The
knock on the door echoed through the almost-empty rooms. Robin, reading a book in the guest room,
heard it quite clearly and wondered vaguely who it was. “Hellooo?” called a voice. Eleanor, Loxley’s sweetheart, dashed to the
window and craned her neck trying to see who it was. Her ears were twitched straight forward and
all her whiskers stood out.
“You’re
not going to be able to see from there,” Robin said. “I’ll go out and look.” She tiptoed to the door and opened it as
quietly as she could. Then she heard it:
the unmistakably unsteady voices of small children, three boys to be exact.
“It’s
the people here to take the van,” Robin reported in a whisper, closing the door
with the knob turned so the latch wouldn’t make the clicking sound as it shut. “But it’s okay; maybe they won’t come in
here.” And she went back to her book.
All
three of them could hear Robin’s mother opening the front door, and all three
of them could hear (quite plainly) the thundering of small shoes in the hallway,
sounding like a herd of dwarf wildebeest.
Then—oh, horror!—the sound became louder still, and closer still…!
Robin
was at the door in an instant, and with a flick of her wrist the lock was
turned and she sprang back and stood alert, her gaze on the door. When nothing happened right away, she turned
back to Loxley and Robin.
“This
is getting ridiculous, I know,” she whispered to them, “but I really do not
want to meet anyone at all right now.”
There was a thump on the door, almost certainly one of the visiting boys
trying the lock. Robin let out a barely
audible sigh of relief.
“Just
in time!” she whispered softly. The herd
of wildebeest did not linger by the door, but instead the beat of their hooves
announced their departure and traced their path back up the hallway and around
the corner, and then came a creaking that showed that they had discovered the
stairs. Robin winced. Even though none of her things were upstairs
anymore, the bedrooms upstairs had always been private family rooms: no guests
allowed. And rules that have been in
place for fifteen years are hard to break.
Five
minutes of contented reading passed as Robin shut out the sound of the ceiling overhead
groaning as the boys tore about through the two bedrooms on the second
floor. But then there came a noise like
a hundred basketballs being dropped at the same time, and Robin knew that the
boys were coming downstairs again. And
then she heard it. Her mother's voice, saying the exact words that Robin had hoped beyond hope not to hear.
“Where
are the kids? Oh, they’re around
somewhere. Do you want me to try to find
them?”
No!!
Mum! Whyyyyyyyy?
“Kids?”
There
was no other response. Robin’s sister
and brothers must not be inside the house or they’d have heard that. Robin gave one last longing glance at her
book, then closed it and hid it under the blanket in the corner.
“I’m
in here,” she called half-heartedly. She
hoped the tone of her voice would imply that she would rather not be
disturbed. But it didn’t.
“Robin’s
in the guest room,” she heard her mother say.
“Do you want to go play with her?”
Robin
could almost hear the characters in the book she was reading bidding her
farewell as to one they would never see again.
And she could definitely hear the floorboards in the hallway creaking
underfoot. Loxley crept into the corner
of the room, keeping his head low to the ground.
“No,
Loxley, don’t leave me!” Robin hissed after him. But now there was a knock on the door.
“Hey,
Robin, can you open up the door?”
Robin
whimpered, but said, “Sure, Mum. Be
right there.” She went to the door and
unlocked it. At once it flew open and
the three boys came tumbling in.
“I’m
going to show their mom and dad the van.
Can you keep them occupied until then?”
“I
guess,” Robin replied. What am I supposed to keep them occupied
with? The house is as good as empty!
But
the boys had already found something to occupy themselves! “Hey, you have cats?” one of them asked in a
voice shrill with excitement.
“Uh…”
“Cool!”
The
boys were on Eleanor and Loxley in a moment, before Robin could do anything
about it. For a minute or maybe a minute
and a half they played with them in a more or less normal way, mostly petting
them (rubbing the fur the wrong way as often as not), but then the youngest
spied a large, empty cardboard box in the corner of the room. “Hey!” he shouted, “we could put them in
here!” So they took Eleanor and put her
in the box, and for a while they just watched her (calmly enough, Robin thought). But when Eleanor didn’t do anything
interesting, one of the boys closed the top and then, without warning, tipped
the box on its side!
