Breaker Boy

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Breaker Boy Page 1

by Joan Hiatt Harlow




  Contents

  1. Drowning!

  2. The Open Coffin

  3. Mrs. Chudzik

  4. The 1911 Matheson Touring Car

  5. The Dreams

  6. The Company Store

  7. Into the Mine

  8. Accusations

  9. Trust

  10. Asking for Help

  11. Abby Disappears

  12. Hanging On

  13. Amazing Abby

  14. Sympathetic Character

  15. Mrs. Chudzik Speaks Up

  16. Inspecting the Ventilation Shaft

  17. First Day as a Breaker Boy

  18. Sticky Business

  19. The Skeleton

  20. Corey’s Bath

  21. Corey Talks Too Much

  22. Polish Night

  23. Hogwash!

  24. Brawl

  25. Truce

  26. Knockers?

  27. Off-Limits

  28. The Reason Why

  29. Too Many Questions

  30. Sans Souci Park

  31. House of Horrors

  32. The Genie’s Castle

  33. Emergency!

  34. Making Plans

  35. North Star Shaft

  36. Richie and His Mule

  37. Spring Training

  38. Visiting Mom

  39. Disaster!

  40. Preparations

  41. Inside the Mountain

  42. South Chamber Shaft

  43. A Voice from Within the Mountain

  44. The Old Mine Comes to Life

  45. Babcia

  46. Waiting

  47. Something Missing

  48. Hope

  49. Happy House

  Afterword

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  For Claire and Larry Krane . . . and Django

  1

  Drowning!

  Corey sat on a rock, pulled off his boots, and pushed his feet into the old pair of skates. He looked at the shining surface of the ice and grinned. He had been watching day after day, until the fragile shell of ice on the top hardened as smooth as a mirror. Once the kids who didn’t work in the mines realized the ice was safe, they would crowd every puddle and pond around Wilkes-Barre each afternoon and weekend, to play hockey. But for now, Corey had the whole pond to himself—except for a dog somewhere nearby, who kept barking.

  After lacing up the skates, he stepped onto the ice, gliding awkwardly around the perimeter of the pond, his ankles folding inward. It was always like this the first time out. Besides, the skates were too tight. His feet had grown a couple of sizes since last winter.

  However, he probably wouldn’t have much time to skate once he started to work. Corey was eleven—almost twelve—and the oldest boy in the family. Dad tried to put off the inevitable, hoping his sons would never work in the mines. However, Dad told him just a few days ago that the family needed money. There was no way to get around it. Corey would find a job in the mine, and quit school in February, when he turned twelve.

  Still, once I start working, maybe I could put something aside for new skates. Maybe a nickel or dime now and then. I’ll hide them in the cigar box Dad gave me. “To keep your treasures—your special things,” Dad said. What special things? Corey remembered opening it, expecting something special inside. It was empty. It remained empty except for a rabbit’s foot that he found on the way home from school one rainy day that still stank from the wet fur.

  Corey did a quick turn and skated forward again. He stroked across the smooth ice, heading out to the middle of the pond. A few white clouds moved rapidly across the blue sky. He could see the gables of the big house on the hillside, belonging to that strange Mrs. Chudzik, the Polish widow of Dr. Chudzik. Corey heard the kids at school whisper that she was “peculiar.” Corey was curious how they knew, since he had never met her. He’d seen her a few times driving around in her bright red touring car with her scary-looking dog at her side, when she went out for groceries or something.

  In fact, he had just seen her this morning down by the company store. A few women standing nearby whispered that the dog in the front seat was Mrs. Chudzik’s hellhound. His grandpa told creepy tales about the hellhounds of Wales, where he was born—stories of dogs with blazing eyes and bloody fangs. Poppa, his Polish grandfather, said that if a hellhound looked at you three times, you would probably die in a terrible accident or something worse.

  As Corey stood on tiptoes to see the driver of the snappy red convertible, the dog had stared at Corey and bared his teeth. Three times this happened! Corey felt a shiver run down his back at the memory. It was no wonder that everyone in town stayed away from Mrs. Chudzik. Just having the dog bare his teeth was enough to scare the pants off anyone.

