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Out of the Ordinary

Month: March 2008

  • Joshua and His Gang; Chapter Ten

    An End And A Beginning

    John walked away humming to himself. It was one of the tunes his mother used to
    sing to him as a baby and it made him feel good when he was feeling bad. First Sam in a tizzy and now the whole
    gang. He thought it might take a great
    deal of humming to make him feel okay again.

    As he turned onto Mr. Ray’s street he saw
    the Hermit come out of his gate and walk up the other way. He was carrying the
    string bag that he used for vegetables and fruit so John knew he was going to
    the Market off Talbot Street.

    When John got to Mr. Ray’s house his feet
    somehow took him up the path and along the side and into the backyard. Then he found himself sitting beside the log
    he was carving. It calmed him to run
    his fingers over the wood he had shaped.

    And as he sat there, stroking his
    creation, the humming reminded him of another part of his childhood and he let
    himself remember. He wasn’t sure if it
    had really happened or if it were a dream. He was only three when it had happened so it could have been either.

    His two brothers, who were much older than
    he was, had cut wonderful wings out of heavy cardboard in an attempt to
    fly. It had not worked. And when Leonard tried jumping off the tool
    shed roof with the wings on and had sprained his ankle as he fell, the boys
    left the wings in the yard. John found
    them.

    He did not know that wings were supposed
    to have the narrow end by your shoulders and the wide ends by your hands. He put them on upside down. Wrapped the elastic strap around his fat
    little tummy. Pushed his arms through
    where his hands were supposed to go. Then he ran madly across the yard toward the ravine and as he fully
    expected to, he began to fly. Once over
    the ravine, past the old railway tracks, back around the dried creek bed, and
    again across the ravine.

    It was not easy to fly because he was not
    a bird. He was a human in flight and he
    had to work to keep moving smoothly. He
    thought that it was like the one time he had ridden his cousin’s little two-wheeled
    bike and would have crashed if his brother hadn’t been running along side and
    holding it. You had to keep pedaling
    hard to keep it going. The same with
    flying. It was fun but tiring. He liked being able to see the world from up
    high. He liked the feel of the wind on
    his body. He liked how it felt to glide
    and catch a little puff of air and sort of hiccup in the sky. He would have
    liked to fly higher, to fly all over the town, to see how high he could go.

    But John was tired and hungry so he swooped
    back over the ravine into his own backyard, dropped the wings, and went in to
    supper. He never flew again. But
    somehow he knew he could if he wanted to.

    * * *

    John walked by Ingrid’s house and looked at
    it but he did not see her so he continued on. It never occurred to him to call on her; no one ever seemed to call on
    Ingrid; she called on other people. It
    never occurred to him to wonder why.

    Ingrid saw John walk by but she kept
    behind the curtains of her bedroom window so he did not see her. Then she
    flopped backward onto the perfectly made bed. She was tired and her head hurt a bit. It was partly the thought of school and the new teacher who was said to
    be strict but mostly it was the gang being so out of sorts with each
    other. Whatever had possessed her to
    say what she did about them never coming to her house. They didn’t but that wasn’t the point. And now she had been in Hugh’s house; easy
    as pie he had shown them his room. Or
    at least where his room would be. And
    he was going to have sleepovers. She
    raised her arms and legs and let them fall onto the bed with a loud groan. Life was just too complicated and getting
    worse, she started to think and then her mother startled her by asking,
    "What’s wrong?"

    "Don’t you know it’s impolite not to
    knock on a closed door?" Ingrid said, but not aloud. "Nothing." is what she said out
    loud. "I mean I have a bit of a
    headache."

    "I could hear you groaning. Get your feet off the bedspread with your shoes
    on. You know better than
    that." Ingrid was kicking off her
    sneakers as her mother was speaking. "And if you’re going to lie on top of the bed in the middle of the
    day don’t forget to make it smooth again when you get up."

    "Why? I’m just going to muss it again
    when I go to bed," Ingrid asked, but again she did it silently. The unspoken words added to her headache.

    Her mother looked at her daughter and
    walked over to stand beside the bed. She put her hand on Ingrid’s forehead. "You are a bit hot. Do you want an aspirin? I don’t want you to get sick and miss
    school."

