My shoulders relax. The room looks brighter.
The future shines.
As I take a bite of yogurt, I hear a thump and feel Inkling’s furry body scrambling from the chair next to me onto the table.
“You’re here!” I say. My face bursts into a grin. “I thought you went to Land o’ Pumpkins. We said good-bye.”
“Well, I figured I’d come for lunch,” he answers.
“Did you miss your train upstate? Will you be able to get another?”
“I was on my way to the station,” says Inkling, “and I got to thinking you might need my help with Gillicut today.”
“You paid the Hetsnickle on pizza Friday,” I say. “You know you don’t owe me anymore.”
“Nah. See, pizza Friday wasn’t the Hetsnickle.” Inkling snorts. “I realized that this morning. All I did was bite a nine-year-old on the ankle.”
“So?”
“In the Mexican swamplands, where I come from, that would be nothing but a warm-up to a day of combat.”
“But—”
“I still owe you, Wolowitz. Dropping on Gillicut was nothing compared to what
“Does this mean—” I am scared to say it, almost. “Does this mean you aren’t leaving?”
Inkling leans against me. “Bandapat code of honor. I can’t leave until that Hetsnickle is well and fully paid. Plus, now that you’ve got a job, I think my squash worries are over.”
I realize: He doesn’t owe me.
He
He wants to be here, with me, more than he wants a whole patch full of pumpkins. More than he wants the Halloween Pumpkin-Carving Extravaganza.
“What’s for lunch?” Inkling asks.
I look.
My yogurt, a ham sandwich, dried apricots, Cheddar Bunnies, and water. A large yellow apple and a Tupperware of rainbow sprinkles.
All for me to eat in peace.
I open the container and push the sprinkles toward Inkling. “Have some.”
The Tupperware lifts, and a small avalanche of sprinkles pours into Inkling’s mouth. Then they go invisible. “Thanks,” he says, chewing. “Don’t mind if I do.”
A thing about Inkling is, he hogs whatever food he gets.
A thing about Inkling is, he shows up when you need him.
A thing about me is, I have an invisible friend.
And that means—
Anything could happen next.
Author’s Note
About the Authors
Emily Jenkins has written the chapter books TOYS GO OUT and TOY DANCE PARTY, plus a lot of picture books, including THE LITTLE BIT SCARY PEOPLE, SKUNKDOG, THAT NEW ANIMAL, and FIVE CREATURES. Her favorite ice-cream flavor is
Harry Bliss is the
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Copyright
Balzer + Bray is an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers.
Invisible Inkling
Text copyright © 2011 by Emily Jenkins
Illustrations copyright © 2011 by Harry Bliss
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Jenkins, Emily, date
Invisible Inkling / Emily Jenkins ; illustrated by Harry Bliss. — 1st ed.
p. cm.
Audience: Ages 7–10.
Summary: “When Hank Wolowitz runs into trouble in the form a of lunch-stealing bully, he finds an unlikely ally in an invisible refugee pumpkin-loving bandapat named Inkling”— Provided by publisher.
ISBN 978-0-06-180220-1 (trade bdg.)
1. Bullying—Juvenile fiction. 2. Imaginary companions—Juvenile fiction.