  No one saw Mrs. Chudzik or her dog very often. Most of the time, she and her dog stayed inside the gloomy gray mansion. But it was also said she had a beak instead of a nose—and when she lured children into her house, they were never heard from again.

  Corey turned to do a little circle, when suddenly his blade hit—what? He heard an echoing sound, and he realized, too late, that the ice had cracked and he was falling into a black hole of icy water.

  He grabbed for the edge of the opening, and more ice cracked and broke off. He tried to swim, but the waterlogged sleeves of his jacket pulled him deeper into the blackness.

  As he sank, he groped for the edge of the hole again, but this time he couldn’t find it. The sun shone through the ice above him and everything was bright and blurry. Where was the hole he had fallen through?

  His bulky clothes and skates dragged him deeper. He tried to kick his way to the surface, but he could not lift his legs. His pants were full of water and tugging at him; his arms were heavy and tired.

  Clouds must have covered the sun, as now it was as dark as a grave. He pressed his mouth near the ice and found a small place of air just under the surface. He must stay close to the top and breathe in that tiny space of air until someone came.

  But who would come? No one was around.

  It was hard to stay near the pocket of air, with his soaked clothes pulling him under. Terror crept over him, and he panicked. Thrashing, he fought to break the ice above him. His arms and legs were useless and weary, and he found himself slipping, slipping down into the murkiness.

  He needed air—he had to breathe. He tried to take a breath, but water flooded into his mouth and down into his lungs.

  As he nodded out of consciousness, he could hear the barking dog, but when he felt his feet touch the bottom of the pond, he knew he had drowned.

  2

  The Open Coffin

  Corey stirred, took a deep breath, and flailed around, still fighting to break through the ice. He wasn’t cold anymore. He was warm and his feet were tangled in a blanket or something.

  Had he drowned? Yes. He remembered drowning. So he must be dead!

  Where was he? He closed his eyes, trying to remember. He recollected a dog in a red car. He could still see the beast snarling with those sharp teeth—just like the hellhound stories he’d heard. The hellhound had looked at Corey three times this morning. It was true. Corey had gone under the ice and now he was probably dead, just as the stories say.

  Had he drowned and gone to heaven? He opened his eyes. The room he was lying in sure didn’t look like how he’d pictured heaven. This place was dark and gloomy.

  Maybe there had already been a funeral. He envisioned Mom and Dad wringing their hands and crying. Dad would have to send Corey’s younger brothers, Jack and Sammy, to be breaker boys in the mine. Poor Sammy was only six.

  Corey shook his head, trying to figure out what had taken place.

  I remember falling through the ice and trying to find air. . . . I could hear
a dog barking . . . then my skates hit the bottom of the pond. And that’s all. So I must be dead.

  He sat up on his elbows and looked around. He was in a strange room filled with dark wooden furniture and old paintings of landscapes and people he didn’t know. Perhaps this was a funeral parlor. He pushed aside the down quilt that covered him. He had on only his underwear, and that was still damp and clung to his skin. His clothes were gone. His feet had socks—huge dry socks that didn’t belong to him. This can’t be a funeral parlor—they dress you up in nice clothes for your own funeral.

  Corey climbed out of the bed. Maybe he could sneak out of this house and find his way home. But he wasn’t walking all the way home in his underwear! He looked through the window and saw that it was night. The faint glow of a streetlight flickered in the distance.

  He listened for sounds around the house—any sound. Running water? Footsteps? Everything was silent, except for a clock ticking. He opened the door of his room quietly, hardly daring to breathe. A poorly lit hallway stretched out in front of him, and at the end, he could see a carved wooden door, probably to the outside.

  Gathering the quilt around him, he crept silently down the hall. Ticktock. Ticktock. The deep strokes of a clock ticked in the next room.

  As he approached the parlor, he stopped. Was someone in there waiting? He shivered and his teeth chattered and clicked like his grandfather’s dentures. Taking a deep breath, he peeked into the big room and froze. In the center of the room was a coffin!

