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Flip the Bird

Page 1

by Kym Brunner




  Contents

  * * *

  Title Page

  Contents

  Copyright

  Dedication

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-One

  Twenty-Two

  Twenty-Three

  Twenty-Four

  Twenty-Five

  Twenty-Six

  Twenty-Seven

  Twenty-Eight

  Twenty-Nine

  Thirty

  Thirty-One

  Acknowledgments

  Singular Reads

  About the Author

  Copyright © 2016 by Kym Brunner

  All rights reserved. For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to trade.permissions@hmhco.com or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.

  www.hmhco.com

  Cover photograph © 2016 by iStock and Shutterstock

  Cover design by Sharismar Rodriguez

  The Library of Congress has cataloged the print edition as follows:

  Names: Brunner, Kym, author.

  Title: Flip the bird / Kym Brunner.

  Description: Boston : Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016.

  Summary: “A teenage falconer in training runs up against trouble when he finds himself falling for a girl who is part of a radical animal rights group”—Provided by publisher.

  Identifiers: LCCN 2015044086 | ISBN 9780544800854 (hardback)

  Subjects: | CYAC: Falconry—Fiction. | Dating (Social customs)—Fiction. | BISAC: JUVENILE FICTION / Animals / Birds. | JUVENILE FICTION / Boys & Men. | JUVENILE FICTION / Family / General (see also headings under Social Issues). | JUVENILE FICTION / Lifestyles / Country Life. | JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Peer Pressure. | JUVENILE FICTION / Social Issues / Self-Esteem & Self-Reliance. | JUVENILE FICTION / Nature & the Natural World / General (see also headings under Animals). JUVENILE FICTION / Sports & Recreation / General.

  Classification: LCC PZ7.B828453 Fl 2016 | DDC [Fic]—dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2015044086

  eISBN 978-0-544-86816-8

  v1.1016

  This book is dedicated to all of my feathered friends and the One who created them.

  ONE

  TODAY WAS THE DAY I’D BEEN DREAMING ABOUT practically my whole life.

  Too bad it was sucking big time.

  I’d been given one job: to grab the plastic critter cage from my room with the mouse inside and bring it with me. Simple. Go to my room, pick up the container, and walk to the truck.

  Somehow I’d managed to screw that up. I still couldn’t believe I had left the mouse behind. I’d even fed him a cheese curd last night and everything. We were practically bonded, the two of us. I looked down at my dark brown I’M NOT LAZY—​I ACTUALLY ENJOY DOING NOTHING T-shirt, wishing I had done something productive for once.

  “You’re such a moron!” my brother, Lincoln, roared from the back seat of Dad’s tricked-out pickup truck when my mistake was discovered. Lincoln was only eighteen, but he thought he knew everything. “What’d you do with it?”

  Whoever called it “brotherly love” wasn’t talking Lincoln and me. “I . . . I must have set it down somewhere in the house,” I stammered. “I don’t know.”

  I did know but wasn’t about to admit it out loud. After I’d grabbed the cage, I’d walked through the kitchen, and there, right in front of me, was an unopened bag of chocolate mini doughnuts. And since doughnuts are more like memories than actual food at my house because they’re never around for long, I had set the cage on the counter so I could scarf down a couple. Or maybe eight, I’d lost count. Was it my fault I’d grown six inches in the past year and was now six foot two and ravenously hungry all the time?

  The sound of Dad’s tires screeching to a halt directly in front of Pete’s Pet Emporium snapped me out of my doughnut dream.

  “You’ve got two minutes to buy a new mouse and get back out here, or that hawk we saw will be long gone,” Dad warned, his bushy gray eyebrows pinched together.

  “Yeah, I got lots of stuff I need to do before I meet up with Lauren,” Lincoln chimed in, flexing his softball-size muscles as he stretched. “So make it snappy, butthead.”

