc has been my best friend for as long as I can remember—and because he bugged me about it every day for the entire summer—I said yes. Even though it meant getting up earlier than any person should actually ever get up for school. We did. And we got here first. And even though sitting here for this long is totally uncomfortable—it is a rock, after all—it’s also kind of awesome.
“Hey, who’s the cute girl with Maya?”
Again with the elbow. I rub the sore spot on my arm and turn my head in the direction Linc is pointing to. There’s Maya. And Linc’s right, there is a girl with her. A girl I’ve never seen before with light brown hair that swings from side to side when she walks.
“Don’t really know. She said something about Mrs. Capistrano calling and asking her to help with some new students.”
By the time I’m done talking, Maya and the girl with the swingy hair are standing in front of us.
“And this is the rock. People paint it during the year—usually for birthdays or if some team wins a big game. But only eighth graders can sit on it. It’s like a school law or something.” Maya rolls her eyes and the other girl giggles. Maya is acting like she doesn’t see us sitting there. And since I’m supposed to be avoiding girls (even if my plan doesn’t technically include Maya since she’s supposed to be my second-best friend), I don’t say anything either. But Linc is definitely not avoiding girls.
“Hi, Maya. Hi, person with Maya. I’m Lincoln Jefferson Truman, but you can call me Linc.” Linc reclines a little and smiles big enough to show all his teeth.
Swingy-hair-girl giggles again. Maya blows her bangs up out of her eyes. “Yeah, that’s Linc and the other one is Gabe. This is Shelby. She’s new.”
Before I have to say anything, the bell rings. Linc and I slide off the rock and head toward the front doors with Maya and Shelby. Linc and Shelby are talking—well, Linc is talking and Shelby is giggling. I mostly concentrate on walking as normally as possible despite the fact that I still can’t feel my butt.
First-day-of-school sounds bounce down and around the hallway—the yelling, the whooping, the slamming of bodies into lockers (some people have a really weird way of being happy to see each other after summer vacation).
I square my shoulders and face my locker, head on. I check the slip of paper with my combination. I’ve got this. Breathe in, breathe out, and go—27 right, 12 left, 2 right. Listen for the click and lift. It opens. I shrug like it’s no big deal even as a sigh of relief seeps out of me bit by bit. Because out of the first 107 days of seventh grade, my locker opened exactly two times. And even though it opened every one of the last 73 days of seventh grade and this is a totally different locker in a totally different hallway, there was no way to know if the locker magic would keep over the summer. Looks like it did. Bonus.
Since I only grew 3/8 of an inch over the summer, which is completely undetectable to anyone or anything, I affix my new locker mirror at the exact same latitude as my last year’s locker mirror. Everyone has one and everyone says they’re for checking hair. For some kids, they probably are. But my hair is my hair and looking at it isn’t going to change it, so I mostly use mine to check for boogers in my nose or food in my teeth. All clear.
I line up my books on the shelf in the order I’ll need them, then pull the first one back out and load it into my bag along with a fresh notebook, my lucky Superman pen and two spares. A lot of people—Linc—don’t think it’s important to always have a spare pen, but then a lot of people—Linc—always end up asking me for a pen when they forget one or when the one old, chewed-on, nasty pen they do have runs out of ink.
Last year I had a backpack on wheels that I dragged everywhere I went. This was because the whole locker-that-I-could-never-get-open problem meant I had to have all my books with me all the time. This year instead of a backpack, rolling or otherwise, I’m using my grandpa’s briefcase. It’s old and soft and the leather still smells the tiniest bit like him. My grandma gave it to me after—well, after everything. After I sling the long strap of the bag across my body, I trace his initials on the front for luck.
Here it is. The Clubhouse. One-time meeting place of the Wednesday Weather Club until it died from lack of members (it was just me and Linc, and he only came because I promised good snacks) and current home of G.A.S. class.
Greater Achieving Students (G.A.S.) was just one of the things that happened because of the whole “hey, all of a sudden I’m a genius” thing last year. It ended up being one of the better things. Most of it, anyway. It’s the reason there’s a trophy in the trophy case that I helped put there and it was a big part of why seventh grade ended up being pretty good. I’m hoping for more of the same for eighth grade. No big changes. No big surprises. And after what happened with Becca Piccarelli, no girls. It’s all part of the plan.
“Gabe—wait up!” Linc weaves his way down the hall, barely avoiding running people over.
The bell rings just as we get to the door. And on the other side of the door is the first surprise of the day. Sister Stevie. She stands there looking a lot like she did last year. Same long white dress, same black veil sitting crookedly on her crayon-yellow hair. Same high-top sneakers—hot pink ones. Same happy-to-see-you smile.