  This is a funeral home! But who is in the coffin? Could it be . . . me? Corey stepped into the room, tiptoed across the thick carpet to the coffin, and peered inside.

  An elderly woman lay within the polished wooden casket, her body resting on a luxurious pink satin pillow and adornments. Her gray hair, fluffed into curls, accentuated the deep wrinkles that lined her pale face.

  Corey stood frozen. Who was she? Then he realized the quilt had fallen onto the floor, and he stood by the coffin in his underwear. What if there were mourners somewhere seated in the dozen or so chairs that stood around the coffin? Grabbing the quilt, he wrapped it around himself.

  There was no one there.

  Hearing a rustling from the casket, he turned toward the corpse. The dead woman was sitting up, her eyes staring straight at him!

  Backing up in horror, Corey screamed, dropped the quilt, and raced for the front door.

  3

  Mrs. Chudzik

  With his fingers fumbling, Corey tried to open the oak door. His sweaty hands shook so badly he couldn’t get a grip on the doorknob. Then he realized it was locked.

  “Stop right where you are!”

  Corey peeked over his shoulder. Standing in the archway to the parlor was the coffin lady, looking very much alive. Her right hand held on to the collar of a large black dog, who strained to lunge at Corey.

  “Turn around!” Her deep voice echoed under the high ceilings and bounded off the walls.

  Corey turned around with knocking knees. “Yes, ma’am,” he sputtered.

  “Who are you?”

  “Corey . . . Adamski,” he stammered. “Where am I?”

  “You are in my house,” Coffin Lady answered. “Where did you think you were?”

  Corey couldn’t concentrate on the lady’s questions with her dog pulling and moving closer by the minute. “Last thing I remember, I was drowning.” He shuddered as the dog showed his teeth.

  “Yes, you were drowning, and lucky for you my dog saw you go under and came barking to me. Otherwise you’d be hammering at the golden gates right now.” She motioned to him to come back into the parlor. “Sit down,” she commanded. As she took a seat, her dog sat by her side. “I wasn’t sure you’d make it. I did artificial respiration on you. Darn near broke my back trying to get you to breathe.”

  “I do remember hearing a dog barking,” he said. After a moment, he added, “Thank you . . . for saving me.”

  “Thank my dog. If he hadn’t spotted you, you’d be dead. Now, what are you going to do?”

  “I’d like to go home. My folks must be worried.” He looked down at his underwear. “Where are my clothes?”

  “Drying on the radiators. I couldn’t let you stay in those wet clothes, now, could I?”

  “Um. No. We don’t have a phone, but perhaps you could call someone to get word to my folks.”

  “I don’t have a phone,” Coffin Lady interrupted. “Never wanted one. Always ringing. When my husband, the doctor, was alive, that phone never stopped. When he died, I pulled the wires right out of the wall myself. I haven’t had a phone since he passed on . . . almost ten years ago.”

  Now Corey knew he was in the big house with the turrets and gables. And the coffin lady was the scary Mrs. Chudzik. He would never have recognized her from seeing her in the car. At that time, she wore a black hooded cape and the tip of her nose was all that was visible.

  Corey couldn’t move a finger or a toe and his legs were like straws. Standing before him was the very woman he heard caught kids like him . . . and they disappeared forever. As he stared at her, unable to speak, he could see her birdlike beak—the one that she used to tear flesh. Her eyes were as black and deadly as the deep water in the pond.

  Mrs. Chudzik had spoken, but Corey never heard a word. And he couldn’t utter a word either. He just stood there, bewitched.

  “Didn’t you hear what I asked? Did the water plug up your ears?” she yelled, startling her dog, who snarled and struggled to get to Corey again.

  Corey almost slid off his chair. “No—yes. My ears are plugged up from the water,” he lied. “Excuse me? What—did you ask me?”

  Enunciating each syllable and with a loud voice, she said, “Do you want me to take you home? It’s dark outside.”

  “Yes, yes, please take me home,” Corey begged. “I’m supposed to be home when the streetlights go on.”

