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Friends of a Feather

Lauren Myracle



  ALSO BY LAUREN MYRACLE

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Thirteen Plus One

  Peace, Love & Baby Ducks

  The Fashion Disaster That Changed My Life

  The Life of Ty: Penguin Problems

  The Life of Ty: Non-Random Acts of Kindness

  DUTTON CHILDREN’S BOOKS

  Published by the Penguin Group

  Penguin Group (USA) LLC, 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014

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  A Penguin Random House Company

  Text copyright © 2015 by Lauren Myracle

  Illustrations copyright © 2015 by Jed Henry

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  ISBN 978-0-698-18227-1

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  Version_1

  For Rosanne Lauer, who makes books better-er

  Contents

  Also by Lauren Myracle

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  CHAPTER ONE

  CHAPTER TWO

  CHAPTER THREE

  CHAPTER FOUR

  CHAPTER FIVE

  CHAPTER SIX

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  CHAPTER EIGHT

  CHAPTER NINE

  CHAPTER TEN

  CHAPTER ONE

  I am bouncy bouncy bouncy in the backseat of the car. My best friend Joseph is finally out of the hospital, and today he’s coming back to school!

  Joseph had leukemia, which is a bad sickness and worse than a cold, but now he’s better.

  I’ve been missing him forever, but now he’ll be back in Mrs. Webber’s class with me. Second grade will go back to normal. Ty and Joseph, Joseph and Ty, just like the old days. And I won’t have to play with Lexie anymore, who Mom says is a “challenge.” Or Taylor, who sometimes kicks!

  Well, I might play with them sometimes, but I won’t be stuck with them. It’ll be my choice. With Joseph back at school, Lexie and Taylor and everyone else will be like the wiggly lime Jell-O at Morrison’s, which is a restaurant where you go through a food line and pick whatever you want, including your own dessert.

  If I’m in the mood for lime Jell-O, then fine. But if I’m in the mood for chocolate pudding, which I pretty much always am, then too bad for the lime Jell-O and hurray for the chocolate pudding, because the chocolate pudding’s name is Joseph. Yippee!

  I giggle, and my sister Winnie looks back at me. Winnie is my middle-est sister. She’s sitting next to Sandra, who is my oldest sister. Sandra’s the one driving. My youngest sister is at home trying to eat her toes; her name is Teensy Baby Maggie.

  “You have such a cute giggle,” Winnie says. “Are you happy about Joseph? Is that what you’re thinking about?”

  “Remember in kindergarten, when Joseph was too scared of Sandra to say her name?” I ask. “But we spied on her anyway, and Joseph screamed when she spotted us?”

  “Oh yeah!” Winnie says. “Sandra was just ‘The Big One’!” Winnie widens her eyes and pretends to be Joseph. “Oh no, The Big One’s coming! Oh no, The Big One saw us!”

  Sandra hmmphs. She takes a left into Trinity’s parking lot and gets in the drop-off lane.

  “Joseph isn’t afraid of me, though,” Winnie goes on. She taps her chin. “He loooooves me, because I am the nicer sister. And sweeter and smarter and more fun to look at.”

  “More fun to look at?” Sandra says. “Like how a severed foot is fun to look at? Is that what you mean?”

  “Ew, and no,” Winnie says.

  Sandra winks at me. Yesterday she showed me a picture of a severed foot on her phone. A real live severed foot. It was from a man in a motorcycle accident who’d been wearing sneakers instead of motorcycle boots. When his body skidded down the highway, sloosh, off came his foot.

  The picture was interesting, but I wasn’t sure how long I should look at it, or if I should look at it at all. Sandra told me not to worry. She said the motorcycle man posted the picture himself because he wanted other people to remember to wear motorcycle boots.

  “He didn’t think he’d be in an accident that day, but he was,” Sandra said. “Expect the unexpected, buddy. That’s the life lesson here.”

