Harriet the Spy, Double Agent (11 page)

BOOK: Harriet the Spy, Double Agent
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“Jasmine’s,” said Annie. They looked at each other and burst out laughing. Ole Golly was right, thought Harriet, grinning so wide that it practically hurt. There are all kinds of love in this world.

 

Chapter 10

Two days after Christmas, they took down the crooked tree, locked up the house, and drove back to Manhattan. Annie went back to the Feigenbaums’, where, she reported, her uncle was on some new diet. That evening, one of Barbara’s patients went into labor with premature twins, and she disappeared into the hospital. Annie called Harriet up the next morning. “I’m going out of my skull over here. It’s just me, Uncle Morris, and the loon parade. Let’s go sled in the park or something.”

“Sledding sounds great,” said Harriet. Her cousins Jeffrey and Marc had sent her a shovel-shaped French plastic sled they called a butt-slider, and she was dying to try it.

“Do you have two sleds? Mine’s in Boston.”

“I have three,” said Harriet. “A toboggan, a flying saucer, and this French butt-slider. Want to ask Sport?”

“I’d prefer not to,” said Annie. “Meet me on the corner in ten.” Harriet put on a ski turtleneck and her Norwegian sweater, then wrapped herself up in a down vest, a long scarf, and snow pants. She found waterproof mitts to go over her fingerless gloves. By the time she left the apartment, waddling in all those layers, she was overheated and sweating.

Annie stood on the corner, as if they were walking to school. She took the toboggan from Harriet and they trudged uptown toward the Koreans’. When they got to the corner, they stopped in their tracks.

The vacant lot was … vacant. Not a trace of the Christmas tree stand remained. If not for the ruts where the truck had been parked, no one would have known they had been there at all. Annie stared, speechless.

“They’re
gone
,” said Harriet, shocked into saying the obvious. “I guess they went back to New Hampshire. I wonder if Balsam ever told Myong-Hee he loved her.” Annie burst into tears. “It’s too late.”

Harriet stared. “What’s the matter with
you?”
. she demanded, and Annie let out a heart-wrenching wail.

“I’ll never see Douglas again,” she sobbed.


Douglas
?” said Harriet. She was incredulous. “Douglas the Dumbwit?” Annie nodded, sniffling defiantly. “I
told
you I was in love with an older man.”

“I don’t get it.”

“He’s not dumb at
all
. I just said that to … I don’t know why. I just said it.” 

Harriet shook her head. “That’s not what I meant. If Douglas Fir was your older man, who is that guy who took you out to lunch? And to Radio City?” Annie turned slowly. The color had drained from her face, and her mouth was an angry straight line. “You’ve been following me. What are you, some kind of double agent?”

“What do you mean?” asked Harriet, stung. Everyone knew double agents were traitors who turned on the people who trusted them most.

“You were spying on me?”

Harriet shrugged. “Well, of course. I’m a spy.”

“Oh,” Annie said. “I thought you were a friend.” And she stormed away.

No semaphore signals were flashed for the rest of vacation. Harriet called several times, and once Annie answered. As soon as she heard who it was, her voice went cold.

“Nobody here by that name,” she said frostily. “This is Rosarita Sauvage.” She’ll stop being mad when we go back to school, thought Harriet. But she waited in vain at the corner on their first day back: Annie had left her house early so she wouldn’t have to run into her former best friend. When they stood at their side-by-side lockers, Annie turned her back, slamming the door when Harriet called her by name. This stinks, thought Harriet, watching her clomp down the hall.

The day was an agony. Nobody else spoke to Harriet either. Janie was lost to her new Christmas headphones, on which she could play Jason Orlando tapes in the hall between classes. In the locker room, the popularity clones were all showing off ski tans and photos of beach resorts, chattering like a pack of tropical birds. Marion Hawthorne turned toward Annie. “How was
your
Christmas, Cassandra?”

