was always hungry.
That thought gave him the idea, the brilliant, best-ever idea.
Chapter 16
Forgetting that he was in disgrace, he was at Ms. Samsonâs desk in a moment, whispering eagerly in her ear. And the more she listened, the more she smiled. When he finished, she nodded her head, turned and pulled a book off the rack by her desk.
She took the book and walked to the front of the class.
âI think that someone in this class would very much like to hear this story,â she said, smiling.
âBut weâve all heard it a million times!â said Ralph, who always complained about rereading books, but then loved them as much as anyone else.
âWell, Ralph, maybe not a million times,â Ms. Samson replied. âBut there is someone in this class who Iâm almost certain has NEVER read The Very Hungry Caterpillar .â
Marthaâs hand shot up. âItâs Ken,â she said when Ms. Samson gave her a chance. âYou mean Ken.â
âNo, Ken was here when I read it a few weeks ago. No,â she said, âput your hands down. We have one caterpillar left in this class. And she is aâ¦â
âVery hungry caterpillar,â Chance filled in, joy flooding his heart. âCan I bring her to the story corner?â
âYes, please do. And letâs the rest of us get ready to tell our very last, very hungry caterpillar her very first story.â
Ms. Samson let Chance hold the little creature in his palm so she could see the pictures. âListen carefully, Matilda,â he whispered to her. He held her a little closer to the book when the very hungry caterpillar turned himself into a cocoon, well, a chrysalis really, but they called it a cocoon in the book. Chance knew, as did the rest of the class, that if it were really a cocoon, that would make her a moth instead of a butterfly.
Matilda lifted the front of her body right up, high in the air, and Ms. Samson looked over at her and smiled.
After the story was done, Chance took Matilda for a tour of the butterfly bush. âLook,â he whispered to her. âOne of those should be you. Soon youâll be a chrysalis too.â
He looked down at her, nestled in his hand. That was when he noticed the chrysalis lying on the table under the bush. He scanned the bush, but couldnât find the lid that it had fallen from. It looked different from the other chrysalides, even the newest ones. He couldnât see the butterfly inside, just hard whitish skin.
âChance, itâs time to get back to work,â Ms. Samson said. âWeâre going to start making butterfly story-boards.â And she held a big sheet of paper up to the class. It was divided into sixteen roomy squares. âWith just pictures, just words, or both, I want you to plan a story with a butterfly or a caterpillar in it,â she said.
Chance looked down at the still, hard chrysalis for one more moment. Then he turned away, put Matilda back in her container on the ledge, and settled down to work. The story was halfway unfolded in his mind before he had unearthed his pencil crayons from his desk.
Chapter 17
Most of the class was eager to get out the door when the three oâclock bell rang. It was easy for Chance to linger unnoticed, putting the finishing touches to one of the squares on his storyboard, while he waited to have the classroom to himself. When he saw Mark hovering in the doorway, he beckoned him in.
Ms. Samson had been saying goodbye at the door, but now she was at her desk, reading over the story-boards. She had just said, âTime to go, Chance,â as she passed his desk. Now she seemed to have forgotten that he was there, although Chance considered that unlikely.
Mark stood just inside the door, looking annoyed. âCome on, kid,â he said. âGet it together. I donât have time for this.â
Ms. Samson paused in her work. âOh, hello, Mark. We read a book youâll remember.
Laurel Dewey
Brandilyn Collins
A. E. Via
Stephanie Beck
Orson Scott Card
Mark Budz
Morgan Matson
Tom Lloyd
Elizabeth Cooke
Vincent Trigili