Notes from a Liar and Her Dog
Ant is sure she must belong
in a different family….
“So,” Mr. Borgdorf continues, “we thought we’d have a little talk today and straighten this all out.”
“Just tell me what to say so I can get out of here,” I mutter, looking at the ceiling.
“Antonia,” my mother’s voice shoots out, as if it has been gathering force until now. “Don’t play your games with me. You’re not adopted and you know it.”
“What about your dad?” Just Carol persists. “Is he your real father?”
“No,” I say, speaking to the floor. “I have a whole other family. Only Pistachio is real. He’s my real dog. When my real parents come, he’s going with me.”
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Gennifer Choldenko
PUFFIN BOOKS
An Imprint of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
To
Jacob Ayer Cholden Brown
With special thanks to:
Erica Calcagno at the Oakland Zoo
for answering all of my many questions.
Alan Blum, Linda Dakin-Grimm,
Libby Ellison, Paula Friedman, Elizabeth Harding,
Nancy Harvey, Glenys and Grey Johnson, Barbara Kerley,
David Macaulay and Susan Miho Nunes. My team.
Ian and Kai Brown for sharing me with my keyboard.
And Kathy Dawson, who wouldn’t let me settle.
What a gift that is.
PUFFIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Young Readers Group, 345 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.
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Registered Offices: Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
First published in the United States of America by G. P. Putnam’s Sons,
a division of Penguin Putnam Books for Young Readers, 2001
Published by Puffin Books, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2003, 2010
Copyright © Gennifer Choldenko, 2001
All rights reserved
THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS HAS CATALOGED THE G.P. PUTNAM’S SONS EDITION AS FOLLOWS:
Choldenko, Gennifer, date
Notes from a liar and her dog / Gennifer Choldenko.
p. cm. Summary: Eleven-year-old Ant, stuck in a family that she does not like,
copes by pretending that her “real” parents are coming to rescue her, by loving
her dog Pistachio, by volunteering at the zoo, and by telling lies.
[1. Family Life—Fiction. 2. Honesty—Fiction. 3. Dogs—Fiction. 4. Zoos—Fiction.]
I. Title. PZ7.C446265 No 2001 [Fic]—dc21 00-055354
Puffin Books ISBN: 978-1-101-65112-4
Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that
it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise
circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover
other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition
including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume
any responsibility for author or third-party Web sites or their content.
CONTENTS
1. WOLF
2. HARRISON EMERSON
3. LITTLE BROWN ACORN
4. PISTACHIO
5. THE VET
6. ZOO TEENS
7. KIGALI
8. THE LIONS
9. A HIPPOPOTAMUS OATH
10. DINNER AT THE MACPHERSONS’
11. THE POSTCARD
12. ELIZABETH’S DRESS REHEARSAL
13. THE EMERSONS
14. HUMBLE PIE
15. JUST CAROL
16. NOSE
17. OTHER DOGS’ STINK
18. A RIDE
19. THE MATH-A-THON
20. FAMILY NIGHT
21. MY REAL PARENTS
22. My MOM’S PLAN
23. THE KEY
24. MARY-JUDY
25. ELIZABETH
26. ANT
27. THE FACTS
1
WOLF
“I don’t even know what I did this time,” I say to my best friend, Harrison Emerson. We watch my mother park her car in the school’s visitor parking slot.
“Could be she’s here because of Kate. Maybe Kate’s in trouble,” Harrison suggests. He is sitting on the asphalt in the shade of the backboard, drawing a chicken in his math book. He always draws during recess, until a noon aide makes him play.
“Oh, right. My little sister’s idea of getting in trouble is putting a book back upside down,” I say, mopping the sweat off my forehead with the tail of my shirt. I sock the handball hard against the backboard.
“Antonia MacPherson, please come to the office.” The loudspeaker sounds patchy and too loud. A kid I don’t know screams, “You cheat!” Another kid smacks the tetherball behind me.
“Antonia MacPherson, please come to the office.” The loudspeaker lady is mad now, like if she has to walk all the way out to the playground to find me, my butt will be butter.
“Want me to come?” Harrison asks. Harrison is working on the chicken’s wing feathers. I know he hates stopping in the middle of the feather part, but I can’t help it. I need him.
“Yeah,” I say.
It’s been a while since I’ve been called to the office. I got bored of it, really. The assistant principal, Mr. Borgdorf, always makes everything sound as if it is life or death, like if you put one foot outside the crosswalk, you are headed for the penitentiary. He loves rules. He has them written all fancy and hung on the walls of his office.