  After seeing Dad’s eyebrows of anger, I held myself back from rebutting Lincoln’s butthead comment. Especially since I owed him one for convincing Dad to let me buy a new mouse instead of abandoning our trapping expedition altogether. I tore out of the truck and dashed into the pet shop, thankful they were open this early.

  The bell jangled noisily as I whipped open the door, but it was barely audible over the squawking, barking, and bubbling of the overstuffed shop. Pete, the short, balding dude who owned the place, wasn’t at the register, so I rushed toward the back of the shop, where the mice were kept. I whizzed past a family crowded together in the puppy circle, playing with a yipping ball of brown fur and made my way down the narrow fish food aisle. Where the heck was he?

  “Yo, Pete? I need help real quick,” I called out, hating to sound like a pushy customer, but my apprenticeship hinged on me trapping this hawk today.

  “He went into the back room,” a female voice said from behind me.

  “Thanks.” I turned around to see who had spoken. My jaw dropped when I saw her, forcing me to use every ounce of energy I possessed to shut it again. Standing in front of me was the prettiest girl I’d ever seen in my almost fifteen years on earth. She looked about my age, with elbow-length hair the white-blond color of candlelight. She wore a blue T-shirt with white wording and some graphics, which I was dying to read, but I didn’t want to be a jerk and stare at her chest. Well, not while she was looking at me, anyway. I did manage to notice, despite the limited ogling opportunities, that she had more curves than a French horn.

  Instead of walking away, she said, “What are you buying?”

  Her question startled me. I hadn’t expected someone who looked as if she could be in a Victoria’s Secret ad to actually speak to me, but then again, why not? I wasn’t the handsomest guy around, but my little sister, Maddie, and her friend Hannah always giggle and call me Hottie Pants, so I figure I’m not too bad—​even if the girls are only ten.

  “Oh, just a mouse,” I told her, sounding way too cheerful. Then I cringed at how lame it sounded to be buying a dinky little mouse. Why hadn’t I said I was there to buy rat poison or bear feed—​something more manly? If I could somehow slip it into the conversation that I’d be using the mouse to trap a dangerous, flesh-eating hawk, it might make her hang around for a few seconds longer.

  “A mouse? That’s so sweet!” Her face lit up as if I had just given her the diamond stud that blinged from the side of her nose. After seeing how excited she was by my buying a mouse, I was glad I hadn’t specified I’d be using it as bait for a hawk’s breakfast. “Do you mind if I watch while you pick it out?”

  Was she serious? I wouldn’t have minded if she tied me down and poured red ants on my face, as long as she continued to talk to me. “No, that’d be awesome!” I gushed, sounding more like my little sister than the rugged guy I’d been faking I was.

  I needed to calm down or she’d think I was a loser. I’ve talked to plenty of hot girls before, although to be honest, they’ve usually just given me my change and I’ve said thank you.

  Sh
e blessed me with a blue ribbon smile—​the kind you get for Best in Show at the county fair. “Cool! I’ve been in here wandering around, waiting for my parents to finish shopping at the hardware store down the street. Sad how all these animals are locked up though, isn’t it? I wish I could set them all free.”

  “Yeah, real sad,” I agreed quickly, even though I thought it a bit extreme to want to free animals in a pet shop, but that was girls for you. Always feeling sorry for the weak and the meek. Come to think of it, perhaps this could work in my favor. “So where you from?” I hoped that she would say she had just arrived in town and was moving in next door to my house.

  “Up north. Not too far away.” She shrugged. “Want me to show you where the mice are?”

  “Sure, that’d be great.” I acted as if I didn’t already know it was the third tank to the left of the storage room door. As I walked behind her, admiring the view, I ran my hand through my hair, wishing I’d brushed it this morning. While I had heard that girls liked guys with thick wavy hair, I wasn’t exactly positive they liked tumbleweed heads.

  We stopped in front of the twenty-gallon tank filled with a swirling mass of mice, but I was still watching more of her than the mice. I wondered if there was something slightly off about her judgment. I mean, the only time I’d seriously attracted the attention of a really hot chick was when I stood next to the chicken incubator at the Museum of Science and Industry tapping on the glass. I rubbed my jaw, thinking the heavy stubble that accompanied my recent growth spurt must be responsible for this newfound female attention.

