by Jim Benton
   You know what this means? It means that if
   Miss Bruntford looked like ME when she was a kid,
   then I’m going to look like HERwhen I’m an adult!
   84
   “Does it look okay?” Angeline said, all
   smuglike. “I hope you don’t mind that I did the
   glitter myself. I’m going to drop it off with Miss
   Anderson now, so she can put it up in the cafeteria
   next week.”
   And then Angeline paused for just a second,
   with this strange kind of tiny smile that was as
   small and bewildering as a baby’s butt.
   I know that she noticed the resemblance in
   Miss Bruntford’s photo and she wanted me to
   crumble.
   But I didn’t. I stayed strong and silent and
   just nodded okay, thinking that this was even worse
   than Isabella’s project, and wondering why I had
   thought there was something bewildering about
   baby butts.
   85
   Next week, both Isabella’s andAngeline’s
   projects go up in the cafeteria, and everybody —
   including Mr. Prince — will see them.
   I very much doubt that even Rumplestiltskin
   can save me now.
   86
   Saturday 21
   Dear Dumb Diary,
   When I woke up this morning, I knew this
   might be my last chance to persuade Isabella to
   change her project. I hoped that when I told her
   about Baby Bruntford, she might take pity on me
   and change her mind. I was also fully prepared to lie
   and say her head was becoming less round. (When
   in reality, if anything, it’s getting rounder.)
   87
   When I got to Isabella’s house, there on her
   front lawn was the kitten I found last week, along
   with another one. I scooped them up and rang the
   doorbell. Isabella was holding a third, much
   younger kitten in her arms when she opened the
   door. When she saw me standing there with the
   other two kittens, she looked just like she did after
   we learned about you-know-what in biology.
   88
   “Oh, good,” she lied.
   Isabella can lie to almost anybody but me. I
   can always spot her deceptions, and she usually
   doesn’t bother even trying. The fact that she was
   even trying indicated that she was really and truly
   desperate.
   “My neighbors lost those two kittens that you
   have there, as well as this third kitten, which I
   found just before you got here. Let me have them
   all and I’ll return them promptly to their rightful
   owners, which is not me. And hurry up, because my
   mom is here and I don’t want her to see them,
   because (Isabella was really groping for an
   explanation here) because . . . my . . . mom . . .
   has . . . a . . . real . . . soft . . . spot . . .for . . .
   baby . . . animals.”
   Isabella’s mom is really nice and everything,
   but a soft spot for baby animals? I’ve seen her
   pound veal like it owed her money.
   89
   Sunday 22
   Dear Dumb Diary,
   I launched Operation Beagle Bounce
   today and it failed. I blame coffee and dog
   breeding.
   The idea came to me last night, as I watched
   Stinker gnaw/make-out with Grossnasty, his chew
   toy.
   I really thought this plan could not miss, and
   here’s how it came together:
   While my parents were asleep, I put a couple
   of aspirin bottles and a Kleenex box on Mom’s
   bedside table. I dumped all the coffee beans in the
   trash and left the empty bag on the counter. Then I
   changed Dad’s alarm clock.
   90
   I got dressed for school and picked up my
   backpack and tiptoed into my parent’s room. Then
   Ishook my dad and said, “Dad. Dad. Look at the
   time! You’re late! You’re late!” I had to sound
   really freaked out or it might occur to him that
   today was Sunday and he didn’t have to go to
   workat all.
   The first thing he did was look at my mom,
   who was still asleep. I pointed at the aspirin and
   Kleenex. “Don’t wake Mom. I don’t think she feels
   well.”
   91
   Dad jumped into his clothes and came
   downstairs. I couldn’t have him hanging around to
   maybe wake up Mom. I pointed at the coffeepot:
   “Out of coffee: Dad, go go go!” Dad ran to his car
   and hopped in, not noticing that I was right behind
   him, carrying fat ol’ Stinker out to the driveway. He
   also failed to notice that somebody had tied
   Grossnasty to the back bumper of his car.
   92
   Dad already drives too fast, but when he
   thinks he’s late for work, he shoots out of the
   driveway like a rocket. I figured that when Stinker
   saw Grossnasty taking off, he’d trot behind the car
   for a while, fussing and wheezing until he eventually
   got tired and lost. Then somebody would pick him
   up and return him to us. I figured he’d be back by
   the end of the week, and by that time, I would have
   been allowed to submit a picture of a beautiful
   fawn or swan or something to Isabella’s project,
   because I did not have a pet anymore — my pet had
   run away.
