PROLOGUE
Before asking when, tell yourself how.
WIZENARD PROVERB
THE BUZZER WENT off, the game ended, and one boy sat alone.
Fairwood was a riot of noise. The visiting team and their fans were laughing and cheering. One spectator had brought a foghorn and was letting it wail like the awakening of some prehistoric monster. But Reginald Mathers and his teammates were quiet. The West Bottom Badgers moved slowly among one another. Curt nods. Sunken shoulders.
It was the first game of a new season, but it felt like an ending.
Reggie looked down at the palms of his hands. Professor Rolabi Wizenard had brought them magic, actual magic, and they had still lost. It seemed as if all the promise of training camp had leached through the polished hardwood floorboards and disappeared forever. Of course it had.
Tonight, Reggie had been promoted to the first sub off the bench, and he had failed spectacularly. Hed played five minutes, maybe, and been terrible the entire time. Turnovers. Missed jumpers. Burned on defense again and again. Reggie had let down the Badgers. Of course he had.
Reggie watched his teammates exchange half-hearted encouragements. Some looked near tears. He stared at his hands again. Reggie felt bad for them. Them. That was the word written in the lines of his palms. Them instead of us.
A minute later, Reggie followed his teammates into the locker room.
Right back where we started, Twig said softly, breaking the silence.
Reggies closest friend sounded defeated. Dazed. Reggie felt his stomach aching.
Lab, the Badgers starting small forward and corner sharpshooter, shook his head. I thought it was going to be different this year.
We needed those threes at the end, Peo said, his eyes locked on his younger brother.
Lab scowled. We needed less turnovers before that
You needed to get a rebound! Peo shouted. Not a single second-chance board
Hey! Rain said, cutting in. We all need to get better before next week. Period.
The room fell into unsettled silence and a few last glares. No one was going to argue with their star player after the incredible game that Rain had just played, but the tension remained. Reggie sensed resentment, and something sharper too.
Professor Rolabi marched into the room, stopped, waited. As ever, he wore his black pin-striped suit, pleats ironed sharp enough to cut butter, and a candy-apple-red bow tie. His strange leather medicine bag hung closed at his side, its secrets locked away. His ice-blue eyes found Reggie.
We need more from you, Rolabi said. We need everything from everyone.
The professor stormed out again, and a new silence loomed so heavy that Reggie thought it might flatten him. Twig gave him a sympathetic pat on the knee, but Reggie barely even felt it.
Rolabi had called him out in front of everyone. He had basically blamed Reggie.
He vaguely heard the others saying goodbye as they left. Finally, Reggie was alone, still wearing his yellow uniform, and he shuffled out into the empty gym. Someone had turned off all but one row of garish overhead fluorescent panels, which cast just enough light for shadows.
Reggie walked to center court, listening to his footsteps echo in the rafters. His chest felt as hollow as the gym. He had given everything to this sport, and it gave him nothing back. It pushed him away. It rejected him.
Of course it did. He had expected something different this year. He wasnt even sure what exactly... but after months of magic and hard work, he thought they could at least win.
Well, Reggie said softly. It was a nice thought while it lasted.
He didnt even know who he was talking to. Rolabi or Fairwood or grana itself. He supposed it didnt matter. Magic was good for stories, but it didnt belong on a basketball court.
Reggie nodded sadly, fixed his duffel over his shoulder, and headed out into the evening. The Bottom was waiting for him, as it always was.
THE
BOY AND HIS BALL
Self-doubt is the beginning of defeat.
WIZENARD PROVERB
ON SATURDAY, REGGIE woke to the smell of coffee, black and strong, wafting in beneath his bedroom door. It was the aroma of Grans morning. Coffee first, then the sweetness of brown sugar on porridge, and finally a spray of cheap perfume before the clatter of the front door as she left for her shift at the diner.
Six days a week. Ten hours per day. Thats what the smell of coffee meant.
Reggie waited until she left, trying to fall back asleep. But his mind was awake and roaming. It was on blown ball games and missed chances and the lies Rolabi Wizenard had told the team. Lies. A harsh word, maybe, but Reggie couldnt think of a better one. The professor had claimed that if they faced their fears, they could beat anyone. He had offered them hope.
Reggie had almost believed it. Twig had shown him that picture book, The World of Grana, and it had all seemed so grand and mystical. The Wizenards had come to save the day. It was a nice story. And that was all.
Reggie rolled over and stared at the sole object perched atop his dressera small wooden box without a hinge. The front was engraved with an intricate, hand-carved symbol. His mother had given it to him the year shed died. Shed told him that she and his father had found it, and that it was very important, and that they wanted Reggie to hold on to it for them and keep it safe. He had dutifully stored it away and only opened it again years after theyd been killed, when he was eleven. While playing around with the box, he had found a false bottom and a note tucked inside.
It read: He has emptied it. You must fill it. He will try to stop you at all costs.
Reggie had swiftly tucked it away again, though the thrill of discovery remained. It was the sort of message that heroes found in Grans old stories. There was even a villain, whoever