“Well, the bell is about to ring,” Miss Gold said, gazing up at the wall clock. She turned back to me. “I just had an idea. You did such a good job with the diary format. I mean, writing your story as a diary entry was very clever.”
“Thanks,” I said weakly. So why didn’t she give me an A?
“You should keep a real diary, Alex,” she continued. “Write in it every day. You can hand it in at the end of the year for extra credit.”
“Really?” I said. “Okay. Thanks.”
I saw Tessa’s hand fly up. I knew what she was going to say.
“Miss Gold, I want to start a diary too. Can I do a diary for extra credit?”
“Yes,” Miss Gold replied. “Anyone in class can keep a diary. Very good idea.”
The bell rang.
I hurried to my seat and started to shove my story into my backpack. I felt a sharp tap on my back. I knew who it was.
“Pay up, Alex,” Tessa said. She stuck her hand in front of my face.
“Excuse me?” I tried to play innocent.