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    A Begonia for Miss Applebaum

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    “Ohyes,”Laurihadagreed.

      “Theytalkaboutbeingrevolutionary,”Bobbybegantosoundoff,“butatthe

      sametimethey’reworriedaboutwhetherthethemeforthepromisgoingtobe

      Tropical Night or Springtime on a Star. They talk about signing petitions to makethosefactoriesinNewarkstopshovingsulfurdioxideintotheairbutwhat

      theyarereallyworriedaboutisifthey’regoingtogettheirdriver’slicensenext week. They talk about Communist suppression but what they’re into is how to uptheirallowances.”BobbyhadbeenabletotellbytheexpressiononLauri’s

      facethatshewasreallybecomingimpressedwithhim,sohedecidedtobeeven

      moreeffusive.“Ifyouhearanybitternessinmyvoiceletmetellyouit’spurely intentional.I’vebeenkickedaroundenough.Therearetoomanyflawsinpeople

      andsocietyandparticularlythatschool.They’renotinterestedinwhatmyideas

      are. All those teachers care about is if I have the quotation marks and the exclamation points in the right place. And that’s not what it’s all about. They should listen to what I’ve got to say. They shouldn’t try to kill off my imagination.Oranybodyelse’simagination!They’reshovingallthisstuffdown

      ourthroats.Wedon’tevenknowwhatitis.Theyshouldletourideasout.Don’t

      jumpupanddownonthem,andwriteallthosenastylittlethingswiththeirred

      pens.Isayonlyabouttwenty-fivepercentofthoseteachersknowwhatthey’re

      doing.I’mgoingtofixtheonesthatdon’tbecauseonedayI’mgoingtowritea

      bookandtellthemhowtoreallyrunaschoolsothatyoudon’tkilloffthewaya kidlearns.Ofcourse,Idon’treallyknowaboutotherschools,butFortLeeHigh

      asfarasI’mconcernedisagiganticmonumenttoman’sattempttoeducatehis

      kidsandhisfailuretodoso.That’sthewayIfeelaboutit.Kidshavetolearnby expressingthemselves!”

      Laurihadlookedathimandfinallyhadtotrytobalancethescales.“Alotof

      teachersatFortLeeHighhelpme,”shesaidsoftly.

      “Well I told you there are some good ones. And besides, I’m just really sounding off right now. I’m really a very quiet person most of the time. I’m a nice kid except when somebody rubs me the wrong way and then I grab a megaphone and I start screaming into it ‘I’m here, I’m here’ and I’m always goingtodothatevenifitmakespeoplegodeaffrommyyelling!”

      Intruth,severaloftheteachersatFortLeeHighhadpickedBobbyoutforhis

      individuality during the first few weeks of his attendance there and he was punishedaccordingly.Hisfirstactofdefiancewastorefusetogotostudyhall.

      HehadtoldMissBerkowitz,hisgradeadvisorwhohappenedtohaveonlyone

      arm, that study hall was simply a waste of time and a fill-in because of inept curricularplanningbythestafftokeepkidsinschoollongerthantheyhadtobe.

      Besides,hepointedout,allthekidsdidinstudyhallwasthrowmaltedballsat

      poor Mr. Kirchmorker when he wasn’t looking and Bobby didn’t like that

      because Mr. Kirchmorker was a wonderful civics teacher. He just happened to bealousydisciplinarian.ThentherewasthetimewhenMr.Kirchmorkergothit

      intheeyewithatangerineandBobbygotsoangryatthekidwhothrewitthat

      hesockedthekid.ButBobbyendedupbeingtheonegettingintotrouble.Hegot

      ten demerits and he didn’t even know what demerits were and he was hoping thatmaybeifhegotenoughofthemtheywouldtrytogivehimtheelectricchair

      at a special assembly but at the last minute before the switch was thrown, he couldshovetheprincipalintotheseatandfryhim.Everyweekatthebeginning

      thereseemedtobesomenewcrimeBobbygotchargedwith.Herefusedtotake gymthirdperiodbecauseitgothimallsweatedupandtheschoolhadnoshower

      facilities.

      As it worked out, before the end of Bobby’s first year at Fort Lee High his parentshadbeencalledinsixtimesforconferencesandwhatmosthorrifiedthe

      disciplinarystaffoftheschoolwasthatBobby’sparentsopenlyexpressedtheir

      love and belief in their son. Mr. and Mrs. Perkins had the nerve to say they thought their son was absolutely correct in most matters. Bobby Perkins was a kidwhotrustedhisparentsandtheytrustedhim.

      “Mr.andMrs.Perkins,”theDeanofBoyshadpronouncedononeoccasion,

      “wecan’thaveallthestudentsrunningaroundsayingwhatevercomesintotheir

      heads!”

      “Whynot?”Bobby’sfatherinquired.

      TheDeancouldn’tanswerthatone.

      Thencametheaforementionedinfamousnight.

      It was a night when the school administration felt it had been completely vindicated because Bobby was finally apprehended by the police. The incident occurred at of all things an Italian block party right near the Century Tower Apartments—when four streets had been closed to traffic to allow local

      merchantstosetupsausageandcookiestandsandtherewerefourrockbandsto

      letthepeoplemusicallyjumpupanddowninthestreets.Thelocalbocceclub

      setofffireworksinbehalfofSt.Anthonyandwine,beerandlasagnaseemedto

      ooze from everywhere. Bobby had gone to the block party alone and he was feeling very depressed as he strolled along the crowded streets watching the bursts of rockets in the sky reflect off the river and the silver webbing of the bridge. It was all so beautiful he almost forgot how alone he really was. Just before the infamy started he noticed Lauri Geddes at one stand. He had never spoken to her before but had seen her often moving through the lobby of the Century Tower or in the halls at Fort Lee High. She reminded him of a timid delicate angora cat. She was also alone and he could tell she was feeling very self-consciousbecauseshewastakinglittlebitesoutofhercannolilikeamouse nibbling at cheese in a trap. Suddenly Bobby heard a gang of kids in a convertiblehootingandhonkingtheirwayastheybrokethroughabarricadeand

      began to invade the block party. The kids in the car were stoned and drunk, especially the driver who was at least two years older than Bobby, and Bobby was so ticked off at their nerve he just jumped right in front of the car forcing

      themtostop.

