point to me from every freaking direction.â Then, to Jasperâs horror, he tells another kid to take it and drive it into the river. The kid seems excited by the prospect and peels out in the stolen car.
âAlph, Iâm sorry,â Jasper says, trying to salvage something out of this. âI just thought youâd want . . . I mean, I just wanted to show you . . . I mean, I can do better. I swear I can! Just tell me how. Tell me what you need me to do!â
Alph appraises him, then says calmly, âCome inside.â
Once theyâre in, Alph, with a couple of the others, leads Jasper to an area separate from the rest of the theater. A broken display case. Rusted popcorn maker. It was once the theaterâs concession stand.
âYou want to be one of us?â Alph asks.
Jasper nods.
âYou think itâs fun to scrounge for food and fight just to stay alive?â Then Alph lifts his shirt, showing half a dozen healed scars even worse than the one on his face. âDo you know how many knife fights Iâve been in? How many flash riots? Do you think I was in them for fun? Do you, for one minute, think I wouldnât change places with your lousy stinking schoolie ass?â
âYouâre free, Alph!â Jasper shouts. âYou get to do what you want when you want.â
Then Alph pushes him so hard, he hits the wall behind him. âCanât you see? I donât get to do ANYTHING I want! Because Iâm too busy just trying to stay alive. And you come here with your fancy school uniform and your motherâs jewelry and your neighborâs freaking car, and you think you can buy your way in? What kind of idiot buys his way into the bottom?â
Now Jasper finds himself stammering. âButâbut itâs not like that. I wannaâI wanna help. I wanna help all of you. I can be important to you!â
âWhat you need, Nelson, is to see what you have for what it is. You won lifeâs lottery, and you want to throw it away? Why would I ever want to associate with anyone that stupid?â
The others back away, sensing whatâs about to happen. Jasper has no idea what to do now, what to say, other than âKevin, Iâm sorry!â
âAnd I told you to NEVER call me that!â
Then Alph takes a deep breath, calming himself down. Jasper thinks itâs over, until Alph rolls up his sleeves.
âClearly your skull is so dense, thereâs only one way to get through to you.â
And then he begins pounding on Jasper. Not fighting him, but hitting him, kicking him, beating him to a bloody pulp. And what makes it all the worse is that Alph does it with such emotional detachment. Heâs not angry. He hasnât lost control. Heâs simply doing his job.
When itâs over, and Jasper lies on the ground sobbing, Alph has Raf haul him to his feet. Then Alph gets in his face, speaking gently, but with a threat beneath his words as deadly as an undertow.
âYouâll tell your parents you were beaten up on the other side of town. Youâll say it wasnât ferals. Youâll make them believe it. And then youâll go back to your lucky little life that the rest of us wish we could have, and you will make something of yourself. Outta respect for the rest of us who canât. And if you ever think about spitting out that silver spoon again, remember what happened here today. Because the next time you show up here, Iâll kill you.â
And then they hurl Jasper out into the street.
â¢Â  â¢Â  â¢
Jasperâs parents come back early from their dinner party. Their car is in the driveway when he gets home. He knows heâll be in trouble, but his battered face will buy him clemency if he plays it right. He stumbles in the front door, wishing he could just slip into bed and pretend heâd been there all night, but he knows itâs not possible.
His mother gasps then bursts
Ann Voss Peterson, J.A. Konrath