NINA KIRIKI HOFFMAN
SWEET NOTHINGS
EVER SINCE DAD DIED, THE sweet nothings stayed in
Douglas's room. He didn't know
how to make them go away.
When Mom came in after lights out,
the sweet nothings hid under Douglas's bed.
He wished they would go under Arthur's for a
change, but they didn't like the
way Arthur smelled. Arthur thought that soap was some kind
of Martian plot to
make his skin hurt, so he usually didn't use it.
Mom had always made
Douglas use the soap. She used to make Arthur use soap too,
but since Dad died Morn just
wasn't on top of things the way she used to be.
Mom would come in and say good night to
Arthur and Douglas, and the whole time
the sweet nothings would be whispering somewhere
just below Douglas's ear. The
worst thing about it was that he could almost understand
them. He was sure they
were talking about things no ten-yearold should hear.
They had first
appeared one night when Dad was whispering to Mom on the sofa
while Arthur and Douglas were
sitting on the floor, doing a puzzle and watching
The Simpsons. Arthur didn't seem to
notice anything, but Douglas saw Dad's head
close to Mom's, and saw More smile a secret
smile that said she was thinking
about something Douglas couldn't understand. Dad whispered
some more and Mom let
out a little giggle that made her sound like someone in seventh
grade.
Small bouncy pink things showed up in the corners of the room as Dad and Morn
whispered
and giggled. It made Douglas feel creepy. They looked like soft rubber
bunnies, but they
had no eyes or ears. They had chubby hands, bigger than their
heads, bigger than their
feet. And the hands were reaching toward Morn and Dad,
fingers curved to clutch. The wide
little mouths always stretched into toothless
grins. Sometimes tongues came out of their
mouths and licked -- licked their own
faces, or each others'. Their tongues were way too
long.
Douglas nudged Arthur, and pointed toward the pink things. Arthur looked. Then
he
looked back at Douglas, his eyes narrowing. "This some kind of trick?" he
whispered.
"What?"
Douglas whispered.
"What'd you do? You steal a piece of the puzzle when I looked away?"
"What?"
"What are you up to?" Arthur's whisper was mad now.
"The pink things," Douglas whispered,
"don't you see the pink things?"
"What are you talking about?" Arthur peeked over his
shoulder at Morn and Dad.
Douglas looked too. Mom and Dad were staring at each other.
Masses of pink
things sat along the arms and back of the couch, reaching out, opening and
closing their too-big hands.
Arthur punched Douglas in the shoulder. "What are you talking
about?"
"The pink things," Douglas said, his whisper fading. He rubbed his arm where
Arthur
had punched him.
"There are no pink things. Shut up."
The pink things hopped around, flexing
their fingers, gripping nothing, as long
as Dad whispered. Later, when Dad and Mom sent
Douglas and Arthur up to brush
their teeth, the little pink things disappeared.
"What was
Dad whispering to you last night?" Douglas asked at breakfast the next
day. Dad had left
for work already.
"Sweet nothings," Mom said, and smiled, staring at the wall.
Douglas hoped
Dad would never do that again, but it happened. Douglas made a
study of the little pink
things. They never actually did anything. They smelled
like burnt sugar and butter and hot
milk. Their grins reminded him of little
devils, even though they didn't have horns or a
tail.
Douglas actually started to look forward to the nights when Mom and Dad were
fighting.
No jiggling little pink things with clutching fingers those nights.
But whenever Mom and
Dad made up .... Douglas took to staring straight at the TV
when that happened, but he
could still see bouncing pink from the corners of his
eyes.
Arthur told Douglas he was being
weird. "What's the matter with you? You sick or
something? How come you're not eating your
desserts?"
Douglas didn't know what Arthur was complaining about. Douglas usually sneaked
his dessert to Arthur later. Arthur was meaner and madder than he used to be,
though, no
matter what Douglas did.
The fights got louder.
Douglas remembered the biggest fight. He and
Arthur had hidden in their room
with the lights out while the shouting was going on.
Douglas
was thinking very hard about the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.
Michelangelo was Douglas's
favorite, and Douglas was trying to talk himself out
of this. Everybody knew Michelangelo
was the stupid one. He liked to party, but
he was stupid. So why did Douglas love him the
best? Leonardo was obviously
smarter and stronger and braver; he was the leader. Douglas
decided from now on
he would like Leonardo the best. You couldn't like Raph. Raph got mad a
lot.
