âIâll meet you at the stoplight in fifteen minutes, OK?â
We said goodbye, and I clanked my plate in the sink.
âIâm going biking with Tina,â I said, and waited for Eva to give me the third degreeâor at least remind me to put my plate in the dishwasher.
âIâll tell MJ.â Her eyes didnât leave the page with the headline, âCandidate Denounces Civil Union Law.â
I grabbed my sweater and paused at the door. Maybe it had been a mistake to give Eva the cold shoulder. She was turning out to be pretty good at it, too.
A âthank youâ sat on my tongue, without budging. I was grateful to Eva for bringing customers to the marina, and I almost wanted to tell her my plan to help, too. But how do you talk to someone who wonât look at you?
***
AS I BIKED down the road, I thought about how nice it was to see Mom busy again. I could tell she was still mad at Eva for not discussing it with her first. They had been up late talking. One e-mail wouldnât change everything, though. It was more important than ever for me to win the pie contest, for Mom and the shop.
Tina waved to me when I reached our meeting spot. âCâmon, letâs go see whatâs set up. I can already smell the cotton candy.â
Tinaâs pink nails gripped her handlebars as she rode high on a hand-me-down boyâs bike. I wouldnât have minded it, but Tina always worked hard at looking like a girl. I guess it came from having two brothers.
At the fairgrounds, we stashed our bikes and walked through the exhibitorsâ entrance. Trucks and cars were parked in and around the booths, unloading.
The fair was at once exotic and ordinary. Men with faded snake tattoos connected wires, hoisted tents, and tied ropes. Women, cigarettes hanging from cracked lips, hauled equipment into place. I remembered the rides from last year, the funnel cakes, and tie-dyed shirts. Even the crocheted tablecloths and knitted baby outfits looked familiar. Except this time was my first pie competition.
We watched a large truck back up to position the Zipper, the upside-down ride.
âWill you try it this year?â Tina asked.
âI donât know. What about you?â
âMaybe.â
We went over to the farm area and watched the men set up the corrals. Soon each pen would hold a prize pig, goat, or cow.
âMoonbeamâs doing great,â Tina said. âMy dad and I will bring her down tomorrow.â
I hadnât seen Mr. Costa since Iâd overheard him at the farm. But he was helping Tina get ready for the fair. It was weird the way people could be good and bad. My form bulged in my back pocket, making me anxious.
Tina saw me kicking the hay. âDo you want to go look at the culinary section?â
I took a deep breath. âMy mom doesnât want me to register for the fair.â
âWhat?! I thought you already had. Thatâs awful.â Tina grabbed my arm. âLetâs go see if itâs not too late.â
I hesitated. âIâm going to enter the adult berry pie competition.â
âWhy?â
âThis way, I donât need anybodyâs signature.â I glanced at her, hoping I didnât need to explain more.
But Tina got it. âThat means youâll be competing against my mom.â
I nodded. I had worried about going for the adult contest for two reasons: it would make it harder to win, and it might make Tina mad. But I didnât have any other choice. âIs that OK?â
âI guess,â she said. âBut you canât just walk into the office and ask for an adult form.â
I unfolded the piece of paper from my back pocket. âI got this from the library.â
She read it over. âIt looks like you filled it out right.â
We started walking toward the office door. My mouth was dry, and I got worried all over again. How could I do this? âMaybe you could turn it in, and say
N. J. Walters
Leah Cutter
Todd Utley
Graham Swift
Ellie Danes
Helen Brooks
Unknown
CKJ
John Farrow
Richard Woodman