Read Welcome Back, Stacey Page 1




  This book is for

  Courtenay Robertson Martin,

  a new fan of

  The Baby-sitters Club

  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

  Also Available

  Copyright

  “Stacey? Do you think that if dinosaurs were still alive, a stegosaurus could beat a brontosaurus in a fight?”

  “What?” I replied. I hadn’t quite heard Henry’s question. I felt bad. A baby-sitter should always pay attention to her charges.

  “Could a stegosaurus beat a brontosaurus in a fight? If they were alive today?” Henry waited patiently for my answer. He and his little sister Grace were making pictures on long rolls of shelf paper with fat pastels. Henry had just drawn what looked like a big city. I had a feeling that the next thing he was going to do was draw dinosaurs in the city — and that my answer would be important to him and to his picture.

  “Well, could a stegosaurus beat a brontosaurus in dinosaur days?” I asked. Henry and Grace and I live really near the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, and Henry likes to visit the dinosaur exhibits.

  Henry shrugged. “I don’t know,” he replied. “I guess it doesn’t really matter. I’ll just pretend a steg could beat a bronto.” (Henry is on familiar terms with dinosaurs. Oh, excuse me. With dinos.)

  Maybe I better stop here and introduce Henry and Grace and myself. I am Stacey McGill and I’m thirteen years old. Henry and Grace and I live on the Upper West Side of New York City. In fact, we live in the same building. I live on the 12th floor and the Walkers live on the 18th floor. Mr. and Mrs. Walker are artists, and Henry and Grace, who are five and three, are my two favorite baby-sitting charges.

  Believe me, I do a lot of baby-sitting. Sometimes I’m amazed by all the things that have happened to me because of baby-sitting. For instance, I live in a large (okay, a huge) apartment building with plenty of little kids, but not many kids my age — and hardly anyone else who’s interested in sitting. So I get a lot of jobs, have a lot of fun (especially with Henry and Grace), and earn a lot of money.

  That’s just the beginning, though. I’ve lived in New York City all my life except for one year. That year, my parents and I (I’m an only child) lived in a small town in Connecticut called Stoneybrook. My dad had been transferred there by the company he works for. We thought the move was going to be permanent, so I was desperate to make friends in Stoneybrook — and fast. Guess how baby-sitting helped me. I heard about this group of girls who were starting something called the Baby-sitters Club. They wanted to run a business sitting for families in the neighborhood — and they were looking for another member! So I joined. Instant friends. I’m still really close to most of the girls in the club, especially Claudia Kishi. She’s my Connecticut best friend. (My New York best friend is Laine Cummings.) Then there’re Dawn Schafer, Mary Anne Spier, and Kristy Thomas. They’re good friends, too. Mallory Pike is a little young to be a close friend, and I don’t know Jessi Ramsey too well yet (Mal and Jessi replaced me when Dad was transferred again, and we moved back to New York), but I still consider them friends.

  Anyway, yes, that’s right. After a year in Connecticut, Dad’s stupid company transferred him right back to where he’d been. Don’t get me wrong. I New York, just like the bumper stickers and the T-shirts say. I really do it. I the stores, especially Bloomingdale’s, the theaters, the museums, the parks, the excitement. I even tourists, because they add to the excitement. But I didn’t all the trauma and trouble of moving twice in just a little over a year.

  Still, we did move, and when we got back to New York I was thirteen, not twelve, and we moved into this huge building with all these kids, and I’ve been sitting practically ever since. Things aren’t the same without the Baby-sitters Club, even though I consider myself the New York branch of the BSC. But I wouldn’t trade big-city life for anything.

  I wouldn’t trade sitting for the Walkers, either. I adore Henry and Grace. There’s just something wonderful about them. It’s not that they’re well behaved (which they are). It’s not that they’re creative and can always be entertained with art projects. No, I think it’s that they’re such caring kids. They look out for each other, they stick up for their friends, and they try very hard never to hurt anybody’s feelings.

