energy!â
âThatâs great, girls,â said Ms. Aruba-Tate. âIâll be excited to see that.â
âMe too,â muttered Ivy.
That afternoon at Beanâs house, Ivy was the lookout. That meant she stood outside the kitchen door, watching for Beanâs mom. If Beanâs mom came along, Ivy was supposed to fall on the floor and screech.
Inside the kitchen, Bean was standing on the counter. She was looking through the cupboards, trying to find rice. No luck. She wished she had said she was going to make chocolate chip energy. She knew where the chocolate chips were.
Crackers, more crackers, walnuts, ugly dried lumps she had never seen before, oatmeal . . . rice! Bean grabbed a handful and stuffed the package back on the shelf. âGot it!â she whisper-shouted to Ivy.
Ivy zipped into the kitchen. Bean jumped to the floor and held out her hand. There it was.A bunch of rice. There was no way they were going to get a Certificate of Scientific Achievement for rice. If only she had kept her mouth shut. âWhat the heck are we going to do with this?â she said.
Ivy looked at the grains, and her eyes got narrow. âThere was this lady,â she began.
âWho?â Bean interrupted.
âLisa Something,â said Ivy. âShe was a scientist. I read about her in my
Famous Women of Science
book. She said you could get energy by breaking stuff into bits.â
âCool!â said Bean. âWhy donât we just break some glasses, then?â
Ivy frowned. âNot those kind of bits. Tiny bits. In the book, she said atoms, which are really tiny bits, but I bet it would work with rice, too. She said there was lots of energy inside tiny things, once you broke them.â
It was a weird idea. When Bean broke stuff, it just lay there, broken. It didnât start jumping around energetically.
Bean looked at the rice in her hand. It didnât seem like there could be anything inside rice except more rice, but it was worth a try. âIâll go get some hammers.â
Grand Slam
Bean thought her mom might not be happy if they hammered rice on the dining room table, so she and Ivy went outside. They found a board in the garage and laid it down on the grass. Bean and Ivy each took a grain of rice and set it on the wood. Then they slammed it with their hammers as hard as they could.
Cool. Rice dust.
They set out two more grains of rice. Slam! More rice dust.
Slam! Slam!
Slam!
The board leaped up and flipped over, spilling rice dust into the lawn. âHey! Did you see that board jump?â said Bean. âThatâs energy for sure!â
âAnd no pollution,â said Ivy. âLetâs do it again!â
âItâs a science experiment! We
have
to do it again,â yelled Bean, lifting her hammer over her head.
âDonât tell me this is another dorky solution for global warming,â said Nancy. She and Mischa stood over them in the grass.
âNone of your beeswax,â said Bean.
âWeâre making clean energy,â Ivy said at the same time. Bean shook her head. Now they were in for it.
âNo offense, but you guys are totally lame,â giggled Mischa.
Bean could have banged Mischaâs toe with the hammer, but she didnât. Ivy was talking. âDonât you care about global warming?â she asked Mischa.
âBor-ing!â said Mischa. âIâm, like, if I hear about global warming one more time, Iâm gonna scream.â
âDonât you care about the polar bears?â asked Bean.
Mischa shrugged. âNot really.â
âDonât you care about nature?â asked Ivy.
Mischa rolled her eyes. âBor-
ing
,â she said.
âWhat?â asked Ivy.
âCamping and all that,â said Mischa, shaking her head. âTotally boring.â
âWhat
do
you like?â asked Ivy.
âShopping!â said Mischa.
âAnd Harky,â added Nancy,