Zinnia's Zaniness

Zinnia's Zaniness by Lauren Baratz-Logsted Page A

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Authors: Lauren Baratz-Logsted
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Pete. Mrs. Pete had her hair up in curlers while Pete was dressed in his work uniform of a navy blue T-shirt and dangerously low-slung jeans. He had his tool belt on.
    We liked Pete's tool belt.
    "We are not glum," Annie corrected him. "We are depressed."
    "With good cause," Durinda added.
    "Okay," Pete said. "Why are you depressed, then?"
    "Because it is August," Georgia said, throwing her ball at the ceiling again.
    "I don't understand," Pete said. "Isn't that a good thing? August means no more chance of Rebecca shooting fire from her fingertips and perhaps accidentally burning the house down around our ears."
    "There is that," Jackie said in an attempt at optimism. But even she couldn't keep that up for very long. She sighed and added, "August seems so very long this year. A whole thirty-one days."
    "But that's good, isn't it?" Pete tried again. "You have a whole month of summer vacation left before you go back to school."
    "Our birthday is this month," Marcia said. "On August eighth, beginning at eight a.m., we will begin turning eight at the rate of one Eight per minute."
    "I did remember that," Pete said. "But isn't that a good thing?"
    We had to give Pete credit: he did keep trying.
    "It is not," Petal said. "For the first time in our lives, Mommy and Daddy will not be with us on our birthday." A tear escaped Petal's eye then, but for once none of us moved to comfort her, not even Durinda or Jackie, because tears were beginning to escape all of our eyes.
    "I see," Pete said softly.
    "I miss having the ability to shoot fire from my fin gertips," Rebecca said. "I know I made a promise not to use that power anymore unless necessary, but I miss just the very idea of that power."
    "I thought I would be happy for it to be August," Zinnia said. "It being August means that it is my turn, finally, to get my power and my gift."
    "Okay, now I'm sure that's a good thing." Pete tried yet again.
    We were still willing to give him credit for persistence, but we did think it was time he got a clue gun. He needed to just give up. Couldn't he see that we would not be cheered? That we could not be cheered?
    "I will be the eighth Eight to get my power and gift," Zinnia said, "after which, according to that first note we found behind the loose stone, we will finally discover what happened to Mommy and Daddy when they disappeared."
    "Or died," Rebecca added.
    Yes, Rebecca was back to that again. Well, who could blame her for being in a dark mood? We were all in dark moods.
    "Now, I know you will try to say that is a good thing, Mr. Pete," Petal said.
    We looked at Pete standing there opening his mouth to speak, and we saw that Petal had been right: of course he was about to say that.
    "Well, not a good thing if we're talking about what Rebecca said," Marcia corrected Petal. "Rather, you'll say that what Zinnia said is a good thing."
    "The part about finding out what happened to Mommy and Daddy," Jackie said, just so we were all clear. "That's what you'll say is a good thing."
    "The problem is," Georgia said, "we are at August first now but August is a whole thirty-one days. Oh, why couldn't August be a shorter month, like June or September? Really, the best thing would be if August were like February, only not during a leap year."
    "Georgia's right," Durinda said. Things had to be pretty bad around here if Durinda was agreeing with Georgia. "I think I could bear to wait twenty-eight days to finally learn the truth," Durinda went on. "But waiting thirty-one whole days is really just too much. Then, too, there's always the question What if the answer is something truly awful? What will we do then?"
    "We usually take a vacation in the summer," Annie said, bringing the conversational ball full circle. We'd begun with Annie and gone one by one down to Zinnia, then back up to Annie again. Sometimes we felt as though our talking was like other people practicing musical scales. "We usually take one in the winter over the holidays and another in the

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