Cricket Magazine Fiction and Non-Fiction Stories for Children and Young Teens

MARIA

MARIA AND I had just settled into a corner of the classroom to work on our Civil War project when Mr. Sanchez told me I had a message from the front office.

OooOOOOoohs echoed around the room.

“OK, OK, pipe down, everyone,” said Mr. Sanchez.

I stood up shakily. I didn’t think I’d done anything bad. Unless you counted that time last week I’d run in the hallway. I couldn’t be called to the principal for that, could I?

Then I saw who had brought the message and knew I was safe—from the principal, at least. It was Brittany, her big brown eyes opened innocently wide. She waved a crumpled but official-looking paper at Mr. Sanchez. I knew that paper well, although I hadn’t seen it in a while. It was a message to come to the front office immediately that Brittany had gotten once. She’d kept it in her desk and used it sometimes to get out of things—like gym class or assembly.

When Mr. Sanchez turned around, she grabbed my arm and pulled me into the hallway. “I want my book back,” she hissed, from behind a tangled curtain of hair. “Right now.”

“But . . . we’re in the middle of class!” I said. “And anyway, you told me I could keep it!” Her dad had given her the book, which was about beetles. Brittany didn’t care

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Cricket Magazine Fiction and Non-Fiction Stories for Children and Young Teens

Cricket Magazine Fiction and Non-Fiction Stories for Children and Young Teens5 min read
Gifts Of Ramadan
“WAKE UP, ASEF,” my mother says. “It is time to eat suhoor.” I wonder why the sky is still dark. Then I remember. Today is the first day of the holy month of Ramadan. We eat suhoor, the morning meal, and recite the fajr prayers before sunrise. This y
Cricket Magazine Fiction and Non-Fiction Stories for Children and Young Teens7 min read
A Stele For Marcus
A DROP OF sweat trickled into the corner of Dimitry’s right eye. He blinked, but that only made it sting more. He wiped his eye against his shoulder, and the rough marble block he was carrying with Castor slipped sideways. The boys clutched it. “Care
Cricket Magazine Fiction and Non-Fiction Stories for Children and Young Teens2 min read
Favorite First Sentences
“The song from the woods first called to me on a bright June morning while I sat on the back porch swing rereading my favorite cookbook.” MIDSUMMER’S MAYHEM by Rajani LaRoccasubmitted by Iris D. via email “NEARLY EVERYONE AT THE MERRYTRAILS ORPHANAGE

Related