Jerry Spinelli
Wringer
Dedication
To Jerry and Helen Weiss
Epigraph
I am grateful to the following for help in writing this story: Steven and Silvia Hagopian, Tom Reeves, and Laura DeSimone
—J.S.
Contents
Dedication
Epigraph
1
He did not want to be a wringer.
2
His mother called, “Palmer, hurry. They’re coming.”
3
It was never meant to be a real party. “Just…
4
They kicked the ball around for a while, then Beans…
5
He caught up to them at the playground. They were…
6
“What happened to your arm?”
7
The following weeks were like a parade to Palmer, with…
8
Family Fest.
9
Palmer had attended his second Pigeon Day with Dorothy Gruzik…
10
By the following year Palmer no longer cared to watch.
11
Cotton candy days, Ferris wheel nights. Family Fest was almost…
12
In his dream the pigeons came to town, not five…
Nipper
13
“It’s a doozie.”
14
Or was it?
15
Tapping.
16
The bird walked in.
17
A pinch on his earlobe woke him. He opened one…
18
Act normal.
19
After dealing with his mother, Palmer turned his attention to…
20
Palmer had never been to Beans’s house. He had been…
21
Beans jumped to his feet, looked up. “Where?”
22
Treestumping had become popular among other school kids. Other boys,…
Featherfall
23
Beans’s mother—Palmer had to fight the temptation to call…
24
Palmer came home that day to find Dorothy shooting baskets…
25
For much of his life Palmer LaRue had felt he…
26
An hour later in his room with Dorothy, Palmer was…
27
Nipper was home that day, waiting at the windowsill. But…
28
Palmer had just finished supper on Monday when the doorbell…
29
Palmer caught the weightless, foamy basketball. He turned it in…
30
Although she insisted that she would be there right up…
31
Henry.
32
He awoke to Nipper pecking at his ear. And just…
33
A bug crawled down the middle of his back. He…
34
Dorothy was crying.
35
He thought of not feeding Nipper. Of not letting him…
36
Despite the heat, he slept with his window shut and…
37
Whatever Henry told them they must have believed, for they…
38
It was as if he could smell into the future.
39
Until he found himself there, he had not been sure…
40
He knows how it will end.
Reader’s Guide
Discussion Questions
Questions for Jerry Spinelli
About the Author
Other Books By Jerry Spinelli
Copyright
About the Publisher
* * *
WAYMER—Hundreds of sharpshooters in and around this rural community are cleaning their shotguns as they look forward to Saturday’s 63rd annual Pigeon Day. Beginning at around 8 A.M., participants who have paid a fee will each have the chance to shoot at ten to twenty pigeons as they are released from boxes.
Shooters are scored according to a point system that, at day’s end, rewards the most accurate of all with the coveted Sharpshooter’s trophy. Proceeds from the shoot go to maintain the community’s 40-acre park.
Organizers said approximately 5,000 birds are acquired for the event. Some are purchased from local breeders, while others are trapped in big-city railroad yards.
The pigeons are placed in white boxes. Each shooter takes a turn firing at a series of birds as they are released individually by ropes attached to the boxes.
Most birds are downed. Many are killed instantly, some are wounded. All downed birds are retrieved by so-called wringer boys, who break the necks of the wounded and place all bodies in plastic bags. The bodies are then sold for fertilizer. A few birds manage to escape.
The shoot takes place in a festive, picnic atmosphere of barbecued chicken, water ice and frolicking children. Attendance last year was estimated at 4,000.
Pigeon Day is the traditional climax of Family Fest, a weeklong celebration of amusement rides, pie-eating contests…
1
He did not want to be a wringer.
This was one of the first things he had learned about himself. He could not have said exactly when he learned it, but it was very early. And more than early, it was deep inside. In the stomach, like hunger.
But different from hunger, different and worse. Because it was always there. Hunger came only sometimes, such as just before dinner or on long rides in the car. Then, quickly, it was gone the moment it was fed. But this thing, there was no way to feed it. Well, one way perhaps, but that was unthinkable. So it was never gone.
In fact, gone was something it could not be, for he could not escape it any more than he could escape himself. The best he could do was forget it. Sometimes he did so, for minutes, hours, maybe even for a day or two.
But this thing did not like to be forgotten. Like air escaping a punctured tire, it would spread out from his stomach and be everywhere. Inside and outside, up and down, day and night, just beyond the foot of his bed, in his sock drawer, on the porch steps, at the edges of the lips of other boys, in the sudden flutter from a bush that he had come too close to. Everywhere.
Just to remind him.
This thing, this not wanting to be a wringer, did it ever knock him from his bike? Untie his sneaker lace? Call him a name? Stand up and fight?
