The Ghost and Mrs. Hobbs (16 page)

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Authors: Cynthia DeFelice

BOOK: The Ghost and Mrs. Hobbs
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I first read
To Kill a Mockingbird
when I was in fifth grade, and Boo Radley still haunts me.

What are you most afraid of?

Giving a dumb answer to a question like this one.

What time of year do you like best?

Fall, because that's when we go on our summer vacation!

What's your favorite TV show?

NFL football.

What's the best advice you have ever received about writing?

Plan on throwing out most of what you write.

What do you want readers to remember about your books?

The characters.

What would you do if you ever stopped writing?

I hope to work with horses or dogs, and volunteer to teach adults to read.

Where in the world do you feel most at home?

I crave being outdoors.

What do you wish you could do better?

I would love to be able to play a musical instrument well, and I'd love to be an accomplished horsewoman. These are both VERY distant goals. So distant, that I think I'll need to wait for my next life.

 

Allie Nichols just laid the last spirit to rest, and
now there's already another one trying to reach her.
But how can Allie help a ghost who won't speak?

Allie Nichols's adventures as a Ghost Magnet
continue in

The
Ghost
of
Cutler Creek

One

The whimpering grew louder and more desperate, then rose to a keening wail. Allie Nichols ran down the long, shadowy hallway, trying to reach the source of the sound. The sadness and hopelessness of it tore at her heart. She had to find out who was in such terrible misery. But it was so dark, so difficult to see! She followed the cries through countless twists and turns and found herself at a dead end.

She forced herself to stop and listen, to try to get her bearings. At first she couldn't hear anything but the rasp of her own breath, ragged from running. Then—there! A whimper, but fainter now than before, farther away. She had gone the wrong way!

Racing back, she followed the pitiful sound through the endless corridors. Sometimes she thought it was the cry of a baby; at other times she was sure it was someone older. The next moment it
sounded like an animal or a bird. She desperately wanted to help, but first she had to find whoever—or whatever—it was.

Nearly weeping with exhaustion and frustration, she turned a corner, only to reach another dead end. The wail faded to a plaintive whimper and stopped. Now crying, Allie pounded the wall with her fist—and woke up.

She had been beating, not on a wall, but on her pillow. Uncurling the fingers of her fist, she sat up and wiped the tears from her cheeks. Her mind cleared and the foggy wisps of her dream receded, but she was left with a lingering feeling of sorrow.

Along with the sorrow was a sense of excitement—and dread. For Allie knew what the dream meant. Twice before she had wakened from urgent nightmares like this one. Both times the dreams had been messages from someone who wanted her help. Both times that someone had been a ghost.

When Allie went downstairs to breakfast the following morning, her mother was talking on the phone, a worried expression on her face. One look at her four-year-old brother, Michael, and Allie knew why. His eyes were red and puffy. He glanced up at Allie, sniffled, and exploded in a sneeze.

“Either it's a cold, or his allergies are suddenly acting
up,” Mrs. Nichols was saying into the phone. “Whichever it is, I'd better get him in to see Dr. Waheed. Could you cover the store for me today? Great. Thanks, Reggie. I'll call you later to see how you're doing. Okay. Thanks again. Bye.”

Mrs. Nichols hung up. “Morning, Allie.”

“Hi, Mom.”

“Can you walk to school this morning?”

“Sure.”

“I'm staying home today to take Mike to the doctor.”

“I heard.” Allie poured herself a bowl of cereal and added milk. Turning to her brother with a sympathetic smile, she said, “Mikey, you don't look so hot.”

Michael made an attempt to smile back, but sneezed instead.

Mr. Nichols came into the kitchen, his briefcase in his hand. “Not feeling any better, Mike?” he asked.

Michael shook his head. Then he wrinkled his nose. “Something smells funny. Poopy.”

Allie and her parents all sniffed the air.

“I don't smell anything,” said Mrs. Nichols.

“Neither do I,” said Allie's dad.

For a moment, Allie thought she did catch a whiff of something “poopy.” But when she sniffed again, it was gone.

Allie and her parents looked at one another and shrugged.

“I've got to go,” said Mr. Nichols. “Smooches all around.” He gave Allie and her mother each a kiss. “Except for you, big guy,” he said, giving Michael a pat on the head. “If you've got Stinky Nose, I don't want to catch it.”

Allie laughed and got up from the table to get ready for school. She called her best friend, Dub Whitwell, to say she was walking, and that she'd meet him at the corner.

As soon as Dub showed up, she told him about her dream.

“Oh, boy,” he said. “Here we go again. It sounds as if Allie Nichols, Ghost Magnet, is back in action.”

In his voice Allie detected the same combination of fear and excitement she'd felt on awakening from the dream. She nodded, saying, “I think so, too.” Then she asked, trying to sound casual, “You did say here
we
go again, right?”

“Of course,” answered Dub. “Are you kidding? I wouldn't miss this for anything.” He grinned and gave her a snappy salute. “Dub Whitwell, your Faithful but Clueless Companion, reporting for duty.”

“What do you mean,
clueless?”
Allie protested.

“You're the one who attracts ghosts, Al,” he said.
“I can't see 'em or hear 'em—I just come along and get scared out of my wits.”

