dark hair stuck out on either side of his baseball cap. The peak of the cap was extra long, so long it made the man look like an anteater. Jenny thought maybe it was one of those trick hats with the hair glued onto it, and when the man took it off, the hair would come with it. If that was the case, she hoped sheâd be around.
âIâm Norm Dubie, the director,â the man said. âCan I help you?â
Their father introduced himself. âThese are my daughters, Mary and Jenny,â he said. âJenny had a call last night from someone who said sheâd been chosen as an extra to skate in your movie today. Iâm here to make sure everythingâs on the up-and-up.â
Mary and Jenny cringed, thinking their father shouldnât have said that. But Norm Dubie said, âGood for you. More parents should be more careful about what their kids do, where they go. Annaââhe hailed a thin girl walking by carrying a clipboardââhave we got Jenny Chisholm on our list for todayâs filming?â
âWe do,â said Anna, checking her list. âAnd weâre almost ready to start. Got a thick sweater, Jenny, and some earmuffs? Itâs gonna be cold in there.â Anna grinned at them, and Jenny nodded.
âI like your hair,â Norm Dubie told Jenny. Her hair had grown since sheâd hacked it off, and now it stuck straight up and out in every direction.
âYou look weird, like your fingerâs stuck in a light socket,â Mary had told her only this morning. But Jenny had decided to let her hair grow so she could have braids.
âItâs splendid,â Norm Dubie said. âYour basic American gamine is what you are, Jenny. Are we on schedule?â he asked Anna. She said, âAre we ever?â and he looked glum.
âWeâll take good care of her, Mr. Chisholm,â Norm Dubie told their father. âNever fear.â Then, to Jennyâs delight, he removed his peaked hat and scratched the top of his head, which was very bald. But the hair was all his.
âOh, hello, Mr. Chisholm!â Tina and Susan churned up, breathing hard. âGuess whoâs here! Complete with skates! Guess!â
âScott Borkowski,â Jenny guessed.
Tina looked sour. Sue stuck out her tongue. âTurkey. Think youâre so much just because youâre an extra.â
âListen, girls, I have to be off,â their father said. âBehave yourselves and come right home when this is over, will you? I donât know when your mother will show upâmaybe not until tomorrowâbut Iâd like you there anyway. Be good,â and he bussed them both on the cheek and left.
âItâs a good thing my father was in a hurry,â Mary said, rolling her eyes. âHe mightâve punched Scott Borkowski out. He was so mad last night he almost called up Scott Borkowskiâs parents, but we talked him out of it.â
âMary,â Jenny said, but Mary had Sue and Tina on tenterhooks and wanted to keep them there.
âMy father practically had steam coming out of his ears, he was so mad when he got a load of the empty beer cans. He nearly blew his cork. I never saw him so mad. He was just about to call up our grandmother, to ask if we could stay with her, when the telephone rang.â Maryâs timing was perfect. She stopped talking, leaving Sue and Tina with their mouths hanging open.
âSo what happened?â Sue asked, running her tongue over her lips, almost panting.
âWe were saved by the bell, you might say.â Mary tossed her hair in an expert manner, adjusting her black velvet ribbon. âIt was our mother saying she was coming home.â
âHow come sheâs coming home so soon?â Tina asked.
âItâs not so soon. Sheâs been gone for ages,â said Sue.
âShe has not. Sheâs only been gone for eighteen days,â Jenny snapped.
âHow come they picked you
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