Twelve Impossible Things Before Breakfast (8 page)

BOOK: Twelve Impossible Things Before Breakfast
9.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Like the time the school principal had tried to ban miniskirts and had sent Brenda home for wearing one. Hilary had changed into her junior varsity cheerleading uniform and walked into Mr. Golden's office.

“Do you like our uniforms, sir?” she had said, quietly.

“Of course, Hilary,” Mr. Golden had answered, being too sure of himself to know a trap when he was walking into it.

“Well, we represent the school in these uniforms, don't we?” she had asked.

“And you do a wonderful job, too,” he said.

Snap. The sound of the dosing trap. “Well, they are shorter than any miniskirt,” she said. "And when we do cartwheels, our bloomers show! Brenda never does cartwheels.” She'd smiled then, but there was a deep challenge in her eyes.

Mr. Golden rescinded the ban the next day.

So Hilary didn't like the idea that any Them, real or imagined, would make her afraid to sit with her favorite six-year-olds. She always said yes to Mrs. Mitchell in the end.

 

It was on the night before Halloween, a Sunday, the moon hanging ripely over the Mitchells' front yard, that Hilary went to sit for the twins. Dressed as a wolf in a sheep's clothing, Mr. Mitchell let her in.

“I said they could stay up and watch the Disney special,” he said. “It's two hours, and lasts well past their bedtime. But we are making an exception tonight. I hope you don't mind.” His sheep ears bobbed.

She had no homework and had just finished reading Shirley Jackson's The Haunting of Hill House, which was scary enough for her to prefer having the extra company.

“No problem, Mr. Mitchell,” she said.

Mrs. Mitchell came out of the kitchen carrying a pumpkin pie. Her costume was a traditional witch's. A black stringy wig covered her blond hair. She had blackened one of her front teeth. The twins trailed behind her, each eating a cookie.

“Now, no more cookies,” Mrs. Mitchell said, more to Hilary than to the boys.

Hilary winked at them. Adam grinned, but Andrew, intent on trying to step on the long black hem of his mother's skirt, missed the wink.

“Good-bye,” Hilary called, shutting the door behind the Mitchells. She had a glimpse of the moon, which reminded her of the Jackson book, and made a face at it. Then she turned to the twins. “Now, what about those cookies?” she asked.

They raced to the kitchen, and each had one of the fresh-baked chocolate-chip cookies, the kind with the real runny chocolate.

“Crumbs don't count,” Hilary said. She scraped around the dish for the crumbs, and having counted what cookies remained—there were thirteen—she shooed the boys back into the living room. They turned on the TV and settled down to watch the show, sharing the handful of crumbs slowly through the opening credits.

Adam lasted through the first hour but was fast asleep in Hilary's lap before the second. Andrew stayed awake until nearly the end, but his eyes kept dosing through the commercials. At the final ad, for vitamins, he fell asleep for good.

Hilary sighed. She would have to carry them upstairs to bed. Since she wanted to watch
Friday
the Thirteenth, Part II—or at least she thought she wanted to watch it—she needed to get them upstairs. It wouldn't do for either one to wake up and be scared by the show. And if she woke them, they'd want to know the end of the Disney movie and hear at least one other story. She would miss her show. So she hoisted Adam in her arms and went up the stairs.

He nuzzled against her shoulder and looked so vulnerable and sweet as she walked down the creaky hall, she smiled. Playfully she touched the doors in the proper order, turning around heavily on one leg. She couldn't quite reach her fingers with her mouth until she dumped him on his bed. After covering him with his quilt, she kissed his forehead and then, with a grin, kissed each of her fingers in turn, whispering, “So there,” to the walls when she was done.

She ran down the stairs for Andrew and carried him up as well. He opened his eyes just before they reached the top step.

“Don't forget,” he whispered. To placate him, she touched the doors, turned, and kissed her fingers one at a time.

He smiled sleepily and murmured, “All right. All right now.”

He was fast asleep when she put him under the covers. She straightened up, watched them both for a moment more, listened to their quiet breathing, and went out of the room.

As she went down the stairs, the hollow tap-tapping echo behind her had a furtive sound. She turned quickly but saw nothing. Still, she was happy to be downstairs again.

