AbrakaPOW
Page 1
To my daughters, Zaya and Evangelina, who have all the qualities from the best magic tricks: They’re beautiful, mesmerizing, and impossible to figure out
Chapter One
“Why, oh why, oh why did we move here?”
—Max’s diary, Wednesday, March 8, 1944
Maxine Larousse climbed over the boxes in the moving truck, searching for the three boxes she had specifically labeled were only to be touched by her hands. Even as she looked, she knew she wouldn’t find them. Her mother had selective illiteracy, and the GIs that were helping them move, well, they were GIs after all, far more interested in shooting at Nazis than ensuring an eleven-year-old’s meticulously written instructions were followed to the letter.
“Hey, Buck! Lookie here, I got a magic wand!” one of the GIs yelled from just outside the truck.
Oh gosh, that’s box number two, Max thought with a groan. She stumbled over the walls of cardboard as she rushed off the truck. The blond GI, who she remembered had said his name was Gil, waved her wand around in the air. “Somebody get me a sorcerer’s hat so I can be Mickey Mouse!”
Max fought the horror in her throat and scrambled to snatch the wand from his hand. “Can’t you read, you big gorilla?” she asked and pointed at the box from which the wand had come.
WARNING! AUTHORIZED PERSONS ONLY!
UNAUTHORIZED OPENERS WILL BE IN VIOLATION OF THE
MAGICIAN’S CODE!!!!
AND MAY BE CUT IN HALF!!!!
YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!
Gil scrunched up his forehead as he read the label.
I probably should have made it shorter to account for limited attention spans, Max thought.
He grinned as he finished. “So you’re a magician? That explains your weird-looking bunny.”
She rolled her eyes. “It’s a ferret.”
“What is that, a long bunny?” he asked.
She ignored his question and carefully placed the wand back in the box.
Buck, the brown-haired GI, came over to try to peek inside. Max slammed the flaps shut.
“You should show us a trick real fast,” Buck said.
“I’m trying,” she said. “I’m making all these boxes disappear.”
“Aw, come on, Squirt,” Gil said and poked her in the ribs. “We’ve been doing all the work here. The least you could do is give us a magic show.”
At what age do boys stop acting like chimpanzees? she wondered.
Mrs. Larousse came out of their new home carrying a pitcher of lemonade on a tray with some glasses. “What’s all this racket I hear?” she said with an air of charm she’d never used back in Brooklyn. The GIs instinctively straightened up, as though the wife of a major deserved a salute like her husband.
“They want me to put on a magic show,” Max said.
Mrs. Larousse placed the tray in the truck’s cargo area and poured lemonade into the glasses. She handed them to the boys. “And? Why don’t you?”
“This isn’t really the place.”
Mrs. Larousse sat next to her tray, her legs dangling off the end of the truck, and straightened out her skirt under her apron. She gave Max the smile that was code for “do this or die” and took a sip from the glass Max had assumed was for her. “Oh, I don’t know. This seems like a magical moment to me.”
Max looked at their yard, with its brown grass and anthills and literally nothing else, and felt the breeze bringing the hot air of Abilene, Texas, wafting across her forehead. This is magic? Then I’ve been doing it wrong. She sighed and wondered if this was finally the time to become the second woman in history—after only the great Madame Adelaide Herrmann—to attempt the BULLET CATCH TRICK. She decided her mother didn’t have the stomach for it and opened the box back up. She found a jar of coins and picked out a quarter.
“Here, take this and examine it closely.” She handed it to Gil.
“You could at least pull it from my ear,” he said. She didn’t laugh. He looked at the front. “Okay, so it’s got the standing liberty on the front, eagle on the back. Hey, it’s 1925. That’s the year I was born!”
“Good, good,” Max said. She tried her best to channel her stage persona, THE AMAZING MAX, even though there was literally nothing bedazzling about this venue. “Now, would you say you would recognize it if I showed it to you again?”
He nodded. “Yeah, it’s pretty distinctive.”
