Rules for Moving (ARC)

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Rules for Moving (ARC) Page 17

by Nancy Star


  pens like that. Everyone’s upset about the same thing. I

  got dozens of letters.”

  Karin nodded. She might have stayed annoyed at Lane

  if she hadn’t been so delighted to discover the woman renting the house next door was Roxie. “I can’t believe that

  Roxie lives next door to me. I can’t wait to tell everyone.”

  “Do you have to? I’m really no good at giving advice

  in person. People always wind up disappointed when they

  find out I’m the one who writes the letters.”

  “I’m sure that’s not true. You want me to lie?”

  “No. Unless—is not telling the same as a lie?” Lane

  read Karin’s face. Her neighbor was not buying the tech-

  nicality. “You’re right. Tell whoever you want. If anyone

  asks for advice, I’ll just tell them I’m a disaster at giving advice in real life.” She glanced at her watch.

  Karin noticed. “Oh. You have to work. Sorry. Don’t

  want to keep you from your fans.”

  “Thanks for stopping by.” Lane wanted to mean it.

  “Your bread is amazing.” She tried to sound like she

  meant it.

  “Want the recipe? Practically everyone on the block

  has it.”

  “I don’t bake,” Lane admitted. “Probably for the best.”

  She tapped her stomach. “Less bake, less belly.”

  “Oh. Do you not want the bread? If you don’t want

  to eat it I can take the rest home.”

  “No. Of course I want it. Henry will love it.”

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  Lane waved goodbye and closed the door and leaned

  against it. Why did she say things like that? Why tell someone who’d just baked her a bread that she was concerned

  about her weight? She shook off the question, letting it

  join all the other unanswered questions she enjoyed not

  thinking about and went upstairs to set up the soundproof

  back bedroom as her home office.

   h h

   h  h

  Over the next few weeks a parade of visitors rang her

  bell. Neighbors welcomed her with cookies and cupcakes.

  Teenagers stopped by to sell magazine subscriptions to

  support the field hockey team and oranges to support the

  band. Children rang the bell asking if Henry could come

  out to play. She always passed their invitations on to him but he never accepted. He preferred to stay in and draw.

  And how could she blame him? She hadn’t accepted any

  of her invitations either. Not to the new-member coffees

  at the Jewish center and the Unitarian church or to the

  book group on her block or to the movies-in-the-morning

  club. The only invitation she didn’t turn down was the

  one from her neighbor Dana, the real estate agent, who

  came over daily now in her capacity as property manager

  for the landlord.

  In addition to the repairs Dana oversaw before Lane

  moved in—the installation of the second-floor window

  guards, even though no one else in the neighborhood

  had them, and the removal of the creeping vine from the

  tiny cracks in the grout of the Manhattan Schist—she was

  now handling a myriad of repairs. The boiler went on

  the fritz first and after that, the hot water heater failed to send hot water to the fixtures in the second floor. When

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  the radiator in Lane’s office had what the plumber called

  a valvular breakdown that resulted in a minor geyser that

  just missed destroying her laptop, Dana offered to host

  a dinner party in her honor to make up for her trouble.

  “It’s the least I could do,” she said after Lane resisted.

  “It could be anything you want. A cocktail party for the

  whole block. Or a small dinner for…” She counted on her

  fingers. “I think there are eight kids Henry’s age. How

  about I invite those kids and their moms to dinner? That

  way Henry can get to meet everyone at once. Sound fun?”

  Lane pretended it did because what it sounded like was

  a good idea for Henry. Having a group of friends right

  here on the block could be just what he needed. Maybe,

  finally, after all the years of moves, she’d finally made a move that would work.

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  CHAPTER TWELVE

  Henry didn’t like it when people talked about slippery

  things. Slippery things were things that might be right

  to do, or might be wrong to do. It was hard to know.

  One slippery thing was Telling. Sometimes it was

  wrong (tattle-telling). Sometimes it was right (safety first).

  Another slippery thing was Lying. It was Always Wrong to Lie except for when it was Allowed. The reason a lie

  was allowed was usually, Because. Because meant a thing you would understand when you got older.

  Secrets were the most slippery things. Secrets could

  be good or bad, depending. When Henry asked his

  mom how he could tell the good ones from the bad

  ones her first answer was, That’s a question that could wake up a nest of hornets. Her second answer was, You can tell if a secret is bad if it makes your tummy hurt. You can tell if a secret is good if it makes your smile come out. For an example of a good secret she told Henry to think about

  the time his class gave him surprise balloons on his last

  day at his old school. She did not tell him an example of

  a bad secret.

  When Henry thought about slippery things for too

  long his head got confused. The best idea for not getting

  a confused head was don’t. Don’t Lie. Don’t Tell. Don’t

  Think About It.

