Authors: Katharine Kerr
only you could see through this water. Black tadpoles zipped by.
She wished she had a paper cup, but Mom would only make her
throw them out, and they would die.
Carefully, she started to climb the rocks. She'd never made it
to the top but maybe she could today. Behind her. Lisa and Beth
were talking as they splashed along. She knew they wouldn't
want to catch up. They'd be too scared.
She wasn't scared. Not of strangers, not of monsters, not of
anything as long as she was in this park. The old trees with their
leaves overhead like a princess* canopy bed made her feel safe-
When she was here, just hiking or learning to shoot a bow at a
target, or row a boat, she felt grown-up and strong. She wanted
to come to the M&S Day Camp every summer till she got to be
a Senior Camper. And then, maybe, if she ever grew up, maybe
she could be a counselor with a car and kids.
298
Susan Shwartz
She waded across a rock where the moss grew springy under-
foot toward another one that glinted in the sunlight. Under the
mud and the green slime, it was shining white, the biggest
luckystone in the world. She'd never be able to dig it up and
carry it home, the way you were supposed to when you found a
luckystone. And even if she did, what good would it be? There
probably weren't enough dimes in the world for the fairies to pay
for a luckystone that size.
Good campers had to try.
So Marty dug her stick in at the tucky stone's base and started
to push and dig it out of its bed. For a while, pushing and puffing
and panting and splashing filled her whole world.
Finally, the rock budged, and Marty rested, leaning on the
stick.
Splash ... splash, the girls were behind her over in that shad-
owy patch near where the caves were. They were making so
much racket they could forget it if they wanted to catch any fish
or tadpoles.
She turned to tell them that. And froze. Lisa and Beth weren't
standing there. It was a man. Her blood froze worse than her feet
in the water. A Stranger.
He had a beard and a dirty face. His clothes were torn, and he
had his hands out below his waist. In them ...
"What's that you've got?" Marty asked. "Is it a rabbit's foot?"
He started toward her, making a goony laughing sound.
She stamped her foot in the water, an angry splash. She hated
it when grown-ups didn't answer her questions. "What is that?"
she asked again.
Again, the laughter. She didn't like the way he laughed. She
didn't like the way he looked. His eyes were ftmny, bloodshot
and sort of flat.
"You're crazy," she told him. "Crazy!"
Her voice was louder than it should be when a kid talks to
grownups, especially if the kid is talking back. She knew Beth
and Lisa heard because they screamed, and she heard them fall-
ing and running, always screaming, toward the shore.
"Go 'way, you crazy, you," she said. She pulled her stick out
of the water and shook it at him.
He jumped forward and tried to pull the stick out of her hand.
Now Marty screamed. He was going to grab her and drag her
into that cave and then ... she didn't know what happened when
strangers dragged little girls into caves, but she knew it was Bad.
THE MONSTERS OF MILL CREEK PARK 299
If she tried to run, he'd tackle her and she'd drown. So she
had to face him.
"You go away!" she said, keeping the stick between them like
she'd seen in Robin Hood. Maybe she could knock him over, and
then she could run.
He grabbed for the stick again.
"No!" she shouted.
Then she screamed again. What looked like a wall of brown
fur dashed growling from the rocks between her and the Stran-
ger, grabbed him, and flung him like Manitou flung the Monster
of Flaboongie into the pond.
The Stranger belly-flopped. For a moment, Marty thought he
was dead. Then he crawled out of the water as fast as he could
and ran away.
The monster that had saved her turned to look at her. She let
her stick drop with a useless little splash. She looked at her hand
with its turquoise ring. It wasn't a real ring from outer space. If
it was, she'd have magic powers and could fight or get away.
Her hand, stupid ring and all, came up toward her mouth, the
baby way it did whenever she was going to cry. Her eyes blurred
and her nose ran—and the monster picked her up and carried her
into the cave.
The monster set Marty down on her feet inside the cave. She
got ready to run. You couldn't let monsters see how scared you
were. Then she forgot her fear and just stood there. For one
thing, she wasn't in a real cave. It was just two or three rocks
standing on end and hanging over each other. Light shone in
through the spaces between them, plenty of light to see that two
other monsters lived in the cave, and they were watching her
and, as best she could tell, giving her friendly monster smiles.
There was the great big monster who had brought her into the
cave—call it the papa monster. There was a middle-size monster,
a little rounder than the great big monster—a mama monster?
And, even though it was me size of a regular grown-up, half-
hiding beside its mother was the baby monster-
Marty had seen bears in the zoo. These were monsters,
though, not bears, and Marty wasn't Goldilocks. The biggest
monster had thrown the Stranger harder than any bear could.
They didn't have claws on their paws, hands, whatever, or she
would have felt them when the monster picked her up. And what
was strangest about all three monsters was their feet. They were
the biggest she had ever seen. If she set her daddy's shoes in a
300 Susan Snwartz
line, she'd need three or four shoes to be as long as one of the
biggest monster's feet.
