canceled, or he might decide to let me live but ban me from the Crypts. âDisfavor,â they call it, which means youâre on the curb, fending for yourself without protection or shelter.
Death or disfavor. I donât know which is worse, and I donât want to find out.
Â
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L ATER THAT DAY I go back to the stacks. My plan is, Iâll finish ripping off the old gummy and take his worthless papers, the junk he calls a book, and give it to Billy Bizmo, like I should have done in the first place. Thatâs my plan, but in the end it doesnât work out that way.
This time Little Face pops up as soon as he sees me coming. âChoxbar!â he chirps, holding out his dirt-colored hands.
I go, âYou know any other words? Huh?â
He shakes his head. âChox! Chox!â
I get one out of my pouch and give it to him, and he gulps it down and holds out his hands again.
âYou know the way,â I tell him. âTake me to Ryter. Then you get another choxbar.â
So Little Face guides me through the rows of stackboxes like before, only this time the old gummy is standing in the door, waiting for me.
âDonât be surprised,â he says with a smile. âBad news travels fast in this part of the world.â
I donât know why, but that hits me hard, the idea that Iâm bad news. Of course itâs true â me coming back to the stacks is bad news, what else could it be? But he looks so hopeful, like heâs sure Iâll prove him wrong, that my plan to rip him off again goes right out the back of my head.
Not today, Iâm thinking, Iâll steal his stupid âbookâ some other day.
âCome on in,â Ryter says, stepping to one side. âMake yourself at home.â
Heâs got this look in his watery old gray eyes, like he knows something I donât, but for some reason that doesnât make me mad. It just makes me want to know, too. But what, what is it he knows? He sees the look on my face and goes, âSomething happened. Is it the Bangers? Have they canceled me?â
I shake my head. âNot yet.â
âNot yet,â he says, sounding real thoughtful. âThank you for being honest with me. If youâd said ânothing to worry aboutâ Iâd know it wasnât the truth. And I always want to know the truth.â
Right, Iâm thinking, just like Billy Bizmo.
Inside, itâs cool and shadowy and of course thereâs no furniture, so I sit on the floor with my legs crossed. The old geez sits on the crate box he uses for a desk. The way light comes in, I canât see his face, and his baggy, old one-piece makes him look thin and shapeless at the same time, like heâs lost inside his clothes.
âIâve been thinking about you,â Ryter says. âAbout your story.â
âI told you,â I say. âI donât have a story.â
His head turns and now I can see his eyes, how big and old and kind they are. âWhat youâre really saying is, you donât have a story worth telling,â he says. âLet me be the judge of that.â
I want to stand up and shout that heâs got no right to tell me what I really mean â what makes him think he knows so much? â but instead I sit there and keep my mouth shut, maybe because underneath it all I know what he says is true.
âStart at the beginning,â he suggests. âWhatâs the first thing you remember?â
The first thing. Thatâs easy. The first thing is when I got my little sister, Bean. The thing about Bean is, she isnât really my sister â weâre not blood â but I didnât know that then, because I didnât know that Kay and Charly werenât my real mother and father. All of that came later, when I started to grow, but when Bean came along I was maybe four years old, and thatâs the first thing I remember.
This tiny, widgy little face wrapped