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    Dear Dumb Diary #4: Never Do Anything, Ever

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      I was pretty psyched about this, since, if it’s

      somebody’s job to be an ON-CALL BARRETTE

      CONSULTANT, they’re going to know techniques

      that even Angeline hasn’t heard of!

      When Collette returned, she said that

      she couldn’t get a hold of the consultant. The

      consultant’s mom said that the consultant was out

      getting sponsors for a Walk-A-Thon tomorrow, but

      we could try back later if we wanted to.

      That means the mystery consultant could be

      only one person . . . Like I was going to give Angeline

      the satisfaction!

      I told Collette that I had just remembered

      that our school had a policy against barrettes

      because a month ago a girl was innocently nodding

      her head and her barrette flew across the room and

      clamped around the neck vein of some nasty blond

      girl and she went unconscious and now barrettes

      are illegal and they’re considering putting some

      limits on scrunchies as well.

      I know. I know. It was a pretty stupid lie. But

      I don’t have the deception abilities Isabella has

      in moments like this. I’m just not in touch with my

      Inner evil the way Isabella is, and I know that I

      am probably a huge disappointment to her because

      of it.

      Sunday 08

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      I discovered Mom’s latest sinister plan. She

      wasn’t donating my old clothes. She was having

      a GARAGE SALE. When I woke up this morning,

      Mom had put mountains of our junk out in the

      driveway.

      Have you ever seen a mom preparing a garage

      sale? Fussing and figuring if she should ask two

      cents or three cents for the warped Tupperware lid?

      Mom! Please! Say three cents and then we

      can buy that yacht we’ve always wanted.

      Isn’t it better to just let people suspect that

      you have crappy junk than to haul it all out in the

      driveway and prove it to them?

      Our garage sale, however, featured an even

      bigger, uglier surprise: This huge group of people

      started parading past our house. When I got up to

      see what was going on, I realized it was that stupid

      Walk-A-Thon. I even saw Angeline and a bunch of

      other kids and parents from my school walk right

      past my actual house. I’ll bet she was the one

      who chose this route. I was so mortified that they

      were going to see my old gross stuff for sale in

      the driveway that I locked myself in my room and

      refused to come out For as Long as I Lived.

      If you ever decide to do something For As

      Long As You Live, you’re going to find out that

      this takes a lot longer than you thought it would

      when you said it. And by dinner, I was ready to put

      aside my mortification for the fragrance of pizza

      that was wafting in from downstairs.

      And get this: Mom gave me 45 bucks from the

      sale of my old junk! At least, something good came

      from the PUBLIC SALE OF SHAME. I guess I

      have to give her credit for scheduling our garage

      sale for when the Walk-A-Thon was going by. And.

      maybe Angeline didn’t even notice my gross stuff.

      Monday 09

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      Angeline had her picture in the town paper

      today, and the whole school saw it because they

      put the article up inside the lobby. It would be bad

      enough if she was just looking adorable and non-

      sweaty, but they happened to take the photo in

      front of my house and you could actually see my

      Big Ol’ Pudding Stain in the background.

      Amazingly, nobody said anything. Evidently,

      Angeline had forgotten I lived there.

      Isabella and I gave Angeline the money we

      had pledged the other day. Angeline walked ten

      miles, so it only came out to a buck apiece. How

      much could she possibly have raised?

      Five bucks? Six?

      Angeline asked us if we wanted to pledge her

      next charity walk, and we said that we had already

      committed to a different charity.

      Pretty fast thinking, huh? It’s only because

      I’ve heard my dad use it about a jillion times when

      people call us at home for donations. He’s got a

      bunch of great excuses to not fork over money.

      Tuesday 10

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      Angeline is on to yet another charity.

      This one donates old clothes to people. She asked

      Anika and Hudson for a contribution, and I was

      just about to contribute what a huge dipwad she

      is, when Hudson said he thought it was pretty cool

      of Angeline to work so hard for needy people. And

      so did Anika, which made Isabella’s head nod

      involuntarily, because that’s what her head does

      when several other people agree on something.

      (Also Angeline was wearing the barrette again,

      which may have had some persuasive powers.)

      Then Angeline turned to me and said, “You

      probably got rid of all your old stuff at your garage

      sale on Sunday, Jamie, so I doubt you have anything

      to donate.”

      “Shucks!” I thought. (Actually I thought

      something much worse, but I will get in huge trouble

      for writing it, so I’m going to stick with Shucks.)

      “Shucks! Angeline did know it was my house.