  So of course Henry was pleasant about my being in outer space the afternoon he asked his dinosaur question, and then about my not knowing the answer.

  “How are you doing?” I asked Grace, looking at her picture.

  Grace was bent over, concentrating hard. She was drawing slowly and carefully, her tongue sticking out of the corner of her mouth.

  “Fine,” she replied, straightening up. “Do you like my picture, Stacey? It’s an elephant. And the elephant is in a bathtub, but there’s no water in it. He’s taking a nap. See? There’s his pillow.”

  Henry giggled. “Give him a blanket,” he said. “And show that he’s dreaming about a bronto.”

  “How do I draw a dream?” wondered Grace. She pulled at her curly hair.

  “Like this.” Henry drew a “dream bubble” over the elephant’s head. “Now put a bronto in there,” he instructed his little sister.

  “Oh!” said Grace. “Thank you, Henry.”

  I smiled. What terrific kids. In fact, the whole Walker family is terrific. Mr. Walker is an artist and Mrs. Walker illustrates children’s books. They’re both pretty well known. The reason I was sitting for Grace and Henry that Wednesday afternoon was that a showing of Mr. Walker’s work was going to open soon, and the Walkers had gone to the gallery to help supervise the hanging of some of his paintings. I guess another thing you should know about the Walkers is that they’re black. There aren’t too many black families in our building. You know what’s funny, though? When I’m with the Walkers I don’t think of them as black, just as people. I feel the same way when I’m with Jessi Ramsey, one of the new members of the BSC. I don’t see her as black, just as an eleven-year-old baby-sitter who’s Mallory Pike’s best friend. I have never understood the big deal about black or white, Jewish or Christian, Irish or Polish or Chinese or Mexican or Italian or who knows what.

  Anyway, boy was I having trouble concentrating that day. It’s a good thing Henry and Grace are so easy to sit for. Earlier, I’d been off in Never-Neverland, thinking about my parents.

  Here’s the thing about Mom and Dad. They have not been getting along too well lately. It’s just like when Laine Cummings and I were in fifth grade. We called ourselves best friends, but we were forever getting into fights. Then we would snap our heads around, or turn our backs on each other, and one of us would say, “I’m not talking to you.”

  The other would reply, “I don’t care.”

  “Good.”

  “Good.”

  “So there.”

  “So there.”

  Then we would spend about two days pretending that other girls were our new best friends, and finally we’d give it all up and realize that we were our only best friends. When that happened, we’d start sneaking looks at each other in class. Then one of us would offer a smile, usually the one who had said, “I’m not talking to you.” After that, at o
ur first opportunity — in the girls’ room or the cafeteria or someplace — we’d apologize and make up. Sometimes I felt that the fights had been worth it, because making up was so nice. Considering how much my parents had been fighting and arguing lately, I certainly hoped that they felt the same way about making up.

  I don’t like hearing my parents argue. Sometimes it’s scary. Not because I’m afraid they’ll hit each other or anything, but because I never know what’s going to come out of their mouths. They hurt each other with words instead of with fists, which is almost as bad. You can’t take back either a punch or an insult. You can apologize, but what’s done is done, what’s said is said, and some things are hard to forget.

  Like the time my father called my mother a selfish spendthrift. I hated both of them then. I hated my mother for doing whatever she’d done to cause my father to call her a selfish spendthrift, and I hated my father for having called her one, whether she was or not.

  I had felt very confused.

  “Hello!” called Mrs. Walker’s voice then. “We’re ho-ome!”

  Henry and Grace jumped up from their little table in a frenzy of excitement.

  “Mommymommymommymommymommy!” cried Grace.

  She and Henry grabbed their pictures and tore into the living room.

  Such pandemonium. You’d think the Walkers had been gone for two months instead of less than two hours. But it was awfully nice to see a couple of smiling, nonangry parents greeted so enthusiastically by their kids.

