The Boy Who Lost His Face
Essay Preview: The Boy Who Lost His Face
Report this essay
Book report: THE BOY WHO LOST HIS FACE
Characters: David, Scott, Randy, and Roger, Larry, Mo, Mrs. Bayfield, Tori.
David was with his friends Scott, Randy, and Roger. They were all at Mrs. Bayfields house to steal her cane the cane had two snake heads for the handle. So they went and stepped all over her flowers, flipped her over, spilled lemonade over her, broke her lemonade pitcher, David saw her panties when she flipped over, and Roger broke her window. Then roger got the cane and took it to his house and kept it.

After that happened Scott, Randy, and Roger started to hate David. Then things started to get even worse. Everything that happened to Mrs. Bayfield started to happen to him. Like when he was playing baseball with his brother David threw the ball too far and broke his moms bedroom window. Then when David was in class he flipped over on his chair like Mrs. Bayfield did. After all those things that happened he began to think he was cursed. Then David made new friends Larry, and Mo Larry liked Mo and David liked a girl called Tori. Which he said only hi to her every day.

Then David got so tiered of the curse he went to Mrs. Bayfields house so she could take away the curse. When David went to her house she said he has to give her her cane back then she will take away the curse. Later that day David went to Rogers house to get the cane but no one was home until Rogers brother went home. David told Rogers brother to tell roger that David was going to be at Rogers house tomorrow at 12:00pm to get the cane.

The next day David went to Rogers house with Larry, Mo, and Tori David rang the door bell to Rogers house when roger came out then roger said he would fight him for the cane. David ended up loosing the fight but tori got the cane from inside the house. They took it to Mrs. Bayfields

Get Your Essay

Cite this page

Brother David And Rogers House. (July 15, 2021). Retrieved from https://www.freeessays.education/brother-david-and-rogers-house-essay/