      But she can’t be sure it was my stuff!” I thought

      cleverly. Make that VERY cleverly.

      So I said, “No. No. That garage sale was

      something my mom was doing. None of that stuff

      was mine. I always selflessly donate my old junk

      to charities. I’ll have a big bag of clothes for you.

      Right away. Yup, a huge bag.”

      Pretty good thinking, huh? Except for not

      having a big bag of clothes. Or even a little bag.

      Other than that, pretty good thinking.

      The teamwork exercise in gym class today

      was this: The little groups race one another in an

      exercise called Sled Dogs. One person sits on

      the floor on a towel and grabs on to a broom while

      the other members of the team drag him or her

      across the gym. Each person takes a turn on the

      towel. I guess this is to determine who is good at

      thinking up an excuse to not have to participate in

      gym that day.

      Anyway, Angeline must really be mad at

      Pinsetti’s head, because she distracted me again,

      which caused me to accidentally hit him in the

      noggin with the broomstick when I turned to see

      what Blondwad and Hudson were giggling about

      this time.

      Pinsetti was sort of dazed and spoke a little

      Egyptian or French or something. Dover yelled at me

      to be more careful, but I think Pinsetti was faking

      it, because broomsticks probably break over heads

      easier than you think.

      I also think it didn’t help that Isabella was

      shouting, “Again! Again!” over and over.

      Wednesday 11

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      Today at lunch, Isabella said she’d heard

      that Angeline had raised 300 dollars for her Walk-

     
    A-Thon. They put a sign up by the office. I couldn’t

      believe how much more famous that made her. How

      famous does she need to be? If it was me, I would

      be totally satisfied with being partly famous and not

      have to go making myself famouser all the time.

      And all day, Isabella couldn’t stop talking

      about the money. She was like: “Three HUNDRED

      bucks. For a charity. Nobody even knows who

      these people are or anything, and they coughed up

      three HUNDRED buckaroos.”

      Then she took a bite out of her hot dog and

      it scared me a little. I don’t know why, but to me

      it looked like she was pretending that the hot dog

      was the throat of the entire human race.

      Isabella came over tonight, and she brought

      a movie to watch: Beauty and the Beast As

      it turns out, there is more than one version of this

      movie, and Isabella did NOT bring the excellent

      cartoon version with the singing teapot and dancing

      candlestick. She brought some old one with the

      people speaking French (sounding a lot like head-

      injury Pinsetti) and you had to read what they were

      saying at the bottom of the screen.

      These are called subtitles, and they are

      designed to make an irritating movie more irritating.

      These subtitles stayed on the screen way too long,

      so I kept reading them over and over, which made

      it seem like all the characters were repeating

      themselves like my grandma does — except that at

      least they didn’t go on and on about how they could

      buy a root beer for a dime when they were kids,

      which was good I guess, because I’ll bet you can

      really work up a thirst running from dinosaurs.

      Anyway, the message of the movie was

      about the same, I guess: Real Beauty comes

      from within. Blah, blah, blah. But if this was

      true, instead of bathing suits and nine-inch heels,

      wouldn’t they make the contestants bring their

      X-rays to the Miss America Pageant?

      Thursday 12

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      We got a HUGE assignment in Phys Ed today.

      HUGE! I can’t believe that I ever suggested to

      Mr. Dover that he change the routine. If I had never

      done that, I would be enjoying my many assorted

      cramps right now instead of teamwork.

      Here’s our big assignment. This is so big that

      Dover is basing HALF of our grade on it. Each little

      group of four gets divided up. One person stands

      on one side of the gym, and the other three line up

      across from him or her. Using only a soup pot, a

      rubber snake, and a high-heeled shoe, we

      have to get a baby doll across the gym floor to

      that fourth member.

      But we can’t just walk across the gym floor.

      And the baby can’t touch it at all. We have to

      pretend the floor is full of crocodiles. And we

      may not simply hurl the baby across, because we’re

      supposed to pretend it’s our precious baby, and

      if the fourth member fails to catch it, that would

      be curtains for baby. Other than that, Dover said

      anything goes.

      We have four whole weeks to figure this out,

      but if we accomplish the task sooner, and prove to

      Dover we can do it, we can just sit around during

      gym and watch everybody else work it through.

      So Dover lined us up in our group formations.

      He said he could walk anywhere in the gym because

      he has some sort of special resistance to the

      crocodiles. Then he handed the dolls to the people

      who are going to be on the left side of the gym.

      Angeline took one look at her baby and said,

      “Mr. Dover, something is wrong with our doll.”

