Alyssa McCarthy's Magical Missions by Sunayna Prasad (freenovel24 .TXT) đ
- Author: Sunayna Prasad
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The sound of the rain banging against the window distracted Alyssa from washing her lunch dishes. She stared out the window and watched every drop. What a better way to spend a Thursday noon than to wash dishes. No hard work involvedâjust looking out the window.
Gone were the happy days of living in her uncleâs house. No more family fun. No more sweets and desserts. Just a structured life of strict and unfair rules. Alyssa longed for a normal and better lifeâthe kind sheâd lived before her parents had died in a car crash five years ago. She wanted to be like many children her age, but when would it happen? Not any time soon.
Unlessâshe could find her godfatherâs phone number and call him without her uncle knowing. One of the rules here was that all phone calls had to be earned unless there was an important reason to call someone. She hadnât talked to him ever since sheâd also lost her aunt three years ago. But she still remembered how sweet, fun, and caring heâd been. He even could be her legal guardian since her parents had designated him as one. If she could find his number at some point and ask about moving in with him, her life would be happier.
But now something didnât seem right with the raindrops, which took Alyssaâs mind off of her godfather. They turned cadet blue. Huh? How could that be? That broke the laws of nature. Too distract her more, though, the cadet blue darkened into a dark grayish blue. What could be going on?
The rain now turned black, looking as if ink fell from the sky. Alyssa leaned closer, squinting her eyes to determine the shapes it formed on the window. The rain formedâletters. What? No. That was impossible. But then a message formed as the rain plopped other parts of the window. What could be causing this? Nature couldnât be changing its laws, right?
The message finished putting itself together. Alyssa gasped at what it said.
Your life will never be the same, Alyssa McCarthy, as magic will interfere.
What the heckâmagic? Alyssa had never believed in magic. Sheâd even been told at a very young age that magic didnât exist. But was now the time to change her views on reality? Was now the time to start believing in magic? Who couldâve done all that? No one on Orion Street was a wizardâat least Alyssa thought that ever since sheâd moved here five years ago, right after her parentsâ deaths.
Turning around, she saw her babysitter, Mrs. Hutchinson, examine the kitchen floor, while her eleven-year-old cousin, Hailey, watched since she had mopped the floor. Would Hailey get a break now? Ever since her uncle, Bruce, had hired Mrs. Hutchinson, sheâd liked the way Hailey did her chores better than her.
âHailey, you can take a break until your next chore,â said Mrs. Hutchinson. âAlyssa, get back to work. Youâve been staring at the rain for too long.â
âOkay.â Alyssa turned backâonly to see the message gone and the rain back to its normal transparency. What?
âWhat did I say?â asked Mrs. Hutchinson.
Alyssa sighed. âFine, Iâll finish washing the dishes.â She scrubbed her dish and glass with dishwashing soap under warm running water. Her eyes focused on those and that was it. No way would she want Mrs. Hutchinson to catch her looking out the window again. Even though Mrs. Hutchinson was only in her sixties, she had the irritability of a ninety-year-old. But it had taken Hailey and Alyssa a while to realize that she wouldnât even tolerate the mildest kind of nonsense, such as getting distracted by a windowpane when having to wash dishes.
After she finished washing her dishes, Alyssa put them to the side and got some paper towels to dry them.
âWhat do you think youâre doing?â Mrs. Hutchinson asked.
Alyssa stopped. âIâm justââ
âThe last few times I was here, youâve left little bits of food in your dishes,â Mrs. Hutchinson reminded her.
âBut they were stuck.â
âLet me inspect them. Also, if itâs rubbery, you have to wash it again.â
âWhy?â
âBecause clean dishes arenât supposed to be rubbery. And boy, did you do such a sloppy job? Look at that stain on your sweater.â
Alyssa looked down.
âThat looks like chocolate,â said Mrs. Hutchinson.
Alyssa blushed and arched her eyebrows. Washing dishes was no slice of peach cobbler. Yet Mrs. Hutchinson just had to embarrass if she were a messy five-year-old child.
âHeyâitâs just water,â Alyssa said, covering the stain at the bottom of her sweaterâs V-neck with her hand.
But Mrs. Hutchinson held up her index finger. âDonât you âheyâ me, Alyssa,â she warned, waving her finger. âThatâs very rude. In my days kids expected their elders. We never would dare talk to them that way unless we didnât mind them to smack our bottoms.â
âThings change,â said Alyssa.
âYeah, yeah,â said Mrs. Hutchinson. âLet me do my inspection.â
Greatâan inspection! How long would Mrs. Hutchinson take? She may take a couple of minutes, or maybe twenty minutes. Alyssa crossed her arms and tapped her foot. She wanted her break now. She wanted to read, rest, do a small craftâanything but wait for Mrs. Hutchinson to finish her silly inspection.
âMrs. Hutchinson,â Alyssa started.
âWhatever, you need to say, wait till Iâm done,â she insisted.
Alyssa sighed. She continued to watch Mrs. Hutchinson run her finger down the middle of the front of the dish. She then rubbed it back and forth. When she put it down and nodded, Alyssa figured out that that dish had nothing in it.
After a few minutes of running her finger down the glass, Mrs. Hutchinson put it down and turned to Alyssa. âYouâre good. Now what did you want to tell me?â
âUm⊠if I tell you, can you not give me a hard time?â
âOkay.â
âThere was writing on the window.â
Mrs. Hutchinson pursed her lips and tilted her head, as if Alyssa had spoken Ancient Chinese. âWriting?â
âYeah.â
âNonsense,â said Mrs. Hutchinson.