“So, if I had a group of, say, three quarters, could you pick out this exact one?” She took the quarter from his hand and held it up.
“Yup.”
“What if there were four? How about then?”
He laughed. “Oh yeah, sweetie. You don’t forget your birth year.”
“Even if there were five?” she asked.
“Even if there were twenty-five, I could pick out that quarter.”
“Okay, so you’re pretty smart. In fact, I’ll bet,” she waved her hand over the quarter, and it vanished “even if there were no quarters, you could still pick out that quarter.”
Gil and Buck both stared at her hand in silence. Then they looked at the ground. Then they walked around her to see if she was hiding the quarter behind her back. They made her move to check under her shoe. She even showed them both her hands to prove it was gone.
“Oh, wow, that’s pretty good,” Gil finally said.
“Sure, thanks,” Max said. “But what do you say? Could you pick out that quarter even if there were no quarters?”
Gil shook his head. “No, of course not. There aren’t any quarters to pick from.”
“Check your back pocket,” she said.
He slipped his hand into his pants pocket, and then he got the look on his face like a man who had just discovered oil in his backyard. He slowly brought his fingers out to reveal a quarter—liberty standing on the front, eagle on the back, and the year that was so familiar, because it was his birth year, emblazoned on the bottom.
“I knew you could pick it out,” she said. And then she let THE AMAZING MAX go back to sleep. “Mom, seriously, why are you drinking my lemonade?” Her mother begrudgingly handed her the glass.
Gil and Buck started applauding. “Wow, that was amazing! How did you do it?”
She shrugged, swallowed her lemonade, and carried her box into the house. The trick was so simple she was pretty sure it wasn’t covered by the magician’s code, but she wouldn’t give those oafs the satisfaction of an answer.
Besides, that would mean admitting that she had slipped one of her 1925 quarters into Gil’s back pocket thirty minutes earlier, just in case such an illusion proved necessary, and the fact that her hand had been close to his back pocket was a secret she would take to her grave. Other than that detail, though, the trick was a simple matter of palming the other quarter until they were looking on the ground, then slipping it into her own pocket so she could show her empty hands. Way, way too easy.
Max went into her room and set the box on her bed. She barely noticed the rat-tat-tat of Houdini trying to find a way out of his cage over in the corner. Which meant he wasn’t really trying. That little white ferret had earned his name probably a thousand times.
Whoops, make that a thousand and one.
Max plucked Houdini off the floor just as he was scurrying to steal her freshly unpacked shoes. She nuzzled his nose and kissed his stinky head, then she let him go on the floor again and watched him drag the dress shoes that she hoped she’d never wear again under her bed.
“You know how I used to tell my friends that the saddest thing in the world was being almost twelve and still not being famous?” she asked him. He stopped in his shoe-stealing duties and looked at her. “Well, it turns out I was wrong. This place is the saddest thing in the world.”
He licked his lips and pushed her shoe with his nose. She p
lopped down next to him and stared in his eyes. “Did you see what I did there, Houdini? I made you believe that I had friends.” She took the shoe and tossed it on top of her dresser. “THE AMAZING MAX strikes again. Ta-da!”
Houdini was far less frustrated with the verbal trick she’d just pulled on him as he was with the fact that her shoe was now out of his reach. He shuffled over under her bed in search of some other item worthy of his thieving efforts.
She got up and plopped on top of her bed. “Oh well, whatever. I have you. And I’ll probably make friends, right? I mean, boring west Texas friends who say ‘y’all’ and ride horses, but friends nonetheless.”
She could hear Buck and Gil outside, mumbling some ignorant version of a magical spell. They must have found box number three. She groaned and got back up. “And maybe, if I’m really lucky, one of those friends could be a capable assistant and we’ll put on the magic show of the century.”
But probably not, she thought to herself, not even wanting to say that last part to Houdini. Finding a kindred spirit here in cowboy land would be a magic trick even I wouldn’t believe.
