bit like poker. Bluffing the other guy is part of the game. When he started dribbling left, I had this feeling he was about to spin right again â and he did. Then he faded away from sixteen feet. It was a beautiful shot.
They were ahead of us by two points now. Six seconds remained on the scoreboard. We still had a chance. A lot can happen in six seconds.
Just then our coach called a twenty-second time-out. âJust focus,â he told us. I wiped the sweat from my forehead and tried to catch my breath. My heart was beating like crazy.
Bobby inbounded the ball to me. I looked up at the clock as I started dribbling up court. Four seconds.
One of the guys on my team was setting a pick on my right side. I crossed left to right, stopping just outside the arc. That left me open for the three-point shot. The shot that would win us the game.
Iâd just released the ball from my finger-tips when the buzzer sounded.
âHe got it off in time!â I heard our coachâs booming voice, though it sounded like it was coming from far away. My eyes were focused on the ball. I watched as it bounced off the left side of the rim, then hit the right.
âYes!â I whispered under my breath, willing the ball to sink into the net. I could practically hear the swishing sound it would make. The ball rolled once around the rim, then popped out and fell to the ground.
The guys on the other team were high- fiving each other. I wished I could disappear. I felt even worse when a couple of guys on my team slapped my shoulder. Consolation slaps.
What really put me over the edge was when the coach pulled me aside and said, âYou did your best, Josh. Thatâs what counts.â
âI canât stand that crap about how doing your best counts more than winning,â I told Bobby on the way home. Weâd hardly spoken since we left the community center,and I was grateful he hadnât mentioned the game. I knew he mustâve been disappointed too, but at least he wasnât the one responsible for botching things up.
âI know what you mean,â he said quietly.
âSometimes doing your best just isnât good enough,â I muttered.
Bobby adjusted the strap on his sports bag and then turned to me. âIt was a tough shot,â he said.
âDonât go making excuses for me.â I hadnât meant to snap; that was just how it came out.
Bobby shrugged. Which was pretty much where our conversation ended that afternoon.
Sometimes the best time to break into a house is when youâre doing something else. I was just walking, thinking about how I didnât feel like going home, and picturing the basketball popping out of the rim and dropping to the ground, when a gruff voice interrupted my thoughts. âTake this!â the voice said.
Next thing I knew, someone was passing me this huge cardboard box. It wasnât likeI had much choice â the box was pressing against my chest â so I took it. Bending a little at the knees, I tried to balance the box in my arms. The thing was so big I could hardly see over it. Plus it was heavy.
Somehow Iâd gotten myself in the middle of someoneâs move. If Iâd been paying more attention, Iâd have crossed the street when I saw the moving truck. But Iâd been too busy replaying the game in my head.
âCome on, move it!â the gruff voice commanded. To my left, I noticed a bald guy with sunburned shoulders carrying a box into a nearby apartment building. I followed him.
The door to the lobby had been propped open. The building smelled like cabbage. I followed the bald guy up the stairs to a corner apartment on the second floor. When he dropped his box on the wood floor and turned around to go back downstairs, I tried to duck behind my box. But he saw me. The weird thing was he didnât seem the least bit surprised. All he did was make a grunting noise, and then he headed back down.
I couldâve left