  I like the life lessons Sandra tells me. Sandra and Winnie. I’m glad I have older sisters to tell me how the world works, because sometimes it’s confusing. I’m glad I have a baby sister, too. I’ll get to tell her how the world works, once she learns to talk.

  Also, a while back I promised to get Maggie a pet, and I need to be a man of my word, even if Maggie doesn’t know words yet.

  Yikes, I need to get Baby Maggie a pet!

  Which makes me wonder something, which I ask Winnie and Sandra.

  “Do you think Joseph still has Sneaky Bob Lizard?”

  “Probably,” Winnie says.

  Sandra inches the car forward. It’s pretty much impossible to have a wreck in the drop-off lane, so I unbuckle my seat belt and scoot forward. “Do you think he’s still fuzzy-headed?”

  “Joseph or Sneaky Bob Lizard?” Sandra says.

  “Ha-ha. Do you think he remembers all the kids in our class?”

  “Unless someone clonked him on the head,” Winnie says. “He missed . . . what? Six months of school? Of course he remembers the kids in your class.”

  I knew that already, actually. I just wanted to hear it. I know the answer to my next question, too, but I ask it anyway. “Do you think he remembers me?”

  Winnie snorts. “No, Ty, he forgot you. He also forgot spying on Sandra, making pants out of duct tape—”

  “And vests and swords,” Sandra says.

  “And those horrible drinks you dared each other to drink!” Winnie exclaims. “I’m sure he forgot those.”

  I smile. We used ketchup and yucky mustard and lemon curd, and milk and soy sauce and orange juice. Oh, and Cheez Whiz. I don’t think either of us will forget those drinks, ever.

  Joseph and I made those drinks last fall. Now it’s spring. We can still do spying and duct tape and yucky drinks, but we can also go outside and drop Mentos into bottles of Coke, which’ll make the Coke spray up and soak everybody. We’ll just have to make sure Mom is busy with Teensy Baby Maggie.

  Teensy Baby Maggie! My eyeballs nearly pop out. I know Teensy Baby Maggie—of course I do, she’s my sister—but Joseph has never met her. That is so weird!

  The car in front of us drives off. Sandra pulls into the space where kids are supposed to get out, then slams on the brakes. Really slams them, because she knows I like it when she makes the car rock back and forth.

  “Move your booty, mister,” she says.

  I scramble out, slinging my backpack over my shoulder.

  Winnie leans over Sandra’s lap. “Tell Joseph ‘hi’ for us, and that we’re so glad he’s back.”

  Sandra shoves Winnie off of her. “If he remembers you. If he doesn’t, don’t bother.”


  I laugh. Then I stop. I put my hand on the rubbery bit of Sandra’s open window and say, “Hold on. What do you mean, if he remembers?”

  “You said it, not me,” Sandra says.

  “Sandra, don’t be mean,” Winnie says.

  Sandra shrugs. “Well, how do we know he didn’t get clonked on the head?”

  “He didn’t,” Winnie says.

  “Maybe aliens took over his body, or he randomly got a brain transfer.”

  Winnie rolls her eyes. “No.”

  Sandra wags her finger. “Now, now. Remember what Mom says: The only thing you can be certain of in life is change.”

  My stomach clenches, because Mom does say that. Not every second, but yes. What if Joseph doesn’t remember me?

  Except he will. Joseph not remembering me would be like . . . like the earth turning upside-down. We’d all fall off and go floating into space.

  “Sandra’s just trying to provoke you, Ty,” Winnie says. “Don’t let her rain on your parade.”

  “What parade?” I say.

  Sandra laughs and slaps the steering wheel. “Exactly.”

  She peels off, and I try to remember what “provoke” means. Something about a pin? About poking another person with a pin?

  From the end of the drop-off lane, Sandra’s last bit of advice floats back to me. “Expect the unexpected! The Big One always knows best!”

  Expect the unexpected. I push and prod that thought in my mind as I trudge up the school’s front stairs. It made sense with the motorcycle man and his decapitated foot (which might not be the right word, but I always forget the real one). I don’t like it when it has to do with Joseph, though. With Joseph, I don’t want to expect the unexpected.