That wasn't good. Getting mad just hurt people. Donatello was the smartest, and
he
loved playing with his machines, but Douglas didn't like machines. Once
Arthur had set up
the toaster to give Douglas a shock. Arthur was good at
machines. He could make the TVgo to
channels that weren't even on cable. No,
Douglas didn't really like Donatello.
But Leo. He
could like Leo.
Deep inside he knew he would always like Michelangelo the best.
The door
slammed downstairs, louder than Douglas had ever heard it. Douglas
closed his eyes and
thought about Michelangelo's face, grinning beneath his
orange headband. Michelangelo had
the best grin.
Mom was crying. Arthur and Douglas sat on their beds in the dark and waited.
Douglas didn't remember falling asleep, but he woke up and it was light outside
and his
neck hurt.
He never saw or heard Dad again.
Dad went to the Next Place -- that was what Mom
said, anyway, as though he had
moved to another town and sooner or later they would all
catch up to him. Aunt
Ruby, who took care of Arthur and Douglas while Mom went to say
good-bye, said,
"I'm sorry, but I just don't hold with keeping you boys in the dark. You
have to
know, and if Hazel doesn't tell you now and you find out later what she's hiding
from you, it's going to hurt you. Children, your father is dead."
Arthur turned pale. He
crossed his arms over his chest and stared at the floor.
Douglas thought, just for a
second, no more sweet nothings, no more yelling.
Good. Then he hit himself in the head so
hard it hurt, and he started crying. He
couldn't get himself to stop. Aunt Ruby kept
saying, "I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm
sorry," and tried to get him to sip from a cup of water.
Nothing helped. His
head fogged up after a crying while and Aunt Ruby put him to bed.
Arthur never
said a word.
The sweet nothings didn't show up again until a couple weeks after
the funeral.
Douglas and Arthur were watching TV on the floor, like they always did, and
Mom
was sitting on the couch hugging a pillow. She was sad a lot. Douglas never knew
what to
do about her being sad.
Sometimes Douglas was sad himself, remembering the way Dad used to
rub his hair,
or make special pancakes the shape of his initial on Sunday mornings, or the
way
on Douglas's tenth birthday he was allowed to stay up really late and he just
sat with
Dad on the front porch looking at stars and talking, and nobody had
been in a hurry to go
anywhere or do the next thing; it had been as if they had
all the time in the world.
That
was the day Dad had finally allowed him to have a pocket knife, too.
Douglas kept the knife
in his pocket all the time, closing his hand around it
often during the day. If he found a
piece of string he would open up the knife
and cut through it. The blade was very sharp.
Dad had promised to show Douglas
how to sharpen the blade on a whetstone, but now he never
would.
The night the sweet nothings came back, Douglas and Arthur were watching some
nature
program. Mom always seemed happier when they were watching some nature
program. This one
was about cats and it talked about how the father cat
sometimes came in the barn and killed
all the kittens that.weren't his. Douglas
thought it was creepy. He reached into his pocket
for his knife and all he found
was a little hole in the bottom of his pocket. His stomach
twisted and hurt him.
He couldn't believe it. It was like he lost Dad all over.
Before he
started crying -- he was afraid he wouldn't know how to stop again, so
he had never let
himself cry since that one night with Aunt Ruby -- he looked
up, looked all around, hoping
that if the knife had fallen out, it had fallen
out right here at home so he could find it
again.
That was when he saw the sweet nothings. They were sitting in front of the
couch,
their blind faces aimed toward Mom. She didn't seem to notice them. She
just sat there
hugging the big orange pillow, with tears running down her face.
The weird thing was the
sweet nothings weren't reaching out and opening and
closing their fingers the way they used
to. They just sat there like little
rubber bunnies. They were almost...cute.
Douglas forgot
about his knife until the next morning, when he searched the
whole house for it and
couldn't find it. He asked Mom if she had seen it, and
she checked inside the washer and
dryer for him, but the knife wasn't there.
"I'll get you another one, sweetie," she said.
"But it --" Douglas said. He could tell that the hurt place inside wouldn't
disappear until
he found his own knife. "It isn't..." Then he looked at Morn and
saw that her face had its
right-before-tears look. "Okay."
