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Authors: Emily Ecton

BOOK: Project Jackalope
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17.
Agatha Ruins Her Reputation

There was a collective gasp and stunned silence as everyone leaned forward and peered into the cage. Then the quiet murmuring began. And tittering.

Hortense stood up, bared her orange fangs, and raked her pipe cleaner antlers across the top of the cage. She looked very menacing.

Mrs. Marlowe the science teacher gave Agatha a pained look. She knew the signs of impending mental breakdown when she saw them. “Agatha, honey, that’s not a jackalope.”

Agatha rolled her eyes. “Okay, you’re right. It’s just an animal hybrid. We used the DNA from an axis deer for the traditional jackalope antler effect.”

“Agatha, honey…” Mrs. Marlowe started.

“I’ve got my notebook with my work right here. It’s all here—the whole procedure.” Agatha pulled the notebook from the night before out of her backpack. She’d even managed to get most of the bloodstains off of the cover. She opened it and held it up. It was filled with all kinds of numbers and gibberish. It looked convincing to me, but heck, a calculus notebook would’ve convinced me just as much.

Principal Turner made a mark on her clipboard. “I’m sorry, Agatha, but it’s clear that what you have here is just a rabbit with pipe cleaners on his head. It is not a jackalope. Not by any stretch of the imagination.” She turned to the other judges.

“Shall we move along?” She shooed Bitsy Perkins on to the next project and gave Mrs. Marlowe, who had taken Agatha’s notebook and was reading it carefully, a stern look.

Hortense spat at them in disgust and pooed in her cedar chips.

Principal Turner stopped momentarily in front of my planetary disaster. “Whose is this?”

I raised my hand. “Mine.”

“Pluto’s no longer a planet, son. Might want to change it before we get back to you.” They headed back to Brendan, whose hermit crab was now out of his shell and attempting to swing a tiny hammer hard enough to ring the bell at the top of a pole.

“Yeah, okay,” I muttered.

“So, you think you’re cute, do you?” Mr. Jones had my arm in a vise grip before I’d even turned back around.

I’ve used that expression “So-and-so has murder in his eyes” and I thought I knew what it looked like. Turns out, I’d never really seen it until I looked at Mr. Jones right then. We’d really played him for an idiot, and he knew it. And he was going to make us pay.

“We should’ve just been straight with you,” I said apologetically, trying not to look at the handcuffs Mr. Jones had taken out. “But we didn’t know how to tell you.”

“Twitchett isn’t an inventor, he’s a con artist. Hortense is all he ever had,” Agatha said. “She’s my bunny, and he stole her. I had some notes to make a jackalope, and Twitchett stole them. He was working some kind of online scam—I think he was trying to con some international buyers.”

I did my eye contact thing. “He never had what it takes to make an actual jackalope,” I said. Which if you think about it, was true. “And we sure don’t—we’re not even in high school yet.” I kept my eyes locked on Mr. Jones’s face. I didn’t want to see Agatha’s expression when I said that. “I don’t know if Bob and Mrs. Simmons were part of his con or whether he was conning them too, but when I came home the other night, he’d stashed Hortense in my room.”

“Besides,” Agatha said. “Even if he had done what he said, it wouldn’t have been a real jackalope anyway, just an animal hybrid. But if any rabbit has a jackalope temperament it’s Hortense, right, Hortense?” She poked a pencil between the bars of the cage and Hortense attacked it with gusto.

“And you expect me to believe this?” Mr. Jones stared into my eyes so hard that I half expected a photocopy of my brain to come out of his butt. “You’ve been running all over the city with this in your suitcase? Just an overgrown rabbit?”

He pointed a finger at Hortense, who looked offended at his tone.

“You didn’t even tell us who you were! We were just trying to get a minute to figure things out. We didn’t know who to trust.” I didn’t even try to put on the pathetic face—I was afraid one wrong move would be it for us.

“I’m not a fool.” Mr. Jones grabbed me by the shoulder and turned me around, pulling my hands behind my back. I could practically feel the steel on my wrists. “You two AND your jackalope are under—”

“Jones, you’ve got to see this.” Mr. Suit #2 hurried over and pointed to a nearby table where the judges were gathered. I gritted my teeth. Carter Oliver.

“You two don’t move,” Mr. Jones barked at us and followed Mr. Suit #2 over to the table. Naturally, me and Agatha followed them. It probably would’ve been a
good time for us to make our escape, but heck, I had to see what had just saved my hide (at least temporarily).

