The Templeton Twins
The Templeton Twins
The Templeton Twins
Ellis Weiner
To Paxton and Charlie Holmes. Jeremy Holmes
WRITTEN By
ELLIS WEINER
illustrated By
Jeremy Holmes
Book
PROLOGUE:
the beginning
ACTUAL PROLOGUE:
Trying to Get
Started
T
The End
I see you have failed to fill it in. Its not as easy as it looks,
is it? Fine.
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HOLD IT,
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ACTUAL PROLOGUE:
Getting Started
Again
O
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he asked.
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wife her checkups, they had not seen that there were two
babies, one boy and one girl.
Professor Templeton was amazed and delighted by
this news. After visiting his wife to make sure she was
all right (she was), he went to the nursery, which is a
special room in the hospital where newly born babies
sleep during the time they are not with their mothers.
TE
MPL
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N
ETO
a billowy white shirt. He looked as though he worked for
the hospital. Maybe that was why, when a man standing
next to him saw the Professor tapping on the window, he
became curious and asked, Who are they?
They? the Professor replied.
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CHAPTER 1
The Story
Actually Does
Get Started
woman had been quite ill for some time, and her death
was not unexpected. Still, it was a very sad event for the
twins, and for their father, Professor Elton Templeton.
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CHAPTER 2
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How is this possible? How can hobbies be so important? How can a dog be ridiculous?
Please, kindly stop asking me all these questions. You
do your job, which is reading, and Ill do mine, which is
narrating. You are the Reader. I am the Narrator. Do we
understand each other?
However, I just realized that the one asking the questions is really me. I am therefore in the position of having
to ask myself to stop asking questions. Will I do so? Yes,
I will. I will what? Ask myself to stop, or stop asking?
All right, I hope you are satisfied. I am now completely confused. I would say, Lets move on, but I dont
even know where we are.
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CHAPTER 2 (AGAIN)
The Story,
in Spite of Everything,
at Long Last, Really
Does Get Started
he Templeton twins
T cetera.
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And so it was . . .
And so it was. Isnt that wonderful? This is something we normally dont say in ordinary conversation but
which I, as a Narrator, am allowed to say without seeming strange or odd or weird.
And so it was that, after school one day, having
enjoyed a snack of frozen waffles and honey, and having
washed the dishes, the twins headed up to their rooms.
While chatting en route (which means on the way),
they decided to devise a Plan to convince their father to
get them something they had wanted for a long time.
I refer, of course, to a dog.
The Templeton twins had been asking their parents
for a dog for at least a year. Now, the drama of children
asking for a dog is as old as the human (and dog) race. I
would not be surprised to learn that Cain and Abel, who,
as you may know, were the children of Adam and Eve,
asked their parents for a dog, too.
And I expect Adam said, When youre older, and
Cain said, Its not fair! and Abel said, You wont have
to walk it or feed it or anything! Well do all that! Then,
Im sure, Eve said, Well think about it, and Cain said,
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of course, was accustomed to hearing his sister use interesting and expressive words. When she made her comment, all he said was, Really? Why?
Itll be tedious because it will remind him of all the
times weve asked before. And it will be grim because it
will remind him of Mama.
John nodded. Then he said, Hmm. Yeah. Right.
Wow. Okay.
Do you seeas Im sure you do, and as Im sure I do
the difference in the way the twins spoke? Tedious and
grim versus Yeah. Right. They were twins, these Templeton twins, but they werent alike in every way. You
will see more of this sort of thing as we proceed.
Abigail said, We need an exciting and a commanding way to ask him. We need a way that will really get his
attention.
John agreed, and so the twins discussed various
exciting and commanding ways of asking their father
for a dog. John suggested writing a song about it. Abigail
suggested sending their father a telegram. John suggested writing a note in invisible ink (lemon juice),
which they would then miraculously make visible.
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Lets do it
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to figure out
how to accomplish
it. Thats what John did
now as he surveyed the ceiling
in the dining room and the kitchen.
When he had successfully figured out
what was what, he went to the garage and got a
fishing rod that the family sometimes took on trips to the
lake. He made sure a hook was attached to the end of its
line, got a small sinker out of the box of fishing supplies,
and tied that to the end of the line, too. He took them into
the kitchen.
What? What is a sinker? Youre joking, surely. Clearly,
a sinker is a lump of heavy metal,
usually shaped like a big teardrop. Its only job, obviously enough, is to sinkto carry the hook and the bait
(which are both usually very light) down into the depths
of the water. Why? Because that is where the fish are.
John, you see, was quite clever when it came to
mechanical things, and connecting little thingies to
other thingies, and to various doodads, in order to solve
certain problems. In this he was much like his father.
Abigail brought the photograph of the dog into the
kitchen and joined her brother. Then the twins did a few
other things, and voil!*
The device was ready.
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3. Is this it? The twins ask for a dog and the book
is over?
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