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    Green Gravy

    Page 3
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      “Green as a bean!” they joined in.

      Kids were looking at them. Mostly Miss Hartman’s class, on the other side of the cafeteria.

      Carly didn’t mind.

      She opened her sack lunch. She stopped long enough to glance across at her younger brother.

      Jimmy had just set his lunch tray down.

      Carly could see his plate. There was brown meat and gravy and some white mashed potatoes. The other vegetable was orange. Carrots!

      Nice colors, but the wrong ones!

      Stacy was right. The school cook wasn’t very creative. Or maybe she wasn’t Irish.

      “There isn’t a scrap of hot green food anywhere!” Carly said.

      Stacy and Abby nodded. “That’s true,” said Stacy.

      “Isn’t anybody else remembering St.Patrick’s Day?” Carly asked.

      Abby teased, “Looks like part Β of your wish isn’t working.”

      “Hey!” Carly turned to her sister. “Do ya have to tell the whole world?”

      Abby just smiled. “It’s kinda cute, that’s all.”

      “Not cute,” Carly said. “Cute’s for babies.” And she slid off her seat.

      “Hey, don’t forget your green lunch,” Abby called.

      “Forget you!” Carly snapped.

      She picked up her lunch sack. Then she marched to the other side of the cafeteria.

      TEN

      Carly went to Jimmy’s table and sat down. She glanced around at the lunches.

      Everyone in her class was having green stuff for lunch. There was split pea soup and lots of celery sticks. One girl even had some raw spinach!

      No one at their table was having hot lunch.

      No one except Jimmy.

      He didn’t seem to care about her wish. Part A or part B. Nope. He sprinkled some salt and pepper on his gravy. And he dug right in.

      “How’s it taste?” Carly asked him.

      “Very good.” It sounded like velly good.

      Carly stared at his tray. “Nothing’s green on your plate,” she whined.

      Jimmy nodded. “I not eat green. I NOT Irish.”

      “Where are your friendly freckles?” she asked.

      “Not like green dot face,” he said.

      The boy next to Jimmy laughed.

      Jimmy joined in.

      That did it!

      Carly leaped up. She flew across the cafeteria to Abby’s table.

      Jason’s tube of cake icing was in plain view.

      “Mind if I squeeze this?” she asked.

      Jason didn’t have a chance to answer. She was gone before he could say “St. Patrick’s Day.”

      At Jimmy’s table, Carly hid the icing behind her. She hurried around to Jimmy. “I get my wish!” she said.

      She leaned over Jimmy’s shoulder.

      And . . .

      Squeeeeeeze!

      Out came the gooey, green icing.

      Plop!

      It landed in Jimmy’s gravy.

      “Eew!” The kids at the table groaned.

      “Happy St. Patrick’s Day!” she singsang to her brother.

      Jimmy’s eyes were big now. Not angry, just big.

      Slowly, he picked up his fork and took a bite.

      The kids watched. They leaned toward him.

      Dee Dee moved over to their table. She wanted to see what was going on.

      “How’s it taste now?” teased Carly.

      “Green gravy not bad,” Jimmy said.

      He took another bite.

      Dee Dee said, “I can’t believe he’s eating it.”

      “Green gravy good stuff,” Jimmy said. “I not Irish, but I eat green gravy!”

      Miss Hartman’s kids chanted, “Green gravy . . . green gravy . . .”

      Across the cafeteria, Abby and her friends were staring.

      Carly didn’t mind.

      She went around and squeezed green icing on pickles, Jell-O, and spinach. She squeezed it on lettuce and green pears.

      It was a “double dabble” lunchtime. That’s exactly what Abby would say.

      Jason Birchall came running over. “Hey, don’t use it all,” he hollered.

      “Thanks for the big squeeze,” Carly said. She gave him the smashed-up tube. “You made my green wish come true.”

      Jason jigged around and acted silly. Then he trailed a string of icing onto his tongue.

