Hush-a-Bye

Hush-a-Bye

by Jody Lee Mott
Hush-a-Bye

Hush-a-Bye

by Jody Lee Mott

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Overview

* "Mott’s deft prose and well-written characters will keep readers engaged from start to frightening finish. This is the perfect read for people who love the chill of terror running down their backs."
School Library Journal (starred review)

A delightfully creepy story perfect for the middle school set! Hush-a-Bye is an old, broken doll found by Lucy and her sister in the woods. It seems to possess extraordinary powers, but will it use them for good or evil?


Like most kids with younger siblings, Lucy loves her sister Antonia, but is all too frequently annoyed with her as well. The two spend most of their time together since their mother works so hard, but without friends Lucy can't help but feel lonely anyway. She's always tried to ignore the bullying and teasing at school about her family being poor—it's always best to keep her head down and do nothing.

When the girls find an old, muddy doll head in the river, Antonia claims it as her newest treasure. At night Lucy hears her talking to Hush-a-Bye—and does she hear the doll talking back? Soon, Hush-a-Bye seems to be protecting Antonia by making bad things happen to others, and it isn't long before Lucy asks for its help against her tormentors, too. Slowly Hush-a-Bye's influence forms a wedge between the sisters, and Antonia's dependence on it becomes frightening. The doll has a mind of its own, and soon it will have Antonia's as well. Can Lucy solve the mystery of Hush-a-Bye to stop its evil plans?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780593206799
Publisher: Penguin Young Readers Group
Publication date: 08/23/2022
Pages: 240
Sales rank: 343,769
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 7.60(h) x 0.70(d)
Lexile: 740L (what's this?)
Age Range: 8 - 12 Years

About the Author

Jody Lee Mott is a former elementary and middle school teacher, and an avid reader of children's books who finally decided to write down the stories bouncing around his brain. He is also the creator and host of the children's book podcast Dream Gardens, which is on Stitcher, Spotify, and wherever podcasts are found. He lives several stone throws from the Susquehanna River in Apalachin, New York with his wife, children and one very large greyhound. Hush-a-Bye is his first novel. Find him at jodyleemott.com.

