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Witch Twins Series

Page 11

by Adele Griffin


  Lakshmi stood her ground. She did not seem to care a fig what people thought of her. Luna liked that, and she wished she had sat next to Lakshmi, after all. Then they would have been a team against Pam. A resistance.

  After the meeting, when they were walking down to the field house to pick bikes for a morning ride, Luna screwed up her courage. She fell into step beside Lakshmi.

  “I don’t want to give anything to the Cabin Fund, either,” she said.

  “Luckily, it’s optional,” said Lakshmi.

  “I feel really out of place here,” Luna said, clearing her throat.

  “Oh, yeah?”

  “Don’t you?”

  Lakshmi stopped walking. “Why do you say that? Because I’m the only one here who’s Indian American?” she asked. Not in a mean way, but her voice was loud.

  “No, that’s not what I meant,” Luna said hastily. Her face felt hot.

  “Then what did you mean?”

  Luna had no idea what to answer. “I just meant … I don’t know,” she squeaked. “See ya later.” She stumbled ahead, feeling stupid and hoping that Penelope would be around somewhere.

  It was too horrible. Her one chance to be buddies, maybe even to make an all-weather friend, and she’d blown it.

  4

  Something’s Brewing

  “AND ON THE SECOND NIGHT, Glad went upstairs to bed. As soon as she switched off her light, she heard it again … a scritch-scratch-scritching at the window.”

  Small smothered screams. Swallowed giggles. In the glowing firelight, the real Glad looked as if she might faint from fear. Claire knew she herself could not laugh. The whole trick of a great ghost story was to keep your eyes slightly zombied out and your voice a few octaves lower or higher than your own. As if some spirit were channeling this awful story through you.

  “Who’s there?” squeaked Penelope. “It’s the one-eared pirate, right?”

  “Shhh.” Claire put a finger to her lips. “At first the scratch was very faint, but then louder. Again and again, it came … the sound of bony fingers scraaaping against the glass.” Through lowered lids, Claire sneaked a peek at the faces ringed around the campfire pit. Even Luna looked spellbound, and she’d heard the story, and the part about the scraaaping, at least a hundred times. (Claire told it at every slumber party they’d ever attended.)

  “Scritch! Scratch!. Scritch!” Claire clawed the air with one hand. With her other hand, she snapped a twig between her fingers. A snap did not sound too much like a scritch or a scratch, but some of the younger girls jumped, then laughed.

  “It was then, out of the darkest nowhere,” Claire continued, “that a howling wind began to blow.”

  There could be no mistaking the sound of the low, howling wind that suddenly kicked up in the distance.

  “Stop!” Penelope squeaked. “I’m too scared. Poor Gladriole!”

  “It’s not the real me,” said the real Glad, twisting her hair. “It’s just a story me.”

  Claire looked quizzically at Luna. Was she casting a spooky weather spell? But Luna shook her head. Claire raised her voice. “Glad sat up in her bed, terrified by the scratching and the wind. Had the ghost of old Wilbur, the one-eared pirate, returned?”

  “I knew it!” Penelope squealed.

  The wind shivered past, prickling scalps and scattering embers.

  “Yipes!” exclaimed Tammy. “This weather! Maybe we should go in?”

  Even Ella looked nervous.

  “No, no! I’ll finish quick,” said Claire, half in her ghost voice, half in her Claire voice. “Glad ran to the window and opened it. Rain swept in, cold as a corpse and soft as tears.”

  When the sprinkle of cold rain began to patter from the night sky, everyone started squealing.

  “Who’s doing that? Is this a prank?” “Does someone have a watering can?” “Shhh!” Claire pressed a finger to her lips and glanced angrily at Luna, who shook her head again. But of course it had to be her sister, Claire thought. Who else? Well, she wouldn’t dare try anything for this next part. “Lightning flashed across the sky, turning the night bright as day. Gladriole could not believe what she saw, standing in the—”

  White lightning jagged across the black sky. It was too much! Now came squealing and shrieking from the campers—and counselors—as they all jumped up from the campfire.

  “There’s cider and graham crackers at the lodge!” shouted Tammy. “Everyone, run. Ghost stories are over!” Quickly, she tamped down the little campfire with the flat end of a shovel. Claire’s story, the one she had been waiting all week to tell at the Saturday campfire, was ruined.

