Squirrelly

“Squirrelly” by Holly Sheidenberger

I splurged on designer path lights to illuminate my front walkway.

They’re exquisite. Sculpted bronze acorns with miniature squirrels sitting on top.

They were a hundred dollars each. I bought eight.

Monday afternoon my prized squirrels were strewn across the grass. Someone had maliciously pulled them all out.

Probably one of the neighbor kids.

Tuesday at the school bus stop I grabbed Sam, the wily one with the red hair.

He agreed to spy out the culprit. For a fee of ten dollars.

Wednesday my lights were uprooted again. Hot on the trail, Sam would need another day. And another ten dollars.

Vandalized again Thursday, I interrogated Sam. “Ten more dollars,” he said. “Tomorrow I’ll know for sure.”

Fed up by Friday, I asked a freckle-faced girl walking her dog if she knew who was destroying my delicate little squirrel lights.

“That’s easy,” she said. “It’s Sam. All the kids know that.”

Ice Cream Shop

“Ice Cream Shop” by Holly Sheidenberger

My dad made me get a job scooping ice cream. Today’s my first day.

A tall man in a tailored black suit walks in. He’s alone.

His polished black shoes clack aggressively on the tile floor. He monitors the time on a gleaming gold watch.

I’m intimidated.

He steps up to the counter. “One scoop of bubble gum. On a cone, please.”

Bubble gum? Really?

Dumbfounded, I scoop his cone.

Then in one foul motion, the vivid pink ice cream falls off and splashes down on his raven-black shoe.

Dread descends like a thundercloud. I’m going to be yelled at. And probably fired.

But the man smirks.

“I’m going to need another scoop of bubble gum,” he says.

This time I deliver it successfully. He turns and saunters out, never even bothering to clean his shoe.

I don’t know who that guy was, but I want to grow up to be him someday.