Maniac Magee

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Authors: Jerry Spinelli
Tags: JUV007000
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same toaster. So all the other kids would be heading for their homes, their night homes, each of them, hundreds, flocking from school like birds from a tree, scattering across town, each breaking off to his or her own place, each knowing exactly where to land. School. Home. No, he was not going to have one without the other.
    “If you try to make me,” he said, “I’ll just start running.”
    Grayson said nothing. What the kid said actually made him feel good, though he had no idea why. And the brushing little worm of a notion was beginning to tickle him now. He kept on driving.

24
    T hey got back to the band shell just as they finished the last of the Krimpets. Grayson looked at his watch. “Guess it’s time to quit the job I never did today. Time for dinner, too.”
    Grayson was joking, but Maniac was serious when he piped, “Great! Where to?”
    Dumbfounded, the old man drove back out of the park to the nearest diner, where he sat with a cup of coffee while the boy wolfed down meatloaf and gravy, mashed potatoes, zucchini, salad, and coconut custard pie.
    Grayson had a way of jumping into a subject without warning; it was during Maniac’s dessert that he abruptly said, “Them black people, they eat mashed potatoes, too?”
    Maniac thought he was kidding, then realized he wasn’t. “Sure. Mrs. Beale used to have potatoes a lot, mashed and every other way.”
    “Mrs. who?”
    “Mrs. Beale. Do you know the Beales? Of seven twenty-eight Sycamore Street?”
    The old man shook his head.
    “Well, they were my family. I had a mother and father and a little brother and sister and a sister my age and a dog. My own room, too.”
    Grayson stared out the diner window, as if digesting this information. “How ’bout meatloaf?”
    “Huh?”
    “They eat that, too?”
    “Sure, meatloaf too.
And
peas.
And
corn. You name it.”
    “Cake?”
    Maniac beamed. “Oh, man! You kidding? Mrs. Beale makes the best cakes in the world.”
    Grayson’s eyes narrowed. “Toothbrushes? They use them?”
    Maniac fought not to smile. “Absolutely. We all had our toothbrushes hanging in the bathroom.”
    “I know that,” said Grayson, impatient, “but is theirs the same? As ours?”
    “No difference that I could see.”
    “You didn’t drink out the same glass.”
    “Absolutely, we did.”
    This information seemed to shock the old man.
    Maniac laid down his fork. “Grayson, they’re just regular people, like us.”
    “I was never in a house of theirs.”
    “Well, I’m telling you, it’s the same. There’s bathtubs and refrigerators and rugs and TVs and beds. … “
    Grayson was wagging his head. “Ain’t that some-thin’…ain’t that something’…”
    It was after dark when they got back to the baseball-equipment room. The worm in Grayson’s head had long since ceased to be a tiny tickle; it was now a maddening itch. As with all such itch-worms, it would exit by only one route, the mouth. He said: “Uh, I was thinkin’, uh, maybe you want to come over to my place. This here floor’s pretty hard.” He tapped his foot to show how hard.
    The grizzled, gray old parkhand could never know how much Maniac was tempted, or how deeply the offer touched him. Neither could Maniac explain that the bad luck he always seemed to have with parents had led him to the conclusion that he’d better stick to himself.
    “Oh, it’s not so bad here,” he said. “Look — “ He lay down on the chest protectors and closed his eyes. “Ah…just like a mattress. I can feel myself dozing off already.” And then, not wanting to hurt the old man’s feelings, he quickly added, “Hey, I told you everything about me. How about you?” He pulled Grayson’s coat over himself. “A bedtime story.”
    Grayson snorted. “Story? I don’t know no stories.”
    “Sure you do,” Maniac prodded. “About yourself. You know about you. Everybody has a story.”
    “Not me.” Grayson was edging for the door. “I ain’t got no story. I ain’t

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