Table of Contents
Title Page
Table of Contents
Copyright
Dedication
ONE
TWO
THREE
FOUR
FIVE
SIX
SEVEN
EIGHT
NINE
TEN
ELEVEN
TWELVE
THIRTEEN
FOURTEEN
FIFTEEN
SIXTEEN
SEVENTEEN
EIGHTEEN
NINETEEN
TWENTY
TWENTY-ONE
TWENTY-TWO
TWENTY-THREE
TWENTY-FOUR
TWENTY-FIVE
TWENTY-SIX
TWENTY-SEVEN
TWENTY-EIGHT
More by Fletcher:
7:03 A.M.
CLARION BOOKS
215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003
Copyright © 2011 by Ralph Fletcher
All rights reserved.
For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book,
write to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company,
215 Park Avenue South, New York, New York 10003.
Clarion Books is an imprint of
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company.
www.hmhbooks.com
The text was set in Phontina MT.
Book design by Sharismar Rodriguez
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Fletcher, Ralph J.
Also known as Rowan Pohi / by Ralph Fletcher.
p. cm.
Summary: After impulsively lying his way into an elite preparatory school,
sophomore Bobby Steele hopes to escape the shame of his father's
well-publicized incarceration but keeps waiting for his secret to be revealed.
ISBN 978-0-547-57208-6
[1. Identity—Fiction. 2. Family problems—Fiction. 3. High schools—Fiction.
4. Schools—Fiction. 5. Brothers—Fiction. 6. Social classes—Fiction.] I. Title.
PZ7.F632115Als 2011
[Fic]—dc22 2011009641
Manufactured in the United States of America
DOC 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
4500326104
For Chris Crutcher
fine writer and friend
who helped me envision this book
when it was still a tiny wet thing,
rising from the straw on wobbly legs
ONE
IT WAS BIG POOBS WHO FIRST SUGGESTED THE IDEA. WE were at the International House of Pancakes: Poobs, Marcus, and me. The tables at the IHOP are sometimes sticky with syrup, but it's the only place around where a kid can order a coffee or soda and nobody complains if he wants to hang out for an hour or two.
The booths were crowded, mostly with Whitestone Prep kids. Stonys, we called them. Even without their green uniform shirts, they were obviously Stonys. They were the ones with braces and designer jeans. The ones with new backpacks. The ones talking about "wild times" at summer music camp in places like Tangle-wood or Chautauqua.
Five Stony girls were jammed into the booth next to us. The tallest girl was blond and cute; very. They were talking about college. I heard her say something about coed dorms, which made the other girls giggle.
Marcus spun his fork like he was playing spin-the-bottle, except there was no girl in his near future, and no college either. After (more like if) he graduated from Riverview High, he was joining the Marines.
The three of us leaned back in our seats. We were beyond bored.
Big Poobs sighed. "Let's do something."
Poobs was a straight-C student, except for the occasional D. There was no college in his plans either, but he didn't need it any more than Marcus did. His parents owned Vinny's, a popular local Italian restaurant. Big Poobs worked busing tables there. In a year he would be a waiter; eventually he would own the restaurant himself.
My grades were actually good, but with Mom gone for over a year now, and no sign of her coming back, I couldn't picture myself waltzing off to the University of Whatever after high school. I figured I should stick around for my little brother, Cody, at least for a few more years.
When the Whitestone girls got up to pay their check, they left behind a piece of paper on the table. I reached over and picked it up.
"What is it?" Marcus asked.
"Looks like an application to Whitestone. Hey, why don't you apply, Marcus?"
"Why don't you eat my shorts?" he calmly replied.
It was mid-August and hot. One good thing about the IHOP: they really cranked up the AC. We had a booth by the window with a view of the street. The cars turning left onto Main Street got blasted by midmorning sun. The drivers all reacted by dropping their sun visors.
"Look: they all do the same thing when they turn," I said. "They all reach up for their sun visors. What are they, programmed like robots? I swear, people are sheep."
Marcus added more sugar to his coffee. "Baa."
