by Sally Warner
It’s
Only
Temporary
It’s
Only
Temporary
Written and illustrated by
SALLY WARNER
VIKING
Published by Penguin Group
Penguin Young Readers Group, 345 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.
Penguin Group (Canada), 90 Eglinton Avenue East, Suite 700, Toronto,
Ontario, Canada M4P 2Y3 (a division of Pearson Penguin Canada Inc.)
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Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
First published in 2008 by Viking, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group
1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
Text and illustrations copyright © Sally Warner, 2008
Illustrations on pages 71, 97, 104 copyright © Alex Twomey, 2008
All rights reserved
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA
Warner, Sally.
It’s only temporary / written and illustrated by Sally Warner.
p. cm.
Summary: When Skye’s older brother comes home after a devastating accident, she moves from Albuquerque, New Mexico, to California to live with her grandmother and attend middle school, where she somewhat reluctantly makes new friends, learns to stand up for herself and those she cares about, and begins to craft a new relationship with her changed brother.
EISBN: 9781101567487
[1. Brothers and sisters–Fiction. 2. Friendship–Fiction. 3. Bullying–Fiction. 4. Brain damage–Fiction. 5. Grandmothers–Fiction. 6. Middle schools–Fiction. 7. Schools–Fiction. 8. Sierra Madre (Calif.) – Fiction. 9. Albuquerque (N.M.) – Fiction.]
I. Title. II. Title: It is only temporary.
PZ7.W24644It 2008
[Fic]–dc22
2007038220
Manufactured in China Set in Excelsior
Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book. The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.
To “The Steps”: Eli Siems, Will and Julia Bosley, and Lucy and Noah Parsons
Table of Contents
Albuquerque
1: Worst Field Trip Ever
2: “The Loonies”
3: To Say Good-bye
Sierra Madre
4: Eucalyptus Terrace
5: Very, Very, Very, Very Nervous
6: First Day of School
7: Social Ecology
8: The Thing about Art
9: Temporary
10: Dear Scott
11: Sticky
12: Remembering
13: Trick-or-Treat
14: Trouble
15: Revenge!
16: Special Edition
17: Butterflies
18: The Turkey Trot
19: After the Dance
20: Something Like Okay
21: Real, True Friends
22: Big, Big Trouble
23: Making Things Right
Santa Fe
24: Family Reunion
25: This New Scott
26: Forever
Acknowledgments
1
Worst Field Trip Ever
And now that he was so messed up, she couldn’t hate her impossible big brother even a little, twelve-year-old Skye McPhee thought moodily as she stared out of the car’s rear window. She and her parents were driving west on Interstate 40 toward the spot where Scott had totaled their other car nearly four months earlier, only three days after getting his license.
This had to be the worst field trip ever, Skye told herself. But her mom was determined that they should visit the accident site before bringing Scott home from rehab for a trial visit – and for the holiday. She thought it would help them count their blessings.
It was the third of July, and blazing hot outside their air-conditioned car. Skye opened her sketchbook and reached into her tote bag for a drawing pen.
At least Scott hadn’t died, Skye thought as they passed a shabby roadside memorial probably built to honor some unluckier reckless kid – because in New Mexico, people very often placed a little white cross by the side of the road when someone died in a car accident. Then they decorated the cross with plastic flowers, which was a good reason all by itself not to die like that, Skye told herself, shuddering, because – plastic flowers! And then white grocery bags blew across the desert and got tangled up like shredded ghosts in the faded, grimy flowers, and the whole thing just got sadder and sadder.
“We’ve already passed Laguna Pueblo,” Skye’s mother told her husband, sounding as if there were a rubber band wrapped tight around her vocal cords. “We must be pretty close. Pull over, Daniel.”
“I’m trying, if the guy behind me would just give me a break and ease up a little,” Skye’s father said, his voice equally strained.
“Well, signal,” her mother said.
But her nervous dad’s right turn signal had been on for at least a mile, Skye thought, gritting her teeth and closing her eyes as her father’s car swerved suddenly to the right and rolled to a stop at the side of the busy highway. A truck’s horn blared as the stream of vehicles that had built up behind them whooshed by.
“There,” her father said, his voice unsteady. “Are you happy?”
“Deliriously,” Skye’s mother told him. “Deliriously.”
“We’re here, so let’s take a look,” Skye said, hoping they wouldn’t start fighting again. Not here, not now.
“Don’t get out, Skye,” her mother told her, sounding scared. “It’s not safe.”
“I know that,” Skye mumbled. “This was a dumb idea,” she said, growing bolder. “We can’t see–”
“It’s over there,” her father said quietly, pointing. “It’s just over there.” He looked down and adjusted an air-conditioning vent toward his face.