  Only Joseph didn’t expect to get sick, did he? Just like the motorcycle man didn’t expect to be in an accident?

  But how can anyone expect the unexpected? It’s like saying, “Tie your shoe, but without tying your shoe.” Or telling a dog to turn into a cat, or marching over to the kitchen sink and ordering it to fly. Sinks can’t fly! That’s why they’re called sinks!

  Oh, fudge nickels, I think, walking faster. Just go to Joseph. Duh. Once I’m with Joseph, everything will be fine. The earth won’t turn upside-down and no one will go floating into space. Duh!

  “Ty!” someone calls.

  I stop.

  “Ty, help us!” the person says, and it’s a girl, and I’m pretty sure it’s Hannah, who’s in Mrs. Webber’s class with me. “You’re our only hope!”

  I turn, and yep, it’s Hannah. She and Claire have their backs pressed against the wall. They’re clinging to each other and trying to be shorter and smaller than they really are. They’re also giggling. Taylor, who is a boy-Taylor, is standing in front of them with his feet apart and his arms spread wide.

  “Mwa-HA-ha-ha!” he says. “Nobody can help you, fools!”

  “Yeah-huh, because Ty will,” Hannah says. “Hurry, Ty!”

  I push my fingers against my forehead. This is not how the morning is supposed to go, because:

  A: I’m not supposed to have to deal with Taylor anymore, not unless I choose to. He’s supposed to be the lime Jell-O.

  B: Taylor is also using a maniac voice, but he’s doing it wrong. It’s MWA-ha-ha, not mwa-HA-ha-ha. What maniac says mwa-HA-ha-ha?

  And, C: The waistband of Taylor’s jeans is lower than his underwear, and I think letting the whole world see your underwear is a bad idea.

  “Taylor, let them go,” I say.

  “Nope,” Taylor says, popping the p sound.

  To Hannah and Claire, I say, “Just walk around him.”

  “We can’t,” Hannah says. “He pooted!”

  “He pooted, and we are gagging!” Claire says. She puts her hands to her throat. “Make”—gag—“him”—gag gag—“get out of here!”

  I sigh. Taylor poots a lot, and his poots are stinkier than anyone’s in the entire school. Like, you can walk into the art room and know that Taylor was just there, because even when Taylor leaves, his poot-smell stays and stays.

  I glance toward Mrs. Webber’s room. Joseph is probably wondering where I am. I could abandon the girls and go to him. Only abandoning the girls would make my stomach hurt.

  “Taylor, move,” I tell him.

  “Ooo-eee! Makin’ bacon!” he says, squatting down. He holds his fists in by his sides and shakes his booty.

  I suck in a big breath of air, take two giant steps forward, and grab Taylor around the waist. I tug. His booty comes toward me, but his feet stay planted where they are.

  Then—pbbbbbbbbb. A cloud of stench glomps on to me. I sputter and flail, trying to get it off.

  “See?” Hannah says.

  My eyes water as I stumble backward. Pulling him didn’t work, so what now?

  A crane lift?

  A superpower magnet like the ones at junkyards that hold up entire cars?

  A giant pair of very strong pliers that I could grab his belt loop with?

  Or . . .

  OR . . .

  “Hannah, do you have gymnastics today?” I ask.

  “Why?” Hannah says.

  I wait. I push my eyeballs at her. I push them harder, and finally she gets it.

  “Ohhhh,” she says. “Why, yes, Ty. I do have gymnastics, and guess what? I even brought my leotard. My shiny pink leotard. If you want to go get it, it’s in my cubby.”

  “Your gymnastics leotard? No!” Taylor says. His ha-ha face turns into a scared face. “Anything but that!”

  “Let the girls go,” I say. “Or I will get Hannah’s pink shiny gymnastics leotard, and I’ll bring it out here, and—”

  “Okay!” he shouts. “You win, you win!” He flees down the hall toward the art room, and Hannah and Claire collapse with crazy laughing.