  She clapped. “They’re all so adorable! What color are you getting?”

  I wondered what color mice juvenile red-tailed hawks preferred, but figured as long as it was furry and breathing, the color was inconsequential. “I haven’t decided.” I remembered to lower my voice to sound more manly. “Pick the one you like.”

  “Really?” She looked up at me, her eyes wide with excitement. That’s when I saw that her eyes were sage green with light flecks of yellow in them. How cool was that? I’d never met anyone with eyes that color before and was pretty sure I never would again.

  The door to the storage room burst open, jerking me out of my drool fest. What was I doing standing here chatting when my hawk was waiting for me? Pete came out carrying bags of cedar shavings. “Pete!” I called out, waving a hand in the air. “If you have a quick second, I need a mouse right away.” I hoped he would pick up on my need for speed.

  He stopped and looked at me. “Another one? Your dad was in last night.”

  “Yeah, I know,” I responded, purposely being vague. “Emergency replacement.”

  He nodded. “Okay, okay. Just let me set this stuff down.”

  “What do you mean, ‘emergency replacement’?” she asked, gracing me with another dazzling smile. “Do you have a whole slew of guard mice at home and one quit?”

  She’s sweet, obviously has good taste in guys, and has a great sense of humor? I couldn’t believe that I’d finally met the girl of my dreams, right there at the pet shop. “Worse than that,” I replied. “The commander lost his battle with German Cheezles today. Nastiest case I’ve ever seen.”

  She laughed heartily, not one of those stupid giggles I’d heard on the lips of all the dumb girls Lincoln used to date before he met Lauren. She leaned closer to the tank, her green eyes darting from side to side as she watched the mice. “They’re all so cute.”

  “Yep, hard to pick one, isn’t it?” I knew I needed to blow out of there soon, before my dad stuck his head in the store and bellowed for me to hurry up. Talk about embarrassing.

  “Oh my gosh! Look at that one!” She pointed to a mouse licking its paws. “It’s tan and has a white spot around her nose. You like her?”

  “That’s the same one I was looking at!” I exclaimed, feigning amazement.

  She playfully smacked my arm with the back of her hand. “Liar!”

  I laughed, thrilled that she had made skin-to-skin contact, even if it was only to hit me. I suddenly feared that I might have chocolate doughnut bits stuck between my teeth. When she wasn’t looking, I did a quick tongue sweep to clear any debris.

  “All right. Here I am, Mercer.” Pete bustled toward us holding a white Chinese takeout container poked with air holes, identical to the one I’d left in the kitchen.

  Dream Girl’s head spun toward me so fast, the tips of her hair grazed my forearm, giving me the cheapest of cheap thrills. “Your name’s Mercer?” She seemed intrigued, like many people do when they hear my name for the first time. I contemplated telling her that she’d misunderstood and that my name was actually Bill Gates Jr. But since my financial status pretty much hovered around zero on any given Sunday, I decided humor was the better route for me. “Yep, it’s Mercer—​a favorite name of hit men and male models alike.”

  She bit her lip coyly. “Which one are you?”

  “Both.” I aimed my finger gun into the air, shot it, and blew on the end before stuffing it back in its holster. Then I struck what I hoped was a modeling pose, hands balled in fists on my hips. “Armed and ungodly handsome. That’s me, ma’am.”

  She laughed. “Did you know that Mercer is the name of a city in Wisconsin?”

  My eyes widened in surprise. Not many people had ever heard about that little town way up north by Lake Superior. “Know it? My parents named me after it. It’s the loon capital of the world, you know.” I held my hand over my heart as if proud of that fact, but decided not to share that it was also where I’d been conceived. That sick little factoid would remain my secret.