 

The first half of the show was scary enough. Hilary sat with her feet tucked under a blanket, arms wrapped around her legs. She liked scary stuff usually. She had seen Alien and Aliens and even
Jaws
without blanching, and had finished a giant box of popcorn with Brenda at Night of the Living Dead. But somehow, watching a scary movie alone in the Mitchells' spooky house was too much. Remembering the popcorn, she thought that eating might help. There were still those thirteen chocolate-chip cookies left. Mrs. Mitchell had meant the boys weren't supposed to eat them. Hilary knew she hadn't meant the baby-sitter to starve.

During the commercial break, she threw off the blanket and padded into the kitchen. Mrs. Mitchell had just had new linoleum put on the floor. With a little run, Hilary slid halfway across in her socks.

The plate of cookies was sitting on the counter, next to the stove. Hilary looked at it strangely. There were no longer thirteen cookies. She counted quickly. Seven—no, eight. Someone had eaten five.

“Those twins!” she said aloud. But she knew it couldn't have been them. They never disobeyed, except when she let them, and their mother had said specifically that they could have no more. Besides, they had never left the sofa once the movie had started. And the only time she had left either one of them alone had been when she had taken Adam upstairs, leaving Andrew asleep.... She stopped. Andrew hadn't been asleep. Not entirely. Still, she couldn't imagine Andrew polishing off five chocolate-chip cookies in the time it had taken her to tuck Adam into bed.

“Now...” she said to herself, “if it had been Dana Jankowitz!” She'd baby-sat Dana for almost a year before they moved away, and that kid was capable of anything.

Still puzzled, she went over to the plate of cookies, and as she got close, she stepped into something cold and wet. She looked down. There was a puddle on the floor, soaking into her right sock. An icy-cold puddle. Hilary looked out the kitchen window. It was raining.

Someone was in the house.

She didn't want to believe it, but there was no other explanation. Her whole body felt cold, and she could feel her heart stuttering in her chest. She thought about the twins sleeping upstairs, how she had told them she was hired to make sure nothing bad happened to them. But what if something bad happened to her? She shuddered and looked across the room. The telephone was hanging by the refrigerator. She could try and phone for help, or she could run outside and go to the nearest house. The Mitchells lived down a long driveway, and it was about a quarter mile to the next home. And dark. And wet. And she didn't know how many someones were in the house. Or outside. And maybe it was all her imagination.

But—and if her jaw trembled just the slightest she didn't think anyone could fault her—what if the someones wanted to hurt the twins? She was the only one home to protect them.

As silently as possible, she slid open the knife drawer and took out a long, sharp carving knife. Then slowly she opened the door to the back stairs...

...and the man hiding there leaped at her. His face was hidden behind a gorilla mask. He was at least six feet tall, wearing blue jeans and a green shirt. She was so frightened she dropped the knife and ran through the dining room, into the living room, and up the front stairs.

Calling, “Girly, girly, girly, come here,” the man ran after her.

Hilary took the steps two at a time, shot around the comer, and ran down the hall. If only she could get to the twins' room, she thought, she could lock and barricade the door by pushing the dressers in front of it. And then she'd wake up the twins and they'd go through the trapdoor in the closet up to the attic. They'd be safe there.

But the man was pounding behind her, laughing oddly and calling out.

Hilary heard the chittering only after she passed the third door. And the man's screaming as she got to the twins' room. She didn't take time to look behind her but slid into the room, slammed the door, rammed the bolt home, and slipped the desk chair under the doorknob. She didn't bother waking the twins or moving anything else in front of the door. The man's high screams subsided to a low, horrifying moan. Then at last they stopped altogether. After all, he hadn't taken time to touch the doors or turn on his leg or kiss his fingers one at a time. He hadn't known the warding spell. Once a night and you're...

She waited a long time before opening the door and peeking out. When she did, all she could see was a crumpled gorilla mask, a piece out of a green shirt, and a dark stain on the floor that was rapidly disappearing, as if someone—or something—were licking it up.

Hilary closed the door quietly. She took a deep breath and lay down on top of the covers by Andrew's side. Next time she came to baby-sit, she wouldn't tell the “Golden Arm” story. Not next time or ever. After all, she owed Them a favor.

Bolundeers

THE ONE CHORE Brancy hated more than any other was taking out the food scraps and emptying them into the compost heap. She didn't mind the dry garbage, or rinsing out the bottles and cans for the recycling bins. She didn't even mind tying up the endless numbers of newspapers that seemed to positively breed in her mother's den, though she refused to go into the den to get them. But the compost...

