Ivy and Bean Bound to Be Bad Read Online Free

Ivy and Bean Bound to Be Bad
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away.
    Bean drove Mrs. Trantz crazy. She didn’t try to; she just did. Every time Bean walked by Mrs. Trantz’s house, one of the tiny white fences circling around the rosebushes fell over. Bean didn’t know how it happened. Then Mrs. Trantz would call Bean’s mother and say that Bean was destructive. That meant she wrecked things.
    Bean didn’t know quite what she was going to do to Mrs. Trantz’s yard, but it wouldn’t be boring, that was for sure. She stood in frontof the stiff rosebushes and looked carefully to see if Mrs. Trantz was peeking from behind her curtains. The coast was clear.
    “Do something!” yelled Dino. “This is boring!”
    Boring! Bean would show him!
    She leaned over the tiny white fence and brought her face close to a rose. And then she spit on it as hard as she could.

    She turned around to face Dino. “How was that, huh? You’d never do that!”
    Ivy grabbed her by the shoulders. “Bean!” she cried. “Promise you’ll never do that again! You’re hurting the flowers, and they have feelings, too!”
    Oh. Right. Just for a second, Bean had forgotten about turning good. “Yeah, sure. I’ll never do it again,” she told Ivy.
    “She’s reformed!” yelled Ivy.
    But Bean whirled around to make sure Dino was watching. “Oh no!” she hollered. “It didn’t stick! I’m turning bad again!”
    This time the Sophies clapped along with Katy.
    Ha! Bean was the Queen of Bad! “Keep your eyes peeled!” she screeched and started to run toward her house.
    Bean knew a lot of things that Nancy didn’t know she knew. One of the things she knew was where Nancy hid candy. Nancy thought she was pretty smart. She didn’t hide candy in her own room. She hid it in the bathroom, behind the stacks of toilet paper, in a brown paper bag. What Nancy didn’t know was that Bean spent a lot of time prowling around the house, looking for treasure. One day when she was prowling in the bathroom, Bean found Nancy’s paper bag full of candy.

    Bean was always careful not to eat so much candy that Nancy would notice. Just a Tootsie Roll or a mini–candy bar—that’s all she ever took. Until today.
    Bean whisked into her house and rushed to the bathroom. Bean often rushed to the bathroom, so her mom and dad and Nancy didn’t even notice. When she came out, there was a bulge inside her shirt, but nobody was watching.
    Bean marched back up the street toward Ivy’s house, but she didn’t stop there. She walked around Pancake Court until she was standing next to Dino, Liana, the Sophies, and Katy. Ivy came running. “What are you doing, Bean?” Her eyes were shining.
    “Look,” said Bean. She pulled the brown paper bag from her shirt. “I’ve got candy. Except it isn’t mine. I stole it.”
    “Great!” said Ivy. “Who’d you steal it from?”
    “Nancy,” said Bean.
    Ivy giggled.
    “Hey, you’re supposed to be good,” said Bean, and Ivy stopped giggling. “I’m going to eat stolen candy,” Bean said to Dino and the other kids, “before lunch and in front of you guys, without sharing.” She reached into the bag and looked at Ivy. “How’s that for bad?”
    Everyone watched while she ate a Butter-finger.
    “Aw, come on,” said Katy. “Give us some. Please?”
    “No,” said Bean with her mouth full. “I’m so bad I don’t share with anyone. Right, Ivy?”
    Ivy nodded, her eyes on the candy.

    Bean opened a pack of peanut-butter cups and ate one.
    “Isn’t your sister going to be mad?” asked Liana.
    “Yg,” said Bean, jamming the other peanut-butter cup into her mouth. She was starting to feel a little sick. She looked at Ivy. “Aren’t you going to stop me?” she whispered.
    “Oh! Right!” Ivy said. She clasped her hands together and said, “Bean, I beg you! Stop stealing and eating dessert before lunch and not sharing! You’ve got to get good.”
    Bean was glad to stop eating candy. “Well, okay, since you put it that way.”
    “You should give us some to show that
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