THIS IS A BORZOI BOOK PUBLISHED BY ALFRED A. KNOPF
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Text copyright © 2011 by Sue Stauffacher
Illustrations copyright © 2011 by Priscilla Lamont
All rights reserved. Published in the United States by Alfred A. Knopf, an imprint of Random House Children’s Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
Knopf, Borzoi Books, and the colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Stauffacher, Sue.
Show time / Sue Stauffacher ; illustrated by Priscilla Lamont. — 1st ed.
p. cm.—(Animal rescue team)
Summary: Keisha’s family’s animal rescue center is asked to help at a nearby college that is being overrun with squirrels, while Keisha is trying to deal with her nervousness as she prepares for the regional jump-rope competition.
eISBN: 978-0-375-89794-8
[1. Squirrels—Fiction. 2. Wildlife rescue—Fiction. 3. Rope skipping—Fiction. 4. Family life—Fiction. 5. Racially mixed people—Fiction.] I. Lamont, Priscilla, ill. II. Title.
PZ7.S8055Sh 2011
[Fic]—dc22
2010004759
Random House Children’s Books supports the First Amendment and celebrates the right to read.
v3.1
For my nephew Lance Corporal John Carter Bateman,
who is serving his country in the U.S. Marine Corps
Keisha Carter was crawling across the kitchen floor, trying to catch her little brother Paulo, when a cold swirl of outside air blew up under her sweater.
“Look at the snow in the glow of the streetlights, everybody.” Daddy pulled Mama to him and gave her a quick kiss. “It looks like a snow globe.”
“Brrrrrr …”
Keisha caught Paulo’s ankle and gave him a kiss, too.
Mama rubbed Daddy’s back. “Our truck is out in all that snow. I’ll get the broom.”
“Snow,” Keisha told Paulo, pointing out the door.
“Rocket,” he replied, pointing in the opposite direction as their puppy skittered down the steps.
“Daddy, you should close the door before—”
But Keisha was too late.
Paulo threw himself flat on the linoleum just in time to avoid a collision as Rocket bounded over the youngest Carter, then sailed through the doorway and out into the snowy white world.
“Hookey-hookey!” Paulo cried with a little scream of delight as he scrambled over to the doorway on his hands and knees to get a better look.
“Yep. He’s doing the hoochie-coochie.” Keisha caught the back of Paulo’s sweater before he could launch himself out the door.
Rocket was on his back, shimmying in the new-fallen snow.
“That dog.” Mama
tsk-tsk
ed, but she couldn’t keep from smiling. Rocket was a cross between a coyote and a dog. The Carters owned him because he didn’t fit in the wild OR the world of humans. He stalked prey and howled like a coyote, but he also loved humans like a domestic dog. Ever since the first big storm in December, he had demonstrated his wild side by rolling, burrowing and playing in the snow.
“All the girls in France do the hoochie-coochie dance, and the way they shake, it’s enough to kill a snake.” Keisha’s six-year-old brother, Razi, step-tapped down the last two stairs and across the kitchen floor.
“Razi Carter,” Mama scolded. “Did you hear that kind of talk on the playground?”
“No. Grandma taught me.”
The puppy’s head popped up out of a snowdrift, and Keisha could see that his perky ears and the ruff of fur that circled his face were now frosted with snow.
“I wish Grandma was here with her camera,” Keisha said.
“Grandma is catching up on her beauty sleep.” Daddy glanced at the clock. “But I need to go.” He pulled on his coat and gathered his supplies.
The volunteers at Blandford Nature Center had asked Daddy to teach a class on repairing turtle shells at their annual Back-to-Nature Conference. He set off down the back steps, his arms filled with plaster shells, drills and screws.
Mama took the broom out of the closet. “I’ll get Rocket and help Daddy with the truck. Razi, can you carry out the muffins? Without dancing?”
Mama couldn’t send Daddy off to his first teaching job without food for the students. Growing up in Nigeria, Mama’s family shared food as a way to show courtesy and to make friends. Daddy said it was one of the things he liked most about Mama—her friendly food.
“Can I wear the oven mitts?” Razi asked.
“You have to. The tins are still warm.”
“Can I wear them to school?”
“We’ll see.” Mama and Razi put on their coats. She
was just about to follow her son out the back door when the office phone rang.
“I’ll be there in a minute,” Mama instructed Keisha. “Go ahead and answer it. Razi, I want you right back at the kitchen table after your delivery.”
