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    House Arrest


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      Contents

      Cover

      Title Page

      Copyright

      Dedication

      WINTER

      WEEK 1

      WEEK 2

      WEEK 3

      WEEK 4

      WEEK 5

      WEEK 6

      WEEK 7

      WEEK 8

      WEEK 9

      WEEK 10

      WEEK 11

      WEEK 12

      WEEK 13

      SPRING

      WEEK 14

      WEEK 15

      WEEK 16

      WEEK 17

      WEEK 18

      WEEK 19

      WEEK 20

      WEEK 21

      WEEK 22

      WEEK 23

      WEEK 24

      WEEK 25

      WEEK 26

      SUMMER

      WEEK 27

      WEEK 28

      WEEK 29

      WEEK 30

      WEEK 31

      WEEK 32

      WEEK 33

      WEEK 34

      WEEK 35

      WEEK 36

      WEEK 37

      WEEK 38

      WEEK 39

      FALL

      WEEK 40

      WEEK 41

      WEEK 42

      WEEK 43

      WEEK 44

      WEEK 45

      WEEK 46

      WEEK 47

      WEEK 48

      WEEK 49

      WEEK 50

      WEEK 51

      WEEK 52

      ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

      Author

      Chronicle Ebooks

      Copyright © 2015 by K.A. Holt.

      All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:

      Holt, K. A., author.

      House arrest / by K.A. Holt.

      pages cm

      Summary: Young Timothy is sentenced to house arrest after impulsively stealing a wallet, and he is forced to keep a journal

      into which he pours all his thoughts, fears, and frustrations.

      ISBN 978-1-4521-3477-2 (Hardcover)

      ISBN 978-1-4521-4084-1 (ebook)

      1. Diaries—Juvenile fiction. 2. Juvenile delinquents—Juvenile

      fiction. 3. Detention of persons—Juvenile fiction. [1. Novels

      in verse. 2. Diaries—Fiction. 3. Juvenile delinquency—Fiction.

      4. Detention of persons--Fiction.] I. Title.

      PZ7.5.H65Ho 2015

      813.6--dc23

      2014022151

      Design by Jennifer Tolo Pierce.

      Typeset in Bodoni Six ITC and Vine Street.

      Chronicle Books LLC

      680 Second Street

      San Francisco, CA 94107

      Chronicle Books—we see things differently. Become part of our

      community at www.chroniclekids.com.

      To my sweet Ike-a-saurus

      WEEK 1

      Boys don’t write in journals,

      unless it’s court-ordered.

      At least, this is what I’ve figured.

      I

      I have

      I have nothing

      to say.

      I am not allowed to have nothing to say.

      Except on Tuesdays

      when I go see Mrs. Bainbridge

      who calls me Tim instead of Timothy.

      I sit on her squishy couch

      my mouth sealed shut

      my eyes burning holes

      in the leaves of all her plants.

      She says I can call her Maureen.

      But who would want to be called Maureen?

      Adjudicated delinquent.

      I had to look up how to spell that.

      Three times.

      I don’t feel like a delinquent

      and I don’t know what adjudicated means

      (even after looking it up).

      Sounds like a kung fu move.

      I adjudicated you in your face!

      HI-YA

      A whole year of this journal?

      Maybe I will write about the other people I see.

      Like José . . . just being José.

      I will pretend his life is mine,

      like I can still go hang out in our street

      whenever I want.

      Magnolia Circle. Where I’ve always lived.

      With the manhole cover

      that makes a perfect third base.

      WEEK 2

      How do you let yourself

      become a probation officer?

      Is there a school for that?

      A diploma?

      Congrats, James, you have graduated

      and are now

      a complete

      tool.

      James recommends

      not writing any more things

      like that last thing.

      Otherwise

      the judge will get mad.

      Who knew my probation officer

      could read my journal?

      I would like it on record that that isn’t fair.

      Do you hear me, James?

      Do you hear me, Mrs. Bainbridge?

      Do you hear me, Judge?

      A personal journal is very crowded

      with so many eyes.

      James on Monday.

      Mrs. Bainbridge on Tuesday.

      School every day.

      Home every day.

      Nowhere else unless Mom is with me.

      That’s the schedule, Journal.

      Got it?

      It’s pretty simple.

      Like a court-ordered cage,

      with a Mom-shaped lock.

