Page 9 of Acting Out


  “Where do you live?” I ask the tabby. “Do you have a home?”

  He looks up at me as if he’s about to tell me something important.

  “Meow.”

  As soon as we get the hardware store Mom and Dad bought all set up and open for business, I really want to volunteer at the shelter here in Ambler, too. I even got a recommendation letter from my supervisor back in Pittsburgh like Dad suggested. When the Ambler shelter sees my letter, I’m sure they’ll let me volunteer.

  The cat’s purr gets louder and louder.

  And I was excited to see that there’s a veterinary clinic two blocks down the street. Maybe I’ll make a copy of my letter to show the vets there, too. If I’m going to be a veterinarian someday, I have to get more experience, especially since we’ve never had any family pets of our own. Mom promised that we could finally get a pet once we’d settled in, but now she acts like it’s the last thing on her mind.

  Mom doesn’t understand how much I love animals, how good I am with them, and how being around animals makes me less nervous. But Dad gets it. He’s an animal lover, too. He loves to see them, pet them, and he talks to them, just like me. Mom is a worrier. She worries about germs, safety, and how expensive a pet might be. And she never seems to relax around animals or enjoy petting them like Dad and I do.

  The tabby comes closer and circles me, leaning his body against my ankles and legs, then comes back around to my hands for more petting.

  “I’d sure like to keep you,” I say to him. “But you look like you already have a home. Still, you should be wearing a collar and a tag with your name and your owner’s phone number on it.” He’s close to me again, purring and content.

  The back door to the store creaks open and bangs against the wall, startling the cat and me. “Hey, Jules,” Josh calls, “are you out here collecting strays again?” The cat sprints off across the back parking lot, out of sight.

  “Josh!” I say. “You scared him away.”

  “Sorry,” he says.

  I look past the parking lot, hoping the tabby will come back, but he’s gone. I hope his ear heals okay.

  “Mom needs you upstairs,” Josh says. “I’m helping Dad in the store. And Mom says we have to get ready for school tomorrow. I’m exhausted. So much for spring break!”

  Josh is right. Spring break hasn’t been a vacation this year. Sometimes, like right now, Josh and I think exactly alike. We have a six-year-old sister, Sophie, too, but Sophie and I rarely think alike. It must be because Josh and I are twins.

  “The store’s looking good, isn’t it?” Josh asks.

  “I guess so,” I say.

  I was excited when Mom and Dad bought the old boarded-up hardware store in Ambler. They renamed it Wrenches & Roses. Mom wants to add a bunch of gardening supplies and gift items to sell.

  “Guess so? I know so,” Josh says. “That sign you helped Dad build and paint looks great. The store still needs a lot of fixing up, but it’s coming along.”

  Dad and I are handy with tools. Josh, not so much. He prefers to draw. Sophie draws, too. I like to build.

  “I’m excited,” Josh adds. “You should be, too.”

  “I’m excited about the store,” I say. “I’m just not thrilled with the first day of school tomorrow. Or meeting new kids.”

  “It’ll be fine,” Josh says.

  “I hope so.” I shrug. “I’ll be right in.”

  Josh heads in, and I hear him tromping up the stairs. Our apartment is above the store, and there’s a huge basement below the store full of who knows what. Josh and I tried to explore down there the first day, but it was not on Mom’s to-do list.

  I look once more to see if the tabby is coming back. Nope. So I go inside, past the basement door, and head upstairs. Dad says the basement needs a lot of work so it’s strictly “off limits” for now, though he promised we could add a family workshop down there someday, where he could teach some do-it-yourself workshops about gardening techniques and home repairs for local families. There’s a lot of room down there. And as he always says about everything, “There are so many possibilities.”

  Nothing is settled. Not in the basement, not in the store, and especially not in our apartment. There are boxes and packing materials everywhere.

  “Jules, wash up and help me set the table,” Mom says.

  Sophie is in the living room, stacking empty boxes, open side out, one on top of the other. She makes a game of putting her stuffed animals in the boxes, talking to them as she goes. Poor kid. We need a real animal around here.

  “Looking forward to going to school tomorrow?” Mom asks me.

  “No, not really,” I say.

  I half expect Mom to start in again on her never-ending You’re-in-Seventh-Grade-Now-Julia-So-Be-Sure-to-Stay-Organized-with-Your-Schoolwork speech, but instead she sighs and goes back to making dinner. She can’t think of anything to say and neither can I. If I start telling her how I feel, I won’t be able to stop. Plus, I don’t think she is interested in how I feel.

  “Get a good night’s rest, Jules,” Mom says. “It’s easier to start fresh when you’ve had a good night’s sleep.”

  “Okay,” I say.

  “And don’t forget to smile,” she says. “It’s a lot easier to meet new friends when you smile.”

  Mom makes it sound so easy. Why did she think moving to Ambler in March was such a great idea? If we had stayed in Pittsburgh for spring break, I could have worked the whole week at the shelter. Instead, Josh and I have been stuck packing, unpacking, and helping to set up Wrenches & Roses. The store opens in just two weeks.

  Now spring break is over. Finished. Gone forever. And so are my Pittsburgh friends and the cats and dogs at the shelter there. I was getting good grades in my middle school back in Pittsburgh. School was fun, but that’s because I knew everybody and everybody knew me.

  After Mom and Dad both lost their jobs, they found the hardware store for sale. Since they had always dreamed of owning a small business, they said we couldn’t pass up this opportunity, and I get that. But now Josh and I have to start all over again in a new school in a new town with only three months of the school year left. I won’t know any of the kids, and they’ll all have their own friends picked out already—ugh!

  At least Josh will be with me tomorrow. I may be good with animals, but I am not very good at making friends. Josh usually helps with that, telling jokes, breaking the ice, introducing us, and answering all the twin questions. And there are always twin questions, usually really dumb questions like, “Are you identical twins?” Duh, hello, I’m a girl, he’s a boy, so how could we be identical? Twins, yes. Identical, no. Josh always responds in a friendly way, explaining the difference between identical and fraternal twins.

  Talking about being twins makes me nervous. Plus, most girls who ask about us being twins are just trying to get to know Josh, not me. I realize that I’m downright dreading starting at a new middle school. It’s stressing me out. Whenever I felt stressed out back in Pittsburgh, I’d just pet the cats and dogs at the shelter, and that always calmed me down. But I haven’t had a pet connection in two weeks, aside from the stray tabby in the alley, and he barely let me pet him.

  I wish I could run away like the stray tabby, only I’d run all the way back to our old home and my old school and all my old friends.

 


 

  Laurie Halse Anderson, Acting Out

  (Series: Vet Volunteers # 14)

 

 


 

 
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