"I've got something you haven't.""Have not." Arnold caved in Stevie's tunnel."Have too. It's a Dark.""A what?""A Dark. I've got it in a hole down there." He jerked his head down thewash."Aw, you're crazy. There ain't no dark. You're just talking baby stuff."Stevie felt his face getting hot. "I am not. You just come and see."He dragged Arnold by the hand down the wash with the sand crunching underfoot like spilled sugar and sifting in and out of their barefoot sandals. Theysquatted in front of the hole. The Dark had pulled way back in so theycouldn't see it."I don't see nothing." Arnold leaned forward to look into the hole. "Thereain't no dark. You're just silly.""I am not! And The Dark is so in that hole.""Sure it's dark in the hole, but that ain't nothing. You can't have a dark,silly."ABC Amber Palm Converter,http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.html"Can too." Stevie reached in his pocket and took tight hold of his pocketpiece. "You better cross your fingers. I'm going to let it out a little ways.""Aw!" Arnold didn't believe him, but he crossed his fingers anyway.Stevie took two of the magic rocks away from in front of the hole and movedback. The Dark came pouring out like a flood. It poured in a thin streamthrough the open place in the magic and shot up like a tower of smoke. Arnoldwas so surprised that he uncrossed his fingers and The Dark wrapped around hishead and he began to scream and scream. The Dark sent a long arm out toStevie, but Stevie pulled out his pocket piece and hit The Dark. Stevie couldhear The Dark scream inside his head so he hit it again and The Dark fell alltogether and got littler so Stevie pushed it back into the hole with hispocket piece. He put the magic rocks back and wrote two big magics in the sandso that The Dark cried again and hid way back in the hole.Arnold was lying on the sand with his face all white and stiff, so Stevieshook him and called him. Arnold opened his eyes and his face turned red andbegan to bleed. He started to bawl, "Mama! Mama!" and ran for the house asfast as he could through the soft sand. Stevie followed him, yelling, "Youuncrossed your fingers! It's your fault! You uncrossed your fingers!"Arnold and his mother went home. Arnold was still bawling and his motherwas real red around the nose when she yelled at Mommy. "You'd better learn tocontrol that brat of yours or he'll grow up a murderer! Look what he did to mypoor Arnold!" And she drove away so fast that she hit the chuckhole by thegate and nearly went off the road.Mommy sat down on the front step and took Stevie between her knees. Stevielooked down and traced a little, soft magic with his finger on Mommy's slacks."What happened, Stevie?"Stevie squirmed. "Nothing, Mommy. We were just playing in the wash.""Why did you hurt Arnold?""I didn't. Honest. I didn't even touch him.""But the whole side of his face was skinned." Mommy put on herno-fooling-now voice. "Tell me what happened, Stevie."Stevie gulped. "Well, Arnold was bragging ’bout his two-wheel bike and—"Stevie got excited and looked up. "And Mommy, he has a cat withthree-and-a-half legs!""Go on."Stevie leaned against her again."Well, I've got a Dark in a hole in the wash so I—""A Dark? What is that?""It's, it's just a Dark. It isn't very nice. I keep it in its hole withmagic. I let it out a little bit to show Arnold and it hurt him. But it washis fault. He uncrossed his fingers."Mommy sighed. "What really happened, Stevie?""I told you, Mommy! Honest, that's what happened.""For True, Stevie?" She looked right in his eyes.Stevie looked right back. "Yes, Mommy, For True."She sighed again. "Well, son, I guess this Dark business is the same asyour Mr. Bop and Toody Troot.""Uh, uh!" Stevie shook his head. "No sir. Mr. Bop and Toody Troot are nice.The Dark is bad.""Well, don't play with it any more then.""I don't play with it," protested Stevie. "I just keep it shut up withmagic.""All right, son." She stood up and brushed the dust off the back of herslacks. "Only for the love of Toody Troot, don't let Arnold get hurt again."She smiled at Stevie.Stevie smiled back. "Okay, Mommy. But it was his fault. He uncrossed hisfingers. He's a baby."The next time Stevie was in the wash playing cowboy on Burro Eddie, heABC Amber Palm Converter,http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.htmlheard The Dark calling him. It called so sweet and soft that anybody wouldthink it was something nice, but Stevie could feel the bad rumble way downunder the nice, so he made sure his pocket piece was handy, shooed Eddie away,and went down to the hole and squatted down in front of it.The Dark stood up behind the magic rocks and it had made itself look likeArnold only its eyes didn't match and it had forgotten one ear and it wasfreckled all over like Arnold's face."Hello," said The Dark with its Arnold-mouth. "Let's play.""No," said Stevie. "You can't fool me. You're still The Dark.""I won't hurt you." The Arnold-face stretched out sideways to make a smile,but it wasn't a very good one. "Let me out and I'll show you how to have lotsof fun.""No," said Stevie. "If you weren't bad, the magic couldn't hold you. Idon't want to play with bad things.""Why not?" asked The Dark. "Being bad is fun sometimes—lots of fun.""I guess it is," said Stevie, "but only if it's a little bad. A big badmakes your stomach sick and you have to have a spanking or a sit-in-the-cornerand then a big loving from Mommy or Daddy before it gets well again.""Aw, come on," said The Dark. "I'm lonesome. Nobody ever comes to play withme. I like you. Let me out and I’ll give you a two-wheel bike.""Really?" Stevie felt all warm inside. "For True?""For True. And a cat with three-and-a-half legs.""Oh!" Stevie felt like Christmas morning. "Honest?""Honest. All you have to do is take away the rocks and break up your pocketpiece and I'll fix everything for you.""My pocket piece?" The warmness was going away. "No sir, I won't eitherbreak it up. It's the magicest thing I've got and it was hard to make.""But I can give you some better magic.""Nothing can be more magic." Stevie tightened his hand around his pocketpiece. "Anyway, Daddy said I might get a two-wheel bike for my birthday. I'llbe six years old. How old are you?"The Dark moved back and forth. "I'm as old as the world."Stevie laughed. "Then you must know Auntie Phronie. Daddy says she's as oldas the hills.""The hills are young," said The Dark. "Come on, Stevie, let me out.Please—pretty please.""Well," Stevie reached for the pretty red rock. "Promise you'll be good.""I promise."Stevie hesitated. He could feel a funniness in The Dark's voice. It soundedlike Lili-cat when she purred to the mice she caught. It sounded likePooch-pup when he growled softly to the gophers he ate sometimes. It madeStevie feel funny inside and, as he squatted there wondering what the feelingwas, lightning flashed brightly above the treetops and a few big raindropssplashed down with the crash of thunder.