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Authors: Emily Jenkins

BOOK: Toys Come Home
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“Penny’s a real name, but it’s also cute. And pennies are round,” continues the mom, as if she hasn’t heard.

“Plastic!” The Girl plants a kiss on the round thing’s fat red surface.

And the name sticks.

For the next several days, the Girl spends a lot of time throwing Plastic toward the ceiling and catching her again.

Blop! Blop!

Plastic actually seems to like it.

When she’s not being thrown in the air or rolled across the room, and when the Girl has gone to school and the toys have the house to themselves all morning, Plastic spends her time looking through the books on the shelves. Lumphy or the toy mice get them down for her, and she reads rather quickly, even if she doesn’t understand all the words.

“What is a croissant?” she asks StingRay one day.

“A kind of monster.”

“Oh. Okay. And what is a snickerdoodle?”

“Another kind of monster.”

“Okay.” Plastic reads on.

StingRay and Lumphy are looking out the window at the guy next door raking leaves in his yard.

“Why is the sky blue?” asks Plastic after a few minutes.

“Blue is the best color,” says StingRay.

“Why? Why is it the best color?” Plastic leaves her book and bounces up to rest near her friends on the windowsill.

“It just always has been.”

“Why do we call it blue?”

“Because it sounds like ‘blew,’ as in ‘I blew out the candles.’ ” StingRay rears up to explain better. “And everybody knows that wind is blue. And breath is blue. If you were painting them in a painting, you’d paint them blue.”

“Or gray,” says Lumphy.

“If you wanted it to be right, you’d paint them blue,” says StingRay.

“And why are we here?” says Plastic. “That’s the thing I really need to know.”

“What do you mean, why are we here?” StingRay asks.

“Why are we here in the Girl’s room? In this town, on this planet?” explains Plastic.

StingRay doesn’t know what to say.

Plastic bounces, expectantly. “I thought you would know.”

“We. We—” StingRay still can’t reply.

The toys are waiting for an answer.

“I’ll tell you later,” says StingRay, finally. “Right now I have some important stuff to do.”

“Why did you have to ask that, Plastic?” moans Lumphy. “It makes my head hurt thinking about it.”

“Sorry!” Plastic rolls around him apologetically.

StingRay’s head hurts, too. But she doesn’t mention it.

. . . . .

That night, Lumphy can’t sleep. His eyes feel sore and heavy, but he keeps thinking about the question Plastic asked. Why are we here? In the Girl’s room? In this town? On this planet?

Lumphy doesn’t know.

And he can tell that
StingRay
doesn’t know. Which is pretty worrying, because StingRay knows nearly everything.

Lumphy’s eyes stay open all night.

The next morning, when the people are away at work and school, Plastic starts asking questions again.

“What’s a robot?”

“Something that’s not alive but seems alive,” answers StingRay.

Plastic thinks this answer over. “Are we robots?” she asks, finally.

“Certainly not.” StingRay is pretty sure.

“And how come we’re here, again?” Plastic asks. “I forgot what you said yesterday.”

“Stop asking that!” Lumphy barks. “Stop asking how come! Stop asking why! You are making my head hurt again.”

Plastic stops, like she did before. But she asks again the next day. And the next.

She is really trying not to ask, she honestly is—but she just wants to know. So, so badly. Evening after evening, the question pops out.

Why are we here?

Then: night after night, Lumphy cannot sleep.

Wondering.

Wondering.

Why he is here. Why any of them are here.

Why the mice are here.

The Girl.

StingRay, Sheep, Plastic, the rocking horse.

It is scary that StingRay doesn’t know, and scary that there might not be an answer at all.

. . . . .

One Saturday night, StingRay wakes at two a.m. The Girl is breathing deeply in sleep and the rest of the room is dark and quiet, just like it always is—but something is different. StingRay looks around.

The one-eared sheep is asleep under the rocking horse.

Plastic is quiet on the windowsill.

But Lumphy is not on his shelf.

StingRay scans the room. Lumphy is not on the carpet. Not in the corner. Not anywhere.

Bonk! StingRay hits the floor. She has a bad feeling about this.

