“This may be difficult for a boy your age to understand, but sometimes people feel a certain way about each other and they want to spend the rest of their lives together. Loving one person that way doesn’t mean you love other people any less. Sharon’s perfect, don’t you think?”
“I wouldn’t say that she’s perfect.”
“Don’t be a rascal. I think she’s perfect. Just like I think you’re perfect.”
“But are you moving away?”
“Yes.”
“Penny doesn’t want you to leave.”
“I know that.”
“I don’t want you to leave, either.”
“You should. You’ll have a bigger room.”
“Will I ever see you again?”
“What? Of course you…” She let out a loud, sharp laugh. “Nathan, I’m only moving out of the house. Sharon and I are buying a small home in the valley. We’ll be twenty minutes away. You can visit whenever you want.”
“Really? Then…then why is Penny so sad?”
“It can still be a sad thing. But I’ll always take care of you. You’ll just have to help take care of Penny.”
“I can do that. I promise.”
Nathan decided to go to the Halloween party as the Pied Piper of Hamelin, He carried Mary’s flute and dragged along a long line of rats he’d made out of brown paper and fur that had been shed by a dog in the neighborhood. Jamison had insisted that this wasn’t a scary costume, but Nathan argued that the Pied Piper had lured an entire village worth of children to their demise and was in fact a figure of great terror and evil. Jamison went as a wolfman.
The first thing they did was bob for apples. Nathan felt that there were many downsides to his teeth and very few upsides, but one positive aspect is that they made him extremely adept at bobbing for apples. He came up with an apple on his very first try, and the other children applauded, except for one boy, Will, who just sat there, looking annoyed and angry. He was in Nathan’s class, but they’d never spoken except once when Will had tried to copy his homework.
Then Ronald turned out the lights, shone a flashlight on his face, and told them a story about a killer with a metal hook for a hand. The killer snuck up on some unsuspecting kids who were listening to music in their car, and just as he was about to open their door the kids started the engine and drove away, popping the hook-hand right off. The killer ran around screaming and bleeding from his hand, and just when it seemed that he might bleed to death, the kids remembered that they’d forgotten something and accidentally ran him over.
Everybody loved the story except for Will, who just sat there and glared at Nathan. Nathan wished he would quit doing that. It was Halloween—shouldn’t this be the one night that people didn’t stare at his teeth?
“What do you want?” Nathan finally asked. He was having a fantastic time, and didn’t want Will to spoil it.
“I want you to leave.”
“Hey, knock it off,” said Ronald. “This is my party and you won’t ruin it for me. Nathan was invited fair and square.”
“Oh, yeah?” Will stood up. He was the biggest child in Mrs. Calmon’s class, which made him much larger than Nathan. “I think he should be uninvited.”
“Why?” asked Nathan.
“Because your mom is disgusting.”
Nathan stiffened and clenched his fists. “My mother died.”
“You know who I mean. My dad said that one of your moms goes around doing the most disgusting things, right out there in public. He said he saw her down by the lake, walking with another woman, holding her hand where anybody could see!”
“So what? Sharon is very nice. Why shouldn’t Mary hold her hand?”
“Because it makes people sick is why!”
Nathan couldn’t remember ever having felt such rage, not even toward Bernard Steamspell. “Take it back.”
“I won’t. My dad said that he can’t even imagine what horrible things they do when they’re done holding hands! Your mom is a nasty beast.”
“Take it back!”
“Nasty beast!”
And then Nathan was upon him, tackling Will to the floor and raining punches on the larger boy’s chest. Ronald ran upstairs for his mother while the other boys cheered. Some shouted “Go, Nathan, shut him up!” while others shouted in favor of Will.
“Take it back!” Nathan was so furious that he thought his eyes might be glowing red, but he also knew that Penny, Mary, and Sharon wouldn’t be happy about him fighting like this, even in their defense. Four or five more punches and he’d stop.
“I’ll never take it back!” Will punched him in the jaw, so hard that Nathan felt something give way behind his lip. He spat out some blood and a pointed tooth. “Nasty vulgar beast!”
“Don’t say that about her!”
“That’s what she is!”
“She is not!”
Will punched Nathan in the chin. His vision went completely white for a second, and as Will’s fist slid past him, Nathan bit him on the arm.
Will screamed as his teeth sunk in, then pulled away so quickly that a small piece of arm came off in Nathan’s mouth.
“Nathan!” Ronald’s mother ran down the stairs. “What have you done?”
“He bit me!” Will wailed. “He bit me on the arm!”
Nathan didn’t know what to do with the (small) piece of Will’s arm that was in his mouth. Spitting it out would seem to call much more attention to it than he wanted, while the idea of swallowing it was stomach-churning and cannibalistic. He gagged and spat it onto the floor.
“I didn’t mean to—!”
“Look at the blood!” Ronald’s mother screamed. “I’ve never seen such a horror show!”
“I’m a goner!” said Will. “He’s murdered me. I just know it!”
Ronald’s mother scooped the boy into her arms. “Henry!” she called upstairs. “Call an ambulance! And the police!”
The police? She wasn’t really going to call the police on him, was she?
She looked back at her son. “Ronald! Get away from him! Come with me! Now! All of you, follow me upstairs!”
Ronald’s mother ran up the stairs with Will. All of the other boys except Jamison followed her. A couple of them were also screaming, though none as loud as Will.
Nathan plopped down into his chair. “I didn’t mean to do it. We were just fighting and he made me so angry. If he hadn’t pulled his arm away nothing would have come off. I wasn’t trying to hurt him like that.”
“I’m glad you did it,” said Jamison. “He deserved it, saying those things.”
“But what if I go to jail?”
“They don’t send kids to jail.” Jamison rolled his eyes at the foolishness of that statement, but then began to look quite concerned. “Do they?”
TWELVE
“Little boys fight all the time,” said Officer Danbury. “It’s what they do. If they didn’t fight, they’d be girls.”
There were a lot of them crowded into the police station. Officer Danbury, Nathan, Penny, Mary, Sharon, Ronald’s mom, Will (with his arm bandaged up), and Will’s parents.
“However,” Officer Danbury continued, “this was no ordinary fight, because one of them was armed, the same as if he’d been carrying a knife or a gun.” He looked at Will’s mother. “If your son were wandering around town with a gun and he went and shot another boy, you’d expect him to suffer some consequences, wouldn’t you?”
“I certainly would!”
“And if he had a knife, and he went around stabbing people just as freely as you please, you’d want to see justice served, right?”
“Indeed!”
“Then it’s settled.” Officer Danbury turned his attention to Nathan. “You’re going to jail, young man.”