Big Wheel

Big Wheel

Chapter One

It’s hard to hold your nose and steer your bike at the same time.  Especially when you’re riding down a dark, bumpy road on a moonless night with a heavy load of very old, very dead fish you’re about to dump in somebody’s swimming pool.

It wasn’t hard getting the fish.  Just a quick visit to the Dumpster out back of Sharkey’s Market with a cardboard box, and I had all I could carry.  It wasn’t hard sneaking out of my house either to do the deed.  Mom and Dad both sleep like a pair of chipmunks in winter.  So you could say things might’ve been a whole lot worse.

On the other hand, you could say things might be a whole lot better if I had my buddy Tag along to help out.  Or Mike and Corey or the rest of my gang.  But if they were here, I wouldn’t be doing this in the first place, now would I?

You can’t see my destination from the road, which is good because nobody there can see me either.  It’s a big old house, and a fancy one, too, set back among the trees and bushes, with gates and columns and a long, sweeping driveway. Just a few weeks ago the gates were rusty, the columns cracked, and the driveway was covered with weeds up to my knees.  Now everything’s been plastered and painted and the driveway’s covered with gravel.  White gravel that gleams in my little headlight.  It’s very inviting, that gravel-covered driveway.  It makes you want to follow it right up to the house the way old Dorothy trotted on up her yellow brick road to Oz.

But I know better than to do that.  Instead I zip past the driveway to the big beech tree carved with everybody’s initials.  My headlight picks out a brand-new pair of them.  “B.O. and P.U. Forever.”  Somebody ought to get himself a new name, a new girlfriend, or both, I snicker to myself–but softly, because sound travels funny out here, and I don’t want anybody to hear me laughing.

Just beyond the tree is a little turnoff that leads through a gap in a fence to a shortcut straight to the pool.  That’s where I ditch my bike.  I’m praying nobody’s fixed that gap yet or I’m sunk.  I hoist the box off the bike and start walking.  If I thought the fish were heavy and smelly before, there’s no way to describe just how much they weigh and stink now that I’m carrying them on my shoulder.  But, hey, there’s no use complaining, and nobody to complain to.

When I reach the fence, I find that I’m in luck.  The gap’s still there, and it’s maybe even a little wider.  I squeeze through with the carton and start down the shortcut.  it’s even darker here than on the road, and now I don’t even have my headlight.  A branch pokes me in the ear. Mosquitoes buzz around my face and hands, biting me anywhere they feel like it.  A briar whips across my ankles and sticks to my sock.  I hear a faint rip as I walk on, pulling it free.

It’s not a real steamy night, but I’m sweating pretty good anyway.  I can hear myself breathing kind of hard, too, along with a lot of other sounds.  You’d think it would be quiet out here now, but it’s noisy as a school cafeteria at lunchtime, what with the crickets and the katydids and who knows what else carrying on. To my right, a bullfrog burps in a bubbling little stream.  To my left, something fast and probably furry skitters into the bushes.  I hope its name isn’t Little Flower and that, if it is, it’s got better things to do than squirt me with its perfume.

And I keep on walking.

At the end of the path, I know there’s a low stone wall.  I also know I won’t be able to see it or feel it with my hands, which are occupied.  When I figure I’ve nearly reached it, I go slow as a baby taking its first steps, to make sure I don’t bump into it and mess up my knees.  When my big toe stubs rock, I know I’m there.

Carefully, I set down the box on the wall and hop over.  I take a few seconds to wipe the sweat off my face and scratch all my bug bites, which are starting to itch something fierce.  Then I lift up the carton once more.  Only half a football field to go and I’m there, I tell myself, squeezing through a row of hedges onto neatly trimmed grass.

Soon, I see it.  The pool.  Black as a tar pit under the stars.  Way off is the house, and it’s dark, too, just the way I hoped it would be.  I stare toward the windows.  I can’t see them, but I take a guess at which one’s his.  “Good night. Sleep nice and tight.  Don’t wake up till the morning light, turkey,” I rasp.  I stride forward and my leg sinks into a hole up to my calf.  The box goes flying, and I fall flat on my face.

For one minute, all I can do is lie there, stunned.  For the next minute, I’m still lying there, staring at the house to see if any lights go on, if anyone heard the noise.  But they don’t, and they didn’t.

Finally, I manage to sit up and check all my body parts.  Nothing’s busted, but my left knee’s burning with what feels like a nasty scrape.  I flex it.  Yeah, it’s a big bruise all right.  My leg’s gonna be good and stiff soon, so I’ve go to finish up–and fast.

I grope around, expecting to find fish all over the lawn.  But amazingly, the box is intact, still taped shut.  I take it over to the pool, tear off the tape, and slide the fish into the water, so nice and easy they barely make a splash.