Boing! Plastic follows her. She never sleeps very heavily.

Together, they scoot down the hall and peek into the grown-up bedroom.

Nothing.

Silently, they inch to the top of the stairs.

The television is on, down in the living room.

Fwap! Gobble-a gobble-a.

Fwap! Gobble-a gobble-a.

Boing, boing, boing!

Fwap! Gobble-a gobble-a.

Bonk!

StingRay and Plastic go downstairs.

All the lights in the living room are on! Lumphy is sitting very close to the television with a dazed look on his face.

“No TV at night!” StingRay chides him. “You could wake the people. No TV and no lights. You know that.”

“I need it,” Lumphy moans. “I need the light. I need the TV.”

“How come?” Plastic wants to know.

“Dread,” says Lumphy. “I have dread.”

“What’s that?” Plastic is feeling rather bouncy, now that she’s fully awake. She zooms around the living room.

“It has to do with too much dark. And not knowing why we’re here. And not sleeping,” says Lumphy. “I just need the light really bad.”

“You have to turn it off,” says StingRay with authority. “I’ll get you a flashlight.”

Plastic bounces herself at the light switches and then at the television. The TV goes off and the room falls into darkness.

StingRay rummages in a kitchen drawer she knows about, bringing back a large red flashlight and flipping it on.

They all three sit there, looking at the beam of the flashlight playing against the wall.

“Still dread,” says Lumphy. “Dread and more dread.”

“How about another flashlight?” StingRay rushes back to the drawer and brings another.

Lumphy turns it on. He stares at the pool of light it makes, darker and yellower than that made by the other flashlight.

“Still dread,” he says, after a while.

“Look at my shadow!” says Plastic. She bounces across the beams of light. “Look at me go! Hey, do you know why shadows get bigger and smaller? Why do shadows get bigger and smaller?”

“Why are we here?” moans Lumphy.

“You should go upstairs to bed,” says StingRay. “I think you’re really tired.”

“I can’t sleep,” says Lumphy. “I can’t sleep for all the wondering.”

StingRay is quite tired herself. She is used to sleeping all night with the Girl. But she will not leave her friend when he needs her. “Come with me,” she tells him. “There’s a light in the linen closet. The people will never notice it’s on. You can lie in there with the towels and sheets and things.”

She leads the way, even though she is a little nervous about the mean towel club that Bobby Dot mentioned so long ago. She has never spoken with any towel but TukTuk, but StingRay knows that the purple grown-up towels inhabit both the adult bathroom and the linen closet at the far end of the hall. She squashes down her fear and lurches up the stairs, pushing with her tail. Plastic and Lumphy follow.

When they get to the closet, StingRay slides one flipper underneath the door and pulls sharply. It pops open, and Plastic bounces herself at the light switch inside.

“Sleeping!”

“Sleeping!”

“Sleeping!”

A chorus of purple towels, stacked neatly one on top of the other, sits on a low shelf. Higher up are sheets, pillowcases, boxes of tissues, and rolls of toilet paper.

“Hello!” cries Plastic. “How’s it going in here?”

“Sleeping!”

“Sleeping!”

“Sleeping!”

“Sorry to wake you,” says StingRay, without introducing herself. “But my friend here has dread.”

“Sleeping!”

“Sleeping!”

“Sleeping!”

“He
wants
to sleep. We all want to sleep,” explains StingRay. “But he’s scared of the dark. We have to come here so he can have light without waking the people.”

“Must you have the light on?” asks the towel on the top of the pile. Its terry-cloth corner waggles in irritation.

“Yes, we must!” snaps StingRay. “I just told you he has to have light. The whole reason he came in here was for light!”

“I need light because I have dread,” says Lumphy, turning around three times before lying down in the corner of the closet.

Plastic rolls over and tucks her round body into the curve of Lumphy’s buffalo stomach. She hums, quietly: “Dum da DUM, da dada DUM dum dum, DUM dum dum, DUM dum dum.”

“Do you know the words to that song?” asks Lumphy.

Plastic does not. “I don’t think it has words,” she says. “I think it’s just a hum.”

