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The Someday Birds

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by Sally J. Pla




  DEDICATION

  For my family.

  CONTENTS

  Dedication

  Flockers and Loners Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  The Flight of the Bar-Tailed Godwit Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  GHOs Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Owl Holes and Rules of Distance Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Fossils and Fire Birds Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Parrot, Rescue Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Ducks and Eagles Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Hall of Birds Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Strange Birds Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Rare Birds Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Credits

  Copyright

  About the Publisher

  1

  My hands aren’t really clean until I’ve washed them twelve times, one for each year of my life. I soap-rinse-one-soap-rinse-two-soap-rinse-three-soap-rinse-four-soap-rinse-five-soap-rinse-six, open my palms to scalding water, and repeat. I do it quick, so no one notices, and I’m usually done in about the same time it takes Joel and Jake to spray water at each other and throw towels on the floor, which is what they call washing up.

  This time I gotta go faster because Gram’s already yelling from the driveway, “Charlie, get your bee-hind out here! Your father’s waiting!”

  But he’s not really waiting. Dad never knows if we’re in his hospital room or not.

  Gram does something my sister, Davis, calls sideways swearing. Gram says words like bee-hind, flipping, heck, and gosh-dang. Davis, who’s fifteen and a half, says, “Gram, just curse normally like the rest of the world.” Then Gram says, “Davis, I ever hear that kind of talk outta your sassy teenage mouth, I’ll swat your dang bee-hind so hard you’ll think twice about talkin’ in general.”

  I used to be scared of Gram. Davis says that’s just Gram’s way, tough love, but I don’t get how tough equals love. Dad’s love wasn’t tough. He never lost his temper, or freaked out with worrying, or tried so hard to control everything we did. Or sideways swore. Still, I have to admit I’m no expert on love. Or hate. Or really anything that has to do with feelings. I rely on what Davis tells me—she’s the expert on that kind of stuff.

  The doctors are supposed to have some news for us today about Dad’s condition. So when Gram crams us all into her little MINI Cooper to go visit the hospital, the sideways swearing really cranks up.

  “Finally, here’s our Lysol Louie,” says Gram when I open the back door and wait for Joel and Jake to scoot over.

  “My name isn’t Lysol Louie; it’s Charlie,” I say.

  Joel and Jake say, “You think we don’t know your name, Droid?”

  “My name isn’t Droid; it’s Charlie.” I say it quietly and hope they’ll drop it. My twin brothers are up to something. I’m not the best at reading people in general, but I know evil when I see it in those identical pairs of eyes.

  “GET IN, CHARLIE! DAD’S WAITING!” yells Davis from the front passenger seat. Meanwhile, the twins snicker, waiting for me to sit down in my spot.

  “Dad’s not really waiting,” I say, taking a Kleenex out of my trusty supply pack and brushing away the dead flies and clumps of dryer lint my brothers have strewn over my seat. I used to get upset at their little booby traps of contamination. But Davis told me that’s exactly what they want. She told me not to react, not to give them the satisfaction. So I just shoot the twins a dead-fish-eye look and sit down carefully, making sure no part of me touches any part of Joel.

  “Dad’s not really waiting, because he doesn’t know whether we’re there or not,” I explain.

  Davis and Gram don’t like hearing this. But if something’s a fact, it’s a fact, and I don’t think it’s wrong to say it out loud. Dad’s got a brain injury, and he stares straight ahead like he’s looking at something really far away. He doesn’t say much, or seem to see us. Gram says that brain injuries like Dad’s are unpredictable things, and we don’t know anything for sure. She says we have to treat him normally, tell him about our day, even if he just sits there most of the time.

  She says, “Charlie, that’s how we got you to start talking when you were little. You were just like your dad, in a way, all sealed off in your own little world. But we broke through to you, finally, didn’t we? We talked your gosh-dang ears off. We talked and talked, and we made you do stuff, go to therapy. We wouldn’t let you off the hook. So now we won’t let your dad off the hook either.”