    Ingrid sighed and something about the
    sound caused her mother to stare at her for a moment. "It’s not easy
    growing up," she said as she turned and walked toward the door and for a
    moment Ingrid wondered if she had just imagined that she heard her mother say
    this. Her mother never said things like this.

    "Maybe you should invite some of your
    friends over for a visit to make you feel better," was the next shocking
    thing her mother said just as she was about to leave Ingrid’s room.

    "They’d mess things up and you’d be
    mad and maybe tell them off," Ingrid said and she was horrified to realize
    that this she had said out loud.

      Her mother stopped and looked back at her. She wasn’t looking hurt or angry as Ingrid
    was expecting but quite surprised.

    "I am a bit of a neat and tidy freak,
    aren’t I?" she admitted.

      She didn’t say anything else but she did give a bit of a shrug and
    a sort of grin before softly closing Ingrid’s door and walking down the
    hall.

    Ingrid’s head now began to pound. Well, at least her mother hadn’t said,
    "Those friends of yours" in that tone of voice that made Ingrid feel
    awful because she thought she knew exactly what friends she meant and why she
    said it. John and Piya and Sam. Then
    Ingrid wondered if she was mistaken, if her mother had ever said this or was it
    just that the one time her aunt did, her visiting aunt, that it had been such
    an upsetting occurrence that it had caused a spreading stain.

    And Hugh was going to have sleepovers. The
    girls wouldn’t be asked, she knew that. Hugh was a boy. She’d never
    thought of boys as boys before.

    Oh, life was just too complicated. She yawned. If she went to sleep, had a bit of nap, she wouldn’t have to think.

    She was just dozing off when there was a knock at her bedroom
    door.

    "Come in, Mom," she said, wondering what now and how
    weird that her mother had knocked.

    But it was Lucy.

    Ingrid was so surprised she sat straight up, flung her legs over
    and off the bed and began to put on her sneakers to cover her confusion.

    "You mom said for me to come on up. She told me what room was yours. Hey, it’s neat." Lucy was
    looking around at the pink ruffles and pretty pictures and fluffy bedside
    rug. "You even have your own
    desk. Sometimes I wish I were an only
    child like you and Hugh," she was saying.

    Ingrid was no longer the least bit tired.

    "Sometimes I wish I had a sister or
    brother," she replied.

    She started to neaten the bedspread and
    Lucy walked around the bed and helped her.

    "Oh, your mom said to tell you that
    she wasn’t going to put down papers for me to walk on, whatever that
    means."

    Ingrid opened her mouth in surprise and
    then she laughed. "Oh, she’s a
    neat freak. She says so herself."

    It felt good to say this but she didn’t
    really feel all that comfortable discussing her mother so she leaped from the
    frying pan into the fire and asked, "Say, who do you think Hugh will have
    over for his sleepovers."

    Lucy shrugged. "I don’t know. Is
    that a real music box? Does it wind
    up? What does it play?"

    Ingrid sighed, but to herself. "Look, I’ll show you." she said.

    * * *

    Lucy knew darned well that Ingrid wanted
    to talk about Hugh; she had seen her blush and she remembered the look on
    Ellen’s face when they first met Hugh and he had looked so foolish being
    introduced to Ingrid. And since then Lucy realized that Ellen did not want to
    talk about Hugh but she was interested to hear anything about him. Even after he had kidnapped the widow’s
    dog. Lucy thought that once the girls
    went boy crazy that was going to be it for the gang. She knew Piya really liked Joshua but this wasn’t the same: she
    seemed to like him in a motherly sort of way.

    Lucy could do two things at once, she
    could think two things at once. So one
    part of her was being interested in the music box and other things in Ingrid’s
    room and the other part of her was wondering what things would be like if
    suddenly the boys were BOYS and not just boys.

    It made her scrunch up her face and when
    Ingrid asked if she was alright she said yes she was and wow, did Ingrid ever
    have a lot of books, almost as many as Ellen and they started to look through
    the bookshelf beside the desk while Lucy thought about Hugh and wondered if
    there was something wrong with her because she didn’t think of him as a BOY at
    all.

    For one thing she thought it was silly
    that he was mad at his parents for moving and didn’t just tell them but acted
    weird. And to find out that Ellen had
    done the same thing by hiding her braces when they moved and pretending they
    were lost was something she was still feeling very nervous about. How could Ellen do that? How could, she, Lucy, not know about
    it? They were not only sisters, they
    were twins, for goodness sake.

