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  RUBY LU, BRAVE and true

  Lenore Look

  Illustrated by

  Anne Wilsdorf

  An Anne Schwartz Book · Atheneum Books for Young Readers

  New York London Toronto Sydney

  Atheneum Books for Young Readers

  An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

  1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, New York 10020

  www.SimonandSchuster.com

  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental. Text copyright © 2004 by Lenore Look

  Illustrations copyright © 2004 by Anne Wilsdorf

  All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

  The text for this book is set in Lomba. The illustrations for this book are rendered in India ink.

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Look, Lenore.

  Ruby Lu, brave and true / Lenore Look ; illustrated by Anne Wilsdorf.

  p. cm.

  “An Anne Schwartz Book.”

  Summary: “Almost-eight-year-old” Ruby Lu spends time with her baby brother, goes to Chinese school, performs magic tricks and learns to drive, and has adventures with both old and new friends.

  ISBN 0-689-84907-9

  ISBN 13: 978-0-689-84907-7

  eISBN 978-1-439-10715-7

  1. Chinese Americans—Juvenile fiction. [1. Chinese Americans—Fiction. 2. Neighborhood—Fiction. 3. Friendship—Fiction. 4. Family life—Fiction. 5. Schools—Fiction.] I. Wilsdorf, Anne, ill. II. Title.

  PZ7.L8682 Ru 2004

  [Fic]—dc21

  2003003605

  To my parents, brave and true

  My life is filled with God’s miracles:

  ANNE SCHWARTZ, my very fantastic editor, who asked me to turn Ruby from a picture book into a chapter book, and who, when I said, “No. I can’t write a chapter book,” put down her editorial pen and rolled out her psychoanalyst’s couch. “Just think of each chapter as a picture book,” she said. Magic words. And suddenly it was raining chapters, just like that.

  ANN KELLEY, Anne’s assistant editor extraordinaire, who spoke Rubyesque and dauntlessly guided the manuscript from beginning to end with great aplomb and enthusiasm and completed the Ann Team with Anne Wilsdorf the Magnificent.

  FRANCISCO NAHOE, true minister of boundless grace, example of unwavering courage, reader of Russian novels and book reports, who lent his clan name, his prayers, and his light along the way.

  VIVIAN LOW, who egged me on to unplumbed depths of mischief when we were Ruby’s age, and who lent the names of her children and their exuberance.

  JAMES DAHL, who never once spoke to me or Vivian when we were Ruby’s age, but who lent his nickname and found his box of Sicks’ Stadium memorabilia.

  Thank you.

  Forever.

  1 The Best Thing About 20th Avenue South

  The best thing about living on 20th Avenue South was everything.

  Ruby liked her house. She had lived there since kindergarten. Tomato slugs lived at the bottom of the front steps. A plum tree lived in the backyard. The kitchen smelled like jook and ice cream.

  Ruby liked the rain. It rained often on 20th Avenue South. The rain sprinkled diamonds on spiderwebs and poured silver on the sidewalks. At night the rain was a lullaby of a billion grains of rice falling on the roof.

  Ruby liked the sunshine. It was not often sunny on 20th Avenue South, but when it was, all the bottle caps in the street shone like coins. Windows opened. Radios played. Laundry dried. Plums ripened. Mothers took their babies out.

  Ruby liked the bus. The No. 3 ran from Chinatown to the Jefferson Golf Course. Ruby’s pohpoh and gunggung lived in Chinatown. Ruby lived near the Jefferson Golf Course. The No. 3 bus brought PohPoh to Ruby, or Ruby to PohPoh, whenever GungGung was too busy to drive them, and they saw each other as often as they could.

  Ruby liked her school. Kimball Elementary was usually four blocks away. But whenever Ruby got the urge, school was nine blocks away: two more blocks over to the driving range to look for golf balls that had come through the fence, three blocks backtracking to school. Ruby was almost eight and was finally allowed to walk to school by herself. She wore lots of reflective tape—just so her mother wouldn’t have to worry, especially on foggy mornings.

  “Everyone should wear reflective tape,” Ruby liked to say. And she got to say this every year at the school safety assembly.

