The Truth About Stacey
The author would like to thank
Dr. Claudia Werner
for her sensitive evaluation
of this manuscript.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
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
Letter from Ann M. Martin
About the Author
Scrapbook
Copyright
“As president of the Baby-sitters Club,” said Kristy Thomas, “I hereby move that we figure out what to do when Mrs. Newton goes to the hospital to have her baby.”
“What do you mean?” I said.
“Well, we ought to be prepared. We’ve been waiting for this baby for months, and the Newtons are practically our best clients. They’ll need someone to take care of Jamie while his parents are at the hospital. Smart baby-sitters would be ready for the occasion.”
“I think that’s a good idea,” spoke up Mary Anne Spier. “I second the motion.” Mary Anne usually agrees with Kristy. After all, they’re best friends.
I glanced across the room at Claudia Kishi. Claudia is my best friend, and vice president of our club. She shrugged her shoulders at me.
There are just the four of us in the Baby-sitters Club: Kristy, Claudia, Mary Anne (she’s the secretary), and me, Stacey McGill. I’m the treasurer. We’ve been in business for about two months. Kristy thought up the club, which was why she got to be president. We meet three times a week from five-thirty to six o’clock in Claudia’s room (Claudia has a private phone), and our clients call then to line us up as sitters. The reason the club works so well is that with four baby-sitters there at the phone, each person who calls is pretty much guaranteed to get a sitter for whatever time he or she needs. Our clients like that. They say that having to make a whole bunch of calls just to line up one sitter is a waste of time. They like us, too. We’re good baby-sitters. And we worked hard to get our business going. We printed up flyers and distributed them in mailboxes, and even put an ad in The Stoneybrook News, the voice of Stoneybrook, Connecticut.
That’s where I live now, in this teeny-weeny town in Connecticut. Let me tell you, it’s quite a shock after life in New York City. New York is a big place. Stoneybrook is not. There is only one middle school here, and I go to it. We all do. (We’re in seventh grade.) In New York there are about a billion middle schools. In fact, in New York there are about a billion of everything—people, cars,buildings, stores, pigeons, friends, and things to do.
Here there’s, well, there’s … not much, really. My parents and I moved into our house in August and I didn’t make a single friend until I met Claudia in school in September. Everyone here seems to have known everyone else since they were babies. Claudia, Kristy, and Mary Anne have. And they’ve grown up together, since Kristy and Mary Anne live next door to each other on Bradford Court and Claudia lives across the street from them. (I live two streets away.)
So, was I ever glad when Claudia told me Kristy wanted to start the club! Friends at last, I thought. And that’s just what I found. Even though I’m better friends with Claudia, I don’t know what I’d do without Kristy and Mary Anne. It’s true that they seem younger than Claudia and me (they don’t care much about clothes or boys yet—although Kristy did just go to her first dance), and Mary Anne is unbelievably shy, and Kristy’s sort of a tomboy. But they’re my friends, and I belong with them. Which is more than I can say about certain traitors I left behind in New York.
“All right, here’s one plan,” Kristy was saying. “It’s a school afternoon. Mrs. Newton realizes that it’s time to go to the hospital. She calls Mr. Newton or a cab or whatever, then calls us, and one of us goes to stay with Jamie.”
“What if we’re all busy?” I asked.
“Hmm,” said Kristy. “Maybe from now on, one of us should be free each afternoon so Mrs. Newton will be guaranteed a baby-sitter. It will be a special service for her, since the Newtons are such good customers.”
“That seems like kind of a waste,” spoke up Claudia, which was exactly what I was thinking.
“That’s right,” I said. “Babies can be late. Two or three weeks late. We could be giving up an awful lot of perfectly good afternoons for nothing.”
“That’s true,” said Kristy thoughtfully.
“How about a nighttime plan?” I suggested. “Doesn’t it seem that pregnant women always rush off to the hospital in the middle of the night? I was born at two-twenty-two A.M.”
“I was born at four-thirty-six A.M.,” said Claudia.
“I was born at four A.M. on the dot,” said Kristy.
We looked at Mary Anne. She shrugged. “I don’t know what time I was born.” Mary Anne’s mother died when Mary Anne was little, and Mary Anne is not very close to her strict father. It figures that they’d never talked about the day (or night) she was born.
