Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp
The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp
The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp
Ebook260 pages3 hours

The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

“Librarians often say that every book is not for every child, but The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp is” (The New York Times). Meet Bingo and J’miah, raccoon brothers on a mission to save Sugar Man Swamp in this rollicking tale and National Book Award Finalist from Newbery Honoree Kathi Appelt.

Raccoon brothers Bingo and J’miah are the newest recruits of the Official Sugar Man Swamp Scouts. The opportunity to serve the Sugar Man—the massive creature who delights in delicious sugar cane and magnanimously rules over the swamp—is an honor, and also a big responsibility, since the rest of the swamp critters rely heavily on the intel of these hardworking Scouts.

Twelve-year-old Chap Brayburn is not a member of any such organization. But he loves the swamp something fierce, and he’ll do anything to help protect it.

And help is surely needed, because world-class alligator wrestler Jaeger Stitch wants to turn Sugar Man swamp into an Alligator World Wrestling Arena and Theme Park, and the troubles don’t end there. There is also a gang of wild feral hogs on the march, headed straight toward them all.

The Scouts are ready. All they have to do is wake up the Sugar Man. Problem is, no one’s been able to wake that fellow up in a decade or four…

Newbery Honoree and Kathi Appelt’s story of care and conservation has received five starred reviews, was selected as a National Book Award finalist, and is funny as all get out and ripe for reading aloud.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateJul 23, 2013
ISBN9781442481213
Author

Kathi Appelt

Kathi Appelt is the author of the Newbery Honoree, National Book Award finalist, and bestselling The Underneath as well as the National Book Award finalist The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp, Maybe a Fox (with Alison McGhee), Keeper, and many picture books including Counting Crows and Max Attacks. She has two grown children and lives in College Station, Texas, with her husband. Visit her at KathiAppelt.com.

Read more from Kathi Appelt

Related to The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp

Related ebooks

Children's For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp

Rating: 4.148809523809524 out of 5 stars
4/5

84 ratings17 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    It was with much trepidation that I picked up this novel. Kathi Appelt’s The Underneath made me ugly-cry and left me depressed and heart-sore (although it is an excellent book for that very reason) and I was not eager to engage in a book that would cause emotions again. However, I was pleasantly surprised. Told with a folk-tale vibe, along with exclamations and onomatopoeia and funny little quips, this story follows two raccoons who have the illustrations job of being Scouts for the Sugar Man. The Sugar Man rules the swamp, a creature of lore and legend, who guards the swamp and enjoys the particular sugarcane that grows in the damp low soil. When the swamp is threated by unscrupulous land developers, the scouts, along with unintended help by a local boy, search for the Sugar Man. The adventure, the character growth, the well-drawn atmosphere of the swamp, the real trouble the characters find themselves facing, all create a story fun to read for children. This book would be particularly suited to reading aloud, for all the fun works and exclamations it includes. Recommend for mid-late elementary children and older, and worth reading for adults as well.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Great audiobook read with Lyle Lovett as narrator. I have difficulty deciding what grade level this book is for, I would place at grades 3-6, a lot of sophisticated vocabulary. Kids might need to read with a dictionary near by. Which isn't a bad thing.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Delightful teen read. A good message about protecting the earth , its animals and natural resources.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Absolutely delightful, masterful storytelling.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Love, love, love. Great fun in Texas bayou country with raccoons (the scouts of the title); feral hogs Clydine & Buzzy and their 15 hungry offspring; a lost DeSoto; and a mythical creature, second cousin to Sasquatch, whose familiar is a crotalus horridus giganticus ("look it up") named Gertrude. There are plans afoot to turn the swampland paradise into a theme park featuring the world's greatest alligator wrestler, and it's up to a 12-year-old boy and our true-blue scouts to put a stop to it. Delightful. I listened to the audio book read by Lyle Lovett---he's really good at animal sounds. For the 8-12 crowd, according to the jacket, but it's one of those stories that's too good to leave to the kids. Appelt has a lot of fun twisting common phrases, song titles, etc., and using them casually in context.Review written in September, 2013
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    What a fun book! There's double trouble in the swamp - a marauding horde of wild pigs and an unscrupulous landowner who wants to turn the swamp into a gator-wrestling tourist attraction. Appelt has the southern idioms down pat and Lyle Lovett's reading was a treat to listen to. I would highly recommend this to kids who enjoy animal stories and to parents or teachers who are looking for a fun read-aloud.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    so cute
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Narrated by Lyle Lovett. Lovett brings a soothing, avuncular tone to this story about a couple of raccon scouts keeping eye on the swamp for the mythical Sugar Man, the greedy developer whose plans will upset the swamp's ecological balance, and 12-year-old Chap who has come to love the swamp thanks to his late grandfather.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I listened to the audiobook version of this novel and thoroughly enjoyed Lyle Lovett's narration. Kathy Appelt has a knack for creating southern folklore that sounds authentic and feels as old as the swamp where her story is set. In the tradition of oral storytelling, the True Blue Scouts has it all - the narrative voice, the vernacular, unique characters, and a legendary location.