  Ruby liked her new wallet. The librarian gave out a shiny wallet to every child who became a card-carrying member of the Beacon Hill Public Library. It was school-bus yellow and closed with crunchy Velero. Ruby carried her wallet everywhere. It meant that she was almost ready for a driver’s license and credit cards. Ruby could hardly wait.

  Ruby especially liked after school. Mr. Tupahotu’s magic class began at 3:12 sharp. Ruby was never late. Mr. Tupahotu had been a famous magician before he became a teacher. He turned scarves into butterflies. He floated a beautiful lady in midair. He owned 513 rabbits (not all at once). He appeared on TV. He signed an autograph for Ruby.

  The Great Tupahotu was now just a regular guy, but he was not your regular second-grade teacher. He could read a whole Russian novel (without falling asleep) and usually one of Ruby’s book reports (without confusing the two). In addition he could tell who threw the paper airplane just by the way it was folded, and fold a much more impressive one. He knew the difference between a person, place, and thing, except sometimes when it came to Ruby’s imaginative writing. And he could write in cursive, even on the blackboard.

  In magic class he made everything look so easy. But everything was actually very hard. Ruby could never do any of the tricks the first time around. Or the second. Or sometimes even the 199th. But she was getting better.

  She could put a coin through her elbow.

  She could cut a string into two pieces and then turn it back into one piece.

  She could hypnotize a handkerchief and make it obey.

  She could almost make a coin stand up just by blowing on it.

  She could make knots disappear … usually.

  And she could make flowers appear … sometimes.

  Ruby starred in her very own backyard magic show, Ruby’s Magic Madness. And neighbors on 20th Avenue South agreed that she was truly amazing.

  Ruby liked her neighbors. Wally lived across the street. Before that he’d lived in Hong Kong. Wally was the only child Ruby knew who could speak Cantonese without having gone to Chinese school. He was fluent, Ruby’s mother said, which meant that he could speak Chinese all day without running out of words. Ruby was very impressed. Still, she was glad when Wally did not sign up for magic class. With a little help from Ruby, he had signed up for Bonsai Club.

  Tiger was Ruby’s best friend. He lived two blocks away, but it felt like he lived next door. He was faster than e-mail. “Don’t break the speed limit!” his mother always called after him. He was also fast at making friends. With just the right smile, he was always saying hi and having a chat. Ruby didn’t make friends so quickly. She liked her old friends best.

  “You never know when a new friend might become another best friend,” Tiger told Ruby. “Just smile and look them smack in the eye.”

  But the very best thing about living on 20th Avenue South was Oscar. Oscar was Ruby’s baby brother. When he was brand-new,
he felt as solid as wrapped tuna from the Pike Place Market and smelled like fresh-baked daan taht. He was more beautiful than Ruby had imagined. She had waited a very long time for him. And when he came home from the hospital, she had nearly forgotten that she had wished for a puppy.

  The second very best thing about living on 20th Avenue South was Emma. Emma had the cutest, sweetest little dog. He had a mouthful of pointy teeth and little feet with toenails that went dop-dop-dop wherever he went. His name was Elwyn and he was bilingual. He obeyed commands in Cantonese (thanks to Wally) and in English. He’d graduated summa cum laude from dog obedience school, and so had Emma. Emma was very proud of Elwyn. And Elwyn was happy to be the only dog on 20th Avenue South.

  But Emma also had a baby brother. When he was brand-new, he, too, felt like wrapped fish and smelled like something freshly baked. Sam was more beautiful than Emma had imagined. She had waited a very long time for him. And when he arrived, she and Ruby became as close as sisters.

  Sam weighed 8 pounds, 10 ounces, at birth.

  So did Oscar.

  Sam scored a 9.5 out of a perfect 10 on his Apgar test.

  So did Oscar.

  Sam could tell when it was lunchtime.

  So could Oscar.

  When Sam was only two days old, he smiled at Emma.

  “Its just gas,” Ruby had explained. “It says here that if babies smile before four weeks old, it’s only because of gas.”

