Nickel Bay Nick Read online




  Also by Dean Pitchford

  The Big One-Oh

  Captain Nobody

  DEAN PITCHFORD

  G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS

  AN IMPRINT OF PENGUIN GROUP (USA) INC.

  G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS

  An imprint of Penguin Young Readers Group

  Published by The Penguin Group

  Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, NY 10014, USA

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  Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England

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  Copyright © 2013 by Dean Pitchford.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission in writing from the publisher. G. P. Putnam’s Sons, Reg. U.S. Pat. & Tm. Off. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author’s rights. Purchase only authorized editions.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Pitchford, Dean.

  Nickel Bay Nick / Dean Pitchford.

  pages cm

  Summary: When eleven-year-old Sam gets into trouble and is forced to work for his reclusive neighbor Mr. Wells, he soon finds out that his mysterious new acquaintance hides many secrets of his own—including one that will change Sam’s life forever.

  [1. Behavior—Fiction. 2. Secrets—Fiction. 3. Neighbors—Fiction. 4. Christmas—Fiction. 5. City and town life—Fiction.] I. Title.

  PZ7.P644Ni 2013

  [Fic]—dc23

  2012048972

  Published simultaneously in Canada.

  ISBN 978-0-698-13539-0

  The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

  To Patrick Mealiffe,

  whose heart beats throughout this story

  Contents

  Also by Dean Pitchford

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  1 THE STRANGER IN THE PHOTOGRAPH

  2 THE MONSTER IN THE WINDOW

  3 THE WEIRDO ON THE CORNER

  4 THE SECRET IN THE ENVELOPE

  5 THE HIGH COST OF FALLING

  6 THE BIG THREAT OF BLACKMAIL

  7 THE SURPRISE IN THE SONG

  8 THE HISTORY OF A MYSTERY

  9 THE MONKEY AROUND MY NECK

  10 THE WISHES IN THE JAR

  11 THE BENJAMINS IN THE BACKPACK

  12 THE RETURN OF A LEGEND

  13 THE SOUND OF CELEBRATION

  14 THE CHALLENGES OF CARJACKING

  15 THE BAD NEWS OF BOOKKEEPING

  16 THE CLOSE CALL BY THE BAY

  17 THE PLACE I’M NOT WELCOME

  18 THE BUCKS IN THE BOX

  19 THE KEY AND THE CAGE

  20 THE END OF THE LINE

  21 THE CODE AND THE CUPCAKES

  22 THE MIX-UP AT THE MALL

  23 THE CLUE IN THE COAT

  24 THE CHRISTMAS IN THE KITCHEN

  THE STRANGER IN THE PHOTOGRAPH

  December 25

  Crash!

  From where I’m standing in the parking lot of the condemned Nickel Bay railroad station, I hear glass from the broken window shatter as it hits the concrete floor inside. If I could get up there, close to those high windows—what is that? Twenty, thirty feet up?—I would smash them all with my fists. BAM! BAM! BAM! BAM! Glass everywhere, falling like sharp snowflakes. Instead, I do my smashing from down below, using chunks of the crumbled asphalt that’s poking up through the snow at my feet.

  My breath makes small, quick puffs in the night air. Despite the cold, I’m sweating. Long, wet strands of brown hair are hanging in my eyes, and I’m still panting hard from running so far so fast. I hadn’t meant to head for the old depot. It’s just where I happened to end up when I ran out of run.

  I heft another lump of asphalt and wonder, how many can I break in a row? Three? Four? And once I do, would I feel any better? Would I feel any less angry? Less betrayed?

  You want the truth? This has got to be the Worst. Christmas. EVER!

  And I’m including the Christmas when I was almost four, the one I spent in a hospital bed, hooked up to a hundred tubes and surrounded by racks of beeping machines. I had just had a heart transplant. Seriously. A holiday heart transplant!

  And yet this Christmas is way worse. Otherwise I wouldn’t be standing out here in the freezing-cold dark, shaking with fury and throwing stones.

  Dad closed his shop today—the Nickel Bay Bakery and Cupcakery. He usually keeps it open on Christmas, but he’s having a bad month. After Thanksgiving, he had to lay off his staff. Extend his hours. Cut his prices. But business is still lousy.

  And guess who gets to help Dad out around the store.

  Yup.

  I’ve been there every day for three weeks, after school and on weekends. Sweeping floors. Washing bread pans. Folding pastry boxes. Last Saturday I folded too many, and he flipped out. “We’ll never sell this many cupcakes!” he barked. “Unfold these now!” So I pushed over a stack and told him to unfold them himself, and he warned me to watch my mouth, and I shouted that he’s hardly one to talk.

  That’s pretty much the way it goes these days. Slam doors, throw things, and yell, yell, yell.

  Bash!

  Window #2. The headlights from a lone car rake across the lot, and for a brief moment my shadow sweeps over the building’s brick walls. What do I care if somebody sees me here? I’ve been picked up by the police enough times that I know the name of every cop in Nickel Bay. Dad reminded me of that this morning, when we were opening presents.

  • • •

  “I don’t see anything under the tree from you to me,” he said.

  I snapped back, “You cut off my allowance, remember?”