  “You didn’t need to send me all that extra-spooky weather!” she scolded as she came up behind Luna. “My ghost story was going great without your help. And Grandy would be mad at you for casting unsupervised spells.”

  “It wasn’t me!” Luna turned, indignant. “You saw how I kept shaking my head no.”

  “Oh, yeah? Then who was it?”

  “It must have been some strange coincidence,” said Luna.

  “Wind and rain and lightning? No way. Weather in threes is not a coincidence. I know a spell when I feel one, and so do you.”

  Luna shook her head. “I promise, it wasn’t me,” she said.

  Claire was not convinced. “Hook on it?” She crooked her little finger.

  “Sure,” said Luna. After they hooked pinkies—because a pinkie hook is like crossing your heart, only twice as strong—Luna said, “Now that you know I didn’t do it, Clairsie, I have tell you my sneaking suspicion. I don’t think that weather was any coincidence.” She linked her elbow through her sister’s and bent her head to whisper. “Methinks there be another witch at Camp Bliss.”

  “Snakes and skullcaps! Here?” Claire cried; then, when Luna pinched her arm to pipe her down, she hissed, “How can you be sure?” Claire had never met another young witch—certainly not one in the eight-to-fourteen-year-old range. All the witches she and Luna knew were Grandy’s friends. Old and cackling and opinionated.

  “I’ve had my suspicions for a while. Only it wasn’t till yesterday that I believed,” Luna said, a bit mournfully. “See, my bottle of Marigold Zest has gone missing. Grandy gave it to me in case I needed zest. I memorised the spell and hid the bottle. Nobody but a witch could have sniffed it out. I’m so worried. Grandy super-extra warned me not to let it fall into the wrong hands.”

  “Are you sure Pam didn’t take it and contribute it to the Pillowcase Fund?” asked Claire.

  “I checked the pillowcase. I checked everywhere.” Luna chewed her bottom lip. The theft had been weighing on her.

  “We’ll set a trap, then,” Claire said. “We have a right to know who this mystery witch is! Especially if she’s stealing our zest and wrecking our ghost stories.”

  “I’ve been doing some detectiving already,” said Luna. “Whoever she is, she’s got it out for Pam. Just watch how much Pam trips over her shoelaces. No matter how hard she ties them together, they keep coming loose. That’s a silly, beginner witch trick.”

  “But weather in threes is more advanced,” Claire argued. “The Decree Keepers would be angry if they knew such a young witch was casting unassisted weather spells.”

  Luna shook her head. “I don’t think this witch is paying attention to the Decree,” she said. “She’s casting so recklessly, like she doesn’t care who catches her.” She lowered her voice to a whisper again. “Methinks she be a rebel witch.”

  “Hard to believe there’s a rebel witch at Camp Bliss,” Claire said. “Everyone here is so normal.”

  “Well, we probably seem normal, too, Clairsie,” said Luna. “You’d have to wake up pretty early to catch us acting witchy. We never make mistakes like yawning with one eye open.”

  “Or twitching one nostril at a time.”

  “Or bending our toes backward.”

  “I haven’t even cast one single food-seasoning spell,” said Claire. “And all the meals here could use more oomph.”

>   They were almost to the lodge.

  “Keep your ears open and your eyes peeled,” said Luna. “We need to find this rebel witch before she makes real trouble.”

  “I’ll do better than just find her,” said Claire, her hands curling into fists. “I’ll catch her in the act.”

  She had to. A rebel witch was an official problem, Claire decided that night, as she lay awake on her top bunk. (Unlike Luna, she enjoyed sleeping up so high. The thinner air made her brain function more clearly, and she liked to touch the ceiling with her toes.) Why, a rebel witch could cast herself into the fastest runner! The scariest storyteller! The strongest tug-of-war puller!

  A rebel witch, with no regard for the Decree, could even vote herself Camp Bliss Girl.

  But to change Destiny, such as Claire’s Destiny to be Camp Bliss Girl, could plop a witch into a vat of trouble. She could be boycotted. Fined. Her stars revoked.

