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Authors: Zilpha Keatley Snyder

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BOOK: The Gypsy Game
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End of that story anyway. But there was something else that had to be settled right away. Something April and Melanie had been working on for about a week. And that was what was going to happen to the Gypsy Game now that Toby was back home. The two girls had talked a lot
about having a meeting and how they thought the other kids would vote, but the strange thing was they never really discussed what they, themselves, wanted to do. Not since the night that they’d had the big argument when Melanie said she thought having a game about Gypsies just wasn’t going to work. April wasn’t sure why they hadn’t discussed it, unless it was just that they didn’t want to risk having another fight. And having the meeting would be a good way to let the other kids do the arguing.

It hadn’t been easy to arrange. As a matter of fact it had taken an awful lot of phone calls. Elizabeth agreed to come right away, of course, but Ken and Toby weren’t all that enthusiastic.

“What’s the rush?” Ken said the first time they called him. “Nobody’s going to be doing anything in that muddy old storage yard until the rain stops. Besides, I couldn’t be there very often. Not for a while anyway. I just signed up for after-school basketball.”

Toby seemed a little more interested. “Oh yeah,” he said. “You mean that game where I was going to get to be the VIP king of the Gypsies and tell everybody what to do?” But even after April set him straight on that one, he still said he might show up if they had a meeting.

But after everyone finally arrived on a rainy Saturday morning and goofed around a lot and ate up all the cookies, Ken and Toby kept on wasting time with a deck of trick playing cards that Ken had brought to the meeting. Even after April got out her notebook and got ready to take notes, Ken and Toby just went on with what they were doing. Even after she asked them nicely to knock it off two or three times, and finally not so nicely. Like yelling, “All
right, you jerks. Come to order so we can get started, or else get out of here.”


Sheesh
. Listen to old February,” Ken said. “Who elected you president?”

April gave him one of her icy stares. “Nobody did. But whose house is this, and whose grandmother made the cookies? And besides, I thought we were here on important business.”

Ken went on shuffling. “Like what?”

“You know like what. I told you on the phone. I told you that—”

“Yeah, I know,” Ken interrupted, “but what’s the hurry? Like I said, we’re not going to be able to do anything out there for a long time. It’ll be too cold and muddy—”

“We know that,” Melanie broke in. “But we, I mean I, think that maybe we need to decide whether or not to go on with the Gypsy Game. Because if we are going to, we could do a bunch of stuff at home right now, like making costumes and collecting stuff and”—she looked at April—“and reading books. You know, about Gypsies, like we did about Egypt, even when we couldn’t go outside. And if we’re
not
 …”

That seemed to get Ken’s attention, at last, and Toby’s too. “What do you mean if we’re not?” Toby asked. He stared at Melanie and then at April. “Oh, I get it,” he said, doing one of his most aggravating grins. “Like, no more playing games where a certain person isn’t the
natural-born
leader. Let’s see. You look kind of Irish, February. What are we going to do next? The Irish Game?”

April had to work at it, but she managed to stay cool.
“As a matter of fact,” she said in an icy tone of voice, “I’m not the one who wanted to stop. Am I, Melanie? Tell them about it, Melanie. Okay? Tell them why you didn’t want to do the Gypsy thing anymore.”

Melanie looked embarrassed. “I didn’t say for sure I didn’t want to. I only said that finding out all those horrible things that happened to Gypsies was too … well, it was too depressing, I guess.”

“Oh yeah? Horrible?” Ken finally looked interested. “What kind of horrible things?”

So Melanie began to tell about the things she’d read in
The Eternal Outcasts
. All about how Gypsies had been beaten and killed and sold into slavery, all over the world, for hundreds and hundreds of years. And then how Hitler and the Nazis had killed so many thousands more.

By the time Melanie finished, Elizabeth’s eyes were full of tears, which was pretty much what you’d expect of a sensitive fourth grader. But Ken was more of a surprise. He’d quit kidding around, and the questions he asked were pretty serious. Toby’s reaction had changed too.

“Yeah,” he said when Melanie finally ran down, “I know all that stuff. My dad told me a long time ago. I just didn’t think you guys would be interested.”

“What do you mean, you didn’t think we’d be interested?” April asked. “Don’t you think we want to know the truth about things, even if some of it is too horrible to play games about? What I think is …” Noticing the surprised look on Melanie’s face, April lost her train of thought, but after a moment she went on. “What I think is—it’s just too depressing.”