That's when it happened. Big Poobs, who to my recollection had never had one truly original idea in his life, spoke up.
"We should do it," he said. "Try to get accepted at White-stone Prep."
"You, get accepted at Whitestone?" Marcus snorted. "Last time you saw an A or a B, it was in your alphabet soup, genius boy."
Big Poobs shook his head. "Not us. Somebody else. We could, like, invent somebody. A real smart kid. Like, bionic."
I stared at Marcus. "Bionic?"
"Yes!" Poobs was grinning like a jack-o'-lantern. "We can help him apply to Whitestone, see if he gets accepted."
Marcus shook his head. "That's stupid."
At that moment Darla, the waitress, approached the table. "More coffee, boys?"
"No," I told her. "Wait; yes."
Darla peered at me suspiciously but refilled my mug. After she left, I pointed at Big Poobs.
"You are a genius," I told him.
Poobs blinked. "I am?"
I smacked a fist into the palm of my hand.
"Let's do it!" I whispered. "Let's create somebody! Then we'll take that somebody and get him accepted to Whitestone!"
Marcus hesitated. "Create somebody?"
"Yeah, how hard could it be?" I said, studying the application. It was surprisingly short, a single page, front and back. "First thing we need is a name."
"Austin? Brady?" Marcus said.
I shook my head. "Those sound like little-boy names. How about Owen?"
"Or Rowan," Poobs suggested.
"Rowan." We repeated the name, turning it over on our tongues.
"Sounds like a warrior," Marcus mused. "I like it."
"Me too." Carefully, I printed the letters on the application. "Rowan what?"
For some reason that simple question stumped us, almost derailed the project right there and then. Marcus and Poobs threw out some last names—Smith, Johnson, White, Hoffman—but they all sounded lame.
I glanced at the glass window where the letters IHOP were stenciled. From where we were sitting, inside the restaurant, the letters appeared in reverse: POHI.
"POHI," I stated. "That's IHOP backwards. His name is Rowan Pohi."
Big Poobs thumped the table with his big soft hands. "Rowan Pohi!" He pronounced it like I did: Pohi.
"Rowan should have a middle name, shouldn't he?" Marcus said. "How about Ian? Rowan Ian Pohi."
"Bingo." I nodded.
"We're in business, baby!" Poobs exclaimed. In his excitement he knocked over the syrup dispenser, causing some syrup to dribble onto the bottom of the application.
"You idiot!" I snapped. "This has to b
e handed in!"
"Sorry," Poobs muttered.
I wet a napkin and carefully wiped away the liquid. I did manage to get it off, though it left a faint stain on the paper.
"That will have to do, I guess." I looked at the application. "Sex?"
Marcus laughed. "Obviously!"
I marked the box for Male.
"They want to know where he went to school last year." I drummed the table, thinking hard. "If we say Riverview, we're screwed. If they check for Rowan's name, they'll find nothing and realize that the application is bogus. We better pick someplace far away."
"My mom used to live in a tiny town in Arizona," Marcus put in.
"Yeah?" I looked at him. "Got a name?"
"Pinon," he said. "I went there once. It's really the boonies. Indian country. No green anywhere. Nothing but desert, scorpions, cactuses."
"Cacti," Poobs corrected him.
I wrote it down. "Rowan went to Pinon High School ... home of the Stingin' Scorpions."
Poobs rubbed his hands together. "Oh yeah!"
"What's Rowan like?" I said. "We're gonna have to know him real good if we've got any shot at getting him into a school like Whitestone."
"He's a dweeb, like you," Marcus replied.
"I'm serious, numb-nuts."
"Remember Terry Lernihan?" Marcus said.
I nodded. "He moved after fifth grade."
"Lernihan didn't say jack," Marcus remembered. "I hardly ever heard him speak in class. Then one day he comes into school with that refracting telescope he made himself. Took first place in the science fair."
I just looked at him. 'And your point is..."
"That's what Rowan's like," Marcus continued. "Maybe the dude doesn't say much, but he's smart as hell. A doer, not a talker."
