sent Iz a what-do-I-do-now look and she got up, taking Linneaâs hand. âWeâll all help.â
We headed for the row of tables where the old dudes were hanging out. Each table held different- colored slips of paper with numbers on them. It looked as if a bunch of them had already been taken. King Svengrud was standing behind one of the tables; I handed over the twenty, feeling like I was signing my own execution notice.
He immediately gave the bill the once-over. That saying âif looks could killâ? Iâm guessing someone invented that one for the expression on old Svengrudâs face when he realized I was in the clear this time.
âAll right, pick yourself four tickets,â he snapped.
I didnât have a clue as to what game we were playing, so I shrugged. âWhatever.â
âNo, no, you got to think lucky. Whatâs your favorite color?â asked Krissy.
I couldnât resist yanking her chain. âUh . . . black?â
âNo, silly, one of these colors.â She pointed at the tables.
âIâm not exactly Mr. Lucky these days,â I said. âYou pick a color for me.â
She clapped. âPink! Now, what day is your birthday?â
âNovember forty-first.â
Her forehead wrinkled up while she thought about that.
Iz pinched me on the arm. âHeâs just teasing you, Krissy. Come on, whatâs your real birthday?â
âNovember fourteenth,â I admitted.
Krissy scanned the pink tickets but then stuck out her lower lip. âSomebody already took pink fourteen. But hereâs yellow fourteen.â
âOkay.â I took the ticket from her. âYou each go ahead and pick me one more and weâll be doneâit doesnât really matter to me.â
You would have thought they were choosing between five hundred flavors of ice cream. I was watching Iz trying to decide between blue eleven and green fourteen when I felt someone tug on my sleeve. I looked down.
âI got you purple fourteen,â said Linnea in this really soft little voice. She handed me a purple ticket. âI like purple the best. My ticket is purple number seven.â
âUh . . . great,â I said. I was as mystified about how to talk to girls in the munchkin size bracket as I was about how to talk to ones my own age. But she seemed to be waiting for something else, so I added, âI bet youâll beat me.â
She got this big, goofy grin on her face, and I could see where a bunch of her teeth had fallen out.
âI like you even if you are a bad boy,â she said, ducking her head down and taking hold of my hand.
Iz and Krissy walked over just then to hand me the tickets theyâd picked out for me, and we let ourselves be jostled out of the way by other ticket pickers.
âNow what?â I asked.
âFive minutes, folks,â boomed out the Big Store King. âJust five more minutes to buy yourself a winner! The fun starts outside in ten!â
âAlmost time for the chicken game!â squealed Krissy. âLetâs go.â
The whole basement full of people started pushing and shoving their way upstairs as if we were on the
Titanic
after it had had that fender-bender. I would have held back but Linnea yanked me onward.
âYou have to come see if you win.â I let her pull me along.
Once we made it outside, we followed the crowd to the back corner of the parking lot. Everybody was gathering around this big square area marked off on the pavement with red paint.
Deputy Dude was directing traffic. âPick a side, folks. Just stand back of the paint lines. We want everybody to get a view of the fun.â
Linnea hauled me through the horde of bodies up to the front of the crowd. Somehow we got separated from Iz and Krissy, but Linnea squeezed the two of us into a spot along the paint marks. In front of us, inside the square, was a small area with a little fence around it.
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