We take the long way to Mr. Borgdorf’s office, stopping for a drink at the water fountain. The water is hot and tastes like pennies. I get a big mouthful and spit it out on Harrison’s shoes. Then Harrison gets a big mouthful and spits it out on my shoes. We are wet up to our knees when Cave Man comes along. Cave Man is our teacher. His real name is Mr. Lewis, but everyone calls him Cave Man because he’s all hairy like one of those monkeys in our history book—the ones that walk stooped, then turn into men. Cave Man escorts us to the office.
“Antonia? Is that you?” the assistant principal calls out as soon as he hears us in the main office. He knows me by name. This is not an hono
r, my mother always says.
“You go first,” I tell Harrison.
Harrison nods. Harrison is short. His T-shirt is almost as long as a dress and his cargo pants are dirty and frayed at the bottom from stepping on them.
“Harrison Emerson, why am I not surprised to see you,” my mom says. My mom is sitting in Mr. Borgdorf’s office with her legs neatly crossed. She is wearing a work skirt and blouse with a scarf around her neck, held in place with a pin. She is glaring at Harrison. My mom hates Harrison because he eats with his mouth open, walks his pet chicken on a leash, and because he’s always scratching at something. I’m not friends with Harrison because my mom doesn’t like him, though. I’m friends with him because I like him. That my mom doesn’t like him is something extra, like a bonus.
“Hey, Harrison, Ant, how are you two doing today?” asks Just Carol. Just Carol is our art teacher. We call her Just Carol because she always says, “Just call me Carol.” Not Miss or Ms. or Mrs. Anything. I wonder what she is doing here.
Harrison blushes so red, his freckles disappear. He loves Just Carol. He has her picture thumbtacked over his bed and everything.
“Mr. Emerson,” says the assistant principal, who is bald except for a strip of hair that runs from ear to ear like a collar. “I’m glad you accompanied your friend Antonia here. But I’m afraid our business is with her. Would you mind waiting outside, young man?”
“No,” Harrison says. Harrison is still staring at Just Carol. She’s wearing dozens of bracelets that jangle every time she moves, earrings that look like the mobiles they put over baby cribs, and a bright gauze dress. She looks as if she is on her way to Hawaii.
“Now,” Mr. Borgdorf says once the door is closed behind Harrison. “Miss Samberson says—”
“Who’s that?” I ask.
“Carol.” The assistant principal clears his throat as if saying her name plain like this gives him phlegm.
“Carol here says you’ve been telling people you’re adopted…that your real parents are going to come and take you away to your real life. And, frankly, she is worried that something is going on.” He glances at my mom. “At home.”
I stare at Just Carol. My face feels hot, as if I have a fever. How could she have blabbed something like this?
“So,” Mr. Borgdorf continues, “we thought we’d have a little talk here today and straighten this all out.”
“Just tell me what to say so I can get out of here,” I mutter, looking at the ceiling. One of the white panels is missing and there is brown paper underneath. Aren’t you supposed to build buildings out of something more substantial than paper?
“Antonia,” my mother’s voice shoots out, as if it has been gathering force until now. “Don’t play your games with me. You’re not adopted and you know it.”
“Fine. I’m not adopted. Can I leave now?”
“Look, Ant …” Just Carol leans forward in her chair. “I don’t want to embarrass you, but I am concerned. It seems as if you’re disturbed about something. I wanted to try to understand here. I thought we could all sit down and work it out.”
“Butt out,” I say without looking at her.
“Antonia!” my mom and Mr. Borgdorf call out in unison, then Mr. Borgdorf takes over. “I expect you to conduct yourself in an appropriate manner, young lady, with courteous and respectful language, otherwise I will put you on probation, on the spot. Consider yourself warned.”
“Maybe you’d rather I hadn’t brought this to the attention of Mr. Borgdorf,” Just Carol says. “But I thought there was a problem that needed to be addressed. And I still believe that. Why is it you think you’re adopted?”
“Because I am, that’s all,” I say, looking around for a window. It’s twice as hot in this office as it is outside. How can Mr. Borgdorf stand to sit in here all day without a window?
“But there must be some reason you think this.”
They are all staring at me. I know I’m not going anywhere unless I say something. “I don’t look like my sisters. And I certainly don’t act like them, because I never would behave as stupid as they do. And I wasn’t named after a queen of England, like Your Highness Elizabeth and Katherine the Great.”
“Antonia, you were named after your uncle Anthony. You know that,” my mother says.
“Mrs. MacPherson, your daughter is unhappy. I don’t think she feels a part of her family. Kids don’t make up stories for no reason,” Just Carol says.
“I didn’t make it up,” I say.
“Look, you don’t know Antonia. She has a strange way of looking at things. She carries everything to the nth degree, and lying is a problem we’ve had over and over again. But we’re working on it, aren’t we, Antonia?” My mother flashes her fake smile. “I appreciate your concern, truly I do, but I don’t think this is the way to handle this.”