No. It did nothing. It was simply, merely there, a whisper of featherwings, reminding him of the moment he dreaded above all others, the moment when the not wanting to be a wringer would turn to becoming one.
In his dreams the moment had already come. In his dreams he looks down to find his hands around the neck of the pigeon. It feels silky. The pigeon’s eye is like a polished shirt button. The pigeon’s eye is orange with a smaller black button in the center. It looks up at him. It does not blink. It seems as if the bird is about to speak, but it does not. Only the voices speak: “Wring it! Wring it! Wring it!”
He cannot. He cannot wring it, nor can he let go. He wants to let go, desperately, but his fingers are stone. And the voices chant: “Wring it! Wring it!” and the orange eye stares.
Sometimes he wished it would come after him, chase him, this thing he did not want to be. Then at least he could run from it, he could hide. But the thing never moved. It merely waited. Waited for him to come to it.
And he would. He would come to it as surely as nine follows eight and ten follows nine. He would come to it without having to pedal or run or walk or even move a muscle. He would fall smack into the lap of it without doing anything but breathe. In the end he would get there simply by growing one day older.
2
His mother called, “Pal
mer, hurry. They’re coming.”
The doorbell rang.
“Palmer!”
He flew down the stairs.
His mother waved him on. “Go, go. It’s your birthday. You invited them.”
At the door he turned, suddenly afraid to open it. He did not want to be disappointed. “You sure it’s them?”
His mother’s eyes rolled. “No, it’s my Aunt Millie. Open it.”
He opened the door—and there they were! Beans. Mutto. Henry. Three grinning faces. Shoving wrapped gifts into his chest. Storming past him into his house, Beans bellowing, “Where’s the grub?”
Palmer stayed in the doorway, fighting back tears. They were tears of relief and joy. He had been sure they would not come. But they did. He wondered if they would give him a nickname. What would it possibly be? But that was asking too much. This was plenty. They were here. With presents! They liked him. He was one of them. At last.
Arms full of gifts, he pushed the door shut with his foot and joined them in the dining room. Beans was scooping chocolate icing from the birthday cake onto his finger. With the drama of a sword-swallower, he threw back his head and sank his finger into his mouth. When it came out, it was clean. Mutto cackled and did likewise. Henry stared at Palmer’s mother, who was glaring at Beans.
Palmer’s mother did not like Beans. She wasn’t crazy about Mutto or Henry either, but she especially did not like Beans. “He’s a sneak and a troublemaker,” she had said. “He’s got a mean streak.” And she was right. But he was also leader of all the kids on the street, at least the ones under ten years old. It had always been that way. Beans was boss as surely and naturally as any king who ever sat upon a throne.
“But he’s the boss,” Palmer would explain to his mother.
“Boss, my foot,” she would snort and turn away.
Some things mothers just did not understand.
“Open the presents!” Beans barked. He rapped on the table with a spoon. Mutto rapped a spoon also.
Palmer dumped the gifts onto the table and for the first time took a good look at them. They were wrapped in newspaper, sloppily fitted and closed with black tape. No ribbons, no bows, no bright paper.
He tore open the first. It was an apple core, brown and rotting. “It’s from me!” piped Mutto. “You like it?” Mutto howled.
Palmer giggled. “It’s great. Thanks.” What a guy, that Mutto.
The other gifts were a crusty, holey, once-white sock from Henry, and from Beans a thumb-size, brown something that Palmer finally recognized as an ancient cigar butt.
Silverware hopped as Beans and Mutto pounded the dining room table, laughing.
Palmer’s mother, still glaring, came with more gifts. These had ribbons and bows and beautiful paper. “Gee,” she said, “after those nice presents you just got, I feel really cheesy giving you this junk.”
Palmer opened them: a soccer ball, a book, a pair of sneakers, a Monopoly game.
“Thanks, Mom,” he said. It was pointless to say more, pointless to say, I like their presents just as much as yours, because they did it themselves. That means something. It means: We came into your house. We gave you a cigar butt. You are one of us.
Palmer’s mother lit the candles, nine of them on the chocolate cake with chocolate icing. She started off the “Happy Birthday” song but soon was drowned out by the boys, who screamed it rather than sang. When they came to the line “Happy birthday, dear”—they glanced at each other and belted out—“Sno-ots! Happy birthday to you!”
So they had done it after all, given him a nickname. Snots. He moved his tongue silently over the name, feeling its shape.
For a moment he wondered if he would be getting The Treatment, but he pushed that thought aside. He was getting greedy. He had already been blessed enough for one day.
“Make a wish,” said his mother, “and blow out the candles.”