Maybe they weren't monsters at all, but space people, Marty
thought. She only knew three words of space-people talk, and
maybe "Klaatu barada nikto" wouldn't mean anything to them if
different kinds of space people had different words for things
like Americans and Russians.
Marty raised one hand How the way they did on TV and
opened her mouth to try.... But the smallest bigfooted monster
came over and laid its hand over hers and stared at her. Just like
meeting new little kids at a birthday party. Marty looked at the
bigfoot child—the other child—and smiled.
Something in the cave changed. Grown-ups were grown-ups;
you could always tell if they were mad or scared or happy with
you. These acted like they had found a kid they'd lost in a park-
ing lot- Relieved. Or the way Marty's parents did when she used
a new big word: trying not to smile and hurt her feelings. Unlike
bears, which had little squinchy angry eyes, these monsters' eyes
were gray and calm: they were smart, the idea came to her.
Voices touched inside her mind. Marty jumped a little. The lit-
tle bigfoot holding her hand let out a squeak and backed off to-
ward its mommy. She looked up at the gray eyes and knew the
voices came from inside the bigfoots' heads.
creature as the others?>
come to a human child any more than to you and ... the
thought-word didn't make sense. Maybe it was a name.>
Marty wanted to play with the monster kid. With feet like that,
she'd bet he'd never fall down in the water. And maybe he could
catch better fish than any of the campers. The boys could show
him how to hit a ball, but she could show him the swings and
merry-go-round and maybe bring him home for dinner. She
couldn't wait to show these .... they were people ... to her par-
ents. Daddy gave her books about bigfoots and spacemen. He
would know how to talk to them. Lawyers could talk to anybody.
THE MONSTERS OF MILL CREEK PAJRK 301
shining in the cave, reaching out to touch her like a hug>
Yes, Marty thought. Oh, yes.
She smiled her best smile at the bigfoot family and tried to
make her thoughts real clear. Couldn't you stay? You could live
here, and he could go to school with us. And we'd be friends.
The mother bigfoot shook her long mane and turned away.
The young one darted to a rock, sat down, and pushed at it. The
biggest bigfoot—and his feet were huge—came over and
dropped down so his eyes could look into hers.
But your forest was so beautiful we stopped here for a while ...
you would say "vacation. ">
Marty blinked. Pilgrims wore gray and black with big hats.
They carried muskets and you drew them in November.
They gave her a great idea. "/ know!" she cried before she re-
membered to think instead. "You're hunting for religious free-
dom. Aren't you?"
She reached into her blouse and pulled out the tiny gold Star
of David her mommy gave her two years ago. "My people came
here. Couldn't you be our neighbors? This is a good place."
The other child was holding out something to her. She held
out her hand and felt him put something into it. It was warm
from fee monster's hand and it felt smooth, except where it had
been cut. It was a tiny statue with such a friendly happy look on
its hairy face that maybe it was a holy statue like the kids at St.
Edwards got to have. If you wore a Jewish star, you couldn't
have a statue. But it would be mean not to trade for it. Monster
or not, he was a real nice kid, and Marty knew his people
worked hard to bring him up right.
She took off the star and held it out. The strange kid's eyes lit
up, and he smiled.
And the monster mommy and daddy spoke over the children's
heads, just like real grownups.
And we will keep voice/name sound safe with us when we go->
you hear them shouting outside? Soon, they will come .. ->
302 Susan Shwariz
The mother went to the mouth of the cave.
"I don't want to forget!" Marty let her voice rise, though that
was bad manners. TV had a word for what the monsters planned
to make her have. Am-nes-ia. You were hit on the head, and they
found you. You woke up in the hospital and didn't remember.
The papa bigfoot put his hands ... paws ... whatever—they
were big, too—on her shoulders. He smelled like a wet dog. She
loved dogs, which should have made her feel safe; but remember
that they are animals, Dr. Thomas said. He raised them, so he
knew.
Marty shook her head.
over at his boy like Daddy looked when he kissed her good
night.
a promise to him, and I won't break my word to you. I promise
I won't hurt you->
He was asking, not telling, not making Marty do anything; and
she knew that, big as he was, he was getting scareder the longer
he waited.
"Let me say good-bye first."
He waved his son over. He wore her star on his wrist because
he was too big to wear it round his neck.
"Sorry, I can't keep this," Marty told him and handed him
back the statue.
She watched him set the statue in a little hollow in the rock.
Its big feet didn't quite stick out.
So, the bright star followed the ivory statue. He set a flat rock
gently on top of them, then laid a bigger rock on that. She had
seen hiding places like this on Spin and Marty. They were called
caches. Even if the monster daddy said he'd make her forget,
Marty'd remember. She always did. She even remembered in the
doctor's office when he put the mask over her face and she woke
up with her tonsils out.
She turned to meet the eldest bigfoot's eyes. "I'm ready," she
THE MONSTERS OF MILL CREEK PARK 303
said. Then, what felt like the doctor's mask came down over her
face,
Marty started to forget.
Sun slanted down on her face. The water below her rippled
and flowed, making Marty feel like she really ought to get up