by Cairi Hayes, Gabrielle Seals, Kameron Bell, Micah Patterson, and Trentin Dickerson

Once upon a time, a dawn bat touched the middle leaf in the stem of a banana plant and went into a secret gaming room. 

The dawn bat went to the gaming room and got a pollen ice cream bar. He played a dinosaur game with his friends, the protector dawn bats. The two protector dawn bats played as the T-rex and the spinosaurus. 

In real life, the dawn bats collect pollen and pollinate the banana plant. 

In the game, the dinosaurs collected pollen ice cream bars. 

The dawn bats turned off the light and took a nap upside down. They woke at nighttime. And the dawn bats saw the solar eclipse. 

At most, the banana plant can make 200 bananas per year. 

The dawn bat played music. He rocked all day. The bananas needed light and the bananas were surrounded by dinosaurs. To give them light, he sometimes used LED lights made out of bananas. When they gamed, they ate snacks. 

When they were extra hungry, they ate chicken and burgers at their favorite restaurants, McBat’s, Bat-fil-A, and Bat Donuts . . . and had more pollen ice cream bars.

One day, the dawn bat and the protector dawn bats left the gaming room and went to McBat’s and this is what happened . . .

They saw dinosaurs who had escaped from the game in the real world. They heard big stomps. So, they got some cool hats. These hats could make the dawn bats invisible, and invincible too! The dinosaurs had scary, laser eyes. And had powers like teleportation and speed and strength, and had LED lights on top of their hats.

The dawn bats lured the dinosaurs back into the TV with yummy food from McBat’s. The dinosaurs’ friends, a triceratops and a stegosaurus, were waiting for them to return home!

The next night, they ate pollen cake and cheesecake. And they met their friends, a rhino and a stegosaurus.

People who wanted bananas arrived, but they had to wait for the dawn bats to finish pollinating. They had a happy life and chilled out. They liked to sleep. They slept upside down, on top of the solar eclipse. 

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