that game, guys,â he said. âWhat happened out there? Itâs like weâre having the worst kind of luck all of a sudden.â
At mention of the word âluckâ Brandon felt his ears get hot. Across the locker room, Kevin stared at him, shaking his head. As if that werenât enough, he pointed at Brandon.
Seriously? Brandon thought. Again with the whole ladder thing?
At least Kevin hadnât told the coach about his bad-luck theory. But that didnât stay true for long.
âMaybe it was because Brandon walked under that ladder before the game,â Kevin said.
Thanks for nothing, Kevin , Brandon thought. âThatâs ridiculous,â he said. âNo one believes all that stuff, do they?â
Coach Hanson shook his head. âOf course not, guys. But Iâm still struggling with this loss. Itâs like you guys donât want to make it to the play-offs.â
âWell, itâs not like we really have a chance after the way we played out there tonight,â Tony muttered.
âThatâs not entirely true,â Coach said. âIf we manage to win next weekâs game, the final seat in the play-offs is ours. Itâs that simple. But based on how we played tonight, weâre going to need lots of practice if weâre going to make it.â
The entire Clover team murmured in excitement. It seemed impossible that theyâd ever see the play-offs, especially since theyâd had a lousy season. But they had to try.
As everyone got ready to hit the showers, Kevin walked over to Brandon and folded his arms across his chest.
âYour bad luck better wear off before then, Brandon,â Kevin whispered. âWe canât lose our chance at the play-offs because of you.â
Fantastic , Brandon thought. If we lose, Kevin will tell everyone itâs my fault.
CHAPTER 2
DUMB LUCK
On the bus ride back to Chesterfield Junior High, Brandon sat in the seat behind Jeff. Even though the Clovers had gotten their butts kicked by Arrow Lake, most of the team seemed to be in a good mood. The thought of having a shot at the play-offs seemed to cheer everyone up. The only person not smiling was Brandon.
âCâmon, man,â Jeff said, noticing Brandonâs sullen expression. âDonât let that bad luck stuff get to you.â
âI didnât at first,â Brandon said. âBut the more I think about it, the more I wonder if I did bring bad luck to the team.â
âThatâs garbage,â Jeff said with a shrug. âDid you forget weâre the Clovers? Thatâs good luck. It cancels the ladder thing out.â
âFour-leaf clovers are good luck. Our logo only has three leaves,â Brandon pointed out.
âAh, who cares?â Jeff replied with a shrug. He nodded toward Kevin. âI wouldnât worry too much about what Kevin thinks. You know how superstitious he is. He wears the same stinky socks for every game. Hasnât washed them yet.â
Brandon laughed. âThose things reek. I just hope he isnât right. Iâd hate to be the reason we donât make the play-offs, you know?â
Jeff shook his head. âTonight wasnât bad luck, Brandon,â he said. âIt was bad basketball. The team had an off night. Kevin just needed someone to blame.â
Brandon tried to smile, but couldnât. The Clovers werenât the best team, but theyâd never played that poorly before. Ever.
Why is walking under ladders supposed to be bad luck anyway? Brandon wondered. He shook the thought away. He wouldnât buy into the dumb idea that he was the reason everyone had played so badly.
It wasnât bad luck , Brandon told himself. It was just a bad game.
* * *
The next day at school, Tony came up to Brandon at his locker. âHey, man,â Tony said. âI thought I should warn you . . . Kevin is telling everyone about the ladder thing.â
âAre you serious?â