Philip Hall Likes Me, I Reckon Maybe Read online




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Dedication

  Philip Hall likes me. I reckon maybe. - September

  Case of the missing turkeys - December

  I never asked for no allergy - February

  The Elizabeth Lorraine Lambert & Friend Veg. Stand - April-June

  The Pretty Pennies picket - July

  The Old Rugged Cross Church picnic - August

  The calf-raising contest - September

  The turkey thieves!

  Still holding the gun, I looked back over to our house, which was as black as a coal stove’s innards. “Oh, Pa,” I said, making it sound more like a prayer than a request. “Where are you when I need you?”

  Then I saw them pulling their now-filled canvas bags toward the gate. Like a chant, I kept saying the word, “Pa ... Pa ... Pa..” But our house slept on, dark as ever.

  As a hand clicked the gate’s latch, 1 shouted, “Stay where you is!” While my own hand kept groping for the trigger. Where is that trigger?

  “What!” shouted a duet of voices.

  Finally I found it. “I said, stay where you are before I shoot you full of lead!”

  “It’s an unqualified delight to spend one’s time with the Lambert family of Pocahontas, Arkansas, and their friends.”

  —Publishers Weekly.

  “Beth Lambert is an energetic and spirited young black girl whose spunk rings true from start to finish.... It’s a fresh, humorous romp, full of the vitality of girls and boys growing up.”—School Library Journal

  PUFFIN BOOKS

  Published by the Penguin Group

  Penguin Putnam Books for Young Readers,

  345 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014, U.S.A.

  Penguin Books Ltd, 27 Wrights Lane, London W8 5TZ, England

  Penguin Books Australia Lcd, Ringwood, Victoria, Australia

  Penguin Books Canada Ltd, 10 Alcorn Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada M4V 3B2

  Penguin Books (N.Z.) Ltd, 182-190 Wairau Road, Auckland 10, New Zealand

  Penguin Books Ltd, Registered Offices: Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England

  First published in the United States of America by The Dial Press, 1974

  Published by Puffin Books,

  a member of Penguin Putnam Books for Young Readers, 1999

  Text copyright © Bette Greene, 1974

  eISBN : 978-1-101-12805-3

  Illustrations copyright © The Dial Press, 1974

  All rights reserved

  CIP IS AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST FROM THE LIBRARY OF CONGRESS.

  http://us.penguingroup.com

  For

  Jordy and Carla

  (and especially Carla

  who never, not even once,

  asked for no allergy)

  OTHER PUFFIN BOOKS YOU MAY ENJOY

  Charlie Pippin Candy Dawson Boyd

  Chevrolet Saturdays Candy Dawson Boyd

  The Friendship Mildred D. Taylor

  Get On Out of Here, Philip Hall Bette Greene

  The Gold Cadillac Mildred D. Taylor

  Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry Mildred D. Taylor

  Sidewalk Story Sharon Bell Mathis

  Philip Hall likes me. I reckon maybe.

  September

  Mama set my morning bowl of steaming grits on the flowered oilcloth. “I don’t want no daughter of mine filling up her head with that Hall boy today. You get yourself some learning, Beth.”

  I sprinkled some sugar on my grits and skimmed a spoonful from the top.

  “You hear me a-speaking to you, girl?”

  “... Yes’m. But Philip Hall is my friend and—”

  Mama shook her head like it almost wasn’t worthwhile explaining it to me. “Beth, honey, you is so smart about most things. How come the good Lord made you so dumb about Philip Hall?”

  “He didn‘t!” I said.

  “Sure enough he did,” argued Mama. “Don’t you see he only wants your company if Gordy or one of them Jones boys ain’t around and when he runs out of mischief to fall into?”

  “Now that’s not true,” I said, dropping my spoon noisily into the grits. “ ‘Cause Philip Hall likes me. I reckon maybe. He’s always inviting me over to his very own farm, now ain’t that the truth?”

  Ma pressed her hands against her wide waist. “That is the very thing I is speaking about,” she said. “He’s got you cleaning out his dairy barn-doing his work!”

  “Well, I don’t mind a bit,” I told her. “He strummed some songs on his guitar while I worked. It was nice.”

