My Bobby is such a help to me.â
âJennyâs a good helper, too,â Mrs. Warren said. She waggled her fingers at Jenny. âRun along, dear. Donât be late for supper.â
Jenny gritted her teeth as she hurried to the back hall where she kept her bike. She knew what Mrs. Strauss would say next. âJenny is such a skinny little thing. A breath of wind would blow her away. No wonder she has no backbone.â
It wasnât fair. Iâve got backbone , Jenny grumbled as she rode across town. Iâm as brave as Bobby Strauss any day . But when she turned into Willowby Lane, she wasnât so sure. Miss Nagleâs house looked drearier than ever.
Rufus meowed a noisy welcome when Jenny unlocked the kitchen door. She shot a quick look through the open door on the other side of the kitchen. Then she filled the food and water bowls, talking to the cat as she worked.
âGood kitty. I wonder if youâre lonesome. I wonder ifââ
She froze. Was that a noise from the front of the house? It had sounded like a hiss.
Rufus leaped up onto the counter and stared down the hall.
âWhat is it, kitty? Did you hear something, too?â
Jenny didnât know what to do. She wanted to runâbut what if she were running from nothing at all? Then Mrs. Strauss would be right, and Jennyâs mother would have to agree with her. You mean you didnât even pick up my sunglasses, Jenny? Iâm surprised at you .
Stiff-legged, Jenny tiptoed across the kitchen and down the hall. The dining room was on the left, the living room on the right. Both were crowded with heavy furniture. Jenny stepped into the dining room. She saw the sunglasses lying at the far end of the table. Beyond the table was a long, low cupboard with a mirror above it.
For a moment Jenny just stood there. Then she darted the length of the table and snatched up the glasses. As she did, the hissing began again, only this time it was right above her head. She whirled and stared up into the mirror.
A shaggy brown head as big as a laundry basket loomed over her. Cruel eyes glared down, and puffs of steam billowed through gaps in the pointed yellow teeth.
Jenny staggered back against the table, too frightened to cry out. For a moment the head hung above her. Then a great cloud of steam filled the mirror, and when it faded the dragon head was gone. Her own face stared back at her, and behind it the dining room was sunny and still.
CHAPTER THREE
Maybe I Made Him Up
Jenny rode her bike at top speed all the way home. When she got there, Mrs. Strauss and her mother were still sitting at the kitchen table.
âYou are so lucky,â Mrs. Strauss was saying, when Jenny burst in, âthat beautiful big house just waiting for you to move in! A gift from heaven!â
Jenny opened her mouth to tell them about the dragon, but her mother spoke first. âI know weâre lucky,â she said. She sounded happier than she had in months. âI still canât believe it.â She held out a hand to Jenny. âDid you find my sunglasses, dear?â
Jenny looked at her motherâs smiling face. Then she looked at Mrs. Strauss. No backbone , Mrs. Strauss was probably thinking.
âHere they are,â Jenny said. âThey were on the dining-room table. I guess Iâll watch television for a while.â She left the kitchen quickly, before the rest of what sheâd wanted to tell her mother could come tumbling out.⦠A big dragon thing with mean eyes and smoke coming from its mouth !⦠The words would make her motherâs smile disappear. And I canât even prove I really saw a dragon , she thought miserably. If I try to show her, I just know there wonât be anything in that mirror .
The next afternoon Jenny got home from school just as her mother was returning from her job at the supermarket. âIâm going to Miss Nagleâs house to do some cleaning,â Mrs. Warren said.
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