“What about your dad?” Just Carol persists. “Is he your real father?”
“No,” I say, speaking to the floor. “I have a whole other family. Only Pistachio is real. He’s my real dog. When my real parents come, he’s going with me.”
My mother sighs. “I think we’re giving her too much attention for this. It sends the wrong signal—”
“Bear with me a minute, Mrs. MacPherson,” Just Carol says, motioning her hands like my mom should stop.
“Is this some new kind of teaching method?” my mother whispers to Mr. Borgdorf. Her foot is swinging back and forth.
“Miss Samberson.” Mr. Borgdorf says her name like it is a complete sentence. “Step outside for a minute. I want to have a word with you.” He shoots an embarrassed little smile in my mom’s direction.
Great. The last thing I want is to be cooped up in a hot room with my mother. I scoot my chair away from her.
“Antonia, I just don’t understand you. Do you want to humiliate me? Is that your purpose here?”
I look up. What would happen if I poked a hole in the paper where the ceiling panel is missing? What would come out?
“You weren’t adopted.”
I shrug. “That’s what you always say.”
“Because it’s the truth,” my mother says, taking a tissue out of her sleeve and dabbing at her face. Her makeup is melting off. I can see a square patch on her forehead where her Kleenex has wiped it clean. “You know, I just don’t understand you. I never have had a moment’s worry with Elizabeth or Kate, either. But you, you’re like some kind of…some kind of …”
“See,” I whisper as Just Carol and the assistant principal come back, “you don’t think I’m your real daughter, either.”
Mr. Borgdorf’s wide lips are pressed together. A sweat bead drops off his nose.
Just Carol sucks her cheeks in and organizes her jangly bracelets so the fronts are all going the same way.
“Now,” the assistant principal says, “I think this has been a productive discussion for everyone. And I’m sure this is a situation you can work out at home, Mrs. MacPherson. And as for you, young lady…do you know the story of the boy who cried wolf?”
I nod.
“I think it would be instructive for you to relay that story to all of us here.”
I run my tongue over my teeth. “Some kid pretended he saw a wolf a bunch of times, and everyone came to help him. Then when he really saw the wolf, they all thought he was kidding and they didn’t come, and the wolf ate him.”
“That’s right. And what do you think the boy learned?” Mr. Borgdorf asks.
“He didn’t learn anything. He’s dead.”
Mr. Borgdorf’s eyes flash angry. His lips roll in. “Fair enough. But why? What was the mistake he made?”
I blow my hair off my forehead and consider this question. “He was stupid. He shouldn’t have expected anyone to help in the first place. He should have handled the wolf by himself. That’s what I would have done.”
2
HARRISON EMERSON
When the bus drops me and Harrison off, my little sister, Kate, is waiting for us. Kate looks like the kind
of kid they show eating chocolate pudding on TV. She is small, even for a third grader, and she has blond curly hair and lots of freckles. She looks like my mom and my older sister, Your Highness Elizabeth. “Three peas in a pod,” my father always says. “And one brown acorn.” That’s me. I have thick, straight dark hair and skin the color of a brown paper grocery bag. I don’t look like anybody, except for my real parents, of course. I look exactly like them.
“Boy, are you in trouble,” Kate says.
I stand on the curb looking back at the bus, wondering if it is too late for Harrison and me to get back on. The bus driver’s big hand reaches for the silver door handle. The door slaps closed and the bus pulls back on the road, blowing stinky black smoke out the tailpipe.
“This is news?” I ask, cocking my head toward Harrison.
When Your Highness Elizabeth isn’t around, Kate spends her time watching me so she can report back to my mother. Sometimes she takes notes so she won’t forget one single thing. I think Kate is going to be a bill collector when she grows up. She doesn’t look like one, though, which is why she’ll be so good at it.
“She lost a whole half-day at Barbara and Barbara’s and she called Dad at work,” Kate says. We are walking now, and I hear coins jingle in her shoe. Kate always keeps change in there. She says it’s the only safe place, because no one will ever think of stealing money from your shoe. The only problem is it sounds so loud when she walks that if someone did want to steal her money, they’d know right where to look.
“Big deal,” I say, although this is a big deal. My mother works part-time as a bookkeeper for two interior designers named Barbara and she doesn’t like to miss. And my father HATES to be called at work. I don’t know why he hates this so much. It’s not like he’s a surgeon who will forget to put somebody’s organs back if he gets a call in the middle of an operation. He works for an insurance company. What’s so important about that?
“Life insurance is essential,” Kate says. She half skips to keep up with us. “I’m thinking of buying some. You can make a lot of money with life insurance,” she tells Harrison.
“Only problem is you got to die first,” I say, kicking a dirt clod, which dissolves into a pile of dirt.