Carter’s table had a fish tank on it with a huge but otherwise normal-looking goldfish inside the middle of it. The fish was swimming around, doing regular goldfish things, when suddenly, without any warning, it disappeared. (Except for a little trail of nondisappearing goldfish poo. Apparently, even Carter couldn’t do everything.)

There was a collective “oooh” from the crowd gathered around the table. I rolled my eyes. Please. Like they’ve never seen a disappearing fish before.

Principal Turner put down her clipboard and leaned forward, getting so close to the tank that her nose was almost touching the glass. “Where’d he go?”

Carter Oliver smirked and snapped his fingers. The goldfish reappeared. The crowd, apparently working from a script, went with a collective “aaah.” Carter held up a remote control. “Want to see it again?”

What a suckup.

The crowd packed in tighter, but I’d seen enough. Besides, I could tell from the crowd’s lines what was happening.
Ooh
for disappearing fish,
aah
for reappearing. Terrific.

The Mr. Suit types had stopped watching and were all talking into their cuffs or on their earphone thingies. They were totally ignoring us. Which was fine by me, but still. Come on. Fake jackalope over here.

Agatha came up to me, holding Hortense’s headband. “Want to be a jackalope?” She held it out to me.

“No thanks. I don’t feel like going on the run again any time soon.”

Agatha grinned. I tried to smile back, but I didn’t want to get my hopes up. We weren’t in the clear yet. “And Jack?”

“In Hortense’s cage at home wearing a turban on his head. We’re good.”

I nodded and turned back to the Carter Show.

Carter had apparently finished his presentation, because the crowd around the table burst into a huge
round of applause. I threw up in my mouth a little. I think Agatha ground a couple of her back teeth into dust.

Guess we didn’t need to wonder who would take the big prize this year. I felt pretty bad for Dewey Childress, who was up for judging next. I don’t care how hopped-up on sugar water his rats were getting—that project was toast.

Mrs. Marlowe didn’t even bother to check out the hopped-up rats, though. She pushed her way out of the crowd and pulled Agatha aside.

“Your project isn’t going to win, Agatha,” she said apologetically. Well, duh. And yeah, I was eavesdropping. Big deal. “But I have to say, I’m very impressed with your calculations here.” She handed Agatha back her notebook.

“You are?” Agatha stopped trying to incinerate Carter’s hair with her eyes and perked up a little.

“I know you weren’t able to test your theories in the lab, but there is some solid reasoning here. I almost believe it would have worked!” Mrs. Marlowe laughed.

“Thanks!” Agatha looked much more cheery.

“Of course it would be completely unethical and possibly illegal to test it, so we’ll never be sure. But come talk to me before school tomorrow. We have some science scholarship programs, you know.” She patted Agatha on the shoulder. “And better luck next year.”

Mrs. Marlowe turned to leave and gave me a weak smile. “Nice…spray painting.”

She rejoined the other judges just in time to see Dewey’s rat guzzling what looked like Karo syrup.

“You’re sure the boy didn’t go anywhere but the craft store last night?” The voice was coming from somewhere over my shoulder. I did the bend-down-and-pretend-I’m-tying-my-shoe move and glanced back. It was Mr. Jones and Mr. Suit #2. They looked like they were having some kind of secret meeting. Naturally, I scooched closer.

Mr. Jones was frowning.

Mr. Suit #2 checked his notebook. “Home and back. No outside visitors, no other stops. And we swept the apartment earlier. No suspicious activity.”

“And the girl?”

“Didn’t leave the building until this morning. No visitors. Apartment swept earlier. And there was nothing in the Simmons place.”

Mr. Jones nodded thoughtfully. “Have they apprehended Twitchett yet?” He was watching Carter through narrowed eyes.

Mr. Suit #2 shook his head. “He gave them the slip in Caracas. But there’s still time. We’ll get him. So Project Jackalope?”

“Project Jackalope is dead. Mark it down as a fraudulent claim,” Mr. Jones said. “Now get on the phone with Washington. I want clearance for Project Goldfish and I want it now.”

“Got it.” Mr. Suit #2 hurried out of the gym as Mr. Jones strolled casually up to Carter.

“So, son, why don’t we have a little conversation? Tell me about your project. I have quite a proposal for you.”

From my crouch, I watched as Mr. Jones took Carter aside. It didn’t take a brain surgeon to know where that was headed. I almost felt sorry for Carter.
Or at least I would’ve, if he hadn’t been such a repulsive egomaniac.

