ONE
Abby Hunter yawned and stretched. And yawned again.
Summer had come. Hot, fly-buzzinâ summer.
No school. Nothing to do.
Abby missed school. She missed her favorite teacher, Miss Hershey. âSummerâs boring,â Abby said.
Abbyâs sister, Carly, crabbed about her paper dolls. âTheyâre floppy,â she said.
Their adopted Korean brothers,Shawn and Jimmy, were tired of American rice. âItâs too dry,â they said.
All the Cul-de-sac Kids were bored.
Dunkum Mifflin boxed up his basketball. âToo hot to play,â he said.
Stacy Henry was sick of sculpting. âThe clayâs too soft when itâs hot outside,â she said.
Jason Birchall fussed about his frog. âCroaker never says, âRib-bittâ anymore.â
Eric Hagel complained about his paper route. âI never get to sleep in,â he said.
But the Fourth of July was coming. The United States of Americaâs birthday.
Abby and her friends stood in front of her house. âFour more days,â she said. âI canât wait!â
Eric and Dunkum, Stacy and Shawn agreed.
The younger Cul-de-sac Kids looked at each other. Dee Dee, Carly, and Jimmy shrugged their shoulders. âWe oughtahave a club meeting,â Dee Dee said.
âGood idea,â Abby said. She was the president of the Cul-de-sac Kids. Nine kids who lived on one street.
Dunkum smiled. âLetâs meet at my house.â
Abby grinned. They always met at Dunkumâs house. He had the biggest basement. âHow soon?â asked Abby.
âGive me ten minutes to straighten things up,â said Dunkum. And he jogged down the cul-de-sac.
Carly, Dee Dee, and the others crowded around Abby.
âLetâs think up something to do,â Jason said. âSomething really fun!â
âYeah,â Eric said. âLetâs brainstorm.â
Stacy leaned on Abbyâs mailbox. âI canât think of anything fun.â
Abby tried to dream up something.
Just then, a mail truck came down the street. Mr. Pete, the postal worker, stopped at each house. The kids watchedhim till he came to Abbyâs house.
Mr. Pete waved to them. âGood morning, kids!â
The Cul-de-sac Kids waved, too.
Stacy backed away from the mailbox. Mr. Pete stuffed the Hunter mailbox full.
Abby stared at the mailbox. Then an idea hit. âI know!â she shouted. âI know what we can do!â
Carly spun around. âWhat?â
âTell us!â Jason said.
Dee Deeâs eyes got big. âPlease?â
âCome on,â Abby said. âItâs time for our meeting. Iâll tell you about it there.â
And she raced down the cul-de-sac to Dunkumâs.
TWO
Abby took off her sneakers. They were new. One red, one blue.
The kids lined up their sneakers along the wall.
Jason plopped down on the floor. The others did, too. âOkay,â Jason said. âLetâs get started.â
Abby sat in the presidentâs seatâa beanbag. âThe meeting will come to order,â she said. âDoes anyone have old business?â
âForget the old business,â Jasonhollered. âLetâs have the new stuff!â
âTell us your idea, Abby!â Carly shouted. âWe canât wait!â
Soon, all the Cul-de-sac Kids were shouting.
Dunkum whistled.
Quickly, they settled down.
âNow,â Abby began. âLetâs start over.â
Ericâs eyes shone. âAbby sounds like a teacher.â
Abby grinned. She liked that. Maybe someday sheâd be a teacher like Miss Hershey.
Jason swayed back and forth. He seemed wound up. âForget school,â he said. âLetâs hear Abbyâs idea.â
âYa-hoo!â Dee Dee said.
Abbyâs voice grew soft. âI have a great Fourth-of-July idea.â
The kids leaned forward, listening.
âA contest,â she said. âWeâll call it Mailbox Mania.â
Eric