After that it got quiet and stayed that way for an incredibly
long time. As if nobody could come to a decision or even think of anything to say. For several minutes the only sound was the rain spattering against the windows and a soft snoring noise from across the room, where both Marshall and Bear were sound asleep.

Toby spoke first, but what he started discussing wasn’t
The Eternal Outcasts
or the Gypsy Game or even real Gypsies. What Toby started telling was about Garbo and Vince and Mickey.

Of course they’d all heard about the three of them before, the old beggar lady and the two guys who’d been living in the church basement. Toby had told how his three temporary roommates hadn’t tried to rob or hurt him or anything, and how Vince, actually, had been the one who’d persuaded him to go back to his father. But this time Toby told them quite a lot more.

This time he told them more about Vince’s headaches, which made him almost blind and crazy with pain, and how Mickey was like a huge overgrown two-year-old. And that Garbo had told him that both Mickey and Vince had been in hospitals for a while until there wasn’t any money for them anymore, and they got sent out to learn to be responsible and self-sufficient.

And how Garbo, herself, had no place to live because she didn’t have any family and was too much of an oddball to fit into the kinds of institutions they wanted to put her in. And so she’d been on the streets for a long time, begging for money for food and living wherever she could.

“Garbo told me all sorts of stuff about them and what it was like to be what she called throwaway human beings,” Toby said. “That’s what she called them. All three of them,
and me too while I was there.” Toby’s grin was one-sided and brief. “And cellar rats. She called us cellar rats. And outcasts, too.” He looked at Melanie. “Just like in that book you were talking about.”

“Outcasts,” Toby said. And then he was quiet again for a while before he sighed and grinned in a strange way and said, “It’s not a whole lot of fun, being an outcast. Eternal or otherwise.”

There was another long quiet spell before Ken said, “Hey, I got it. How about if we kind of try to help those dudes out a little? I mean, Garbo and those other dudes.” He looked around the group and then nodded. “You know, like getting some kind of project started for—”

“Hold it. Hold everything, Kamata,” Toby said. “My dad already thought of that. He’s already been over to see Garbo a bunch of times. And he’s been talking to some of his friends about finding a place for people like them to live and—”

Ken interrupted back, “Hey, I’ll bet my dad could help with that kind of real estate thing. I’ll ask him. I’ll ask my dad.”

Then they all started having ideas, about bake sales and car washes and other ways to raise money. April was just saying that Melanie ought to be treasurer because she was good at math and keeping track of money, when Marshall woke up.

Getting up from where he’d been lying with his head on Bear’s neck, he wobbled over sleepily, rubbing his eyes. “Hi,” he said. “What are we talking about?” He looked at Melanie. “Are we talking about the Gypsy Game?”

Melanie started to say, “No. Not about the—” when April interrupted.

“That’s right,” she said. “A game about a different kind of Gypsies. I guess we’re talking about a different kind of Gypsy Game.”

Marshall looked worried. “With bears?” he asked anxiously.

“Sure, Marshamosis,” Toby said. “With bears. Couldn’t have a Gypsy Game without a bear, could we?”

Everybody laughed and went back to making plans about ways to raise money, and maybe for another type of meeting to which parents and other adults might be invited.

Everybody seemed pretty enthusiastic, at least for the moment. But later, when Ken and Toby and Elizabeth had gone home and Marshall had gone back to playing with Bear, April and Melanie talked about some of the problems that might arise and how much harder it would be this time because of having to get adults to agree on what ought to be done and how to do it and especially on who was going to get to run things and make all the important decisions.

“There’s going to be a lot of arguments,” April said. “Adults have a hard time agreeing on who gets to run things.”

“I know.” Melanie was looking worried. “It’s definitely not going to be easy. There’s going to be a lot of …”

“A lot of what?”

“Well, you know. Ethical dilemmas, and stuff like that.”

“Yeah.” April sighed. But then she grinned and said. “But we can handle it, I guess. I mean, we’re practically experts at ethical dilemmas. Right?”

“Right!” Melanie grinned back. “Practically experts.”