   93
   But here’s how dog breeding works, I guess.
   Long ago, people who wanted to invent the beagle
   looked around for the beagliest animals they could
   find. And when those two beaglish dogs had
   puppies, they married those puppies to other
   super-beagly dogs, until finally, after they did this
   a jillion times, they got the beagle as we know it
   today.
   94
   I had never really thought about what
   beagles had been bred for. I suppose I thought
   they were bred to stink and be nuisances, like
   maybe for homeowners who wanted something to
   dig up their flower beds but were afraid the
   neighbors would object to a skunk.
   But it turns out, beagles were bred to chase things,
   fast things, like foxes and — at this particular
   moment — chew toys tethered to movingcars.
   Stinker took off faster than I had ever seen
   him move. I could barely hear Dad’s tires squealing
   over the sound of Stinker’s toenails scraping on the
   cement. Stinker caught up to Dad’s car quickly and
   got a good chomp on Grossnasty.
   95
   And I learned that there’s another thing that
   beagles were bred to do: Not Give Up. Stinker
   was not going to let go of Grossnasty for anything,
   not even to avoid being dragged behind a car.
   Fortunately (for Stinker), Dad only went a
   block or so before he had to stop.
   For medicine? For gasoline? Nope.
   96
   For coffee. Adults’ bloodstreams are
   practically full of it, and my dad is maybe the
   worst. Since he didn’t get it at home, he was willing
   to be late for work just for a cup of his precious
   Starbucks. (“Need some latte in my b
atte,” he
   always says.)
   When Dad got out of the car, he noticed
   Stinker still hanging on to Grossnasty and realized,
   by looking at a newspaper box outside Starbucks,
   that it was Sunday.
   97
   When Dad got home, he was pretty angry, but
   I apologized as hard as I could for getting the
   calendar mixed up, and he just grumped a little,
   handed me Stinker (who was scruffier and dirtier
   than ever), and went back to bed.
   Like I said, the plan had failed, and it looked
   like I wasn’t going to get rid of Stinker. But then, at
   that time, I hadn’t considered The Mom
   Factor.
   Mom sprang her big surprise on us this
   afternoon.
   98
   Remember last week when somebody called
   and Mom got all excited? It was Miss Bruntford. She
   had asked Mom for her meat loaf recipe so they
   could use it to make the New Improved school
   meatloaf.
   All the teachers know about my Mom’s
   cooking. Last year, the lemon squares my mom
   brought for a bake sale caused a dozen kids to lose
   their hearing for three days.
   99
   Mom says she made a little loaf (remember
   that day when we smelled her cooking but she gave
   us pizza?) and took it over to Miss Bruntford’s. Miss
   B. tried it, and asked Mom to make a big batch to
   try on the kids this week at school.
   Mom says that Miss Bruntford knows the kids
   hate the school meat loaf, and she thinks my mom
   can solve the problem. Mom is so proud of herself
   that Dad and I were careful not to say anything
   discouraging. Though I did overhear Dad make a
   secret call to our insurance agent to see if we were
   covered if Mom food-poisoned an entire middle
   school.
   100
   So Mom spent the entire day making her meat
   loaves.
   I was in the family room trying not to inhale
   any more meat loaf odor than I had to when I saw
   Stinker walk into the kitchen and then walk out. He
   scratched at the door to go outside. I opened it and
   he walked down the sidewalk and slowly down the
   street.
   I watched him walk all the way out of sight.
   101
   When I looked in the kitchen, I saw what
   Stinker had seen. Not just a couple of meat loaves,
   but countless steaming football -shaped meat
   lumps stacked on every counter.
   And I understood: Stinker had done the math.
   He knows how much leftover meat loaf he is
   expected to eat from one single meat loaf. The
   leftovers he thought he was going to have to eat
   from this batch were just too much to bear.
   Mom said that one day I’d appreciate her
   cooking, and she was right: Today I do.
   Stinker has run away from home!
   102
   Monday23
   Dear Dumb Diary,
   That’s right! Stinker has run away from home,
   and Isabella still won’t let me off the hook. She
   says the law states that unless the dog is gone
   forever, or has been given away, or the dog or turtle
   has been replaced with a different kitten, then it’s
   still my dog, and that’s what is going in the project.
