Authors: Lindsey Little
Tags: #supernatural, #fantasy, #junior fiction, #bullying, #Australian fiction, #Australian juvenile fiction
One â these things are real, but as long as no one else can see them they're going to keep getting me into trouble and I won't have any evidence to show it's not my fault.
Two â they're not real, in which case I'm insane and starting to get violent. Maybe I did trip Martin Hacker after all. Maybe it's just my crazy brain blaming it on imaginary blue creatures.
And if that's true, then what crazy, violent thing am I going to do next?
A brighter light illuminates the room from behind me. Looking up, I see Claire holding the door to the hall open, staring down at me.
âYou know, they've invented this great thing called electricity,' she tells me, reaching for the switch.
âLeave it,' I say. Her hand stops â she's caught between being a smart-alec and being nice â then falls back to her side. She walks down the steps and plonks herself beside me.
âI don't think it's going to be so bad here, actually,' she says. âWe've got our own rooms, we're not sharing the loo with six other people. It's an improvement.'
I don't answer. I can't bring myself to explain that it's not the house that's the problem.
My imaginary blue mouse sniffs my runners.
âClaire, could you do something for me?'
âSure.'
âIf I do anything particularly crazy tomorrow, would you just go ahead and kill me?'
She thinks about it. âSure, I'd do that for you,' she says eventually. âMy advice, though?'
âWhat?'
âDon't. It might damage my social standing.' She stands up and walks back up the steps to the hallway. âJust act normal.'
âI'm not sure I know how to do that,' I tell her.
She snorts and walks the fifty miles back to her own room upstairs. The mouse and I sit in the dark a while longer and listen to my family stomping around this strange house. The noises become fewer and more distant as the day winds down. Finally I crawl towards the corner of my room and roll onto my mattress. The soft blue light throws up strange shadows, which weave about on the bare walls as the mouse scurries around. It's making me feel seasick.
âTurn out the light,' I mutter.
To my surprise the blue light disappears. I smile in the darkness. If that's all I have to do to keep these things at bay, maybe I can get through this. With the light from the mouse gone I notice for the first time that there's quite a bit of moonlight filtering in through the windows. I'll have to put some curtains up if I want a decent night's sleep. But at least the shadows aren't moving anymore.
Then suddenly a shadow moves.
I sit bolt upright, heart in my throat, and stare at the spot where the shadow was. I can't see where it went. And I can't convince myself that it's just me being crazy again. If the shadow were ferret-shaped or octopus-shaped or even dinosaur-shaped, I'd figure it's just the blue things messing with me again.
But it wasn't. It was man-shaped.
Another shadow flickers over the wall. I turn with a manly squeak of fright to peer out into the garden, trying to see what made it. I'm hoping it's just Michael getting a head-start on the pruning, or Peter out to survey the nocturnal creatures that reside here. Even Garth trying to freak me out would be a relief. I mean, I'd kill him, but in a relieved way.
Only I can't see anyone â just shadowy shapes that are probably normal garden things. The trouble is I've never seen this garden in the dark before so I don't know what it's supposed to look like. Was there a shrub over there earlier today, or is it actually some maniac crouching down, ready to spring? And was the trunk of that tree always that wide? Or is there a ninja standing beside it now?
I can't see properly. I'm going to have to move. I pull my blanket around my shoulders for extra-special protection and creep towards the window for a better look. I've almost reached it when I spot a suspicious-looking shadow at the back of the garden, near a gate that leads to a track through the woods. It looks like a cloaked figureâ¦
âOw!' Pain shoots up my toe as I stub it on the aluminium base of the sliding door. I instinctively look down, and smack my head against the glass. âDamn it!' I curse, hopping on the spot with sore foot in one hand, sore head in the other.
The pain in my toe passes, and I inspect it for damage. It's alright, it's not bleeding. I put my foot down again, look back at the window and â
âAAAAGH!'
Man. Leather-clad, muscle-bound man, standing right on the other side of the window, glaring in at me.
I jump away from the glass, straight onto a pile of comics which shoot out from under me. My feet fly into the air and I land heavily on the stone floor, banging my elbow and jarring my neck. Too bad I didn't knock myself unconscious â I might have got a decent night's sleep then.
When I look back up at the window, there's nobody there.
I sit on the floor all night, back up against the wall, watching the dark windows. By the time dawn creeps over the garden outside my body is rocking backwards and forwards, my feet are frozen and my eyes feel like they've been sandpapered. They make one last effort to search the dim garden for signs of life.
Nothing.
I moan in relief and exhaustion, and crawl over to collapse on my mattress. I just have time to check my watch â seven-thirty â before my eyes shut for goodâ¦
âAAAAGH!'