 

ZILPHA KEATLEY SNYDER
has written many popular and award-winning books for young readers, including
The Egypt Game, The Headless Cupid
and
The Witches of Worm
, all Newbery Honor Books and ALA Notable Books. Her most recent novels are
Spyhole Secrets, The Ghosts of Rathburn Park
and two novels about Gib Whittaker,
Gib Rides Home
and
Gib and the Gray Ghost
, which were inspired by stories her father told her about his childhood in a Nebraska orphanage.

Zilpha Keatley Snyder lives in Marin County, California.

BE SURE TO READ ANOTHER GREAT NOVEL BY
Zi
l
pha K
e
atl
ey
Sn
y
d
e
r
.…

Delacorte Press
ISBN: 0-385-73084-5

Excerpt from
The Unseen
by Zilpha Keatley Snyder
Copyright © 2004 by Zilpha Keatley Snyder

Published by Delacorte Press
An imprint of Random House Children’s Books
A division of Random House, Inc.
New York

All rights reserved

 

I
T ALL BEGAN
on a cold day in early autumn when a girl named Alexandra Hobson was playing a dangerous game in a forbidden forest. The game, about an enchanted creature, half human and half animal, had been inspired by the fact that Alexandra, or Xandra, as she preferred to be called, believed herself to be enchanted in some deeply secret and very private way. In a way that ordinary human beings could never understand or appreciate. Particularly not the humans who happened to be members of her own family and who, in spite of what most people thought, were all hopelessly ordinary.

As for the forbidden forest? The forest was real enough, acres and acres of undeveloped timberland that started right behind the Hobsons’ property and stretched out toward the mountains. And the forbidden part was real too. Forbidden by people who insisted that a forest wasn’t a safe place for a twelve-year-old girl to spend so much time, at least not all by herself.

And so it happened that on that particular cloudy afternoon nobody knew where Xandra was or what she was doing. Not that any of her siblings would have cared to know, except so that they could tell and cause trouble. In the Hobson household causing trouble for Xandra had always been a favorite pastime.

She hadn’t meant to go very far that day, but she’d gotten caught up in the game about being an enchanted woodland creature, and one thing and one
forest pathway led to another. She’d skirted the edge of the marsh, crossed Cascade Creek by jumping from one rock to another, and kept going on, deeper into the forest.

This time the game concerned a unicorn, a magical creature that could be seen only by royal princesses or enchanted people. She was closing in on the unicorn, imagining fleeting glimpses of its slender legs and glowing golden horn, when she suddenly arrived at a place she had never been before. She had come out of dense forest into a small circular clearing carpeted with a thick layer of vines and ferns and surrounded by tall overhanging trees. She was turning in a circle, admiring the peaceful beauty of the small meadowlike area, when she was startled by a sudden sound.

She’d heard what? Gunfire? Yes. Definitely gunfire. Two shots in rapid succession. Frozen by surprise, Xandra was standing motionless when she became aware of a snapping, crackling sound in the branches over her head. She jumped back, throwing up her arms to protect her face, and when she took them down, there it was, only a few feet away.

Lying on a mound in the center of the vine-covered clearing, very close to Xandra’s feet, was a large white bird. As she stared in shocked surprise, it fluttered weakly and then lay still. At first she was too horrified and angry to be frightened or even to remember why she ought to be, completely blocking
out all the times she’d been warned about what might happen to her if she went into the woods alone, particularly during hunting season.

It was a big bird, its body larger than a pigeon’s, but completely, purely white. Its wings, fanned out on the gray earth, gleamed like sunlit snow—except where an ugly smear of red ran along the edge of the right wing and trickled down onto the grass. Muttering, “How could they? How could anyone shoot something so beautiful?” Xandra dropped to her knees, but as she stretched out her arms the bird began to move. Lifting a sleek, tear-shaped head, it opened its long golden beak and gave a mournful cry. “Oh,” Xandra gasped, “you’re alive.”

The wounded bird raised its head on its long curved neck and looked at her. Looked long and carefully, turning slowly to examine her with one glittering, jewel-like eye and then the other. Then it crooned again and began to try to pull its long slender legs under its body. It was still struggling to get to its feet when Xandra became aware of a series of terrifying sounds: shouting voices, crashing underbrush, and then trampling feet and the barking of a dog.

They were coming. The hunters were coming to get their prey. To crush it into a bag full of dead game, or to hang it from someone’s belt by its long delicate legs. Scooping the white bird up into her arms, Xandra turned and ran.

