The Heinie Prize

Free The Heinie Prize by R.L. Stine

Book: The Heinie Prize by R.L. Stine Read Free Book Online
Authors: R.L. Stine
Chapter 1
F OAM F IGHT !
    It was a hot, sunny day. The green grass gleamed under a clear blue sky. Birds twittered in the rotten apple trees.
    My pals Feenman and Crench were walking across the Great Lawn with me. We had our cans of Foamy Root Beer raised high. And we were toasting one another and singing the Official Rotten School Song:
    â€œRah rah Rotten School!
    I’d rather be in Rotten School—
    Than NOT in school!”
    I have to admit it. Those tender words always bring tears to my eyes.
    I’m Bernie Bridges, and I love my Rotten School. You probably go home every day after school. But our school is a boarding school, and we live here.
    Why do I love it so much?
    If only I weren’t so modest, I’d tell you that I’m the KING here! I’d tell you that it’s my PURE GENIUS that makes me the king.
    Maybe you’ve heard other people say this about me. Of course, I’d never say it about myself.
    â€œRah rah Rotten School!”
    We sang and slapped our root beer cans together. Feenman, Crench, and I love Foamy Root Beer. You know their slogan—“It’s So Foamy, It Stays on Your Face for Hours!”
    We tilted the cans to our mouths and took long drinks. Then we wiped the foam off our faces and did the Official Rotten School Burp.
    Feenman holds the school record for the Three-Minute Burp. Is he proud of it? Does a weasel have feathers?
    Crench is a talented burpsman, too. Every timeour teacher, Mrs. Heinie, turns her back, Crench lets out loud, disgusting belches—until the instant she turns around again.

    So far, she hasn’t caught him once.
    Hey, my guys are talented !
    â€œRah rah Rotten School!”
    I turned and saw that Feenman had a devilish look on his face. He shook his root beer can and sprayed foam down the front of Crench’s school vest.
    â€œHey! Why’d you do that?” Crench screamed.
    Feenman shrugged. “No reason.”
    Crench shook his soda can and shot a spray at Feenman. But Feenman ducked, and I got a Foamy Root Beer shower.
    â€œWhoa—!” I shook my soda and let Crench have it in the face.
    In a few seconds all three of us were soaked . We were wrestling on the ground, licking the foam off one another.
    â€œDudes! Stop!” I shouted, wiping root beer foam from my hair.
    I saw my archenemy walking toward us. Thatspoiled, rich kid, Sherman Oaks. And what was that shiny thing he was carrying?
    I jumped to my feet and hurried over to check it out.
    And that’s when all the fuss about the Heinie Prize began.

Chapter 2
W HO W ILL W IN THE H EINIE ?
    Sherman Oaks is tall and blond, has crinkly, blue eyes, and a stuck-up expression. Some guys told me he has a heart tattoo on his butt with the words I’M RICH.
    But we don’t know for sure. He doesn’t shower with the rest of us after gym class. He pays a kid to shower for him.
    I wiped foam off my face. My hair was sticky from the root beer, and my sneakers squished as I walked.
    â€œWhat’s Sherman carrying?” Crench asked.
    â€œLooks like some kind of display case from a store,” I said.
    â€œYou think he’s gonna put his money on display?” Feenman asked.
    â€œHey, dudes,” Sherman greeted us with a smile. He held the glass case in front of him with both hands.
    â€œWhat’s that?” I asked, pointing.
    â€œIt’s a solid platinum display case,” he said. “My parents paid two thousand dollars for it. They buy me anything I want because they want me to like them.”
    â€œBut—what’s it for?” I asked.
    Sherman grinned. I had to shield my eyes from the bright glow of his teeth. “It’s to display the Heinie Prize when I win it,” he said.
    I stared at Feenman and Crench. “Huh? The Heinie Prize?”
    Sherman nodded. “Mrs. Heinie awards a silver trophy every year to the Most Outstanding Fourth Grader.”
    â€œSherman, you’d better give me the

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