She hurried out before the GI movers could violate the plainly written instructions and incur a well-deserved dismembering, regardless of how much she secretly would have loved to see that happen.
Chapter Two
Houdini wallowed on top of Max’s dresser as she worked on the last three steps of the FLOATING CARD TRICK. He was miles away from interested in what she was doing, which meant she needed more practice. Ferrets, you see, are excellent barometers of showmanship.
She had just gotten the ace of spades to rise out of the deck, and Houdini had just started paying attention, when her mother called her to the kitchen.
“Max! I still need your help in here!”
Max had hoped that her vanishing act would go unnoticed. Sadly, she wasn’t nearly the escape artist her ferret was. She dragged herself back into the kitchen, where her mother was surrounded by half-unpacked boxes.
“I thought you were going to the bathroom,” Mrs. Larousse said. “Why’d you disappear on me?”
“I’m a magician, Mom. Disappearing is what I do,” Max said. “Anyway, I thought Dad was coming home soon. He’s so much better at unpacking than I am. I might as well be a monkey the way I unpack your things. Breaking them, sitting on them, stacking them so they fall over. I’m such a burden.”
Her mother rolled her eyes. “As grateful as I am for your sacrifice, your father isn’t here, so you have to keep burdening me with your help.”
Max sighed, rather loudly, and plopped down to start unwrapping teacups. Even when Major Larousse was there, he wasn’t there. She could see in his eyes that he still heard the rumbles of tanks and felt the African sun beating down on his head, even though the battle was thousands of miles away. “When will he come home?”
“I don’t know, sweetie. This is new for all of us.”
Her mother had said those words at least a dozen times over the last few weeks: the entire time they were packing up in New York, the four-day trip driving across seven states to get to Texas, and at least three times since they’d pulled up to the little cardboard-colored house that looked like tornado bait. It helped Max to know that her mother, who had lived her entire life bouncing around the five boroughs of New York City, felt just as out of place in the land of cowboys as Max did. But Max knew there was even more to it than that.
Because it was new for everyone. New for her and her mother, whose big-city accents were now ambushed by the Abilene small-town drawl. And also new, in the worst sense, for Major Larousse, who had always enjoyed challenging Max to a nice game of hopscotch or hide-and-seek in Central Park before he had been sent off to jolly old Morocco. There he spent his time reminding GIs to hop and hide from bullets on the front lines. . . . That is, until he forgot to take his own advice and took a bullet in the hip. Now there was no time for games at all because he was stuck spending his days behind a desk, doing something she once thought he would never, ever do.
He was babysitting the Nazis. That’s what Max had called it when her mother told her about the job. Of course, that wasn’t the official name. Officially, he was in charge of the guards and prisoners at Camp Barkeley, a place for captured German soldiers that were being held by the American troops. They were prisoners of war, and her dad was a little like their warden. He was to sit in his office and make sure they were fed, had their bedtime, and had plenty to do during the day to keep them out of trouble.
But he wasn’t supposed to be punishing the prisoners, so it wasn’t exactly like a real prison in Max’s opinion. He was holding the prisoners, which made no sense to her at all. These were the people that filled the newsreels with horror stories. They were bombing London, killing civilians, and shooting bullets into the hips of perfectly good fathers who had perfectly good daughters, perfectly happy back in their redbrick homes in Brooklyn. Letting the monsters work on farms and earn wages and go swimming and eat three good meals a day just seemed like a trick. And not a magic trick.
It was an hour and a half of unpacking all the knickknacks and figurines they’d accumulated from both sides of the family, arranging them on the shelves, rearranging them, and then repacking the pieces that didn’t quite “fit the décor,” as her mother said. Finally, once she was satisfied with the display, she sealed the box back up and slid it over to Max. “Go ahead and put this away.”
Max blinked. “Put it away?”
Her mother nodded. “Yes, we don’t need the rest of these out.”
“Then why do we have them?”
“In case we eventually need them. Or if your grandmother comes to visit.”