  That’s what the baby book said. But Emma didn’t believe it. Emma smiled at Sam. And Sam smiled back. Ruby saw it with her very own eyes. She’d had to think fast.

  She climbed their plum tree, but Oscar wasn’t watching.

  Time Out.

  So she climbed back down.

  She took a bathroom break.

  When she came back, she tried some jokes.

  A feather.

  Funny faces.

  But all Oscar did was cry and sleep.

  Ruby wanted to cry too. Waiting for a stinky baby brother to smile was harder than waiting for morning recess at school.

  Finally, Oscar smiled at Ruby, and he was still only two days old.

  Before long Sam rolled over.

  So did Oscar.

  Sam sat up.

  So did Oscar.

  Sam cut his first tooth.

  So did Oscar.

  Sam said his first word.

  “Da,” he said.

  Emma beamed.

  “Da da da,” he said. In case nobody heard, he said it louder, “Da da da!”

  Ruby looked at Oscar.

  Oscar looked at Ruby.

  Oscar really was the cutest little brother on 20th Avenue South. He had headlight eyes, a drippy tongue, and a runny little nose. Ruby liked doing her magic tricks for Oscar, who cooed and drooled and clapped under their plum tree. Ruby’s magic show had many fans, but Oscar was the best one of all. When everyone else went home, Oscar was still there. Oscar loved Ruby. And Ruby loved Oscar.

  But Oscar was not producing, as Emma had delicately put it.

  “Please,” Ruby pleaded. “Say something…. Anything.”

  Oscar put all his toes in his mouth.

  He blew bubbles through his lips.

  He laughed.

  To make matters worse, Sam said his second word. And then his third. And his fourth. Soon, he said what sounded like the longest sentence Ruby had ever heard.

  “Da dee a ma mi haba bee dee bee bee,” he said.

  “Daddy and Mommy have a pretty baby,” Emma translated triumphantly.

  So Ruby tried candy.

  And presents.

  She promised fireworks.

  She tried hypnosis.

  Desperate, she asked for advice.

  “Sorry,” said the lady at the dog obedience school, giving Oscar the once-over in his puppy suit. “He has to be a real puppy.”

  “Every baby develops at his own rate,” Mr. Tupahotu gently told Ruby. “You can’t hurry nature.”

  So Ruby tried the library. She borrowed language tapes and videos.

  She put Oscar in front of the mirror. She moved his lips. He moved his hips. Ruby was a convincing ventriloquist. And Oscar was ready for his nap.

  Ruby was close to tears. Oscar gave Ruby a yawn. And a burp.

  But Oscar did not say boo.

  That night Ruby dreamed that Oscar was making a speech.

  “My fellow babies …,” Oscar began.

  Millions were transfixed. When Oscar finished, the applause was thunderous and utterly transporting. Ruby clapped loudest of all.

  The next morning Ruby ran straight to Oscar’s room. But Oscar the Orator was nowhere to be seen. It was just the same old Oscar. And Ruby felt her love for him getting thin around the edges.

  Now the worst thing about living on 20th Avenue South was Oscar. Oscar was not talking. If only Oscar would say something—one word—everything would be right again. Rain would fall. Slugs would ooze. Plums would grow. It was all Ruby wanted. It was all she could think of. She wished for it with her cigar box full of old birthday candles and Thanksgiving wishbones. And just before falling asleep, she wished for it upon all the stars in the sky.

  2 Ruby’s Magic Madness

  One day, when Ruby was busy, Oscar spoke.

  “See,” he peeped. “Seeeeeeee.”

  His words were glass-noodle clear.

  Ruby froze.

  “See,” Oscar repeated. “Seeeeee.” He pointed at Ruby’s sleeve where she had hidden her coin for Ruby’s Vanishing Quarter trick.

  Ruby could not remember what she was doing. Clink! A shiny quarter fell out of her sleeve and rolled away.

  Everyone laughed. Ruby’s audience thought Oscar was very funny. Oscar clapped and blew bubbles through his lips. Everyone laughed again.

  Almost everyone, that is. Ruby did not laugh.