  “By hawthorn and the hay moon, ye shall be found, rebel witch,” Claire muttered as she drifted off to sleep.

  The next morning, every single one of the Sleepy Hollow girls looked suspicious to Claire. Suspect Number One was Ella, with her witch-red hair, who butted in lines and shoved at the sink and always used “Takes one to know one!” as her standard comeback.

  Or Lakshmi, who talked loud as a judge and stalked around with her hands clasped behind her back, and who rebelishly said she would never give to the Pillowcase Fund.

  Or maybe that girl, Glad, who was so dreamy and poetic. Poets and witches often overlapped.

  Or even Min Suh, who laughed all the way until it was time to pitch for the softball team, and then she turned into a tyrant, slamming knuckle- and curveballs like nobody’s business.

  Yes, everyone had her witching moments. And those were just the girls in Sleepy Hollow.

  It was too much to think about. And soon, Claire forgot to think about it. Especially after the next morning’s nature walk, when she was the first to spot a purple-speckled blue jay, the official bird mascot of Camp Bliss. Later that afternoon, she did twelve chin-ups at the “test-your-fitness” obstacle course, making her the chin-up champ in her age division.

  It was, all in all, a great day. By dinnertime, Claire decided that even if there was a rebel witch at Camp Bliss, she wasn’t anyone to lose sleep over. No, this mystery witch was not aiming to sneak off with Claire’s loving cup. She was probably just a wee witch, a Cabin One girl who didn’t know any better.

  By the next morning, Claire had pretty much put the whole thing out of her mind when two incidents made her think again.

  First, she saw Pam trip.

  Ever since Luna mentioned that the rebel witch held a grudge against Pam, Claire had been keeping an eye peeled, waiting to see when Pam might stumble next. While there had been a million great opportunities to trip her up—especially during yesterday’s softball game—Pam stayed standing.

  Luna was imagining things, Claire had decided after the softball game.

  It wasn’t until the next morning, while she was checking names for roll call, that Pam suddenly and inexplicably tripped and fell. Hard.

  “Ow! Dang!” Pam staggered to her feet. “It’s like my knees keep giving out!”

  Which was precisely how the spell worked! A tap on each knee and a quick:

  Knock, these knees—

  Fall to thine!

  The spell was in the Baby Book of Shadows; that’s how simple it was.

  From the way Pam was rubbing her dusty knees, it also looked pretty painful. Claire glanced around. The Green Gables girls and Cabin Five’s Plum Creek girls were lined up for roll call. Just beyond, a group of junior and senior counselors were lounging in and around the oak-tree hammock.

  Claire looked down the roll-call line at Luna, whose face was pinched in worry. She had seen Pam fall, too, and had heard her remark. Claire knew that Luna was thinking the same thing: Yes, Pam was annoying; but, no, she sure did not deserve being cast around and tripped up by some mean rebel witch.

  Claire literally stumbled on the next clue a couple of hours later, after dinner. Tammy had invited her on a twilight walk along with the Green Gables cabin, and Claire was trotting over to Green Gables, scouting for fireflies, when she saw a lump of freshly turned grass.

  She was about to stomp it down with her foot when she caught the thinnest whiff of apple. Claire’s nose was exceptionally good. She could pick out the faintest, most scentless odors, such as feathers, saltine crackers, or sand.

  She followed her nose to where the smell was its strongest, then quickly crouched and dug and dug until she was holding a quarter-section of a green Granny Smith apple.

  Claire knew she had stumbled upon evidence of a spell. More important, it was evidence of a problem-solving spell. Here’s how the spell worked:

  Tell your problem to the apple, then polish and quarter it.

  Whisper four possible solutions into each of the four sections.

  Bury the sections North, South, East, and West.

  After a week, dig all the sections up.

  Whichever section of the apple is least rotten is the best solution to the problem.

  But anyone knows that is a very quaint and bygone way to solve a problem. An Old School spell, Claire thought irritably. With about twenty-five percent accuracy. No modern witch wasted her time whispering to apples and digging them up. Whoever was teaching this rebel witch was using a very out-of-date textbook.

  Angrily, Claire dug up the remaining sections and tossed them high into the trees. Of all the camps to pick, she thought, why did some strange Old School rebel witch have to come sneaking into her very own Camp Bliss?

