muttered.
âToo bad, then.â Eric turned to go.
The lump in his throat made Jason cough. âThereâs just no way,â he said.
THREE
Jason marched over to Abbyâs the next day.
He told her his plan to buy Ericâs mountain bike. And he told her about Ericâs dealâthe rotten one.
Abby shook her head. âSounds like you need some quick money. I know just the thingâa recycling project.â
âA what?â Jason asked.
âYou know, a recycling project. Care for the earth and pick up some extra cash at the same time. Iâll call the Cul-de-sac Kids to help,â she said.
âYa-hoo!â shouted Jason. âWhen do we start?â
Abby sat on the porch step. âTomorrowâs Saturday. Meet me in front of my house at eight.â
âGotcha.â Jason raced home to count the money in his box. One more time.
Saturday morning, Jason met Abby in front of her house.
Dee Dee Winters and Abbyâs little sister, Carly, pulled wagons. Stacy Henry wore her motherâs garden gloves.
Dunkum Mifflin showed up with armloads of trash bags. Abby and Carlyâs Korean brothers, Shawn and Jimmy, helped carry the bags.
Jason smiled. He felt good having so many friends. Cul-de-sac Kid friends!
Only Eric was missing.
But Jason didnât care. Heâd show Eric all about good deals. Heâd have the moneysoon. Maybe even today!
âIf you buy Ericâs mountain bike, Iâll race you,â Dee Dee teased.
âWe sure will!â Carly piped up.
Jason pushed up his glasses. He had more important things on his mind than bike races. At least for now.
Dunkum whistled with his fingers. âWeâll stop at every house in the cul-de-sac. Then all the houses up the street from the school. Abby, Stacy, and I will gather newspapers. Carly and Dee Dee can pull the glass bottles in the wagons. Jason, you, Shawn, and Jimmy can collect aluminum cans.â Dunkum gave Jason a handful of heavy-duty trash bags. âWeâll split the money evenly,â he said.
âSuper good,â Jason said.
Abby grinned. âLetâs go to Ericâs house first,â she suggested.
âHoo-ray!â the kids agreed.
âThis is a fun way to earn money,â Dee Dee said.
Carly hurried to catch up with Dee Dee.
Shawn and Jimmy Hunter chattered in Korean.
Abby, Stacy and Dunkum told jokes.
Jason jigged and jived.
By lunchtime, the kids had gathered a mountain of recyclable items. Enough to fill Abbyâs fatherâs van.
Jason, Abby, and Dunkum rode along to the recycling center.
On the way back, Jason counted his share of the money. Fifteen dollars and forty-eight cents worth of work.
Yes! He ran across the street to Ericâs.
No one was home.
Phooey , he thought.
Eager to buy the bike, Jason darted home. He went to his room and counted all his money. For the last time.
Jason wanted to dance. There was plenty of money to buy Ericâs bike!
At lunch, he ate fish and salad without fussing. But he nearly choked on the garbanzo beans. He excused himself every few minutes to see if Eric was home yet.
His mom went to the kitchen for more herbal tea.
His dad reached for the TV remote and turned on The Weather Channel.
Quickly, Jason offered his last garbanzo bean to Muffle. The puppy chomped it right down.
Ya-hoo!
Jason didnât bother to excuse himself from the table. He hurried off to his room.
There he rooted through his junk drawer. Gotta have some strawberry bubble gum, he thought. Gotta, gotta!
Just then he heard Ericâs grandpa drive up.
âYes!â He grabbed his money and slammed the drawer. The bubble gum would just have to wait. Again.
Ericâs grandpa was pulling into the garagewhen Jason arrived. Jason waited for Eric and his grandpa to get out of the car.
âIâve got the money,â Jason shouted, waving it in Ericâs face. âEven the extra five bucks!â
Eric made a