1.
"February vacation soon, students! Just ten more days!" Mr. Leroy, the school principal, pointed out, after he had made his usual announcements on the intercom. "I hope all of you have wonderful plans!"
The second-graders wiggled in their seats and began to murmur.
Vacation, vacation, vacation. Even though they loved school, vacations were always exciting. "I’m going to—" Ben began.
"My family’s—" Barry Tuckerman whispered loudly.
But Mrs. Pidgeon put her finger to her mouth and reminded them that the announcements weren’t finished. "Shhh," she said.
"And we mustn’t forget," Mr. Leroy continued, "that this month we are celebrating the birthdays of two of our most important presidents. Let’s finish up this morning’s announcements by singing to them, shall we?"
Mr. Leroy started off. "Happy birthday to youuuuu," he sang. In every classroom in the Watertower Elementary School, the students joined in. Some of them sang, "Dear Abe," some sang, "Dear George," and some tried to fit in "Dear Abraham-and-George."
Gooney Bird Greene, at her desk in Mrs. Pidgeon’s classroom, sang loudly, "Dear George-Abraham-William-Henry-and-Ronald." She was still singing the list of names after the others had finished the last "Happy birthday to you." So she sang her own final line all by herself. The other children all stared at her.
But Gooney Bird didn’t mind. "I am never ever embarrassed," she had once said. And that seemed to be true. Now, after she concluded, "Happy birthday to you," she folded her hands on her desk, looked up toward the front of the room, and cheerfully waited for the school day to begin.
"Goodness," Mrs. Pidgeon said. "Who were all of those people, Gooney Bird?"
"Presidents with February birthdays," Gooney Bird explained. "I don’t think it’s fair that George Washington and Abraham Lincoln get all the attention."
"But they were important guys!" Barry Tuckerman pointed out.
"All presidents are important," Gooney Bird said.
"I don’t even know who those other ones are," Chelsea said.
"Well, let’s find out," Mrs. Pidgeon said. She began writing on the board. "George. Abraham. And who were the others, Gooney Bird?"
"William-Henry-Ronald."
Mrs. Pidgeon wrote those names on the board. "All right, class. Who was George?"
"Washington!" the children called, and Mrs. Pidgeon wrote "Washington" on the board after "George."
"Abraham?" she asked, and the children all said, "Lincoln!" So she wrote that.
"William?" she asked, but the room was silent. "Well, it could be Bill Clinton, I suppose," she said. "But President Taft was also named William, and—oh, dear. There might be lots of Williams . . ."
At her desk, Gooney Bird sighed loudly.
"Henry? Anyone know Henry?" Mrs. Pidgeon left "William" blank and held her chalk beside Henry’s name. Gooney Bird sighed again.
She left "Henry" blank. "Ronald?" Mrs. Pidgeon said. "Oh, I know that one, for sure!" She wrote "Reagan" after "Ronald." "I remember when he was president. It wasn’t that long ago. But William and Henry? Help me out here, Gooney Bird."
"Actually," Gooney Bird explained, "it wasn’t
William, comma, Henry, comma, Ronald. It was
William Henry, comma, and
Ronald. Ronald Reagan, just like you said. And William Henry Harrison.
"I kind of like when people have two first names, don’t you?" asked Gooney Bird. "It makes them somewhat special, don’t you think?"
Felicia Ann, at her desk, nodded her head. The other children frowned a bit.
"William Henry Harrison was born in February," Gooney Bird went on. "He was president of the United States, but only for one month."
"How come? Everybody gets to be president for four years! We learned that!" Malcolm was partway out of his desk. "Four years! Right, Mrs. Pidgeon? Didn’t we learn that? Four years?"
The teacher gently placed her calm-down hand on Malcolm’s shoulder. "Gooney Bird?" she said. "Want to explain?"
"He died. Moment of silence, please."
"Moment of silence?" Mrs. Pidgeon repeated with a questioning look.
"When you hear something sad and serious," Gooney Bird explained, "you should always have a moment of silence. You don’t have to close your eyes or anything."
"Well, I like the idea of an occasional moment of silence," Mrs. Pidgeon said. "Let’s do it. A moment of silence for William Henry Harrison, class, because he died after being president for only one month."
"Bummer!" said Tyrone. He began one of his raps.
"First he be elected, then he be rejected . . ." "Moment of silence, Tyrone," Gooney Bird reminded him. "Anyway, he wasn’t rejected," she pointed out. "He got sick and died."
The class was all silent for a few seconds.
"And nobody remembers him," Keiko added, sadly.
"Except Gooney Bird Greene," Nicholas pointed out.
"I remember
everything," Gooney Bird said.
"Well," Mrs. Pidgeon said, after the moment of silence had ended and she had looked around the room with a sigh, "another day in the second grade. I wish we had cleaned this mess up better yesterday before school ended."
The children all agreed. They had been working on valentines to take home to their parents. Now the valentines were done, but there was red construction paper everywhere, as well as scissors and paste, Magic Markers, and white paper that they had folded and cut into snowflakes. Tiny white scraps were all over the floor.
"Mr. Furillo will clean it up," Nicholas said. "That’s his job."
"Nope," the teacher said. "It’s our job. Let’s do it quickly. We have to get to work on our geography lesson."
"Mrs. Pidgeon?" Gooney Bird raised her hand. "I have an idea! We could do both at once!"
"Sounds good." Mrs. Pidgeon had begun to walk around the room, collecting unused sheets of construction paper. She held a stack of red papers in her hand. When she got to Gooney Bird’s desk she looked down in surprise. "My goodness!" she said. "A
blue valentine?"
Gooney Bird nodded. She looked proudly at the large blue paper heart that she had decorated with a yellow arrow, and the words i love you carefully lettered in brown. "Yes," she said. "I like to be different."
Mrs. Pidgeon looked at Gooney Bird, who today was wearing unmatched socks, knickers, and a pearl necklace over her love your mother T-shirt. "I know you do," she said fondly. "Finished with your paste?"
Gooney Bird nodded, and Mrs. Pidgeon picked up the square of paper with a white dab of dried paste on it. "Here’s what we’ll do," she announced to the class. "Put your valentines away neatly in your desks so they don’t get crumpled. I’ll come around with the wastebasket, and each of you deposit all of your used paste and your paper scraps."
"Like on an airplane!" Barry announced. "When the flight attendant comes around with a plastic trash bag!"
"Yes, a little like that," Mrs. Pidgeon said. She went to the front of the room and picked up the large wastebasket.
"I’m going on an airplane for vacation! I’m going all the way to—"
"Enough, Barry! We’ve all heard about your plans."
"Me too!" Beanie called out. "I’m going on a plane!"
Hastily Mrs. Pidgeon set the wastebasket down, went to the piano, and played a chord to quiet the class. Then she played the opening line to a familiar song, a