  “Because you stole my car, remember?”

  Okay, wait. It’s not how it sounds.

  It wasn’t me who stole the car. I’m eleven, so there’s no way I’m gonna drive. I just took the keys from Dad’s jacket. My friend Jaxon’s the one who drove the car away from the bakery. I only went along for the ride. Me and Jaxon’s girlfriend, Ivy.

  And I wore my seat belt. So there.

  Jaxon’s fifteen. Maybe he doesn’t technically have a driver’s license, but he’s already started driver’s ed. He and Ivy are both older than me, but we’ve been a team ever since we met in the Peanut Room.

  You don’t know about the Peanut Room? That’s where kids at my school with medical problems have to spend lunch period. Jaxon’s the only one of us who’s actually allergic to peanuts. Ivy’s got diabetes, so she has to take an injection at lunchtime, and with this heart thing of mine, I get stuck in there so I don’t get hit in the chest out on the playground.

  Ivy’s fascinated by anything scientific, and she’s way smarter than a lot of teachers. She gets a bad rap for being difficult, but that’s only because she gets bored in class. Did I mention she’s also kind of gorgeous?

  Jaxon does impressions. He can mimic just about any teacher at school, but he can also make a lot of other crazy sounds. Since the first time I laughed at his impression of a spoon caught in a garbage disposal, the three of us have been hanging out.

  I soon learned that even though Jaxon’s dad is a rich lawyer and always buys him everything he asks for, Jaxon still loves to take things that aren’t his. At first we messed around in small ways—a little shoplifting here and there. No big deal. Bu
t then we got bored. And Jaxon got inventive.

  Unless you’re a pale fifth-grade runt with a medical condition, you wouldn’t know how awesome it feels to have a couple of eighth-graders be your friends—one who’s beautiful and one who’s funny. Even if the funny one sometimes suggests you do things that cross the line.

  Around Thanksgiving Jaxon said he wanted to practice his driving and asked could I maybe help him borrow Dad’s car. How could we know that Dad had deliveries to make that afternoon? Or that he’d call the police when he saw the empty parking space in the alley behind the bakery? Even after the cops pulled us over and I explained the whole situation, they still took us down to the station.

  The next day, Dad cut off my allowance. So that’s why he didn’t get a Christmas present.

  Serves him right.

  Me? I got the usual crap I get every year, the stuff Dad would have to get me anyway. But when he wraps it in holiday paper and makes me open it on Christmas morning, he calls it a “present.” Socks. Underwear. A pair of jeans—from Goodwill! Isn’t it bad enough I’ve got a secondhand heart?

  “You have anything to say about your presents?” Dad asked.

  “You call these presents?” Maybe that was mean, but he was working my last nerve.

  “Watch it.”

  I bit out each word. “Thank. You. For. My. Presents.” Then I looked over his shoulder. Twisted to peek behind the sofa. “Where is it?”

  “Where’s what?”

  I folded my arms. “That thing I’m getting.”

  Dad shrugged. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

  “You know!” I was getting impatient. “What I asked for.”

  I asked for a suitcase. A small one with wheels. For my trip to see Mom. The day after Christmas, I was finally going to get away from Dad and the bakery and gray, gray Nickel Bay, and go stay with Mom until school started. It had been nine months since I last saw her.

  “Your mother and I talked,” Dad began carefully.

  “About what?” I spit out.

  “Temper,” Dad warned.

  “What did you say to her?” I demanded.

  “We talked about”—I could tell he was choosing his words carefully—“about your behavior lately.”

  “What behavior?”

  “What behavior?” Dad started to count on his fingers. “You vandalized the teachers’ lounge at school.”

  “I accidentally broke a lamp!” I shouted. “That TV screen was already cracked.”

  “You spray-painted graffiti on the back wall of the Crestwood Retirement Home.”

  “Nobody ever goes back there!”

  “You skipped seven days of school. You missed our last appointment with Mrs. Atkinson at Family Services.”

  “She hates me!”

  “And you stole my car, which resulted in your fifth trip to police headquarters this year.”

  “They didn’t arrest me!”

  “That’s because every cop in Nickel Bay has known me since high school!” Dad’s voice was getting louder now. “But it’s not because you didn’t deserve it!”

  He had run out of fingers to count on. I had run out of excuses. We stared at each other.

  “So, you and Mom talked.”

  “We talked,” he said quietly, “and we agreed that your trip was to have been a . . . reward. And we agreed that . . .”

  That’s where I stopped listening. Blah blah blah blah blah. Long story short? I’m not going anywhere. Two more weeks till school starts again. Two more weeks of sweeping out the bakery and fighting with my dad and hating my life.

  Then he had the nerve to add, “And remember, we’re going over to Lisa’s for Christmas dinner.”

  “Forget it,” I snapped.

  Dad’s been seeing Lisa for about a year now. She used to sell perfume at Dillard’s Department Store until she got laid off.

  Dad’s eyes narrowed. “What did you say?”

  “You heard me!” It was my turn to count on my fingers. “You ground me for two months. You stop my allowance. You make me work for no pay. You give me underwear for Christmas instead of the rolling suitcase you promised.”