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   h h

   h  h

  What happened on the Blue Rabbit was a Don’t Think

  About It. His bus was called the Blue Rabbit. All the

  buses at his school had names that were animals and

  colors. His friend Francesca’s bus was the Red Rooster.

  Ezra and Beatrice, who went to Speech with him, were

  on the Green Squirrel. Henry didn’t know why the buses

  had animal names but there were a lot of things he didn’t

  know like why did they call it Speech when all he did

  was draw.

  The way Henry knew he was on the right bus was

  if it had a blue sign with a rabbit picture pasted to the

  window. The blue sign on his bus was curled in at the

  corners. That was as much as he wanted to think about

  the Blue Rabbit.

  Sometimes when his mom lay next to him in bed

  she could see through his eyelids into his feelings. So

  the night after What Happened on the Blue Rabbit, he

  decided to end the New Norman part where his mom

  slept in his bed.

  He made it a good surprise. He made it about, he was

  growing up. He said, “I think tonight you should sleep in

  your room because I’m growing up.” He closed his eyes

  extra tight. Sometimes if he closed his eyes extra tight

  she couldn’t see in.

  She said, “Okay.” And then she got quiet. And then

  she said, “Are you sure?”

  With his eyes closed he couldn’t see her face but he

  could hear from her voice she was Worried. He nodded

  to make her unworried and she said, “Can you please use

  word
s?” Now her voice was Disappointed.

  He made his voice very strict. “Yes. I’m sure.”

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  She said, “Okay,” again, and then she said, “Shove over.

  We’re still going to have Tell Me That Story, aren’t we?”

  He shoved over and asked if she could tell a short one

  tonight and then he gave her an idea. “Maybe a story

  where someone wrote to you with a problem and you

  wrote back an answer that made them happy and then

  you got happy?”

  “That’s a good suggestion. Let me think of one.” She

  thought for a long time.

  His eyes got sleepy waiting, so he closed them. He

  heard her say, “Are you still awake?” but he was too tired to talk so he nodded and then crossed his fingers under the blanket that she wouldn’t get mad that he didn’t use words.

  She didn’t. “Okay buddy. Sleep tight.” She kissed him

  good night and left the room.

  As soon as she left he opened his eyes. Even though

  he was in bed and his eyes were facing the wall, he felt

  like he was still on the bus, inside the Blue Rabbit. He

  could see the blob of pink gum that was on the back of

  the red seat in front of him and he could see the mud

  stuck in the ridges on the floor mat and he could see the

  driver with sticky-out ears and no hair and the bus aide

  who had big ankles but her socks fell down anyway.

  The boy on the Blue Rabbit who yanked Henry’s hair

  was in fifth grade or fourth, regular size with fat hands

  and long sneaky arms that could reach over the top of

  the seat and grab hair without making any sound. His

  name was Sighless.

  The first time Sighless yanked his hair, Henry thought

  he got an all-of-a-sudden headache. For a headache he

  was supposed to go to Miss Fiske and show her the note

  that said, nurse. But Miss Fiske wasn’t on the bus and

  the bus aide wasn’t for helping with headaches.

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  The second time Sighless yanked his hair, Henry felt

  a pull and a sting. He was staring at the pink gum on the

  back of the seat in front of him when it happened, which

  made him think maybe there was gum on his seat too

  and that’s what pulled his hair.

  He turned around to look. No gum. Maybe the pull

  and the sting was his imagination. Mrs. Wexler, his teacher in his old school, said he had a very good imagination

  which was a blessing and a curse.

  After he saw there was no gum, he saw Sighless sit-

  ting in the seat behind him not doing anything except

  looking out the window and smiling.

  The third yank was the hardest. At the third yank,

  Henry’s hand went, all by itself, to the back of his head to try and make whatever was yanking stop. He felt something pull away and he turned around fast as the wind

  but nothing was there. Just Sighless sitting behind him

  looking out the window. His smile was even bigger now.

  The bus aide saw him turned around and yelled out,

  “Face front. Right now. Or I’ll…” She didn’t say anything

  else. She just closed her mouth and gave him a glary look.

  Henry wanted to tell her that he was turned around

  because his hair got yanked three times but his mouth

  wouldn’t let him.

  Doctor Bruce told him that most people didn’t know

  it, but Not Talking was a Super Power. He said it was the same Super Power as Invisible. A person who didn’t talk could be like a Fly on the Wall. Flies on the Wall could

  listen to what people were saying without the people

  knowing they were there. Doctor Bruce told him the

  tricky part about being Invisible was that it could be a lot of fun or it could be a lot of boring. The good part about being Invisible was if it got boring, all he had to do was 163

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  go back to talking and poof! No more Invisible. So far his Super Power wasn’t fun or boring.

