It was strange, driving over to Toby’s. I’d only ever biked there, on the trails that connect the different subdivisions. Toby lived in Walnut Ranch, one of the older developments south of the loop. I’d practically lived at his house during elementary school, and as I drove, I remembered flashes of what we’d been like as kids: how we’d taped notes to the undersides of each other’s mailboxes, written in a code that only we could decipher. The year we dressed as Batman and Robin for Halloween and then switched costumes, just to see how long it would take my dad to notice, the answer being a disturbingly long time. The Cub Scout camping trip when the scout leader’s obnoxious son put a worm in my pudding cup, so Toby and I caught a frog and zipped it inside his sleeping bag. Writing swear words in the air with our sparklers on the Fourth of July. Begging my mom to take us to Barnes and Noble at midnight to get the latest Harry Potter book and promising we wouldn’t stay up all night reading but doing it anyway.
I’d completely forgotten what Toby had been like, back then. How he’d always been the one to devise our elaborate schemes, how he’d constantly gotten me into trouble, and then out of it with an aw-shucks routine and apology. He’d grown up into exactly the unabashedly nerdy, quick-witted guy you’d expect from a kid who went door-to-door selling homemade comics to raise the start-up capital for our summer lemonade stand when we were ten. And I’d grown up into a massive douche—with a cane.
TOBY’S HOUSE LOOKED the same as I remembered, complete with an unwashed burgundy minivan parked in the driveway. I rang the bell and a tiny dog started yapping.
Toby’s sister opened the door. She was wearing a bright pink bathrobe and carrying an angry little terrier that looked like an ankle biter.
“Hey, Emily,” I said.
“Omigod.” She seemed shocked that I’d turned up at her house, as though she’d forgotten I used to know her garage door code.
Toby’s house was pretty compact, and the front door opened directly into the living room, where three of Emily’s friends were watching one of those terrible vampire romance things in their pajamas, sleeping bags already laid out.
“Hiiii, Ezra,” one of the girls said, giggling.
“Um, hi?” I said. Poor Toby. No wonder he’d wanted me to come over. Thankfully, he came dashing around the corner, fastening a pair of cuff links.
“Welcome to purgatory,” he said. “Come on in.”
Toby’s room hadn’t changed much; there was a new shelf displaying some action figures I didn’t recognize, a police box, and some random dude dressed like Toby in a blazer and bow tie, plus a couple of samurai swords. And then I caught sight of the top shelf of his bookcase and stopped dead.
“You kept them?” I asked.
“I finished them.” Toby pulled out the thick stack of homemade comics and tossed them onto his bed.
I reached for Superhero Academy, volume I. It was laughingly amateur, done in colored pencil on computer paper, with the byline in alternating blue and red bubble letters: created by Toby Ellicott & Ezra Faulkner.
We’d worked on Superhero Academy every day after school in the fifth grade. I think we’d gotten four volumes in before suffering from artistic differences. But there were at least eight volumes scattered across the bed. A few of them were computer-illustrated and almost professional-looking. I picked up Justice University: The Final Battle and flipped to the end.
“Okay, there’s no way Invisible Boy could defeat the Arch Alchemist with a samurai sword,” I argued.
“You’re just bitter because I made your character evil,” Toby snapped.
“Not at all, I just don’t get how the Arch Alchemist became mortal all of a sudden.”
“Because he split his soul into seven pieces and hid them all over Justice City,” Toby retorted.
“You turned our comic book into a Harry Potter rip-off?” I spluttered.
“Are we seriously having this discussion?”
I felt my cheeks heat up, and I tossed the graphic novel back onto the bed with a shrug. Toby sorted them into the right order and returned them to his shelf.
“So are we going or not?” he asked.
“Where? Jimmy’s party?” I sincerely hoped he wasn’t going to annoy me into showing up at that.
“I could kill Luke,” Toby said. “He really didn’t invite you?”
“Invite me to what?”
“The Floating Movie Theater? You know, that piece of paper with some random words on it and a URL?”
Suddenly, I remembered the sheet of paper Luke had passed me in Moreno’s class that afternoon. I’d thought it was some stupid flyer for Film Club.
“Crap,” I said. “He gave me something, but I never opened it. I was sort of distracted.”
Toby snorted. “Yeah, I’ll bet you were distracted.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“Cassidy, dude. I know you’re into her, but trust me, it’s better to just forget it. She’ll get into your head and mess you up.”
“Believe me,” I said with a sigh, “staying away from Cassidy won’t be a problem.”
And then I explained how I’d accidentally forced her into joining the debate team.
“You are so dead,” Toby said.
“I didn’t realize it was such a big deal,” I admitted. “You put my name down.”
“And I figured you’d cross it off.” Toby shrugged. “But Cassidy’s different. A FORFEIT next to her name on the tournament lists would cause gossip. She’s the defending champion, you know? Everyone thought she’d rank nationally, but she withdrew from the state tournament two days before the primaries, just totally disappeared. To have her name posted as a forfeit from Eastwood, the most pathetic debate team out there? Anyway, are we going to Luke’s screening or not? Because we need to pick up coffee filters on the way.”