“Gabe. Linc. Come in. Sit down.”
Linc and I snag the same seats as last year, me by the window and Linc next to me. This year there are more desks. Seats for ten students instead of just six. Some of them are already full. There’s Shelby, the new girl with the swingy hair, and Cameron Goodrich, the only person I’ve ever punched. Well, other than Maya, but that was an accident. And it was Cameron’s fault.
I see a couple of seventh graders I know—including Mary Frances Gonzales. Ever since her picture was in the paper a few years ago for winning the library’s summer reading challenge—she read more pages than any other kid in the state of North Carolina (and probably the world)—she acts like she’s famous. She’s not. But she is sitting behind me. When class starts, there’s still one empty desk.
Maya’s in her same-as-last-year spot on the other end, her hand already waving in the air. Class hasn’t even started and she already has a question. The thing is, so do I.
“Yes, Maya?” says Sister Stevie.
“What are you doing here? I thought you weren’t coming back.”
That was my question, too. Because Sister Stevie being our teacher was supposed to be a one-time kind of thing. A just-last-year thing. She said good-bye to us at the end of seventh grade and cried and everything. We even got her flowers and a card—a mushy goodbye card my mom picked out.
“I know. I have so much to tell you.” Sister Stevie grabs the giant exercise ball she uses instead of a chair and settles herself on it, facing the two semicircles of desks. She smiles big enough to show the dimples in both her cheeks and claps her hands like a little kid.
“See, after the school year ended, I went back to teaching college classes. Summer classes. And it was fine. But I realized something important.” Sister bounces on the ball hard enough to almost shake her veil loose. “I liked teaching all of you better. So I prayed about it—a lot—and got permission from my Mother Superior. Then I called Mr. Dooley and convinced him that he needed me. That you needed me, too. I prayed a bunch more while he thought about it and—ta da—I’m back. I’ll be teaching both this class and eighth grade religion.”
I look over at Linc, who is doing something really weird. Instead of slouching way down in his seat and doodling or chewing on his pen or doing any of the other things Linc usually does in class, he’s sitting up straight and facing Sister Stevie. The notebook on his desk looks almost new and he’s even—wait, is he really? He is. He’s taking notes. I poke my leg out to the left and kick his chair. He doesn’t even flinch. Weirder than weird.
Sister Stevie keeps talking about how happy she is to be back and how much fun we’re going to have this year. I take a break from listening to her and looking at the weirdness of Linc paying attention to check out the skies. When I crane my neck over to the side as far as it will reach, I see the same thing I saw this morning. Pure Carolina blue sky, not even one cloud to look at. Nothing to give a clue about what might come later.
The back and forth of Sister Stevie and Maya’s voices goes on and on. It’s a full-on Maya-Ling-style inquisition and it lasts until the bell rings. Day one of G.A.S. class is over.
“See you this afternoon, Gabe,” says Sister Stevie on my way out.
I raise my eyebrows and one of my shoulders to say “see you later” without actually having to say it.
Sister Stevie being back is kind of great. I mean, I like her more than I’ve liked any teacher in a long time. But it’s also kind of not great because Sister Stevie has a way of making everything be about more than what it seems to be. She makes kids think about things and stretch their brains in directions where maybe some people’s brains (like mine) might not be made to stretch.
“I can’t believe I overlooked the possibility of a cute new girl.” Linc smacks himself in the forehead and passes me the basketball.
“What are you talking about?”
“I mean, all summer I thought about who might show up on the first day of school a lot cuter than she was when she left on the last day. You know, who might get her braces off or magically have her skin clear up. I narrowed my list down to the six most likely candidates. I was right, by the way. But the new-girl thing totally slipped my mind.” Again with a forehead smack. He’s going to knock his brain loose. Looser than it already is.
“What new girl?”
“Shelby Frasier. Shelby with the swinging hair and the great smile. Shelby who’s in our G.A.S. class and laughs at everything I say.”
“Oh, her. It’s not really a laugh. It’s a giggle. And don’t you think it’s kind of annoying?” Because I do.
“Annoying? You’re just saying that because she doesn’t think you’re funny,” says Linc. He motions for me to take a shot.
Since I have nothing more to say on the subject of Shelby the giggling new girl, I step into position.
Woomp, woomp, woomp. Stop, aim, and shoot. Clang. Off the rim. And I missed. Again.
“That’s M.” Linc uses his T-shirt to wipe the worst of the sweat from his face, dribbles twice, and takes a jump shot. Swish.
