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    The Major Eights 1: Battle of the Bands

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      the right hand to start with.

      Scarlet began singing.

      “Your love is like a song . . . to the

      beat of my heart. . . .”

      It was awful. It

      didn’t sound like

      the song on the

      radio at all.

      Scarlet stopped.

      I was the only one

      playing. “We just

      need practice,” I

      told my friends.

      “This is a love

      song.” Scarlet made a face. “Gross!”

      “And you

      aren’t playing

      with your left

      hand,” said

      Becca. “That’s

      where I watch

      for chords.”

      “Just keep

      playing,” said Maggie. “We’ll get it.”

      Scarlet shrugged. “Also, I only know

      the chorus.”

      I frowned. “Maybe we should skip

      ahead, then.”

      I played the chorus. Scarlet belted

      out the high notes. Maggie picked

      up the beat on the kick drum. Becca

      looked over my shoulder. It finally

      started to sound like the song! Maybe

      this would work after all.

      But Becca still did not play. Finally,

      she took off the guitar strap. She put

      her guitar away in its gig bag.

      We all stopped.

      “What’s wrong?” Scarlet asked her.

      Becca’s face turned red. “I can’t

      play this!” she shouted.

      I blinked. Maggie dropped her

      sticks. Scarlet raised her eyebrows.

      “I told you,” Becca

      said. “I only read

      chords Major chords,

      minor chords. But I

      do not read music.

      This is too hard!”

      She zipped the

      bag shut.

      “Wait!” I cried.

      “Becca, I know it’s

      hard. But we can

      figure it out. We have to. We need

      to play a real song!”

      “Then I guess I am not competing,”

      Becca said. She threw the gig bag

      over her shoulder. She stormed up

      the stairs. The door slammed shut

      behind her.

      “Now what do we do?” Maggie

      asked.

      “We can’t compete without a

      guitar,” I said.

      “We are not a band without a

      guitar,” Scarlet said.

      “We are not a band without Becca,”

      Maggie said.

      My heart sank. Competing in the

      Battle of the Bands was going to be

      harder than I thought.

      Scarlet, Maggie, and I practiced

      without Becca. We practiced for

      several days. But the real song still did

      not sound right. The piano part was

      too hard for me. Scarlet didn’t know

      the tune, so she made up her own.

      Maggie only played her kick drum,

      because she was afraid of playing the

      song wrong.

      And we all missed Becca.

      Later that week, Mom was driving

      me home from school.

      “I haven’t seen Becca lately,”

      said Mom.

      I leaned my cheek against the

      door. “Me neither.”

      “Is she still in the band?” Mom

      asked.

      “No,” I said. “She left because she

      didn’t like the song I picked for us

      to play.”

      “Hmm,” said Mom. “That sounds

      tricky.”

      “It is.” I sighed. “We sound awful

      without her. The Battle of the Bands

      is in one week.”

      “Maybe you

      don’t need to

      win,” said Mom.

      “Maybe you

      should just go

      up there and

      have fun.”

      “But if we win, we can buy

      equipment. If we win, we will show

      everyone that we are a real band.”

      “I think you already are a real

      band, Jasmine. And I think you and

      your friends are at your best when

      you are having fun. Together.”

      I thought about what Mom said.

      Nobody had fun with the song I

      picked. Especially Becca.

      And then I had an idea.

      “Mom! Do you have any paper?”

      “So, what’s so important, Jasmine?”

      Scarlet folded her arms. It was the

      next night. At recess that day, I had

      told my band friends to come over for

      a super-important meeting. I had the

      broken keyboard and hairbrush mic

      ready. Maggie sat behind the drums.

      Even Becca came. But she sat on the

      basement stairs.

      I took a deep breath. “I want us to

      have fun again,” I said.

      Scarlet and Maggie looked at each

      other.

      “Ever since we started playing the

      song I picked, we’ve been fighting.

      Becca got mad and left. We aren’t

      having fun anymore.”

      Scarlet nodded. “I don’t like the

      song,” she said. “You picked it without

      asking us.”

      Maggie whispered, “It is a hard

      song, too.”

      “And there are no chords for Becca,”

      Scarlet said.

      “I know,” I said. “I thought we

      had to do a hard song to win. But it

      doesn’t matter if we win. I just want

      my friends back.”

      Becca came down the steps. “I’m

      sorry I left,” she said. She hugged

      me. Then Scarlet hugged both of us.

