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    Dear Dumb Diary #7: Never Underestimate Your Dumbness

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      memory of my lovableness will linger.

      I wish I played an instrument. That last

      sentence would be a really good song.

      I suddenly realized that Betsy’s Museum of

      Adorableness isn’t so dumb after all. It stands as a

      shining example to all humanity of how you should

      hold your head to look cute.

      124

      Thursday 26

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      I had a horrible dream. I dreamed of

      Angeline — which is horrible all by itself — but

      it gets worse. We were at a taco restaurant, and

      Angeline was selling glittery jewelry for thousands

      of dollars. I was sitting there eating a taco, getting

      it all over my face, when Angeline walked over and

      gave me the money she’d made selling the jewelry.

      Then she took a napkin and wiped some taco sauce

      off my chin because she saw Hudson coming over to

      my table.

      125

      Angeline wiped the taco sauce

      off my chin, Dumb Diary !And I woke up

      screaming so loud, I wouldn’t be surprised if Stinker

      made another set of earrings and maybe even a

      charm bracelet.

      This dream is Angeline’s fault. It was caused

      by Angeline putting her own makeup on my chin to

      save me a little embarrassment. Angeline’s selfish

      niceness was cruelly making me feel guilty about

      letting her take the blame for the poo earrings.

      I couldn’t keep it to myselfany more —I had to

      confess!

      126

      As soon as I got to school this morning, I told

      Uncle Assistant Principal Devon what happened. I

      explained everything to him. I told him how Stinker

      eats things all the time and they practically never

      come out looking like jewelry except for maybe the

      kind of jewelry you’d wear with those bridesmaids’

      dresses. Then I immediately regretted saying that

      because he got really quiet and serious and told me

      that I should have told him the truth right away.

      127

      I told him that I thought that the truth

      was still the truth even if it’s a couple days late.

      He thought about that for a minute and said,

      “Dumbest thing I’ve ever heard.” Then he

      told me we would forget about the whole thing.

      After that, I thought maybe he wasn’t a rat.

      He went on to say that Angeline will get to

      go the dance, which has me thinking again that he

      is a rat, because even if Angeline gets punished for

      something she didn’t do, who would it hurt?

      So I won’t have Hudson all to myself over

      tacos tomorrow night. But if I can talk Angeline into

      getting the burrito, I’ll still look adorable and she’ll

      look like somebody trying to gag down a fire hose

      full of spiders.

      128

      129

      Friday 27

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      I just got back from the dance. Where should

      I start?

      First of all, Angeline thanked me for telling

      Uncle Assistant Principal Devon the truth. Then she

      laughed at me for being dumb enough to mistake

      Stinker’s creations for earrings.

      I pointed out how dumb it was for her to

      take the blame for something she didn’t do, and

      she said that she just did it so that Aunt Carol and

      Uncle Assistant Principal Devon would stop fussing

      over it.

      She said that she totally knew that I had

      done it, but she really didn’t care. She just wanted

      to make it stop. (I guess maybe she’s not that

      dumb.)

      130

      On the dancier side of things, the Dance

      Committee did a pretty good job of decorating the

      gym. They also picked really good music.

      But here’s how dumb Angeline is: She just

      starts dancing, and she’s not doing it with anybody

      in particular. She just dances in every direction and

      she does it like nobody’s watching. One minute she’s

      dancing with Mike Pinsetti, and the next minute

      she’s dancing with Margaret (who is a surprisingly

      good dancer and barely apelike).

      It’s so weird how easily dumbness comes to

      Angeline.

      131

      I think I probably had just as much fun

      standing still, and I only made a couple of

      mistakes, but I think I looked pretty good. Isabella

      and I both danced a little, but we didn’t get all out

      of control like Dancypants Angeline.

      Uncle Assistant Principal Devon was there,

      even though the wedding is tomorrow. In spite of

      the fact that he is a rat, apparently he takes his

      principaling very seriously.

      132

      I couldn’t totally enjoy the dance, because I

      was feeling bad about ditching Isabella the whole

      time. The Taco Rendezvous with Hudson

      was one of my dreams come true (below owning

      a talking unicorn, but above being able to talk to

      koalas).

      When I looked at Isabella standing so

      professionally, I remembered back to the first really

      nice thing she did for me when we were kids.

      We were in third grade, I think, and we were

      at lunch. I was eating some horrible thing that my

      mom had horribly packed for me, and Isabella had

      one of her mom’s incredible meat loaf sandwiches.

      She looked over and saw how much I hated my

      lunch and then she did the sweetest thing you could

      imagine.

