whole five-monthsâ worth of my allowance.
I struck the carpet with my branch once and became suddenly aware my lips had been moving independently of my brain. My little green book lay open in my lap, but I hadnât even glanced at it; I had blurted out the entire curse without even realizing it. The second time I made a conscious effort. I pronounced each word deliberately, thumping the stick three or four times, feeling all my anger and frustration toward Jordan sliding from my brain, down into my arm, through my hand, onto the stick ,and into the thick, beige carpet. The third time, it was like I was in some kind of weird trance. I thumped and thrashed and thwacked. I whipped and whomped and whacked. I beat that carpet so wildly the stick slipped from my hand, flew straight up in the air, and came down, smacking me right between the eyes, snapping me out of my stupor.
âEeoowww!â I shouted, rubbing my forehead and turning toward Paula-Jean. âDid you see that? That branch attacked me!â
Paula-Jean stifled a giggle. âServes you right, Claire. You were totally out of control.â
Before I could stop him, Cyrus hoisted himself to his feet. He scrambled toward the stick and snatched it in his gooey jaws. He nudged the door open, and made off into the hall and down the stairs with the dwarf winterberry euonymus. I would have chased after him, but my body suddenly felt like a sack of dirty laundry. I fell backward into the carpet and sighed deeply. Lack of sleep had definitely caught up with me.
âSo?â asked Paula-Jean, yawning. âDo you think it worked?â She wriggled into her sleeping bag and fluffed her pillow.
âNo idea,â I said. I barely had the energy to blow out the candle and crawl into my own sleeping bag. I lay there for a few moments thinking about Jordan and what I may or may not have done to him. A slight twinge of guilt flitted through my brain, but it was nothing that a deep yawn couldnât cure. âI guess weâll find out in the morning.â
In a matter of minutes, Paula-Jean was snoring away. Although my body felt as though Iâd just run three consecutive marathons, I couldnât manage to fall asleep. I twisted and turned. My back was itchy where the juniper needles had stabbed me. My forehead was sore where the branch had struck me. And for some reason, no matter what position I tried, I just couldnât get comfortable.
Morning light dribbled through the cracks in the blinds, snuffing out any remaining chance I had of getting a decent nightâs sleep. Paula-Jean yawned and stretched, turning toward me all bright-eyed and bushy-tailed.
She smiled. âHey.â
âMm,â I grunted. As I wriggled out of my sleeping bag, a dull ache rippled through my whole body. I groaned.
âWhatâs wrong?â she asked.
âNothing.â I decided not to tell Paula-Jean I felt like Iâd been in a train wreck. I just knew sheâd find a way to connect my aches and pains to the what goes out, returns threefold and I was in no mood for any I-told-you-sos.
I got up and got dressed as quickly as my sore limbs would allow. Despite my fragile condition, I was anxious to see if my curse had actually had any effect on Jordan.
Paula-Jean and I sat at the breakfast table suspiciously still, our cereal getting soggier by the moment, eyeing each other and waiting for Jordan to arrive. When I heard his bedroom door creak open and his lumbering steps descending the stairs, my back straightened and my pulse quickened.
âThis is it,â I whispered. âThis will tell us for sure if that book is magic.â
Paula-Jean nodded once and then fixed her eyes on the doorway.
Jordan entered the kitchen rubbing his neck. He stopped short when he saw us sitting there like a couple of statues, gawking at him.
âYou two freaks practising for the staring Olympics?â
I fumbled for my spoon and shovelled a heap of