free hand Mack grabbed the aromatic T-shirt and clumsily tied it around Stefanâs massive bicep. He knotted it tight, all while keeping his palm pressed down on the red gusher.
The blood flow slowed some more.
âI canât keep this up; we need help,â Mack said.
Stefanâs eyes flickered with what would surely be a temporary understanding of the word we .
A powerful word, we .
âYou have a cell phone?â Mack asked. Cells were absolutely banned at school, so only about two-thirds of the students carried them.
Stefan nodded. His never exactly perky expression was even duller than usual. But he jerked his chin toward his pants pocket.
âOkay, you need to pull on this tourniquet, right?â Mack said. Seeing the blank expression, Mack explained, âThe shirt. Pull on the knot with your left hand. Pull hard.â
Stefan managed to do this but barely. Mack noticed that his fingers were clumsy, fumbling. His strength was fading.
Mack pried the cell out of Stefanâs pants pocket and dialed 911.
âNine-one-one, what is the nature of your emergency?â a bored voice asked.
âI have a nine-year-old boy pumping blood all over the place,â Mack said.
âNine?â Stefan asked, like he wasnât totally sure it wasnât true.
âTheyâll come faster for a bleeding kid than a bleeding teenager,â Mack explained, covering the mouthpiece. âNow shut up.â
It took eight minutes for the ambulance to arrive, which, as it turned out, was barely fast enough.
After the EMTs took Stefan away, Mack made it home unmolested by any more bullies, possibly because he was shirtless except for the neck band of hisdestroyed T-shirt, and his hands were red with blood up to the elbows. That sort of fashion choice tends to discourage people from bothering you.
Mackâs father was home when Mack came in the side door. His father was staring into the refrigerator with the door open, looking like he might see something really cool there if he just kept searching.
âHey, big guy,â his father said.
âHey, Dad,â Mack said.
âHow was school?â
âEnh,â Mack said. âSchoolâs school.â
âYeah. I hear you,â Mackâs dad said without looking up.
Mack headed toward the stairs and the shower.
Four
L etâs just skip the part where Stefan lost two pints of blood. And the part where the doctor told him he could easily have ended up dead.
Letâs skip over the slow workings of Stefanâs mind as he sought to make some sense of the fact that he had come quite close to dying at the age of fifteen.
And while weâre doing that, letâs skip over the fact that Mackâs father didnât notice that Mack was more or less covered in blood.
Mackâs parents didnât pay a lot of attention to him.
It wasnât really sad or tragic. They werenât bad parents. It was just that at some point they had given up trying to figure Mack out.
Heâd had one phobia or another since age four. His mother had tried many, many, many (many) times to talk him through these irrational fears. His father had tried as well. And sometimes both at once. And sometimes both at once with a school counselor. And a minister. And a shrink. Two shrinks. Two shrinks, two parents, a minister, a school counselor. But they had never had much success.
In between talking Mack out of being terrified of things that werenât really scary, they had tried to talk him into being scared of things he actually should be afraid of.
Things like bullies, for example.
The boy had no sense. That was clear to his parents and everyone else. The boy simply had no sense.
So, over time, Mackâs parents had learned to steer around him. Theyâd given him his own space. Which was how he liked it. Mostly.
Mack assumed that when Stefan returned to school he would have to demonstrate his toughness by giving Mack a serious