  “You and your big sister better get on out of here, girl!” said Mama, wrapping her strong, dark arms around me. “Or you both going to miss the school bus.” Her kiss made a smacking sound against my cheek. “Now get!”

  Outside, my pa was throwing slop into the pig trough from a battered tin bucket. When he saw Anne, he called out, “EuuuuuWheee! Who that coming down the road in the starched-up dress?”

  Annie smiled in that shy way she always does when she is being teased by the opposite sex. “Oh, Pa ...”

  Then Pa looked at me and asked, “Then somebody tell me who it is coming down the road in the faded jeans?”

  “I reckon it’s one of your two girl children. Want any more hints?”

  “Oh, give me another little hint,” said Pa, letting his good, strong teeth show.

  “I’m only the daughter that’s the second-best arithmetic solver, the second-best speller, and the second-best reader in Miss Johnson’s class.”

  Pa wiped the sweat from his forehead with the sleeve of his denim shirt. “That Hall boy again? Don’t go telling me he’s number-one best in everything.”

  “Everything,” I said. “Just everything.” And yet Pa’s question started me wondering something I never wondered before. Is Philip Hall number one only ‘cause I let him be? Afraid he wouldn’t like me if I were best? Shucks no! And that’s too silly to even think about.

  The wind was a-blowing up the dust on the dry dirt road that ran between our pig and poultry farm and Mr. Hall’s dairy farm. A long time ago my mama showed me what to do when the road is dry from lack of rain and the wind comes up to make matters worse. Secret is to walk along the grass at the very edge of the road. Takes longer, but at least you can get to the highway clean.

  Long after I had walked halfway, I spotted his shirt as red as dime-store lipstick. Up there where the dirt road meets up with the blacktop.

  “Hey, Philip! Hey, hey, Phil-ip!”

  He heard me because the shirt could be seen suddenly going down then up, down then up. He called out, “Run! Run! Run!” As I came closer, I could see a coffee-colored arm pointing down the road in the direction that the bus comes. “Hur-ry, Hur-ry, the bus! THE BUS!”

  “Let’s run, Annie,” I said, hugging my lunchpail and books against my chest and taking off like a turkey on Thanksgiving Eve. My sister wasn’t running with me. Well, let her miss the bus if she wants to. I ran even faster down the middle of the dusty road. Five miles to school is a heap of walking. Faster, I ran faster. Running made the dust rise higher and higher. I held my breath. But suddenly my mouth opened and I sucked in air—Ah-hm, Ahhh-hmmm-and dust.

  Philip’s arms made wide circles. “Come on, Beth. Come on. Come on!”

  I had to go on. Couldn’t disappoint him, not sweet Philip. Uhh chmm! Uhhhh chm! Made myself go. Made myself run. Uhhh hmm. Dust in my nose. My throat. Uhh uhhh!

  As he wildly waved me on he shouted from the loudest part of his voice, “BUS IS COMING! ALMOST HERE!”

  Not much farther. I was going to make it. I had—“Ohhhhh!” A speck of something struck my right eye. If only I could li
e down in the fresh grass by the side of the road, wipe the speck from my eye, and breathe country air again. But I didn’t lie down, didn’t stop. Kept going ... kept running until I reached ... reached blacktop!

  After I wiped the speck from my eye, I looked down, straight down that long, blacktopped road, but I didn’t see anything. “Where ... where’s the bus?” I asked Philip while struggling to get back my breath.

  Philip looked very serious—no, he didn’t. He was biting his lip, trying to hold onto a straight face. Suddenly his lip came unbit. “Ah ha ha ha. Did I fool you! You just a-running down that road. Ah ha ha ha!”

  “Why! Why! ... You ... you no good, low-down polecat!”

  Philip looked surprised. “Can’t you take a joke?”

  I thought about shoving him into the gully at the side of the road. “That’s not one bit a joke, Philip Hall. What that is is mean. Low-down mean!”

  “Awww, I thought you was one girl could take a joke.”

  “I can!” I said, brushing the dust off me as best I could. “Just as good as anybody.”