Allie smiled. Dub had helped her enormously during her two previous ghostly adventures. He was the only other person who knew she saw and heard ghosts, if you didn't count Michael. And Allie didn't, really, because while Michael saw and heard them, he didn't understand that they were ghosts.

“So what now?” Dub asked. “We just wait to see what happens next?”

“I guess so,” Allie answered. “There's nothing we can do until we know who the ghost is. And what it wants.”

They were passing Luv'n' Pets, the local pet store. As usual, Allie stopped to look at the puppies in the front window. There were new ones every couple of weeks. The last batch of yellow furballs had been replaced with a litter of seven tiny brown-and-white furballs.

“Oooh, look how cute you are!” Allie crooned, sweet-talking the puppies through the plate glass. But this time she was distracted by an unpleasant tingle that ran through her body.

“Oh, Dub!” she cried. “I just had that—that
feeling.
He was back. Or she—or it. Anyway, the
ghost
!” Allie stood still, trying to focus with every fiber of her body. “It's gone now.”

“Are you okay?” Dub asked.

Allie collected herself and nodded, but she was feeling a little shaky.

“They never just tell you what's going on, do they?” Dub said. “Every once in a while you get a clue, and you have to go from there.”

“Yeah.” Allie gave him a wry smile. “Ghosts are funny that way.”

Dub glanced quickly at his watch. “We better get moving or we'll be late.”

“Bye, puppies,” Allie called as she and Dub started walking again. “Hey, speaking of puppies, I thought of something to give Mr. Henry and Hoover for an end-of-the-year present.”

Mr. Henry was Allie and Dub's sixth-grade teacher. Hoover was his beloved golden retriever, and the class mascot. It was the next-to-the-last day of school, and, although excited about summer vacation, Allie couldn't bear to think that her days in Mr. Henry's classroom were coming to an end. He was without a doubt her favorite teacher in the world. She was going to miss him—and Hoover—terribly.

“Yeah?” said Dub. “What?”

“Remember Mr. Henry said the vet told him Hoover has to go on a diet? Well, a friend of Mom's made up a recipe for low-calorie, healthy dog biscuits, and Mom found a bone-shaped cookie cutter,
so I'm baking some treats for Hoover. And Fm making a collar for Mr. Henry.”

“Oh, he'll look terrific in that,” said Dub. “Don't forget a matching leash.”

“Very funny. I started it last night, and it's turning out pretty good. Fm making it out of red cord, and Fm sewing Hoover's name and phone number in black.”

“So guy dogs can see them and call her up for dates?” Dub asked with a grin.

“Right,” Allie answered. “Or, if she gets lost, whoever finds her can call Mr. Henry.”

“Cool,” said Dub.

“Want to come over and help me make the dog treats after school?”

“Okay.”

When they walked into their classroom, Allie noticed a boy she had never seen before standing by Mr. Henry's desk. The bell rang, and all the kids found their seats, except for the boy, who continued standing.

“Everybody, I want you to meet L. J. Cutler,” Mr. Henry announced. “He'll be with us for the rest of the school year.” Here Mr. Henry stopped and smiled. “What's left of it, anyway.”

The kids laughed, and Mr. Henry went on. “L.J. came to us all the way from Georgia, and I know you'll make him feel welcome.”

Several kids, including Allie and Dub, called out, “Hi, L.J.”

Allie heard Karen Laver mutter, “What kind of name is
Eljay?”

Allie figured
L
and
J
were initials, standing for something else, probably a real name that L.J. didn't use for some reason. Sort of the way “Dub” was short for “double.” Dub's real name was the same as his father's, Oliver James Whitwell. Luckily for Dub, his mom had nicknamed her son “Dub” to save him from being called Ollie or Junior.

As usual, Karen had kept her voice just soft enough so Mr. Henry couldn't hear her comment. Allie pretended she hadn't heard, either.

Mr. Henry turned to the new boy and said, “We're glad you're here, L.J. What brings you and your family to Seneca, New York?”

L. J. Cutler looked out from under a shock of tousled brown hair that fell across his eyes. He didn't smile, or look bashful or embarrassed, or do anything Allie might have expected from a new kid standing in front of a group of strangers who were curiously checking him out.

The room was quiet while everyone waited for L.J. to speak. In a low voice he muttered, “What do you want to know for?”

There was a moment of stunned silence. Then Mr.
Henry said, “All right, L.J. I didn't mean to put you on the spot. Why don't you take that empty desk next to Allie. She'll be happy to show you the ropes. Won't you, Allie?”

“Sure,” Allie answered automatically. But she wasn't sure at all. She wasn't sure she felt like talking to this strange, surly boy.

L.J. fell into the chair beside her, slid down, stuck his legs straight out in front of him, and folded his arms across his chest. Without looking at her, he said so softly only she could hear, “I don't need you or anybody else for a baby-sitter, so just back off.”

For a second, Allie stared at him, dumbfounded. She couldn't believe he had just said something so downright rude. Then she grew angry. Who did he think he was?

“Fine with me,” she said shortly, quickly looking away from him. She sat staring straight ahead, her heart racing, outrage at L.J.'s behavior making her pulse beat really fast.

At that moment, the skin on the back of her neck began to prickle, and her hands grew cold and clammy. In her head, the cries and whimpers from her dream echoed pitifully. Her ghost was back. What was it trying to tell her?

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