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The Higher Power of Lucky

Susan Patron

Проза18+

Atheneum Books for Young Readers

An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division

1230 Avenue of the Americas

New York, New York 10020

This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Text copyright © 2006 by Susan Patron

Illustrations copyright © 2006 by Matt Phelan

All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

Book design by Ann Bobco

The illustrations for this book are rendered in pen and ink and pencil.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Patron, Susan.

The higher power of Lucky/Susan Patron.—1st ed.

p.     cm.

“A Richard Jackson book.”

Summary: Fearing that her legal guardian plans to abandon her to return to France, ten-year-old aspiring scientist Lucky Trimble determines to run away while also continuing to seek the Higher Power that will bring stability to her life.

ISBN 13: 978-1-4169-5395-1

ISBN 10: 1-4169-5395-7

[1. Abandoned children—Fiction. 2. Interpersonal relations—Fiction.

3. Runaways—Fiction.]

I. Title.

PZ7.P27565 Hig 2006

[Fic]—dc22   2005021767

Visit us on the World Wide Web:

http://www.SimonSays.com

for René

Contents

1. Eavesdropping

2. Brigitte

3. Good and Bad

4. Graffiti

5. Miles

6. How Brigitte Came

7. Tarantula Hawk Wasp

8. Snake

9. Short Sammy’s

10. The Urn

11. Smokers Anonymous

12. Parsley

13.Bisous

14. The First Sign

15. The Second Sign and the Third Sign

16. Getting Ready to Run Away

17. Hms Beagle Disobeys

18. Cholla Burr

19. Eggs and Beans

20. A Good Book

21. Amazing Grace

22.Bonne Nuit

23. By and By

1. Eavesdropping

Lucky Trimble crouched in a wedge of shade behind the Dumpster. Her ear near a hole in the paint-chipped wall of Hard Pan’s Found Object Wind Chime Museum and Visitor Center, she listened as Short Sammy told the story of how he hit rock bottom. How he quit drinking and found his Higher Power. Short Sammy’s story, of all the rock-bottom stories Lucky had heard at twelve-step anonymous meetings—alcoholics, gamblers, smokers, and overeaters—was still her favorite.

Sammy told of the day when he had drunk half a gallon of rum listening to Johnny Cash all morning in his parked ’62 Cadillac, then fallen out of the car when he saw a rattlesnake on the passenger seat biting his dog, Roy, on the scrotum.

Lucky balanced herself with a hand above the little hole that Short Sammy’s voice was coming out of. With her other hand, she lifted the way-too-curly hair off her neck. She noticed two small black birds nearby, panting like dogs from the heat, their beaks open, their feathers puffed up. She put her ear to the hole because Sammy’s voice always got low and soft when he came to the tragical end of the story.

But Short Sammy didn’t head right to the good part. To stretch it out and get more suspense going for the big ending, he veered off and told about the old days when he was broke and couldn’t afford to buy rum, so he made homemade liquor from cereal box raisins and any kind of fruit he could scrounge up. This was the usual roundabout way he talked, and Lucky had noticed that it made people stay interested, even if the story got quite a bit longer than if someone else had been telling it.

She stood up, her neck and the backs of her knees sweating, and mashed wads of hair up under the edges of her floppy hat. She carefully angled an old lawn chair with frayed webbing into her wedge of shade, and made sure the chair wouldn’t break by easing herself onto it. Flies came, the little biting ones; she fanned them away with her plastic dustpan. Heat blasted off the Dumpster.

There was a little silence, except for the wobbly ticking noise of the ceiling fan inside and people shifting in their folding metal chairs. She was pretty sure they had already heard the story of Short Sammy hitting rock bottom before, as she had, and that they loved the pure glory and splendiferousness of it as much as she did—even though it was hard to imagine Short Sammy being drunk. Short Sammy’s voice sounded like it could barely stand to say what came next.

“That Roy, man,” said Sammy, who called everyone “man,” even people like Lucky who were not men. “He was one brave dog. He killed that snake even though it bit him in the place where it hurts the worst for a male. And there I am, trying to get away, falling out of the Cad. I break a tooth, I cut my cheek, I give myself a black eye, I even sprain my ankle, but I’m so drunk, man, I don’t even know I’m messed up—not till much later. Then I pass out.

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