“It was fine,” Annie said, adding darkly, “except for the traitor.” Harriet pulled on her pajamas, the same pair she’d worn in Water Mill. It felt like a lifetime ago that she’d been so carefree and happy, had sat on the rug cutting snowflakes with Annie, had slept side by side in the trundle bed, gazing at the faded stars on the ceiling. She felt utterly and completely alone. Not even her notebooks distracted her. She stared at a blank page for what felt like hours, but all she could manage to write was

ANNIE WON’T SPEAK TO ME. WHY IS SHE ACTING SO SHOCKED? SHE KNOWS PERFECTLY WELL I TAKE NOTES. I’M A SPY AND A WRITER. WHAT ELSE AM I SUPPOSED TO DO??

What else indeed, she thought, closing the cover. She threw the green notebook back into her trunk, next to the marbled blue sketchbook, and took out the stationery Ole Golly had given her.

Dear Ole Golly
, she wrote,

I am having a personal problem. You told me that I should write everything down,
and I have. But all is not well. Remember my friend Rosarita, who lived with the
Feigenbaums? Her real name is Annie, and she is furious with me. I don’t think she’ll
ever forgive me. I know you’re concerned with your upcoming baby and hope all is well
in that area

She looked at
area
, frowning, and crossed the word out.

that department, but I need your help
.

Harriet stopped writing. How can she help me? she thought. She’s in Canada. And no grown-up could possibly understand how this feels.

Annie didn’t bend. She avoided Harriet in the halls and kept to herself in class.

She wore clothes that were almost like costumes: a man’s derby hat, thrift-store jewelry, unmatched striped socks. Marion and her sidekicks, Carrie and Rachel, made jeering comments whenever they passed in the hall, and when Annie ignored them, pronounced in a stage whisper meant to be overheard, “She is
so
weird.” One day after school, Harriet came upstairs from her cake and milk and heard her mother talking to some other woman behind the closed door of the library. It must be one of her idiot friends from the bridge club, thought Harriet, speeding up so she wouldn’t be forced to make conversation. With one foot on the staircase, she stopped short when she recognized the second voice as Barbara Feigenbaum’s.

“I don’t know what to do with that girl. She comes home from school, slams her door, and goes on these crying jags. Hours she spends crying. If I try to go in and comfort her, she has a tantrum. Morris says it’s a needed catharsis, that she trusts us enough to display her repressed emotions, but I just have a feeling that something has changed.”

“In what way?” Harriet heard the tinkling stir of a teaspoon on china. They were both drinking tea, she surmised, so this might be a long conversation. She edged toward the door, being careful to stay to one side so that they wouldn’t see her feet under its bottom edge.

“Boy trouble, maybe.” Harriet held back a snort. Why did everyone think that whatever was wrong with a girl was because of a boy?

Barbara Feigenbaum went on. “She just doesn’t seem like herself. I wondered if Harriet had mentioned anything. Maybe something at school?”

“I wish I could help you, but Harriet isn’t much of a talker. She takes everything in, but she’s very still-waters-run-deep.” Am I? thought Harriet, wondering at this description. I thought I was rather loud.

Her mother continued. “She’s always up there in her room, writing things down in those notebooks of hers. I’m lucky if I get two words from her.” This was a fascinating perspective to get on herself. Could it even be true? I
don’t
 really talk to my mother that much, thought Harriet. What would we talk about?

Shopping? Bridge? Recipes? She spends all her time doing things that don’t interest me.

But I never knew she minded.

Barbara Feigenbaum let out a sigh. “It’s the age. So much going on in those little heads.”

“If you like, I’ll ask Harriet point-blank. She doesn’t seem to be spending as much time with Annie as usual. Maybe they’re spatting.”
Spatting
? thought Harriet. What trunk did she drag that one out of?

Barbara sighed again. “I’m at my wit’s end, I’m telling you. My heart breaks for that child, what she’s been through with all this upheaval. It’s dragged on for months. My poor sister’s a wreck. I can’t wait till this nightmare is over.” Harriet’s ears perked up. Now they were getting somewhere.
What
nightmare?  she thought. I want details. Maybe I’ll even find out about P.

“I’m sure,” Mrs. Welsch sounded sympathetic. “It’s been so hard on all of you.”