Two more letters and I’ll have H-I-P-P-O-P-O-T-A-M-U-S. Then I can sit down and guzzle water until I stop feeling like I’m going to burst into flames. It might be the first day of school but it’s still August. And August in North Carolina means two things—high temperatures and even higher humidity. Ugh.
This time I skip the dribbling, the stopping, and the aiming. Linc and I both know I stink at jump shots. I just shoot. Big surprise, it doesn’t go in. That’s U. Today I wish we still played H-O-R-S-E. It’d already be over.
I dream about cold things while Linc decides what his next shot will be. A double scoop of pistachio almond fudge ice cream on a waffle cone. Yum. Cirrocumulus clouds—they always mean cold weather. Snow—like last Christmas Eve. I try to remember how it felt when my “little” sister Sabrina stuffed a snowball down the neck of my jacket. In the middle of almost remembering, a giant drop of sweat forms in my hair, travels down my forehead and through my eyebrow until it lands in my right eye.
While I’m trying to figure out a way to make my head stop sweating so much, the basketball hits me in the chest. Linc’s standing just behind the free-throw line we drew with chalk. By the showing-all-his-teeth smile on his face, I know he just made another basket.
Fine. A free throw. The one shot I know I can make—at least I know I can make it with 72.8% accuracy. If I shoot it underhand. Granny style. I’ve got the stats to prove it. But it’s so hot. And there’s a bottle of ice cold water waiting in the fridge. So I do the only thing I can do. The smart thing. I walk over and take the shot overhand. I miss.
“That’s S,” I say. “Water break.”
Linc whoops and high fives himself like he doesn’t beat me every time we play H-I-P-P-O-P-O-T-A-M-U-S. By the time I get back with our waters, he’s done celebrating.
We sit side by side against the garage door in the one sliver of shade on the driveway and gulp our water. After we burp two huge burps—Linc’s is louder, longer, and smells like a tuna fish sandwich mixed with sweaty socks—Linc grabs my notebook and starts flipping through the pages.
“Hey, is this right?” he asks.
“What do you mean?”
“Is this right? Am I as good as these other guys?”
“That’s what I told you. Your shot stats are better than all but two of the guys on last year’s team. And one of them was Ty. Since he graduated that makes you better than all but one.”
After I used my project for the Academic Olympics to prove to Ty Easterbrook, star of last year’s St. Jude basketball team, that shooting free throws granny style leads to more points, better stats, and more wins, some people started listening to what I had to say about basketball. Since I stink at actually playing basketball, it was kind of weird and completely awesome at the same time.
Linc stays quiet for a long time. His mouth’s not moving, his arms and legs are still, and he barely seems to be breathing.
“You okay?” I ask.
Instead of answering my question, he turns to me and says, “So if I tried out for the team, do you think I’d make it?”
It’s an easy question to answer. Sort of. “Well, yeah. Of course you’d make it. But . . .”
“Yeah, but . . .”
The “but” is Linc’s parents. They think school is for school and not for sports. They’re both doctors and want him to be one, too. But Linc’s grades aren’t what anybody would call great. Especially Dr. and Dr. Truman. So whenever he asks if he can join a team, the answer is “no.” I secretly think that even if his grades were great, the answer would still be “no.”
“So I’ve been working on something.” Linc’s expression is so serious it almost doesn’t look like his face at all.
“Yeah?”
“I put together something for my mom and dad. Kind of like a proposal. I gave a bunch of reasons why they should let me try out for the team and promised to do some stuff better at school.”
“Is that why you were paying attention in G.A.S. class?”
“Yep.” Linc smiles, jumps up, and starts dribbling the ball. “Who knows, if I try really hard I might even end up being as smart as you.”
“It could happen.” I cross my eyes and he laughs. Linc’s really happy, but I feel like I have to ask. “Um, do you really think they might say yes?” What I don’t say is that every other time—every single time—they’ve said “no.”
Linc doesn’t answer until after he’s made four baskets in a row from all over the driveway.
“I don’t know. But I’ve got to try.”
Aim. Shoot. Swish.
I slap my algebra book closed and flex my left hand a few times to get the blood flowing again. Back to school for a week and the teachers are already trying to bury us in homework. The aroma of baking cookies hits the olfactory receptors in my nose, triggering my brain to decide it’s time for a post-study snack. My growling stomach agrees.
I walk into the kitchen in time to see Mom slide fresh cookies onto the rack to cool. I close my eyes and give a huge sniff. Chocolate. Vanilla. And something nutty.
“What kind are they?” I ask.
“Chocolate chunk with macadamia nuts.”