Big Poobs smiled. "Yeah."
"That's a start," I said. "Clubs and activities?"
"Boy Scouts," Marcus suggested. "Definitely put that in. Oh, and National Honor Society."
I nodded. "How about sports?"
"Football!" Big Poobs exclaimed.
"Yesss!"
Football was a very sore subject at Riverview High. It got cut out of the budget last year, along with a bunch of other stuff, so we didn't have a football team anymore. Kids were still pissed off about it. Whitestone Prep had a strong football team; they traveled all around the East Coast to play other private schools. Their school had just added two new turf football fields.
"How about extracurricular activities?" I said.
"Volunteers at soup kitchen."
"Hey, let's not make him into kind some of saint," Poobs warned.
Marcus grinned. "Why not?"
"Sounds good to me," I agreed, and jotted that down.
"Hobbies?"
"Mr. Pohi loves to cook," Poobs suggested with a giggle. "Especially pancakes."
'Are you really that stupid?" I demanded. "That would give it away!"
Poobs sucked his thumb, baby-style. "Sowwy."
"Hey, I skipped this part," I said. "Academics. They want to see Rowan's grades from his old school. We've got to tell them something. Rowan's a good student, right?"
"Damn good!" Big Poobs agreed.
"What's his grade point average?" I asked. "He has to be smart enough to get into a school like Whitestone."
"Four point oh," Poobs declared. "We're talking genius material."
I shook my head. "Let's not get greedy. How about three point six?"
"Yeah, that sounds more realistic," Marcus put in.
My eyes snagged on something I hadn't noticed before, a box on the lower-right-hand corner of the page. Letter of Recommendation.
"Uh-oh," I muttered.
"What?"
"It says he has to send in at least one letter of recommendation." I read out loud: "'Letter should come from an adult within the school community who has personal knowledge of the applicant—a teacher, coach, or administrator.'"
We stared at each other.
Marcus shrugged. "We'll have to fake one."
"Sign somebody else's name?" Big Poobs looked worried. "Isn't that forgery?"
"We're just goofing," Marcus told him. "Besides, there's no way anybody's gonna trace it back to us."
I gave Marcus a straight look. "Can you do it?"
He smiled. "Sure. Piece o' cake. I'll write a recommendation from his football coach, Ramón García."
Marcus's sudden Spanish accent made Big Poobs snort with laughter.
"You'll have to make up some fake letterhead to write it on," I told Marcus.
He nodded. "Can do. Pinon High School. Home of the Rattlesnakes."
"Home of the Scorpions!" I hissed. "Jeez!"
Marcus smiled lazily. "Scorpions, rattlesnakes ... what's the diff?"
"There's a huge diff!"
"You can't mail it from here," Big Poobs pointed out. "They put the name of the town on the postmark. So the letter has to be mailed from Pinon, Arizona. If it's from around here, they're going to smell a rat."
"No worries," Marcus said. "My cousin Devon lives out there. I'll write the letter, put it in an envelope, send it to Devon, and have him mail it from there."
"You're good at this," I told Marcus. "A little too good."
He bowed. "Thank you very much."
"They want a local mailing address," I said with a shrug. "I'll just use mine."
"So is that it?" Poobs asked eagerly. "Is the application finished?"
"Almost," I told him. On the last line there was a space to sign, which I did now—Rowan I. Pohi—with a flourish and a bold dot above the finali. "Done!"
Poobs's face turned serious. "Do you really think we can get him into Whitestone?"
"You better believe it." Marcus theatrically raised his head and began speaking in a mock-solemn tone. "All his life Rowan Pohi has dreamed of going to Whitestone Prep. I ask you: Would you deny this fine young man the chance to make something out of his life? Would you?"
"Nope."
"Nope."
"Nope."
"I count one nope and two dopes," I declared.
I expected Marcus to belt my arm, so when he did I was ready for it. I didn't even flinch.