  He faced front for a minute with his hand guarding

  the back of his head in case another yank came. Then,

  very slowly, he got on to his knees and, very slowly, he

  turned his body around to check on whether someone

  was hiding behind him. Maybe a monster who slipped

  onto the bus when no one was looking. He knew his

  Super Power was working because he bus aide didn’t see

  him turn around.

  No one was there. Just Sighless. He faced front.

  The bus aide was looking at her phone, which had

  pictures of sneakers on it, when Sighless laughed. When

  Henry turned to see why his laugh was so loud he saw

  that Sighless was leaning forward in his seat so close to

  Henry’s head that Henry could hear what he said next

  even though Sighless whispered it.

  What he said was, “You’re a weird dope.”

  Henry faced front and waited for another yank but

  nothing happened. The game was over.

  Except it wasn’t over because now Henry felt something

  hot on his ear which turned out to be Sighless’s mouth

  on purpose touching his ear while Sighless whispered,

  “All you have to do is say stop and I will.”

  Henry wanted to say Stop, but his mouth wouldn’t

  listen. After a while Sighless got tired of waiting and he yanked Henry’s hair again, three more times, yank, yank,

  yank. The last time he yanked so hard a noise came out

  of Henry’s mouth and the bus aide looked up and Sighless

  said, “See? He can talk when he wants to.”

  It wasn’t words that came out of his mouth, though.

  It was just a sound that meant, He’s hurting me. But the bus aide didn’t understand sounds so she shook her head

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  because, Boys, stop bothering me. Then she went back to looking at sneakers on her phone.

  Henry waited for something else to happen but nothing

  else did. When the bus turned onto the street where the

  school was, he snuck a peek at Sighless who was staring

  out the window with his hands folded on his lap like they

  were supposed to do during morning announcements.

  Sticking out of his hands was hair.

  Henry didn’t know for a hundred percent sure if the

  hair was his but it did have the same brown color and

  the same curly cue and his head hurt worse than before

  so probably it was.

  When Sighless saw Henry looking at the hair he said

  in a quiet voice that Henry wished he didn’t hear, “If you tell anyone I pulled out your hair, I’ll come to your house tonight while you’re sleeping and I’ll pull out the rest.”

  Henry wanted to say that he was very good at not

  telling but his mouth still wouldn’t work.

  Sometimes when he didn’t talk people said, Just try.

  They didn’t know trying didn’t always show on the outside.

  On the way home from school, Sighless didn’t sit

  behind him. He sat in the back of the bus with the noisy

  boys. That night Henry didn’t tell what happened. He

  wasn’t sure how Sighless would know he didn’t tell but

  he hoped he knew so he wouldn’t come over to pull out

  the rest.

   h h

   h  h

  It was still dark out when the phone woke him up. P
robably Aunt Shelley. Aunt Shelley was the only one who called

  before the sun came in the window. He didn’t hear her

  words but he heard his mom’s voice. Mad.

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  After her voice stopped and it got quiet, he heard

  feet walking down the hall and someone breathing in

  his room. He wanted to look sleeping but what if it was

  Sighless? He opened his eyes.

  He didn’t mean for his mom to see that his eyes were

  Sad but all the Sad from the day popped in at once. He

  could tell she saw because her eyes got Worried and she

  asked if everything was okay. He nodded but she still

  looked Worried so he told her he was okay, just a little

  lonely from sleeping by himself. The last part was true.

  His mom said, “Shove over,” so he did and she climbed

  in next to him and touched his hair and by accident pulled on the spot where his hair had been yanked out but her

  eyes were closed so she didn’t see him make an Ow face.

  They both fell asleep after that. The alarm woke him

  up. The sun was in the window. His mom’s eyes were

  open. He could tell by her eyebrows she was Sad. To make

  her happier he said, “I think today it would be better if

  I stayed home with you.”

  She laughed and said, “I wish.”

  After she got out of bed he crossed his arms over his

  chest and tried to get all the air out of his body so he

  would be completely flat because if he was completely

  flat, how could he sit on a bus?

  His mom laughed and said, Up and atom, in a voice

  that meant she didn’t have time for games today.

  After she went downstairs to make breakfast he got

  dressed very, very, extra very slowly. When he put on his

  socks, he wiggled his toes in slowly, until he could see

  them poking at the very tippy end. When he pulled up

  his socks he stretched them slowly, as high as he could

  get them, until they almost touched his knees. He walked

  down the stairs slowly. He ate his cereal one Puffin at a

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  time. He chewed the Puffins into a thin paste while he

  watched the hands on the clock. These hands didn’t jerk

  ahead, one minute at a time, like the ones at school, but

  he could still see time move so he knew he knew that

  needed to be a little more slow. Just a little more slow so he could miss the bus and his mom would have to drive

  him to school and then he would never have to tell her

 

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