      Dover walked over and looked at the doll

      and said, “Angeline, I don’t see anything wrong

      with this.”

      “Well, could you see what Hudson thinks?”

      she said, and Dover walked over and handed it

      to Hudson, who was standing on the other side of

      the gym.

      Angeline smiled, looked at Mr. Dover, and

      said, “We’re done.”

      There was this moment of silence when our

      normal, innocent brains had to get up to speed and

      realize what Angeline had done. She had gotten the

      baby across the gym according to the rules, and

      she had done in twenty seconds what the rest of us

      were going to need four weeks to do. Plus, she had

      tricked a teacher to accomplish it, right there in

      front of everybody.

      The applause was deafening. Mr. Dover, in

      the interest of sportsmanship, HAD to accept the

      solution, but then he set a new rule: that none of

      the rest of us could trick a person to accomplish

      the task.

      I spent the rest of the class watching smugly

      barretted Angeline and Hudson sit over in a corner

      of the gym laughing and talking while my little

      group dumbly scratched our dumb butts like dumb

      apes and came up with nothing.

      When class was over and it was time to

      clean up, I tossed the pot to Pinsetti, who, it turns

      out, wasn’t looking (which was kind of his fault,

      according to Isabella), and I accidentally hit him

      right in the exact spot where I had dropped him in

      Trust Falls, and where I’d broken the broomstick.

      He started yelling at me, but Isabella jumped

      in and said if his head is so sensitive to injury,

      then maybe he should just suck it up and wear a

      helmet when I’m around. I’m so glad that I have a

      friend like Isabella, who grew up with terrible mean

      brothers who made her so cruel and quick to lash

      out. It really is a blessing.

      I know. I know. Why didn’t Pinsetti go nuclear

      on me? I mean, one time he got in a fight with a

      kid and messed him up so bad the kid had to eat

      prescription soup for a month.

      I think it’s because he had a crush on me

      once, and the lingering effect of the crush kept his

      anger subdued.

      It’s a known science fact that Crush

      enzymes can stay in your system for up to six

      years. Love is so powerful that only swallowed gum

      endures longer.

      Friday 13

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      Angeline came around at lunch today and

      asked for that big bag of clothes that I lied about

      and she so rudely believed. I thought about just

      admitting that I didn’t have any clothes for her, and

      besides, I really don’t care that much if the people

      in Wheretheheckistan want my old junk. But then

      Hudson walked up with a paper bag and handed it

      to her.

      “I have some stuff for that clothing charity,”

      he said. And then he said, “I think it’s really great

      what you’re doing.” And I realized ANGELINE

      WAS NOT WEARING THE BARRETTE! He

      was looking at her differently than when she was

      merely beautiful. Hudson was impressed by

      her generosity. Hudson was seeing the inner

      Angeline.

      Oh, my gosh. It’s like Beauty and the<
    br />
      Beast Except Angeline is some sort of Beast

      that has Inner Beauty and Outer Beauty, so it’s

      Beauty and The Beauty. There is no Beast.

      Angeline is like one of those candies that’s

      chocolate on the outside, and when you bite into

      it, there’s even better chocolate on the inside. And

      there’s only one of those in the box. And you can’t

      help it if you’re born one of those brittle, maple-

      toffee, old- people flavors.

      If you think Angeline made me crazy before

      this, Dumb Diary, that was nothing. Angeline isn’t

      just beautiful on the outside, she may also be

      beautiful ON THE INSIDE, which means she

      is much much much MUCH MUCH MUCH

      MUCH worse.

      Beauty is only skin-deep, but hate

      goes all the way to the bone.

      So I told Angeline that I had forgotten

      the bag this morning because I was so busy

      making posters for my new charity,Take an

      Underprivileged Koala To Lunch Day,

      that I forgot. Of course, she was interested in the

      charity, but I told her we were still working out some

      of the details, like making sure the restaurant had

      enough booster seats for the koalas.

      I know. I know. Another lame lie. But it was

      all I could think of, and I wouldn’t even look at

      Isabella, who I’m sure was deeply disappointed —

      yet again — in my lack of inner wickedness.

      Saturday 14

      Dear Dumb Diary,

      I tore up the house this morning. We had NO

      old clothes. Mom’s brilliant garage sale strategy

      had wiped us out. Even Dad’s old way-too-

      short shorts were gone.

      Isabella wouldn’t give me any of her old

      clothes, because she said that if her clothes went

      to some mysterious country, they could use them to

     

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