TWO
ON THE WAY HOME I STOPPED AT THE POST OFFICE AND bought a stamp and an envelope. I copied the correct address, tucked the application into the envelope, put on the stamp, and sealed it. When I handed the letter to the clerk, she took a close look at the return address. Then she glanced at me.
I thought she might say You're Bobby Steele's kid, aren't you? Instead, she handed the envelope back. "Put it in the mail slot right over there."
I walked to the other side of the room and mailed off Rowan Pohi's application to Whitestone Preparatory School.
We were living on the top floor of a three-story brownstone in a long, narrow apartment. From the small entrance, you passed through the TV room to get to the kitchen. When Mom lived there, the place usually smelled like fried onions or whatever tasty food she had simmering on the stove. Now when you walked in, you smelled only cat litter.
I found my little brother, Cody, in the den, crumpled in front of the TV with Turf, our cat, dozing beside him. Mrs. Richards watched Cody in the afternoon; she must have let him in. Cody had a feather in the back of his hair, sticking up Indian-style.
Not too long after Mom left, Cody started insisting that he was 100 percent Native American. I knew for a fact he didn't have any Indian blood in him, not one single drop, but I didn't argue. I figured if it made him feel better, what the heck, no harm, no foul. Every morning, Cody put a feather in his hair when he got dressed. Once in a while, if my father wasn't around, I even dabbed some war paint (green face cream Mom left behind) on his face.
"Bobby, how many days till I go to school?" He asked the question without taking his eye off the cartoon he was watching—SpongeBob.
"A week till kindergarten," I told him. "You getting excited?"
"Yeah." Though he didn't sound excited.
I went i
nto the kitchen. My father had a regular schedule for supper, and we followed it religiously. Wednesday was spaghetti night, so it was my night to cook. I used premade sauce, the kind you buy in a jar, but I doctored it up with fried onions and garlic to improve the taste, the way Mom showed me once. After that I filled a pot halfway full with water for pasta and turned on the oven to warm up the garlic bread. Then I made the salad. My father liked to eat at six o'clock sharp, which suited me fine.
He came home looking hot and grimy, like he usually did after work. My father owned CarWorks, an auto-repair shop on the corner of Fifteenth and Remington. There were three other mechanics and three lifts at his garage. I had a part-time job there, mostly doing oil changes and vacuuming out cars, and earned enough money to buy things I needed.
"Hi," I said. "We can eat whenever."
"Okay, gimme ten minutes." He hung his keys on the hook next to the refrigerator and headed into the bathroom. A moment later I heard the shower turn on.
During supper we watched our cat chase a housefly around the room. We got Turf at the hardware store a little more than a year ago. Cody, Mom, and I were walking through the gardening section and found a small gray cat sound asleep on a green square. The sign above said ARTIFICIAL TURF SALE. One of the clerks noticed our interest and mentioned that the cat needed a home, so Mom agreed to make her part of our family. Cody named her Turf.
My father reached for a piece of garlic bread and pulled it apart. Cody pushed his spaghetti around on the plate. We had run out of Kraft Parmesan cheese. "I can't eat it without cheese," Cody complained.
"It don't matter," my father said. "Eat."
Doesn't matter, I mentally corrected him. My father's bad grammar really bugged me.
I favored my father: pale blue eyes, sandy hair, freckles, and long legs. With his compact limbs, dark eyes, and curly black hair, Cody looked like Mom. A lot like Mom. The spitting image, isn't that what they say? It was freaky. No matter how many times I looked at Cody, I always got a little jolt. It was like having a mini-Mom in the house. It must have been weird for my father too.
"Today I was working on a 'ninety-nine Camry," he was saying. "Do whatever you gotta do, the owner told me when he dropped off the car. That's what he said: Do whatever you gotta do. Car needed a new water pump, so I got one from my supplier and tell Jimmy to put it in. Cost a hundred and fifty, with labor, but when the guy comes to pick up the car, he goes apeshit, says I'm charging way too much. Says, 'I didn't authorize it, and I'm not paying.'"
Also Known as Rowan Pohi Page 1