When I’m done, I stand up and look at the still, dark house once more.  “Sunrise. Open your eyes.  You’re gonna get a big surprise,” I rhyme.  Too bad I won’t be around to see it, I add silently.  Then, picking up the empty carton, which I’ll dump in a trash can somewhere along the road, I roll on out of there as quickly as I can, limping and scratching and grinning like a gorilla that’s stolen his archenemy’s bunch of bananas.

 

It’s Hard to Read a Map with a Beagle on Your Lap

IT'S HARD TO READ A MAP WITH A BEAGLE ON YOUR LAP

(excerpts)

There once was a golden retriever.
In a ballgame he got in a fever
He brought back the bats,
the helmets and hats,
And then carried off the reliever.

***

At night I go to bed and dream
That I’m a movie star.
I own a big white mansion.
I drive a big red car.
At night while I have visions
Of being someone classy
I wonder if my puppy dreams
She’s Rin Tin Tin or Lassie

California Demon

(excerpt from Chapter One)

Exactly one week before Christmas, at 1:45 on an afternoon as cold and snowy as only a December afternoon in Vermont can be, Rosie Rivera sat tied to a chair in the basement of her mother’s magic shop, listening to the sounds of bumping and crashing on the floor above.

If only, she thought miserably.  Are there any crummier words in the English language?  If only.  If only I were beautiful.  If only Johnny Haines liked me.  if only I hadn’t tried to make a love potion to get Johnny Haines to like me.  And, especially, if only I hadn’t opened the wrong bottle by mistake and let out that nasty little imp who’s upstairs wreaking heaven knows what havoc.

Rosie signed, then frowned.  it’s Lydia’s fault, really.  if only she’d taught me how to make a proper love potion in the first place, everything would have been fine.  But Lydia won’t teach me a thing.  She doesn’t want me to learn magic.  Heck, she doesn’t even want to practice magic herself.  Real magic, that is–not those silly games and party tricks she demonstrates and sell upstairs.  I mean, honestly, what good is having a witch for a mother if she doesn’t want to be one?

The ceiling rattled above her head.  Lydia’s going to kill me when she gets back.  Rosie sighed again, more mournfully than before.  Then the sigh turned to a shudder.  If that creature doesn’t kill me first, she thought, and she opened her mouth to scream for help, but all that came out was a goose’s honk–and a feeble one at that.  For her second attempt she mooed like a cow.  No wonder the imp hadn’t bothered to gag her.  It obviously found the idea of Rosie sounding like a barnyard far more amusing.

Rosie pursed her lips.  Okay, Rivera, she told herself, one thing Lydia did teach you is to look at the bright side of things.  Maybe the imp will get bored and go back in its bottle.  A bone-jarring thump and the shatter of glass told her this hadn’t happened yet.  She winced, but bravely persisted.  And when it gets bored and goes back in its bottle, a customer will come and find me before Lydia does.  Then I’ll straighten up the mess and she’ll never know what happened.

Bang! Smash! Rosie winced again and had to admit it was hopeless.  Face it, girl.  That bottle was dated 1928.  If you’d been stuck in a bottle over sixty eyars, would you want to go back inside?  Furthermore, there hasn’t been a customer all day–which, as if things aren’t bad enough, will really drive Lydia crazy, it being nearly Christmas and she’s been threatening to close the store if business doesn’t pick up–and I can’t imagine anyone will come in now, with what’s going on up there.  Thud! Splat!

Oh no, Rosie moaned, and she strained hard against the thin cords the imp had wrapped around her until, exhausted, she fell back in her seat.

Suddenly, all the hideous noise ceased.  A moment later, cutting through the silence, came the clear, sweet ring of the door chimes.  A customer, Rosie exalted.  At last.

Chester, The Out of Work Dog

CHESTER, THE OUT OF WORK DOG

(excerpt)

There were two things Chester loved most in the world – his family and his sheep.

Chester’s family was named Wippenhooper.  There was Ma Wippenhooper, Pa Wippenhooper, and their children, Claude, Maude, and Willy.  The Wippenhoopers all looked different.

The sheep all looked pretty much the same. But Chester could recognize each and every one.  He had to.  It was his job.

Every morning after breakfast Chester would herd his sheep out of their pen to a pasture.  Every evening he’d bring them back.  He ran ahead of the sheep and showed them where to go.  He steered them left.  He steered them right.  He charged and chased to keep them all in line.  He made sure not one of them got lost or hurt along the way.  He was very good at his work.

At night when his work was done, Chester would settle down happily with the Wippenhoopers first to listen to a little television and later to the quieter country sounds of the wind in the apple trees, the crickets in the grass, and the distant bleat of his sleepy sheep.  Then, curled up on Willy’s bed, Chester too would fall asleep and dream nothing but pleasant dreams.

