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Tell Me
Tell Me Read online
ALSO BY
JOAN BAUER
ALMOST HOME
BACKzWATER
BEST FOOT FORWARD
CLOSE TO FAMOUS
HOPE WAS HERE
PEELED
RULES OF THE ROAD
SQUASHED
STAND TALL
STICKS
THWONK
VIKING
Published by the Penguin Group
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First published in the United States of America by Viking, an imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2014
Copyright © 2014 by Joan Bauer
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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Bauer, Joan, date.
Tell me / Joan Bauer.
pages cm
Summary: Feeling scared and powerless when her father’s anger escalates and her parents separate, twelve-year-old Anna spends the summer with her grandmother and decides to make a difference when she sees what seems to be a girl held against her will.
ISBN 978-0-698-15992-1
[1. Fathers and daughters—Fiction. 2. Parents—Fiction. 3. Fear—Fiction. 4. Rescues—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.B32615Te 2014
[Fic]—dc23
2014003708
Excerpt from “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” from the book The Poetry of Robert Frost edited by Edward Connery Lathem. Copyright © 1923, 1969 by Henry Holt and Company, copyright © 1951 by Robert Frost. Reprinted by permission of Henry Holt and Company, LLC. All rights reserved.
Version_1
Contents
Also by Jone Bauer
Title page
Copyright page
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
Chapter Twenty-Six
Chapter Twenty-Seven
Chapter Twenty-Eight
Chapter Twenty-Nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-One
Chapter Thirty-Two
Chapter Thirty-Three
Epilogue
WITH THANKS TO:
For Evan, who listens
Prologue
This isn’t just a story about a girl (me) and and my intense training in drama.
It’s not just about Things Happening in a Family, either.
You’ve got to trust me when I tell you, that’s just part of it.
Mostly it’s about seeing, really seeing, and not telling yourself you didn’t see it.
It’s about telling what you saw.
And then deciding you’ve got a bigger role to play.
I’ll remember her eyes forever.
Big, scared, baby animal eyes.
And the questions that wouldn’t let me go.
Did I see something?
Is a girl in trouble?
What can I do?
What should I do?
I mean . . .
What should anybody do?
This is the story of what I did, along with the amazing people who put themselves out there to help.
—Anna M. McConnell, age 12, Philadelphia
One
I am in the mall dressed like a cranberry, feeling the emotion of the moment.
What do I want to leave them with?
I’ve been seriously trained to ask this question.
I sit here thinking, and sitting isn’t easy because of the outfit I’m wearing. Every time I move, it puffs up.
“We’re ready, Anna.” That’s Lorenzo Lu, my best friend and acting partner.
“I’ll be right there. . . .”
What do I want to leave them with?
Sometimes I think in big, fat letters.
I study myself in the scratched mirror. My face is covered with red makeup, and my lips shine with ruby lipstick. I smooth out my round, red costume, adjust my red gloves, scratch my red tights. I think I’m allergic to these tights. I look at the pile of 20 percent off coupons from the Wide World of Cranberries store and feel a major surge of energy.
I want them to be happy they came.
I want them to know that this cranberry cares.
Lorenzo is wearing jeans, a red and white striped shirt, red socks, white shoes, and a big button that reads, I’M WITH THE CRANBERRY.
I wiggle my hips, aim my voice to the corner of the room. “Do I look fat in this?” My voice echoes back. Very few kids can do this trick.
Lorenzo laughs. “You look fat, Anna, because you are packed with antioxidants.”
Antioxidants are major players in the cranberry world.
Lorenzo sighs. His dad is Chinese and his mother is Italian; he’s got the best blend in his face. “I wish you didn’t have to go.”
I know.
Out in the mall, the music starts playing.
I can hear Mr. Dimsdale shout into his microphone, “And now, are you ready for the big fun?”
“Of course they are.” I scratch my tights again.
“I might have to go to the bathroom,” Lorenzo mentions.
I shake my head at him. The rule of performers everywhere in the galaxy is, The Show Must Go On.
“Heeeere she is!”
Lorenzo and I run out into the mall to wild applause.
A little girl shrieks, “Hi, Miss Berry!”
Lorenzo and I move to the beat.
The music makes you want to dance.
One . . .
Two . . .
Three . . .
Four . . .
I raise my hand and do a twirl; Lorenzo gets down and does a breakdance move.
The crowd loves this.