  Philip nodded. “For a girl, you take jokes better than anybody.” Suddenly he pointed down the road and this time the yellow bus was really on its way. He smiled a dimpled smile and I remembered why he’s the cutest boy in the J. T. Williams School.

  Mr. Barnes squeaked the bus to a stop and opened the door to let Fancy Annie first on board. When I got on, my friend Bonnie called, “Sit next to me, Beth.”

  I was just about to tell her that I had already promised to sit next to Philip Hall when I saw him slide into the seat next to Gordon. The dumb bum.

  “Hey, Phil,” said Gordon. “First thing this morning old Henry brought your invitation.”

  “Philip must be having another birthday party,” whispered Bonnie. “Reckon he’ll invite us?”

  “Philip Hall likes me,” I told her. “Most every day after my chores, I go over to his farm and he sings and just plays his guitar for me. And later this day, when old Henry gets around to our house, I reckon I’ll have my invitation too.”

  Then Bonnie, who mostly acts as though she invented talking, stopped talking. Something had to be upsetting her, and I knew what it was. “Now don’t you fret,” I told her. “Maybe Philip Hall will invite you too.”

  “But what if he doesn’t?” she asked, becoming more upset.

  “Then, in that case,” I told her, “don’t you worry none. ‘Cause you is my friend and he is my friend and I’ll just tell him to invite you ’cause you is my friend.”

  At recess I told Susan, Ginny, and Esther about the invitation that was waiting for me. They all said that they wanted one too, and I told them all not to fret. ‘Cause if they wanted to go, then I’d only have to ask Philip to invite them.

  When the last bell of the day rang, I was the first one out of the classroom and third in line for the bus. Mr. Barnes isn’t too good about waiting for kids and, anyway, Philip likes me to save him a place.

  “Hey, Philip,” I called, at the first sight of red shirt. “Over here.”

  Gordon looked at Philip as though he was clear out of his mind. “You let a girl save places for you? She your girl friend, Phil?”

  His face crinkled into a dark frown. “She’s not my girl friend. And I hate girls!”

  I climbed on the bus, without once even looking at that dumb bum who spent the whole trip back laughing with Gordon and telling him about the food they were going to eat and the games they were going to play at his birthday party. And Philip Hall is not one bit the cutest boy in school either, and that’s for sure.

  Where our dirt road meets the blacktop, Mr. Barnes brought the bus to a stop and Anne, Philip, and I jumped off. As my boy friend no more and I poked along the dirt road together, I wasn’t saying one word to him. Finally, he said something to me, “Afternoon shower dampened the road down. Ain’t one bit dusty now.”

  “Reckon I’m not going to talk to you about any damp roads or any dusty roads or any kind of roads at all.”

  Philip dimpled a smile. “Oh, you is mad, Beth Lambert. You is mad, Mad, MAD! Ain’t that right?”

  “That is right, Mister Philip best-in-the-class Hall. You all the time rather be sitting with Gordon and laughing with Gordon and telling him that I’m not your friend. And that makes me mad. Mad. Mad. MAD!”

  Philip reached up and pulled a leaf from an elm. “You is my friend all right.” ‘

  “I am ... truly?”

  Philip looked down at his shoes and nodded. “Sure. ‘Cause after you finish up the chores on your farm, I’m going to let you come visit. I’m going to let you brush down my cows.”

  “See you directly,” I called as I started running to catch up with Anne. My chores shouldn’t take long. And then probably I could go over to Philip Hall’s. Sweet Philip. I had to get him something very special for his eleventh birthday. What?

  Suddenly I knew. A pick for his guitar just like they sell at the Busy Bee Bargain Store. And with the nickel I had saved from not buying ice cream last Saturday, together with the nickel that Pa will give me this Saturday, then I’d have a whole dime to spend on a guitar pick for sweet Philip Hall.

  Mama was sitting on her porch chair, rocking away. Near her feet was the big sewing basket and in her lap was Pa’s old overalls that was getting fresh knee patches.

  “Hey, Ma, old Henry brought the mail yet?”

  She looked up from her sewing. “Mail’s on the kitchen table.”