      Then Maggie hugged all of us. We

      were a giant dumpling, all squished

      together. I laughed. Scarlet laughed.

      Maggie and Becca laughed. We

      bobbled against each other and

      Maggie tripped. We all went down

      with her. We were a pile of giggles

      on the carpet.

      I sat up. It was good to have all

      my friends back. Now I had to tell

      them my new idea.

      “I have something else to say,” I

      said.

      My friends listened.

      I pulled out sheets of paper.

      Maggie and Scarlet frowned. Becca

      glanced up the stairs.

      “It’s not what

      you think,” I said.

      I passed out the

      pages. “I wrote

      down the song

      we made up

      last week.

      It’s not for the competition or

      anything. It’s just for fun. I created a

      chorus and verses. And I put in guitar

      chords.” I smiled at Becca.

      She looked at the paper. “I can

      play this!”

      “Hey,” said Scarlet. “These are the

      words I was singing!”

      “We should do this!” said Maggie.

      Becca took her guitar out. I played

      notes for her to tune to. Maggie

      rolled on her snare drum to warm up.

      Scarlet sang her scales.

      “We sound crazy!” I said.

      Scarlet laughed. “Hit it, Jasmine!”

      I strung out the notes in the first

      chord, E major. I played them one at

      a time, counting the beats.

      Maggie joined me. She pressed

      the kick drum pedal in time with the


      beat.

      Becca strummed along with us.

      Her face glowed.

      Scarlet began to sing. “Once I was

      inside a box. There I met a crazy fox.

      He told me I had chicken pox. But I

      said . . .”

      We built up to the chorus. Becca,

      Maggie, and I paused. Then we

      played loud. Scarlet sang: “People

      get chicken pox, chickens get fox pox,

      foxes get people pox. That’s a lot of

      crazy talk. . . .”

      Maggie giggled. But she kept the

      beat.

      For the first time, we played a

      whole song together. It was not a real

      song, but it was our song. And that

      was even better.

      “Hey,” Scarlet said. “What if we

      play that song at the Battle of the

      Bands?”

      I frowned. “But I just wrote it down

      for fun.”

      “We definitely should! It’s a great

      song,” Becca said. “And we wrote it!”

      Maggie nodded. “Let’s do it!”

      I didn’t know what to say. I thought

      we were just being silly together.

      Singing this in front of a crowd was

      not my plan. Then again, my friends

      were happy. “Well . . .”

      “Come on, Jasmine,” they begged.

      “Please?”

      I shrugged. “Oh, okay.”

      Maggie and Becca high-fived.

      Scarlet said, “That song is majorly

      funny.”

      “That’s it!” shouted Maggie. “We

      can be the Major Eights! You know,

      ‘major’ like ‘major chords’ and also like

      . . . ‘important.’” She put her hands on

      her hips like a superhero.

      “That and we’re majorly crazy,”

      Scarlet laughed.

      “That’s perfect!” Becca said.

      “Yeah,” I said. But inside, I was

      worried. If we played this song for

      the competition, people would laugh

      at us. My brother would make fun of

      me. Leslie would beat me again. And

      people would not believe we were a

      real band.

      This was not looking good.

      I took a deep breath. The air smelled

      like corn dogs. From behind the stage,

      we could hear Leslie Miller playing her

      piano solo. Ms. Kwan stood ready with

      her laptop. Mom and Dad and Nick

      were out there watching. I huddled

      closer to Scarlet, Becca, and Maggie.

      “We’re still doing ‘Fox Pox,’ right?”

      Scarlet whispered.

      “Definitely,” Becca said.

      I still had time to change their

      minds. “Maybe we should do the

      other one.”

      “What?!” they all whispered.

      “It’s just . . . listen to Leslie! She

      sounds like . . . a grown-up.”

      Leslie finished her solo. The crowd

      cheered.

      Ms. Kwan nodded to the next

      group. They were a lot older than

      us. They wore black leather. The girl

      with the keyboard even had pink

      hair. They carried a sign that said,

      Silver Sporks.

      Maggie said, “Maybe Jasmine is

      right.”

      “But . . . I can’t play the other song!”

      Becca said. “I thought we were doing

      ‘Fox Pox.’”

      “Me, too,” said Scarlet.

      Then the Silver Sporks began. “Your

      love is like a song . . . to the beat of

      my heart. . . .”

      I stomped

      my foot. “That’s

      our song!”

      “Oh, no!”

      said Maggie.

