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
Folding the corner, she flipped through the remaining
pages. Then she skimmed the rest of the pages from the
start to make sure she had missed no similar messages.
There were no other cryptic clues.
Drink the milk.
Maybe soaking a page in milk would make words
appear. She could soak one in the tins of milk Dale left out.
Or that could be the milk the message was talking
about! A challenge to drink unprocessed cow’s milk-what
purpose could that serve? To give her diarrhea? Dale had
made a special point of warning her
not
to drink the milk.
Of course, he had acted sort of peculiar about it. He could
be hiding something.
Drink the milk.
All the hassle of finding holes for the keys Grandpa
Sorenson gave her, in order to uncover extra keys that fit a
locked journal, for that odd message? Was she missing
something, or overanalyzing? The hunt might have simply
been meant to occupy her time.
Do you think Mom and Dad would let us get a pet
chicken? Seth asked, holding the hen.
Probably right after they get us a pet buffalo.
Why don’t you ever hold Goldilocks? She’s really
good.
Holding a live chicken sounds disgusting.
Better than holding a dead one.
I’m fine just petting her.
You’re missing out. Seth held the hen up to his face.
You’re a good chicken, aren’t you, Goldilocks? The hen
clucked softly.
She’s going to peck your eyes out, Kendra warned.
No way, she’s tame.
Popping one of the rosebud chocolates in her mouth,
Kendra replaced the
Journal of Secrets
in the nightstand
drawer and returned to her painting. She scowled. Between
the gazebos, pond, and swans, the picture required more than
thirty shades of white, gray, and silver. Using the sample
hues Lena had given her, she prepared her next color.
* * *
The sun was bright the next day. There was no evidence
that it had ever rained or that it would ever rain
again. Hummingbirds, butterflies, and bumblebees had
returned to the yard. Lena gardened in the back beneath a
large sun hat.
Kendra sat in the shade on the back porch. No longer a
prisoner in the attic, she felt better able to enjoy the fine
weather. She wondered if the diverse butterflies she saw in
the yard were among the species Grandpa Sorenson had
imported. How did you keep a butterfly from leaving your
property? The milk, perhaps?
She passed the time with a game she had found on a
shelf in the attic-a triangular board with fifteen holes and
fourteen pegs. The object was to jump pegs like checkers
until you had only one left, which sounded simple at first.
The problem was that in the process of jumping, certain
pegs ended up stranded, unable to jump or be jumped. The
number of pegs you left stranded on the board determined
your score.
Her best effort so far was three, which the directions
labeled typical. Leaving two was good. One was genius.
Five or more labeled you hopeless.
While resetting the pegs for a fresh attempt, Kendra
saw what she had been waiting for. Dale was walking along
the perimeter of the yard with a pie tin. Setting the peg
game on a table, she hurried to intercept him.
Dale looked mildly distressed at her approach. I can’t
let Lena see you talking to me like this, he murmured in
low tones. I’m supposed to put the milk out on the sly.
I thought nobody knew you put the milk out.
Right. See, your grandfather doesn’t know, but Lena
does. We try to keep it our secret.
I was wondering what the milk tastes like.
He looked nervous. Didn’t you hear me last time? You
could get… shingles. Scabies. Scurvy.
Scurvy?
This milk is a bacterial stew. That’s why the insects
like it so well.
I have friends who have tried milk fresh from the cow.
They survived.
I’m sure those were healthy cows, Dale said. These
cows are… never you mind. Idea is, this ain’t just any
milk. It’s highly contaminated. I wash my hands good after
even handling the stuff.
So you don’t think I should taste it.
Not unless you’re aiming for a premature burial.
Would you at least take me in the barn to see the
cows?
See the cows? That would be breaking your grandfather’s
rules!
I thought the point was we might get hurt, Kendra
said. I’ll be fine if you’re with me.
Your grandfather’s rules are your grandfather’s rules.
He has his reasons. I’m not about to go breaking them. Or
bending them either.
No? Maybe if you let me see the cows, I’ll keep your
secret about putting out the milk.
Now see, that’s blackmail. I’ll not stand for blackmail.
I wonder what Grandpa will say when I tell him at
dinner tonight.
He’ll likely say you ought to mind your own affairs.
Now, with your leave, I have chores to do.
She watched him walk away with the tin of milk. He
surely had acted defensive and strange. There was definitely
some mystery surrounding the milk. But all the talk
about bacteria made her reluctant to try it. She needed a
guinea pig.
Seth tried a flip off the boulder into the pool, but
landed on his back. He never could quite make it all the
way around. He surfaced and stroked to the side to try
again.