  Behind me, I heard the screen door slam. Mama don’t like no screen door slamming. On the oilcloth-covered table was a platter of fried chicken, a pot of still warm black-eyed peas, and a catalog for mail ordering. This ain’t all the mail. Can’t be!

  I went back into the living room, which is also my brother Luther’s bedroom, and hollered through the screen door, “Ma, this ain’t all the mail ... is it?”

  She was quiet for a moment and I thought she was about to say that was all there was when, “No-o-o,” she called back, “reckon not. There’s something else on my bureau.”

  I knew it. I just knew it! But when I looked the only piece of mail I saw was a circular announcing bargain day at the Busy Bee. Maybe the invitation is underneath. Sure. My hand touched the sheet of advertisement without really moving it. I hope, I hope. I lifted the circular. And there was—nothing! Absolutely nothing.

  I tiptoed out the kitchen door, closing it without a sound. Crossed the dirt road, shortcutted through the corn-field and past the mailbox where the sign read: HALL’S DAIRY. Inside the barn Philip was sitting on a bale of hay, picking out a tune on his guitar.

  Without even looking up from his guitar strings, he said, “You better get busy, Beth. You got eight milk cows to brush down today.”

  “You didn’t send me one.” My voice sounded right next door to tears.

  Philip took notice. “What? Send you—”

  “A birthday invitation,” I said. “Sent one to Gordon, but not to me.”

  “Oh,” said Philip. “That. That’s what you mad about?”

  I nodded while tears stung at my eyes. “I was going to buy you a special present ‘cause I thought you was my friend, but you’re not my friend at all.”

  “Don’t be like that,” he said. “I didn’t invite girls, only Gordy, Bobby, and Jordan and Joshua Jones—the brave members of the Tiger Hunters’ Club. We’re the boys ain’t afraid of nothing. Not even roaring mad tigers.”

  “Well, why couldn’t you invite me too? I’m not even a little bit afraid of tigers either and you said ... this very day, you said I was your friend.”

  Philip nodded his head yes.

  “So why didn’t you invite me too?”

  “... I can’t.”

  “Well why not?”

  “Just can’t.”

  “Why not?”

  “Just can’t do it.”

  “ Why!?”

  “ ‘Cause.”

  “ ‘Cause why?”

  “ ‘Cause ... ’cause I was afraid t
hey’d call me sissy. Then they’d go ‘round saying I liked you and that you was my girl friend, stuff like that.”

  “And you the president of the Tiger Hunters?” I asked. “That the club ain’t afraid of nothing, not even roaring mad tigers?” I began to laugh.

  Philip looked frightened. “What you laughing at?”

  I only laughed some more.

  “Are you laughing at me?”

  “Reckon I is ‘cause you is funny, Funny, FUNNY, Mister Philip Hall.”

  “I’m not! Not! NOT!” shouted Philip, jumping off the bale of hay.

  “Oh, yes you is. You say you ain’t afraid of tigers. Well, I don’t know a soul ever seen a tiger, not in all of Randolph County. But you is afraid of a word, and everybody knows that words can’t bite and words can’t scratch. So you’re not a tiger hunter, Philip Hall. What you is, is a ‘fraidy cat. And that’s a whole lot worse than being a sissy.”

  The next day was Thursday and Ma said I looked sickly so she kept me home from school. And on Friday she said the same thing and kept me home again.

  On Saturday Philip had his birthday party. I saw the Tiger Hunters being driven over by Gordon’s pa in their blue pickup truck. I kept telling myself to be happy. After all, I wouldn t have to spend perfectly good ice-cream money on a stupid guitar pick for that low-down dumb bum of a polecat. But truth of the matter is, I wasn’t happy. Wasn’t happy at all.

  By noontime, Ma, Pa, my brother Luther, my sister Anne, and I had all eaten, washed, and got fancy dressed for town. At the Busy Bee, I saw Bonnie, who turned her head the moment she saw me, just as if she was mad.

  “Bonnie! Hey!”

  “I’m not about to speak to you,” she said, turning to face me. “You promised you’d get Phil to invite me to his birthday party, didn’t you? Didn’t you promise?”

  “He didn’t invite me either,” I told her.