A knock came on Claudia’s door. Mimi, her grandmother, stuck her head in the room. “Hello, girls,” she said politely.
“Hi, Mimi,” we answered.
“May I offer you something to eat?” she asked. Claudia’s family is Japanese, and Mimi, who didn’t come to the United States until she was thirty-two years old, speaks with a gentle, rolling accent. She has lived with Claudia’s family since before Claudia was born.
“No thanks, Mimi,” replied Claudia, “but maybe you could help us.”
“Certainly.” Mimi opened the door the rest of the way and stood just inside the room.
“Do you know what time Mary Anne was born?” Claudia asked. She figured Mimi would know since Claudia’s parents have been friendly with the Thomases and the Spiers for years, and Mimi had gotten to know the families, too.
Mimi looked only slightly taken aback. “Let me think for a moment, my Claudia…. Mary Anne, your mother and father left for the hospital around dinnertime. That I remember clearly. I believe you were born near eleven o’clock.”
“Oh!” A grin lit up Mary Anne’s face. “I didn’t know. So I was another nighttime baby. Thank you, Mimi.”
“It was my pleasure.” Mimi turned to leave, and almost bumped into Janine, Claudia’s sister, who had come up behind her.
“Claudia! Claudia!” cried Janine.
I looked up in alarm. Janine is this prim, notmuch-fun fifteen-year-old who’s a genius. To be honest, she’s boring. Dull as dishwater. I’d never even heard her raise her voice, which was why, the minute I heard her cry “Claudia!” I knew something was wrong. Very wrong.
Unfortunately, I was right.
“Janine! What is it?” exclaimed Claudia.
“This.” Janine was waving a paper around. She squeezed past Mimi and thrust it at Claudia.
Claudia took it, and Kristy, Mary Anne, and I crowded around. We stared at the paper in horror. This is what we saw:
Need a reliable baby-sitter?
Need one fast?
Then call:
THE BABY-SITTERS AGENCY
Liz Lewis: 555-1162
OR
Michelle Patterson: 555-7548
And reach a whole network of responsible
baby-sitters!
Ages: 13 and up
Available:
After school
Weekends (until midnight)
Weeknights (until 11:00)
Low rates! Years of experience!
CALL N
OW!
The four of us just looked at each other. Even Kristy, who has sort of a big mouth, couldn’t say anything. Mary Anne’s eyes grew so wide I thought they would pop right out of her head.
“What is wrong, my Claudia?” asked Mimi.
“Competition,” Claudia replied stiffly.
Kristy checked her watch and saw that it was only five-forty-five, and that we still had fifteen minutes left to our Friday meeting. “I hereby change this meeting of the Baby-sitters Club to an emergency meeting,” she announced.
“We will leave you alone, then,” said Mimi softly. “Janine, please help me with dinner.” Mimi tiptoed out, followed by Janine, who closed the door softly behind her.
I looked at my three stricken friends.
Claudia’s dark eyes were troubled. She was absentmindedly playing with a strand of her long black hair. Claudia is very fashion conscious and always dresses in the absolute latest trendy clothes, but I could tell that clothes were the last things on her mind.
Kristy, wearing her typical little-girl clothes, her brown hair pulled back into a messy pony-tail, looked as troubled as Claudia did.
Mary Anne, her hair in braids as usual (her father makes her wear it that way), had put on her wire-rimmed glasses to read the flyer. When she was finished, she sighed, leaned back against the wall, and kicked off her penny loafers.
If I could have looked at myself, I would have seen a second trendy dresser and a fourth long face, more sophisticated than Kristy’s or Mary Anne’s but not nearly as beautiful as Claudia’s.
I examined a pink-painted nail while Kristy held the dreadful flyer in her shaking hand.
“We’re dead,” she said to no one in particular. “The other baby-sitters are older than we are. They can stay out later than we can. We’re doomed.”
Not one of us disagreed with her.
In nervous desperation, Claudia took a shoe box from under her bed, reached in, and pulled out a roll of Life Savers. Claudia is a junk-food addict (although she won’t admit it), and she has candy and snacks stashed all around her bedroom, along with the Nancy Drew books her parents disapprove of because they think they’re not “quality” reading. She was so upset about the Baby-sitters Agency that when she was passing around the Life Savers, she forgot and offered me a piece. I’m diabetic and absolutely not allowed to eat extra sweets. I used to try to keep my illness a secret from people, but Claudia, Mary Anne, and Kristy know about it, and they don’t usually offer me candy.
