“I could trade you this for a cookie,” he said, unfolding the paper towel on the table. Ever since Lucky had told him he was a mooch, he always offered a trade of some kind. Miles had long eyelashes, big round chocolate-chip eyes, and wavy orangey hair. His fingernails were as dark as if he had been changing the oil in a car. He offered the half-eaten piece of banana nut bread. “It’s really good,” he said.
“Okay,” said Lucky, although it wasn’t much of a trade.
Miles said happily, “What kind does Brigitte have? Does she have any mint Milanos? Then will you read me my book?”
Lucky lowered her backpack to the floor and slid out of the banquette. She had read
“Yeah,” Miles said. “My favorite Olden Days of Hard Pan stories are when Chesterfield the Burro is in them.” He folded his lips inside for a second to show he knew she meant business about making noises. Then he said, “She keeps the cookies in that blue box in the cupboard.”
Miles had done a thorough cookie-availability check with everyone in town at one time or another. He was an expert on who had what kind of cookies, who would give him one, and where they stored them. He made his cookie rounds every day.
Dot’s Baubles ’n’ Beauty Salon was next to Miles’s house, so her back door was his first stop of the day. Usually she’d be in her kitchen, where she had her homemade jewelry for sale and her Beauty Salon, with chairs on the back porch for people to sit in while their curlers got dry. Sometimes Miles let Dot wash his hair as a trade for the cookies. If she had a kind he really loved, like mint Milanos, he let her give him a haircut.
Lucky handed Miles a Fig Newton. He ate it in small bites, gently thumping his heels against the banquette. He rested his bare feet on Lucky’s survival kit backpack under the table.
“Don’t mash my survival kit,” Lucky said.
“I won’t,” he said, and then asked, “What kind of stuff do you have in there?”
“Things you need if you get lost or stuck out in the desert.”
“Like what? A map?”
Lucky hadn’t thought of having a map before. If you were lost it wouldn’t help to have a map, because you didn’t know where you were in the first place. “No, like a good book that you can read to not be bored.”
Miles nodded. “Like
“Uh-uh. You can’t keep anything like chocolate, because it melts. You really need things like specimen boxes in case you find some good spiders or insects, plus nail polish remover, mineral oil, and stuff for scientific studies.”
“Will Chesterfield the Burro be in the Olden Days of Hard Pan story?”
“Yes,” said Lucky. “It happened when Hard Pan was still a mining town, in the century before last. You have to pretend I lived back then, and I was your age, or maybe six.”
“I’m five and a half.” Miles made a noise like a helicopter.
“No noises, Miles.”
“I forgot. Were there dinosaurs in the Olden Days story?”
“No, this was after the dinosaurs. I was teaching HMS Beagle to heel.” Hearing her name, HMS Beagle thumped her tail on the floor. “She was still a puppy. We went down the dirt road like if you’re going to the old dump”—Lucky gestured to the open desert that began at the edge of their half circle of trailers. Miles looked out the small window toward the purple Coso Mountains hundreds of miles away.
“The Beag wanted to smell
Miles made a
“The old miners’ caves? Where I’m not allowed to go?”
“Uh-huh. We thought the caves were a perfect place for our secret home.”
“My grandma says they’re full of black widow spiders.”
“Well, maybe, but we had more important things on our minds. We found this one cave that had an old tin cup and coffee pot and a wooden crate you could sit on, and a little fire pit with a grill. They were still mining silver up the hill and Hard Pan was a boomtown with
Miles shook his head.
“Because the ground is so hard you can’t get a shovel in it. It’s like