least favorite metal. I like gold better, and bronze even better than that.
Thatâs just like you
, Robby would say,
to like the color that means third place. Youâre such a loser, Loser.
Youâre a loser,
Iâd say back.
Youâre Prince Loser of Losertown, Lord of Losertania.
And heâd be like,
That isnât even funny, itâs just dumb, Dumbo. Queen Dumbo of Dumboland.
Robby would be able to use his boy-Âstrength to get out of this well without a rope. Thatâs the kind of thing he does. He gets out of trouble. I fall into wells. When I finally get out, heâll probably say, âWhyâd you stay down there so long? Are you retarded?â
And Iâll say, âDonât use that word, you freak.â
And heâll say, âDonât call me a freak, you jerk.â
And then Iâll probably punch him or maybe do that thing where I push in the back of his knees and he falls over. And then heâll probably punch me back or sit on me and spit onto my face, that long gob of saliva dangling over my lips. And then Iâll probably throw up.
I miss Robby and all his gangly strength and the way he hops up and down from foot to foot when heâs waiting for something to happen, like he has too much energy to actually contain in his human body.
âHelp,â I say, just to see if my voice still works or to see if the silent silver has stolen my sounds away. I sound croaky, like a frog. A hopping frog. Robby, the jumping frog. Dad used to say Robby was frogging when he hopped from foot to foot. âStop frogging, Robb-Âo,â heâd say. âYouâre making me tired.â And Robby would stop frogging. Dad had that kind of power. Iâd say, âStop frogging, Robb-Âo,â and heâd say, âZip it, Skippy,â and heâd frog even more. Frog, frog, frog.
Ribbit, ribbit
.
âWoe is me,â I croak to the imaginary silver coyote thatâs fallen on my head. Then in a French accent, âVat did ve do to deserve this,
mon ami
?
Zut alors! Au secours!
â
No one in Nowheresville speaks French, except for
le coyote dâargent
, naturally. Animals know either all languages or none, I forget which. I learned French the summer before last at camp. It was French or canoeing, and I donât like the water any more than I like the fish that lurk around in it, looking hungrily at all that skin on your bare, kicking legs.
â
Je ne sais pas
,â my imaginary head-Âcoyote says. â
Je tâaime. Ou est la salle de bain?
â
Then weâre quiet for a while because that is all the French I know, and I guess itâs the limit of his vocabulary, too. Maybe if I knew the real French word for coyote, weâd be better friends and heâd save me, knitting me a rope ladder to the top out of his silky fur.
â
Au revoir
,â I say to him, and then heâs gone in a shivery blink.
I hear more footsteps.
âCroak, croak,â I croak and the animal barks,
Le woof! Le woof!
He is also
français
!
Mon dieu!
Maybe it is Lassie, this time! Lassie is a dog from an old TV show. Robby and I, we watched all of those shows. After a while, they were boring, but there was something good about them, too. They were like the hand-Âknitted afghans that you cover yourself with at your Grandmaâs house. Boring, safe, slightly annoying. Lassie was a bit like that, but she also always saved the day. No one was ever left to die. Not in one single episode.
âLassie!â I shout. âI am in the well! I mean,
Je suis
in the well!
Dans
the well!
Dans LE
well!â
We never used to watch dumb old shows like
Lassie
back in New Jersey. We watched reality TV, like
The Singer
with Mom and Dad on the massive TV in the living room, which is one of the many things that is now gone gone gone into a huge underground storage tank at the bank where they keep the things stolen by wrongdoers. The TV. The living
Cynthia Felice
Andre Norton
Jez Strider
Rosalyn West
Patricia Hagan
Nikki Winter
Carrigan Richards
Yvonne Collins, Sandy Rideout
Shirley Rousseau Murphy
Beth Goobie