“Who are Liz Lewis and Michelle Patterson?” asked Mary Anne, peering over to look at the flyer again.
I shrugged. I barely knew the kids in my homeroom, let alone in any other grade.
“Maybe they don’t go to the middle school,” suggested Kristy. “It says the baby-sitters are thirteen and up. Liz and Michelle probably go to the high school. I wonder if Sam or Charlie knows them.” (Charlie and Sam are Kristy’s older brothers. They’re sixteen and fourteen. She has a little brother, too, David Michael, who’s six.)
“No, they go to Stoneybrook Middle School,” spoke up Claudia, in a tone of voice that indicated she was likely to expire in a few seconds. “They’re eighth-graders.”
“They must be pretty friendly with the high school kids,” I said, “unless there are a whole bunch of really old eighth-graders that we don’t know about.”
Claudia snorted. “For all I know, there are. Liz and Michelle could be fourteen or fifteen. I wish you guys knew who they are. You’d faint. Those two aren’t baby-sitters any more than I’m the queen of France.”
“What’s wrong with them?” I asked.
“For one thing, I wouldn’t trust them farther than I could throw a truck,” said Claudia. “They have smart mouths, they sass the teachers, they hate school, they hang around at the mall. You know, that kind of kid.”
“It doesn’t mean they’re not good babysitters,” said Mary Anne.
“I’d be surprised if they were,” replied Claudia.
“I wonder how the agency works,” mused Kristy. She was still holding the flyer. “There are only two names on this, but it says you can get in touch with ‘a whole network of responsible babysitters.’ I’ll say one thing, Liz and Michelle know how to go after customers. Their flyer is a lot better than ours was.”
“Hmph,” I said.
“Hey!” cried Mary Anne. “I have an idea. Let’s call the agency and pretend we need a sitter. Maybe we can find out how those girls operate.” Mary Anne may be shy, but she sure can come up with daring ideas.
“Oh, that’s smart!” said Kristy approvingly. “I’ll make up a name and say I need a babysitter for my younger brother. Then I can call them back later and cancel.” “Okay,” Claudia and I agreed. “Competition, are you ready?” Kristy asked the phone. “Here comes the Baby-sitters Club!”
Kristy called Liz Lewis, just because Liz was listed first on the flyer. She put her hand over the mouthpiece. “It’s ringing,” she whispered to us. “One … two … thr—Hello? Is Liz Lewis there, please? … Oh, hi, Liz. My name is—Candy. Candy Kane…. No, no joke…. I got your flyer for the Baby-sitters Agency. I’m supposed to sit for my little brother tomorrow and” (Kristy paused, and the rest of us watched the wheels turning) “I just got asked out on a date.”
Mary Anne started to giggle. She grabbed a pillow from Claudia’s bed and buried her face in it to muffle the sounds. Kristy turned away so she wouldn’t have to see.
“From three to five,” Kristy was saying. (Liz must have asked her when she was supposed to be sitting.) “He’s seven years old. His name is, um, Harry…. Twenty-eight Roper Road. Will you be baby-sitting for him? The flyer said—Oh, I see…. Mm-hmm…. I’ll be at 555-3231. Oh, but only for about ten minutes. Then I have—I have another date…. Who with?”
By that time, Claudia was laughing, too, and I was on the verge of it. Kristy glanced at us helplessly, not sure what to do about her “date.” Then she simply pulled a name out of the air. “With Winston Churchill,” she replied, taking the chance that Liz wouldn’t know who he was. Apparently she didn’t. “Yeah, he goes to high school,” continued Kristy nonchalantly, getting into her story. “A sophomore. Football player … Me? I’m in seventh…. Yeah, I know.”
I had to leave the room. I couldn’t stand it any longer, and I didn’t want to ruin Kristy’s call. I closed Claudia’s door, ran to the bathroom, laughed, and returned.
Kristy was saying, “Okay, five minutes … Yeah, later.” She hung up. Then she began to laugh, too. “You guys!” she exclaimed. “Don’t do that to me when I’m on the phone.”