      You better take this journal seriously,

      James told me Monday.

      Or they’ll throw you in juvie

      so fast

      your head will spin.

      As if my head isn’t already spinning.

      On that day, weeks ago, I’d lost my head.

      Everything foggy and frosty,

      everything a dwarf name

      from a fairy tale

      that doesn’t exist.

      I remember I was so tired.

      So

      so

      so

      tired.

      Levi had been sick the night before.

      One of those nights with no nurse at home to help.

      Mom had her hands full.

      And I did, too.

      Levi was bad sick.

      So I helped.

      Running for towels,

      for meds,

      for the heavy oxygen tanks,

      for the suction machine,

      for the spare trach tubes,

      for the ties to keep the tube in his neck

      so he could breathe

      which he wasn’t doing very well

      that night

      before the morning

      when my head was full of fairy-tale dwarves

      named Foggy and Frosty and Sleepy and Crazy.

      I will never know what I was thinking when I stole that wallet,

      because I wasn’t thinking.

      I wish everyone would stop asking.

      There is no what

      when there is no thinking.

      There is just is-ing.

      Things happen.

      Things happened.

      Just like that.

      Snap.

      It is what it is.

      It was what it was.

      So stop asking.

      I was trying to help,

      that’s all.

      But it was the opposite of help,

      and I know that now.

      I’m not sorry, though.r />
      If you’re wondering.

      I’m just sorry I got caught.

      Because it would have helped.

      It would have.

      WEEK 3

      James says I should take that last part out.

      You better be sorry, he says

      when he throws this journal into my chest

      looking mad and disappointed.

      A look they must give tests on

      at Probation Officer University.

      This is not a joke, Timothy.

      They’ll throw you in juvie so fast

      your head will spin.

      I mouth the words when he says them.

      He doesn’t like that.

      But he needs new words.

      He won’t like it that I wrote that, either.

      Oh, well.

      Hey, James?

      Suck it.

      When Levi was born my dad was still here.

      Nine months ago.

      Feels like nine years.

      Dad’s heart was beating in the same room as mine.

      His lungs filled with the same air as mine.

      His stomach filled with the same pizza as mine.

      We had pepperoni that night

      when Levi was born.

      We high-fived our root beers.

      Dad told the waitress,

      I have two boys now. How about that?

      And she gave us ice cream

      for free.

      And it was the best night.

      Until it wasn’t anymore.

      Then the phone rang in the pitch-dark night

      and José’s mom answered because I was at their house.

      Dad was at the hospital with Mom and Levi.

      José’s mom came to wake me up

      but I was already awake.

      And she drove me to the hospital

      and she told me Levi was sick

      and the doctors didn’t know what it was

      and it was bad

      real bad

      and they wanted me there

      in case he died

      so I could say good-bye

      and none of it made sense

      because Levi was a brand-new baby

      and nothing happens to brand-new babies

      because they are new and haven’t hurt anyone yet.

      And Dad still had pizza in his stomach

      and so did I

      from earlier that night

      when everything was OK.

      P.S. Levi did not die.

      Not any time they told us he would.

      And there were a lot of times.

      James.

      Mrs. B.

      I know you’re reading, so listen up.

      I’m thinking you guys don’t know anything

      about anything.

      No offense.

      But if you’re going to understand what I’m

      talking about

      in this dumb journal

      I’m going to need to explain some things

      to your dumb faces.

      No offense.

      There are just so many things you have to understand

      before you can really understand.

      Understand?

      So I can tell you about that day

      that stealing day

      but you’re never going to know

      what was going on in my head

      because I don’t know what was going on in my head

      all I do know is what was going on in my life.

      Lesson One: trach.

      You say it like trake

      in case you didn’t know.

      It’s a plastic tube

      in Levi’s neck.

      Well, in a hole in Levi’s neck,

      a hole the doctor put there

      so Levi can breathe.

      The tube protects the hole

      but it lets in a lot of germs

      like a superhighway to his lungs,

      so that’s no good.

      But breathing is good.

      Kind of a lame trade-off, if you ask me.

      I guess the trach is like a plastic nostril

      in Levi’s neck.

      It has all the gross stuff that nostrils have:

      slippery boogers

      and slime

      and gunk

      and when he sneezes, these snot bullets shoot out.

