So Why Donât You Marry It?
Â
Â
Â
Â
H arry sits next to me in Room 2B. He looks like any other second grader except for one thing. Harry loves to do horrible things.
The week before Valentineâs Day, I didnât think anything too horrible could happen.
But it did.
Harry and I were looking at his new library book, The Bug Hall of Fame. Song Lee was looking at it too. âSee that giant water bug?â she said. âWhen I live in Korea, I see one eat a fish.â
âNo fooling?â Harry flashed his white teeth at Song Lee. Heâs had a crush on her ever since she brought in a potato beetle for show-and-tell in kindergarten.
âHey, Doug,â Harry said.
âYeah?â I replied.
âLook! Hereâs a picture of a stinkbug.â
âEeyew, neat-o!â I said.
Then he turned the page. âAnd a KISSING BUG!â
Just as I made a face, Mary appeared. She had a pile of bright red valentines in her hand. âOhhhhhhh! Did you say BUGS KISS?â
Ida joined the conversation. âWe know they do, Mary. Remember when we had our ant farm? Ants kiss every time they pass food.â
Harry lowered his bushy eyebrows. âAnts are not bugsâtheyâre insects. Weâre talking about bugs.â
âWell,â Mary snapped. âTheyâre romantic, whatever they are!â
Suddenly, Sidney peered over her shoulder. âIf you love ants so much, why donât you marry one?â
âSIDNEY!â Mary shouted. âThatâs dumb! You canât marry an ant.â
The rest of us tried not to laugh, but it was hard. Sidneyâs joke was so stupid, it was funny.
When the bell rang, everyone returned to their seats. Except Mary. She was still passing out her valentines.
âMary,â the teacher said. âItâs too early to pass those out. Please collect them.â
Mary made a long face. âYes, Miss Mackle.â
âBoys and girls, we will pass out valentines on Thursday, when itâs Valentineâs Day. We will also have a party and a special Valentineâs Day square dance.â
Everyone cheered.
âIf you can wear something with a touch of red or white in it, that would be fun,â the teacher added.
âI know what Iâm wearing,â Harry blurted out. âMy black-widow sweat-shirt !â
âYouâre supposed to wear Valentine colors,â Mary grumbled.
âI am!â Harry replied. âA black widow has a touch of red. Heh! Heh! The deadly red hourglass.â
âEeeeeeyew!â Mary groaned.
âThe black widow is poisonous,â Ida said.
Miss Mackle just smiled.
Later, when we were standing in the lunch line, everyone was talking about what they would wear for Valentineâs day. But not Harry and me. We were too busy taking deep whiffs.
âMmmmmmm. Itâs hot dog day!â Harry said. âI love hot dogs!â
Sidney made his eyebrows go up and down. âSo ... why donât you marry one?â
This time the joke was on Harry and he didnât like it.
All through lunch he glared at Sidney. We knew that the hot dogs werenât the only things steaming. Harry was, too!
After lunch, our class went outside for recess. Some of us started up a kickball game. Harry raced for the pitcherâs mound.
âI GET TO BE PITCHER!â he shouted.
Dexter ran for the plate.
âIâM UP FIRST!â he called. Then he pushed his hair back with his fingers. Ever since January when he transferred into our class, Dexterâs been the king of kickball.
âIâm FIRST BASE!â Ida yelled.
âIâm SECOND!â I shouted.
After everyone took a position, Harry said, âWhat do you want, Dex? My slime ball ... slow and smooth over the plate? Or my new specialty ... the cyclone ball?â
Dexter rubbed his hands together.
âGimme the cyclone!â he said as he kicked the air twice with his big blue
Dewey Lambdin
Roberta Trahan
David Sakmyster
Caroline B. Cooney
Rhodi Hawk
Cynthia Sax
Rachel Hanna, Bella James
Penelope Fitzgerald
Frank Moorhouse
Gordon Doherty