Her dad had been out here before, Skye reminded herself as she tried to see where her family’s other car had tumbled end-over-end that cold March night. Today, a cloudless blue sky wheeled overhead, and the gray-green scramble of nearly flat desert shimmered and stretched before her eyes, an expanse punctuated only by dark scrubby bushes and a billboard.
The only weird things about this landscape were the black skid marks on the pavement – lots of skid marks, Skye noted, although the highway was as straight as could be along this stretch – and some strange, deep-yellow scrapes in the earth that headed off into the desert as if leading to a place Skye didn’t want to go.
&
nbsp; “But – there’s nothing here,” her mother said, her voice as small as a girl’s. “I don’t understand. What did Scotty hit?”
“Nothing,” Skye’s father said. “He was going pretty fast.”
He’d probably been reaching for a CD, Skye thought, frowning – or, more likely, flipping off another driver. Scott was famous for his bad temper, after all. Maybe he’d been forced off the road, she thought suddenly; they’d never know.
Scott sure couldn’t tell them. He didn’t remember a thing about that night.
“We’d better get going. We’re supposed to be at rehab by two,” Skye’s father said. “If you really think bringing him home is a good idea.”
“The insurance company thinks it’s a good idea,” Skye’s mother reminded him dryly. “And I’m pretty sure we can manage it. Sooner or later I want my baby to come home, Danny, so it might as well be now.”
“We can give it a try, at least,” Skye’s father said, looking over his shoulder for a break in the traffic as his left turn signal ticked. “We can turn around on that reservation road.”
The imposing turnoff to the road that led south to the ancient and isolated Acoma Pueblo looked as if it were headed toward a big city, rather than a distant hilltop. Most of the inhabitants of the reservation now seemed to live in the satellite dish-studded houses and trailers scattered sparsely along this reservation road, however, and Skye sketched, wondering what their lives were like.
“Turn the car around, Daniel,” Skye’s mother said. “Or we’re going to be late.”
“There’s a wide place just past that little cemetery, if I recall correctly,” Skye’s father said as he rounded a corner. “What the–” His exclamation faded as he made his way past an unexpected lineup of parked cars and pickups parked on both sides of the narrow dusty road. “It’s a funeral,” he announced, his voice flat.
Skye’s mother gasped – which just about said it all, in Skye’s opinion.
She couldn’t help but look, however.
In spite of the intense midday heat, people of all ages were streaming quietly through a wrought-iron gate and into the barren cemetery, which was surrounded by a low wire fence. The people were neatly dressed in dark jeans and ironed shirts, Skye observed, and at the head of each carefully tended grave was a small wood cross that had been painted white.
A woman with shining black hair flowing loose to her waist stood near the gate. She was holding a black-and-white bowl, and many of the people entering the cemetery slipped money into the bowl as they passed, probably to help pay for the funeral, Skye guessed.
They ignored her family’s car.
“Don’t stare, honey,” Skye’s father said, catching her eye in the rearview mirror. “This is a private moment for them.”
“I know, Daddy,” Skye murmured, looking away. But she could still picture every detail of the scene.
It was nice here, she thought, her spirits unexpectedly lifting, and it was peaceful, and perfectly perfect in every perfect way: the sky, the heat, the little white crosses, the beautiful bowl, the quiet people.
This was the way the end of life was supposed to be.
And this was probably how it should have been – for Scott.
Skye couldn’t help but think that.
2
“The Loonies”
“Late,” Scott exclaimed angrily from his wheelchair as Skye and her parents walked into his wide-doored room. “Late, late!”
“I’m sorry, sweetie,” Mrs. McPhee said, hurrying to his side. “We wanted everything to be just perfect for you at home, that’s what happened.”
Let the lies begin, Skye thought grimly, forcing herself to look at what was basically a brand-new brother. He was planted in his chair like a TV judge, and he glared at his family as if his condition was all their fault.
Scott’s TBI – his “traumatic brain injury” – was the worst result of his accident, Skye had been told, though you couldn’t tell that just by looking at him. But the TBI was the injury that would take the longest time to heal–if it ever fully did.
As for the rest of him, Scott’s ankle was still in a cast, as was his left arm. The scar on his right cheek had faded a little, Skye was relieved to see, but her brother still looked like Frankenstein’s monster. Maybe it was his expression, Skye thought, but he didn’t truly seem like her brother anymore. Not that he had for a long, long time.
They used to be friends. But then, when he was twelve and she was about eight, Scott had started messing up: talking back to their mom and dad, slamming doors, “forgetting” to do both chores and homework assignments. He’d concentrated all his attention on his small circle of friends, friends who’d grown sketchier as the years passed – except for Stacie, his almost-girlfriend, who seemed nice.
