kisses the top of Juliaâs head. âBack to work. You and me both.â
Julia sighs and reaches for her backpack. She removes a piece of paper, a bottle of water, and a small metal box.
âHomework first,â George says, wagging a finger. âThen you can paint.â
âItâs for art class,â Julia explains. âWeâre doing watercolors. Iâm going to paint Ruby.â
George smiles. âAll right, then. Just donât forget your spelling.â
âDad?â Julia asks again. âDid you see Mackâs face when Ruby hit him?â
George nods. âYes,â he says solemnly. âI did.â He shakes his head. âPoor Mack.â
He turns away, and only then do I hear him laughing.
colors
Julia opens the metal box. I see a row of little squares. Green, blue, red, black, yellow, purple, orange: The colors seem to glow.
She pulls out a brush with a thin tuft of a tail at its end. She dips the brush in water and wets the paper, then taps at the red square.
When the brush meets the damp paper, pink petals of color unfurl like morning flowers.
I canât take my eyes off that magical brush. For a moment, Iâm not thinking about Ruby and Mack and the claw-stick and Stella.
Almost.
Julia touches red again, then blue, and there, suddenly, is the purple of a ripe grape. She touches the blue, and her paper turns to summer sky. Black and white, and now I see that she is painting a picture of Ruby. I can make out her floppy ears, her thick legs.
Julia stops painting. She takes a few steps back, hands on her hips, gazing at her work.
She scowls. âItâs not right,â she says. She glances over her shoulder at me. I try to look encouraging.
Julia starts to crumple up the paper, then reconsiders. Instead she slides it into my cage at the spot where my glass is broken. âHere you go,â she says. âA Julia original. Thatâll be worth millions someday.â
Gingerly I pick up the paper. I do not eat a single bite of it.
âOh. Hey, I almost forgot.â Julia runs to her backpack. She pulls out three plastic jarsâone yellow, one blue, one red.
She opens the jars, and an odd, not-food smell hits my nose. Julia pushes the jars, one by one, through the opening. Then she slides some paper through.
âThese are called finger paints,â she says. âMy aunt gave them to me, but really, Iâm too old for finger painting.â
I stick a finger into the red jar. The paint is thick as mud. Itâs cool and smooth, like bananas underfoot.
I pop my finger into my mouth. Itâs not exactly ripe mango, but itâs not bad.
Julia laughs. âYou donât eat it. You paint with it.â She grabs a piece of paper and presses her finger on it. âSee? Like this.â
I place my finger on a piece of paper. I lift it, and a red mark is there.
I get a bigger glob from the pot and slap my hand down on the page. When I pull my hand off the paper, its red twin stays behind.
This isnât like the ghostly handprints on my glass, the ones my visitors leave behind.
This handprint canât be so easily wiped away.
a bad dream
I lie awake, peeling dried red paint off my fingertips. Bob, who accidentally walked on one of my paintings, is licking his red paws.
Every so often, I glance over at the empty ring. The claw-stick glints in the moonlight.
âStop! No!â Rubyâs frantic cries startle me.
âRuby,â I call, âyouâre having a bad dream. Youâre okay. Youâre safe.â
âWhereâs Stella?â she asks, gulping air. Before I can answer, she says, âNever mind. I remember now.â
âGo back to sleep, Ruby,â I say. âYouâve had a hard day.â
âI canât go back to sleep,â she says. âIâm afraid Iâll have the same dream. There was a sharp stick, and it hurtâ¦â
I look at Bob, and he looks back at
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