  Mrs. Chudzik motioned him back down the hall to the bedroom where he had been. She turned on the light, grabbed his clothes off a radiator, and passed them to Corey. “Now get dressed and we’ll go.” She left the room.

  Corey pulled on his still-damp pants. Oh, boy, he suddenly realized. If she’s taking me home, that means I’ll be in her car—the red 1911 Matheson Touring car with the self-starting four-cylinder vertical engine that Dad said we’ll own someday. Someday. Corey knew “someday” would never come. But tonight Corey would get a chance to ride in that amazing car!

  He imagined himself driving down Center Street in the front seat of the legendary convertible while the McDooley twins stood on the sidewalk with their mouths open.

  “Come on, hurry up,” Mrs. Chudzik called. “I’ll wait outside.” She took her dog and left.

  Once he was dressed, Corey walked hesitantly out into the hallway again. He heard a low hooting sound coming from another room off to the right and stepped closer to the door.

  Then another hoot—like an owl. Did she keep owls in the house? He looked around again at the dark rooms, then tiptoed to the closed door and knocked softly. “Mrs. Chudzik? Is that you?”

  No answer. He put his ear to the door and heard a noise, like something scraping and clinking. CRASH! The door pushed open, and before Corey could take a breath, the huge beast burst out of the room and jumped on Corey, knocking him onto the floor, its tongue and teeth close to Corey’s face.

  “Stop!” he yelled. “Get off me!”

  Almost immediately, the hairy dog and his wet tongue stopped, stepped back, and sat up pretty, like dogs are taught to do—front legs extended, with what looked like a toothy smile on his face. The dog was sitting up and grinning at Corey.

  “I thought Mrs. Chudzik took you out,” Corey whispered. “You scared the life out of me.”

  The dog understood and sat down, his tail wagging nonstop. Corey carefully put out his hand to pat the dog’s head, but pulled it back quickly. The dog, however, took Corey’s hand into his mouth. Corey could feel the teeth, but the teeth didn’t bite. It seemed to be a fr
iendly gesture, as if they were shaking hands. In a moment, he let go, but continued lapping Corey’s hand. All the while, the tail never stopped flapping.

  Mrs. Chudzik appeared at the door. “Taking all night to put on your clothes? Come on! Let’s get you home.” She stopped as she noticed her dog next to Corey. “Oh, I was going to leave Hovi, but I see he unlocked the door again. He does that with his teeth. I should have warned you. Hovi has a habit of doing what he thinks are good deeds. It’s his nature. Now that he’s saved you, he may think you belong to him. You’ll just have to put up with it.”

  She pulled on the black cape over her head and arms. For a moment Corey had the vision of a large hovering bird fluttering its wings before seizing its prey.

  “Come along,” she ordered, beckoning him with a long finger. “You, too, Hovi.”

  At Mrs. Chudzik’s invitation, Hovi took off instantly. He whooshed past them and jumped into the front passenger seat of the waiting touring car that hummed and glowed in the driveway.

  4

  The 1911 Matheson Touring Car

  Corey gazed in total admiration. The full moon had risen and the bright red Matheson Touring car shone like something alive, brilliant and beautiful. It was the latest, 1911 model—and it was still 1910! Best of all, he was going to ride in it!

  “Backseat, Hovi.”

  The dog hopped smoothly into the backseat. Mrs. Chudzik put on a huge pair of driving goggles and adjusted them. Although they were meant to keep out dust and bugs, they looked more like magnifying lenses. Her eyes bulged even larger in the goggles.

  She reached over and opened the passenger side door. “Don’t stand there gawking. Hop in.”

  “Oh, okay, sure.” Corey climbed in the front seat, hoping Hovi didn’t mind. But Hovi sat happily in the rear, waiting for the ride to start.

  Mrs. Chudzik backed the car out of the driveway and onto the street. The headlights were as bright as a train’s, and the engine purred as quietly as a cat.

  Corey spoke up. “Thanks, Mrs. Chudzik. I always wanted to have a ride in this . . .”

 

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