  Off the hook is a weird expression. I imagine being a really little kid, just wanting to be left alone. And there’s a big fishhook holding me up by the back of my collar while I dangle, and a whole crowd of people—my family, therapists, doctors—watches me squirm. Is that how Dad feels in the hospital? Inside, where we can’t tell what’s going on, is he squirming, too?

  Dad got hurt in Afghanistan. He’s not in the military, though. He’s an English teacher and a part-time journalist. He was over there to do a profile on some soldiers, to write about what their life was like. But a bomb went off while he was riding around in a jeep. The doctors said Dad was really lucky, because he got thrown into the air away from the explosion.

  Gram covered her eyes and said “Holy Jesus!” when the doctors first told us that. But I asked them more questions. I needed to picture what that moment was like, with my dad flying through the air like a bird. I tried to draw it once—how high the flames could have reached, which direction Dad flew (up high, and then straight ahead into the road, they think). I drew him flying. I wish I could have drawn him a better place to land.

  Dad sustained a head injury. That’s the word they used, sustained. It means you’ve had to withstand something. But it also means something is stretched out, like a note of music, just played and held constant for a long period of time. That’s what it’s like now, with Dad in the hospital. Like this strange invisible hum is in the air around us, and Gram and the twins and Davis and I just have to keep listening to it, and none of us know how long it will go on.

  2

  Human and bird behavior share similar qualities when it comes to the issues of family and survival.

  —Tiberius Shaw, PhD

  The hospital’s basically our home away from home. I used to get anxious about it, but not so much anymore. First you go in these huge sliding glass doors, and there’s a bunch of orange couches and coffee tables and potted palms. It’s like they’re trying to pretend it’s some sort of nice hotel—one with hand-sanitizer dispensers all over the place, and people wearing scrubs, and others pacing around with their phones.

  “Can we go down to the cafeteria?” asks Joel, dragging on Gram’s arm. “Please? We’re starving!”

  Joel and Jake love the hospital cafeteria. It’s called the Garden of Eatin.’ I try to tell them it’s actually pretty much the opposite, but they never listen to me. They are ten, and always squabbling and wrestling with each other.

 
“Shush!” says Gram to the twins. “We’re not going to the cafeteria. Stand up and walk straight, like normal human beings.”

  “But we’re starving! STARVING!” They limp along, moaning.

  That cafeteria is taste-bud torture. The sandwich bread has seeds like little pebbles. The soup has blobs of orange scum, and the oatmeal’s a lump of sticky paste. Their scrambled eggs leak a soggy puddle of egg juice that ends up seeping into all the other stuff on your plate. Just thinking about it makes me gag.

  It doesn’t take much to make me gag—I even do it when I brush my teeth, which is why Dad always let me use a wet washcloth over my finger. But now Gram makes me use a toothbrush. She stands over me while I gag, and she doesn’t even care. I don’t know what the big deal is, toothbrush or washcloth, if your teeth get clean.

  The hospital cafeteria is torture overall, but I admit it usually does have fairly decent chicken nuggets. The coating is crispy and kind of bland, which I like. I’ve figured out that no matter where you get dragged in this world, you can usually survive by ordering the chicken nuggets.

  I’m hungry right now, too, but I don’t say anything because I don’t want to sound like Joel and Jake.

  “Oh, for the love of Pete.” Gram is yanking Joel along the hall while he holds his stomach and wails loudly. Jake joins in, and the two of them stumble along, doubled over and groaning like they’re going to die of starvation at any minute. I hang back and stay behind Davis, walking close to the wall, my hands held up like surgeons do on television.

  A nurse in purple scrubs and white clogs stops in her tracks when she sees the twins, doubled over and moaning. “Oh my. Are you looking for the urgent care?” she asks.