  “How did everything go?” asked Mr. Walker. (Grace had wrapped herself around his left leg.)

  “Oh, fine, as usual,” I replied, grinning. “We have plenty of masterpieces to show you.”

  “Daddy, can we hang my dino-fight in your show?” asked Henry.

  “We’ll see,” said Mr. Walker.

  Mrs. Walker paid me then, and Henry and Grace each had to hug me twice before I could leave. When the door was closed behind me, I walked to the elevator and rode down to the 12th floor.

  The doors opened.

  I could hear the fight even before I reached my apartment.

  Mom and Dad were at it again.

  Slowly I crept toward 12E.

  “Look at this bill!” my father was yelling, and I mean yelling. “Four hundred and ninety dollars on jewelry at Altman’s? Do you think I’m made of money?”

  “You ought to be,” replied my mother sarcastically. “You practically live at the office. I’m surprised Stacey recognizes you anymore.”

  I looked at my watch. Five-thirty. What was Dad doing at home? He usually didn’t get home until seven-thirty or eight. Mom and I were used to eating our dinners alone those days.

  I put my hand on the doorknob and felt around in my pocket for my keys. I was about to go inside. But then I drew back. I did not want to walk in on the middle of a fight. I did that once and my parents immediately started arguing about me. See, I have diabetes and I have to stay on a strict low-sugar diet, give myself insulin shots everyday, and go to the doctor a lot. If I don’t do those things, I could get really sick. So Mom and Dad would argue over whether I’d stick to my diet at a party (of course I would), or whether I should be allowed to go to summer camp (they finally let me). That kind of thing.

  No more noises were coming from inside my apartment, so I decided it would be safe to go inside. I was just about to put the key in the lock when my father positively roared, “Fifteen hundred and sixty-eight dollars at Tiffany’s. Good lord, what did you buy?”

  I stood there, frozen. I couldn’t move. Part of me was wondering just what my mother had bought, but most of me was waiting to hear how she’d answer Dad. Sometimes she cries.

  Not that time. She spat out her answer as if the words tasted bad. “Jewelry,” she said. “Maybe if you were home more often I wouldn’t be so bored. When I get bored I shop … sometimes.”

  “Sometimes? Try all the time. And if you’re so bored, get a job,” shouted Dad. “Do something useful with your life instead of supporting every store in the city. Spend more time with your daughter.”

  “Stacey doesn’t need me so much anymore,” replied Mom. Now she did sound a little teary.

  “Doesn’t need you!? She’s a diabetic.”

  “Exactly. She’s a diabetic. Not an invalid. And she’s thirteen. She’s growing up. It would be nice, though, for her to see her father. I mean, just occasionally. So she doesn’t forget what he looks like. I hope she’s going to … afterward.” (What had Mom said? I’d missed something.) She was sounding sarcastic again, though, not tearful.

  (And how had I gotten into this argument, anyway?)

  “Do you know what you are?” my mother continued. (Her voice was as loud as my father’s. I hoped our neighbors were enjoying the fight.) “You’re a workaholic,” she screamed.

  “I have to be, to pay all your bills,” retorted Dad. “Besides, you always ask too much of me. You expect … six different places at once.” (I was missing words again.) “At the office, with you, with Stacey, with our friends. You’ve been too darn demanding. And you’re a spoiled brat. You even expect us to move out of the city. Well, soon we won’t have to worry about any of those things.”

  They wouldn’t? Why not? I wondered.

  “Moving would be healthier for Stacey. She was in much better shape when we lived in Connecticut.”

  “So move,” said Dad. “But I’m not going to commute on top of everything else. And what are you going to do without Tiffany’s?”

  “Find another jewelry store,” snapped my mother. “I’ve got to …”

  (Darn. What was I missing? I pressed my ear to the door.)

  “Well,” said my father, “Stacey and I are perfectly happy.”