    I am almost afraid now to read the book because I enjoyed the audio experience so much! Will I find the short chapters distracting when I actually see them on the page? Will the pacing feel too slow, or choppy as more characters are introduced? Future reading experience aside, here is a story that's a delight to hear. Kathy Appelt definitely has an ear for language. She skillfully weaves the individual concerns of the humans and swamp creatures into a captivating tale of fealty, protection and fried sugar pie.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    children's fiction/fantasy; racoons/animals. Old Bayou swamp story that begs to be read aloud (helpful if you know something about French pronunciation).
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I knew about two chapters in that I didn't want to rush through this. I wanted to savor Appelt's lyrical words, her carefully constructed eco-plot. The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp follows in the footsteps of all great American folklore with memorable characters and folksy language. And who doesn't love swamp stories? A perfect setting! So deserving of all the accolades it is receiving!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This was a charming book. The quirky chain of events in the story were masterfully intertwined. I think much of the humor and some references in the book will go over the heads of younger readers, but it was entertaining and fun.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This is the third book my daughter and I have read this summer.We completely fell in love with "Sugar Man" and all of its characters. I so want Ms. Appelt to write more books with Bingo, J'Miah, Chap, the Sugar Man, and yes, the DeSoto too. Each character was strongly and individually created. They each had a very unique voice which allowed us to completely immerse ourselves in the story.The plot was interesting and fast moving. There were several plot lines that presented in alternating (and often very short ) chapters. As the story progressed, the plot lines intertwined, separated, and ended with each line connected to all the other lines in a very satisfactory way.I read this book out loud to my daughter which maximized our enjoyment of the story. As I mentioned above, the characters were very strongly developed and each had an unique voice. This made it a joy to read out loud as the way the voice should sound was obvious from the writing. There was no struggling to think of different sounds for different characters. Also, there is a Southern homeyness to the dialogue that adds a lot of sugar and spice to the reading. It is impossible to read this book with a flat tone. The author gives you lots of energy and movement in the words. In short, it is fun to read this story and I wish there was more.Our only complaint was in the character of Chap's mom. She was so flat. All she did was run the cafe and make fried sugar pies. She seemed willing to step back into the kitchen and let her son (trying hard to learn how to be a man) solve their problems. Perhaps this was the author's goal as a means of showing Chap's growth. At the end, Chap looks at the swamp and realizes that he wants to save this special place not just for his grandpa but because of his own love of the land. Chap is becoming a man in his own right. Chap's mom, however, remains a weak and disappointing female character in an otherwise thoroughly enjoyable book.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Kathi Appelt spins a wonderful yarn set in the deep, deep South of the Sugar Man swamp. This is a story about what really matters to us as humans, and as animals - our connections. Our connections with one another and our connections to place. A story that begs to be read aloud, Appelt draws in her audience with little asides and conjectures, while masterfully weaving a tale that sings and soars. We follow the antics of the swamps true blue scouts - a pair of raccoons alongside the story of twelve-year-old Chap Brayburn, a fiercely proud (and tall) youngster who is missing his recently deceased grandfather something fierce, and works hard to help his mother run their cafe specializing in sweet Muscavado sugar cane, deep fried pies.