At first she ran directly toward home, but then,
remembering something she’d read about how to escape bloodhounds, she headed for the creek. She stopped only for a moment at the rocky bank, then jumped out into the water and began to wade, working her way upstream.

The streambed was paved with slippery, moss-covered rocks, and the cold water quickly saturated her shoes. The depth of the water varied as she moved forward. Sometimes it was only a few inches deep, but now and again it flowed well above her knees, soaking the hem of her skirt. The howling of the hound grew louder and as she slipped and stumbled forward, she wondered frantically if it was really true that a hunting hound would lose the scent if its prey ran through flowing water. Or was she freezing her legs and ruining her new shoes for nothing?

The dog’s howls grew louder and closer, and now Xandra could hear the voices of the hunters—hoarse, threatening voices, calling to each other and to the hound. Shaking, almost choking with fear, she stumbled on, slipping and sliding, now and then falling to her knees. With the motionless bird still cradled in her arms, she had to struggle clumsily to get back onto her feet. She was cold and soggy, her knees were skinned and bruised and her plaid skirt was wet almost to her waist before she became aware that the sounds of pursuit had begun to fade. The howls and shouts were growing dimmer and farther away. But even after she was fairly sure she had succeeded in
throwing the hounds off the trail, she stumbled on. And all the while the bird continued to lie warm and dry in her cradling arms. Still alive? she began to wonder. Or had the poor thing died of its wounds, or perhaps of sheer fright?

The howls and shouts were long gone before Xandra dared to slow her pace, leave the streambed and scramble up the shallow bank. In her arms, the bird lay absolutely still. Putting it gently down on a patch of grass, she was looking for a solemn and secret place to leave its poor dead body when it raised its head, and once again she heard the soft, sobbing call.

It was much later when a damp and bedraggled Xandra Hobson, still carrying the wounded but now definitely living bird, pushed open the heavy back gate of 75 Heritage Avenue, closed it firmly behind her and realized that, for once, she was glad to be there.

Extremely glad, in spite of the fact that there had been times when she’d imagined, even pretended, that she lived somewhere else. Times in fact when she’d actually denied living at the expensive end of Heritage Avenue in the house that one of her smart-mouthed siblings had nicknamed the Hobson Habitat. She wasn’t sure why she avoided being identified as a Hobson, except that she knew from past experience that once people knew who she was, she would have to listen to them rave about all her gorgeous and talented brothers and sisters. (Or
siblings
, as Xandra
preferred to call them. There was something warm and cozy sounding about “brothers and sisters” that had very little to do with the way Xandra felt about her fellow Hobsons.)

But on that particular afternoon, with the hunters and their ferocious dog somewhere close behind her, the solid stone walls of the Hobson Habitat were a welcome sight. After a quick glance around to make sure she was not going to be seen, either by a sibling or by Otto, the Hobsons’ gardener, Xandra made her way across the lawn and around several carefully landscaped flower beds on her way to the basement door.

The huge basement of the Hobson Habitat was as hopelessly dusty and cluttered as the rest of the house was sleek and shiny. Over the years it had become the dumping place for all sorts of furniture and equipment that no one used anymore but might want again at some future time. Starting just inside the door and spreading out in every direction were dozens of boxes and trunks and barrels and filing cabinets. And in between everything else there were objects too big for containers. All sorts of Hobson artifacts, such as teetering stacks of skateboards, skis, scooters, golf carts, hockey sticks, tennis rackets and the scattered remains of an elaborate model railroad. And here and there among the toys and sports equipment, many different kinds of housecleaning equipment, such as rug shampooers, floor waxers and vacuum
cleaners. None of which—none of the sports stuff and certainly none of the cleaning gadgets—interested Xandra in the slightest.

But farther on, way back behind the furnace, if you knew how to find it, there was an entirely different scene. Getting there wasn’t easy. The furnace itself was an enormous black box, out of which great fat heat vents snaked off toward every part of the house. It was necessary to wind your way between boxes and barrels and stacks of stuff and then duck under a couple of sagging heat vents before you came to a place that no one in the family ever visited—no one except Xandra. A place that had been, for a long time, a very private and secret hideout for her special friends who happened to be animals. And where now, as always, she immediately felt better. Safer, calmer and more at home.

It was in that small space behind the furnace that Xandra had fed and cared for a variety of infant or ailing creatures, but only until they were strong enough to make it on their own or could be adopted by families who, unlike the Hobson parents, weren’t allergic to or afraid of pets of any kind.