But one day the Wippenhoopers sold the farm. They packed their belongings into a big truck and moved to town. Chester went with them. His sheep stayed behind.

In My Tent

IN MY TENT

(excerpt)

On the day the twins were born
Dad promised me my very own tent
The snow was falling fat flakes on the river
like feathers from my pillow
when I have a fight with Jon
It was hard to think of sleeping under the stars
with the tricky wind tickling our noses nibbling our ears
But Dad bent his head to the frozen ground “Listen hard,”
he said “and you can hear spring snoring”
So I bent too and listened and heard a tiny
puh puh puh gentle as a baby’s breath
“She’ll be getting up soon,” Dad said
But we tiptoed all the way home
so she wouldn’t wake up yet

The Golden Heart of Winter

THE GOLDEN HEART OF WINTER

(excerpt)

When the leaves were crisping and the grass glowed in its final burst of green, a blacksmith felt the autumn in his sinews, laid down his hammer on his anvil, and called to his three sons.

“No one can make a sword that sings like I can,” the eldest was boasting.

“My knives are so fine, they fly from their masters’  hands without being thrown,” the second son bragged, waving a dagger before him.

“Enough!” bellowed their father.  “Be quiet and listen to me.”  He looked around the forge. “Where is Half?”

“Here, Father,” his youngest son said from the corner where he’d been watching a mouse. Half, so named by his brothers, did not make knives or swords.  No one would let him near the forge, for they all thought him a fool.  Instead, he fetched wood for the furnace and cleaned out the ashes.  And he was very good at soothing the horses that had to be shod.

The blacksmith looked at his sons and shook his head sadly.  “I am tired,” he said.  “I am growing old.  Soon I will lay down my hammer for the last time.  I would have all three of you run this smithy, but I see that it cannot be.  Therefore, one of you alone must take my place.”

“Then that one shall be me,” said the eldest son.

“No, no.  It shall be me,” insisted the second son.

Half said nothing at all.

The blacksmith raised his hand.  “Listen well and learn how I shall choose my heir.  Go forth, each of you, and bring back something of value.  Whatever is worth the most will mark the master of this forge.”

The two eldest sons looked at each other.  Then they turned to Half, who was studying a beetle scuttling across the floor.

“This half-wit as well is to go on such a quest?”  The eldest laughed.

“Yes, he will go.  He, too, is my son.”

“But, Father…” the second son began.

“No more words.  There will be time enough for words when you return.”

Nine O’Clock Lullaby

NINE O'CLOCK LULLABY

(excerpt)

9 p.m. in Brooklyn, New York

The vroom and shush of traffic

outside the bedroom window

while Mama turns the pages

of a sleeptime tale.

9 p.m. in Brooklyn, New York, is…

***

10 p.m. in Puerto Rico

Sweet rice, fruit ice, coconut candy.

Papa playing congas, Tio his guitar.

Swaying lanterns in the branches,

dancing people on the grass.

Bedtime is forgotten on a special party night.

10 p.m. in Puerto Rico is…

***

Midnight on the mid-Atlantic

Nothing blacker than the water,

nothing wider than the sky.

Pitch and toss, pitch and toss.

The Big Dipper might just ladle

a drink out of the sea.

Midnight on the mid-Atlantic is…

***

2 a.m. in England

Bread in the pantry at nighttime

tastes better than cream cakes at tea.

2 a.m. in England is…

Exotic Birds

(excerpt)

INTRODUCTION

You are walking through a jungle in South America.  High up in a tree you see a monkey swinging by its tail.  A shadow passes overhead.  Zap!  Before you can blink, sharp claws grab the monkey and carry it away.  you have just seen a harpy eagle getting its dinner…

It is a hot, dry day.  Your jeep is moving slowly through the African plain.  Up the road watching you is a tall, long-necked figure standing on two scaly legs.  You drive a little closer, and, whoosh, off it goes, dashing across the brown grass at forty-five miles per hour.  Quick, snap a picture!  It’s an ostrich on the run…

You have been in cold places before, but no place is as cold as this.  it’s a good thing you’re only visiting.  Who or what, you ask could live at seventy-five degrees below zero?  Then you see them, thousands of them, huddled together, each with an egg on his foot.  What are they?  Emperor penguins, spending the whole winter in a world of ice…

Harpy eagle, ostrich, emperor penguin.  What do all of these strange creatures have in common? They are birds–exotic birds.

Twenty Ways to Lose Your Best Friend

Chapter One

The President of the United States made me lose my best friend.

He doesn’t know he did.

And Sandy,  my once best friend, doesn’t know it was his fault either.

