Authors: Brandon Mull,Brandon Dorman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #Juvenile Fiction, #General, #American, #Magic, #Fantasy, #Fantasy fiction, #Children: Young Adult (Gr. 7-9), #Action & Adventure, #Fantasy & Magic, #& Magic, #Ages 9-12 Fiction, #Children's Books, #Fairies, #Brothers and sisters, #Family, #Siblings, #Good and evil, #Family - Siblings, #Multigenerational, #Grandparents, #Family - Multigenerational, #Connecticut, #Authors, #Grandparent and child
as well eat shoe leather.
Kendra glanced at Lena.
Go
ahead, dear, the woman urged. You won’t get
sick; I cooked it plenty.
I like it, Seth said, chewing on a bite. We have any
ketchup?
Why would you go and ruin a perfectly good steak
with ketchup? Dale moaned.
You put it on your eggs, Lena reminded him, placing
a bottle in front of Seth.
That’s different. Ketchup and onions on eggs is a
necessity.
That’s sickening, Seth said, upending the bottle over
his steak.
Kendra took a bite of the garlic potatoes. They were
tasty. Mustering her courage, she sampled the steak.
Bursting with flavorful seasoning, it was much easier to
chew than other steak she had eaten. The steak is wonderful,
she said.
Thank you, dear, said Lena.
They ate in silence for a few moments. Grandpa
dabbed his mouth with his napkin again and cleared his
throat.
What do you suppose makes people so eager to break
rules?
Kendra felt a jolt of guilt. The question was addressed
generally and hung there awaiting a response. When
nobody answered, Grandpa continued.
Is it simply the pleasure of disobedience? The thrill of
rebellion?
Kendra glanced at Seth. He stared at his plate, picking
at his potatoes.
Were the rules unfair, Kendra? Was I being unreasonable?
No.
Did I leave you with nothing to do, Seth? No pool?
No tree house? No toys or hobbies?
We had things to do.
Then why did you two go into the woods? I warned
you there would be consequences.
Why are you hiding weird old ladies out in the forest?
Seth blurted.
Weird old ladies? Grandpa asked.
Yeah, what about that?
Grandpa nodded thoughtfully. She has a rotten old
rope. You didn’t blow on it?
I didn’t go near her. She was freaky.
She came to me and asked if she could build a shack
on my property. She promised to keep to herself. I saw no
harm in it. You shouldn’t go bothering her.
Seth found your private retreat, Kendra said. He
wanted me to see it. My curiosity got the better of me.
Private retreat?
Big pond? Fancy boardwalk? Parrots and swans and
peacocks?
Grandpa looked at Dale, speechless. Dale shrugged.
I was hoping you’d take us out on a boat, Kendra said.
Who said anything about a boat?
Kendra rolled her eyes. I saw the boathouse,
Grandpa.
He tossed his hands up and shook his head.
Kendra set her fork down. Why would you let such a
nice place go to waste?
That is my business, Grandpa said. Yours was to obey
my rules, for your own protection.
We’re not afraid of ticks, Seth said.
Grandpa folded his hands and lowered his eyes. I was
not entirely honest about why you needed to stay out of the
woods. He lifted his gaze. On my land, I provide refuge
for some dangerous animals, many of them endangered.
This includes poisonous snakes, toads, spiders, and scorpions,
along with bigger game. Wolves, apes, panthers. I use
chemicals and other controls to keep them away from the
yard, but the woods are extremely hazardous. Particularly
the island in the center of the lake. It is deliberately
infested with inland taipans, also called ‘fierce snakes,’ the
deadliest serpent known to man.
Why didn’t you warn us? Kendra asked.
My preserve is a secret. I have all the necessary
licenses, but if my neighbors complained, those could be
revoked. You must not tell a soul, not even your parents.
We saw a white frog, Seth said breathlessly. Was that
poisonous?
Grandpa nodded. Quite lethal. In Central America
the indigenous people use them to fashion poisoned darts.
Seth tried to catch it.
Had he succeeded, Grandpa said gravely, he would
be dead.
Seth swallowed. I’ll never go into the woods again.
I trust you won’t, Grandpa said. All the same, a rule
is of no value unless the punishment is enforced. You will
have to stay in your room for the rest of your stay.
What? Seth said. But you lied to us! Being afraid of
ticks is a lame reason to stay out of the woods! I just
thought you were treating us like babies.
You should have brought those concerns to me,
Grandpa said. Was I unclear about the rules or the consequences?
You were unclear about the reasons, Seth said.
That is my right. I am your grandfather. And this is my
property.
I am your grandson. You should tell me the truth.
You’re not setting a very good example.
Kendra tried not to laugh. Seth was in lawyer mode. He
always tried to maneuver out of trouble with their parents.
Sometimes he made some pretty good points.
What do you think, Kendra? Grandpa asked.