      133

      She pulled Eddy Dooley’s hair until he gave

      me his lunch.

      People don’t always know how nice Isabella

      is or how she looks out for her BFF, but I do. And at

      that moment, I was overwhelmed with a dumb idea.

      I told Angeline I wasn’t going for tacos.

      And she said, “I know. I knew you wouldn’t

      ditch Isabella. It was mean of Hudson to say

      Isabella couldn’t come, and I’m not going, either.”

      134

      At the end of the dance, we told Hudson we

      weren’t going. We didn’t give him any reason. We

      just told him we weren’t going.

      Just as he was driving off into the night with

      his mom and a few other friends, Isabella caught

      up to us.

      “Why aren’t you two going for tacos?” she

      asked.

      I was shocked. “You know about that?”

      I said.

      “Of course I know about that.”

      Angeline was just as surprised. “Isabella,”

      she said. “You should also know that Hudson invited

      us, but told us that you couldn’t come.”

      135

      “That’s right,” Isabella said. “That’s exactly

      what I told him two weeks ago. My mom won’t let

      me go. When your Aunt Carol drove me home from

      your house a couple weeks ago, she came in and

      told my mom about my fall down the stairs. That

      fall may have fooled your family, Jamie, but the last

      time I successfully fooled my mom with that one I

      was four. She was mad that I did it at your house.

      She almost said I couldn’t go to the dance a
    t all,

      but she’s not totally immune to my fake crying yet,

      so here I am.

      “But when I told her that Hudson asked me

      to go for tacos after, she said I couldn’t go, as a

      punishment. Hudson asked me before he asked

      you two. I told him I couldn’t go.”

      “Jamie, I would have told you, but we were

      fighting that day. It just hasn’t come up since.”

      136

      And then Isabella looked really confused.

      “But why didn’t you two go?” she asked.

      “I have no idea, Isabella,” I said. “We

      decided not to go because we thought he was

      ditching you.”

      “That was pretty dumb,” she said.

      And she was right.

      137

      Saturday 28

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      Today was “Aunt Carol’s Big Day.”

      It started out with a panicky phone call from

      Aunt Carol. Uncle Assistant Principal Devon had

      picked up the bridesmaids’ dresses after they

      were altered and left them in his unlocked car. Get

      this: Somebody stole them, so we had to wear the

      dresses we wore to the rehearsal dinner.

      STOLE THEM! Maybe criminals aren’t

      all bad!

      138

      It worked out fine. We all looked great, even

      Betsy. Her dress wasn’t stolen, since it didn’t need

      to be altered and she had it at home. She still had

      all the precious adorablenesss she loves. And let’s

      face it: The girl can work the ruffles.

      The teachers who came to the reception looked

      good, too, even Miss Bruntford. She had on a big

      flowery dress that kind of made her look like a couch

      standing up on its side. But still, a really nice couch.

      Being an art teacher, Miss Anderson is an

      expert on good-lookingness, and today was no

      exception. Her dress, shoes, and lipstick were all

      laser-pointer red, and her fingernails looked like if

      Barbie turned into a werewolf.

      But Aunt Carol, being the bride, was legally

      entitled to be the prettiest one there, and she was.

      And even though it looked like they had

      crammed her into the wedding dress, she looked

      glamorously crammed.

      139

      The wedding ceremony it self was kind of

      boring and long. But that makes sense because the

      idea is to glue two people together forever and the

      first rule of the road is that beautiful

      things take time, and you can’t rush

      glue.

      140

      The reception was a lot different from the

      ceremony. The food was pretty good, and there

      were no Old Gasbag Relatives quizzing me until I fell

      asleep in it.

      It was really funny watching Aunt Carol and

      Uncle Assistant Principal Devon jam cake into each

      other’s faces. I think that may be the one wedding

      tradition that could be carried over to the Divorce

      Ceremony.

      I danced the dumb way that Angeline

      danced — in every direction and not caring who

      saw — and it was a lot more fun than standing. I

      may even do less standing at the next school dance.

      141

      At some point during the night, I saw myself

      in a mirror in the hallway and was so grateful I

      wasn’t wearing that ugly Bridesmaid Disaster.

      Isabella came over and stood next to me.

      “Nice dress,” she said. “I guess you’re pretty

      happy the bridesmaids’ dresses got stolen.”

      And then it hit me! Isabella had stolen the

      dresses. She was so touched that I passed on tacos

      with Hudson, that she did this for me.

      “You shouldn’t have done that, Isabella,” I

      said. “I really appreciate it, but you shouldn’t have

      stolen the dresses.”