    For another thing she hated the goofy look Hugh got when he looked at Ingrid. Lucy
    hoped no one ever looked at her like that. She’d gag if they did; she was sure of it.

    And half the time she couldn’t understand
    what he was saying. Well, it was
    getting easier but you had to really listen when he spoke or you’d get
    confused.

    And he had his own room.

    She sighed, quietly (Ingrid was showing
    her her new school shoes), and thought maybe it was just Hugh, not all boys,
    and maybe some boys might be BOYS for her.

      So
    she considered Joshua. No – he was
    definitely a boy. He wasn’t what he
    seemed to be, or maybe he seemed to be what he wasn’t, or maybe that was the
    same thing. Maybe he one day would be
    that – whatever that was.

      Lucy decided he had potential. Piya pronounced it podenchill and Lucy had not ever corrected her (Ellen
    said it was rude of her to do this when she did it and Piya cried easily so she
    avoided upsetting her if she could) but Lucy did wonder if Piya would ever get
    it right. Too bad she didn’t have an
    aunt who was an English teacher.

    She thought about Sam and almost
    giggled. Sam! He would always be a little boy to her even when he got big, she
    was sure of it.

    John? No, he was too different. And
    she knew there would be other problems here although she would not put them
    into words, even in her head.

    Bill? He was nice, she guessed, but she didn’t really know him or know about
    him. She knew he was a fusspot but he
    was big and strong and he had a way of listening to people when they talked
    that appealed to Lucy. And he had a
    wonderful laugh. Maybe there was BOY
    material here.

    Lucy rolled her eyes slightly and decided that she was just very
    particular about BOYS and there was nothing wrong with her.

    Ingrid broke into her secondary thoughts by saying, "I don’t
    really think you’re paying attention, you’re making all sorts of faces, let’s
    go and find the gang."

    "Okay," Lucy agreed. "Sometimes I just pay attention elsewhere as well as here,"
    she added by way of explanation.

    "Oh, I see," Ingrid said, but she didn’t really. She looked back at her bed just as they
    were leaving the room and saw that it was in perfect order again.

      * * *

    Sam was sitting on his bed with his back against the headboard, a
    red  scarf with white polka-dots  tied around his face and over his  mouth.

    His sister came in to get something from the drawer she rented
    from Sam in his dresser, noted his presence and smiled,  but did not say
    anything. She sat down on his bed and
    began to go through the dresser drawer for the notebook she was wanting.  Sam leaned a bit sideways and put his head
    against her back.

    "Not feeling well?" she asked.

    "I talk too loud." he said.

    "Oh, I wondered if you had a toothache. Or were planning to rob a bank."

    Sam giggled and then he sighed. "I talk too loud." he said again.

    "You do," she agreed.

    "People don’t like me when I yell."

    "I guess not."

    Sam snuggled closer against his sister’s back. "They want to make a map and just put
    important places on it. My place is
    important."

    His sister didn’t say anything.

    "Well, it is!" he said.

    "I know." she replied.

    "Hugh has his own room."

    "You’d like your own room."

    Sam rubbed his face against his sister’s back; her sweater was
    soft and warm. He thought he would like
    his own room  but he couldn’t really imagine it.   

    "I talk too loud," he said again.

    "You’re not talking too loud now," she said.

    He didn’t say anything but she could feel him nodding his head in
    agreement.

      * * *

    Snookums was wriggling
    contentedly and wagging her tail as Ellen petted her. Ellen had seen the dog staring at her hopefully from the old
    wicker laundry basket where she sat and watched the world on a no-longer-used clothesline
    stand in the Widow Jenkins backyard and she had stopped and let herself in by
    the gate and sat on the stand and was now cuddling the dog.

    She had been worried that Snookums might
    have been upset by being kidnapped – dognapped, as Lucy had corrected her – but
    she seemed to be fine.  The Widow Jenkins had no idea Snookums had
    gone missing. Joshua had returned her
    before she was missed. It felt good to
    sit with the warm little dog and try not to think about the gang.

    "Oh, I didn’t see you out
    there," Snookums’ owner suddenly called out and Ellen looked to see the
    Widow Jenkins at the back door; she looked like she was tangled in yarn.

    "Do you want some cookies? I think I have some left in the tin. My grandkids were here last week and they
    know where to find them."

