Read Alice the Brave Page 1




  What was I afraid would happen to me if I tried a simple jump? I wondered.… Getting a lung full of water. Passing out. Being hauled out by Mark Stedmeister’s father and taken to the morgue.

  ALICE SHOULD BE USED TO BEING IN OVER her head by now, but really, she’s terrified of deep water. She’s managed to keep this a secret from even her best friends, Pamela and Elizabeth. But it will be beyond embarrassing if everyone finds out she’s afraid to come out of the shallow end. It’s sink or swim time—but maybe the bravery it takes to face her fears might splash over into the rest of Alice’s life.

  DON’T MISS

  Meet the author, watch videos, and get extras at KIDS.SimonandSchuster.com

  COVER DESIGN BY JESSICA HANDELMAN

  COVER ILLUSTRATION COPYRIGHT © 2011 BY JULIA DENOS

  ATHENEUM BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS

  SIMON & SCHUSTER • NEW YORK

  AGES 10–14 • 0811

  Here’s what fans have to say about Alice:*

  “It was so amazing to read your books and think, gee, that happened to me.”—An Alice Fan

  “To tell you the truth, sometimes I cry knowing that Alice isn’t real.”—Carole

  “I read your Alice books in two days because once I start I just can’t stop reading them.”—Becca

  “I just have to say I LOVE YOUR ALICE BOOKS SO MUCH! Well, love is an understatement! I ADORE YOUR ALICE BOOKS! They are by far, the best series in the whole universe.”—Paige

  *Taken from actual postings on the Alice website. To read more, visit AliceMcKinley.com.

  PHYLLIS REYNOLDS NAYLOR includes many of her own life experiences in the Alice books. She writes for both children and adults, and is the author of more than one hundred and thirty-five books, including the Alice series, which Entertainment Weekly has called “tender” and “wonderful.” In 1992 her novel Shiloh won the Newbery Medal. She lives with her husband, Rex, in Gaithersburg, Maryland, and is the mother of two grown sons and the grandmother of Sophia, Tressa, Garrett, and Beckett.

  Alice the Brave

  BOOKS BY PHYLLIS REYNOLDS NAYLOR

  Shiloh Books

  Shiloh

  Shiloh Season

  Saving Shiloh

  The Alice Books

  Starting with Alice

  Alice in Blunderland

  Lovingly Alice

  The Agony of Alice

  Alice in Rapture, Sort Of

  Reluctantly Alice

  All But Alice

  Alice in April

  Alice In-Between

  Alice the Brave

  Alice in Lace

  Outrageously Alice

  Achingly Alice

  Alice on the Outside

  The Grooming of Alice

  Alice Alone

  Simply Alice

  Patiently Alice

  Including Alice

  Alice on Her Way

  Alice in the Know

  Dangerously Alice

  Almost Alice

  Intensely Alice

  Alice in Charge

  Incredibly Alice

  Alice Collections

  I Like Him, He Likes Her

  It’s Not Like I Planned It This Way

  Please Don’t Be True

  The Bernie Magruder Books

  Bernie Magruder and the Case of the Big Stink

  Bernie Magruder and the Disappearing Bodies

  Bernie Magruder and the Haunted Hotel

  Bernie Magruder and the Drive-thru Funeral Parlor

  Bernie Magruder and the Bus Station Blowup

  Bernie Magruder and the Pirate’s Treasure

  Bernie Magruder and the Parachute Peril

  Bernie Magruder and the Bats in the Belfry

  The Cat Pack Books

  The Grand Escape

  The Healing of Texas Jake

  Carlotta’s Kittens

  Polo’s Mother

  The York Trilogy

  Shadows on the Wall

  Faces in the Water

  Footprints at the Window

  The Witch Books

  Witch’s Sister

  Witch Water

  The Witch Herself

  The Witch’s Eye

  Witch Weed

  The Witch Returns

  Picture Books

  King of the Playground

  The Boy with the Helium Head

  Old Sadie and the Christmas Bear

  Keeping a Christmas Secret

  Ducks Disappearing

  I Can’t Take You Anywhere

  Sweet Strawberries

  Please DO Feed the Bears

  Books for Young Readers

  Josie’s Troubles

  How Lazy Can You Get?

  All Because I’m Older

  Maudie in the Middle

  One of the Third-Grade Thonkers

  Roxie and the Hooligans

  Books for Middle Readers

  Walking Through the Dark

  How I Came to Be a Writer

  Eddie, Incorporated

  The Solomon System

  The Keeper

  Beetles, Lightly Toasted

  The Fear Place

  Being Danny’s Dog

  Danny’s Desert Rats

  Walker’s Crossing

  Books for Older Readers

  A String of Chances

  Night Cry

  The Dark of the Tunnel

  The Year of the Gopher

  Send No Blessings

  Ice

  Sang Spell

  Jade Green

  Blizzard’s Wake

  Cricket Man

  ATHENEUM BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS

  An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

  1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Copyright © 1995 by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

  ATHENEUM BOOKS for Young readers is a registered trademark of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  The Simon & Schuster Speakers Bureau can bring authors to your live event.