  “Why is he scared of your gymnastics leotard?” Claire asks Hannah.

  “I have no idea!” Hannah says.

  I do. I know why. It’s because sometimes Hannah changes into her leotard at the end of school, and everyone sees her in it. And sometimes her underwear peeks out, kind of. Which Taylor shouldn’t be afraid of since people can see his underwear, too! Sheesh!

  Hannah’s laughter trickles off. “What’s wrong, Ty? You look mad.”

  “I’m not,” I say. But maybe I am, because I just realized something. Taylor pulled an unexpectedness on me by being here and bothering the girls right when I walked by. Then I turned around and pulled an unexpectedness on him, by bringing up Hannah’s leotard.

  My brain buzzes, and I sway.

  Hannah rushes over and grabs me. “Ty?”

  “Whoa,” I say.

  “You’re probably light-headed,” Claire says. “Probably because of Taylor’s poots.”

  Hannah looks worried. “Do you want me to take you to the office?”

  I shake free and head for Mrs. Webber’s room. “No, I’m fine. I just got dizzy for a second.”

  Either that or the world has turned upside-down. Which if it did, I’m not fine at all.

  CHAPTER TWO

  Joseph!” I call when I see him.

  He turns at my voice. He’s surrounded by other kids, and his face is shining and happy, and my first thought is that he is the sun, because he’s at the center of things. He’s the sun, and the kids gathered around him are the planets and stars and space junk and stuff.

  My second thought is that he must be embarrassed of his hair, because he’s wearing his red woolly hat, which is the same hat he wore last fall when he got sick. He was absent a lot to go get treatments, and the treatments made him bald.

  My third thought is, So? Because when he got put in the hospital for real, Mom took me to visit him almost every week, and I saw his bald head then. I thought he looked cool. And as he got better, and his hair started growing back, I saw his
fuzzy head. I thought he looked cool then, too.

  “Ty!” he calls back to me. His smile makes him light up even more.

  I grin and hurry toward him, but I stop before I fully reach him. I’m not sure why. I know I’m still grinning, because my cheeks are tight, but for a second it’s more of a frozen grin than a real grin.

  It’s strange. Joseph is finally back, and for some reason I feel shy.

  I push harder on my smile and tell my legs to move.

  “Out of the way, people!” I say to the kids circled around him. John makes room, and so does Chase. But Lexie, who was my loaner best friend while Joseph was gone, edges closer to Joseph instead of farther away.

  “You’re really here!” I say to Joseph.

  “I know!” Joseph says back. “So are you!”

  That makes me laugh, and my shyness melts away. Joseph is still Joseph, and I’m still me. He’s wearing a shirt I’ve never seen before, but that’s the only unexpectedness.

  “I gave him that,” Lexie says, as if she grew mind-reading powers when I wasn’t watching. “My mom took me to visit him last night, and I gave him that shirt to say ‘welcome back.’”

  “Oh,” I say. I take a longer look. Joseph’s shirt, which Lexie gave him, has an octopus on it with a big head and googly eyes. The octopus’s arms have suckers on them that make me think ploop ploop ploop.

  For a shirt, it’s sort of pretty awesome, and I'm jealous that Lexie was the one who gave it to him. I wish it was a babyish shirt instead, or dumb, so that later Joseph could tell me his mom made him wear it. Except no, because that would be like saying I wished Joseph’s shirt was dumb. That I wanted Joseph, my best friend, to be wearing a dumb shirt.

  Lexie smirks, and I imagine a cartoon picture of the octopus going ploop ploop ploop all over her head. There could be a speech bubble that showed her saying, “OH NO, OCTOPUS POOP!”

  I grab Joseph’s arm. “Did Mrs. Webber tell you where to sit yet?” I ask. “Let’s ask if you can be by me.”

  “Too late,” Chase says. He points to the desk next to his. Joseph’s stuff is on top of it, including his backpack with the broken strap that he and I fixed with a rubber band.