I just stared at her. Somehow I remembered Santa’s reindeer a little different than that.
“You know… my chickens? The ones I hatched for the science fair last year?”
“Oh, right. How could I forget.”
“They’re laying eggs!” She pushed the carton into my hands. “Here, take these! They’re for you and your family.”
“Oh. Uh, thanks,” I said, and closed the door.
I used to really like eggs. Especially scrambled, with bacon or sausage. But even without the little snake incident, I knew that no matter what you did to these eggs, they would taste nothing but foul to me. These eggs came from the chickens that had been the chicks that had hatched from the eggs that had been incubated by Juli Baker for our fifth-grade science fair.
It was classic Juli. She totally dominated the fair, and get this — her project was all about watching eggs. My friend, there is not a lot of action to report on when you’re incubating eggs. You’ve got your light, you’ve got your container, you’ve got some shredded newspaper, and that’s it. You’re done.
Juli, though, managed to write an inch-thick report, plus she made diagrams and charts — I’m talking line charts and bar charts and pie charts — about the activity of eggs. Eggs!
She also managed to time the eggs so that they’d hatch the night of the fair. How does a person do that? Here I’ve got a live-action erupting volcano that I’ve worked pretty stinking hard on, and all anybody cares about is Juli’s chicks pecking out of their shells. I even went over to take a look for myself, and — I’m being completely objective here — it was boring. They pecked for about five seconds, then just lay there for five minutes.
I got to hear Juli jabber away to the judges, too. She had a pointer — can you believe that? Not a pencil, an actual retractable pointer, so she could reach across her incubator and tap on this chart or that diagram as she explained the excitement of watching eggs grow for twenty-one days. The only thing she could’ve done to be more overboard was put on a chicken costume, and buddy, I’m convinced — if she’d thought of it, she would have done it.
But hey — I was over it. It was just Juli being Juli, right? But all of a sudden there I am a year later, holding a carton of home-grown eggs. And I’m having a hard time not getting annoyed all over again about her stupid blue-ribbon project when my mother leans out from the hallway and says, “Who was that, honey? What have you got there? Eggs?”
I could tell by the look on her face that she was hot to scramble. “Yeah,” I said, and handed them to her. “But I’m having cereal.”
She opened the carton, then closed it with a smile. “How nice!” she said. “Who brought them over?”
“Juli. She grew them.”
“Grew them?”
“Well, her chickens did.”
“Oh?” Her smile started falling as she opened the carton again. “Is that so. I didn’t know she had… chickens.”
“Remember? You and Dad spent an hour watching them hatch at last year’s science fair?”
“Well, how do we know there’re not… chicks inside these eggs?”
I shrugged. “Like I said, I’m having cereal.”
We all had cereal, but what we talked about were eggs. My dad thought they’d be just fine — he’d had farm-fresh eggs when he was a kid and said they were delicious. My mother, though, couldn’t get past the idea that she might be cracking open a dead chick, and pretty soon discussion turned to the role of the rooster — something me and my Cheerios could’ve done without.
Finally Lynetta said, “If they had a rooster, don’t you think we’d know? Don’t you think the whole neighborhood would know?”
Hmmm, we all said, good point. But then my mom pipes up with, “Maybe they got it de-yodeled. You know — like they de-bark dogs?”
“A de-yodeled rooster,” my dad says, like it’s the most ridiculous thing he’s ever heard. Then he looks at my mom and realizes that he’d be way better off going along with her de-yodeled idea than making fun of her. “Hmmm,” he says, “I’ve never heard of such a thing, but maybe so.”
Lynetta shrugs and says to my mom, “So just ask them, why don’t you. Call up Mrs. Baker and ask her.”
“Oh,” my mom says. “Well, I’d hate to call her eggs into question. It doesn’t seem very polite, now, does it?”
“Just ask Matt or Mike,” I say to Lynetta.
She scowls at me and hisses, “Shut up.”
“What? What’d I do now?”
“Haven’t you noticed I haven’t been going down there, you idiot?”
“Lynetta!” my mom says. Like this is the first time she’s heard my sister talk to me or something.
“Well, it’s true! How can he not have noticed?”
“I was going to ask you about that, honey. Did something happen?”
Lynetta stands up and shoves her chair in. “Like you care,” she snaps, and charges down to her room.
“Oh, boy,” my dad says.
Mom says, “Excuse me,” and follows Lynetta down the hall.
When my mother’s gone, my dad says, “So, son, why don’t you just ask Juli?”
“Dad!”
“It’s just a little question, Bryce. No harm, no foul.”
“But it’ll get me a half-hour answer!”
He studies me for a minute, then says, “No boy should be this afraid of a girl.”
“I’m not afraid of her…!”
“I think you are.”
“Dad!”
“Seriously, son. I want you to get us an answer. Conquer your fear and get us an answer.”
“To whether or not they have a rooster?”
“That’s right.” He gets up and clears his cereal bowl, saying, “I’ve got to get to work and you’ve got to get to school. I’ll expect a report tonight.”
Great. Just great. The day was doomed before it had started. But then at school when I told Garrett about what had happened, he just shrugged and said, “Well, she lives right across the street from you, right?”
“Yeah, so?”
“So just go look over the fence.”
“You mean spy?”
“Sure.”
“But… how can I tell if one of them’s a rooster or not?”
“Roosters are… I don’t know… bigger. And they have more feathers.”
“Feathers? Like I’ve got to go and count feathers?”
“No, stupid! My mom says that the male’s always brighter.” Then he laughs and says, “Although in your case I’m not so sure.”
“Thanks. You are giving me big-time help here, buddy. I really appreciate it.”
“Look, a rooster’s going to be bigger and have brighter feathers. You know, those long ones in the back? They’re redder or blacker or whatever. And don’t roosters have some rubbery red stuff growing off the top of their head? And some off their neck, too? Yeah, the rooster’s got all sorts of rubbery red stuff all around its face.”
“So you’re saying I’m supposed to look over the fence for big feathers and rubbery red stuff.”
“Well, come to think of it, chickens have that rubbery red stuff, too. Just not as much of it.”
I rolled my eyes at him and was about to say, Forget it, I’ll just ask Juli, but then he says, “I’ll come with you if you want.”
“Seriously?”
“Yeah, dude. Seriously.”
And that, my friend, is how I wound up spying over the Bakers’ back fence with Garrett Anderson at three-thirty that afternoon. Not my choice of covert operations, but a necessary one in order to report back to my dad that night at dinner.
We got there fast, too. The bell rang and we basically charged off campus because I figured if we got to the Bakers’ quick enough, we could look and leave before Juli was anywhere near her house. We didn’t even drop off our backpacks. We went straight down the alley and started spying.
Читать дальше