    Ellen put Snookums down and the dog took a
    moment to decide between following Ellen into the house or returning to her
    laundry basket where she could watch the world of her neighbourhood. She chose the basket.

    The Widow Jenkins did have wool wound
    around her neck and down her front like a long necklace. "I’m untangling this darned mess,"
    she explained, pulling a bunch of tangled yarn out of her dress pocket.
    "It was in a nice neat ball, I wound it as I undid a sweater that had
    holes in the sleeves but was good in the body of the sweater, but that darned
    dog got playing with it when I wasn’t looking." She laughed and Ellen knew she was not all that mad.

    When Ellen was sitting at the kitchen
    table with crackers and peanut butter (the cookie tin was empty: the grandkids
    had eaten them all) the Widow Jenkins continued to untangle the mass of wool
    and drape the straightened length around her neck.

    Ellen picked up one of the knitting
    needles that was on the table and twirled it in her fingers like she had seen a
    magician do at a show at the library. You could sit quite comfortably with the Widow Jenkins and not
    talk. Ellen found it peaceful. Lucy said she found it nerve-wracking.

    "Would you like to learn to
    knit?" the Widow Jenkins asked
    Ellen, not understanding the ‘magic’ of her twirling.

    "I sort of know how," Ellen
    explained. "My grandma taught me
    but I didn’t want to make potholders."

    "I knit socks," the Widow
    Jenkins said and pointed to one half done on the counter where the phone
    was. "I knit when I talk on the
    phone."

    It didn’t look like a sock to Ellen. It looked like – a ballet slipper.
    "Could you teach me how to knit a ballet slipper?" she asked.

    The Widow Jenkins thought about this for a
    time. She always gave a question
    careful thought. "I don’t think a
    knit ballet slipper would be a good thing," she finally said. "Not stiff enough in the toe and too
    slippery on the sole. You taking
    ballet?"

    "No, but my sister is. Sort
    of." Ellen said.

    "Well, I have a pair of ballet
    slippers that my niece grew out of and left here in case my neighbour’s girl
    could use them but she decided she wanted to be a majorette instead. I think I
    saw them in the hall closet. I’ll go
    see."

    She came back with a lovely pink pair of
    ballet slippers.

    "Do you think they will fit
    Lucy?"

    "I don’t know. My feet are bigger than hers." Ellen
    slipped off her sneaker and put on the shoe. It was a bit tight. It might be
    perfect for Lucy. She said this.

    "Well, take them and see. I hope they do. No sense having them dance for no one in the closet." She laughed and Ellen chuckled as well.

    "There she goes now," the Widow
    Jenkins said, who, from her kitchen window, had as perfect a view of the world
    as Snookums from her laundry basket.

    Ellen looked out the window to see Lucy
    and Ingrid walking along the street.

    "Hey," she called out the door
    and they stopped and waited for her as she thanked the Widow Jenkins for the
    crackers and the shoes.

    "I got you some shoes for your
    ballet," Ellen said to Lucy showing her them.

    "And I got you a book on magic –
    Ingrid said you could borrow it."

    The
    twins smiled at each other. Ingrid
    wasn’t thinking as she usually did when she saw the twins together that she
    wished she had a sister. She was
    thinking of getting to Joshua’s and seeing who might be there.

    "Let’s go," she said.

    "Where?" Ellen asked.

    "We’re going to Joshua’s. See if the gang is there. It’s
    awful being out of sorts."

    The twins hooked themselves one each to a side on Ingrid’s
    shoulders and she put her arms around each of them and the three walked
    giggling and lopsided down the street.

    * * *

    Bill and his brother were sitting on the
    floor of the side porch folding newspapers into neat cylinders so they would
    more easily fit into the delivery bag and be easier to toss onto
    doorsteps. Bill and his brother weren’t
    saying anything, at least not in words, but their expressions to each other
    said a lot.

    They
    were listening to their mother having a phone conversation with her
    sister. She was in the hallway and
    there was an open window so they could hear clearly. They were quiet so she wouldn’t know they were there.

    "Well, of course she would think that, now wouldn’t
    she," their mother was saying. They had to imagine what their aunt was saying some of the time but most
    of the time it was obvious. "I
    mean he hasn’t been home early three nights last week and two already this
    week."

