tickets?â he asked. âIs there a prize?â
âNo. No prize,â I said. âOkay, whoâs first? Tell you what. Iâll give you a break. Three tickets for two dollars.â
The big kid was blocking the line. âBut what kind of tickets are they?â he asked. âWhat are they good for?â
âTheyâre Good Luck tickets,â I said. âEveryone wants good luckâright? Good Luck tickets for only a dollar!â
The cute little angels waved their money in the air. I started to drool. This was so EASY.
But Joshua Bradly Belcher poked his freckled face up against mine. âHow do we know theyâre real Good Luck tickets?â he asked.
âCheck âem out,â I said. I held up a ticket. âIt says GOOD LUCK right on it.â
The kids all stared at the ticket. They pushed forward. They wanted their tickets.
âOkay, one at a time. One at a time,â I said. I reached for the first dollar. And felt someone squeeze my shoulder.
I looked upâand saw Mrs. Twinkler, the Drama Coach. âCome with me, Bernie,â she said. She tightened her hold on my shoulder and dragged me away.
âKidsâwait right there!â I cried. âDonât anybody move.â
But theyâd already started kicking one another.
Mrs. Twinkler pulled me across the lawn to a shady spot under an apple tree.
âBernieâ¦â she said.
I hated the way she said it.
âI can explain about the Good Luck tickets,â I said. âI was giving them out free. Would you like one?â
She took the ticket from me. âBernie, you sparkle and shine!â she said.
She talks like that all the time. Sheâs very dramatic. Sheâs always telling us to reach for the stars. But since the stars are about a billion miles away, I donât really get it.
âI was watching you trying to sell those tickets,âshe said. âAnd I was so impressed with you, Bernie.â
Huh? Did she say impressed ?
âYou glow!â she said. âSuch energy! Like a blazing star lighting up the solar system!â
âYes, I know,â I said.
âThe way you hold an audience,â she said, âwow, wow, wow.â
âOh, I get it,â I said. âYou want me to star in the school play?â
She flashed me a twinkling smile.
âI loved the last school play you did,â I said. âWhat an awesome show. The kid who played Scooby Doo was terrific. I really believed he was Scooby Doo!â
âThank you, Bernie,â she said, still grinning at me.
âSo what part do you have in mind for me?â I asked. âOf course, itâs a starring part. Right?â
âForget the school play,â she said. âI have a better idea.â
âA better idea?â
Mrs. Twinkler grabbed both of my shoulders. âIâm going to put you in charge of the annual school pageant,â she said. âYouâll be the pageant director.â
âReally? How much does the job pay?â I asked.
âThis year the pageant is something really exciting,â she said. âWow, wow, wow. Itâs a reenactment of the Battle of Rotten Town from 1650.â
âWow, wow, wow,â I said. âIâll get busy on that right away, Mrs. T. How much does it pay?â
âThis pageant is going to be WONDERFUL!â she cried. âFABULOUS! Oh, my! Did I say GLORIOUS?â
âIâll do my best,â I said. âDoes the director get paid?â
âIâll order the costumes,â she said. âIâll have them sent to your room. And Iâll get the script to you as soon as I finish it!â
She slapped me on the back. âSparkle and shine!â she cried. âThis is so exciting! Wow, wow, wow!â
âYou can count on me,â I said. I watched her twinkle off to the School House.
When I turned around, Feenman and Crench were standing right behind me.
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Unknown
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