my ankle.
Bony fingers gripped me like iron.
Then I heard a soft, triumphant cackle beneath the stairs.
14
I yelled.
I screamed and kicked and pulled, but the thing held on.
My heart sank when I remembered no one could hear me. Dad and Sally were outside and Mom was in the office with the door closed.
It had me and it wouldnât let go.
The icy grip was burning into my flesh, eating through to the bone. It was too dark to see, but in my imagination I pictured a fleshless creature under the stairs, scaly, sharp-toothed mouth grinning at me.
Got to get loose!
I kicked harder. I had to get away, but whatever had my ankle wouldnât let go. I couldnât see anything down there, but something told me there was a second claw ready to snatch my other ankle. Once it had both feet, I was a goner.
I strained until it seemed as if my muscles would snap like rubber bands. Then with a crack and a sudden jolt the step gave way, the tread breaking through.
There was a scream from under the stairs and the bony claw let go of my ankle.
I yanked my foot free and scrambled up the stairs on my hands and knees.
I slammed the door and leaned against it, my chest heaving.
When I finally got my breath back I looked down at my hands and almost laughed. I still had the trash can!
Good going, butter brains, youâre a real hero. Except the only reason you didnât let go is because you were too scared to think straight.
I dragged the trash can outside and left it there, prying my hands off the sticky handles.
âHey, Jay!â
My dad was shouting from the top of the hill, where he and Sally were playing. I waved. Then I ran up to them, ready to tell Dad about what had happened in the basement.
With every step I became less sure. What really had happened?
The dim basement had gotten on my nerves. A little mouse had scared me. My ankle had gotten caught between the steps.
And the laugh? Maybe that evil laughter was all in my head.
When I got up to the top of the hill the first thing I said was, âBetter not go down into the basement, Dad.â
âOh? Why is that?â
âThe steps got busted. Theyâre pretty old and rotten, I guess.â
âThanks for the warning,â he said. He glanced at my ankle. âI notice youâre limping, are you OK?â
âYeah, Iâll be fine. Just make sure you donât go down there, OK? You or anybody else.â
Dad looked at me kind of funny. âSure, anything you say,â he said. âYour new friend Steve was aroundâwanted to know if you wanted to go swimming. Said heâd meet you down at the lake.â
Steve. Iâd almost forgotten.
Ten minutes later I was cannonballing off the end of the dock. KERPLUNK! The water was cold but it felt good. It woke me up, as if the incident in the basement had been some kind of bad dream.
Except my ankle was still sore. So that part was true.
I figured it was partly Steveâs fault, telling me that spooky story. Putting ideas into my head. So I decided to get back at him. It turned out he didnât like to touch bottom in the lake.
âGross,â he said. âThe mud squishes between your toes.â
âWhat are you afraid of, Steve?â
âI just think itâs gross, thatâs all,â he said.
But he was real jumpy in the water, like he was scared something was going to bite him. Snapping turtles or snakes. Iâm a pretty good swimmerâbetter than Steve, as it turned outâand that gave me an idea.
When Steve wasnât looking, I dove under as quietly as I could and swam in his direction. I reached down, got hold of his big toe, and held on.
Even under water I could hear him yelling bloody murder.
âHelp!â he screamed. âHelp! Itâs got me! Help!â
It was great. I held on as long as I could and then let go and broke the surface with a huge splash. I was laughing so hard I had to get out of the water. Steve was beet