I do a shimmy as Lorenzo takes the mic from Mr. Dimsdale and declares, “For years, the cranberry was taken for granted. . . .”
I slump and look sad.
“For years the cranberry’s nutritional contents were known to only a few. . . .”
I look pathetically unappreciated. People laugh.
“But, the truth is now known. . . .”
I jump up and make a noise.
“Cranberries are among the world’s healthiest foods!”
r /> I spin around at this news.
“So healthy that an entire store has been dedicated to cranberries in every form.”
Ta da!!
I point to the Wide World of Cranberries store and clap my hands.
Then Lorenzo goes off script. “Cranberries,” he shouts. “They’re not just for UTIs anymore.”
Women laugh hard. Fred Dimsdale looks nervous.
“What’s a UTI?” a little boy asks his mother.
“Urinary tract infection,” the mother says quietly.
Lorenzo has three older sisters and knows about these things. “This,” he declares, “is the sale of the century!”
Actually, the store has only been open since April, but you get the idea. I run into the shop and people follow me.
I look at the anti-aging supplement display, bounce my voice there.
“Let’s hit it!” I say and my voice echoes back.
A little boy yells, “How did you do that?”
Years of practice, child. That’s the short answer.
I dance with kids. I do the slide. I say, “We’re so glad you’re shopping with us today!”
When someone buys something, I have to shout, “Antioxidants rule!” It’s not an easy line.
But I know how to deliver.
Fred Dimsdale, the owner of the cranberry store, saw me perform one of my most heartbreaking roles as a radish at the Children’s Drama Workshop—a lonely, rejected radish singing my heart out—and he was deeply moved.
“Can you play other produce, kid? Something cheerier? I felt your pain with the radish, but . . .”
The song I sang as a radish was written by Charlie Chaplin, a famous mime who made a fortune by saying absolutely nothing, but he wrote a song about how you’ve got to smile no matter what.
“I can play other produce,” I assured him.
The cranberry is a non-singing part, which is fine by me. I’ve had some issues singing—my mouth gets dry. I get hoarse and nervous.
But that moment as a singing radish—I sang like I always hoped I could.
Lorenzo and I have been doing four shows a day every weekend since the store opened. Fred Dimsdale offered to extend us through the summer, but I’m not going to be in town.
I’ve got to go stay with my grandmother in Virginia because of all the things happening in my family.
My mom and dad’s marriage isn’t doing so well.
“Puffy hug!” I shout, and little kids run up and hug my padding.
I added the hug move last week. Mr. Dez, my drama coach, always says, “Use a part of what you need in the role you’re playing.”
More and more these days, I really need a good hug.
Fred Dimsdale hands me my check. “You brought the heart of a cranberry to every performance, kid. I’m going to miss you. It won’t be the same.” He looks over at Jeremy Pearlmutter, who is going to play the cranberry after me. Jeremy is here to observe me doing the act, but so far all he’s done is yawn and scratch his neck. He hasn’t asked me one question about the experience. I don’t think Jeremy will lose himself in the role.
“Thanks for giving me a job, Mr. Dimsdale.”
“Call me when you get back, kid. First thing.” He sounds desperate.
“I will.” I shake his hand.
I walk to the back of the store, into the little office, and change out of the costume. Usually I wear it home—when a cranberry is walking down the street, people want to know more.
I put the costume on a hanger, use makeup remover to get the red off my face.
In real life, I look nothing like a cranberry.
I’m medium height. I have curly auburn hair that falls in my face. People say I’m pretty. I’ve got dark brown eyes like my dad.
I used to be closer to my dad than I am now.
Lorenzo and I walk to the escalator.
“Tell me again why you’re leaving,” he says.
I sigh. “I know it’s a bad time for me to go.”
Lorenzo throws back his head. “There would never be a good time for you to go. I’m going to have to work in my uncle’s drug store this summer, Anna—three days a week—totally exposed to sick people. I mean, if some major viral strain breaks out . . .” Lorenzo squirts antiseptic cleaner on his hands. “And we’re going to have to talk about our future! Eighth grade isn’t looking good!”
I know that, too. The high school has an after-school drama program, but we’re not in high school yet. The middle school has nothing. We’re too old for the Children’s Drama Workshop. They kick you out on your twelfth birthday into the big, cold world.
We head down the escalator.
I wonder what’s going to happen with my parents while I’m away.