I went back over to Agatha, who was still clutching her notebook and wearing her pipe cleaner antlers, and nudged her in the side.

“Did you hear that?”

“Hear what?”

“Project Jackalope is officially closed.”

We high-fived as Principal Turner pinned a blue ribbon on Carter’s disappearing fish.

EPILOGUE
I Make a New Friend

So I got a C- on my project, big surprise. It would’ve been a B-, except I included Pluto, which everybody knows isn’t a planet anymore. (Thanks, Dad.)

Carter’s not in school anymore, at least not here. He came in the day after the science fair bragging about some big government project he was going to be a part of, and then he never showed up again. The cheerleading squad wore black armbands at the next game. Big loss. I’m crushed.

I didn’t hear from Mr. Jones or the rest of the Suits either, which kind of surprised me. Guess they had better things to do, what with Project Goldfish and the whole search for Twitchett. (Last I heard, he
was still on the run somewhere in Venezuela.) I’m not complaining, though.

People at school kept clear of me, at least for a little while. Mostly because they were afraid my drug overlord boss might swoop in and shoot it out with me in the bus parking lot. But then I think it dawned on them that a hardened criminal probably wouldn’t be such a wuss at volleyball.

It gave me some time to do some heavy-duty thinking, though, mostly about how Jack and Agatha had stuck by me. Heck, Clint Warburton didn’t even stick by me when I got caught shooting spitballs in health class. It doesn’t take a brainiac to figure out how fast he would’ve caved with those Suit guys on his tail. Not your definition of an awesome friend. (Well, not mine, anyway.)

And yeah, fine, I’ve got a soft spot for a jackalope. Big deal, right? So I figured, what the hell? The next day I saved a spot for Agatha at lunch. And I’ve gone over to her place for some quality Jack time. Heck, I went so wacky that I even visited Killer at Keisha’s house. It’s not like it’s his fault he moved out—he can’t help it if he’s a big sack of
dander who lives in a pink plastic mansion. Me and Keisha even figured out how to wire his hot pink Corvette with a remote, and I swear that rat thinks he’s Dale Earnhardt. (Hello, next year’s science fair.)

Mrs. Marlowe helped save Agatha’s rep, too, which helped nip any lunchtime teasing in the bud. Everybody’d heard about Agatha’s lame project, but once Mrs. Marlowe took a class period to explain that Hortense was a stand-in because the real deal would’ve gotten Agatha arrested, they pretty much got over it. Nick Hurley’s even started hanging out and stealing her chips at lunch. (And I know for a fact corn chips make him gag.)

We had a hard time keeping Jack secret at first, even with Hortense protecting him. (Apparently Agatha’s mom hates Hortense and keeps clear of her cage at all times.) But once he shed his antlers it got a lot easier. According to Agatha, it’s a seasonal thing. (Either that, or we just got a defective jackalope.) We told Agatha’s mom that Hortense had spontaneously reproduced, and her mom actually bought it. I know, it makes no sense, but you
have to hear Agatha explain it. She made it sound cool and believable, like spontaneous human combustion.

Which brings me to the current problem. I think I should probably take this opportunity to apologize to the entire world for the unleashing of Agatha. If I hadn’t come up with that idea about the science fair, Mrs. Marlowe never would’ve seen Agatha’s notebook, and never would’ve convinced Agatha’s mom that Agatha has a future in science. And if she hadn’t done that, Agatha wouldn’t have been allowed to start up her scientific research again.

Which means I wouldn’t be sitting here with the world’s only Batterfly sticking its proboscis into my ear. And yes, I said Batterfly—a one-of-a-kind bat/butterfly hybrid, courtesy of Agatha. It was a birthday present. Happy birthday to me.

So I’ll just say it one last time, for the record. I’m sorry. Believe me. I’m sorry.

Author’s Note

• This is a fictionalized portrayal, but the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, or DARPA, is a real agency in the United States Department of Defense.

• It really is working to develop cyborg moths, known as Hybrid Insect Micro-Electro-Mechanical Systems, or HI-MEMS.

• It really is developing one-way-invisible self-healing shoot-through shields as part of the “Asymmetric Materials for the Urban Battlespace” program.

• It really is working on ultrasound mind control helmets for soldiers.

• It really is developing the Energetically Autonomous Tactical Robot, or EATR, a robot that powers itself by consuming organic biomass—although the developers insist that, contrary to early news reports, EATR will feed on organic matter from plants, not humans.

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