I have no idea if twelve is too young to take an Uber, but I didnât want to leave Josh at my place alone after school again, so I had one drop him off here at the restaurant. We discussed earlier this week that he should probably help out up here to pay off the damages he accrued.
Iâve been watching the Uber on a map, so I meet him out front. When he gets out of the car, he looks like a completely different kid from the one I met several days ago. Heâs wearing clothes that fit him, I took him for a haircut yesterday, and heâs carrying a backpack full of books rather than cans of spray paint.
I doubt Sutton would even recognize him if she saw him.
âHow was school?â Today was his second day at the new school. Yesterday he said it was okay but didnât expand.
âIt was okay.â
I guess thatâs as much as Iâll get from a twelve-year-old. I open the door to my restaurant, and Josh pauses before walking in. He looks up at the building and assesses it. âFunny how I slept here for two weeks but this is the first time ever Iâm walking through the entrance.â
I laugh and follow him into the restaurant. Iâm excited for him to meet Theo, even though I havenât had a chance to tell Theo about Josh yet. Theo arrived a few minutes ago and came through the back right as I was heading toward the front to fetch Josh.
Theo hasnât been to the restaurant since last week, and I havenât brought Josh around because I had to take some time off in order to attempt to get his life straightened out. When we walk through the double doors that lead to the busy kitchen, Josh pauses in wonder. He stares wide-eyed at the commotion. Iâm sure the place is a lot different during the day than it was when heâd sleep here at night.
The door to my office is open, which means Theo must be in there doing his homework. I lead Josh in that direction, and he follows me as we make our way into the office. Theo is seated at my desk, reading. He looks up at me, then looks at Josh. He leans back in the desk chair and pulls in his chin. âWhat are you doing here?â
âWhat are you doing here?â Josh asks Theo.
Theyâre asking each other this like they know each other. I didnât think they would since the schools here are so big, and there are so many. I wasnât even sure which school Theo attended. âDo you two know each other?â
Theo says to me, âYeah, heâs a new kid at my school.â Then to Josh, he says, âBut how do you know Atlas?â
Josh drops his backpack and nudges his head toward me as he plops onto the sofa. âHeâs my brother.â
Theo looks at me and then at Josh. Then at me. âWhy didnât I know you had a brother?â
âLong story,â I say.
âDonât you think thatâs something your therapist should know about?â
âYou havenât been here all week,â I say.
âI had math practice after school every day,â he says.
âMath practice? How does one practice math?â
Josh pipes in. âWait. Theo is your therapist?â
Theo answers him with, âYeah, but he doesnât pay me. Hey, did you get Trent for math?â
âNo, I got Sully,â Josh says.
âBummer.â Theo looks over at me, and then back at Josh. Then back at me. âHow have you never mentioned you have a brother?â Theo canât seem to get past that fact, but I donât have time to explain it to him right now. The kitchen is running behind.
âJosh can tell you. I have a kitchen to run.â I leave them in the office and head back to help out with all the chits weâre behind on.
I like that they know each other, but I like it even more that Theo seemed comfortable around him. I know Theo much better than I know my little brother, and I feel like Theo would have had some sort of reaction if he was displeased to see Josh.
About an hour later, the kitchen is fully staffed, and I have a few minutes to break free. When I walk into the office, Josh and Theo are having what looks like an intense discussion about a manga Theo is holding. âSorry to interrupt.â I motion for Josh to follow me. âYou finish your homework?â
âSure,â he says.
âââSureâ?â I donât know him well enough to know what kind of answer sure is. âIs that a yes? A no? A mostly?â
âYes.â He sighs, following me out of the kitchen. âMostly. Iâll finish it tonight; my brain hurts.â
I introduce him to a few people in the kitchen, finishing with Brad. âJosh, this is Brad. Heâs Theoâs father.â I gesture toward Josh. âThis is Josh, my little brother.â Brad wrinkles his forehead in confusion but says nothing. âJosh has a debt to pay off. You have any work for him?â
âI have debt?â Josh asks, befuddled.
âCrouton debt.â
âOh. That.â
Brad immediately puts two and two together. He nods slowly, and then says to Josh, âYou ever washed dishes?â
Josh rolls his eyes and follows Brad to the sink.
I feel bad making him work, but Iâd feel even worse if there werenât any consequences to the thousands of dollars he cost me. Iâll let him do dishes for an hour and then weâll call it even.
I mostly just wanted him out of my office so I could talk to Theo about him. I havenât had a chance to talk to him without Josh in the room.
Theo is at my desk, stuffing papers into his backpack. I sit on the couch, prepared to ask him about Josh, but Theo speaks first. âYou kiss Lily yet?â
Always about me, never about him.
âNot yet.â
âWhat the heck, Atlas? I swear, you are so lame sometimes.â
âHow well do you know Josh?â I ask, changing the subject.
âHeâs only been in school for two days, so not super well. We have a couple of classes together.â
âHowâs he doing in that school?â
âNo clue. Iâm not his teacher.â
âI donât mean his grades. I mean his interactions. Is he making friends? Is he nice?â
Theo tilts his head. âYouâre asking me if your brother is nice? Shouldnât you know?â
âI just met him.â
âYeah, me too,â Theo says. âAnd youâre asking me a loaded question. Kids are mean sometimes. You know that.â
âAre you saying Josh is mean?â
âThere are different kinds of mean. Josh is the better kind of mean.â
Iâm not following at all. Theo can see that, so he expands. âHeâs like a bully to the bullies, if that makes sense.â
This conversation is making me uncomfortable. âSo Josh is⦠king of the bullies? That sounds bad.â
Theo rolls his eyes. âItâs hard to explain. But Iâm sure itâs not surprising that Iâm not the most popular kid in that school. Iâm on the math team, and Iâmâ¦â He shrugs off the last word. âBut I donât have to worry about kids like Josh. When you ask me if heâs nice, I donât know how to answer that, because he isnât nice. But he isnât mean, either. Or at least he isnât mean to the nice people.â
I donât speak up immediately because Iâm trying to absorb all this information. I might be more confused than I was before this conversation. But it does make me feel good to know that Theo isnât scared of Josh.
âAnyway,â Theo says, zipping his backpack. âYou and Lily. Did it fizzle out already?â
âNo, weâre just busy. Iâm going to a wedding with her tomorrow, though.â
âYou finally gonna kiss her?â
âIf she wants me to.â
Theo nods. âShe probably will as long as you refrain from saying anything cheesy, like, Look at the ships, letâs lock lips!â
I grab one of the couch pillows and throw it at him. âIâm getting a new therapist who doesnât bully me.â