Read Flying Feet Page 3


  “It made me think—”

  Ms. Katz stood up. “Thinking is good.”

  “Could we still have Come as a Character Day?” he asked.

  Ms. Katz blinked.

  Charlie took a breath. “We could get rid of Jake’s junk pile, too.”

  “That pile out there?” Ms. Katz’s eyebrows went up almost to her hair. “And what about characters?”

  She leaned forward. “It’s Friday, Charlie. Come as a Character Day was supposed to be Monday.”

  Charlie heard the bus outside. His mother was back with the busers.

  The walkers were here, too.

  Doors banged.

  Feet slapped.

  The bell rang.

  Gina came down the hall. “Mama mia, piz-za-rii-a,” she sang.

  Whew! She was loud.

  Ms. Katz covered her ears. So did Charlie.

  Gina passed the door.

  Charlie knew she stopped at the water fountain. It sounded as if she might be gargling.

  “Well, the Center is open on Saturday.” Ms. Katz smiled. “We could work on it tomorrow morning.”

  She held up her hands. All her fingers were crossed. “We’ll give it a try.”

  Charlie went to his desk. He put his books in a row.

  He had a feeling.

  Too bad it wasn’t a buzz.

  He thought about his Flying Feet and his Junker Cruncher.

  And what about last year’s invention? The Snowball Saver.

  Not one of them had worked.

  Maybe this new invention wouldn’t work, either.

  He hoped it would.

  Otherwise, everyone would be laughing.

  Especially Larry.

  On Saturday morning, Charlie looked around. Almost everyone was at the Center today.

  “I had to come,” Sumiko said. “I felt sorry for Mrs. Farelli.”

  Gina nodded. “Me too. Even though she’s tough as nails.”

  “Besides,” Habib said, “the lunch lady has a great snack today.”

  It was Charlie’s favorite.

  Destiny and Beebe were giving them out. Fat pretzels with white salt dots on top.

  Charlie chewed on the white pretzel dots.

  Then he went with Mitchell to the Homework Help room. But there wasn’t any Homework Help on Saturday.

  Today it was just a regular classroom.

  Mitchell pulled out a paper and pen. “What should I write?”

  “Write a story to go with my new invention,” Charlie said.

  Mitchell stared up at the ceiling. “What’s it called?”

  Charlie stared out the window. What was it called?

  Nothing yet.

  “Wizard Walkers,” he said, after a minute.

  Charlie looked at the stone wall outside. Jake was taking off the tarp.

  He’d show everyone his invention there.

  He looked over Mitchell’s shoulder. “Nothing is on your paper,” he said. “It’s just a big blank.”

  “Listen, Charlie,” Mitchell said. “I have to think first.”

  “Start with the title,” Charlie said.

  “Why don’t you go outside?” Mitchell said. “Help everyone with Jake’s pile. You can watch everyone practice.”

  “I hope you know how to spell ‘wizard,’ ” Charlie said.

  “Of course,” Mitchell said. “ ‘W-i-s-s-e-r-d.’ ”

  “Good.”

  Outside, Destiny ran past him.

  She was carrying a watering can from Jake’s pile.

  It was full of water now.

  It sloshed across the schoolyard.

  “Out of my way, Charlie,” Destiny said. “I have to water those half-dead plants in the junk pile. I’m going to save their lives.”

  Charlie followed her across the yard. He found the box with his invention.

  He found a penny, too. A penny for luck!

  Ms. Katz rocked back and forth on the three-legged tilting chair. Her hair was flying around.

  Everyone dug through the junk pile.

  They were looking for things to go with their characters.

  Angel opened a box. “Here’s a blue ribbon for my hair,” she said. “I guess I’ll be Alice in Wonderland.”

  Gina tossed Charlie’s red Flying Feet sneakers out of the way. “They’re really junk,” she said.

  Sumiko scooped them up.

  She held them in the air.

  She squinted at them.

  “Not junk at all,” she said. “I know what to do with them.”

  “All this straw.” Jake scratched his head. “I don’t know where it came from.”

  “Never mind,” Habib said. “I know what to do with it.”

  He dragged some of it away.

  Charlie stood there with his hands on his hips.

  Jake’s junk pile was smaller.

  The stone wall looked bigger.

  Never mind, Charlie told himself.

  He was going to be brave.

  He had to do it.

  The bell rang.

  It was Come as a Character Day.

  There was no time for snack.

  But who wanted snack anyway?

  The lunch lady had warmed a huge pot of red soup with lumps.

  Outside, everything was ready.

  Jake had used the bricks to make a yellow brick road. It went straight to the stone wall.

  He’d put a bunch of chairs out, too.

  Destiny and Sumiko stood behind the pile. They were getting ready.

  Habib and Mitchell were getting ready, too.

  Charlie held the paper Mitchell had written.

  His invention box was right in front of him.

  He was ready. Maybe.

  Mr. Randolph, the principal, came across the yard. Mrs. Farelli was next to him.

  Her nose was red, but she was smiling.

  People were at the gate, too.

  “Wow,” said Mitchell. “There’s Zelda A. Zigzag. She looks just like her picture.”