  I’m onto ye, trouble-enkindling Old School rebel witch,” Claire said out loud, in case the rebel witch was somewhere out there. Spying on her.

  Which was a pretty spooky sensation.

  5

  Luna Boo-hoo

  ONE AND A HALF WEEKS down, Luna thought. Three and a half to go. She tried to remember what three and a half weeks in the past had felt like. She counted back to late June and the last day of school, when their fifth-grade teachers, Mrs. Fleegerman and Mr. Rosenthal, had taken them out to Wild Water Park for an end-of-the-year school trip. There had been a fun house and an observatory and a homemade fudge stand. Luna and Claire had shared a bag of white-chocolate fudge with pineapple chunks. Delicious!

  The taste of pineapples and chocolate seemed like a million years ago.

  It would be impossible to stay at Camp Bliss for three and a half more weeks, Luna decided. What was the point? She had not made an all-weather friend, though she was friendly with a lot of girls. Especially Penelope. That was mostly because they both were picked last for teams.

  And every time she climbed all the way up to the top bunk, she was sure this was the night she would fall and break her arm.

  In fact, the only place where she felt comfortable was the first-aid office. Probably since she’d spent so much time there.

  It wasn’t her fault. Bad things kept happening to her.

  For example, in spite of applying plenty of Haley’s fancy sunscreen, Luna came down with a skin-splotching rash. “Sun poisoning,” Pam said. “Go see Talita in the office. You’re excused from afternoon sports.”

  Luna went down to the office to find Talita, who used to go to Camp Bliss but now was in medical school. Now, as a summer job, she was in charge of all the Camp Bliss paperwork, plus head of first aid.

  Talita gave Luna some calamine lotion and a paperback to read while she recovered in the first-aid bed. The paperback was called Eternally Eustacia. It was an old-fashioned romance with lots of good descriptions of ball gowns and horseback riding.

  When the rash faded into little pink bumps, Luna thought she was getting better. By the next morning, the bumps had started to itch. It turned out she had a case of poison sumac.

  “Okay, Luna, you are excused from the basketball tournament,” said Pam with a frown.

  Luna trotted to the first-aid offic
e, where Talita mixed up a baking powder paste to stop the itch. She took another rest on the first-aid bed and read a couple more chapters of Eternally Eustacia. Then she and Talita played crazy eights.

  “It’s fun to get a break from solitaire,” Talita said.

  Luna smiled. Talita was nice. She had shiny eyes, and she wore her hair in little braid circlets she called twisty-ties. She promised she’d twisty-tie Luna’s hair one day when she had the spare time.

  The poison sumac was almost gone the next morning when Luna woke up with a bloody nose. “We’re in a mountainous region,” Talita explained when she was summoned from the office to Luna’s bunk side. “Don’t be scared. It’s natural. Keep pinching your nose at the bridge.”

  The nosebleed cleared up, but the next day Luna was back in the first-aid office because she had stepped into a thicket of nettles. Talita had to use tweezers to pick them all out.

  “If there was a blue ribbon for being accident-prone, you’d get it,” Talita said as she swabbed Luna’s ankles with disinfectant. “All set.”

  “How about a hand of crazy eights?” Luna looked around the first-aid room with longing. It reminded her of a combination of her mother’s examining room and Grandy’s library. A good balance of dark wooden beams and sterilised instruments.

  “Okay,” said Talita. “And then you need to get back to camp.’”

  But after crazy eights, they played go fish, and then one of the campers, Janna Bruskaard, came in with a scraped elbow. “I hope I’ll be healed by the canoe trip tomorrow,’” she said. “Everyone says I’m a star paddler!”

  “Don’t worry about a thing,” Talita comforted her. Then Luna watched as Talita swabbed, sprayed, and bandaged Janna’s elbow and told her how brave she was. Talita will make a good doctor, Luna thought. She was calm and decisive.

  Talita was teaching Luna rummy five hundred and telling her about her boyfriend, Curtis, when the dinner bell rang.

  “Gosh, that’s the first time the bell took me by surprise!” Talita said with a laugh. “You go ahead. I’ve got to finish up some paperwork here. Guess I took a little bit of a sick day myself.”

 

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