    I loved this story, of the big themes it touches upon, and on the small details of place that help define the contours of our days and the arc of our lives. Kids will eat it up: it's just that good. As good as a sugar pie, and then some.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Bingo and J'miah are two young raccoons, official True Blue Scouts of the Sugar Man Swamp. They know their duties: be true and faithful to each other, heed the Voice of Intelligence, and in case of emergency, wake the Sugar Man. What Bingo and J'Miah don't know yet is that trouble is heading for the swamp from two different directions. A whole herd of destructive feral hogs is about to descend on the peaceful place -- and there's a human critter stirring up trouble, too. Sonny Boy Beaucoup, owner of the swamp, is planning to pave over the whole thing for a theme park and gator wrestling arena. There's another problem, too: Bingo and J'miah don't exactly know where to find the Sugar Man, a legendary figure distantly related to Sasquatch. Nor do they know how to wake him up when they do find him. And Bingo and J'miah are not the only ones anxious to save the swamp: twelve-year-old Chaparral Brayburn is also looking for a way to thwart Sonny Boy's schemes. But how can a twelve-year-old boy, a mythical creature, and two raccoons save the swamp?Friends, am I the right reader for this book? I think it's safe to say that I am not. You see, this story has a definite voice. It's Southern. It's folksy. It's east Texas to the core, brothers and sisters, and it drips with sugar-cane sweetness. I can admire how consistent the voice is, and how well the plot pulls together in the end, but all the time, the voice is grating on my last nerve. Friends, have you ever read a book that grates on your last nerve? If so, you'll know it's a sensation akin to slogging through swamp muck while wearing a pair of Sonny Boy Beaucoup's patent-leather loafers.*Ahem* Sorry, I got carried away for a minute. As I was saying, readers who enjoy this sort of book, with its folksy voice and tall-tale elements will love this story. I am not that reader, so I barely tolerated it, and I found myself irritated by small details, like the fact that the author spelled the name Aloysius like it sounds (Alouicious), and at an entire subplot about the Ivory Billed Woodpecker, which fizzled out in the end and apparently only existed in the book because it's trendy (or maybe because it gave two separate characters the opportunity to say "Lord God!" in reference to the bird). And the fact that the animals in the swamp could apparently hear the rumbling approach of the feral hogs when they were still three days' walk away. But I'm sure that readers who are not already irritated with that smug Southern narrative voice would be a lot more forgiving of this book's other foibles. So, if you are that reader, go for it. And if you're not . . . well, you've been warned.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Kathi Appelt's storytelling and sense of place is masterful. The language brings this book to life and it would make an AWESOME family readaloud.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I just finished reading “The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp.” The only good thing about this book being over for me is that I now am able to tell you how fantastic it is. The author is a wonderful weaver of stories, and she makes a beautiful tapestry from the adventures of our raccoon friends Bingo and J’miah, a sleepy and sweet toothed cryptid named “The Sugar Man” and his slithering sidekick Gertrude, a fine young Homo Sapien named Chap Brayburn, some not so fine Homo Sapiens named Sonny Boy Beaucoup and Jaeger Stitch, some mean – and I mean MEAN – wild boars, a wise and creative DJ, a red star, a pirate, a mom, some fond memories of a beloved and nature loving grandpa, a swamp, an old Polaroid camera, and some delicious pies. Throw in solid writing, short chapters, humor, a satisfying ending, and you are sure to have a winner with the 10-12 year old crowd (and possibly their parents and teachers too).I will end this review with the wise words of KSUG DJ, Coyoteman Jim, “Have a good day and a good idea….Arrrrooooooo!”

Book preview

The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp - Kathi Appelt

The First Night

1

FROM THE ROOFTOP OF INFORMATION Headquarters, Bingo and J’miah stood on their back paws and watched Little Mama and Daddy-O trundle away; their stripy gray and black silhouettes grew smaller and smaller in the deepening dusk.

Daddy-O called out, Make us proud, boys!

That was followed by Little Mama. Be sure to follow orders!