âNo, really, it was there,â Alyssa said.
âThere was nothing here when I came and thereâs nothing there right now. So donât tell me stories.â
âBut itâs not a story.â
âI donât want to hear any more,â said Mrs. Hutchinson. âNow itâs time for your next chore.â
âAw, but I wanted my break,â said Alyssa.
âToo bad,â said Mrs. Hutchinson. âYou have to go vacuum the living room.â
Alyssa dragged her feet towards the living room and took the vacuum from the corner. Vacuuming, she thought about that writing and how Mrs. Hutchinson wouldnât believe her. Would a nicer babysitter believe her? Mrs. Hutchinson had babysat her and Hailey for three years, and not once, did she smile or use keenness. Alyssa wanted her out of the house.
After vacuuming the carpet for about ten or fifteen minutes, Alyssa decided that it looked clean enough and stopped vacuuming. She put the vacuum away back where it was before.
âHailey, you and Alyssa need to go get the mail now!â Mrs. Hutchinson called, facing the staircase.
âComing!â cried Hailey.
Another rule Uncle Bruce had placed on Alyssa and Hailey was they could not go outside by themselves. He worried about people taking them or some animal attacking them, even though they were older. Alyssa would be turning thirteen next month, and childhood would end for her. But that rule had been placed because last month Uncle Bruce had heard about a seventeen-year-old boy who got shot while skateboarding in his neighborhood. Itâs happened here in Bursnell, New Jersey.
Hailey and Alyssa treaded to the closet and put on their raincoats until Mrs. Hutchinson said, âIt stopped raining outside.â
âAlready?â asked Alyssa.
âYes,â said Mrs. Hutchinson. âIâm going to go to the bathroom.â
The girls walked outside towards the mailbox. Alyssa pulled the mail out of the mailbox and walked back towards the doorâonly to see some mud bubbling from the ground. It piled up, looking like horse manure, and grew as more mud emerged. Alyssa dropped her jaw and stared at it.
âAlyssa, whatâs going on?â Hailey asked.
âNo idea,â said Alyssa.
The mud stopped piling, but then continued to bubble, spreading throughout the whole pile. This also had to be caused by magic, because mud couldnât just bubble on its own.
The bubbles stopped popping up and down. Alyssa and Hailey gasped as they expanded. They kept their mouths open as the bubbles merged together. Each bubble attaching to another bubble formed a still bigger bubble. Alyssa and Hailey stepped back as the now-one giant bubble swelled. And to Alyssaâs horrors⊠pop!
Particles of exploding mud landed on the girls, causing them to shriek. Then, a few seconds later, the front door opened to reveal a glowering Mrs. Hutchinson.
âWhat the heck have you two been doing?â she screamed.
âT-the mud⊠it e-exploded,â explained Hailey.
âNonsense!â growled Mrs. Hutchinson. âGet inside!â
The girls headed inside, pulling and wiping the mud out of their hair. Alyssa could easily spot mud in her straight pale blonde hair, unlike Hailey, who needed more patience to search for globs in her elbow-length red hair. But Alyssaâs hair fell to her tailbone, a few inches past her hips; so cleaning out the mud would take longer, even with the shorter layers in the front.
âHow could dirt explode?â yelled Mrs. Hutchinson, stomping her feet.
âI⊠I think it was magic!â exclaimed Alyssa.
âThereâs no such thing as magic!â screamed Mrs. Hutchinson. âAlyssa, youâre twelve years old. Youâre too old to say things like that!â
âBut nothing else can make mud explode!â Alyssa pointed out.
âMrs. Hutchinson, we swear it did!â whined Hailey.
âEnough!â retorted Mrs. Hutchinson. âYou and Haileyâgo upstairs and take showers!â
Alyssa followed Hailey up the stairs and heaved a sigh. How else would the mud have gotten all over the two of them? Mrs. Hutchinson couldnât have thought theyâd play in the mud. They werenât small children anymore.
âAlyssa, can I shower first?â asked Hailey.
âSure,â said Alyssa.
As Hailey strode into the bathroom, Alyssa treaded into her room. She scratched more mud off of her skinny jeans (which sheâd only wear ever since theyâd come into style) and the back of her left hand.
Standing by her bed, since she didnât want to get dirt on it, she thought about the writing on the window and the exploding mud. Why did they happen? Someone wanted magic to interfere with her life, but whom, and why?
Also, why didnât she ever see magic before? Why would her parents and others tell her that magic didnât exist? Could magic be new to the earth? Had it been hidden somewhere? There had to be some reason why no one ever believed in magic.
Alyssa thought about the possibility that maybe magic would only interfere if she stayed here in her uncleâs house. Maybe sheâd be safe if her godfather could arrange with his lawyer to let her move in with him. Or would it? Unlike science, anything could be possible with magic, which meant that magic could follow her wherever she went. How could she find out more about it? Right now, there were no options available.
The sound produced by the shower ended, which let Alyssa know that Hailey had finished. Now she could have a turn. She walked towards the bathroom, as Hailey stepped out with a towel wrapped around her body. After heading inside, she took off her clothes and stepped into the hot shower.
After five minutes Alyssa stepped out and headed back to her room. She put on leggings and a long shirt, but she gasped when
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