      Now all the kids were looking at Jason.

      The lunchroom teacher blew a whistle.

      Yikes. Carly hurried to sit down.

      “Quiet!” the teacher called.

      Everyone tried to settle down. It wasn’t easy.

      The kids at Jimmy’s table were holding in the giggles.

      The kids at Abby’s table were tasting Jason’s icing.

      Carly was having too much fun.

      She forgot all about the Lunch Rule.

      ELEVEN

      Carly carried her shoe box to Miss Hartman’s desk.

      She set down her bag of green cookies.

      The teacher said, “There are fifteen stars beside Carly’s name. She has earned the good citizenship award.”

      Carly took a deep breath. She hoped she hadn’t let her teacher down. Or her classmates.

      “Everyone listen carefully,” said Miss Hartman. She nodded for Carly to begin.

      “My name is Carly Anne Hunter,” Carly said. “My middle name is always spelled with an ‘e’ on the end. I was born seven years ago. And I’m Irish on my mother’s side.”

      She showed a picture of a fluffy white puppy. “This is Snow White. She’s the color of clean snow.”

      Next, Carly held up a drawing of her duck. “This is Quacker,” she said. “Her brother’s name is Jack. Quacker and Jack are brother and sister.”

      The girls giggled.

      The boys tried not to.

      Someone asked, “Do your ducks fight?”

      Carly nodded her head. “Like cats and dogs,” she said.

      She was ready to talk about her favorite foods. “I like sweets best.” The clover cookies got passed around.

      She noticed that Jimmy took two.

      At last, she showed her family picture. “This is the whole Hunter family,” she said.

      She pointed to each person, starting with her parents. “My father’s English and my mother’s Irish. But they learned to like Korean food in four months.”

      Next she pointed to Abby. “This is my big sister. She’s the president of the Cul-de-sac Kids. It’s a club. Abby makes up words like ‘double dabble.’”

      Carly pointed to a tall, skinny boy. “Shawn’s nine years old. He plays soccer and the violin. His Korean name is Li Sung Jin, and he’s my adopted big brother. Snow White is really his pet.”

      She picked up the dog’s picture again.

      Miss Hartman asked a question. “Is Snow White a Shih Tzu dog?”

      “Yes,” Carly answered. “Her doggie family tree goes back to ancient China.”

      “Do you know what Shih Tzu means?” asked the teacher.

      “My father told me,” Carly said. “It means Lion Dog. These pets were watchdogs in the Chinese royal courts.”

      “Wow,” someone whispered.

      “Cool,” someone else said.

      Carly spoke up. “But better than all that is someone in this class. Someone very special.” She pointed to Jimmy and asked him to stand up.

      “You all know Jimmy. He’s my adopted brother. He’s Shawn’s birth brother.”

      Jimmy was smiling.

      “Will you come stand with me?” she asked him.

      Her brother nodded. “I come.”

      Carly smiled at Jimmy. “Here is the best citizen I know,” she said. “And a good sport.”

      She told about the green gravy. For Miss Hartman’s sake.

      Then she turned to Jimmy. “I’m sorry for being selfish. A good citizen is NOT selfish.”

      She took off her Student of the Week pin.

      She put it on Jimmy.

      Miss Hartman was smiling the biggest smile.

      Everyone else was clappi
    ng.

      Except Jimmy.

      He pulled out his marker and stood on tippy-toes.

      “What are you gonna do?” Carly asked.

      “I draw green Irish heart on sister face,” he said. “Happy Carly Day!”

      Carly felt like crying.

      Happy, happy tears. Capital H!

      And she never ever said Sour-Pie Jimmy again.

      THE CUL-DE-SAC KIDS SERIES

      Don’t miss #15!

      BACKYARD BANDIT MYSTERY

      Stacy Henry wants to earn extra money for the Cul-de-sac Kids club. But she can’t get permission from Abby, the club president, who is out of town.

      The rest of the kids vote to go ahead with the yard sale. But some of their treasures disappear one night.

