Tip-Top Tappin' Mom!

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Authors: Nancy Krulik
Chapter 1
    “What a cool baseball jersey!” Katie Carew complimented her best friend Jeremy Fox. It was Friday afternoon. Cherrydale Elementary School’s fourth-graders had all just run out onto the playground for recess.
    “Thanks,” Jeremy said to Katie. “I got it yesterday when my dad and I were at the sporting-goods store in the mall. We were looking for a Mother’s Day present for my mom.”
    “ But you got the present,” Katie pointed out.
    “We bought one for my mom, too,” Jeremy assured her.
    “Do you really think your mom will want a baseball shirt for Mother’s Day?” Suzanne Lock, Katie’s other best friend, asked Jeremy.
    “She’ll love it,” Jeremy assured Suzanne. “My mom’s a huge Cherrydale Porcupines fan.”
    Katie knew that was true. She’d been to baseball games with Mrs. Fox. Jeremy’s mom screamed louder than anyone.
    “If you say so,” Suzanne told Jeremy. “I just know that my mom likes more girly presents for Mother’s Day.”
    “Like what?” Jeremy asked.

    “Every year I get her a big bouquet of roses,” Suzanne told him.
    “Speaking of roses . . .” George Brennan began with a big smile on his face. “How did the big rose greet the little rose?”
    “How?” Katie asked him.
    “Hi, Bud!” George exclaimed. He laughed at his own joke.
    Katie laughed, too. She loved George’s jokes.
    But not everyone did. “That’s so corny,” Suzanne told him.
    “You mean thorny ,” George corrected her. He started laughing all over again.
    Suzanne rolled her eyes. “You know what your Mother’s Day gift should be, George?” she asked.
    “What?” George wondered.
    “A day without jokes,” Suzanne told him.
    “My mom likes my jokes,” George insisted. “Besides, we’re taking her out for brunch for Mother’s Day.”
    “Lucky you,” George’s best friend, Kevin Camilleri, told him. “My big brother Ian and I have to make breakfast for my mom and then serve it to her in bed. It was my dad’s idea.”
    “We tried that last year,” Emma Weber told Kevin. “But the twins jumped in bed with my mom and spilled her tray. She spent the rest of Mother’s Day washing her sheets and buying a new pillow because hers was soaked through with orange juice.”
    Katie could picture that. Emma W.’s twin brothers, Tyler and Timmy, were toddlers. They could be a real handful.
    “So this year, we’re just getting my mom a camera,” Emma W. continued.
    “My whole family is going to that new rock-climbing place for Mother’s Day,” Mandy Banks told the kids. “It was my mom’s choice. She’s always wanted to try it.”
    “Rock climbing sounds like a lot more fun than making toast and cereal,” Kevin said with a frown. “I wish I had your mom!”
    Katie gulped. Kevin had just done something terrible. He’d made a wish!
    “You do not wish that, Kevin!” she shouted. “You don’t wish that at all.”
    The fourth-graders all stared at her.
    “Katie Kazoo, what’s with you?” George asked, using the way-cool nickname he’d given Katie in third grade.
    Katie didn’t know how to answer that. Her friends must have thought she’d gone nuts. But Katie wasn’t nuts. She just knew that wishes didn’t always come true the way you wanted them to.
    Wishes could be bad, bad things.

Chapter 2
    The whole wish mess had started one horrible day back in third grade. That day, Katie had lost the football game for her team. Then she’d splashed mud all over her favorite jeans. But the worst part was when Katie let out a loud burp—right in front of the whole class. Talk about embarrassing!
    That night, Katie had wished she could be anyone but herself. There must have been a shooting star overhead when she made the wish, because the very next day the magic wind came.
    The magic wind was like a really powerful tornado that blew around Katie and no one else. It was so strong, it could blow her right out of her body . . . and into someone else’s !
    The first time the magic

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