Lucky looked around to see if anyone was paying attention. Down at the side of the dirt road that went off the main paved one, a couple of pairs of boots were sticking out from under someone’s old VW van. The wearers of the boots were pounding on the van’s stomach. She heard the soft hooting calls of an owl who’d woken up early. The little glass observation tower at the Captain’s house, where he liked to sit and watch what was going on around town, looked empty—and anyway she knew the heat in it would be too much to bear right now. There were, as usual, no cars on the road. She handed over the marker.
Lincoln put his string in his pocket and rubbed away the dust beside the word SLOW with the hem of his T-shirt. Lucky was afraid he was going to try to fit DOWN next to it, but she knew he couldn’t, and it would look bad. The sharp upside-down V of the top of the diamond came too close to SLOW.
But instead Lincoln did something brilliant. Next to SLOW, he drew two neat perfect-size dots, one like a period and the other a little above it. Lucky knew it was a colon and it made the sign mean, “You must drive slow: There are children at play.”
“Wow,” she said. “That is…presidential.”
Lincoln rolled his eyes and blushed and handed her the pen. His dark hair flopped over on his forehead in a springy, independent way. It was hair that would do whatever it wanted to, no matter how he combed it. Lucky liked that kind of hair quite a lot.
In one of her brain crevices where she stashed things she wanted to be sure to remember when she grew up, Lucky put the SLOW: CHILDREN AT PLAY episode. If Lincoln did decide to run for President of the United States, Lucky would go on TV and tell everything in exact detail: the misleadingness of the sign, the cleverness of Lincoln, the neatness of his two dots, the happy-endingness of the story. Except she would never tell the very private and lovely part about her glistening eyebrows.
5. Miles
A good way to kill a bug that you need as a specimen, without smashing or hurting it, is to capture it in a jar or a tin box. You put a little cotton ball dabbed with nail polish remover in with the bug and, presto, it dies.
Very early Saturday morning, when there was still a little leftover coolness from the night before, Lucky borrowed some cotton balls and half a bottle of nail polish remover from Brigitte’s medicine cabinet. She was making an inventory of her survival kit backpack, which you have to do regularly to be sure you haven’t used up something important for some reason besides actual survival. It was a good time for an inventory, because Brigitte had gone to the Captain’s house to pick up this month’s U.S. Government Surplus food, and Lucky was glad to be able to check out her supplies in private.
She was starting to spread all her stuff out on the Formica table in the kitchen trailer when she heard a sound like a pig snorting. Then the pig squealed and snorted again. HMS Beagle thumped her tail on the floor and padded to the door.
“I know it’s you, Miles,” Lucky called through the screen door. She sighed. “Here’s the deal. I’ll tell you one Olden Days of Hard Pan story. You don’t get to make
From outside, Miles said, “Does Brigitte have any extra cookies?”
“How many have you had already?”
Miles stuck his head in. HMS Beagle’s head came up to Miles’s chin, and the dog was always happy when he visited because she knew she would get plenty of cookie crumbs. Miles was only five, and he was
“You mean since today started?” he asked.
“Come in and close the screen before the flies get in,” said Lucky, cramming her survival stuff back into the backpack. “Yes, how many cookies have you had since you got up this morning?”
Miles had to push HMS Beagle a little bit because she was smelling him very thoroughly.
“Does banana nut bread count?” he asked as he came in, taking tiny steps so as not to touch any of the cracks on the linoleum floor. He dragged a plastic Buy-Mor-Store grocery bag.
“Who gave you banana nut bread? Dot?”
Even though Dot was the bossiest and crabbiest person in Hard Pan, Miles could always mooch a cookie off her.
“Yeah. She said she hoped there would be butter with the free Government food today so she could make new banana nut bread, because her