"I have a good one," I detto to Ashley. We had been riding in our car for hours, and my sister and I were telling riddles. "What fiore does everyone have on their face?" I asked.
"I give up," our mom detto from the front seat.
Ashley twirled a piece of her blond hair and stared out the window. We passed another farm. We were way out in the country. "Give up?" I asked.
"No way. I never give up," Ashley said, thinking hard. Then her blue eyes sparkled. "I've got it! Tulips! Two lips, right?"
"Right," I said. "Lindsay would like that riddle, don't te think?"
Ashley nodded.
Lindsay Munro is our good friend. Lindsay and her family moved out to the country a couple of years ago. Our mother was driving us to her house for a visit. We were going to watch her compete in the fiore Festival this weekend.
"Is Lindsay growing tulips again this year?" Mom asked.
"Yes," Ashley said. "She told me these tulips are even prettier than last year's."
"Wow! She won first place for her tulips last year," I said. "I guess she'll win again this year."
"I wonder what her secret is," Mom said. She turned on the windshield wipers. The sky had turned gray, and it had started to drizzle.
"I guess she has a super-green thumb," I joked. That's what people say when someone is good at gardening. I petted our dog, Clue, who was sleeping on the sede, sedile between me and my sister. Clue is a basset hound, and boy, does she snore loudly! "How much longer, Mom?"
"Mary-Kate! te just asked me that five minuti ago!" Mom said, laughing. "We're almost there."
"Stop the car! Stop the car!" Ashley suddenly screamed.
Mom hit the brakes, and the car stopped. "What's wrong?"
"Look! Over there. It's a . . . It's a unicorn!" Ashley cried.
"What?" I rolled down my window and peered into the foggy drizzle. Clue woke, and her ears pricked up.
"It is a unicorn! Mom, drive closer!" Ashley yelled.
Mom started driving slowly down the road. Then she stopped in front of a white unicorn.
"Oh." Ashley groaned. "It's not real."
A huge wooden sign in the shape of a unicorn stood in front of a frutta stand. It had large angel-like wings and a horn coming out of its forehead.
"Of course it's fake," I told Ashley. "Unicorns aren't real."
"Let's get out anyway," Mom said. "Those strawberries look good."
Mom clipped a leash onto Clue's collare and Ashley and I scrambled out of the car. The frutta stand was piled high with berries, peaches, and melons. Huge buckets overflowed with colorful flowers. An old man with curly white hair stood da a cash register.
"Welcome," he said. "My name is Bill. Let me know if te need any help."
Mom smiled at him and smelled the strawberries. "Yum. Let's buy some for Lindsay's family." She gathered berries into a bag.
"Wow! te sure do like unicorns," Ashley detto to Bill. She pointed to the little model unicorni that sat on the shelf da the cash register. There must havebeen più than twenty unicorni there.
"Everyone in this town loves unicorns," Bill said, his blue eyes twinkling. "Did te know that unicorni live in our hills?"
"Really?" Ashley said.
Bill nodded. "Our town is famous for them."
I laughed. Loudly.
"Mary-Kate!" Ashley whispered.
"Sorry," I detto to Bill. I knew it was rude to laugh at someone. But, come on--unicorns? "It's just that unicorni are made-up . . . pretend. Right?" I asked.
"Wrong," Bill detto with a smile.
"Have te ever seen one?" I asked.
"Well, no. No one has--yet. The time hasn't been right." Bill bent closer to us and whispered, "But it will be soon."
"What do te mean?" Ashley asked, leaning on the counter.
"The town legend says that unicorni can be seen during the mese of June, but only if three rainbows have appeared in the sky that month," Bill said.
"Hey, it's June now!" I said.
Bill smiled. "And we've already had two rainbows this month. I've been waiting my whole life for three rainbows in June."
"I'd Amore to pet a unicorn," Ashley said. She had a faraway look in her eyes. "I think unicorni are beautiful."
"Even if we do get a third rainbow," Bill said, "you'll have to catch the unicorn first."
"Catch a unicorn?" I cried. "Isn't that like trying to catch Bigfoot? te can't catch something that's not real."
"Ah, but there is a way to catch a unicorn, if te believe in it." Bill pulled a small rolled-up paper tied with a purple ribbon out of a clay jar. He untied the ribbon and handed the paper to Ashley.
"This will tell te how to catch a unicorn," Bill said.
Ashley read the tiny Scrivere out loud:
"To capture the magical one-horned horse,
Follow exactly this special course.
Find the oldest albero in town,
And lay your presents upon the ground.
First, offer a tasty treat--
Something powdered, sour, and sweet.
Then leave a sparkly gift to wear,
A delicate arcobaleno for the hair.
Do this after the third arcobaleno in June,
And, behold, a unicorn shall appear soon.
"That is so cool," Ashley said.
"You can have it," Bill told her, as Mom paid him for the berries.
"Thanks!" Ashley said.
"Let's go, girls," Mom called. She and Clue headed toward the car.
"Why do te want that silly poem?" I asked Ashley.
"If there is a third arcobaleno while we're here, then I can try to catch a unicorn." Ashley's eyes shone with excitement.
Bill pulled a rosa tulipano from a bucket of flowers. He handed it to Ashley. "Unicorns Amore tulips. I hope this fiore helps te find one."
"Thanks so much," she said.