Read an Excerpt

1

It was deep in the afternoon of the last Tuesday of summer when I kicked away a willow branch lying on the riverbank and found the head.
    My eyes had been closed. I’d been imagining, for no particular reason, how the September sun would look to the salamanders trolling the murky Susquehanna riverbed. Like margarine on burnt toast, I supposed. Then my foot knocked into the branch, my eyes opened, and another eye stared back at me.
    Its yellow hair was tangled with twigs and muck and broken glass like some crazy bird’s nest. It had a scratched cheek, a chipped-up nose, and a grimy clot of mud in the hole where the left eye should have been. I picked up the head and held it by its ragged neck. The body, I supposed, had long since floated away.
    “Poor little doll,” I said. “Where’d the rest of you go?”
    I glanced behind me. My sister Antonia was somewhere along the slope above the bank, searching for flat rocks to skip on the water. She was always somewhere close by.
    I bent down to drop the head back in the hollow space where it must have been hiding for weeks—maybe years, for all I knew. I wondered if the rest of her might be hiding somewhere on the small river island that sat a couple hundred feet out from where I stood. The curve of its shore matched the curve of the riverbank like a puzzle piece, and it was covered in tall birch trees that jostled against each other.
    I looked at the river. Bars of light shivered across the surface. There hadn’t been a single cloud in the sky since the middle of August. Nothing above us but a wide sheet of blue.
    Looking across ripples of sunlight on the river’s brown face, I wondered what would happen if I tossed the doll’s head into the water. I wanted to make the sunlight dancing there smash into a million pieces. Somehow, that seemed like the best possible thing I could do that day.
    I weighed the doll’s head dangling from my hand, its hair twisted in my fingers. Its one good eye watched me. Almost like my daddy’s eyes—bright emerald green and full of mischief. At least, that’s how I remembered them.
    I bit my lip and swallowed the sour ball of pain rising up my throat. The eye still looked at me, but it didn’t seem so bright anymore. It was dull and scratched and looked like nothing more than a cheap glass eye stuck in a poor broken doll’s head.
    “Lucy?”
    I turned. Antonia stood there with her hands cupped together, full of rocks too fat for anything but sinking with a loud plop. She was smiling, and her eyes were wide open even though she was facing into the sun. I could never understand how she was able to do that without squinting. The sparkly duckling barrette she’d worn since second grade glittered in the sunlight.
    “Gross,” Antonia said, but she was still smiling. “What’s that?”
    “Nothing,” I said. “Just an old doll’s head. Come look.”
    Antonia dropped the rocks, letting them thump in the undergrowth, and shuffled toward me. I pressed my finger against the doll’s cheek.
    “See?” I said. “Only an old broken doll’s head.” Antonia wrapped her hand around the head and tried to pull it toward her. I jerked it away.
    “Stop that,” I said, a little more harshly than I’d intended. “There’s glass in its hair. You’ll cut yourself. I’m going to throw it back where I found it. Nothing but trash anyway.”
    Antonia pouted. I tried to ignore her, but that pout always rankled me. Even though there was only a year’s difference between us, sometimes Antonia acted like such a baby. According to Mom, Antonia just had her own “Antonia way” of doing things, which meant she needed a little extra help at school, and a little more patience from me. I knew it wasn’t completely her fault why she acted the way she did, so I tried to be understanding. I didn’t always succeed.
    I shook my head to break up the annoyed feeling. There were still a few more hours of this day to enjoy my freedom. No sense in ruining that with fussing over things I couldn’t change. And no sense in keeping some dirty, broken, good-for-nothing doll’s head.
    I stepped toward the river and drew my arm back. A gust of wind shook the gray birch branches across the far bank. As they swayed, I thought I heard something—a faint voice whispering among the sound of rattling dry leaves.
    Take me home.
    I swung about and glared at my sister. “What did you say?”
    Antonia cocked her head to one side. “I didn’t say nothing. Must have been the doll.”
    I looked at my sister for a long time, then shook my head. “Don’t be silly.” I picked shards of glass out of the doll’s hair. Too many worries about school tomorrow were making me jumpy, making me hear things. I needed to settle myself down.
    “It’s sad, though, don’t you think?” I said. “Poor thing left all alone here. Her little body’s probably washed all the way to China.”
    “My teacher read a book about a glass bunny that got lost,” Antonia said. “He got drowned in the ocean until some fisherman pulled him out and saved him.”
    “Probably shouldn’t throw her back in the river. That would be littering. We can put her in the trash when we get back home.”
    Antonia leaned in and squinted at the doll’s head. “She’s not garbage,” she said. “She needs us. She’s lonely.” She rested her cheek on my arm. “Can’t we take her back to the trailer? We can fix her up, and maybe we can find another body for her.”
    I nudged Antonia away. “Mom wouldn’t like it. She’s already threatened to take a shovel to all the junk under your bed.”
    “It’s not junk,” Antonia said. “They’re my precious treasures.”
    Her precious treasures were a flat soccer ball, a trunkless stuffed elephant named Mr. Lumps, a large bag full of knotted rubber bands, a papier-mâché Earth with only five continents, and about a hundred other bits and pieces she’d picked up here and there and shoved under her bed “for later.”
    “She’d be the most precious treasure of all,” Antonia said. She nestled her cheek against my arm again and fluttered her eyelashes. “Please, can we keep her? Pretty please?”
    I had to smile. She knew her eyelash flutter always worked on me. “I suppose so . . . if we don’t tell Mom.”
    Antonia’s eyes grew wide. “You mean lie?”
    The doll’s green eye glowed in the afternoon light, and the sound of the river filled our ears. A single cloud, thin as a whisper, floated just above the treetops.
    “Not a lie,” I trailed my pinkie across the doll’s stubbed nose. “A secret. Our secret.”