      Is there a bandit in the neighborhood?

      Who is stealing from the Cul-de-sac Kids? And why?

      ABOUT THE AUTHOR

      Beverly Lewis is part Irish, but only a wee bit. The idea for this story came from her children, Julie, Janie, and Jonathan. Each of them received the honor of Student of the Week during grade school.

      Now they are teenagers and help create cover ideas for the Cul-de-sac Kids books.

      Beverly likes her mashed potatoes with brown gravy. (Capital B!) She tried eating cake icing on top, and it made her write this funny book.

      If you like humor and mystery, watch for more Cul-de-sac Kids books. You just might discover a new food group!

      Also by Beverly Lewis

      Amish Prayers

      The Beverly Lewis Amish Heritage Cookbook

      GIRLS ONLY (GO!)†

      Youth Fiction

      Girls Only! Volume One · Girls Only! Volume Two

      SUMMERHILL SECRETS‡

      Youth Fiction

      SummerHill Secrets: Volume One · SummerHill Secrets: Volume Two

      HOLLY’S HEART

      Youth Fiction

      Holly’s Heart: Collection One‡ · Holly’s Heart: Collection Two‡

      Holly’s Heart: Collection Three†

      SEASONS OF GRACE

      Adult Fiction

      The Secret ·The Missing · The Telling

      ABRAM’S DAUGHTERS

      Adult Fiction

      The Covenant · The Betrayal · The Sacrifice

      The Prodigal · The Revelation

      ANNIE’S PEOPLE

      Adult Fiction

      The Preacher’s Daughter · The Englisher · The Brethren

      THE ROSE TRILOGY

      Adult Fiction

      The Thorn ·The Judgment

      COURTSHIP OF NELLIE FISHER

      Adult Fiction

      The Parting ·The Forbidden · The Longing

      THE HERITAGE OF LANCASTER COUNTY

      Adult Fiction

      The Shunning ·The Confession · The Reckoning

      OTHER ADULT FICTION

      The Postcard · The Crossroad · The Redemption of Sarah Cain

      October Song · Sanctuary (with David Lewis) ·The Sunroom

      www.BeverlyLewis.com

      †4 books in each volume ‡5 books in each volume

      Beverly Lewis Books for Young Readers

      PICTURE BOOKS

      In Jesse’s Shoes · Just Like Mama

      What Is God Like? · What Is Heaven Like?

      THE CUL-DE-SAC KIDS

      The Double Dabble Surprise

      The Chicken Pox Panic

      The Crazy Christmas Angel Mystery

      No Grown-ups Allowed

      Frog Power

      The Mystery of Case D. Luc

      The Stinky Sneakers Mystery

      Pickle Pizza

      Mailbox Mania

      The Mudhole Mystery

      Fiddlesticks

      The Crabby Cat Caper

      Tarantula Toes

      Green Gravy

      Backyard Bandit Mystery

      Tree House Trouble

      The Creepy Sleep-Over

      The Great TV Turn-Off

      Piggy Party

      The Granny Game

      Mystery Mutt

      Big Bad Beans

      The Upside-Down Day

      The Midnight Mystery

      Katie and Jake and the Haircut Mistake

      www.BeverlyLewis.com

      From Bethany House Publishers

      Fiction for Young Readers

      (ages 7–10)

      by Robert Elmer

      Space scooters? Floating robots? Jupiter ice cream? Blast into the future for out-of-this-world, zero-gravity fun with the AstroKids on space station CLEO-7.

      THE CUL-DE-SAC KIDS

      by Beverly Lewis

      Each story in this lighthearted series features the hilarious antics and predicaments of nine endearing boys and girls who live on Blossom Hill Lane.

      JANETTE OKE’S ANIMAL FRIENDS

      by Janette Oke

      Endearing creatures from the farm, forest, and zoo discover their place in God’s world through various struggles, mishaps, and adventures.

     

     

     



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