Authors: Sally Warner
“Hey, dummy,” Jared says to me. Stanley, EllRay, and Corey are standing behind him like a small flock of silly sheep.
Well, one good thing—at least Jared’s not calling me “Super Emma.” I try to swallow my bite of sandwich. Across from me, Annie Pat is goggling.
Jared is scowling, probably because I have not said anything back to him. “You think you’re so great, don’t you?” he asks me. “Little Emma-Wemma, the perfect girl.”
“I don’t think I’m so great,” I say. I can hear my own heart beating,
wuh, wuh, wuh
.
“You’re going to be sorry, Super Emma,” he says again, leaning toward me and keeping his voice low. “I’m going to get even with you tomorrow at recess, when everyone on the playground is watching. Everyone!”
Books by Sally Warner
A Long Time Ago Today
Best Friend Emma
Not-So-Weird Emma
Only Emma
Super Emma
This Isn’t About the Money
PUFFIN BOOKS
Published by the Penguin Group
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Registered Offices: Penguin Books Ltd, 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
First published in the United States of America by Viking, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2006
Published by Puffin Books, a division of Penguin Young Readers Group, 2008
3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4
Text copyright © Sally Warner, 2006
Illustrations copyright © Jamie Harper, 2006
All rights reserved
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA IS AVAILABLE
EISBN: 9781101567616
Printed in the United States of America
Set in Bitstream Carmina
Book design by Nancy Brennan
Except in the United States of America, this book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
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For Joe Martin, my main (super) man
in Madison, Wisconsin — S.W.
For Gonna—J.H.
For No Reason
A Hero
For No Reason!
Super Emma
For No Reason?
Pickle
For No Reason
Trash
For No Reason!
A Wish
“Let me see that, stupid,” Jared Matthews says to EllRay Jakes. “Give it here.” If Jared were a lion, he would be growling right now. His twirly brown hair even looks a little like a lion’s mane, if you squint your eyes.
But that’s not fair to lions, one of my favorite animals.
“My name’s not ‘Stupid,’
stupid
, it’s EllRay,” EllRay tells him, trying to be brave. But he hands over the plastic figure he was playing with to Jared, who grabs it and starts twisting the movable arms back and forth.
“Don’t break the wings,” EllRay says in a loud and nervous voice.
I have said it before: EllRay is small in size but large in noise. He is the first littlest kid in the third grade, and I am the second littlest. Also, I am the second shyest, after Fiona.
I don’t like to hear EllRay sound scared. I think he’s pretty cool, but that’s a secret.
“I’ll break the wings if I want to,
Lancelot
,” Jared says.
Lancelot!
See, I think the trouble started this morning when we had this substitute teacher, Mrs. Matheson. She’s short and wide, and she was wearing an orange dress that made her look like a big chunk of supermarket cheese.
Well, she still is. Wearing the dress, I mean.
Anyway, she called EllRay
by his real name. She said, “Lancelot Raymond Jakes?” while she was taking roll. And I guess EllRay’s name was supposed to be a secret, because he never said it out loud before.
A lot of kids laughed when the substitute called his name, but Jared Matthews laughed the loudest:
“Haw, haw, haw.”
He is the biggest kid in our third-grade class, and he is not very nice.
“My name is EllRay,” EllRay shouted politely to Mrs. Matheson, but it was too late—the damage was done. Now, everyone in class knows that EllRay is probably short for L-period-Ray, which is probably short for Lancelot Raymond.
Some people’s mothers and fathers should
be more careful when they name a baby, that’s what I think.
Jared pinches the toy’s purple wing, which is webbed like a bat’s. It is as if he is holding a teacup he is about to smash on the ground. He looks at EllRay, just daring him to say something. And Jared is smiling a little. “I think wings look dumb on action figures,” he says to EllRay.
EllRay’s eyes get big. He looks scared—or at least very wide awake.
Wide awake is a good way to look in our class, especially after lunch on a warm California day. It is very easy to fall asleep then, even if you pretend that you are only reading up close. And doing that just makes me sleepier than ever, which is why we get a recess like this in the afternoon—to run around and breathe some fresh air, in other words.
Oh, that reminds me! This boy Corey Robinson, who sits next to me, really fell all the way asleep in class last week. He even drooled on his book,
which is official school property. I felt sorry for him, but it was kind of funny.
It was
especially
funny when Ms. Sanchez, who is our regular teacher, glided up behind him and pinched him on his hot red ear. Even though it was a gentle pinch, Corey squawked like a stepped-on cat, and he rose straight up into the air as if his chair was a giant slingshot that had decided to see how far Corey and his floppy green hair would go.
The answer was—pretty far!
In case you are wondering, Corey is not an outer-space alien, even though he has green hair. He is training to be a swimming champion, which is another classroom secret, but he told me about it once. Anyway, Corey swims a lot, and sometimes the chlorine in the pool turns his whitey-blond hair green.