coffee at Docâs when they were back in town visiting. Matty thought the whole thing was very sweet; it made him hopeful: everyone finds the people, or person, theyâre meant to find, eventually.
âI have missed you,â Matty had told Locs on the phone.
âThatâs the second thing,â sheâd said.
So heâd agreed to hire this guyâwhoever he was, whatever kind of trouble he was inâas his guidance counselor. âIs he going to come here by himself?â Matty had asked. He waited for Locs to answer. But she didnât. She was waiting for Matty to tell her something. Either: Because I want you to bring him. Or: Because I donât want you to bring him. And before he could ask himself, again, Am I really going to do this? heâd said, âBecause I want you to bring him.â
âMaybe I will,â Locs had said. âBut then again, maybe I will not.â
And then she hung up, leaving Matty with two visions of the future. Both of them gave him a bad feeling.
âI have a bad feeling,â Matty said.
âWell, as I was just saying, I had a bad feeling that December in Turku as well,â Lawrence said.
âUncle Lawrence!â Kurt yelled, and then he waved at Uncle Lawrence to come over.
âIâm being paged,â Lawrence said, and he walked over to his nephew. Matty then turned in the opposite direction and thought, Where are they? And a second later, there they were: Ellen and a man walking toward him through the snow. The man looked tallâtaller than Mattyâand thin; he had gray hair and had lost most of it except for on the sides, but he was one of those tall, fit men who cut their remaining hair very short, and so he looked youthful even though he was not young. Locs had described the guyâHenrik Larsenâas a goofball. But he did not look like a goofball. Matty, on the other hand, was dressed in his ridiculous homemade umpire uniform. The uniform was supposed to be a joke, but now he wondered whether heâd succeeded a little too fully in making it so. He was wearing Kurtâs old soccer shin guards, and the pieces of black plastic barely covered half the length of his shins. Heâd also stuffed a pillow into his red sweatshirt for a chest protector. And while his mask was a genuine umpire mask, it was ancient, and several bars had been broken, so that the ones that remained were too far apart to stop anythingâa ball, a rockâfrom reaching his face. Heâd dressed like this for the fourteen years heâd umpired this game, but today, for the first time, he felt like a man who was absolutely ill equipped to go into battle.
Matty shook the guyâs hand when he got close enough, and said, âSo you must be my new guidance counselor.â
The guy didnât say anything. He just took his hand back, then crossed his arms and frowned. Locs was supposed to have told this Henrik that he was going to be the new Broomeville Junior-Senior High guidance counselor. Did this frowning and arm crossing mean she hadnât told him? Although she
had
told Henrik to call him Matthew. What
else
had she told him? Locs, Locs. He felt her nearby. She might even be sitting in the stands, watching him. He looked at Henrik, making sure he didnât look anywhere else. âHenry,â Ellen said. âThis is Matthew.â
Henry? thought Matty. âI go by Matty,â he said to Henry.
âOr Big Red,â Ellen said.
Matty felt his face turn unhappy. He wondered whether Henry could see it behind the mask. Henry was still frowning; his arms were still crossed. âI went to Cornell,â Matty explained to Henry.
Henry let his frown disappear. For now. It felt so good, knowing he could and would be able to return to it. Earlier heâd wondered whether there was a difference between Jens and Henry. This was the difference: Jens was always a little out of control, even though he insisted that he
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