For as long as raccoons had inhabited the Sugar Man Swamp, which was eons, they had been the Official Scouts, ordained by the Sugar Man himself back in the year Aught One, also known as the Beginning of Time. Of course, Bingo and J’miah would follow the orders. They knew them by heart.

OFFICIAL SUGAR MAN SWAMP SCOUT ORDERS

• keep your eyes open

• keep your ears to the ground

• keep your nose in the air

• be true and faithful to each other

• in short, be good

These orders were practical, and the raccoon brothers had no problem following them. Besides, Bingo and J’miah weren’t ordinary Swamp Scouts. They were, in fact, Information Officers, a highly specialized branch of the Scout system. And because of this there were two additional orders:

• always heed the Voice of Intelligence, and

• in the event of an emergency, wake up the Sugar Man

The first additional order was easy enough, as we shall soon see, but the second was a different matter. The problem? Nobody really knew exactly where the Sugar Man slept, only that it was somewhere in the deepest, darkest part of the swamp. He hadn’t been seen in many years.

The bigger problem? Waking the Sugar Man up wasn’t all that easy. He slept like a log. Literally.

The biggest problem? What if he woke up cranky? Every denizen in the swamp knew that the wrath of the Sugar Man was something to avoid.

He also had a rattlesnake pet, Gertrude.

Crotalus horridus GIGANTICUS (also known as CHG).

Brothers and sisters, the stakes were high.

2

GOT TO GO WAY, WAY back into yesterday and the yesterday before that, maybe a million yesterdays, actually more than a million, a gazillion yesterdays, to hear about the Sugar Man. Got to go back to when the sea had only barely rolled its way south into the Gulf of Mexico and left behind the slow-moving Bayou Tourterelle, which meandered through the middle of a wide, open marsh.

Sitting as it was in the deep southern side of the continent, the marsh had long days of sunshine and plenty of rain, all the right ingredients to give birth to a whole host of species of plants and animals. And like a tree rising up out of the rich red dirt, soon enough a creature born of the swamp rose up too.

He was taller than his cousin Sasquatch. Taller than Barmanou. Way taller than the Yeti. His legs and arms were like the new cedar trees that were taking root all around, tough and sinuous. His hands were as wide and big as palmetto ferns. His hair looked just like the Spanish moss that hung on the north side of the cypress trees, and the rest of his body was covered in rough black fur, like the fur of the ursus americanus luteolus, UAL, also known as Louisiana black bear, that had taken up residence in the area.

You could say that he was made up of bits and pieces of every living creature in the swamp, every duck, fox, lizard, and catfish, every pitcher plant, muskrat, and termite.

Of course, Bingo and J’miah knew the history. Little Mama and Daddy-O had made sure of it.

Over the years, however, the Sugar Man has grown older and older and sleepier and sleepier. Let’s not forget that he’s been there for too many years to count, since back before we even measured time in years. But just because the Sugar Man is old and sleepy doesn’t mean he can’t spin an alligator over his head and toss him into orbit. Nosirree, Bob. In fact, whenever he gets mad, he tends to throw things.

All in all, it’s not a good idea to stir up the wrath of the Sugar Man.

3

BUT RIGHT THEN, THE SUGAR Man was not on the minds of Bingo and J’miah. Standing there, on the rooftop of Information Headquarters, they watched their parents’ shadows fade into the thick woods of the swamp. Bingo straightened up as tall as he could and saluted. But when he turned toward his brother, he could see that J’miah was on the verge of sniffles. Sniffles, especially brother-sniffles, are highly contagious. Bingo did not want to sniffle. He pinched his nose to keep the sniffles from welling up. He was not going to sniffle. No way, José. Not this big boy.

He knew that he would miss Little Mama and Daddy-O. In fact, he already did. But the missing part was not as strong as the excitement part. He blew his nose as hard as he could.

We’re official, he said, and he slapped his brother on the back, then did a little two-step atop the DeSoto.

You heard me. The DeSoto.

4

BACK IN 1928, WALTER P. CHRYSLER introduced his newest car. The DeSoto. It was named for the Spanish conquistador, Hernando de Soto. It was la-di-da-di-da. In the first twelve months of production DeSoto set a record: 81,065 cars. More than Pontiac. More than Buick. More than Graham-Paige.

