looked around the room like he was daring anyone to vote against the calendars.
The vote was called. No one put up a hand except Michael Baylor. Owen fingered the sample calendar nervously.
Beauties of the Ages
it said on the cover.
Owen raised his hand.
Soon others raised theirs, and then almost everyone was voting to sell the calendars.
Each student took a hundred home in a box. Owen hid his in the bedroom closet and tried to work up the courage to ask his rather for help in selling them. But that evening he found Horace sitting in his favorite chair, his face hidden behind the newspaper. Owen could tell from the snapping sound of the turning pages that his father had had a bad day.
So Owen waited until Friday when Horace was usually in a better mood. When Horace got home late in the afternoon he threw his tie on the chesterfield and ruffed up Sylvesterâs fur in a happy way. Then when he was reading the paper he joked about an article about a chicken with two heads and no feet. âSure would have trouble crossing the road!â he said. Then he looked at Owen.
âHow was your day?â he asked. âYou look like the prison bars are closing in all around.â
Owen screwed up his courage.
âI was wondering,â he said, âif you could drive me into Elgin.â
âWhat for?â
âI have to sell calendars. Itâs to go to Japan on the class trip,â Owen said.
âI thought you lost that election,â Horace replied. His voice was suddenly sharp as wire, and Owen wished he hadnât brought it up.
âYes, but ââ
âShow me these calendars.â
Owen brought the box down from the bedÂroom and opened it for his father.
âTractor calendars!â he said with that special note of delight that Owen knew to dread. âYouâd be lucky to sell two of these. Youâll just be wasting your time.â
Owen went to Margaret to ask if she would drive him into Elgin. But Horace followed him into the kitchen.
âYouâd do better if you sold the
tractors
door-to-door!â he said.
âWhatâs all this about?â Margaret asked.
âHis class thinks theyâre going to Japan!â Horace said sharply.
âDidnât you plant some idea like that in Owenâs head?â Margaret asked.
âBut he wasnât even elected,â Horace said.
It was strange for Owen to see his father whirling like this, saying something one day and then the opposite another.
âThese are just young kids!â Horace said. âHow do they think theyâre ever going to get to Japan?â Horace looked at Margaret straight over Owenâs head. âDo you know what he wants? He wants me to drive him all the way to Elgin. After Iâve been working all day! Do you know Iâve been to Elgin twice already this week? People in Elgin donât buy anything! I can tell you that for a fact. And these ridiculous calendars...â
Owen retreated to the bedroom and closed the door. He felt like he was caught so tight under a giant s foot that he could hardly breathe.
Before dinner his mother took him aside. âYou know that your rather has to sell things every day,â Margaret said. âItâs a difficult life and some days donât go right. He didnât mean what he said.â Owen could hardly look up at her. âI called Lorne,â she said finally. âHeâll take you to Elgin.â
Lorne arrived in the truck after dinner. Owen snuck out the back with his box of calendars so that Horace wouldnât ask him where he was going.
On the dark ride to Elgin, Owen tried not to think of what he would say if he happened, by chance, to knock on Sylviaâs door.
He thought about explaining to Sylvia that he had written her a Christmas card but had forgotten the stamp. He still had the remnants of the card, without sparkles, in a drawer underneath his socks, and wondered now if he should have
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