3
The Giganotosaurus
âBingle boo!â said our bus driver, Mrs. Kormel. âLimpus kidoodle!â
âBingle boo!â we all said, as we piled onto the bus.
Mrs. Kormel invented her own secret language. So instead of just saying âHelloâ and âSit down,â she says âBinglebooâ and âLimpus kidoodle.â
Mrs. Kormel is not normal.
I had to lug my sleeping bag with me, because we were going to be spending the whole night in the natural history museum. Just what I always wanted to do, sleep next to boring dead stuff. * At least I had my Batman sleeping bag. Batman is cool.
There were some grown-ups on the bus with us too. Mrs. Daisy and Mr. Macky and Mr. Docker were all there. Ryanâs mom, Mrs. Dole, came along as a chaperone. Thatâs a fancy word that means âagrown-up who hangs around with kids to make sure we donât have any fun.â
âAre we there yet?â I asked Mrs. Kormel as soon as she started driving.
âNo, A.J.,â she said.
I kept asking Mrs. Kormel every five minutes if we were there yet. Any time youâre in a car or bus, always ask if youâre there yetâeven if you know perfectly well that youâre not there yet. Thatâs the first rule of being a kid.
It took a million hundred hours to get to the natural history museum.
âPinkle burflenobin!â announced Mrs. Kormel when the bus finally stopped.
That means âEverybody get off the busâin Mrs. Kormelâs secret language.
As soon as we walked into the museum, we heard an announcement: âThe museum will be closing in five minutes.â
âYay!â I shouted. âWe can go home!â
âThat means everybody else has to go home, Arlo,â said Andrea.
âI knew that,â I lied. I hate it when Andrea calls me by my real name.
In the entrance of the museum, I looked up and saw the most amazing thing in the history of the world! It was a huge dinosaur skeleton that just about filled the whole room! Dinosaurs are cool. *
âWOW!â everybody said, which is âMOMâ upside-down.
âItâs a Giganotosaurus !â said Andrea. âHe was one of the biggest meat-eating dinosaurs in the worldâeven bigger than T. rex !â
âThatâs right, Andrea!â said Mr. Docker. âHow did you know that?â
âI read about the Giganotosaurus in my encyclopedia,â said Andrea, all proud of herself. âHe weighed eight tons!â
âHe should have gone to Weight Watchers,â I said. âMy momlost twenty pounds that way.â
âWhere do you think they got a Giganotosaurus ?â asked Ryan.
âThey probably went to Rent-a-Dinosaur,â Michael said. âYou can rent anything.â
Next to the Giganotosaurus was a big bear that was standing up on its hind legs like it was about toattack. It was cool, and scary.
Ryanâs mom and the other grown-ups told us to spread out our sleeping bags on the floor underneath Giganotosaurus . Then they went off to do boring grownup stuff, like drink coffee and talk about the weather. Whatâs up with that? Grown-ups are always drinking coffee and talking about the weather. I tasted coffee once, and I thought I was gonna throw up. But if they didnât drink coffee and talk about the weather, I donât know what grown-ups would do all day. Theyâre weird.
Speaking of grown-ups, I wrote a poem about my dad. It goes like this:
My dad has hair growing out of his nose.
If he didnât cut it, it would reach his toes.
He also has hair coming out of his ears.
I tried to tell him, but he couldnât hear.
Why do men grow hair in such strange places?
I thought it was weird when it grew on their faces.
I unrolled my sleeping bag right next to Ryanâs. Then I turned around and sawâ¦
THE COOLEST THING IN THEHISTORY OF THE WORLD!
Iâm not gonna tell you what it was.
Okay, okay, Iâll tell