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Authors: Laura Dower

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“Yeah, how’s it going, Finnster!” Chet said, making fun of Hart’s nickname for Madison.

They rushed up behind Madison, but she just made a face at them and looked in the other direction. Finnster was a name her secret crush, Hart Jones, used. But now that Fiona’s twin brother, Chet, started calling her that name, it sounded a little different.

Madison tried opening her locker, but she couldn’t remember the combination.

She watched as Hart and Chet walked away down the hall.

What was her code?

Madison pulled on the lock and tried another set of numbers. But that didn’t open it, either.

Brrrrrriing.

The first set of bells rang. She had to dash. The books would have to wait. Madison took off for Mr. Danehy’s room, still trying to remember the numbers that would open her locker. Why was she forgetting everything these days?

Luckily there were quite a few kids who hadn’t yet made it into the classroom, so Madison entered the room without anyone noticing. Mr. Danehy wasn’t even there yet. Madison sat down at her assigned seat right next to her lab partner, Poison Ivy.

“Nice nails,” Ivy mumbled. She sounded like she had a little cold.

Madison held out one hand to admire them. “Yeah, it’s a cool color.”

Ivy held up her own hand. She had the exact same color on her nails; only her nails were longer and more manicured than Madison’s.

“Ahhh … ahhhh …” Ivy started to sniffle, and Madison handed her a tissue from her book bag.

“Choooooo!” Ivy exploded in a giant sneeze.

“Nice job, Ivy!” Chet yelled from across the room. “We felt that one all the way over here.”

Ivy wiped her nose and shook her head. “Dork.”

“I know you are, but what am I?” Chet shot back.

Ivy just rolled her eyes and looked over at Madison. “Can I have another tissue? Thanks.”

Chet practiced being annoying, Madison was sure of that. She knew what a pest he was because Fiona was always complaining about him. But in science class he was the absolute
worst.
Chet’s favorite
annoying
thing to do was imitate their teacher, Mr. Danehy. He put on Mr. Danehy’s strange accent that no one understood but everyone joked about.

“Today weeee will beeee studying the life cycle of zeeee beee!” Chet announced, standing in front of Mr. Danehy’s desk.

Everyone burst into laughter.

“Do us all a favor and sit down,” Ivy yelled.

Madison grinned. For the first time in a long time, she was totally on Ivy’s side.

“Yeah, Chet. Quit acting like a moron,” one of Ivy’s drones, Rose Snyder, said from a row behind them.

“Excuse me?” Chet said, laughing himself. “I’m not the one who just sprayed snot all over the room.”

Ivy stood up. “Why don’t you just stop?” she said. “Quit acting like a jerk.”

Chet scoffed at both of them. “Girls are the jerks.”

“Yeah!” another boy yelled.

Even Hart started laughing, which Madison couldn’t believe. Most of the girls in the room booed. It was chaos as girls left their desks to gather on one side of the room and boys gathered on the other side. A kind of war had been declared when everyone least expected it. Everyone was
yelling.

“What is all this ruckus about?” Mr. Danehy said as he strolled into the classroom later than usual. He slammed his briefcase onto his desk and clapped wildly. “What is going on?”

Chet dashed over to his chair. Everyone else hushed up. They all sat down close to where they’d been standing.

“I SAID … what is all this ruckus about? Does someone want to help me out here? Ms. Snyder? You were one of the girls booing. What is going on? Do you think that you can just do whatever you like when I am not in the room?”

Rose shrank into her new chair. “No, Mr. Danehy,” she said.

Ivy raised her hand from the back of the room. “We were just—”

“ENOUGH!” Mr. Danehy yelled. He yanked a stack of papers out of his briefcase and handed it to two kids in the front row. “Take one and pass it along.”

Madison glanced around. She didn’t know what to do. Her plan to gently pass the late permission slip to Mr. Danehy had been foiled by this spontaneous classroom war.

Ivy passed Madison her copy of the trip instructions sheet. Written in bold across the top was a simple heading.

SCIENCE TRIP TO FAR HILLS NATURE TRAILS:

Wednesday, March 28

Madison read down the sheet for information.

Luckily she’d read most of the textbook chapters on earth science and animals that covered what they’d be seeing at the nature center. Unluckily the list of things they had to see and record was way longer than she’d expected. This field trip was going to be hard work.

Places to Visit:

1. Field habitat

2. Forest habitat

3. Duck pond

4. Butterfly zone

5. Apiary

“Now, I want you to read this very carefully, students,” Mr. Danehy explained. “What I have organized here is a little friendly competition. When we go to the nature center, I would like two teams to gather as much information as possible about the animals and natural life in all of the places I’ve listed here. You will find more specific questions at the bottom of your sheet.”

Madison flipped the paper over. He had questions and then questions about those questions. This would take
forever
to complete.

Mr. Danehy continued. “The two teams will bring their results back to class for an oral presentation and debate in class. Is that clear?”

Chet had to speak. “What teams are you talking about, Mr. Danehy?” he asked. “We don’t have teams.”

Mr. Danehy paused and leaned forward against his desk. “Quite right,” he said, thinking. “No teams
yet.
” He raised his arms. “What’s easiest? How about this side of the room will compete against this side of the room? How’s that?”

The kids glanced around at one another.

Didn’t he notice that one side was only girls?

And the other side was only boys?

“Mr. Danehy,” a girl from the front said softly. “Do you think that’s a fair way to split up the room?”

“Yeah!” Chet yelled.

“What are you talking about? It couldn’t be more equal. There are exactly the same numbers of seats on each side.” He counted them out loud. “Numbers here are very fair. And scientific.”