      I listened.

      “They play it

      better than

      we do,” I said.

      “Jasmine,” said Becca, “we have to

      play ‘Fox Pox now.’”

      “But it’s just a crazy song we made

      up on the spot,” I said. “It was just for

      fun!”

      “That’s right,” said Scarlet. “It is fun.

      Which is why I want to do it.”

      “Me, too,” said Becca.

      “Me three,” said Maggie.

      I sighed. “But we might lose,” I said.

      “That doesn’t

      matter,” said

      Scarlet.

      “They’ll laugh

      at us,” I said.

      “It’s a funny

      song!” Becca

      replied.

      “They will think we’re not a real

      band,” I said.

      “So what?” said Maggie. “Jasmine,

      there’s no time left!”

      The Silver Sporks finished their song.

      Ms. Kwan called us over. Becca, Maggie,

      and Scarlet bounced onto the stage.

      I hung my head. The Silver Sporks

      high-fived us on their way down the

      stairs. The keyboard girl with pink hair

      looked at me. She smiled and said,

      “Hey, break a finger.”

      “What?” I asked, surprised.

      “She was being silly,” Becca

      whispered. “She meant ‘good luck.’”

      We took our places on the stage. I

      stared out at the crowd. My parents

      and Nick were in the front. My heart

      sped up.

      But if the Silver Sporks could be

      silly and still be good, maybe we

      could, too. I looked up. Scarlet stood

      proudly, mic in hand. Becca had her

      guitar strapped on. Maggie smiled

      from the drum set. I smiled back.

      Ms. Kwan announced, “And now,

      the Major Eights!” The crowd clapped

      politely.

      I began the chords. I played each

      note, one at a time. Becca and

      Maggie joined in.

      Then Scarlet began to sing.

      At first, the crowd was quiet. But

      slowly, the laughter started. It spread

      through the crowd. My face got hot.

      I felt like running off the stage. But

      my friends kept playing. When we

      got to the chorus and Scarlet sang

      about fox pox, the laughter erupted.

      Everyone laughed. I looked down as I

      played. I could not wait for the song

      to be over.

      And then, it was. The crowd did

      not laugh anymore. They cheered! My

      mouth fell open. They had not been

      laughing at us. They were laughing

      with us. They thought our song was

      funny!

      My parents cheered in the front.

      Even Nick cheered. He shouted, “Go,

      Jasmine! The Major Eights rock!!!”

      I beamed with pride.

      Ms. Kwan smiled wide at us. “Great

      job, girls!”

      The four of us stood together, arm

      in arm. We took a bow. The crowd

      cheered even louder. Someone

      whistled.

      “I can’t believe this is happening!”

      Maggie said.

      “They really like us,” Becca said.

      “Of course they do!” Scarlet agreed.

      “This is the best day ever!” I yelled.

      Becca, Scarlet, Maggie, and I waited.

      We had waited all day for this.

      Leslie came over. “Jasmine, your

      band was great!” she said.

      “Not as good as your piano solo,” I

      told
    her. “But thanks!”

      Finally, Ms. Kwan was onstage. She

      held a paper in her hand. “I have

      the results from the judges,” she

      announced. “For Center City’s Battle

      of the Bands, the grand prize winner

      of the thousand dollars is . . . ”

      Maggie crossed her fingers. Scarlet

      held her breath. Becca and I squeezed

      each other’s hands.

      “. . . the Silver Sporks!”

      Our shoulders sagged. But the

      Silver Sporks seemed like a nice group.

      I clapped for them. I was glad they

      won.

      “It is really okay that we didn’t

      win,” Becca said.

      “Maybe we can enter another one

      of these sometime,” Maggie said.

      “I would like that,” I agreed.

      “Me, too,” Scarlet said.

      But Ms. Kwan was not finished.

      After the Silver Sporks got their check,

      she stepped up to the mic again. “We

      also have an honorable mention to

      award,” she said.

      “What’s that?” I whispered.

      “Somebody who was pretty good,

      but didn’t win,” Maggie whispered

      back.

      “The judges think this group has a

      lot of potential,” said Ms. Kwan. “And

      I think we can all agree that they do.

      The honorable mention goes to . . .”

      “. . . the Major Eights!”

      Scarlet screamed. Becca jumped in

      the air. Maggie’s jaw dropped.

      “That’s us!” I shouted.

      “Come on,” Scarlet said. We ran up

     

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