table. Plastic cups rained onto the ground. “She’s killed us, Frankie.”
“No, I didn’t!” I shoved Robbie. He wouldn’t budge. “Get off!”
“Move it!” Kristen tugged Robbie’s arm.
“Good-bye, cruel world.” Robbie rolled to his side, dragging Kristen. She fell hard to the sidewalk and burst into tears. As she tried to stand, Frankie pushed her back down.
Nick punched the air two inches from Frankie’s nose. “Get lost!” Wide-eyed, Frankie ran across the street into Robbie’s opened garage.
The table collapsed under Robbie’s weight. He grabbed my shirt, twisting as he pulled me down, landing on top of me. My ribs burned and back throbbed. James yanked off Robbie, who came up with fists flying. He punched James in the mouth, splitting his lip. James grunted and popped his left fist into Robbie’s right eye. Robbie burst into tears and ran home.
I slowly stood, James helping me up as I dusted off my clothes. His eyes zoomed over me.
“Nice left hook you’ve got,” Dad said from behind me. “That should keep Robbie and his weasel cousin on their side of the street for a while.”
I looked over the disaster on the sidewalk and my lungs deflated. Kristen wiped her nose and sniffled. Her knees were scuffed and blood trickled down one shin. “Sorry about your lemonade stand,” she said.
My chin quivered. “Now I’ll never get the Magic Memory Dust.” James gave me a funny look.
“Kristen, come inside and Mrs. Tierney can fix up your knees,” Dad offered.
“I want to go home,” she whined, gingerly touching the raw skin.
“I’ll take her.” Nick tugged Kristen’s elbow. “We’ll catch ya later,” he said to James.
As they walked away, Dad looked down at James. “What’s your name, son?”
“James, sir.” He wiped his palms on his shirt and extended a hand. “James Donato.”
Dad grasped his hand. “Nice to meet you, James. Come inside so we can clean you up.”
James took a quick glance at me. “Yes, sir.”
“Aimee, take James into the kitchen. I’ll tell your mother to get the Band-Aids.”
By the time Mom retrieved the bandages and ointment, James’s lip had stopped bleeding. His mouth was swollen, so he sat on the kitchen stool beside me holding a bag of frozen peas to his face.
I rattled off questions. I wanted to know everything about him. Yes, he would attend the same school as me. Yes, he loved to play football. No, he had never punched another kid before. Yes, his hand was sore.
He held up five fingers twice and then one more for eleven years when I asked his age.
“Do you have any sisters?”
He shook his head.
“Brothers?”
He held up two fingers before shaking his head harder and changing two fingers to one.
I laughed. “Robbie must have hit you hard if you can’t remember how many brothers you have.”
He frowned. “I have one brother. And Robbie punches like a baby.”
I laughed harder and slammed both hands over my mouth to quell the giggles, afraid he would think I was laughing at him and his miscount rather than Robbie’s expression after James pummeled him. I’d never seen Robbie run home so fast.
James glanced around the kitchen. Mom’s apple pie for her bunco party baked in the oven. Classical music floated into the room from the radio my dad had taken outside. James shifted in his seat. “I like it here.”
“I’d like to see your house.” I hoped he wanted to be my friend because I really liked him. He had a nice smile and was very brave. He’d punched Robbie, something I’d wanted to do for a long time but had been too afraid. Robbie was much bigger than I was.
“Yours is better.” His eyes skirted back to me. “What’s Magic Memory Dust? It sounds cool.”
My cheeks flamed as I recalled James’s face when I’d whined about the dust earlier. As we leaned on the countertop, I told him about it, keeping my face ducked. I admired how dark the skin on his forearm looked next to mine. I shrugged over the