Recently, Scott had started lying in a big way – to everyone–and cutting class, and, later, sneaking out at night.
Then there was the accident, and Scott was different now. His quirky expression and blazing blue eyes were the same as before, but some important part of him seemed to have been left behind in the desert that cold March night.
“Stoppit,” Scott snapped, looking at Skye. “Quit looking!”
“I didn’t do anything,” Skye mumbled, staring down at the shiny floor again.
“Did they round up everything you’ll need for the holiday, son?” Mr. McPhee asked in his most bustling, take-charge tone. “Are you all packed?”
“Uh,” Scott grunted, looking away. “I hate it here!” he shouted suddenly, pounding the arm of his wheelchair so hard that Skye jumped.
“The Loonies,” Scott had painfully managed to call Las Lunas Rehabilitation Unit during Skye’s one and only other visit a few weeks earlier, and that small joke was the only thing so far that had given her anything like hope for him.
But now…
“We know you hate it here, darling,” Mrs. McPhee murmured, trying to calm him down. “But I don’t see your suitcase, and we need to talk to the nurse before we take you home in that nice van your daddy bought.” She spoke as if Scott were a baby.
“Tell Skye to quit looking!” Scott said, struggling to spit out his angry words.
“I’m not,” Skye protested, her heart pounding. “And anyway, what am I supposed to do, keep my eyes shut for the rest of my life?”
“Yes!” Scott shouted.
“Why don’t you go wait outside in the hall, Skye,” her father told her hurriedly. “Just humor me,” he added in a whisper. “I guess Scott feels self-conscious about the way he looks, or something.”
“Well, that’s not my fault,” Skye whispered back, but she felt relieved as she slid from Scott’s emotion-jangled room into the brightly lit hallway. She slumped gratefully into a green vinyl chair and closed her eyes.
Three whole days with Scott. What were they letting themselves in for?
“Skye,” a pleased-sounding voice said. “Just the girl I wanted to see.”
Skye reluctantly opened her eyes. In front of her stood Scott’s social worker, Ms. Santina – who seemed nice enough.
“I wanted a word with you before Scott goes home,” Ms. Santina said, and Skye found herself following the woman down the hall and into her determinedly cheerful office.
“Sit down, Skye,” Ms. Santina said, smiling. “So, how are things going?”
“Great,” Skye said cautiously.
“Scott’s going home for a couple of days, and you probably have some questions about that,” Ms. Santina said, looking sympathetic and attentive in advance.
“Not really,” Skye said, shrugging. “I mean, I’m glad and everything,” she added, lying.
Ms. Santina waited, but Skye didn’t say anything more. “Have your parents explained to you exactly what happened to Scott, and what to expect from here on out?” the woman finally asked.
“Not really,” Skye said again. “They’ve been a little busy,” she added, in case she’d sounded critical.
To Skye’s surprise, Ms. Santi
na threw back her head and laughed. “Understatement of the year,” she finally said. “To put it simply, Skye, Scott suffered what is considered a moderate brain injury. When he crashed the car, the impact caused his brain to slam forward into his skull, and then sort of bounce back and forth, like a yolk getting knocked around inside a raw egg. So there was internal swelling of the brain at both sites of impact, and some internal bleeding. The pressure built up inside his brain while he was unconscious – which was probably for about half an hour or so, it’s hard to tell exactly. Surgery was necessary to reduce that pressure, of course, and stop any further damage from happening.”
“But he’s not okay yet,” Skye said, stating the obvious.
“Well, no, he’s not,” Ms. Santina said. “He’s progressing nicely, but there’s still some memory loss, which is very common with brain injuries, and some cognitive problems, in addition to the physical injuries Scott suffered in the accident.”
“What kind of problems?” Skye asked, frowning.
“There’s some language impairment,” Ms. Santina said. “Reading and writing are difficult for your brother at this point, but we expect that to improve in time. But he also has problems with verbal communication, and that makes him feel very frustrated. He’ll use inappropriate words, and so on.”
“You mean swearing?” Skye asked. “Because he did that before. A lot.”
“Not that kind of inappropriate,” Ms. Santina said, smiling again. “I mean more like mixing his words up in a pretty significant way. So, let’s see,” she continued, glancing down at some notes. “Scott will have to have more speech therapy, once he comes home for good. And occupational therapy, and physical therapy, too. He’ll need a lot of help.”
“My mom can’t do all that,” Skye said, her voice shaking a little. “She hates making dinner, even. I think maybe Scott should just stay here with you guys.”
“He can’t,” Ms. Santina said. “I totally hear you, Skye. It’s just that the lucky ones get to a point where they can go home and continue their rehab there. There will be therapists coming over to help out, though. Don’t you worry about that.”