“Hardest on Annie,” said Barbara Feigenbaum. She loves her niece, Harriet realized. The Feigenbaums seemed so entirely clueless, off in their own child-free world, that it had never occurred to her that they really cared about Annie.

Harriet heard Barbara Feigenbaum’s chair scrape the floor as she pushed it back, rising to go. Rats, she thought, scampering toward the staircase as quietly as she could manage. They were so
close
.

Harriet tried to sink back into her everyday spy routine, but it wasn’t the same without Douglas and Balsam Fir. Or without Annie. I don’t want to spend this much time by myself, she realized.

She called up Sport, who was happy to hear from her. “Been a long time,” he said.

“How was your New Year? Did you stay up till midnight and watch the ball drop?”

“Yeah. It was boring.”

“It always is. I don’t get New Year’s Eve. It just seems like an excuse to get drunk and act stupid in public, for people who don’t really
need
an excuse.” Harriet laughed. I’ve missed him, she thought. We agree about so many things.

“You know what I did on New Year’s Eve?” she said. “I read through a whole year’s worth of spy notebooks.”

“Really?” Sport sounded impressed. “How long did that take?”

“I don’t really know. I fell asleep in my bed with the light on.” This time it was Sport’s turn to laugh. “My dad does that every night. I used to go into his bedroom as soon as I woke up and turn it off for him. Sometimes I’d find him asleep in his chair with his face on the desk.” 

“Does Kate do that for him now?” Harriet lounged on her bed with the long cord stretched over her body, twisting it with her toe.

“I guess so.” Sport sounded a little bit wistful. “The door’s always closed. All I really know is what time he stops typing.”

Harriet thought of the dinners she’d had at Sport’s, how much she admired the quick bursts of rhythm when Matthew Rocque got up a real head of steam. She preferred peacock blue ink, but there was something very impressive about the mechanical tap dance of fingers that yielded a manuscript. “What are you doing tonight?” she asked Sport. “Would you want to come over or something?”

“Too much homework,” he said. “And I’m baking a sourdough. I still have to knead it and punch it down after it rises. How about tomorrow, right after school? We could go to the park if it’s nice out.”

“I’d love it,” said Harriet. “Have a good sourdough.” The next day was cold but not windy, so Sport and Harriet headed for Carl Schurz Park. A tugboat plowed through the East River, dragging a giant barge. The path along the embankment was still sunny next to the rail, though the pensioners sitting on benches looked frozen in place. Harriet felt strangely awkward with Sport as they strolled along the river. She wondered why, when she’d felt so completely at home with him on the phone. I’m not used to him being this
tall
, she decided. Sport had no right to grow so much faster than she did. It made her feel puny.

“Look at that gull,” said Sport, pointing. A seagull was flapping right over the barge, so close that it looked like a kite tied to the stern with invisible string. “Why do you think he’d be flying like that?”

“Maybe he’s riding a wind current.”

“Maybe he’s looking for dinner.”

“Maybe he’s a she.” This is better, she thought, feeling loose again. That was the thing about really good friends: even when you’d been out of touch, you could pick up right where you left off.

“Maybe he isn’t a seagull at all.” Sport smirked. “He
might
be a very thin swan.”

“Or an albino crow.” The gull made a raucous, rude squawk and flew away, as if it were offended. They both cracked up.

When the sun got too low and the park got too cold, they walked back toward Sport’s, passing the playground where they had first met. A professional dog walker went 63

by with an oddly assorted pack of lap-dogs, retrievers, and an Afghan hound fanned out on leashes held in both hands.

“How do they
do
that?” asked Sport as they crossed the street in front of his building. “What if the dogs start to fight with each other?”

“They must hold auditions,” said Harriet.

Sport grinned. “Imagine the rejects. ‘I’m sorry, Mrs. Kessler, but your Lhasa apso does not play well with others. Little Wudgie has been expelled.’” Harriet looked at him. “Sport? Why did Yolanda—Annie, I mean—get expelled from your school?”

BOOK: Harriet the Spy, Double Agent
7.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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