 
2

I’d come down to the river almost every summer day since we moved to Oneega Valley, a long, narrow ribbon of town in New York State, just a few miles north of Pennsylvania. Antonia had found the dirt footpath hidden under a row of winterberry bushes running behind our trailer. You had to squeeze through them, shuffle sideways down the path to avoid the pricker bushes and stinging nettles that grew between the willows, then slide down a low slope to get to the riverbank.
    It was strange I’d never noticed the doll’s head all those days and weeks I’d spent there. Not until Antonia showed up, anyway. That figured. I mean, I liked her company, but things always got more complicated with her around. And now here we were heading back home, trying to sneak in a busted-up doll’s head.
    After Antonia and I squeezed through the winterberry bushes, we spotted Mom’s baby-blue junker parked between the trailer and the tall ginkgo tree. We weren’t expecting to see her so soon. Then again, we were never too sure when we’d see Mom, day or night.
    “Don’t say anything about the head,” I reminded Antonia as we approached the trailer. Her eyes grew wide, like I’d said the most unbelievable thing she’d ever heard.
    “I wasn’t going to.” As if she wasn’t the biggest blabbermouth in the world.
    “Well, just remember it,” I said, and shooed her on ahead.
    Antonia slumped her chin on her chest and pouted. “I said I wasn’t going to.”
    Mom lay on our old, beat-up couch with the faded bird-of-paradise slipcover. A damp washcloth covered her eyes, and her smudged sneakers were still tied tightly on her feet. That meant a bad day at work.
    “Hey there, firecrackers,” she said in a gravelly voice, not taking off the washcloth. Antonia kneeled on the floor near Mom’s head. She removed her duckling barrette and leaned back so Mom could stroke her fine, straight hair.
    It seemed like Antonia got all the best parts from our parents—Mom’s glossy chocolate-brown hair and dark eyes, and Daddy’s high cheekbones—while I ended up with a dirty-blond mess that ate combs, a pug nose, and eyes the color of dishwater.
    At least neither one of us ended up with our daddy’s temper. We’d already had our fill of it anyway. Not anymore, though, or at least not in the twelve months since we’d last seen him.
    I carefully tucked my bag out of sight at the other end of the couch. Mom raised her feet to let me sit down. I pulled off her sneakers and socks and rubbed her feet.
    “Mmm, that feels good, Peppernose,” she said. Mom called me that because of the dark freckles all over my fish-belly-white face. I thought they made me look ugly, but I still liked the name. She only ever used it at home, so it was like our own secret code.
    I trailed my finger across the calla lily tattoo that curled along her calf. “Work go okay?” I asked.
    Mom shrugged. “It went.”
    Antonia and I exchanged a worried look. I hated how tired she sounded after work, and how her clothes always smelled like onions and cheap coffee.
    She worked weird hours as a waitress at Theodora’s Hometown Diner. Mornings, evenings, weekends, holidays—there wasn’t a time or a day she wouldn’t be expected to show up. She never talked about her job except to say it was like trying to juggle ten balls while tap-dancing, and every once in while someone would throw you a watermelon and a bag of cats.
    “We were down by the river,” Antonia blurted out. Whenever she gets worried about Mom, she rattles her mouth about random things no one asked her. I shot her a look before she blabbed everything about the doll head. “Oh yeah,” she went on, winking at me, “but we didn’t find anything there.” Like Mom wouldn’t see right through her.
    Sure enough, Mom lifted a corner of the washcloth and squinted at Antonia. “What did you find, and where did you put it?” Antonia once brought home a pail full of tadpoles. She’d put them under her bed and promptly forgot about them until a week passed and their death-stink got Mom’s attention.
    “Just some skipping stones,” I said quickly, before Antonia could mess things up even more. “She wanted to bring some home, but I made her leave them there.”
    That seemed to satisfy Mom. She lowered the washcloth and handed her foot back to me.
    “Looking forward to the first day of school tomorrow?” she asked me. Looking forward? Icy fingers dug into my gut.
    “Sure,” I lied.
    “Keep an eye on your sister as much as you can.”
    “No trouble on the double,” Antonia said, and giggled.
    “Double trouble is right,” Mom said. “Why don’t you two go to your room and see what I got for you to wear for your first day back?”
    Antonia gasped. “New clothes?”
    Mom sighed. “Well, they were on clearance.” Antonia didn’t care. She bolted off to our room with her howler-monkey yell on full volume.
    Mom nudged me with her shoulder. “You too, big sister. Check out what I got for you. I think you’ll like it.”

I wasn’t two steps into the bedroom when Antonia snatched away my backpack and nearly tore off my arms.
    “Watch it!” I complained, but she was already focused on pulling out the doll’s head. Our closet door was open, and it was clear Antonia had been busy setting up a place of honor on top of a cardboard box she’d shoved inside.
    “Perfect,” she said, and kissed the doll’s nose as she sat it on the box. Then from a corner of our room she dragged a little wooden chair Mom had picked up from a yard sale years ago and set it facing the doll head.
    “I don’t think that’s a good idea,” I said. “Mom’s going to find that thing and throw it in the trash. Hide it in the dresser.”
    Antonia shook her head. “Can’t.”
    “Why not?”
    Antonia rolled her eyes. “How can I have conversations with her through the dresser? That’s so rude.” Then she squeezed her behind in the tiny chair built for a much tinier behind than she’d had for some time and shut the closet door. And that, apparently, was the end of that.
    Later that night, when the lights were out and the covers were pulled over my head, I heard Antonia shuffle out from her bed. She tapped lightly on the closet door and slid it open. And then she whispered a song that sounded kind of familiar.
           Hush-a-bye and good night
           Till the bright morning light
           Takes the sleep from your eyes
           Hush-a-bye, baby bright
    She sighed, shut the door, and dove back under her covers. It didn’t take long for her teeth to start grinding together. She did it every night, and it sounded like she was chewing on a brick. One of these nights, she was going to grind her teeth down to the gums. It made my own teeth hurt listening to it, but I knew snoring would follow soon enough. It was still annoying, but at least I could sleep through it. But that night, while I waited for her rumbling snore, I heard something else.
    “Good night, Lucy, sleep tight.”
    I pulled the covers back from my head and looked at Antonia. She’d already stopped grinding and was revving up her snoring. I glanced at the closet door. It was shut tight.
    I shivered and pulled the covers back over my head. It didn’t make sense. Antonia was never one to talk in her sleep. But that wasn’t the strangest part. I figured it was just my imagination, but I could have sworn I heard those words coming from inside the closet.

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