   I asked her if she meant “puppy” instead of
   “kitten,” and she got all panicky again and said it
   could be a puppy or a kitten and, besides, those
   weren’t her kittens.
   Then she added that I wouldn’t need to give
   her my photos. She already had pictures of me and
   Stinker that were going to work just fine for her art
   project.
   I wondered if today would be a good day to
   have a long talk with Mr. Prince, maybe sort out
   some of these feelings we have for each other, and
   see if he could get Isabella suspended.
   I thought I’d hint at it a little by sculpting
   Isabella’s head in mashed potatoes with a fork
   stuck in one eye.
   104
   He didn’t notice, though. He wasn’t standing
   by the garbage can today. Mr. Prince was off in a
   corner talking with Miss Anderson. Probably asking
   about me. He cares so much.
   I think Hudson may have said hi to me today,
   but I didn’t really notice, being so deeply immersed
   in the romantic fairy tale that is my life, although I
   still really can’t tell if I’m the Princess or the frog.
   (This fairy- tale report for Evans is going to be
   tough.)
   Also I was pretty hungry and wished that I
   had eaten Isabella’s head instead of throwing it
   out.
   Wait a second. Why did Isabella bring up
   those kittens again?
   105
   Tuesday 24
   Dear Dumb Diary,
   That was the very first thing I asked Isabella
   today. I also asked her if the neighbors got their
   kittens back and if the kittens were happy now and
   kittens kittens KITTENS.
   And it was more than Isabella could take. She
   knows she can’t lie to me. It was time for her to give
   up trying.
   106
   She said it had come to her in a flash in art
   class that nobody had an uglier pet than I do.
   Except her. Isabella has a turtle.
   107
   So she used her powers of persuasion on her
   dad to make him take her to the mall to get a
   kitten, which is one of the all-time cutest animals
   in the world.
   But Isabella says that in as little as a week
   kitten cuteness starts to fade. And she wanted her
   pet to be the cutest one in the project so that
   everybody would say that Isabella was the cutest
   girl in our grade.
   So she told her dad that the kitten had run
   away, and she cried and cried until he took her to
   get a new one. (As you might recall, Dumb Diary,
   Isabella’s fake crying is unrivaled.)
   The replacement kitten also started to lose
   its cuteness after a week, so she replaced it the
   same way. She’s keeping the extras hidden in her
   room until the assignment is over.
   108
   So I had her, right? In my best TV lawyer
   voice, I pointed out that the TURTLE is the real
   pet and that’s what has to be in the photo.
   Then she got all sinister again and smiled this
   real horrible smile. “Nope,” she said. “Last night,
   kittens one and two ate the turtle. A shame, really,
   but it all works out fine in the end.”
   109
   “But it doesn’t work out fine for me. Not for
   ME!” I said.
   And she countered with — get this —“What do
   you care, with your three boyfriends?”
   “Three boyfriends?” I said. “WHAT
   three boyfriends?”
   She never answered. She just said that she
   had even worse pictures of me and Stinker, and if I
   knew what was good for me, I’d just be quiet about
   the kittens until the assignment was over.
   Isabella has older brothers and is therefore
 &n
bsp; an expert in blackmail.
   110
   Wednesday 25
   Dear Dumb Diary,
   We turned in our art projects today. Isabella
   was glaring at me and flashed the more awful
   pictures of me and Stinker, just to keep me in line.
   111
   112
   Angeline kept looking at me like she expected
   me to say something to her, but what did I have to
   say? I’m either Miss Bruntford or The Beagle. I was
   done talking.
   And at lunch today, Pinsetti was jabbering so
   loud at me, I couldn’t hear what Mr. Prince and Miss
   Anderson were saying, but they were giggling, so I
   suppose it was about something funny I had said.
   114
   The only good thing, I guess, is that Hudson
   and Angeline were sitting together. I’m grateful
   that she’s taken him off my hands—although as I
   write this, I can hardly believe I said that. As a
   matter of fact, I take it back . . .
   But I guess that just shows how committed I
   am to making Mr. Prince wait painfully for me until I
   am an adult.
   115
   Thursday 26
   Dear Dumb Diary,
   Miss Bruntford and Mom’s meat loaf
   are back!
   We all knew this day would come. But what I
   didn’t expect was my mom to show up as well. When
   your mom shows up at school unexpectedly, you
   figure that either your house burned down or she
   read your diary.
   But my mom was just excited to see the kids