Everywhere he went -- to the school, to the store -- he
still kept an eye out
for his knife.
When the sweet nothings came back the next night,
Douglas watched them out of
the comer of his eye. The third time they came back, he
actually edged over and
touched one. It felt smooth and warm and sort of wet, and he liked
touching it,
but he thought he shouldn't like touching it. He let go of it right away.
That
was the night they followed him up to his bedroom after More made him and
Arthur turn off
the TV and go to bed.
The sweet nothings moved right into Douglas's and Arthur's room that
night and
they only left when everybody was downstairs watching TV. Douglas was always
scared
when he had to pee in the middle of the night. He was afraid he'd step on
one, or that they
would all crawl into his bed while he was gone and be waiting
there to grab him with their
chubby clutching hands when he slid back between
the covers. Usually he just took the
covers with him to the bathroom so that the
bed was bare when he got back and he could see
its clean white surface by the
nightlight and make sure no little pink lumps huddled there.
After a little while Arthur stopped punching Douglas in the shoulder; or maybe
Douglas just
stopped noticing it.
"You're getting too weird," Arthur told him. "Stop it."
But how could
he stop it? The sweet nothings were there. What was he supposed to
do, step on them? Let
them grab him?
Douglas had seen Arthur step on one and not even shiver. The sweet nothing
got
up afterward as though nothing had happened.
Douglas wished he could get rid of them
somehow.
Sometimes Douglas thought about putting the sweet nothings in a sack and
throwing
them in the Dumpster at school.
No, that probably wouldn't work. Dad had gone to the Next
Place, and the sweet
nothings had found their way back from there. They could probably come
home from
anything.
He thought about drowning them, but he wasn't even sure they were alive.
How
could you kill something that wasn't alive?
If he could only find his knife, maybe he
could -- but Dad had told him the
knife was only for cutting string or scotch tape, or for
whittling. "Never hurt
anyone with this," Dad had said.
The best thing would be if he could
get a steamroller to run over them, but
maybe they'd pop back into shape like Judge Doom in
Roger Rabbit.
One night he decided to do something even though he didn't think it would
work.
He took the big fuzzy orange pillow cover off the pillow that Mom was always
hugging
on the couch and he caught the sweet nothings -- they didn't try very
hard to get away, and
when he picked them up, they snuggled in his hand and some
of them licked him. It made him
feel good in an icky way.
He put them all in the pillow case and zipped it shut right
before the Sunday
evening nature show came on, and then he brought the pillow downstairs.
The
sweet nothings made a pretty lumpy pillow. If Morn noticed something different,
Douglas
wasn't sure what would happen. He was tired of things being the same,
though.
He noticed
right away that the sweet nothings didn't ooze out of the pillow
cover and reappear on the
floor the way he had been afraid they would. Mom
hugged the pillow. The TV talked about the
lives of ants. Arthur colored in
pictures of Muppets. Douglas took a blue crayon and a
piece of paper and started
coloring a sky in a big picture. He did short lines very close
to each other and
worked across the top, then moved down and worked the next stripe,
leaving no
speck of white page behind.
When he peeked at Mom, she was crying the way she
usually did, but she had her
cheek pressed against the pillow and there was a little smile
on her face. She
didn't even seem to notice how funny the pillow was. When she went to bed,
she
took the pillow with her.
Douglas looked at his picture the next morning in the wake of
the first
whisper-free night he'd had in a long time. A solid blue sky the size and shape
of his piece of paper. He had been concentrating so hard on making the white
blue that he
had forgotten to leave room for anything else.
He decided that was okay. Sometimes you just
had to look at the problem and not
anywhere else. He got out a new piece of paper and
spilled the crayons out of
the coffee can onto the kitchen table, and there was his knife.
He held it in his hand a long time before he picked up a green crayon. He opened
the blade
of his knife and sharpened the crayon, leaving little cuffs of color
in the middle of his
paper. He sharpened the pink crayon and the brown crayon
and the silver, and then he wiped
his knife off on his jeans, closed the blade,
and set the knife right on the table next to
where he was working, so he could
see it.
He closed his eyes. He opened them. The knife was
still there. He smiled and
started a new picture.