Nice back-flop, Kendra said, standing beside the
pool. That was one for the blooper reel.
Seth climbed out of the water. I’d like to see you do a
better one. Where have you been?
I found out a secret.
What?
I can’t explain. But I can show you.
Good as the lake?
Not quite. Hurry up.
Putting a towel over his shoulders, Seth stepped into
his sandals. Kendra led him away from the pool through
the garden to some flowering shrubs on the outskirts of the
yard. Behind the plants lay a large pie tin full of milk where
a crowd of hummingbirds were feeding.
They drink milk? he asked.
Yeah, but that isn’t the point. Taste it.
Why?
You’ll see.
Have you tried it?
Yes.
What’s the big deal?
I told you, try it and you’ll see.
Kendra watched curiously as he kneeled by the tin. The
hummingbirds dispersed. Seth dipped a finger into the milk
and put it on his tongue. Pretty good. Sweet.
Sweet?
He lowered his head and puckered his lips against the
surface of the milk. Pulling back, he wiped his mouth.
Yeah, sweet and creamy. A little warm, though. Looking
beyond Kendra, his eyes bulged. Seth jumped to his feet,
screaming and pointing. What the heck are those?
Kendra turned. All she saw was a butterfly and a couple
of hummingbirds. She looked back at Seth. He was turning
in circles, eyes darting around the garden, apparently perplexed
and amazed.
They’re everywhere, he said in awe.
What are?
Look around. The fairies.
Kendra stared at her brother. Could the milk have
totally fried his brain? Or was he messing around with her?
He didn’t appear to be faking. He was over by a rosebush
gazing at a butterfly in wonder. Tentatively he reached a
hand toward it, but it fluttered out of reach.
He turned back to Kendra. Was it the milk? This is
way cooler than the lake! His excitement seemed genuine.
Kendra eyed the tin of milk.
Drink the milk.
If Seth was
playing a prank, his acting skills had suddenly improved
tenfold. She dipped a finger and put it in her mouth. Seth
was right. It was sweet and warm. For an instant the sun
gleamed in her eyes, making her blink.
She glanced back at her brother, who was creeping up
on a small group of hovering fairies. Three had wings like
butterflies, one like a dragonfly. She could not suppress a
shriek at the impossible sight.
Kendra looked back at the milk. A fairy with hummingbird
wings was drinking from her cupped hand. Other
than the wings, the fairy looked like a slender woman not
quite two inches tall. She wore a glittering turquoise slip
and had long, dark hair. When Kendra leaned closer, the
fairy zipped away.
There was no way she was really seeing this, right?
There had to be an explanation. But the fairies were everywhere,
near and far, shimmering in vivid colors. How could
she deny what was before her eyes?
As Kendra continued to survey the garden, startled disbelief
melted into wonder. Fairies of all conceivable varieties
flitted about, exploring blossoms, gliding on the
breeze, and acrobatically avoiding her brother.
Roaming the pathways of the garden in a daze, Kendra
saw that the fairy women appeared to represent all nationalities.
Some looked Asian, some Indian, some African,
some European. Several were less comparable to mortal
women, with blue skin or emerald green hair. A few had
antennae. Their wings came in all varieties, mostly patterned
after butterflies, but much more elegantly shaped
and radiantly colored. All the fairies gleamed brilliantly,
outshining the flowers of the garden like the sun outshines
the moon.
Rounding a corner on a pathway, Kendra stopped short.
There stood Grandpa Sorenson, wearing a flannel shirt and
work boots, arms folded across his chest.
We need to talk, he said.
The grandfather clock tolled the hour, chiming three
times after the introductory melody. Sitting in a high backed
leather armchair in Grandpa Sorenson’s study,
Kendra wondered if grandfather clocks got their name
because only grandparents owned them.
She looked over at Seth, seated in an identical chair. It
looked too big for him. These were chairs for adults.
Why had Grandpa Sorenson left the room? Were they
in trouble? After all, he had given her the keys that ended
up leading her and the guinea pig to sample the milk.
Even so, she could not quit worrying that she had discovered
something that was meant to stay hidden. Not
only were fairies real, but Grandpa Sorenson had hundreds
in his yard.
Is that a fairy skull? Seth asked, pointing to the flat-bottomed
globe with the thumb-sized skull on Grandpa’s
desk.
Probably, Kendra said.
Are we busted?
We better not be. There were no rules against drinking
milk.
The study door slid open. Grandpa entered along with
Lena, who carried three mugs on a tray. Lena offered
Kendra a mug, then Seth and Grandpa. The mug contained