  Gram puckers up her already wrinkly face. “Heavens, no, thank you!” When the nurse is past, Gram smacks Joel on the back of his head. “See how you behave? Shut those traps, the pair of you.”

  Right before the elevator bank, I tug on Gram’s jacket.

  We are by the propped-open door of the gift shop.

  “Two minutes, today, Charlie,” Gram says, holding up two of her bony, wrinkly fingers in a V. “We’re in a hurry.” I could argue, because I usually get five or ten minutes in the gift shop. But something about Gram’s face keeps me quiet.

  Joel says, “If we’re in such a hurry, how come we always have to wait for him?”

  Jake says, “Let’s get candy!”

  Davis rolls her eyes, folds her arms, and slumps against the wall outside the shop to wait.

  There’s a bunch of lady stuff in the shop—scarves and jewelry. Also these teeny tiny little T-shirts for newborn babies, and candy and gum, and toy dinosaurs and Lego sets for all the bored kids that get dragged around.

  But what I’m after is on a shelf behind the counter.

  Perched on that shelf are the coolest, most realistic little bird sculptures ever. There’s a screech owl, a quail, a parrot, a bald eagle, a dove, and a ruby-throated hummingbird in flight, posed on this little wire stand stuck into a chunk of wood. When I look at it, I can almost hear its wings whirring. (From fifty to two hundred beats per second, faster than any other bird.)

  The sculptures were hand carved by Legendary Ornithologist, Artist, and Philosopher, Dr. Tiberius Shaw, PhD. An old, folded notecard says so. It has a gold feather stamped on it, as well as a photo of Dr. Shaw, who looks carved from wood himself: dark, piercing eagle eyes, brown leathery skin, and big white eyebrows that stick out like feathery wings.

  Tiberius Shaw knows everything about birds, and has written tons of books. I don’t have any of them yet. Someday, I hope I will. But what I do have, with me right here always, in this blue canvas backpack of supplies I always carry, is my own notebook, my own sort of Bird Book. It’s where I copy sketches of birds, write down facts I learn about birds, and other stuff, too. My Bird Book comes with me everywhere.

  And actually, back at home, I have this other really cool old book Dad got me at a garage sale. It’s huge, and it weighs a ton. It’s called the Audubon baby “elephant” folio. There are no elephants in it, just giant full-color paintings of birds—shore, marsh, forest, birds of prey, ocean birds, waterfowl—that someone named John James Audubon painted, back before even Dr. Shaw was born. Long, long ago, when America was mainly wilderness.

  When I was younger, I would only talk about birds and nothing else. I mean, if you had asked me when I was six, “How are you today, Charlie?” I might have replied, “Did you know that hummingbirds are actually really nasty and territorial and fight with each other all the time?” or “Did you know that there are feral peacocks in Southern California?” I’d talk bird stuff at you until you felt like asking, “What does all THAT have to do with the price of tea in China?” (That’s what Gram always asks, when I go on and on about bird facts.)

  But I’m way better about that now. Now, when you ask, “How are you, Charlie?” I will say “Fine,” even if I’m not fine, even if I know this amazing thing about starlings that would fascinate you to hear, instead of just hearing the boring old word: “Fine.”

  But if that’s what people want, then fine. Okay. I’m fine.

  Ellie is behind the gift shop counter today. I like her. She never minds showing me the shelf of bird sculptures. She says, “Take your time, Charlie boy. You want me to take ’em all down for you?”

  I don’t have to answer that question; she knows. She puts the birds on the counter.

  Ellie told me that Legendary Ornithologist, Artist, and Philosopher, Dr. Tiberius Shaw, PhD, used to be a lot more famous. “Folks don’t know him as much now, but he was a big shot. Wrote those kinds of self-help sorts of books, about what birds can teach us about people, about life. Big-name scientist guru; got on all the talk shows.”

  Someday, I am going to buy all his books.