Against one wall were the cages and boxes where various animals had lived and where, by the light of two narrow windows high up on the wall, Xandra had fed and cared for them. Creatures that had lived behind the furnace at least temporarily included any number of baby birds, two litters of abandoned
kittens, an orphaned baby skunk, a slightly chewed-up garden snake she’d rescued from a neighbor’s bulldog and a half-grown barn owl whose larger siblings had pushed it out of the nest. Ratchet, the noisy barn owl baby, had been one of Xandra’s favorites. Having had so much personal experience with pushy siblings, she couldn’t help feeling a special sympathy for the evicted owl.

So now, safe at last in the dark, smelly privacy of her secret hideout, she settled the white bird into a large carton padded with straw and equipped with a bowl of water. Although it shrank away from the touch of her hand, it seemed quite calm when she reached in to put the water bowl in place, only turning its head from side to side to watch what she was doing.

It seemed much stronger now, its head held high on its long slender neck. The blood she had seen on its right wing seemed to have disappeared. By the time she was ready to leave, the bird was sitting up with its snowy wings tucked in and its long legs folded neatly beneath its body. On her way out, preparing to duck under the first furnace vent, Xandra looked back and caught her breath in surprise. Even in the dimly lit basement, the bird’s feathers glistened so brightly that it seemed to be surrounded by a mysterious halo of light. “Goodbye, you beautiful thing,” she whispered. “I’ll be back as soon as I find out what you are and what you like to eat.”

Inside the house she stopped long enough to take off her soggy shoes before she made her way quietly up the back stairs and down the hall to her own room. A room where two whole walls were covered by bookshelves, and where, among dozens of books about birds and animals, she quickly located an illustrated volume on local birds. It didn’t take long to find out what she needed to know. The bird was probably an egret or something very similar, and it would need to eat things like frogs and insects and small fish. She knew where she could find such things, of course, at a place where Cascade Creek flowed out into a series of quiet, shallow ponds, but that would have to wait until tomorrow. There wasn’t time to get to the ponds and back before dinner. But in the meantime …

In the meantime, it suddenly occurred to her, there was the aquarium. The enormous aquarium, practically an indoor lake, full of all kinds of exotic and expensive tropical fish, which belonged to Quincy, the oldest, biggest and possibly most hateful of the siblings. Only a moment later, standing in the doorway of the fish collector’s room, Xandra was peering across what closely resembled a full-fledged scientific laboratory and plotting her raid on the aquarium. She worked her way around science fair displays decorated with blue ribbons, and desks and tables covered with microscopes and racks of test tubes—plus, and this was particularly annoying, Quincy’s very own television.

Not that having a television in your own room was unusual on Heritage Avenue, where most kids did. Most kids, but not the ones at the Hobson Habitat, where there was a strict rule against it until you were eighteen years old. Giving the shiny new TV a resentful glance, Xandra moved carefully and quickly across the room, knowing that the eighteen-year-old owner of the TV—not to mention his own car—might arrive home at any time. But then, peering into the watery depths of the aquarium, with the fishnet already in her hand, she changed her mind.

Why did she change her mind about kidnapping a fat and juicy zebra fish or perhaps the beautiful, brightly colored angelfish? At first she wasn’t too sure. It was definitely not that she was terrified about what the aquarium-owning sibling would do to her if he learned who had taken his precious fish. That was a risk she was willing to take. After all, she didn’t plan to confess and he would have no proof. But there were other reasons. The main one seemed to be that the fish were beautiful creatures too, and after all, they really couldn’t help being owned by someone as mean as a Hobson teenager. Also, there was the probability that a spicy tropical fish might not be good for the digestive system of a purely white, nontropical bird—particularly one that was already in a weakened condition. And besides, Xandra suddenly realized, there might be an easier solution. A brine shrimp solution.

Cluttering up a family refrigerator with jars of smelly brine shrimp to feed his fancy fish had been one of the aquarium owner’s more annoying habits. But at that particular moment, a habit that suddenly met with Xandra’s approval. Checking her watch, Xandra decided there was just about time to change into dry clothing, make a quick and stealthy stop at a particular refrigerator, visit the basement and arrive at the dinner table only a little bit later than usual.

BOOK: The Gypsy Game
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