1
The Big Race
My name is A.J. and I hate ice cream.
Actually, thatâs not true. I love ice cream. In fact, itâs one of my favorite things in the world. I was just pulling your leg there.
No, I wasnât doing that either. If I was pulling your leg, I would actually be taking your leg and pulling on it. Why would anybody want to pull on a leg? Thatâs a weird thing to do. *
Speaking of weird things, last week the weirdest thing in the history of the world happened. When I got to school, our groundskeeper, Mr. Burke, was sitting out in the playground on a riding lawn mower.
Well, thatâs not the weird part, because Mr. Burke sits on a riding lawn mower all the time. The weird part was that right next to him was our principal, Mr. Klutz. He was sitting on another lawn mower.
All the kids gathered around to see what was going on. I went over to my friends Ryan, Michael, Neil, and Alexia.
âWhatâs going on?â I asked.
âMr. Klutz and Mr. Burke are going to have a lawn mower race,â said Michael, who never ties his shoes.
âThe first one to reach the monkey bars wins,â said Ryan, who will eat anything, even stuff that isnât food.
âLawn mower races rock ,â said Alexia, who is a girl but is cool anyway.
âThe loser has to pay the winner a dollar,â said Neil, who we call the nude kid even though he wears clothes.
Mr. Klutz and Mr. Burke revved the motors of their lawn mowers and glared at each other.
âGet ready to lose , pardner!â shouted Mr. Burke. âAh reckon Ahâm a-gonna give you a whuppinâ youâll never forget.â
He talks funny. He had a toothpick in his mouth, too. Whatâs up with that?
âKiss my grass!â yelled Mr. Klutz. âYouâre going down , Mr. Burke!â
Thatâs when Andrea Young, this annoying girl with curly brown hair, came over. She was with her equally annoying cry-baby friend Emily.
âHi, Arlo!â said Andrea. She calls me by my real name because she knows I donât like it.
I didnât say hello to Andrea because I knew the guys would start teasing me and saying I was in love with her.
âThey shouldnât have dangerous races and gamble on school property,â Andrea told us. âIt sets a bad example for children.â
âI agree,â said Emily, who agrees with everything Andrea says.
âCan you possibly be more boring?â asked Alexia.
Andrea stuck out her tongue at Alexia. Alexia stuck out her tongue at Andrea. Emily stuck out her tongue at Alexia. Alexia stuck out her tongue at Emily.
Whenever somebody says something mean to you, always stick out your tongue at them. Thatâs the first rule of being a kid.
âIâm not boring,â Andrea said. âI just donât like violence.â
âWhat do you have against violins?â I asked.
Everybody laughed even though I didnât say anything funny.
âNot violins, Arlo!â Andrea said, rolling her eyes. âViolence!â
Oh. Why canât a truckload of violins fall on Andreaâs head?
Our gym teacher, Miss Small, came running out in front of the lawn mowers. She was carrying a big flag.
âOn your mark,â she yelled, âget set⦠GO!â
She waved the flag. Mr. Klutz and Mr. Burke took off. *
2
A Seesaw Battle
The lawn mower race was hilarious, because lawn mowers go really slow. I mean, I can walk faster than those things. It was like watching a turtle race. But it was still exciting, and everybody was yelling and screaming.
âPut the pedal to the metal, Mr. Klutz!â
âYou can beat him, Mr. Burke!â
We all walked alongside the lawn mowers so we could see who was winning. First Mr. Klutz took the lead. Then Mr. Burke took the lead. Then Mr. Klutz was ahead. Then Mr. Burke was ahead.
âThis is a real seesaw battle!â shouted Ryan.
âAre they going to fight on the seesaws?â I asked.
Gabriel García Márquez, Gregory Rabassa