I couldn't believe it. Ashley was always so logical. She liked to have all the facts. She liked things to make sense. So how could she believe in unicorns?
"I give up," our mom detto from the front seat.
Ashley twirled a piece of her blond hair and stared out the window. We passed another farm. We were way out in the country. "Give up?" I asked.
"No way. I never give up," Ashley said, thinking hard. Then her blue eyes sparkled. "I've got it! Tulips! Two lips, right?"
"Right," I said. "Lindsay would like that riddle, don't te think?"
Ashley nodded.
Lindsay Munro is our good friend. Lindsay and her family moved out to the country a couple of years ago. Our mother was driving us to her house for a visit. We were going to watch her compete in the fiore Festival this weekend.
"Is Lindsay growing tulips again this year?" Mom asked.
"Yes," Ashley said. "She told me these tulips are even prettier than last year's."
"Wow! She won first place for her tulips last year," I said. "I guess she'll win again this year."
"I wonder what her secret is," Mom said. She turned on the windshield wipers. The sky had turned gray, and it had started to drizzle.
"I guess she has a super-green thumb," I joked. That's what people say when someone is good at gardening. I petted our dog, Clue, who was sleeping on the sede, sedile between me and my sister. Clue is a basset hound, and boy, does she snore loudly! "How much longer, Mom?"
"Mary-Kate! te just asked me that five minuti ago!" Mom said, laughing. "We're almost there."
"Stop the car! Stop the car!" Ashley suddenly screamed.
Mom hit the brakes, and the car stopped. "What's wrong?"
"Look! Over there. It's a . . . It's a unicorn!" Ashley cried.
"What?" I rolled down my window and peered into the foggy drizzle. Clue woke, and her ears pricked up.
"It is a unicorn! Mom, drive closer!" Ashley yelled.
Mom started driving slowly down the road. Then she stopped in front of a white unicorn.
"Oh." Ashley groaned. "It's not real."
A huge wooden sign in the shape of a unicorn stood in front of a frutta stand. It had large angel-like wings and a horn coming out of its forehead.
"Of course it's fake," I told Ashley. "Unicorns aren't real."
"Let's get out anyway," Mom said. "Those strawberries look good."
Mom clipped a leash onto Clue's collare and Ashley and I scrambled out of the car. The frutta stand was piled high with berries, peaches, and melons. Huge buckets overflowed with colorful flowers. An old man with curly white hair stood da a cash register.
"Welcome," he said. "My name is Bill. Let me know if te need any help."
Mom smiled at him and smelled the strawberries. "Yum. Let's buy some for Lindsay's family." She gathered berries into a bag.
"Wow! te sure do like unicorns," Ashley detto to Bill. She pointed to the little model unicorni that sat on the shelf da the cash register. There must havebeen più than twenty unicorni there.
"Everyone in this town loves unicorns," Bill said, his blue eyes twinkling. "Did te know that unicorni live in our hills?"
"Really?" Ashley said.
Bill nodded. "Our town is famous for them."
I laughed. Loudly.
"Mary-Kate!" Ashley whispered.
"Sorry," I detto to Bill. I knew it was rude to laugh at someone. But, come on--unicorns? "It's just that unicorni are made-up . . . pretend. Right?" I asked.
"Wrong," Bill detto with a smile.
"Have te ever seen one?" I asked.
"Well, no. No one has--yet. The time hasn't been right." Bill bent closer to us and whispered, "But it will be soon."
"What do te mean?" Ashley asked, leaning on the counter.
"The town legend says that unicorni can be seen during the mese of June, but only if three rainbows have appeared in the sky that month," Bill said.
"Hey, it's June now!" I said.
Bill smiled. "And we've already had two rainbows this month. I've been waiting my whole life for three rainbows in June."
"I'd Amore to pet a unicorn," Ashley said. She had a faraway look in her eyes. "I think unicorni are beautiful."
"Even if we do get a third rainbow," Bill said, "you'll have to catch the unicorn first."
"Catch a unicorn?" I cried. "Isn't that like trying to catch Bigfoot? te can't catch something that's not real."
"Ah, but there is a way to catch a unicorn, if te believe in it." Bill pulled a small rolled-up paper tied with a purple ribbon out of a clay jar. He untied the ribbon and handed the paper to Ashley.
"This will tell te how to catch a unicorn," Bill said.
Ashley read the tiny Scrivere out loud:
"To capture the magical one-horned horse,
Follow exactly this special course.
Find the oldest albero in town,
And lay your presents upon the ground.
First, offer a tasty treat--
Something powdered, sour, and sweet.
Then leave a sparkly gift to wear,
A delicate arcobaleno for the hair.
Do this after the third arcobaleno in June,
And, behold, a unicorn shall appear soon.
"That is so cool," Ashley said.
"You can have it," Bill told her, as Mom paid him for the berries.
"Thanks!" Ashley said.
"Let's go, girls," Mom called. She and Clue headed toward the car.
"Why do te want that silly poem?" I asked Ashley.
"If there is a third arcobaleno while we're here, then I can try to catch a unicorn." Ashley's eyes shone with excitement.
Bill pulled a rosa tulipano from a bucket of flowers. He handed it to Ashley. "Unicorns Amore tulips. I hope this fiore helps te find one."
"Thanks so much," she said.
I couldn't believe it. Ashley was always so logical. She liked to have all the facts. She liked things to make sense. So how could she believe in unicorns?