She flung the final bucketload onto the small mountain of scraps and tried not to watch the tomato ends and eggshells creep down the slimy sides. And she didn't take a new breath until she was well upwind and moving fast.

God! she thought. Then amended it quickly, in case God was listening, though she doubted he was. Gosh! Ever since her father's death she had had these big moments of Unbelief. Still, she thought, probably better not to swear. She had an additional thought then. Imagine if the whole world was like the compost heap. Aid not just my life.

Of course, the world had once actually been that way. They had talked about that in school. The Cretaceous, with its great, wet, green, muddy, mucky, swamp-and-romp dinosaur playground. It was supposed to have been full of fetid and moist, murky growth. like an overgrown compost heap.
Imagine living in that!
Brancy thought. I'd rather die first.

The word die resounded inside her. It was ugly and sharp and it hurt.

She rinsed the pail at the outside tap, then walked back into the house. ‘Done,” she called out to her little brother. “I get dishes tomorrow, and you, Mr. Brat—you get the compost.”

“I hate the compost,” Danny whimpered. “Something's growing out there.” He spoke in the quiet, whispery, scared voice he had used ever since their father died.

“Of course something's growing there,” Brancy said. She deliberately made her voice sound spooky.

“It is?” His eyes got wide.

"Volunteers,” Brancy told him. “And if you're not careful, they'll get you!”

“Mommmmmmmy,” Danny cried, and ran out of the room.

Moments later he came back, followed by their mother. She was not amused. “Brancy, he has had enough nightmares since ... without you adding to them.” Her mother never actually used the word death. Or cancer. Her conversation was full of odd ellipses and gaps. Brancy hated it. "I need you to be more ... understanding about ... about things.”

“All I said was that volunteers grow up in the compost heap. And you know they do.”

“She said the Bolundeers would get me.” Danny was white faced. “Maybe get all of us. Like they got...” He didn't say the word Daddy. He didn't have to.

Mrs. Callanish knelt down. “Oh, Danny, a volunteer”—she pronounced the word very carefully—“is a tomato or squash or some other vegetable that grows from the seeds that are thrown into the compost heap. And they can't possibly get you. Not like ... Have you ever seen a fierce tomato or a mean pumpkin?” She made a face.

“At Halloween,” Brancy said. “All those teeth.”

“Brancy!” Mrs. Callanish's mouth was drawn down into a thin line.

Brancy knew, even before her mother spoke, that she had gone too far this time. In fact, since her father's death everything that Brancy said or did seemed wrong, hurtful, awry.

Her mother was changed, too, beyond all recognition. Before, she had been a funny, cozy kind of mom, always ready to listen, even when she was busy. And as a DA, she was always busy. Now she was stem and unreachable. Brancy understood why—or thought she did. Her mother was trying to be brave and strong, like her father had been throughout his illness. But what made everything worse was that her mother never let them talk about him. About his illness, about his death. She just set his memory firmly between the spaces. He was... (gone).... It was almost as though he had never been a part of their lives at all.

“OK, get your homework out of the way and then we can have a chapter of Tolkien tonight. I've managed to get most of my work done.” Mrs. Callanish nodded, but there was no warmth in her voice, as if reading to them were a duty she was still willing to perform—but not one she was happy doing.

Brancy knew that Danny would be finished with his homework first. After all, how much homework does a kindergartner have, except maybe coloring? But she had at least an hour of math and social studies and a whole page of spelling words to memorize. Mr. Dooley, her English teacher, was a bear on spelling words. He had won a national spelling bee as a fourth grader and loved to tell them about it. Before her father had died, Brancy had been class champion—and Mr. Dooley's pet. But she had gotten C's on her last three spelling tests and had never made up the two she missed because of the funeral. Mr. Dooley didn't even kid around with her anymore. Which is fine, Brancy thought. Just fine. Mr. Dooley is kind of joofy on the subject of spelling, anyway.

BOOK: Twelve Impossible Things Before Breakfast
9.1Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Vineyard Stalker by Philip R. Craig
The Honeywood Files by H.B. Creswell
Small Town Girl by Patricia Rice
Brainstorm by Belle, Margaret
Three Seconds by Anders Roslund, Borge Hellstrom
The Stolen Bones by Carolyn Keene
The Diva Diaries by Anders, Karen
The Truth Behind his Touch by Cathy Williams