    She then said a few "Mmm-mmm"’s and Bill
    and his brother looked at each other and raised their eyebrows. She was talking about Mr. and Mrs. Sanderson
    just down the block.

    Bill had once heard his mother say that it wasn’t gossiping if you
    didn’t say anything bad about a person and since then he realized she
    skillfully skirted the issue. Mr.
    Sanderson hadn’t been home late, she hadn’t said that, she had just said he
    hadn’t been home early. It was
    confusing but it sort of made sense. It
    worried him that this was so. But he didn’t seem to mind this kind of
    worry.

    Then she said, "Oh, they’re both fine" and Bill and his
    brother cut their eyes to each other. Now she was going to talk about them. At least they hoped so. They
    didn’t believe eavesdroppers never heard any good about themselves. She was a braggy sort of mother.

    "Well, no, he hasn’t been told yet, but they think the middle
    of September, that was the earliest they could do the surgery."

    Bill and his brother immediately stopped folding papers and stared
    at each other. Surgery?  What surgery? On which one?

    For awhile their mom just kept saying, "Uh-huh, mmm, yes,
    well, no, I don’t think so."

    Then she said, "Oh, you’d better go and see who’s there,
    then. Talk to you later." And she hung up.

    Bill and his brother started to fold papers again but very slowly.

    "What do you think she was talking about?" Bill asked
    his brother.

    His brother shrugged.

    "I don’t need any surgery. Do I?" He would have bitten
    his nails without worrying what his mother would say if his hands hadn’t been
    occupied folding papers.

    "Likely wasn’t talking about us at all," his brother,
    who seemed not to worry, ever, about anything, said.

    They thought their mother had gone back into the kitchen but she
    was, in fact, still sitting in the hallway untangling the phone cord and she
    heard her sons talking. She knew how
    Bill would continue to worry (she wished Ken had half more of the worrying
    knack and Bill half less) and she knew she could ease it this time.

    "We were talking about my brother and his son, Agnes had
    asked how they were doing," she called out so they could hear her,
    "and their dog is going in to the veterinarian to have its, um, operation
    so it won’t roam around so much."

    Bill and his brother did not say anything, just looked at each
    other with guilty grins.

    "You’re welcome," their mother called out into the
    silence.

    "Thanks, Ma," they both said. And Bill scooted away.

    * * *

    When Piya walked home she went by Joshua’s
    house, as she always did, but she did not see him and wondered where he had
    gone after they all left Hugh’s.  She had stopped at Kresge’s to see how the
    guppies were doing – they seemed to be fine; the babies were definitely growing
    bigger. And Mrs. Mabel had commented on
    her earrings, the shavings Piya had forgotten to remove.

    She hated it when the gang argued. She hated to see Joshua upset.

    She stopped in front of her house and
    stared up at it. Suddenly she had the
    thought that she would be able to see Joshua’s house very clearly from the
    attic in her house. His house was on
    the street that jutted into her street but from up high it should be visible.

    The trouble was she had no idea how to get
    into her attic. But there had to be a way.

    Her mother was in the garden doing
    something so Piya went straight upstairs and started looking at the ceiling for
    an opening that she might not have seen before because she hadn’t been looking
    for it. Her aunt the doctor said people
    often didn’t see what was right in front of their noses until it was pointed
    out to them.

    There were no openings in the hall or any
    of the bedrooms or the bathroom. Next
    she tried the closets. No luck there,
    either. The only thing left was the
    linen cupboard in the hallway. Nothing
    there. She sighed and was backing out
    from there when her skirt got hooked on a nail or sliver of wood and as she was
    freeing it she happened to glance up and it was then she saw the small door in the
    wall, not the ceiling, high up, in front of the shelves.

    For an adult to get in there they would
    have to take all the sheets and blankets and towels and boxes off the shelves
    and get a ladder. Or maybe just get a
    ladder – there might be space enough in front of the shelves.

    Piya thought for a moment and then she
    simply climbed the shelves like a ladder and lifted the latch on the door and
    pushed it forward and open.

    Yes – the attic. She had to lean forward and brace her arms on the floor of the
    attic and then take a deep breath of bravery and sort of let go with her feet
    and pull herself into the attic space with her arms. But she did it.

      She
    then gave a huge sigh of relief and almost sneezed in the dust.