Max tried to imagine the blitzkrieg they’d endure if her Grandma Schauder came and wasn’t greeted by the Hummel figurines yodeling on the mantel. It sent a chill down her spine. “Where do you want me to put them, then?”
“Out in that storm cellar.”
Another chill down her spine, only this one lingered. “Really? By myself?”
Her mother stifled a grin. “Are you afraid? THE AMAZING MAX? Master of the Dark Arts? Madame Queen of the Ghostly? Scared of a creaky old storm cellar in the middle of the day?”
Max narrowed her eyes, picked up the box and Major Larousse’s flashlight, and spun toward the back door so fast her ponytail whipped around and smacked her in the face.
“Oh, honey, I’m just teasing. I’ll go with you if you want.”
“Don’t bother,” Max said. “I’d rather die alone than bring a cantankerous old goat into the sacred Indian burial grounds and risk angering the ghosts.”
“Was that referring to me? I lost track after ‘alone.’”
Max let the slamming of the screen door act as her reply as she headed out to the door in the ground that served as the entrance to the creepiest place on earth.
The storm cellar.
Max had never seen a storm cellar before that day, and at first thought it sounded quite magical. Like a hidden room where a wizard might concoct thunder and hurricanes and then keep them in bottles on long, gnarled shelves in case of an emergency. Which, of course, she knew wasn’t possible. There was no such thing as magic, at least not the wizarding kind. But there was the magic you could make yourself, and she would have loved to find a way to bottle a hurricane, even if only in an illusion.
Unfortunately, the entire vision of the kindly wizard and the tamed cyclones was itself an illusion. Instead, the storm cellar was a dark, dank, bug-filled hole in the ground, lined with cement, accessible only via the ricketiest staircase ever built, which was revealed by pulling on a cinder block that was dangling from a thick wire. The wire went through a pulley on top of a pole, and then attached at the other end to a heavy metal door. The door that was stuck in the ground.
The door she was now straining to open.
How do you get out of the cellar if the door is closed? she wondered as both her feet slowly lowered to the ground with the descent of the cinder block. Sh
e climbed on top of it. It took every last ounce of weight an eleven-year-old magician had on her body to open that darn door. Pushing it open from the inside, she imagined, would be impossible.
She shook her head. That scenario was the stuff of nightmares.
The cinder block touched the ground, and she stepped off. She peered through the open door, where the sunlight happily illuminated the first seven steps, but then lost the wrestling match with darkness and left the rest of the abyss as black as midnight.
Luckily Max had the flashlight. She turned it on and shone it down the staircase, which was a mess of warped boards that strained against the nails supposedly holding them onto a cracked beam on the right and the concrete wall on the left. She picked up the box of knickknacks, balanced the flashlight on top, and headed down into the cellar.
She made it down the first five steps with no problem, but the sixth step was only fastened on one side, and so it moved under her foot. She tried to keep her balance and dropped down to the seventh step, teetered, then finally found her footing again on the eighth. Thankfully, the ever-important knickknacks were unscathed. Not thankfully, the flashlight slipped off the top of the box and bounced the rest of the way down, the clack of it hitting every step echoing off the concrete walls. The flashlight landed at the bottom, shining its beam back up at her face.
She squinted and inched the rest of the way down, trying very hard to not die while also not breaking any of the chubby-cheeked milkmaids stowed away in the box for the ride.
She stepped off the bottom stair and onto the concrete floor. Or, rather, into a puddle of very smelly water that was on the concrete floor. She yelped and tried to jump over the puddle, landing in a much deeper, much smellier one. She stretched her foot over to the flashlight and kicked it around so that it shone across the room and over to the far wall, where a wooden bench perfectly suited for a box of knickknacks was located.
She did her best to dance across the floor on all the dry patches, misjudging only occasionally. Once she was able to set her box down on the bench, she was a little surprised at how dry her left shoe was. Her right shoe was soaked through, but her left still had a dry spot right above the heel. Amazing.