“But Winston Churchill?” I cried. “The high school guy you’re dating?”
When we calmed down, Kristy said, “All right, this is how I think the agency works. People call Liz and Michelle when they need sitters. Then Liz and Michelle simply turn around and find the sitters. In other words, they do all the phoning for their clients. I guess they must baby-sit, too, from time to time. But when they don’t, they probably get part of the salary earned by the sitter they found for the job.”
“No wonder their sitters are so old,” said Mary Anne. “All Liz and Michelle have to do is call older kids.”
“Yeah,” said Kristy glumly. “We could do that ourselves, if we’d thought of it.” She paused. “Liz seemed more interested in my date than in finding a baby-sitter.”
“Figures,” said Claudia.
The phone rang. “I’ll get it. It’s probably Liz,” said Kristy. Mary Anne got ready with a pillow. “Hello, the B—hello?” (Kristy had almost said, “Hello, the Baby-sitters Club,” which is how we answer the phone during meetings.) “Yes, this is she…. Oh, terrific…. How many? … Wow. How old are they? … Okay…. Patricia Clayton…. Okay…. Okay, thanks a lot. I’ll see Patricia tomorrow…. Later.” She hung up.
“Later?” repeated Mary Anne.
“That’s how Liz says good-bye.”
“So?” I asked.
“She actually found three available
sitters,” said Kristy. “She gave me a choice. I didn’t know any of the names, but two were thirteen years old, and one was fifteen years old. One was even a boy. I chose the fifteen-year-old. People are going to love the agency. I’m not kidding. We don’t offer a range of ages like they do. There are no boys in our club. And we can’t stay out past ten, even on the weekends.”
We looked at each other sadly.
At last, Mary Anne stood up. “It’s after six. I’ve got to go home.” Mr. Spier likes Mary Anne home on the dot. I was surprised she was letting herself be even a few minutes late. It just showed how upset she was.
“I might as well go, too,” I said.
“Yeah,” said Kristy.
The three of us said good-bye to Claudia and left. “See you guys!” called Mary Anne when we reached the Kishis’ stoop. She was suddenly in a hurry. Across the street I could see her father standing at their front door.
“Well,” I said to Kristy.
“Well.”
“Kristy, we’ll make it. We’re good baby-sitters.”
“I know,” she said. But that was all she said. I kind of expected Kristy to be a little more positive. I mean, the club was really more hers than anybody else’s. I thought she’d do anything for the club. I would.
But maybe that was because the club was more than just a project or a business to me. It was my friends. It was the only good thing that had happened to me in the last horrible year.
I ran home.
Somehow, I managed to eat dinner that night. It wasn’t easy. For one thing, ever since I developed the diabetes and I’ve had to watch what I eat so carefully, food simply isn’t much fun anymore. Often when I’m hungry, I don’t care what I eat. I eat just to fill up. And since I was upset about the Baby-sitters Agency that night, I wasn’t even hungry. But Mom watches my food intake like a hawk, particularly since I’ve lost a little weight recently. So I forced down what I thought was a reasonable dinner.
As soon as I could, I escaped to my room. I closed my door and sat down in my armchair to think. It had been just a year earlier that I had started to show the symptoms of diabetes. At first, we didn’t think anything was wrong. I was hungry all the time—I mean, really hungry, nothing could fill me up—and thirsty, too. “Well, you’re a growing girl,” Mom had said. “I expect this is the beginning of a growth spurt. Let’s measure you.” Sure enough, I’d grown an inch and a half. But then, even though I was eating and eating, I began to lose weight. I didn’t feel well, either. I grew tired easily and sometimes I felt weak all over. Twice, I wet my bed. (The second time, I happened to be sharing a double bed with my former best friend, Laine Cummings, at a sleepover.) When that happened, Mom forgot about my growth spurt and decided I was having a psychological problem. She took me to a fancy New York psychiatrist. During my first session with him, he asked me about the bed-wetting, heard that I was losing weight, and watched me drink three sodas. He was the one who realized what was going on and told Mom to make an appointment with my pediatrician. Mom did. Two weeks later, I was learning how to give myself insulin and monitor my blood sugar level.