She had not expected him to solicit her opinion. She
tried to collect her thoughts. Well, I agree that you didn’t
tell us the whole truth. No way would I have gone into the
woods if I knew there would be dangerous animals.
Me neither, Seth said.
I made two simple rules, you understood them, and
you broke them. Just because I chose not to share all my
reasons for making the rules, you think you should escape
punishment?
Yes, Seth said. Just this once.
That doesn’t sound fair to me, Grandpa said. Unless
the punishments are enforced, rules lose all their power.
But we won’t do it again, Seth said. We promise.
Don’t lock us up in the house for two weeks!
Don’t blame me, Grandpa said. You locked yourself
up by disregarding the rules. Kendra, what do you think
would be fair?
Maybe you could give us a reduced punishment as a
warning. Then the full punishment if we mess up again.
Reduced punishment, Grandpa mused. So you still
pay a price for your disobedience, but you get one more
chance. I might be able to live with that. Seth?
Better than the whole punishment.
That settles it. I will reduce your sentence to a single
day. You will spend tomorrow confined to the attic. You
can come down for meals, and you can use the bathroom,
but that is all. Break any of my rules again, and you will not
leave the attic until your parents come for you. For your
own safety. Understood?
Yes, sir, Kendra said.
Seth nodded his agreement.
Journal of Secrets
Did you ever notice the keyhole on the belly of the
unicorn? Seth asked. He was lying on the floor
beside the fanciful rocking horse, hands laced behind his
head.
Kendra looked up from her painting. She had asked
Lena to create a paint-by-numbers to help her endure her
incarceration. Kendra had wanted to paint the pavilions
around the pond, and Lena had quickly sketched a scene
with startling accuracy, as if the housekeeper had the place
memorized. Seth declined to have another canvas prepped.
Stuck in the attic or not, he was sick of painting.
Keyhole?
Weren’t you looking for keyholes?
Kendra got off her stool and crouched beside her
brother. Sure enough, there was a tiny keyhole on the
underside of the unicorn. She retrieved her keys from the
nightstand drawer. The third key Grandpa Sorenson had
given her did the trick. A small hatch swung open. Out fell
several rose-shaped chocolates wrapped in gold foil, identical
to the one she had found in the miniature armoire.
What are those? Seth asked.
Soap, Kendra said.
Kendra reached up into the hatch and felt around
inside the hollow rocking horse. She found a few more
rosebud chocolates and a tiny golden key like the one from
the armoire. The second key to the locked journal!
They look like candy, Seth said, snatching one of the
ten chocolates.
Have one. They’re perfumed. You’ll smell pretty.
He unwrapped it. Funny color for soap. Smells a lot
like chocolate. He popped the whole thing in his mouth.
His eyebrows shot up. Holy cow, this is good!
Since you found the keyhole, how about we split them
fifty-fifty. She was a little worried he would eat all of them
otherwise.
Sounds fair, he said, grabbing four more.
Kendra placed her five chocolates in the nightstand
drawer and retrieved the locked book. As she expected, the
second gold key unlocked another clasp. Where could the
third one be?
She slapped her forehead. The first two had been hidden
inside things the other keys had opened. The other one must
be in the jewelry box!
Opening the jewelry box, she rummaged through the
compartments of glittering pendants, brooches, and rings.
Sure enough, disguised on a charm bracelet, she found a
tiny golden key matching the other two.
Kendra eagerly crossed the room and inserted the key
into the final lock on the
journal of Secrets.
The final clasp
unlatched and she opened the book. The first page was
blank. So was the second. She thumbed quickly through
the pages. The whole book was blank. Just an empty journal.
Was Grandpa Sorenson trying to encourage her to
keep a diary?
But the whole game with the keys had been so sneaky.
Maybe there was a trick to this as well. A hidden message.
Disappearing ink or something. What was the trick with
disappearing ink? Spray it with lemon juice and hold it up
to a light? Something like that. And there was another
trick where you rubbed gently with a pencil and a message
appeared. Or maybe something even more devious.
Kendra surveyed the journal more carefully, hunting for
clues. She held a few pages up against the window to see if
the light would betray hidden watermarks or other mysterious
evidence.
What are you doing? Seth asked. He had only one
chocolate rosebud left. She would need to hide her chocolates
someplace more secure than the nightstand drawer.
She held up a final page. The light revealed nothing.
Practicing for my audition at the insane asylum.
I bet you’ll win first prize, he teased.
Unless they see your face, she retorted.
Seth went over and scooped some kernels for
Goldilocks. She laid another egg. He opened the cage to
retrieve it and stroked her soft feathers.
Kendra plopped down on the bed, leafing through the
last pages. Suddenly she stopped. There was writing on one
of the final pages. Not really hidden, just tucked away in
an unlikely spot. Three words written near the binding,
toward the bottom of an otherwise empty page.
Drink the milk.