My voice gets louder as I talk. âI snuck into your house too.â
This gets everyoneâs attention. Eva stops roughly wiping Tonyâs ankle. Tony stops yelping in pain. They both stare at me silently.
Which is good, because Iâm not done talking. Not even close. I tell Eva about the whole plan. When Iâm finished with that, I go back further. I go over everything sheâs done to me this year and all the horrible ways sheâs treated me. I tell her how I got kicked off the team, and just like that, Iâm bawling my eyes out. Next thing I know, Iâm so angry Iâm shaking. âHow could you? After all that happened this summer, how could you do this to me? Huh?â I glare at her through bleary eyes. âHow does someone do these things to another person?â
But Eva doesnât answer me. First, she glares at me and I think sheâs about to yell and then her eyes fog up with tears. I think her hand is trembling because she spills some peroxide and Tony gives another yelp.
 . . .
Despite Evaâs threats, the cops donât handcuff Tony. Evaâs family doesnât even press any charges. Her parents agree that heâs learned his lesson. âThereâs no lesson like forgiveness,â her dad says, patting Tony on his shoulder. I wonder if heâd say the same thing if he found out Eva liked soccer babes more than soccer studs. Based on her behavior this past year, I doubt it.
Eva and I watch Tony limp out the front door, and Eva says, âIâm sorry, Addie.â
Weâve both been holding onto our dogsâ collars for several minutes, but now that the cops and Tony are gone, we finally let go. I can hear Evaâs parents doing one more sweep of the upstairs, making sure everything is where itâs supposed to be.
âI know thatâs not even close to good enough, but I really am sorry. Tomorrow Iâll go to Coach and tell him what really happened, okay?â
I almost say thanks but stop myself. Why should I say thanks when sheâs just doing the right thing?
âI donât know how to explain all the stuff Iâve done to you this year,â she says. âIâm not even sure I can explain it to myself. At first, I thought I could just stay away from youâbut that just made it worse. It was like you werenât even the same person to me. You were just this person I hated. The fact that I could do terrible things to you proved that you had to be a terrible person, if that makes any sense.â
It doesnâtânot really. But Iâm glad sheâs trying to explain it, even if thereâs no way she totally could.
Because Iâve already said everything I have to say and thereâs really nothing else either of us can say, I change the subject. âDid you see Belle back there? Chomping on that kidâs ankle? Sheâs never done anything like that before.â
âShe mustâve learned it from Skittles.â We watch the dogs start to wrestle each other again. âWe do lots of strange things because of the ones we care about,â Eva says.
I
tâs late in the season, and weâre playing Ironwood again. Weâve won most of our games, and were looking ready for the postseason until our goalie, Alyssa, got a concussion. During practice, it seemed like her replacement, Becca, was going to be solid, but now Iâm not so sure. Coach has spent the whole game screaming his lungs out at her.
I feel really bad for Alyssa because I know how hard it is not to be able to play. I feel bad for Becca too. I also know how brutal Coach can be. But honestly, itâs nice to have something to focus on besides what happened with Eva.
She fessed up to everything she did to me, just like she said she would, and wound up suspended from school for a week. She was also kicked off the team. Mom said I should consider suing, and I didâbut in the end, I couldnât go
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