He stared into the ring of candles—nine yellow flames, plump and liquidlike, perched on their wicks—and suddenly he felt the old fear, launching itself from his shoulder and brushing a wingtip across his cheek. And just as suddenly it was gone and Beans was croaking, “Hey, we ain’t got all day. I got lotsa wishes if you don’t.” Beans leaned across the table, took a deep breath and blasted away. The flames vanished. Wick tips glowed orange for a second, then turned black.
Let Beans blow away, Palmer didn’t care. Nothing could blow out the candleglow he felt inside. Palmer LaRue—Snots—the world’s newest nine-year-old—was one of the guys.
3
It was never meant to be a real party. “Just cake and ice cream,” Palmer’s mother had said, “that’s all.” She did not want “those little hoodlums,” as she called them, in her house any longer than necessary.
The boys dragged out the cake and ice cream as long as they could. Beans and Mutto kept leaving their chairs and wandering around and flopping on furniture. Palmer’s mother kept shooing them back to the table.
“I guess you’re done now,” she said, anxious to shoo them out the door.
“More ice cream,” they said.
And then Beans started having to go to the bathroom, or so he said. He made three trips upstairs, probably spying on Palmer’s room. As he headed up the stairs for his fourth trip, Palmer’s mother grabbed his arm and announced, “Okay, boys, party’s over. Time to go out and enjoy the summer sunshine.”
As the guys left, Henry surprised Palmer’s mother by saying thank you for the party. “Yeah,” Palmer called back, “thanks, Mom.”
Palmer brought out his new black-and-white soccer ball. Beans snatched it from him and booted it into the back of Mutto’s head. Mutto squawked, and the two of them rumbled onto the sidewalk. Beans and Mutto rumbled several times every day. Each rumble lasted about twenty seconds, with both claiming victory.
The ball bounced down the street and into a neighbor’s front yard. The front yards along Palmer’s street were very small, about the size of a blanket. The grass was neatly trimmed, and almost every yard had a border of flowers. Most of the houses were gray.
Henry chased down the ball and kicked it back up the street. Henry always looked funny running, all arms and legs. He was by far the tallest of the group.
Beans said, “Which one is Fishface’s house?”
Palmer did not want to say, but Beans was looking straight at him. “I’m not sure,” he answered.
“Not sure?” Beans gave a smirk. “Guess I gotta start yelling then.” He cupped his hands and yelled at the top of his lungs: “Fishface! Fishface! Fishface!”
Palmer pointed to the house directly across the street from his. “That one.”
Beans stepped up to the house and shouted: “Fishface! Fishface!”
Palmer cringed.
No one came to the door, no window curtain stirred.
“Okay, Fishface, you asked for it!” Beans turned to Mutto and Henry. “Let’s leave her a little present.”
They searched the gutter.
“Sewer grate!” piped Mutto. The three of them raced to the nearest grate.
Fishface was Beans’s name for Dorothy Gruzik. Beans and the guys hated Dorothy and harassed her whenever they got the chance. Palmer had never understood why, though now that he was one of them, maybe he would find out. Maybe now he could finally find a fish in her face.
Palmer’s mother had been trying to push Dorothy and him together as friends for years. Palmer had never been much interested. For one thing, Dorothy was a girl. Plus she was in a lower grade and a whole year younger than he.
The guys returned from the sewer grate with something in a plastic bag.
“Just mud and sticks,” said Beans glumly. He went to Dorothy Gruzik’s house and dumped it on the top step. His face brightened. “Maybe they’ll think it’s poop.”
He rang the bell, banged on the door, and everyone took off. It was the first time Palmer had ever run with the gang. He felt shivers of excitement. He screamed and beat them all to the corner.
4<
br />
They kicked the ball around for a while, then Beans said, “Let’s go to the park.” He booted the ball down the middle of the street.
“Why don’t we play here,” said Palmer, but the others were already dashing after the ball.
Let’s go to the park.
Palmer hated the park. He never played there, never swung on the swings, never slid down the sliding board, never fed the ducks, never watched a softball game. Most especially, he never went near the soccer field. For in one month, four short weeks after his birthday, the soccer field would become, as it did every year, a place of horror.
He walked. Four blocks and he was at the park. He hoped they would be at the softball field but knew they would not. Nor were they at the baseball field or the basketball court or the tennis courts or the World War I cannon or the playground or the Boy Scout cabin or the picnic area.
He heard, then saw them at the soccer field, racing and yelping like puppies in a pasture. He stayed on the sidelines, walked along the chalked edges of the field.
“Come on, Snots!” they yelled and kicked the ball his way.
“Can’t,” he yelled, lying. “My leg hurts.” To prove it, he threw the ball back. “I’ll just stay here and watch.”
He hoped they wouldn’t be mad at him for not joining in. He loved to see them playing with his birthday present. Each thud of a foot said: We’re kicking your soccer ball. We like you. You’re one of us.
Wringer Page 1