Judy Moody marched into third grade on a plain old Thursday, in a plain old ordinary mood. That was
before
Judy got stung by the Queen Bee.
Judy sat down at her desk, in the front row next to Frank Pearl.
“Hey, did you see Jessica Finch?” asked Frank in a low voice.
“Yeah, so? I see her every day. She sits catty-cornered behind me.”
“She’s wearing a crown.”
Judy turned to look at Jessica, then whispered to Frank, “Where’d she get that? Burger Barn?”
“I don’t know,” said Frank. “Ask her. She says it’s bejeweled.”
“Well, it looks be-dumb, if you ask me,” said Judy, though secretly she admired the sparkling ruby-like gems.
“Hey, are those real rubies?” Judy asked Jessica.
“They’re costume jewelry,” Jessica said.
“Who are you dressing up as? The Queen of England?”
“No, I’m the Queen Bee,” said Jessica. “I won the N. V. Spelling Bee on Saturday.”
“The envy spelling bee?” Judy asked. Judy didn’t envy anybody who had to spell long words into a microphone with a million and one people staring bug-eyed at her. She knew those people were silently yelling
FLUB IT UP
because they wanted their own kid to win.
“Not
envy
. N. V. As in Northern Virginia.”
“Oh,” said Judy. “Is that where you got the crown?”
“It’s a tiara,” said Jessica. “T-I-A-R-A. A tiara is a fancy crown like the Queen of England wears. Queen of the Bee has to know tons of definitions.”
“What word did you win for?” Judy asked. “Frank wants to know,” she added, in case Jessica thought
she
was interested.
“
Artichoke
. It’s a fourth-grade word.”
Artichoke
! Judy could barely spell
meatloa
f
!
Give me S-C-I-E-N-C-E any day,
she thought. Was that the rule?
I
before
E
? Or was it
E
before
I
?
“I have spelling posters in my room at home,” said Jessica. “With all the rules. I even have a glow-in-the-dark one.”
“That would give me spelling nightmares. I’ll take my glow-in-the-dark skeleton poster any day. It shows all two hundred and six bones in the body!”
“Judy,” said Mr. Todd. “The back of your head is not nearly as interesting as the front. And so far I’ve seen more of it today than I’d like.”
“Sorry,” said Judy, facing front again.
Jessica tapped Judy and passed her a folded page from the newspaper. Right there, SMACK-DAB in the MIDDLE of the newspaper for the whole world to see, was a picture of Jessica Finch. It even said LOCAL GIRL BECOMES QUEEN BEE in big fat headline letters.
“My dad says I got my fifteen minutes of fame,” Jessica whispered to the back of Judy’s head.
Judy did not turn around. She was green with N-V. Jessica A. Finch, Queen of the Dictionary, Class 3T, was famous! Judy could not help thinking how stupendous it would feel to be able to spell better than
meatloaf
and be the Queen Bee and wear a tiara. To get her own picture in the paper!
But she, Judy Moody, felt about as famous as a pencil.
As soon as Judy got home from school, she decided to memorize the dictionary. But she got stuck on
aardwolf
. Three lousy words. Who ever heard of an aard
wolf
anyway? Silly old termite-eater. It had a pointy little head and beady little eyes and a pinched-up face that looked just like . . . Jessica A. Finch! Jessica
Aardwolf
Finch might be famous, but she was also a silly old termite-eater.
Since Jessica had become Queen Bee with the word
artichoke,
Judy decided to skip the dictionary and spell all the vegetables in the refrigerator instead.
“Do we have any artichokes?” Judy asked her mother, opening the door of the fridge.
“Since when did you start liking artichokes?” asked Mom.
“Don’t worry, I’m not going to eat them or anything,” said Judy. “It’s for Spelling.”
“Spelling?” Stink asked.
“Mr. Todd does have some creative ways of teaching Spelling,” said Mom.
“Never mind,” said Judy, giving up when she saw asparagus. Vegetables were too hard to spell. There had
D. Robert Pease
Mark Henry
Stephen Mark Rainey
T.D. Wilson
Ramsey Campbell
Vonnie Hughes
TL Messruther
Laura Florand
B.W. Powe
Lawrence Durrell