It’s rotten not having a best friend.  it’s more alone than being alone.  When you’re alone, but you have a best friend, you always know you’ll see her soon and then you won’t be alone anymore.  But when you’re alone without a best friend, you feel you’re going to be alone forever.  Which is how I feel right now.

But I guess I’d better begin at the beginning.

It was Election Day.  We were having dinner–Mom, Dad, my older brother, Ronnie, and me. Mom was mad.  She’s mad a lot.  We’re all pretty used to it, especially since she isn’t usually mad at us.  It’s other things that get her angry–things other people do.  “Most people have small minds,” she says.

Dad teases her sometimes.  He hardly ever gets angry.  He says getting angry won’t help people’s minds get any bigger.

Anyway, at dinnertime on Election Day Mom said, “You know, I voted this afternoon.”  She plopped some mashed potatoes on my plate.  “While I was on line, I heard two men talking. Ooh, they made me mad.”  She poured some gravy on my potatoes.  It splashed over the side.  “One of them said to the other, ‘I don’t think he’s as good as the other guy.  But I went to school with him, so I’m voting for him.’  Isn’t that the dumbest thing you ever heard?”

She went over to Ronnie.  He was reading a comic book.  “You should vote for who you think is the best person to be president.  You shouldn’t vote for someone just because you know him.”  She dumped some potatoes on Ronnie’s plate.  Some of the potatoes fell off on him.

“Ma, watch out!” he yelled.  He held up his comic book.  It had potato lumps all over it.

Mom frowned and grabbed the comic book out of his hand.  “You shouldn’t be reading at the dinner table.”  She put the comic on an empty chair and carefully poured gravy on Ronnie’s potatoes.

Next she brought the potatoes and gravy to Dad.  She started to dish them out, but he took them from her.  “I’m right, aren’t I, Richard?” she said.

“Yes.  Ronnie shouldn’t read at the table.”

Mom made a face.  “I meant about voting for the best person.”

“Oh, well.  Yes, I think you’re right, Jane.  But I can understand how the man you heard felt.  A lot of people would vote for a friend even if he or she weren’t the best person for the job.”

“A lot of people have small minds,” Mom said.  Then she looked at me.  “What do you think, Emma?” she asked.

“I don’t know,” I said.  “I’m too young to vote for the president.”

“That’s true.  But you never know.  Someday soon you might have to choose between a friend and someone else for some job…Now, eat your potatoes.”

“Okay, Mom,” I said.

I didn’t think about what Mom said anymore that night.  I didn’t really think I was going to think about it anymore at all.

Boy, was I wrong.

 

Charmed

(excerpt from Chapter One)

Sss came the sound again.

Miranda’s hand froze in midair.  Her skin prickled.  “It’s coming from my room,” she said.

Slowly she walked down the hallway.  With each step, the noise grew louder, nearer.  Maybe it’s the wind, she told herself.  But she knew it wasn’t windy out.

Her door was closed.  She didn’t remember closing it.  The hiss was making it rattle and hum.  Swallowing hard, Miranda grasped the doorknob.  It felt icy cold.  She shivered and dropped her hand.  Suddenly, she let out her breath.  “This is ridiculous,” she said.  “I’m being silly.”  Once again seizing the knob, which was now at least ten degrees warmer, she opened the door.

The noise stopped immediately.  She switched on the light.  Everything looked the same–her desk, her dresser, her bed.  Nothing was out of place.  She went over to her closet and flung open that door.  She could see clear to the back, and there was nothing inside except for her clothes, hung neatly as ever.

Maybe it’s some kind of bug.  A cicada or a katydid, she thought.  But she vaguely recalled it wasn’t the time of year for either one.  She sat down on her bed for a while.  I wish Bastable would come back, she thought sadly.  Then she remembered the cookies.

She jumped up, heading for the door, and nearly tripped.  “What the…”  She looked down at her feet.  Uncle Gerald’s basket was lying there.

How did it get here this time? I know I put it over there just this afternoon, stupid thing. She picked it up, nearly threw it in its corner, and left the room.

She stopped in the kitchen, put Bastable’s cookies on a plate, then went back to the living room where she watched TV for a long time with the sound off, making up her own dialogue for the succession of sitcoms and cop shows.  At last, she decided she might as well go to bed.  She brushed her teeth, washed her face, and turned out all but the front hall light.  Then she padded to her room.

The door was open as she’d left it.  With a small sigh of relief and fatigue, she walked inside and flicked on the light switch.  But no light came on.  With a bang, the door slammed shut behind her, and the hissing began again.  There was no doubt this time where it was coming from.  It was coming from the basket–shining like a small silver spaceship right on top of Miranda’s bed.