  Charlie looked up.

  Larry walked with Zelda A. Zigzag. He helped her to her seat. A special seat Jake had brought from the office.

  But she pointed to the three-legged tilting chair. “I’ll sit there,” she said. “I like adventure.”

  “Hey,” Sumiko said. “Even the bus driver came.”

  All the seats were taken.

  Beebe gave out programs. “I made them last night,” she said.

  Ms. Katz stood up. “Come as a Character Day is in honor of Mrs. Farelli. We’re glad she’s back.”

  Charlie blinked. It was true. He was glad.

  Everyone clapped.

  “Now we’ll begin,” said Ms. Katz.

  Trevor Petway hopped out from behind the pile. His friend Clifton hopped, too. They wore paper rabbit ears.

  “Graaaaahhhh!” they shouted. “We’re Peter Rabbits. Tough ones.”

  Gina came out next. Her hair was slicked back. A curtain hung from her shoulders. She wore the ruined eyeglasses from the pile.

  “Do you know who I am?” she asked.

  “Everyone knows that,” Zelda A. Zigzag said. “You’re Harry Potter. And we know your story.”

  Mitchell wore a tin hat.

  Habib had straw sticking out of his sleeves.

  “We’re characters from Dorothy’s story,” they said together.

  Sumiko popped out behind them. She held Ms. Katz’s dog, Tree Stump.

  She wore the red Flying Feet sneakers.

  She tapped them together three times. “See? Ruby-red sneakers.”

  She looked around. “There’s no place like home,” she said. “Oops, I forgot to say I’m Dorothy. This is my dog, Toto.”

  Sumiko stopped. “These are also Flying Feet. I’ll touch them for luck for the next race.”

  Tree Stump jumped out of her arms. Beebe chased him. “Got him!” she said.

  Charlie heard voices behind him.

  “This is great,” Zelda A. Zigzag was whispering t
o Mrs. Farelli.

  Would his part be great? Charlie wondered. Or would Larry laugh?

  Destiny came next. She had yellow streaks in her hair. “I’m Mary. Some people might think this is a pile of junk.”

  She waved her arms around. “But it’s a secret garden. See the flowers? See the pipes that make a little fence around them?”

  “Good ideas,” said Mr. Randolph.

  “Wow,” Jake said.

  Then it was Charlie’s turn.

  He went to the box.

  Inside were the work gloves.

  They looked huge.

  They were stuffed with cotton.

  There was just room for his hands.

  But first he read Mitchell’s paper. “This is the story of an inventor named Charlie,” he said. “He invented Wizard Walkers.”

  “Who ever heard of that story?” Gina asked.

  “It’s a new one,” Charlie said. “It was written by Mitchell McCabe.”

  Mitchell took a bow.

  “Lovely,” said Ms. Katz.

  Charlie snapped on the gloves. He waved them in the air. “These are Wizard Walkers. Dorothy’s wizard might have used them.”

  “Lovely,” said Sumiko in a Ms. Katz voice.

  Charlie climbed up on the wall.

  He crouched down.

  He leaned on his hands.

  He threw his legs up in the air.

  And began to walk on his hands.

  One hand-step.

  Two.

  He was going to fall. “Yeow …”

  But then someone held on to his ankles.

  “Everyone needs a helper,” a voice said. “Even a wizard.”

  It was Larry. He wasn’t laughing.

  Charlie kept going along the wall. Right to the end.

  He still owed Larry T-shirt money. He’d give him the penny he’d found. That was a good start.

  Then he stood up. “I have more Wizard Walkers in the box,” he said. “Help yourself.”

  Mrs. Farelli nodded. “We all do things together at the Zelda A. Zigzag School. We do them for each other.”

  Everyone was clapping.

  “Time for snack,” Mrs. Farelli said. “Red soup.”

  Zelda A. Zigzag was twirling on the three-legged twirling chair. She stood up. “Ah. The wonderful red kind with lumps.”

  Charlie walked with her.

  He might try a little more of that soup, too.

  He felt a buzz. Was it about soup?

  A new invention was on the way.

  He just had to figure out how to do it.

  Buzzzzz.

  PATRICIA REILLY GIFF is the author of many beloved books for children, including the Kids of the Polk Street School books, the Friends and Amigos books, and the Polka Dot Private Eye books. Several of her novels for older readers have been chosen as ALA-ALSC Notable Books and ALA-YALSA Best Books for Young Adults. They include The Gift of the Pirate Queen; All the Way Home; Water Street; Nory Ryan’s Song, a Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators Golden Kite Honor Book for Fiction; and the Newbery Honor Books Lily’s Crossing and Pictures of Hollis Woods. Lily’s Crossing was also chosen as a Boston Globe–Horn Book Honor Book. Her most recent books are Number One Kid, Eleven, Wild Girl, and Storyteller. Patricia Reilly Giff lives in Connecticut.

  ALASDAIR BRIGHT is a freelance illustrator who has worked on numerous books and advertising projects. He loves drawing and is never without his sketchbook. He lives in Bedford, England.

 


 

  Patricia Reilly Giff, Flying Feet

 


 

 
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