  “I never promised you a—”

  “You turn Mom against me and screw me out of my visit with her, and then what? You think I’m just gonna tag along and sit around Lisa’s table with her two screaming girls and pretend we’re all having a nice Christmas dinner? I’d rather drink gasoline.”

  Dad’s never smacked me. I’m sure he’s scared it would stop my heart or something. But I can tell when he wants to, and that was one of those times.

  I spent the rest of the day in my bedroom. It’s hardly private, though, since Dad took the door off its hinges last month. He said I slammed it “one too many times.”

  • • •

  Smash!

  Three windows in a row. I’m on fire!

  When Mom left Dad and moved away from Nickel Bay, I was three and a half, and the doctors hadn’t found the hole in my heart yet.

  “I’ve got dreams,” she told Dad before she left. Mom has a really great singing voice, and over the years, she has sent me postcards saying things like, “I hope you understand, Sam, that I have to follow my star!” So far her star has taken her to Nashville and Los Angeles and tons of other places. I was always certain that, once she found success, Mom would send for me, and I’d finally get out of Nickel Bay. I’d leave Dad, with all his pathetic rules, and I’d leave the kids at school who snicker and call me Frankenstein because of the scar down my chest. I’d start a new life with Mom while she lived her dream. And maybe I’d get a dream of my own.

  The last time I saw her—last spring break—I stayed with her in a dusty motel room in Memphis, where the temperature was about a billion degrees every day. To stay cool in the evenings, we sat around the half-filled swimming pool in the courtyard, and Mom sang me little pieces of songs she’d been trying to write. There was one called “I’m So Ready” that I liked a lot, so she taught me the chorus.

  My heart is strong

  My hands are steady

  My future waits

  And now I’m ready

  Whoa-oh

  I’m so ready

  We’d sing at the top of our lungs until the motel manager poked his head out of his office and asked us to keep it down.

  I haven’t sung that song since I got back from Memphis.

  • • •

  Before Dad left for Lisa’s in the late afternoon, he leaned into my bedroom. “You coming or not?”

  “Not.”

  From across the room, I could smell that he was wearing some yucky cologne Lisa gave him. He had on his stupid Christmas sweater, the one with green holly leaves and red berries on it. Dad played football in high school before he was a fireman, which was before he worked construction and before he opened the bakery. He’s still a big, muscle-y guy, and with all those leaves and berries stretched across his broad shoulders, that sweater looked extra dorky. I wasn’t going to be the one to tell him.

  “There’s leftovers in the fridge,” he said. “You know the rules: no visitors. No TV. Do not leave this house. Do I make myself clear?”

  I didn’t even look up. “Crystal.”

  He slammed the front door on the way out. See? I’m not the only one who acts like a child.

  When he wants to punish me with no TV, Dad hides the remote. If he hadn’t, I wouldn’t have gone snooping, and if I hadn’t gone snooping, I wouldn’t have found the card, so what happened next is totally his fault.

  The envelope was hidden in his bottom dresser drawer, behind his unmatched socks and the shoe polish rags. The postmark said Little Rock, AR.

  We don’t know anybody in Arkansas.

  When I opened it, a picture fell out. I didn’t recognize the couple in the photo�
��a guy with a mustache wearing a tuxedo standing next to a lady in a white dress. She was holding a bunch of flowers, with her hair piled up in curls. They both looked goofy, they were smiling so hard. Across the bottom of the photo, in gold ink, was printed OUR HAPPY DAY—DECEMBER 4.

  It took a moment before it hit me that I knew the lady.

  “Mom?” I whispered.

  The note Mom had written inside the card was short. Just about how quiet and simple the wedding ceremony had been . . .

  “Wedding?” I gasped.

  . . . how happy she and Phil and his kids are . . .

  Who’s Phil? I wondered. And how many kids are we talking about?

  . . . and, she wrote, how “this Christmas, as you can imagine, is hardly an ideal time for one of Sam’s visits.”

  “Ya think?!” I blurted out in the silent bedroom. I reread the caption on the photo. OUR HAPPY DAY—DECEMBER 4.

  December 4?

  Mom got married, like, three weeks ago and didn’t mention it? Isn’t getting married the kind of thing you tell the people you love? And what about Dad? He never said a word, either!

  In that moment, I hated them both. With shaking hands I crushed the wedding picture and the card, dropped them to the floor and stood up quickly.

  Bad move.

  Suddenly dizzy, I slumped against Dad’s bedroom wall. My neck and face were burning hot, and my heart pounded in my chest, straining to pump enough blood to my head to catch up with my feelings. The few times I’ve passed out at school, everybody made such a big deal about it, but that’s just the way my body works.

  I don’t remember leaving the house. I don’t remember running through the snow-covered streets. I don’t remember anything before that first chunk of asphalt exploded that first window.

  • • •

  Crash!

  And now I’m up to window #4. If life were fair, I’d get some sort of medal for hitting four targets in a row. Maybe I should be a pitcher, I think for one moment. Or maybe a quarterback. But small, scrawny kids with spare hearts don’t get to be pitchers or quarterbacks. They don’t get to have dreams.