      So, yeah. It’s a plastic nostril in your neck.

      But it doesn’t look like a nostril. Just a tube.

      It saved Levi’s life

      and changed everyone else’s.

      Sometimes I wonder what it’s like

      to breathe through your neck

      instead of your face.

      How does food taste

      if you can’t smell it?

      Do your sinuses still hurt

      when you’re sick?

      Does it tickle when you cough

      out of the tube?

      Does it feel weird when you swallow?

      It must.

      Because Levi chokes a lot.

      When he chokes we use the suction machine

      and it is so loud

      like a jackhammer drinking a Slurpee.

      It sucks all of the gunk out of the tube in his neck

      so Levi can breathe easy again.

      He always looks so relieved.

      I wonder how that feels?

      José came over today.

      He called me a felon

      and laughed his head off.

      He wanted me to come with him.

      Cam’s paintball party.

      My answer:

      What part of house arrest don’t you understand,

      dummy?

      I told him I was getting a tracking device on my ankle

      and if I leave the house

      it will blow my whole leg off.

      Even messier than paintball.

      He believed me

      so I laughed my head off.

      WEEK 4

      James says I need to talk more about that day.

      Your journal, he says,

      in that eye-rolly way they must teach at

      Probation Officer University,

      is to prove you are reflecting on what you did,

      to prove house arrest is working,

      to prove you don’t need juvie to set you straight.

      It is court-ordered, Timothy.

      You know what that means, right?

      And that’s when I shout,

      I’m doing it, right?

      I’m writing in it, OK?

      He nods and looks kind of bored.

      And I wonder, again, how this ever happened.

      There are a lot of things I know

      that I shouldn’t know

      about why things are the way they are.

      About Dad driving away and never coming back.

      About his job he never went back to.

      About Mom working nights for extra money.

      About food coming from the church on the corner.

      About Levi’s medicine costing as much

      as a pet space shuttle.

      I know.

      But I don’t say I know.

      But Mom knows I know.

      Because she knows everything.

      Except whether or not Dad is ever coming back.

      No one knows that.

      Well, maybe Dad does.

      A year is a long time

      to write in a journal.

      and never go to paintball parties.

      That is not a haiku.

      José came over.

      It was a quick visit.

      His mom made a casserole for him to bring

      which he thought was embarrassing.

      So did I.

      Oh, we don’t need a casserole!

      Mom said it in her fake-smile voice.

      But I put it in the fridge for later.

      It smelled so good.

      Way better smelling than José

      who punched me in the shoulder

      and called me “smooth criminal
    ”

      even though I’m not smooth at all.

      At all.

      That day.

      Always in my head.

      Won’t go away.

      Always in the mirror.

      Written on my face.

      That day.

      When the guy’s wallet was next to the credit card swiper thing

      at the checkout

      and the manager and the guy looked out the window

      at the car crash outside of the grocery store.

      My breath came fast.

      My vision did this weird pinpoint thing.

      My brain went white.

      So I leaned over, grabbed the wallet, kept walking.

      The sun was bright.

      The day was cold.

      The wallet was heavier than I thought it would be.

      I paid

      one thousand

      four hundred

      forty-

      five

      dollars

      and

      thirty-

      two

      cents

      on one shiny blue card.

      Levi’s medicine for one month.

      I made it one and a half days before they caught me.

      One and a half days of feeling like I could breathe.

      One and a half days of trying to figure out how to tell Mom.

      Then the police came.

      They took me away.

      But even worse?

      They took the medicine away, too.

      Man. I was really stupid then.

      White hair on his head

      coming out his ears

      creeping from his nose

      BOBBY

      his red name tag shouts it

      as if your eyes are deaf.

      When BOBBY took that credit card

      he knew it wasn’t right

      the white hair in his nose

      sucked in and out

      like seaweed in the tide.

      My uncle’s card.

      The sweat rolled down my face

      getting in my eyes.

      Quite the generous uncle.

      That’s what BOBBY said

      when he swiped the card

      handed over the medicine

      never taking his eyes off me

      even when the pharmacy door ding-dinged

      and I turned around

      looking back through the glass.

      BOBBY watched me go,

      his mouth a tight line

      his hand in his white hair

      searching for answers.

      WEEK 5

      James frowned.

      His little pig eyes narrowed.

     

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