I wonder if staying with Mim, my grandmother, is the right thing—maybe my parents need me around and they just don’t know it.
Lorenzo puts his hand on my shoulder. “Just remember, Anna, cranberries are the bravest fruit.”
I square my shoulders to prove he’s right.
We walk to the entrance of the mall. I feel all the mess twisting me up inside. It’s easy to pretend everything is fine when you’re in a cranberry suit—you can hide from the world because no one can see the real you.
When it’s just you and your face and heart out there, it’s so much harder.
Two
I walk into my house and try not to look at the table. I told Mom we should have a sheet over it or something.
I do look at it though—our dining room table, on its side, broken.
Everything else in our dining room has been picked up. Everything but the memories.
I try to remember the good times we had in this room—the holidays, my birthday parties, the time Dad and I decorated the dining room like Hawaii for Mom’s birthday, with paper palm trees and huge flowers.
One stupid moment can change everything.
It happened eight days ago when Dad picked me up at the mall after my cranberry gig. Driving with Dad isn’t easy.
He was driving too fast, like he always does, when a man in a black sports car cut him off. Dad takes these things personally.
“Dad, remember you’re not supposed to—”
He sped after the guy, shouting out the window.
“Dad! It was, tops, an SDM.” That stands for Small Dumb Move. Lorenzo and I created anger management phrases to help my father get a grip. They don’t always work.
The guy in the black car made The Ultimate Bad Gesture. My father went radioactive.
“JDT!” I hollered (Jerks Do This).
But the anger was driving Dad and wouldn’t let go. He got too close to the guy’s car.
“Dad, pull over!”
The guy in the black car almost hit us. Dad leaned on the horn. The guy pulled over; Dad did, too. The man in the black car got out, screaming. He stormed over to us, glared at me, and hollered, “What are you?”
I was still in the fruit suit.
“Don’t yell at my daughter!”
“I’m a cranberry!” I screamed. “A helpless cranberry. I’m just trying to get home.”
The guy stared at me. At the Children’s Drama Workshop, one of the things we learned was, Use the pain.
I shrieked, “And I have to go to the bathroom!”
A police car drove up. “What’s going on?” the cop demanded.
I raised my hand. “Permission to get out of the car, officer.”
The cop nodded. I got out, waddled over, and gave the man and the policeman a 20 percent off coupon.
I mentioned the bathroom again, told them to stop by the store, waddled back to the car.
The angry man snarled, “Where do you think you’re going, ace?”
The cop pocketed his coupon. “The cranberry has to go to the bathroom.”
/> I’m still trying to decide if I bribed a policeman.
Dad pulled out; his eyes were fierce. “Nobody does that to me, Anna. Nobody!”
It was like opening a dam. All the water came rushing out.
Back home, Mom didn’t let Dad cool down. She got right in his face. “What happened?”
Big mistake. That made him madder.
So mad, he turned over the dining room table. Dishes broke. The vase of flowers crashed to the floor.
Mom screamed, “Brian, what is the matter with you?”
That was the Big Question we’d been asking all year.
Dad left.
Left Mom standing there.
Left me trying to get out of my cranberry suit.
Left Peanut, my dog, shaking in the corner.
Mom started crying. “Enough. It’s enough.”
The next day Mom and I went to see Jen, our family therapist. Mom announced, “Your dad and I . . . well, we’re going to be separated for awhile.”
I’d been expecting this, but the news still hit like a baseball smashing a window.
“And, Anna, I’m thinking about . . . well, not just thinking, I’ve made the decision to stay with Uncle Barry for a while.” Barry is her brother. He lives in New Jersey. His wife collects miniature eggs with little forest animals peeking out of them. They’re all over the house. Mom hates it there.
I looked at my hands. “Where am I going to be?”
I felt this rumble in my chest like a monster was in there. I had to bend over, even though I was sitting. I put my head between my legs.
Mom said, “Breathe, honey,” like I was sitting there with my head between my legs holding my breath.
“Slow in, slow out,” Jen added.
I got the rhythm of that. I sat up.
Then we talked about me staying with my grandmother for “awhile.”
Nobody defined “awhile.”
“Anna, the flower festival is in a few weeks,” Mom mentioned.
Mim lives in Rosemont, this tiny town in Virginia that lives and breathes flowers. The whole town turns out for the flower festival. Tourists come from all over.