      “Get out of the way,” the kid driving the car yelled—and then he made the mistakeofthrowingabeercanwhichhitBobbyinthehead.OnceagainBobby

      forgothisbasicallyshynatureandjumpeduponthehoodandsockedthedriver.

      Hegotinafewgoodpunchesbeforetheothersstartedtoreallybeatonhimand

      by that time the police were on the scene. Everything would have worked out justfineifthekidBobbyhadpunchedhadnotturnedouttobethelocalpolice

      chief’s son. As it was, Bobby was the only one who was dragged off to the police station and once the police had him inside they threatened him with everything from reform school to a bop on the skull with a nightstick. Bobby began to feel as though he was back in school again, when there suddenly appearedathingirlwithlongbrownstraighthair.Shehadbeenstandinginthe

      doorwayandthensteppedforwardwipingsomepowderedsugarfromherlips.

      Shespokeinaverygentlebutclearvoice.

      “He’sinnocent,” shesaid.

      Asilenceflashedthroughthestationhouse.Thethreepresidingofficersturned

     
    toseewherethevoicehadcomefrom.Eventheyoungbeardedassistantcopto

      therightofthemaindeskstoppedtyping.ThechiefwasaSergeantCollinswho

      looked like an irate Wizard of Oz, and he leaned forward from behind his toweringdesk,peeringdownwithbulgingeyes.EventhetwoPuertoRicangirls

      working behind the dusty glass of the computer report room peered out like bronzed goldfish sensing something strange was occurring to the customary choreography of the stationhouse. There was something more than a routine bookinggoingon.

      “Didyousaysomething?”SergeantCollinsasked.

      “He’sinnocent,”Laurirepeated.“Iwasawitness.”

      Bobby saw the girl’s hands were trembling and he knew it had taken every dropofcourageinherbodytomakeherfollow,comeforwardandbearwitness

      for him. Nevertheless the police brayed illogically at them for the next twenty minutes. The kids just kept staring at each other as though in silent agreement thattheworldwasforthemostpartunjustandoftenverynoisy.Thecopseven

      worked up a phony call to the police commissioner and they announced that it wasBobby’sluckiestdayonearththatnochargesweregoingtobepressed.But

      hewouldbeonsemiprobation.Theykeptyellingthingslike“Whatwouldyour

      parentssay?”and“Youshouldbethrownoutofschool!”ButfinallyBobbyand

      Lauri were allowed to leave—and from that moment on Bobby Perkins and

      LauriGeddeswereascloseasiftheyhadsignedapactinblood.

      AbouttheAuthor

      PAULZINDELwrotemorethan40novels,including ThePigman, one of the best-selling young adult books of all time. His Broadway play, The Effect of

      GammaRaysonMan-in-the-MoonMarigolds, wonthePulitzerPrizeandwas producedasafilmdirectedbyPaulNewman.

      Mr.Zindel’sotheryoungadultbooksincludethepopular PardonMe,You’re

      Stepping on My Eyeball!; My Darling, My Hamburger; The Undertaker’s

      Gone Bananas; The Pigman’s Legacy, a sequel to The Pigman; and the autobiographical ThePigmanandMe.

      Mr.Zindel’sworkasanauthorbroughthimtoexoticdestinationsaroundthe

      world, from Australia’s Great Barrier Reef to the monkey forests of Indonesia.

      Drawingfromthoseexperiences,hecreatedTheZoneUnknownseries—packed

      fullofhorror,humor,adventureandbravery—withreluctantreadersinmind.It

      includes six titles: Loch, The Doom Stone, Raptor, Rats, Reef of Death, and

      NightoftheBat.

      FanscanvisitPaulZindelontheWebat:www.paulzindel.com

      Findoutmoreat:

      WWW.GRAYMALKIN.COM

      ISBN-13:978-1-9351-6970-3

      ABEGONIAFORMISSAPPLEBAUM

      Copyright©1989byPaulZindel

      AllrightsreservedunderInternationalandPan-AmericanCopyrightConventions.By paymentoftherequiredfees,youhavebeengrantedthenon-exclusive,nontransferable righttoaccessandreadthetextofthisebookonscreen.Nopartofthistextmaybe reproduced,transmitted,downloaded,decompiled,reverseengineered,orstoredinor introducedintoanyinformationstorageandretrievalsystem,inanyformorbyany means,whetherelectronicormechanical,nowknownorhereinafterinvented,withoutthe expresswrittenpermissionofthepublisher.

      Thisisaworkoffiction.Names,characters,places,andincidentseitheraretheproductof theauthor‘simaginationorareusedfictitiously.Anyresemblancetoactualpersons, livingordead,businesses,companies,events,orlocalesisentirelycoincidental.

      www.graymalkin.com

      Document Outline

      Books by Paul Zindel

      Title Page

      Dedication

      Contents

      1

      2

      3

      4

      5

      6

      7

      8

      9

      10

      11

      12

      13

      14

      15

      16

      17

      Sneak Peak

      About the Author

      Copyright Page

     

     

     



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