hummed awkwardly. I tried not to look her directly in the face, just because I didnât want her to say nothing about me not being in school. Plus I felt weird about being the only person in the store. âYâall got track stuff?â I asked. Then, trying to be more clear, I added, âLike, shoes?â
âYep. Right over here,â the girl, Tia, said, leading the way.
The track shoes at Everything Sports were amazing. Neon green and gold, shiny black and electric blue. They looked like they were full of power and speed, like just wearing them could get me closer to Usain Boltâs world record. They were just like Luâs.
I picked up one of the shoes, a silver one. Flipped it over to see the price. Then put it right back down. Yikes! Then I looked at a mean bright orange one, looked at the bottom.
âWant to try any of them?â Tia asked. She had been standing behind me the whole time.
I put the orange shoe backâthey were even more!âandturned to face her. âUm . . . the silver ones, I guess.â
âSize?â she asked.
âI donât really know, I think an eight? Maybe eight and a half.â The truth is, I had no idea what size I wore. I couldnât remember. When me and Ma went to get my last pair, the ones I was wearing, the ones that now had their heads chopped off, the reason we went in the first place was because the sneakers I had were too small. I think I was a seven then, and we had to bump up to an eight. But I just couldnât remember. Tia eyeballed my feet, and even though I knew she was trying to guess my shoe size, I couldnât help but think she was looking at my chewed-up dogs like, What the?
I was hearing Shamikaâs booming laugh ringing in my ears again when Tia finally chirped, âIâll bring a nine, too.â
I took a seat on one of the benches and looked around at the boxing gloves and soccer balls and every other kind of sports equipment. There was a man working in the store too. He was standing next to a rack of jump ropes, tossing a basketball back and forth from hand to hand, and occasionally spinning it on one finger, but only for like half a second. He probably wasnât no athlete either.
A few moments later Tia came back out with twoboxes. âOkay,â she said, setting the boxes down on the floor in front of me. âI got an eight and a nine, but no eight and a half.â She popped the top of the first box. âLetâs start with the nine.â
She pulled the silver shoes from the box and set them down in front of me. I untied my frayed shoestringsâI had to cut them, tooâand slipped my sneakers off, tucking them under the bench. Two more people walked into the store. Tia and the other guy greeted them; then Tia encouraged me to put the shoes on. âWalk around, jump up and down or whatever. Take your time and get a feel for them.â
I put the shoes on. The nines fit perfectly. After I laced them tight, I stood up and bounced up and down a few times like Tia suggested. They felt amazing, almost like I didnât have any shoes on at all. I stepped in front of the mirror to check myself out. Man. It looked like I was wearing spaceships on my feet. Or silver bullets! âHow are they?â Tia came back over to check on me.
âTheyâre good,â I said, still staring at my feet in the mirror. I felt like they had some kind of power in them, and that power was pumping into me. The kind of power that shut down all laughter. I repeated, now looking at her, âTheyâre good.â
âPerfect.â Tia nodded and went to talk to one of theother customers. And thatâs when I made my move.
At first I wasnât going to do it. I mean, when I went into the store, it was a thought, but only a thought. Not even like a real, real thought either, because I knew that I could just ask my mother to get them for me, and she would because she felt like
Annette Lyon, G. G. Vandagriff, Michele Paige Holmes, Sarah M. Eden, Heather B. Moore, Nancy Campbell Allen