  For more information or to book an event, contact the Simon & Schuster Speakers

  Bureau at 1-866-248-3049 or visit our website at www.simonspeakers.com.

  Book design by Mike Rosamilia

  The text for this book is set in Berkeley Oldstyle Book.

  0711 OFF

  This Atheneum Books for Young Readers paperback edition August 2011

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the hardcover edition as follows:

  Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds.

  Alice the brave / Phyllis Reynolds Naylor. —1st ed.

  p. cm.

  “A Jean Karl book.”

  Summary: The summer before eighth grade, Alice tries to confront her fears, not the least of which is a fear of deep water.

  ISBN 978-0-689-80095-5 (hc)

  [1. Fears—Fiction. 2. Swimming—Fiction. 3. Single-parent families—Fiction.

  4. Family life—Fiction.] I. Title. PZ7.N24Alf 1995

  [Fic]—dc20

  94-32340

  ISBN 978-1-4424-2851-5 (pbk)

  ISBN: 978-1-4424-6582-4 (ebook)

  ISBN: 978-1-4424-2851-5 (print)

  For Corie Hinton,

  with love

  Contents

  Chapter One: Hang-ups

  Chapter Two: Abyssinian Sobbings and Other Stuf
f

  Chapter Three: Waiting it Out

  Chapter Four: Armpits

  Chapter Five: Spies

  Chapter Six: Tent Talk

  Chapter Seven: Letters

  Chapter Eight: Spectacle

  Chapter Nine: A Matter of Trust

  Chapter Ten: Luck

  Chapter Eleven: Changes

  Chapter Twelve: Conversation

  1

  HANG-UPS

  A MONTH BEFORE I STARTED EIGHTH grade, I knew I was going to have to face something I’d been afraid of for a long time.

  Everybody’s afraid of something, I suppose—elevators, dogs, planes, spiders.… Up to this point, though, I’d steered around it. Made excuses. But when Pamela and Elizabeth, my two best friends, said we were going to spend the rest of the summer practically living in Mark Stedmeister’s swimming pool, I knew I had to face my terror of deep water.

  “I am going to tan like you wouldn’t believe!” said Pamela.

  “I’m going to perfect my backstroke,” said Elizabeth.

  Not even Dad and Lester, my brother, knew how frightened I was at the thought of water up over my head. When we went to the ocean, I never went out in water more than waist deep. Hardly anyone else did either, of course, so that was okay. And up until now, whenever the kids gathered at the Stedmeisters’ pool, one of Mark’s folks was always at poolside as lifeguard. I’d sit on the edge of the shallow end and laugh at the guys kidding around over by the diving board, and no one bothered me.

  But now I guess they figured that since we were going into eighth grade, and Mark is bigger than his father, even, the boys could take care of any emergency. Mrs. Stedmeister looked out of the window a lot, I noticed, but she didn’t sit out on the deck the way she used to, so we didn’t have to wait for her to come out, or for Mark’s dad to come home at night before we could swim. We had the pool to ourselves, and that’s what made it so scary. That, and the fact that Patrick, my boyfriend, was up in Canada and wouldn’t be home till the end of August.

  The more time we spent at the pool, the bolder the guys got, and last time, after a lot of whispering, they’d all descended on Pamela. They’d picked her up in her pink bikini and tossed her into the deep end. Pamela did just the right amount of shrieking and flailing before she swam gracefully over to the edge and climbed out.

  Of course, there are problems being Pamela, too. She used to have blond hair so long she could sit on it. When she was in the swimming pool on her back, her hair would spread out around her so that she looked like a goddess on a lily pad.

  Then last spring, Brian put gum in her hair, and the only way she could get it out was to cut her hair. Now she has a short feather cut, and looks even older and more sophisticated than ever.

  She doesn’t always feel that way, though.

  “I just feel so naked,” Pamela said forlornly as we were coming back from the pool one afternoon.

  Elizabeth glanced over at the bikini that barely covered Pamela’s bosom. “Well, look at you!” she said.

  Elizabeth wears a sort of halter-top suit that comes up high at the neck and is low cut in back. I guess she figures if she’s modest in front she can afford to let go a little behind. She only worries about the part she can see.

  “My head, I mean,” Pamela said. “Sometimes I can still feel my hair, you know?”

  “What?” I said.

  “It’s as though it’s been amputated,” Pamela explained. “Like a man who’s lost a leg and can still feel pain in it.”

  “Pamela, that’s spooky,” I told her.

  We were all feeling a little spooked, if you ask me. We had hardly finished congratulating ourselves on having survived seventh grade, and here we were, about to be eighth graders. We had spent the last year envious of all those gorgeous, sophisticated eighth-grade girls we’d seen in the halls at junior high, and suddenly we were the eighth graders!

  Except that we didn’t feel gorgeous or sophisticated, either one. I was feeling scared about Mark’s swimming pool, Pamela was feeling amputated, and Elizabeth was as nutty as ever about bodily functions. We were as ready for eighth grade as we were for an earthquake.