  I was trembling. I’d heard my parents fight before, but not like this. They’d fought about a restaurant bill being too high, or about Dad getting home from work later than usual three nights in a row, but I’d never heard anything like this. It sounded much worse. I was scared to death. Mom wanted to leave the city? Dad thought Mom was lazy and demanding and spent all his money the wrong way? (I thought it was their money.)

  Slowly I stepped back. I pulled my keys away from the lock. I dropped them in my pocket. Then I crept down the hall (as if there were a chance my parents could hear me over their shouting). I sped up when I reached 12C and ran the last few yards to the elevator. I poked frantically at the down button. A few seconds later, the elevator arrived with a crash. The doors opened up, allowed me inside, and closed.

  ZOOM.

  Our elevator never travels naturally. It clanks and swooshes and comes to stomach-dropping stops.

  The doors opened in the lobby. I ignored Lloyd and Isaac on duty at the desk, and even James as he held the front door open for me. I just ran. I ran by them, out onto the sidewalk, and all the way to my friend Laine Cummings’ apartment, which is several blocks away. By the time I reached it, I was crying.

  Laine lives in one of the fanciest apartment buildings in all of New York City. It’s called the Dakota. Lots of famous people have lived there, and still do, and I think the movie Rosemary’s Baby was filmed in it. Mr. Cummings is a big-time producer of Broadway plays, and Laine’s family has buckets of money.

  Naturally, with so many famous people and so much wealth, the security at the Dakota Apartments is pretty tight. But the guards know me, since Laine and I have been friends for years, so I never have any trouble getting in. Not even on that day when I was crying, and my face was flushed and my hair a mess from all that running.

  When I reached the door to the Cummingses’ apartment, Laine opened it, gawked at me for a second, and led me through the living room, down a hallway, and into her bedroom.

  She closed her door behind us. “What on earth is wrong?” she asked.

  I couldn’t blame her for looking so surprised. After all, I’d been fine in school that day. (Laine and I go to the same private school.)

  “You aren’t sick again, are you?” she asked worriedly.
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  I shook my head. Then I tried to calm down. I knew that if I spoke, my voice would wobble, so I took a few deep breaths. At last I managed to say, “I came home from baby-sitting and Mom and Dad were fighting.”

  “Your father’s home already?” asked Laine.

  I nodded. “I don’t know when he got there. I didn’t even go inside my apartment. I just stood at the door and listened. I could hear almost every word. They were really going at it.” For some reason, as soon as I said that, I knew I was going to cry. And I did. In a major, awful, hiccuping, gulping way.

  Laine, who had been kneeling on the floor, moved to the bed and sat down next to me. She put an arm across my shoulder. “What were they fighting about?” she asked after a few moments.

  “Oh,” I said, wiping my eyes, “everything. Everything in their lives. Money, New York, me.”

  “You?”

  I nodded again. “I think I was just an excuse, though. Dad said Mom should spend less time shopping and more time with me. But I don’t feel, like, neglected or anything. And Mom said she wants to move out of the city because it would be healthier for me, but I don’t want to move out of the city.”

  “Move out of the city to where?” asked Laine.

  “I don’t know. I guess to Long Island or someplace nearby.”

  “Oh.”

  I looked at Laine. Over the years we’ve been through good times and bad times. And we’re both pretty sophisticated, having grown up in the city and all, but of the two of us, I’d have to say that Laine is more sophisticated. Maybe because of the lifestyle she leads — getting to ride around in limos and going to openings of Broadway plays. And she always looks fantastic. Like, right now, she was wearing this amazing black pants suit. It was made from stretchy cotton. The bottoms of the legs were cuffed, and the top was short-cropped. She was wearing a leopard-skin leotard under the top. Her fluffy brown hair had been permed several weeks earlier and had grown out to that perfect stage. From her ears dangled teardrop-shaped blue and green stones, and on one wrist were about twenty silver bangle bracelets.

  Even so, Laine somehow seemed very young and innocent just then. Something in her brown eyes reminded me of Grace when she’s scared.