no, thank you,â I said, backing awayâbefore I gagged from the smell.
Aunt Sylvie caught my hand. âCome. Come. Just a little taste!â she urged.
She lifted the spoon out of the pot.
And I gasped.
A slimy creature with arms and legs stared up at me. I watched in horror as it tried to wriggle off the spoon.
âJust a taste,â Aunt Sylvie repeated.
She shoved the spoon against my lips.
I clenched my lips shut. I shook my head no, furiously.
Aunt Sylvie tightened her grasp on my wrist.
She stared hard into my eyes.
âI insist!â she said. âOpen wideâNOW!â
2
âN oooooo!â I shouted as loud as I could.
I yanked my hand from Aunt Sylvieâs grasp and ran for the hall.
But Kevin and Lissa blocked the kitchen doorway.
âHey, Sam!â Kevin grabbed my shoulders. âGet a grip. You donât have to taste it if you donât want to.â
I glanced over my shoulder. Aunt Sylvie stood by the stove, smiling at me.
âThatâs right, Sam,â Aunt Sylvie said. âI just thought you might enjoy it. Itâs a special recipe Ilearned on a small island in the South Pacific. Squid stew. Very tasty.â
âSam doesnât really like to try new things,â Lissa explained. âHe eats only plain old white food.â
Aunt Sylvie narrowed her eyes at me. âYou must eat more than that,â she said.
âNo. No, I donât,â I admitted.
âYou donât understand, Sam.â Her smile turned cold. âThat wasnât a questionâyou must eat more than that.â
Aunt Sylvie turned her back and stirred the pot.
âCome on,â Kevin pulled me out in the hallway. âI want you to see something upstairs.â
Kevin and Lissa thought Aunt Sylvie was awesome. I thought she was creepy.
âWhat do you want me to see?â I asked as we climbed the stairs.
âAunt Sylvieâs room,â Kevin replied. âItâs full of the most incredible stuff youâve ever seen.â
We stepped into Aunt Sylvieâs room. Just a few days earlier it had been a regular bedroomâwith pictures on the walls, a big bed with an oak headboard, and a colorful rug on the floor.
Now everything was gone. Even the bed.
âWhere does she sleep?â I asked.
Kevin pointed to a straw mat on the floor. âAunt Sylvie doesnât like clutter. She says if you surroundyourself with too many things, the spirits will have a hard time finding you.â
I made up my mind right then and there to fill my bedroom with as much junk as possible.
âGet this, Sam,â Kevin called to me from across the room. He pointed to a wooden mask that hung on the wall. Its mouth twisted into an ugly sneer.
âPretty spooky,â I said, glancing away from the dark eye sockets. They seemed to stare right through me.
âItâs not spooky,â Lissa said. âItâs a medicine mask from an ancient mountain tribe. Aunt Sylvie says when you put it on, it will chase the germs right out of your body if youâre sick.â
âDoes Aunt Sylvie think it really works?â I asked, turning my back to the mask.
âSheâs not really sure,â Kevin replied. âBut she says itâs important to keep an open mind.â
âYeah,â Lissa added. âShe says even the impossible is possibleâwhatever that means.â
I wandered around the room, studying Aunt Sylvieâs stuff. Tacked on the wall over the sleeping mat I saw an Indian dream catcher. I made one in camp last summer. Itâs a big wooden hoop with a web made of string inside it. Itâs supposed to catch bad dreams and let good dreams pass through.
âSam, check this out!â Lissa held a silver mirrorin front of my face. Just as I caught my reflection in it, Lissa flipped it over.
I gasped.
A dozen black eyes stared back at me!
âThe eyes are carved into the wood,â Lissa explained.
Qiu Xiaolong
Louis L’Amour
Ludmilla Petrushevskaya
Katie Graykowski
J. C. McClean
Sarah Cameron
Michael Wallace
Fern Michaels
Henry James
Lisa Brackmann