The two factions jostled amiably on the high rampart bleachers, competing against each other with small displays of firework spells in team colours.
'This is it, team!' Wood hollered as the players huddled around him atop the platform. His voice was nearly lost in the roar of the excited crowd. 'I know this is a sudden death match, but don't let that spook you! We've played an amazing season and I am proud of each and every one of you! Do your best, keep it clean, and try to have fun! If we lose, we may be out of the playoffs, but we'll still have a better record than Team Bigfoot has racked up in over ten years! You're all winners in my book, eh? So let's keep our chins up! Ready?'
The team joined in, piling their hands atop Wood's outstretched fist. 'G
As the team assembled along the platform edge, Wentworth moved alongside James, his skrim at his side.
'If I didn't know any better,' he muttered under his breath, 'I'd almost think Wood
James glanced at the boy next to him. Wentworth looked up. 'I'm just sayin',' he shrugged.
'Well, I expect us to win,' James replied. 'Remember, just keep an eye on Warrington and Hurst. If they line up…'
'Yeah, yeah,' Gobbins agreed grimly from James' other side. 'We squeeze in between them like Mother Newt chaperoning a Valentine's dance.'
A sharp whistle pierced the air over the figure eight course. Professor Sanuye floated over the center ring in his official's tunic, his whistle protruding from between his teeth.
'Number Six Hippogriff,' Jazmine announced, launching from the platform for the warmup lap. The rest of the team began to stream out behind her, assembling into Hippogriff formation.
'This is it,' Norrick called seriously, dropping his skrim and preparing to launch from the platform. 'Sudden death, everyone! Do or die!'
'Do or die!' the others echoed, as if it were a battle cry. James joined them, feeling a drunken mixture of excitement, apprehension, and secret confidence. 'Do or die! Let's go!'
One minute later, Sanuye blew a long note on his whistle. The match began.
Two hours later, Team Bigfoot was gathered in the Kite and Key, jostling raucously around two tables which they had pushed together.
'Victory!' Norrick cried, hoisting his Butterbeer. The rest mimicked his toast, making sure to shout loud enough for the Zombies gathered dourly in booths on the other side of the bar to hear. 'Victory!' they cried jubilantly, clanking their mugs and tankards together, slopping their drinks all over the tables between them.
'It was a close one,' Gobbins admitted to James as the cheers broke up into enthusiastic chatter. 'I was a little worried at halftime with them up by four points.'
James nodded and shrugged, but the truth was that he knew it had never really been a close match at all. One minute before the halftime whistle had blown, Team Zombie had succeeded in walloping home a string of quick goals ,thanks to the combined efforts of Warrington and Hurst, who, despite the Foots' best efforts, had managed to cluster into a piledrive formation, carrying all three Clutches between them and flanked by the remainder of their team.
James had fumed about his team's failure to prevent the maneuver, but he also knew that piledrive formation was a once-in-a-match tactic. Team Zombie had been nervous about losing the match even then and had begun to resort to desperation maneuvers. Five minutes into the second half, Team Bigfoot had already regained the lead. Wentworth had replaced Mukthatch on goal, leaving Mukthatch to shadow Warrington for the rest of the game, his ape-like reach and intimidating demeanor easily preventing any repeats of the fabled piledrive maneuver. In the end, using a confident mixture of game magic and
'We're going to the tournament!' Norrick cried out exuberantly, and the rest joined in, hooting and hollering, but James was less confident. Even as his fellow teammates cheered, he looked around and saw a table near the fireplace surrounded by the slate grey sweaters and scarves of Werewolf House. Clayton Altaire sat at the head of the table, staring at James with a small crooked smile. As James watched, the older boy raised a hand and pointed discreetly at James. He mimed shooting him and mouthed the word '
James sighed, the celebration leaking out of his heart. Yo
James looked away, not liking those secretive, confident grins. Instead, he looked toward the Zombies on the other side of the room, gathered truculently around their own tables. Zane sat among them, looking equally morose, and yet when he saw James, he winked and shrugged a little. Like the Werewolves' grins, Zane's gesture seemed to speak volumes.
James rolled his eyes, bemused. Even Zane's gestures managed to be sarcastic.
During the following days, James, Ralph, and Zane struggled to formulate a plan. Barring any unforeseen disasters, it seemed that the Bigfoots would—amazingly enough—play in the final tournament match. For most of the team, this accomplishment was success enough. James, of course, had a different goal in mind. It was essential that the Bigfoots not only
It would have helped if the Werewolves' record had been even slightly imperfect. Where Team Bigfoot (to no one's greater surprise than their own) had managed to scrape together a record of four wins and three losses, barely clinging to a second-place standing, Team Werewolf was as yet undefeated. Worse yet, all but one of the Bigfoots' victories had been breathtakingly close, including two technical wins by tie. The Werewolves, however, had easily dominated every match, usually leading by double digits at halftime and proceeding to send in their second-string players for the last quarter while the starters actually left the platform, descending to their locker cellar and changing out of their pads and jerseys. The sheer arrogance of it all added insult to injury and formed the final sting of the Werewolves' game of psychological warfare—a game they alone played with nearly eerie ease.
'
'Probably, but nobody's found it yet,' Ralph said with a sigh. 'They just seem to play a totally solid game. No chinks, no weak links.'
James shook his head as he looked down at the floor between the sofas. The disarmadillo waddled idly past a nearby coffee table, sniffing the carpet, two empty licorice soda bottles balanced amusingly on its plated back. Zane sat up and added his own empty bottle to the collection.
'That doesn't mean they don't