“C’mon, Paulo.” Keisha took Paulo’s hand and pulled him along into the office. She picked up the phone. “Carters’ Urban Rescue,” she said in her grown-up voice.
“No, no! The copier in the main office. The documents are there. Uh, sorry about that,” a man’s voice said into the receiver. “Can I speak to Fred? I’m an old friend. Bill Fox.”
“I’m sorry, Mr. Fox. He just left.” Keisha tugged on Paulo’s hand. He was trying to get the stapler again.
“When will he be back? Sometime today?”
“Not until late, he said.”
“That won’t work. Darn it. The president wants someone on this today.”
“Can I help? I’m his daughter. Is this about an animal?”
“Ummm … ani
mals.
Yes. About fifty of them. Maybe 150. Why they are my responsibility, I couldn’t tell you. I’m the Director of
Human
Resources, not Animal Resources. You’d think this would fall under Groundskeeping or Physical Plant or Pest Control.
Melissa!” he shouted, causing Keisha to almost drop the phone. “Do we have a Pest Control Department?”
Keisha pulled out an intake form. “I’m sorry, Mr. Fox. I’m not sure I understand. What kind of animals?”
“Squirrels are taking over the campus here at Mt. Mercy College. They’re frightening the students and making the nuns jumpy and, besides that, they’re messy. Ms. Pontell, the president’s secretary, just stormed into my office to inform me that his new Persian rug has teeny-tiny black walnut stains all over it … in the shape of paw prints! And
I’m
supposed to take care of it.”
“The rug?”
“No, the squirrels.”
It didn’t help that Paulo had given up on the stapler and was now after the calculator. Keisha pushed all the office equipment out of Paulo’s reach.
“So I thought,
I’ll call Fred. He’ll know what to do.
”
The back door slammed, and Keisha could see Mama holding a glistening Rocket and swatting the snow off her skirt.
“My mom will know what to do, too,” she told Mr. Fox. “I’ll go get her.”
“What do you mean it needs more toner? I just put in a new cartridge. That’s impossible.…”
Since Mr. Fox was already busy, it seemed like a good time to put the phone down. “Mama,” Keisha said
when she’d reached the kitchen. “There’s a man on the phone who says he’s Daddy’s friend and the president wants him to take care of the fifty squirrels—or maybe 150—that are causing trouble over at Mt. Mercy and causing black walnut stains to get on the Persian rug.”
Mama held out a dripping puppy to Keisha. “Fifty squirrels on a Persian rug?”
Keisha shrugged. It didn’t make sense to her, either.
Rocket could wiggle his bottom and moan even when Mama was holding him in the air. Keisha grabbed an old towel from the basket by the back door and held out her arms.
“Oops. I left Paulo in the office. He was heading for the printer.”
“All right, Ada,” Mama said, using the nickname that meant “eldest daughter” in Mama’s native language, Igbo. “Clean up this dog, eat your muffins with Razi and check his hands when he’s done.”
Keisha finished rubbing Rocket dry as Mama hurried down the hall to speak to Mr. Fox. Then she sat down in her chair, broke off a piece of banana nut muffin for herself and looked over at Razi, who, in about thirty seconds, had managed to become crumb-covered. Razi licked his fingers and pressed them to the crumbs on his plate, all the time tapping his feet on the floor.
“Razi, your tapping is shaking the table.”
“I have to learn my steps. We’re going to practice on the stage today.”
“Can’t you just think about them?”
“No.” Razi continued to tap.
Keisha decided to focus on the warm, banana-y muffin in her mouth and not her brother. She was on her second muffin when Mama returned to the kitchen,
put Paulo in his high chair and sat down next to him.
“That man needs to focus on one thing at a time,” she said, tying on Paulo’s bib.
“Can you help him, Mama?”
“I’m sure we can, but it’s not an emergency. Your father is busy all day, and I promised Razi’s teacher I would help her work on the costumes for the mid-winter show. We don’t cancel our plans when it’s not an emergency. We schedule an appointment.”
“What about Grandma? We could go after she picks me up from jump rope practice.”
“Grandma. Hmmmm …” Mama bit into a piece of muffin that Paulo held out for her. Paulo loved to feed Mama. It made him feel like a big boy. “Good idea, Ada. I will call him back and tell him that you and Grandma will come over this afternoon.”