Excerpt
Excerpt
Hokey Pokey
Night
All night long the Seven Sisters whisper and giggle and then, all together, they rush
Orion the Hunter and tickle him, and Orion the Hunter laughs so hard he shakes every
star in the sky, not to mention Moon and Mooncow, who loses her balance and falls—
puh-loop!—into Big Dipper, which tip-tip-tips and dumps Mooncow into Milky Way, and
Mooncow laughs and splashes and rolls on her back and goes floating down down
down Milky Way, and she laughs a great moomoonlaugh and kicks at a lavender star
and the star goes shooting across the sky, up the sky and down the sky, a lavender
snowfireball down the highnight down. . .
down. . .
down. . .
down…
Today
Jack
…to Hokey Pokey…
…where it lands, a golden bubble now, a starborn bead, lands and softly pips upon the
nose of sleeping Jack and spills a whispered word:
it’s
and then another:
time
Something is wrong.
He knows it before he opens his eyes.
He looks.
His bike is gone!
Scramjet!
What more could he have done? He parked it so close that when he shut his eyes to
sleep he could smell the rubber of the tires, the grease on the chain.
And still she took it. His beloved Scramjet.He won’t say her name. He never says
her name, only her kind, sneers it to the morning star: “Girl.”
He runs to the rim of the bluff, looks up the tracks, down the tracks. There she
is, ponytail flying from the back of her baseball cap, the spokes of the wheels—his
wheels—plumspun in the thistledown dawn.
He waves his fist, shouts from the bluff: “I’ll get you!”
The tracks curve. He can cut her off!
He sneakerskis down the gullied, red-clay slope, leaps the tracks, plunges into the
jungle and runs—phloot!—into a soft, vast, pillowy mass. Oh no! Not again! He only
thinks this. He cannot say it because the front half of himself, including face, is buried in
the hippopotamoid belly of Wanda’s monster. This has happened before. He wags his
head hard, throws it back and—ttthok!—his face comes free.
“Wan-daaa!” he bellows. “Wake up!”
Wanda stirs in a bed of mayapples.
“Wanda!”
The moment Wanda awakes, her monster vanishes in a puff of apricots,
dropflopping Jack to the ground. He’s up in an instant and off again.
Every other step is a leap over a sleeper. All is quiet save thunder beyond the trees
and the thump of the sun bobbing against the underside of the horizon.
He hoprocks across the creek, past the island of Forbidden Hut and pulls up huffing
at the far loop-end of the tracks. He looks up, looks down.
Nothing.
He slumps exhausted to the steel rail. He stares at his sneaker tops. He gasps,
reflects. She said she would do it. “I’m going to take—” no, to be accurate, she didn’t
say “take,” she said “ride”—”I’m going to ride your bike.” And who knows? Maybe if she
had said it nicely. . . maybe if she wasn’t a girl. But she is a girl and she said it with that
snailey smirk, and then of course there was no way she was ever coming within ten
long spits of his bike.
But she did.
And he hates her. He hates her for taking the thing he loves most in this world. But
maybe even more, he hates her for being right.
He pushes himself up from the rail. Once more he casts forlorn eyes up and down
the tracks that no train travels. He cries out: “Scramjet!” This is too painful to bear alone.
From the black tarpit of despair he rips his Tarzan yell and hurls it into the jungle and
over the creek and across the dreamlands of Hokey Pokey.
Hokey Pokey
- Genres: Children's, Fantasy, Fiction
- paperback: 320 pages
- Publisher: Yearling
- ISBN-10: 0440420512
- ISBN-13: 9780440420514