Robin,
after a moment of stunned silence, leaped to Eleanor’s rescue, but Eleanor had
already burst out of the box and had dashed into the hallway with the boys in
full pursuit. Loxley crouched lower in
his corner, trying to make himself as small as possible.
“Yes,
you stay hidden,” Robin whispered to him.
“I have to go save Eleanor.” With
that, she went out into the rest of the house.
Where
had they gone? But there! A thump came from somewhere overhead. Robin made for the stairway, but just as she
got there Eleanor came racing past her, her tail and head low; the three
boys were hot on her trail, nearly falling over each other in their eagerness.
“Wait!”
Robin said, but they didn’t listen and continued in full pursuit. Robin ran after them, but she was only one
and they were three, so they had the advantage of being able to split off, and
they did. By the time Robin caught the one
that was chasing Eleanor, she had no idea where the other two were.
Eleanor
was cowering in a corner in the kitchen and one of the older two boys was
reaching for her when Robin caught his arm in her hand.
“Hey!”
she said. “How about we go do something
else, okay? Maybe Eleanor is tired of
playing for right now and if we come back later she’ll want to play again. Sound good?”
“Okay!”
the boy agreed. Robin let out a sigh of
relief, but then she heard again the sound of the wildebeest stampede, and it
was coming from the living room.
Turning,
she saw that the other two were after Loxley.
Robin sprang into action again, and caught them just in time to save
Loxley from going through the same chase Eleanor had. But by this time there was no stopping the
boys, and they went from chasing Eleanor to chasing Loxley and back to chasing
Eleanor again so that Robin was always after at least one of them. But then she came round a corner to find all
three boys standing in the living room looking very perplexed and with no cats
in sight.
“Where
are Eleanor and Loxley?” she asked them.
“We
don’t know!” they replied. “They were
right here!”
Robin
groaned. “Well, they must have hidden
from you guys because they didn’t want to play anymore.”
“Oh,
don’t worry!” one assured her. “We can
find them!”
“That’s
not—” Robin began, but the boys were already gone. “Exactly what I meant,” she finished lamely. “Oh, well,” she sighed. “Eleanor and Loxley are big enough to take
care of themselves. And they must be
hiding pretty well for the boys to not be able to find them, so that’s alright. At this point, I can’t really do anything
else but wait for Eleanor and Loxley to come out by themselves once the family
has left.” She returned to the guest
room, shut the door, took her book out from under the blanket, and lost herself
once more in the story.
She
was brought sharply back by a young and very frightened voice (can’t anyone read the hint that I just want to be left alone?), and she looked
up to see one of the boys standing in front of her.
“We
can’t find them anywhere!” he said.
“And
you’ve looked all over the house?”
He
nodded hard. Reluctantly Robin put her
book down and stood up.
“Alright,
let’s go see,” she said. Anxiously the
boy led her all through the living room, the office, the dining room, the
kitchen, all the upstairs—everywhere, in fact that he had looked himself. The other two joined in the search as they
went back through all the house yet again, looking in every bedroom
closet. Suddenly Robin had a thought and
dropped back as the boys continued their search. She slipped softly into the kitchen and
looked over the back of the stove.
Two
wide yellow eyes peered back up at her.
“Hello, Eleanor,” Robin whispered.
“You stay there, okay? I’m going
to find Loxley. Be quiet now!”
As
Robin backed away from the stove, she heard a slight stirring coming from under
the table. She got down onto her hands
and knees and looked underneath.
At
first, she didn’t see anything, but then she caught a glimpse of something on
one of the chairs, effectively hidden by the slatted back of the chair from the rest of the
kitchen. Loxley’s eyes glowed brightly.
“Shh,”
Robin whispered.
“Don’t
say anything, please!” he pleaded.
“Oh,
that’s a clever spot!” Robin replied quietly.
“I won’t tell them. Just don’t move!
They’ll never find you there.”
“Okay,”
he replied.
Robin
straightened up and wandered out into the dining room. Upstairs she heard the thundering of six
small shoes. The boys must already have
found something else to do, goodness knows what. But that was alright. Robin’s book was long, and if the boys needed
her, they knew where to find her.
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