Everyone sighed. Sometimes Mr. Danehy noticed little details and forgot to notice big ones. And once he made up his mind, there was no changing it. He thought he was being fair.

But without realizing it, he’d just drawn battle lines for a battle of the sexes.

“Well, that sounds like discrimination,” Madison’s school friend Lindsay Frost said in the lunchroom. Madison explained the story of science to everyone seated at the orange table in the cafeteria.

“Discrimination? What is that, exactly?” Aimee asked.

“Picking one group over another,” Lindsay explained. “But
unfairly.

Fiona piped up. She shared a far-out story about an elementary school teacher she had in California. He got into trouble because the school said he picked on girls more than boys during class. Parents thought he played favorites.

“All teachers have favorites,” Madison said. “I know mine do.”

“You are so right,” Lindsay said.

“I don’t mind it when it’s me, of course …” Aimee added, chuckling under her breath.

The whole table laughed.

“But Mr. Danehy is different. He isn’t discriminating or whatever you call it. He doesn’t think that way,” Madison explained. “I still don’t think he even noticed that one side was girls and the other was boys. He just counted heads. He’s scientific about
everything.

“Still,” Aimee said, drinking from a juice box, “the whole setup is just freaky. It’s like the Dark Ages or something. How could Mr. Danehy not notice?”

“I think it’s funny,” Madison said. “The boys in our class
are
total geeks. And now we have the chance to make Chet eat his words. No offense, Fiona. I know he’s your twin brother and all, but he is such …”

“A PAIN!” Fiona laughed. “I’d like a chance to show up my brother, too.”

During the course of their lunchroom conversation, Madison discovered some other surprising news. Mr. Danehy’s science class wasn’t only the one group in the entire seventh grade that matched boys versus girls. They were also the only class to have a mile-long list of things to explore, the only class that had a list of questions to answer, and the only class that had to do a presentation after the trip was over.

“The whole thing is just wicked unfair,” Fiona said. She pushed her lunch tray away. “You have to win that challenge, Maddie.”

Ivy Daly strolled by, followed by her drones, Rose and Joanie.

“Hey, Madison,” Ivy called out.

Madison smiled. “Hey,” she said.

“See you around,” Ivy said, and walked past the group.

“What was
that?
” Aimee said, faking shock. “Did you just make nice with the enemy?”

“No,” Madison said. “She only said hello because we’re science partners. Enemy status will return to normal after the science project is over. You watch. If it’s boys versus girls, I have to make a truce with Ivy. We’re both girls, so we’re on the same side.”

“No,
you’re
a girl and she’s …” Lindsay’s voice trailed off. “She’s a weirdo.”

Fiona giggled.

“Maddie, you didn’t even tell me if Mr. Danehy accepted your permission slip today,” Aimee said.

“Yes,” Madison said. “Of course he was a big grouch after what happened, but he said I could go. He didn’t even notice that it had dried gum on it.”

Aimee let out a giant “HA!”

“Hey, how are we all supposed to go on the same trip and have fun when we all have different assignments?” Fiona asked. She had a spaced-out look on her face.

Lindsay agreed. “Does that mean we can’t go around together or be bus partners?”

“Oh-em-gee, I didn’t think of that!” Aimee said. “We have to be bus buddies.”

Fiona laughed. “You sound like you’re in third grade. Aim!”

Madison laughed, too. “Will you be my bus buddy, Aimee?” she teased.

Aimee stood up with her lunch tray. “You guys are cruel,” she said. “I’m SERIOUS! You ARE!”

Within moments, the four friends were laughing and talking at the same time. They would do whatever they could to beat the boys, and be bus buddies.

On the way out of the cafeteria, Madison, Aimee, Fiona, and Lindsay almost plowed into Egg and his pal Drew.

“Hey, you guys,” Drew said.

Egg grunted in their direction, too. “Hey, guys.”

The four girls looked at each other.

Lindsay cracked a smile. “We’re not guys,” she said.

“We’re
girls,
” Aimee blurted, and took off down the hall.

“What’s that supposed to mean?” Egg yelled.

Fiona smiled coyly. “Sorry, Egg,” she said, starting to explain.

Madison grabbed her arm to stop her from saying anything more. “Look, we gotta fly,” Madison said, tugging Fiona away from the boys.

Fiona smiled again. Egg was scratching his head with bewilderment.

“They’re just wacko,” Egg said to Drew.

Drew shrugged. “I guess.”

“Later for them,” Egg added.

Drew nodded.

But when Madison glanced around, she saw Egg watching Fiona all the way down the hall.

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About the Author

Author Laura Dower has a lot in common with Madison Finn: They’re both only children and they both love dogs, the color orange, and books! Laura has written more than ninety kids’ books to date, including twenty-five in the series From the Files of Madison Finn. Her other books include the new Palace Puppies series and
For Girls Only
, a guide to girl stuff. When she’s not writing, Laura loves to garden, sing (loudly), and volunteer as a scout leader for her daughter and two sons. She and her family live in New York. Want to be keypals? Drop her a note at
www.lauradower.com.

All rights reserved, including without limitation the right to reproduce this ebook or any portion thereof in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, events, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Text copyright © 2002 by Laura Dower

Cover design by Connie Gabbert

978-1-4804-2257-5

This edition published in 2013 by Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.

345 Hudson Street

New York, NY 10014

www.openroadmedia.com

FROM THE FILES OF
MADISON FINN

FROM OPEN ROAD MEDIA

Available wherever ebooks are sold

BOOK: Lost and Found
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