      “I didn’t steal them,” she said. “I loved that

      dress. I wouldn’t have done that for you.”

      142

      And then Angeline walked up, and she said,

      “Nice dress, Jamie.”

      Suddenly I REALLY realized what had

      happened. Angeline had stolen the dresses for me.

      It makes sense. Angeline was so glad that I told the

      truth about the earrings that she did this for me in

      return.

      “Angeline. You shouldn’t have stolen the

      dresses for me. It was a nice gesture, but you

      shouldn’t have done it.”

      For a second I felt a little regret that I wasn’t

      related to her.

      143

      Angeline laughed. “You’re right Jamie, it

      WOULD have been a nice gesture, but I didn’t do

      it. I loved that dress. I looked like a million bucks

      in it, and Isabella looked like a thousand bucks. I

      figured you stole them.”

      And then I was glad AGAIN that I’m not

      related to her.

      144

      “Also,” she added, “I don’t know how I feel

      about being related to a thief.”

      “We’re not related,” I informed her. “We’re

      not cousins.”

      “Of course we’re not cousins,” she said.

      “We’re going to be grandmas together.”

      That’s when Isabella just lost it. She started

      jumping up and down and screaming and begging

      me, “Can I have one, Jamie? Can I please please

      have one?”

      I must have looked pretty confused because

      Angeline felt like she had to explain.

      “Oh, c’mon, Jamie. Don’t play dumb. You’re

      the one that’s been stuffing Stinker under our

      fence. I’ve seen you do it.”

      145

      “It wasn’t Jamie,” Isabella admitted —

      although it sounded a lot more like bragging than

      admitting.

      “I knew that Stinker and Stickybuns were in

      love that first night they met at Jamie’s house,”

      Isabella said. “They wanted to be together. And

      when two people are in love, they should be

      together. Even if one of those people is a dog. And

      so is the other one.”

      Can you believe how sweet Isabella is, giving

      so generously of her time so that Stinker and

      Stickybuns could spend time together? And that

      explains why Stinker kept coming back from the

      walks all scratched up. Isabella had been stuffing

      him under Angeline’s fence.

      “Are they going to have puppies?” Isabella

      asked, and I think that she very nearly squealed,

      which made it the first time I had ever heard her do

      anything like that.

      “When will the puppies be here? Can I please

      have one? Please please please?”

      Angeline grinned. “The vet says that

      Stickybuns is going to have puppies in three or four

      weeks. And sure, you can have one!”

      146

      Puppies. Stinker is going to be a dad. And

      Stickybuns is going to be a mom. That makes

      Angeline and me grandmas — together.

      “What in the world did Stickybuns ever see in

      Stinker?” I said. He’s my dog and everything. I know

      that I love him, but seriously: EW.

      Isabella said, “He did poop some nice bli
    ng.

      You know that gots to impress the ladies.”

      She’s right. But I’m not sure what’s harder to

      accept: That now I really am related to Angeline

      (In- Laws by Dog) or the fact that there are a

      few burglars running around in those bridesmaids’

      dresses right now.

      At least now I know what Isabella was hinting

      at with the spiders in my burrito and the snakes in

      my yard. She was hinting about the puppies.

      147

      At the end of the evening, I kissed Aunt

      Carol, congratulated her, and thanked her for

      everything. Then I went to say good-bye to Uncle

      Assistant Principal Devon. I caught up to him in

      the hall. I congratulated him and wished him a fun

      honeymoon.

      “Bit of luck the dresses got stolen, huh?” he

      said, and he smiled this big dumb smile that I had

      not seen him smile in a month. It revealed more

      than just a mouthful of nice teeth.

      “YOU stole them?” I asked him.

      “I didn’t say that,” he said. “But I knew you

      hated that dress. I hated it, too. Your Aunt Carol

      and I had a huge argument about it. That’s why she

      was crying a little that day.”

      “So you made the dresses disappear? For

      me?” I asked, even though I was totally sure of the

      answer.

      148

      All he said was that we’d talk about it when

      they got back from their honeymoon. He said he

      thought that the truth was still the truth even if it’s

      a couple days late.

      I told him that was the dumbest thing I’d ever

      heard.

      I know what the truth is. The truth is that he’s

      not a rat. The truth is he’s my Uncle Dan.

      149

      Sunday 29

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      It’s Sunday. Homework day, again. Isabella

      is coming over because she has no idea what to

      do with her diorama, since that whole “Baron Von

      Leash” thing was a load of garbage. (Note the flies

     


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