  I wish I could stay here in the gift shop and sketch the little bird statues. I’d rather do that than go upstairs to see Dad. I love my dad, but that hospital room makes my feet rumble and my stomach feel like a washing machine. Meanwhile, seeing the birds makes me feel quiet and orderly. The birds are beautiful. The basic facts about them don’t change. Bird behavior is pretty consistent. You can write it down, know it, understand it. No matter how hard you try, you can’t do that with people.

  Someday, when I meet Legendary Ornithologist, Artist, and Philosopher, Dr. Tiberius Shaw, PhD, I will ask him what he means, that birds can teach us about people.

  Ellie is the gift-shop person on Monday-Wednesday-Fridays. She is about six feet tall and maybe four feet wide, and her blue vest is as big as a tent. Ellie has wild curly black hair, dark brown skin, and big dangly earrings that swing back and forth when she talks to Gram. They talk a lot. They whisper, thinking we don’t hear, but we do. And as always, they’re whispering away about one thing and one thing only: Ludmila.

  Ellie whispers to Gram, “Well, I don’t know, but if I were to guess, I’d say that Ludmila, well, she’s got issues, is all I’m saying. What’s she doing in his room like that all the time? Sitting around staring at him like a vulture. What’s she waiting for?”

  Gram widens her eyes and looks up at Ellie. “But no, that’s not how Ludmila is, Ellie. Not at all! She watches over him like a hawk. The other night she caught one of the new orderlies about to give him the wrong meds!”

  Ellie nods. Her earrings sway like clock pendulums. “Mm hmm, oh dear,” she says, crossing her arms across her big chest. “Dear, oh dear. The whole situation is rough. But why’s that Ludmila even involved? Why’d she just show up in his room one day out of the blue? It’s strange, if you ask me.”

  Gram shrugs. “It’s strange, yes. But I don’t want to pry. There’s a story there. It’ll all come out in good time.”

  Gram buys chocolate bars for Joel and Jake. I say good-bye to the bird sculptures, and then we don’t delay anymore. We take the elevator up to Dad. They’ve put him up with the stable patients on the sixth floor of the hospital now.

  The elevator doors open, and boom, who do we se
e standing there? Ludmila herself, waiting to go down. We all jump a little. She has a blue wig on today, electric blue, with straight bangs that stick out over her thick black glasses. I know that her normal hair under that wig is bright pink. She nods to Gram, and says, in her deep, slightly Russian-sounding accent, “He didn’t want anything this morning. Not even the coffee with lots of sugar.”

  “Well, you sure are gettin’ to know him,” says Gram.

  No one else says anything. We all look down.

  “So,” Ludmila says, nodding to herself. “Well. I’ll be back a little later.”

  Davis snorts loudly, folds her arms, and looks away. When Gram’s not around, Davis calls her “Ludmila, the Intruder Gorilla.”

  “Thank you,” Gram answers, in the same sort of voice she uses to talk to Aiden, the three-year-old kid who lives next door. “We so appreciate your help.”

  Ludmila gets on the elevator going down.

  One thing about Ludmila? She doesn’t feel the need to force a smile or talk all loud and cheery, like some people do.

  The first time we met her, it was one of the early days—when we were sitting around Dad’s bed, listening to the machines beep and trying not to look at that pressure monitor thing sticking out of his head. And suddenly there she was—a lady in maybe her twenties or thirties, with bright pink spiky hair and thin silver rings in her nose and ears. She had on thick glasses, an old flowery dress, black leather vest, heavy boots, and lots of tattoos up and down her bare arms. There was a scabby-looking new tattoo on her right hand: the word Amar, with lots of tiny red hearts and angel wings fluttering all around it. All red and puffy.

  Joel and Jake jumped back a little when they saw her at the door. She just walked right in. “I’m Ludmila,” she said, offering the hand to shake. Gram shook it. Then Jake pointed to it and said, “Your tattoo is bleeding.”

 

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