Something hit me in the face. I'm on my feet in an instant and ready to run away, before I see a small rubber skull at my feet and Garth standing in the doorway.
âMum says get up,' he says, grinning.
Bastard. I pick the skull up and hurl it back at him. He ducks out the door and runs up the passageway laughing.
Once I get my breathing back in order I pick up my watch â seven-fifty. I've had twenty minutes' worth of sleep. I moan quietly as I rummage around in a box and find a towel, then trudge to the bathroom.
The shower doesn't seem to come equipped with hot water, but at least it wakes me up. I wrap the towel around me and stare at myself in the mirror. It's not a pretty sight â blue lips, dripping hair, dark circles around bulging eyes. Like a cross between a fish and a zombie. A great first impression I'm going to give.
By the time I get dressed and stagger to the people-filled kitchen, I'm once again struggling to keep my eyes open. But I'm going to have to stay awake long enough to tell Mum and Michael what happened. They'll probably want to call the police.
âWhere's my folder gone?' Mum calls from near a pile of boxes in the corner of the lounge. âOh hello, darling. You're late.'
âWell, there was this â'
âWhich folder?' Michael asks from the fridge. âJeez, Jimbo, you look like death.'
âThat's because I â'
âThe one with all my references in it. I really should take it with me, don't you think?'
âMum â'
âMummy, where are my black shoes?'
âWell, there's a box over here with “Winifred's hats and shoes” written on it. Do you think we might be onto something?'
âHey, Dad â'
âHey, Dad, I'm old enough now to drink coffee, yeah?'
âYou on a caffeine high? I think that can wait a few more years.'
âHello?'
âMorning, Jim. Hey, Claire, you haven't seen my guitar picks, have you?'
âWhy would I have seen your guitar picks?'
âDoesn't anyone care that there was some creep hanging around outside my room last night?' I yell.
Everyone in the kitchen turns and stares at me.
âAHA!' Mum yells. She straightens up from the boxes with a folder clutched in her hand. âFound it.'
âWhat did you say, Jimbo?' Michael says, frowning.
âLast night.' Finally, I've got their attention. âThere was someone out in the garden. I was looking out the window and then suddenly this guy in a leather jacket appeared out of nowhere right on the other side of the glass, like, an inch from my face.'
âMy God, that's terrifying,' Michael says. âI had a nightmare too. Things kept on hatching out of all the boxes and crawling up the walls.'
âIt wasn't a â'
âI slept like a log.'
âMe too.'
âWell, I didn't. I woke up in the middle of the night and had no idea where I was. Really freaked me out.'
Oh, for heaven's sake. Can't anyone in this family stay on track? âShouldn't we call the police?' I ask.
âWhat about?' Peter says. âHey, Mum,
you
haven't seen my guitar picks, have you?'
She shakes her head. âSorry, love. No time to look now, either â I have to get this lot to school. Now, Jimmy, don't just stand there gawping. We're going to be late.'
You'd think these people had never seen a stranger before. They're staring at me like I'm a giraffe that's accidentally wandered into a flock of penguins. Yes, hello, I've arrived. I'm terribly fascinating, and aren't you all excited. Do you like my
Call of Duty
T-shirt?
Now go away.
âWon't it be fun, me working at your school?' Mum says as we wait just inside the front doors. âWe'll all be here together. That'll be my office there,' pointing to the right, âjust in front of the headmaster's, so I'll know if you've been naughty. Look, glass walls. I can keep an eye on you. And straight over there,' pointing to the left, âis the main office. Don't they look nice and helpful?'
Claire and I snort, but Winifred's enthusiasm is loud enough to cover us up.
âWe'll have to organise school uniforms for you all,' Mum says as she peers about. âI'll find out where the second-hand shop is this morning and we can all meet back here at lunchtime, get you kitted out.'
Great. A family outing in front of the whole school. This day is just getting better and better.
Although I think most of the school has seen us already. We've been standing in this foyer for twenty minutes now, waiting for the office staff to deal with us. They can't have forgotten about us, surely â we take up enough room.
Finally a rotund woman in a floral-print dress emerges from the main office and bears down on us. She smiles expansively at Mum. âSue, the headmaster will see you now,' she says.
Mum gives us a look of pretend terror and hurries through her new office into the headmaster's. As soon as Mum shuts the door, Floral Woman's smile disappears. She looks down at us like we're slugs crawling round her pudgy toes.
âLeticia,' she snaps at a passing teacher, pushing Win and Garth towards her. âTake these two to the primary school. Now, you two,' she says, turning back to Claire and me. âHere are your class schedules. Here, take them! I'll have to find students in your own classes to show you around. I just don't have time for this.' And she bustles around the foyer like an angry chicken, looking for victims.
Why, if you don't like kids, would you choose to work at a school?