  Maybe, out of the three of us, Elizabeth was the most frightened of going back to school in the fall. She’d been shocked at the way the eighth-grade girls leaned against their lockers sometimes and kissed their boyfriends—a long series of little glancing kisses on the lips—and she must have thought she was going to be required to do a certain amount of it before she graduated; I’m not sure. But I did notice that as July turned to August, she’d begun using the word “sex” instead of “mating,” and that was a step up. When she mentioned the subject at all, that is.

  Everything was changing, not just us. Lester was going to be twenty-one in September, and Dad just got back from a music conference in Michigan, where he’d gone with my English teacher, Miss Summers.

  I had a million questions to ask him as soon as he got in the house.

  “Have a good time?” Lester wanted to know.

  “Did Miss Summers have a good time?” I asked, getting right to the point. I want so much for Dad to marry her that I even practiced writing my name Alice Kathleen Summers before I realized that if she married Dad, she’d be a McKinley too.

  “We both enjoyed ourselves,” said Dad.

  “How were the beds?” I asked.

  Dad raised one eyebrow as he sat down on the couch and began taking things out of his briefcase.

  “My bed, on the men’s floor, was fine, Al,” he said. (He and Lester call me Al.) “I don’t know how Sylvia’s bed was. I didn’t ask.”

  Even though Dad says I can’t ask him intimate questions about him and my English teacher, I manage to find out what I want to know.

  “I wonder if she packed that black sexy slip with the slit up the side that I saw her buying at Macy’s,” I said to no one in particular.

  “I didn’t ask her that either,” said Dad. He frowned at me and smiled at the same time. “Watch it, Al.”

  “May I ask just one personal question?”

  “No.”

  “That means you did!” I said, clapping my hands.

  Dad was beginning to look exasperated. “That means nothing of the kind! Now see here, Alice …!”

  “The question was, ‘Did you hold hands?’” I said, grinning. I know how to get Dad’s goat.

  “We did on occasion hold hands, Al. Satisfied?”

  “Then may I ask just one more personal question?”

  “No!”

  I clapped my hands again. “Then you did, you did!”

  “Al!”

  “Let’s just say they made sweet music together,” said Lester, and Dad said he’d go along with that.

  Everyone is musical in my family except me. Dad said that when Mom was alive (she died when I was five), she used to sing a lot. Dad plays the piano and flute, and he’s manager of the Melody Inn, one of a chain of music stores. Lester sings and plays the guitar, and my English teacher sang alto in the Messiah Sing-Along. That’s where Dad met her. Even Lester’s girlfriends sing.

  I can’t carry a tune, so I don’t sing at all except to myself, and only when I’m running the vacuum cleaner. Maybe I have a genetic defect or something. Dad says I have other fine qualities, though, and Patrick, who plays the drums, says I have a good sense of rhythm, so I’m not a total loss.

  After that little conversation with Dad, I was pretty quiet because I was thinking how the next five weeks were going to be absolutely awful. The one thing I would not do is tell Lester about my deep-water fear, because he would probably follow me to the pool and throw me in to make me swim.

  “Anything wrong, Al?” Dad asked at dinner. I realized I’d got halfway through my chicken salad without saying a word.

  I shook my head. I tried to think of something interesting to tell him and Lester to make them stop looking at me, but my brain went on hold. I could tell right away that Dad thought I was feeling left out because he wouldn??
?t answer my personal questions about his weekend with Miss Summers, so he proceeded to tell me all the impersonal things they had done.

  “It was sort of fun living in a dorm,” he said. “Made me feel like a college man again.”

  “What’d you do? Streak across the campus naked?” asked Lester. Lester has a thin mustache above his upper lip, making him look a lot older than he is—old enough to have done any daring thing there is to do at college.

  “No, we all went to the cafeteria each morning, then Sylvia and I got in a mile walk before the seminars began,” said Dad. “In the afternoon we practiced with the group of our choice and performed for each other in the evening. It was just plain fun! Sylvia even took a class in flamenco dancing.”

  I imagined my English teacher doing a Spanish dance with a rose between her teeth. I imagined us both together, she and I, dressed in Spanish costumes doing the flamenco together, beside a pool or something with everybody clapping. In my mind’s eye, however, I danced a little too close to the edge and fell in, never to be seen again. I sucked in my breath.

  Dad stopped talking and looked at me strangely.

  “Hiccups,” I said.

  “Well, here’s a little item that might interest you, Al,” Dad told me. “Guess what you and I are going to do?”

  “The flamenco?” I said warily.

  “We’re going to go shopping one of these days. I’ve decided it’s time to get some new furniture.”

  “We already got a new couch,” I told him.

  “Not just a couch. Now that you’re going into eighth grade, I think it’s time you had a real bedroom set—dresser, chest of drawers, the works. Whatever you want.”

  “Dad!” I yelped, and leaned across the table to hug him. I hadn’t the foggiest idea what kind of furniture I wanted. Not canopies and ruffles, like Elizabeth has, or the Coca-Cola logo in Pamela’s room. Something that would reflect the real me.

  “We need some new dining room furniture, too,” Dad went on, and he and Lester began discussing whether we needed a table that would seat eight or ten. Something told me that Dad wasn’t just doing this for me or Lester or even himself. He was doing it because he wanted a house Miss Summers would like to live in.