Fortune-Telling Ball
When my brother, Max, and I got home from school that afternoon, my dad was in the kitchen.
Some days Dad works at home.
He says it makes him appreciate the office more.
âDad!â I yelled. âWe are going on a fieldtrip! My whole class!â
âGet a chocolate doughnut when you go,â Max said. âThe jelly ones are stale.â
âWe arenât going to a bakery,â I said. âWe are going to an apple maker.â
âYou mean an orchard?â Dad said. âCool.â
Max made a face. âBetter luck next time.â
âSounds like fun to me,â said Dad. âRoscoe will get to pick apples, Iâll bet. And who knows? Maybe theyâll have free taffy apples. Or free pie.â He got a big smile on his face. âI do love a good apple pie. Especially a free one.â
My little sister, Hazel, came into the kitchen. She was wearing a black pirate eye patch, overalls, a fluffy pink ballet tutu, and a pair of my dadâs old sneakers.
âHazel, my dear, as always you are looking very fashionable,â Dad said.
If you ask me, little kids should not be allowed to dress themselves.
âDid somebody say pie ?â Hazel asked.
âIâm going on a field trip to an apple-growing place,â I explained. âThey might even give away pie and applesauce.â
âApplesauce is my favorite,â Hazel said. âExcept for gummi worms and broccoli.â
Hazel pulled a small red ball out of one of her pockets.
Hazel loved that ball. She carried it everywhere she went. And she refused to share it.
Of course, it wasnât just a plain old everyday ball. It was a magic ball that could tell the future.
All you had to do was shake it. Thenask it a yes-or-no kind of question.
When you turned it over, there on the bottom, in a little bitty window, was your answer.
Hazel canât read yet. I think she just liked the ball because it was so shiny.
And because Max and I wanted to play with it.
âMagic ball, will I ever get to go on a field trip and eat pie?â Hazel asked.
She turned the ball over. âWhat does it say?â she asked Dad.
Dad looked at the bottom of the ball. âIt says, âYOU BETTER BELIEVE IT!ââ
âCan I borrow your ball for one second?â
I asked Hazel. âI just want to ask it about my field trip.â
âNope.â Hazel shook her head.
âPlease?â I begged. I smiled my best smile.
The one that makes Grandma say, âYou old charmer, you!â
It works on grandmas.
But not so much on little sisters.
Hazel shook her head again. âNope.â
She tossed her ball in the air. Whenshe tried to catch it in her tutu, the ball dropped onto the floor.
It rolled behind the refrigerator.
âIâll get it for you, Hazel,â Max said.
âNo, wait! Iâll get it!â I said quickly.
Because I am a helpful brother.
And also because I really wanted to get my hands on that ball.
âI have dibs,â Max said.
âYou just want it âcause I want it,â I said to Max.
âYou just want it âcause Hazel says you canât have it,â Max replied.
It was hard to argue with that one.
âBesides,â Max added, âyou had a ball like that and you lost it.â
âI didnât lose it,â I said. âI accidentally dropped it in the garbage disposal when I was giving it a bath.â
âWe paid three hundred and twenty dollars to repair the disposal, if I recall correctly,â said Dad.
âI donât want to get my tutu dirty,â Hazel said. âWhoever gets the ball can play with it.â
Max and I dashed to the refrigerator.
He took one side. I took the other.
We both reached for the ball.
I had to lie on the floor and s-t-r-e-t-c-h my left arm extra far.
When I stood up, I had dog hair, dust balls, and three Froot Loops stuck to my shirt. But I also had the ball.
I
J. A. Redmerski
Artist Arthur
Sharon Sala
Jasmine Haynes, Jennifer Skully
Robert Charles Wilson
Phyllis Zimbler Miller
Dean Koontz
Normandie Alleman
Rachael Herron
Ann Packer