Double-Chinned Myers shinnying up the flagpole. Gary Fulcher could go to you-know-where and warm his toes.
There was really no free time at school except recess, and now that there were no races, Jess and Leslie usually looked for a quiet place on the field, and sat and talked. Except for the magic half hour on Fridays, recess was all that Jess looked forward to at school. Leslie could always come up with something funny that made the long days bearable. Often the joke was on Mrs. Myers. Leslie was one of those people who sat quietly at her desk, never whispering or daydreaming or chewing gum, doing beautiful schoolwork, and yet her brain was so full of mischief that if the teacher could have once seen through that mask of perfection, she would have thrown her out in horror.
Jess could hardly keep a straight face in class just trying to imagine what might be going on behind that angelic look of Leslieâs. One whole morning, as Leslie had related it at recess, she had spent imagining Mrs. Myers on one of those fat farms down inArizona. In her fantasy, Mrs. Myers was one of the foodaholics who would hide bits of candy bars in odd placesâup the hot water faucet!âonly to be found out and publicly humiliated before all the other fat ladies. That afternoon Jess kept having visions of Mrs. Myers dressed only in a pink corset being weighed in. âYouâve been cheating again, Gussie!â the tall skinny directoress was saying. Mrs. Myers was on the verge of tears.
âJesse Aarons!â The teacherâs sharp voice punctured his daydream. He couldnât look Mrs. Myers straight in her pudgy face. Heâd crack up. He set his sight on her uneven hemline.
âYesâm.â He was going to have to get coaching from Leslie. Mrs. Myers always caught him when his mind was on vacation, but she never seemed to suspect Leslie of not paying attention. He sneaked a glance up that way. Leslie was totally absorbed in her geography book, or so it would appear to anyone who didnât know.
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Terabithia was cold in November. They didnât dare build a fire in the castle, though sometimes theywould build one outside and huddle around it. For a while Leslie had been able to keep two sleeping bags in the stronghold, but around the first of December her father noticed their absence, and she had to take them back. Actually, Jess made her take them back. It was not that he was afraid of the Burkes exactly. Leslieâs parents were young, with straight white teeth and lots of hairâboth of them. Leslie called them Judy and Bill, which bothered Jess more than he wanted it to. It was none of his business what Leslie called her parents. But he just couldnât get used to it.
Both of the Burkes were writers. Mrs. Burke wrote novels and, according to Leslie, was more famous than Mr. Burke, who wrote about politics. It was really something to see the shelf that had their books on it. Mrs. Burke was âJudith Hancockâ on the cover, which threw you at first, but then if you looked on the back, there was her picture looking very young and serious. Mr. Burke was going back and forth to Washington to finish a book he was working on with someone else, but he had promised Leslie that after Christmas he would stay home andfix up the house and plant his garden and listen to music and read books out loud and write only in his spare time.
They didnât look like Jessâs idea of rich, but even he could tell that the jeans they wore had not come off the counter at Newberryâs. There was no TV at the Burkesâ, but there were mountains of records and a stereo set that looked like something off Star Trek. And although their car was small and dusty, it was Italian and looked expensive, too.
They were always nice to Jess when he went over, but then they would suddenly begin talking about French politics or string quartets (which he at first thought was a square box made out of string), or how to