  Ruby moved on to her next trick, Magnetic Ruby, in which a spoon sticks to Ruby’s hand as though she is magnetic.

  “See,” Oscar said. “Seeeeee Bee!” “Bee” was Oscar’s second word (He could not quite say “Ruby.”). And he pointed right at where she was holding the spoon.

  The crowd roared. Plums dropped from the tree. Oscar clapped. He was very clever. Now everyone could see that “Bees” finger was secretly bent around the spoon.

  Ruby closed her eyes. She wished with all her magical powers that she could make Oscar disappear.

  But when she opened her eyes, he was still there.

  The next day Ruby did her tricks fas And trickier. She sprinkled magic dust. And she said the magic Cantonese words, “Sic faan! Sic faan!”—which means “Eat rice! Eat rice!” Ruby couldn’t think of any Cantonese or English words more magical than that. She waved her arms. She flapped her cape.

  Ruby held her breath. The tree held its plums. It was so quiet, you could hear someone’s TV through an open window. Everyone turned to look at Oscar. But Oscar was holding his breath too, his cheeks inflated like balloons.

  Everyone clapped for Ruby, who was again truly amazing on 20th Avenue South. Ruby was so pleased she gave an encore, performing her very special Knot in Hand trick. Everyone was mesmerized. Everyone that is, except Oscar.

  “See Bee,” Oscar peeped. He made a fist like Ruby’s, then pointed at it with his other hand to show where the knot was. Oscar smiled sweetly.

  “Morel” Wally shouted.

  “More!” Tiger stomped.

  “Os-car! Os-car! Os-car!” they all chanted, giving Ruby’s baby brother a stomping ovation.

  A hard, green plum fell smack on Ruby’s head. Ouch! Ruby was mad. If only Oscar would babble and act like the baby that he was, everything would be right again on 20th Avenue South. Why did Oscar have to talk so much?

  Now Ruby was no longer truly amazing on 20th Avenue South. Oscar was. And Ruby felt all her love for him drying up like spilled soda on a hot sidewalk.

  Ruby’s Magic Madness was closed the next day. Instead of performing, Ruby put her elbows on the back of their sofa and sighed hea
vily and watched the clouds drift past their window. She’d seen her father do this whenever he had lost at Scrabble. Oscar put his elbows on the sofa too, and he watched Ruby and sighed too.

  Just when Ruby thought she’d never do magic again, she had an idea.

  A great idea!

  What if Oscar stayed in the house during Ruby’s show? He could be as clever as he wanted, as long as no one could see him. Yes! There was even something magical about it.

  So Oscar stayed indoors. Only Ruby knew that the black tufts moving silently back and forth across the bottom of their window were from the top of Oscar’s head.

  Ruby’s Magic Madness went on once again. And because magicians never tell their secrets, no matter how much the audience begs, Ruby was once again truly amazing on 20th Avenue South.

  Until … Emma made her announcement.

  “Sam can walk,” Emma bragged. “Sam can talk. Sam knows his colors. Sam knows his shapes.” Then the big sister of all announcements: “Sam even knows magic tricks.”

  Ruby could see that Sam could walk … when he wasn’t crawling. Sam could talk … if you considered baby babble talking. Sam knew his colors … except for orange and purple. And his shapes … well, he knew squares. But magic tricks? No way! Sam showed Ruby his Mummy Finger in a Box. He pushed his finger through a hole in the bottom of a little box. He opened the box. Ta-da! There was his finger! He wiggled his finger across the cotton in the box, phh-phh. He closed the box. He opened the box again. His little finger went phh-phh. Now you see it, and now you see it again. Sure was cute. But everyone could see that it was not magic.

  Ruby couldn’t stand it.

  She ran straight into her house and grabbed Oscar from behind the sofa.

  In less time than it takes for Tiger to make a friend, Ruby reappeared. She was no ordinary magician. She had a baby brother assistant who could walk fast, talk even faster, and now he knew real magic tricks. She taught him how to blow a half-dollar into a standing position, just like that. (A secret wire attached to the back of the coin and falling through a crack in the table let Oscar pull it upright.) It beat the Mummy Finger in a Box any day.