“Oh, please. Everyone knows the words to that,” says the towel on top.

“True. I know them,” says another towel.

“So do I.”

“So do I.” All the towels agree.

“What are they?” Plastic wants to know.

“Oh, the more we get together,

Together,

Together,

The more we get together

The happier we’ll be.”

The towels’ voices merge in silky harmony, not loud enough to wake the people, but loud enough to fill the small bright linen closet with music.

“Party party party!” says Plastic.

“ ’Cause your friends are my friends

And my friends are your friends,

So the more we get together,

The happier we’ll be!”

The second time around, Plastic and StingRay join in. As she sings, StingRay scoots over to Lumphy and taps him gently with the tip of her tail.

“Lumphy,” she whispers, as the towels stop singing and begin an argument as to whether they should next do “Goodnight, Irene” or “Michael, Row the Boat Ashore.”

“Yes?” The buffalo is calm now, but his eyes are still wide open and his mouth is twisted in anxiety.

“I figured out the answer,” says StingRay. “To Plastic’s question.”

“You did?” asks Lumphy.

“You did?” asks Plastic.

“Yes,” says StingRay, proudly.

“What is it?” asks Lumphy.

“Why are we here?” asks Plastic.

“We are here,” says StingRay, “for each other.”

Oh.

Of course we are.

Of course we are here for each other.

“For each other! For each other!” cries Plastic, bouncing up. “You found the answer!”

Lumphy feels the agony and the tension rush out of his buffalo body.

We are here for each other. StingRay is right.

The toys have been here for each other. And they will be.

The dread is gone.

StingRay tucks herself up against Lumphy, tummy touching tail. The two of them watch Plastic roll happily in circles.

“You can turn the light off now,” says Lumphy. “I think I can sleep.”

So Plastic bounces the light switch, and comes to rest by Lumphy’s head.

The towels sing, “Hallelujah.”

And the toys are there for each other, in the bottom of the linen closet, at the end of the hallway.

In the Girl’s house. In the night. In the town.

On the continent, on the planet.

In the universe.

Together.

Author’s Note

Thanks, first, to all the children who asked me what happened to Sheep’s ear. Here is your answer.

The events in
Toys Come Home
occur before the events in
Toys Go Out
and
Toy Dance Party,
but this book was written last. I suspect the stories are best read in the order they were written, rather than chronologically, but I leave the choice to the readers.

Some references:

The story about the cat and the doll who live in the tree with the large collection of hats is
Fletcher and Zenobia
by Victoria Chess and Edward Gorey. It is a favorite of mine and long out of print. The song about glorious mud is “The Hippopotamus Song,” originally by the comedy team Flanders and Swann and more recently recorded by John Lithgow. Sheep’s “nom nom nom nom nom nom nom nom” chewing sound comes from the insanely popular YouTube video of that name by Parry Gripp (safe for all ages). Pumpkinfacehead is modeled on the cat Mungo Kotis, who terrorized and charmed our family when we sublet his apartment one summer.

The unbelievably talented Paul O. Zelinsky came up with the phrase “wise old towel,” which I steal here. Plus he draws all my characters exactly the way they appear in my imagination, only better. Many thanks to Anne Schwartz for her most excellent editing and support of my work. Also to Lee Wade, Rachael Cole, Emily Seife, Adrienne Weintraub, Chip Gibson, Lisa Nadel, Lisa McClatchy, Kathleen Dunn-Grigo—and everyone else who works on my books at Random House.

My gratitude to Libba, Ayun, Robin, Scott, and Maureen for their company as I wrote this book. Likewise to Bob, for online support and shoptalk. And thanks to Elizabeth Kaplan and Melissa Sarver for representing me so well.

Thanks to Ivy for the name Bobby Dot. It was originally the name of a beloved plush Christmas elf she covered with Band-Aids. I am sorry I gave it to such a horrid walrus. Thanks also to Ivy for listening to the first draft with such enthusiasm and intelligence.

The songs the towels sing are all folk songs my family enjoys singing together. My biggest debt goes to them.

The family. Not the towels.

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