You weren’t anybody unless you had a DeSoto.

Nowadays, there are only a few DeSotos in existence. Some of them are parked in forgotten garages, waiting for their drivers to remember them. Some of them have been lovingly restored and their owners proudly show them off in Fourth of July parades and things like that. Most of them, sadly, have been relegated to junkyards or left to rust in overgrown pastures. All in all, they’re hard to find.

But one of them, a 1949 Sportsman, has been sitting atop a little knoll along the banks of the Bayou Tourterelle for more than sixty years, looking out over the water.

And in all that time, the old Sportsman has not budged, not an inch to the east, not an inch to the west. Its once-shiny green paint has turned into a veneer of dusty red rust, and its hood ornament, a bust of the old explorer Hernando de Soto, stares straight ahead. For many years the car sat there, all sealed up and empty, sinking into the damp red dirt a little bit more each year. And at the same time, the prodigious vines and ferns that thrived in the boggy swamp crept up its sides and top until it was pretty much completely hidden.

Lots of critters walked right by it—some even walked over it—and did not even notice it. The dusty red rust with its flecks of green paint were so close to the color of the dirt and the vines that it became camouflaged. Even human-types who paddled their pirogues up the Bayou Tourterelle missed it entirely.

If you did happen to stumble upon it and looked at it head-on, you might think that it was just a ghost of a car, and that your eyes were playing tricks on you. A car, after all, is meant to move, not hide all alone beneath the dirt and shrubs. And the sad truth is that it could have just slid right into the bayou of its own accord, that’s how lonely it was . . . and it might have . . . it came close a few times . . . except for the raccoons.

Raccoons can make a cozy nest just about anywhere. They will set up housekeeping in underground burrows, abandoned outhouses, unused chimneys, garbage cans, tree cavities, old cisterns—the list is endless.

You wouldn’t think that an abandoned DeSoto would be one of those places, but thanks to the wet ground beneath it, eventually a small hole in the floorboard on the passenger’s side rusted through, making an entryway.

And soon enough, a stripy pair of raccoons discovered that open hole and made themselves right at home. It was a perfect place to settle in and raise their kits, and that’s what they did. That original pair of raccoons turned out to be the great-great-greater-greatest-grandparents of Bingo and J’miah.

The old car could have simply been a raccoon nursery for generations of our procyonid crew, it was cozy enough, but one night a random strike of lightning hit so close that every inch of fur on the raccoons’ bodies poofed straight out. They watched as all the numbers and dials on the dashboard lit up. The raccoons could also see that the hood ornament cast an eerie orange glow, like a faded firefly. It was a historic moment, especially because that was when they first heard the all-important Voice of Intelligence. It came from the direction of the dashboard, more specifically through the radio, and floated atop the invisible sound waves inside the car. Prepare for rain, it said. And sure enough, it started to rain. Ever since then the DeSoto has been Information Headquarters for the Sugar Man Swamp Scouts, most recently Bingo and J’miah—Information Officers.

The Voice has never told a lie. Not once.

5

CHAP BRAYBURN, ONE OF THE few members of the local Homo sapiens, on the other hand, did tell a lie. When his mother asked him if he was okay, he said, Yep. But he knew that wasn’t true. Ever since his grandpa Audie Brayburn passed away just a few days ago, nothing was okay. When you are twelve, and the very best grandpa in the world, the person who taught you more than anyone else, including your mother, walks into a grove of cypress trees, curls up in the arms of their massive roots, and just flat-out dies? Without even saying good-bye? That was not okay.

Moreover, Grandpa Audie died just when it seemed like all heck was breaking loose. Instead of sticking around, Audie went to meet his maker as Brother Hadley at the Little Church on the Bayou kept saying, over and over.

Everyone at the funeral told Chap, You’re the man of the household now, son. Chap wasn’t sure he was done being a boy yet. Nevertheless, when he looked at his mother, with her crestfallen face, he knew he was going to have to man up, especially now that their landlord and the official owner of the entire Sugar Man Swamp, Sonny Boy Beaucoup, had unceremoniously raised the rent on their combination home and café, their only source of lodging and income.