  She laughed again, making my spirits soar. I was just getting up the nerve to ask her what her name was when Pete lifted the cover of the tank and handed it to me. “Hold this.” We’d bought so many mice from Pete over the years that he knew exactly what I wanted it for, so he reached in and grabbed the first tail he could.

  “No, not that one!” Dream Girl cried in dismay. “The tan one with the white nose!” She tapped on the glass, pointing out the intended victim.

  Pete shot me an exasperated look over the rim of his wire glasses.

  I nodded sheepishly. “Yes, the tan one, please.”

  Pete shook his head and sighed, setting the white one back in the tank. It took him a few tries, but he finally managed to grasp the tail of the tan mouse.

  “Yes, that’s the one!” She grinned at me proudly, as if she had birthed the rodent instead of simply picking it out. I decided right then that I wanted this girl to be the mother of my children, even if they ended up tan and furry with little white noses. But first, I’d have to ask for her number.

  Pete put the mouse in the box and we followed him to the register. As he rang me up, my future wife turned to me and said, “What are you going to name her?”

  I had never named my bait before but figured it couldn’t hurt. “Not sure. Got any ideas?”

  “That’ll be a dollar and twenty-two cents.” Pete handed me the carton.

  “What do you think of Cinnamon?” She bit her nail, like she was worried I’d say no.

  I pretended to consider it a moment while I dug my wallet out from my back pocket. “Cinnamon, huh?” I said. “Yeah. I like that name.”

  Pete rolled his eyes and held out his hand for the cash. Dad’s truck horn blared as I opened up my wallet. It was as empty as my trap. I patted my pants pockets, feeling for change. Panic raced up my gut and lodged in my throat. “Oh no! I spent my last dollar at lunch yesterday. Let me run out to the truck.”

  Pete threw his hands up. “Mercer! I’ve got a ton of customers here.”

  “Sorry.” Not only sorry, but mega-humiliated. What kind of girl would want to marry a guy who couldn’t come up with two bucks to pay for a lousy mouse?

  Dream Girl smiled at me and plopped her yarn purse onto the counter. “I got it.”

  I would rather have gouged out my eye with the fish tank thermometer than let her pay. “No, that’s okay. My dad’s right outside.” Four steps la
ter, the cash register drawer slammed shut. I glanced back and saw Pete handing her change before he rushed off toward the puppy circle.

  The horn blared again, this time longer. “Hold on!” I yelled over my shoulder.

  She handed me the white carton. “Well, here you go. Have fun with Cinnamon!”

  I started walking backwards, an indelible grin on my face. “I will! And thanks!”

  She nodded, waving. “No problem. Just take good care of your new commander.”

  “You bet,” I assured her, thinking it depended on how she defined “care.”

  I gave her one last look and dashed outside. Three steps onto the sidewalk, I realized I had forgotten to ask for her phone number, her name—​anything! How stupid was I?

  As I flung open the truck door with my container in hand, I had to wonder exactly which one of us was the man and which one was the mouse.

  TWO

  THE MOMENT MY BUTT CHEEKS HIT THE SEAT, Dad floored the truck and pulled a U-turn.

  “What took you so long?” he snarled. “That hawk is probably long gone by now.”

  “There were a lot of customers,” I explained, buckling my seat belt. I tossed a look over my shoulder at Lincoln. “Including one insanely gorgeous customer in particular who picked out my new pet mouse.” I grinned broadly as I held up the box, gently petting the outside of it. “We named her Cinnamon.”

  “You were flirting with a girl while we were out here waiting?” Dad turned left on County Road Q so fast that my head grazed the window. “Where are your priorities, Mercer?”

  Where were his, I wondered. “It wasn’t just any girl, Dad. She was the prettiest, sweetest, coolest girl I’ve ever met in my life. And she followed me around the store and actually laughed at my jokes.”

  Lincoln’s eyes widened. “You told her you were buying the mouse as a pet? What a great ploy, little bro-mite.” He laughed, showing off that perfect smile of his that made all the girls go crazy. “Picking up chicks at the pet store? Brilliant!”

 

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