“He was being a chicken. Mom said if he didn’t get it out, he was going to swallow it in his sleep.”
Just then the rabbit came hopping into the room. It went directly to David and proceeded to pee all over his socked foot. I wasn’t sure if it was out of reflex or disgust, but David’s foot flung forward, kicking the rabbit a good three or four feet across the room.
Jonah gasped. “You hurt him, meanie!” he cried. More blood oozed out of his mouth and dribbled down his chin with the exclamation.
I might have felt the need to apologize for my brother, but I kind of agreed with him. Who kicked a rabbit?
“Wyatt, take care of the rabbit,” I said, then directed Jonah into the bathroom down the hall to help him clean up his face.
“Is Bugs Rabbit going to be okay?” Jonah asked.
“He’s fine. He has a lot of fur. It protects him.”
“You said you’d watch the movie with us, Lily, and now you’re playing with your friends.”
“I know, kid. I’ll send them on their way.”
But I didn’t have to. After I’d finished helping Jonah and went out to the living room, they were all standing by the open door. Isabel was handing out candy to some trick-or-treaters, but Gabriel and David were putting shoes on.
When Isabel shut the door, she twisted her bracelet back and forth on her wrist. “We need to get going.”
David wouldn’t meet my eyes and seemed like he couldn’t get out quick enough. He was holding his right shoe and walking on his tiptoes out the door.
“Well, when you get your special rabbit powers, give me a call,” I said.
He tried to laugh but it came out more like a nervous cough.
Sorry, Isabel mouthed. I shrugged. I didn’t blame her. My family was very overwhelming and only half of us were here. And besides, I didn’t care. I was pretty sure David didn’t even know who Benny Goodman was and for a clarinetist that was a sin as far as I was concerned.
David was somebody Isabel had picked out for her quest. And he only further proved my point that said quest was impossible.
“Has anyone seen my blue-handled pliers?” my mom called out to the house in general. When six people lived under one roof, it was often the quickest form of communication. It didn’t necessarily produce results, but it was the fastest. “Anybody?”
“No!” came the reply from Wyatt.
My mom poked her head in my room. I was sitting on my bed, in my pajamas, still contemplating whether I wanted to get up or not.
“I haven’t seen them,” I told her with a yawn.
“You want to come with me today?”
About once a month, my mom went to different outdoor craft fairs or flea markets where she sold her creations. “How far away?” I asked.
“This one’s in town. The Fall Fest. You’d make twenty percent.”
That was her draw for us to go help—twenty percent of the profits. It seemed like a good deal, unless she only earned fifty bucks, which wasn’t unheard of. Then our take for an entire day’s work was ten dollars. But sometimes she’d earn three hundred dollars and I could walk away with sixty dollars in my pocket. It was a gamble. One I was willing to take because I didn’t only go for the money incentive.
I went for the people-watching. People-watching inspired me, and I could use some inspiration. Ever since scribbling down a couple of great lines while listening to The Crooked Brookes the other night, I couldn’t conjure up any more good ideas. The newspaper clipping taunted me from the wall next to my bed. It reminded me that I had less than two months to write an entire song—music, lyrics, everything. And I’d barely completed a few lines.
“Yeah, I’ll go,” I said, finally getting up.
Mom nodded. “We leave in thirty minutes.”
The kettle corn cart was closer to our booth than normal and the sweet smell in the air almost made up for what I’d discovered upon arriving at the Fall Fest. In the booth right next to ours was Cade Jennings. His father owned a very successful insurance company and they were giving out quotes today right in the middle of all the craft booths.
I scowled. Wasn’t there a different section for that kind of thing?
My mom was unloading her trays onto the table and I was trying to think of any excuse to leave this booth. “Should I go get us drinks?” I asked.
“I brought some water bottles.” She pointed to a bag under the table.
“Snacks?”
“Are you hungry already?”
It was nine in the morning and we’d eaten breakfast before we left. It was a valid question. “No, I guess not.”
“There’s another case of rings below. Why don’t you put them out?”
“Okay.” I pulled up the tablecloth and slid out the boxes. “How come we aren’t selling any of dad’s pieces today?” I meant his furniture pieces; Dad’s furniture was really nice, even nicer than the necklaces he made that he tried to pretend were better than Mom’s.
“He’s working on a contracted job—some kitchen cabinets for a house up in Scottsdale.”