It wasn’t just a small amount of cash that Sonny Boy demanded. It was a boatload.

We might have to leave, said his mother when she got the notice.

Leave? Leave the swamp, with its ancient trees, with its thick and winding Bayou Tourterelle, with its millions of insects and brilliant green peepers? Leave all of that? Thinking about it made Chap’s throat burn, as if there were a box of matches all lit up back there. He was definitely not okay. He tried swallowing to put out the fire. But it didn’t help.

And what about the ivory-billed woodpecker? Chap knew that only a few people in the entire world still believed that the ivory-bill, or IBWO, still existed, particularly in the Sugar Man Swamp. But Grandpa Audie had assured Chap that it was still out there. I even took a photo of it, Audie told him, a one-of-a-kind Polaroid. Then he followed with, Some time back, which Chap understood was 1949. More than sixty years ago.

In his hands, Chap now held his grandfather’s old birder sketchbook. After Audie had lost his Polaroid one-of-a-kind photo, he never took another photograph of anything. Instead he turned to drawing. In the sketchbook, there were rough pictures of every kind of bird that Audie had ever seen. Curiously, there was no sketch of the ivory-bill, despite Audie’s claim of catching it on the photo. Audie had declared, I’ll draw it when I see it again. Then he added, As long as the swamp is here, the bird could return. So there was an empty white page, smack in the middle of the book, waiting for that drawing. Waiting for that bird.

Chap brushed the leather cover with his palm and pulled it toward his face. It smelled like raw sugarcane and bullfrogs and red dirt. It smelled like Grandpa Audie. The heat in Chap’s throat grew.

Then he opened the sketchbook and flipped quickly through the pages of Audie’s drawings. None of them were perfect, not at all museum quality as Audie would say, and on each one he had added something funny, like the diamond ring he drew around the leg of the brown thrasher, and the little hat he put on the red-winged blackbird.

He told Chap that the brown thrasher was so plain, It needed some jazzin’ up. And the red-winged blackbird was dapper, so of course, He has to have a hat. That was Audie. But even though Audie added his own quirky elements, he still managed to capture the nature of every bird he drew.

No one, thought Chap, loved birds more than Grandpa Audie. He stared at the blank page, the one that was supposed to hold the ivory-billed woodpecker. IBWO.

We’re going to find it, old Chap! his grandpa had said over and over. But now? Now that Audie was gone? The page was so empty, Chap had to close the book fast. His throat ached.

To make matters worse, he heard his mother call from her room, Nosotros somos paisanos.

Chap didn’t expect that. It was his grandfather’s special message, just between them, the message that his grandfather had told him every night before bed. It had to do with his name, Chaparral, another name for the greater roadrunner. Most birds have a legend attached to them, and the one for the chaparral was that he was true and faithful. A fellow countryman. A paisano.

Audie’s sketch of the greater roadrunner included a large heart in the center of its breast, a heart that he had added on the day Chap was born. And right at the bottom of the page, Chap could see where his grandfather had erased the word roadrunner and written Chaparral over it, so that the name said Greater Chaparral.

Nosotros somos paisanos. We are fellow countrymen. We come from the same soil. That’s what it meant. Grandpa Audie had said it to him every single night of his life. Chap knew that his mother meant well by saying it, but instead of comforting him it just made a big cloud of lonesome hover above his head. He closed his eyes, and if it hadn’t been for his cat, Sweetums, who at that very moment jumped onto his bed and startled him, he knew that he might’ve burst into tears. How manly would that be?

6

ONE OF THE JOBS OF the Sugar Man Swamp Scouts is to go on missions. Now that his parents had both been gone for at least an hour, Bingo was bored. It was way past time for a mission. From his perch on the front seat of the DeSoto, he looked into the rearview mirror above the dash, brushed his fur back, took a good long look at his handsome black-and-white mask and his pointy little ears, and said, J’miah?

He only barely heard his brother’s reply, Mmmm?

J’miah was digging out some old junk that had gotten stuck in the crack between the backseat and the seat’s back, tossing it onto the floorboard behind the passenger’s seat.

Bingo just said two words: Mission Longleaf. He waited. There was silence.

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1