    There
    were things in the attic she had never seen before and decided they were from
    the people who had owned the house before her parents did. Likely her parents did not know this was up
    here. They certainly wouldn’t think
    Piya was up here. She giggled softly to
    herself and walked over to the window that looked toward Joshua’s house.

    Yes! She could see his house clearly now. The whole front of it and part of the side. And far along the street. The window was dusty but it opened
    easily and she knelt on the attic floor and leaned her head and shoulders
    through it.

    Now she could watch Joshua from her very
    own house. She settled contentedly and
    began to watch. Oh, there he was
    now. On his verandah. He must have been home when she walked by
    but inside the house. She waved at him
    but did not call out. It was more fun
    to secretly observe. Maybe she was
    going to be a detective when she grew up. Sadly she did not have an aunt, or an uncle, who was a detective.

    * * *

    Joshua looked around the verandah. It looked awfully empty with no one there.

    "Mom," he yelled.

    "What?" she answered from somewhere in the house.

    "I need some lemonade. I think the gang is coming over. We’re going to make a map of the
    neighbourhood."

    "That’s nice," she said. "But you are going to have to make it yourself. I’m busy."

    Oh well, he thought. Mostly she could be counted on. Today he would have to do it. He
    went into the house, into the kitchen, read the directions on the Kool Aid
    packet, found the jug, poured in water, poured in the Kool Aid powder.

    The
    sugar bin was empty.

    "Mom," he yelled.

    "What?"

    "We’re out of sugar."

    "No we’re not. We’re
    never out of sugar. There is another
    bag in the cupboard beside the stove at the back beside the extra
    vinegar."

    He found it and added a cup to the Kool Aid lemonade. Then he added a bit more. He liked things sweet. Some sugar got on the floor, he could feel
    it grit under his sneakers. He took the
    dish cloth and swiped it like a broom until the grittiness was gone.

    "Joshua!" was shouted from the front door and he went to
    see and it was Ingrid, holding her new school coloured pencils and Ellen with
    ballet slippers and Lucy with a book on magic.

    "I made lemondade," he said and the girls helped him
    carry it and the glasses to the porch.

    "You’ll need nine glasses," he told Lucy. "Don’t forget Hugh."

    "As if I could," she thought, thinking of Ingrid and
    Ellen. Then she sighed. Maybe he would move back to British
    Columbia, if not England. And she sure
    wanted to know what a Colonist was.

    Bill showed up and then Sam. Then Hugh. Joshua looked around
    at the nicely crowded verandah.

    "Where’s Piya?" he asked.

    The gang lined up on the porch and looked along the street. No Piya.

    Then,
    for some reason, Sam opened his mouth and shouted, "Piya!"
    considerably startling the rest of them and at the same time Bill looked along
    the street toward the street where Piya’s house was and saw her in the window
    of her house way up high.

    He motioned and they all looked. Piya was looking back, partly hanging out of the window.

    Joshua motioned for her to come join them. She waved her hands at them, side to side,
    palms up.

    "I think she’s stuck," said John who seemed to have
    appeared from nowhere and who was good at reading hand signals.

    "No she’s not, the window is open wider than she is,"
    Sam said and it wasn’t very shouted so that most of the gang looked at
    him.

    "I’ll go see," said Lucy and Ingrid and Ellen went with
    her.

    Five minutes later they were back.

    "She was stuck," Ingrid explained.

    "In the attic." added Ellen.

    "She couldn’t get back out of the attic opening, too far to
    the shelf." Lucy finished.

    "What did you do?" Bill asked.

    Some of the gang were
    trying not to laugh. They couldn’t tell
    from Piya’s face if she found this at all funny.

    "I backed out of the hole and stood on Ingrid’s shoulders and
    then sat on top of the towels," Piya said and started to giggle and so the
    whole gang knew they could laugh and not hurt her feelings or have her cry or
    go home.

    "Let’s make the map," Joshua said. He was about to yell for his Mom and tell
    her they needed paper – Sam had not brought any – but he decided to get it
    himself. He wanted the good paper in
    his Dad’s desk and thought it best not to tell his Mom he was taking this. He got it and didn’t tell her.

    Hugh opened the paper bag he had brought and took out a package of
    potato chips. The gang loved potato
    chips.

    "Crisps," he said.

    "Chips," shouted Sam.

    Hugh passed around the bag for sharing and then they began to make
    their map.