Floral Woman finally plucks out a girl called Tracy Beckett from the masses and hands me over to her. She's skinny and slanted, like she's been italicised, so I don't trust her. One of those types whose ponytail swings much more than it should as she prances along arm in arm with her self-confidence. She takes the entire first period to show me around the school, pointing out all the sights of note along the way, including the assembly hall, her best friend, the lavatory, her boyfriend, the library and her second-best friend.
âLook, we've got to get to class,' she says suddenly and irritably, like it's my fault she's been leading me around like a poodle in a parade ring. âWe're going to be late for maths.'
âOkay,' I say, and follow along behind her as she canters off. I see a familiar face outside one of the classrooms and am about to smile when I realise that it's Martin from the take-away yesterday, standing about with some tough-looking friends. He says something to them and points at me, and they all turn and sneer at me with such force that I actually take a step back, right onto someone's foot. I turn to apologise and swipe someone else with my backpack.
I figure I'm beyond apologising now, so I just put my head down and plough on past Martin and his friends without looking to either side. I've completely lost Tracy the ponytail girl. I walk in and out of three classrooms before I find her in a fourth.
The maths teacher is already there, sitting on the edge of his desk calling names from the roll. He raises a pair of shaggy eyebrows at my sudden appearance.
âOh my word,' he wheezes, staring at me like I've just hatched out of his morning egg. âOh my goodness.'
âUm, I'm new,' I tell him. âI'm James.'
He blinks and pulls himself together. âQuite. Well, James, I'm Mr Lancer. It's great to have you with us. Now, let's get you signed in.' He poises his pen at the bottom of the list. âLast name?'
Oh God, do I have to?
âMunkers.'
And there they are, wafting around the class. The sniggers. The guffaws. Laugh it up, guys.
Even Mr Lancer seems taken aback. He looks back up at me in confusion. âAre you sure?' he asks.
Am I sure? It's only my last name, for heaven's sake. This guy is weird.
âFairly sure.'
âOh.' He looks disappointed. âOh, well, never mind. There's a spare seat back there.'
Great. I've already disappointed my first teacher, and all I've done is tell him my name. I wander down to the desk he pointed to and drop into the chair, wondering how else I can lower his opinion of me.
âDo you have the textbook yet, James?'
âUm, no. Sorry.' Well, that was easy. He takes it pretty well, though â just grabs an old textbook from a shelf and hands it to the first kid in the row. âPass this down, would you?' he says. Down it comes, from hand to hand, people just passing it over their shoulders without looking round.
The boy in front of me, though, turns as he passes it back to me. He's got messy dark hair and some decent muscle-tone. I wonder whether he gets that from working out or from beating freaks like me to a pulp. He gives me a frank stare, then smiles.
Hmm. What's that supposed to mean?
âOkay, people. Page forty-six â we'll continue on with the trigonometry we started last week.'
We slog our way through trig questions all morning, most of which I know â we did it a few weeks ago at my old school. I answer a few questions to keep Mr Lancer happy, but then my mind wanders and I start to think about gardens, and blue creatures, and how very⦠very tired⦠Iâ¦
âMr Munkers?'
My head snaps back from where it was almost touching the desk in front of me. âCosine,' I say in desperation.
Mr Lancer raises an eyebrow. âCorrect, in fact,' he says. âNow, would you care to tell me what the question was?'
âUmâ¦' I look desperately down at the page I was drooling on, and up at the whiteboard. Everyone's looking at me, smirking. I'm just about to admit defeat when the bell goes for break. Mr Lancer shakes his head and hollers over the noise of people rushing for the door. âFinish the questions on page forty-nine for homework. There'll be a test on this on Wednesday.'
I shove my books into my backpack and try to creep out with the crowd, but Mr Lancer catches my eye and beckons me over. I sigh, and let my classmates pass until we're the last ones in the room. He leans back against his desk and folds his arms.
âJust moved here?' he asks.
I nod. âYesterday.'
âTired?'
I almost laugh at how little the word covers my condition, but I nod again.
âYou'll be okay,' Mr Lancer says, smiling. âGet some sleep. Preferably not during school hours, though.' And he motions me out the door with his head.
There are students everywhere out in the corridor, but I don't recognise any of them. It looks like I'm going to have to find my next class on my own. I check out my schedule and find I've got history after break, in room C9. I look up at the sign over the door to maths â B2. Not around here then.
âExcuse me,' I say to a girl walking by in a school jumper and a long skirt. âDo you know where I'm supposed to be?'
She stares intently at me. âNone of us knows,' she says in a low voice. âYou're a mystery.' And she walks away without another word, plucking imaginary things out of the air.
It looks like I've met the resident nutter. Maybe she and I can form a club.