phrased the question wrong, but she was too tired to try again. At least her parents were happy. The polls were closed, so their big arguing season was over.
Who won the stupid election?
Ava wrote.
The pencil answered. Ava wasnât sure when the official results came out, but once they did, Mom wasnât going to be happy for long.
âHas anybody seen my physics textbook?â Marcus said, rummaging through papers on the kitchen counter.
âCheck the living room,â Gram told him. âI think I saw it in there.â
âI canât believe we have this yahoo in charge of the country for another four years.â Avaâs mom shoved the newspaper across the kitchen table to make room for a plate of toast.
âFour more years ⦠four more years â¦â Dad walked past, chanting as if he were at one of those post-election victory parties. Mom rolled up the front page and swatted him on the butt. He laughed and pulled her into a hug, and Ava thought that was probably a good sign they wouldnât be at the lawyerâs office today either.
âItâs not there,â Marcus said. âI need that book.â
âTry the stairs,â Mom told him.
âIâve been thinking about giant fruits and vegetables,â Dad said, grabbing an apple from the bowl on the table. âMaybe we could grow a world-famous cucumber or something in that plot out back.â
âSince when are you a gardener?â Mom pulled the orange juice from the fridge. âI couldnât even get you to help weed the tomatoes last summer.â
âYeah, but if they were
giant
tomatoes, Iâd have been all over that.â
âThen we could make a giant pizza!â Emma-My-Name-Is-Electron said.
Marcus stared at her name tag. âDid you take my physics book?â
âOh! Maybe.â Emma-My-Name-Is-Electron ran upstairs and came down with Marcusâs book. There were about a dozen colored slips of paper sticking out among the pages. âCan you leave the sticky notes in there? Your book has good names.â
âWeâre going to family night at Cedar Bay later, right?â Ava asked, reaching for a banana.
âUgh, itâs Wednesday, isnât it?â Her mom sighed.
âDo you guys know what the entertainment is tonight?â Ava asked. âIf itâs nothing too long, maybe I could bring my saxophone.â Sheâd been thinking about what the pencil said ⦠what Grandpa wanted. Momâs forgiveness wasnât something Ava could give him, especially when she didnât know what he needed to be forgiven for. She wasnât about to ask, at least not until her mothergot over being mad about having a yahoo in the White House. And she couldnât bring a dead saxophonist back to life either. But she could remind Grandpa of the music heâd loved. âIâve been practicing a song I think Grandpa will like.â
âThat would be great,â Dad said.
âDonât take it personally if heâs in one of his moods,â Mom added.
âI wonât.â Ava thought about her trip to Cedar Bay with Sophie and the list theyâd made. âDo we have any old baseballs around?â
âMaybe.â Dad frowned and looked up at the ceiling. âThere might be some in the garage from Marcusâs Little League days. Over in the corner with those old tennis rackets.â
âIâll check on my way out. Thanks!â Ava threw away her banana peel, grabbed her backpack and saxophone, and headed to the garage. She found half a dozen cobwebby baseballs on a low shelf, brushed off two newish-looking balls and one older one, put them in her backpack, and started down the driveway to meet Sophie.
â
Mehhh!
â Ethel yelled. Ava jumped about a mile and then ran the rest of the way to the sidewalk, even though the goats were fenced in.
âLook what I found for Mrs. Raymond!â Sophie dropped her
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