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    Looniverse #1: Stranger Things (A Branches Book)

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    “Stop that!”

      Rex sat at the edge of

      the hole. He was panting

      with that dog expression

      that looks kind of like a

      smile and also kind of

      like he has a stomachache.

      I rushed over to rescue Willow. But Rex

      began to dig again. A moment later, Willow

      leaped out of the hole and started to lick

      herself clean.

      Great. Most cats get hair balls. My cat is

      going to cough up mud balls.

      Rex walked to a different part of the

      yard and started to dig another hole. Willow

      followed him. So did I.

      I couldn’t stand all the strangeness. I had

      to do something.

      Anyone who’s ever been on a merry-go-

      round knows how slowly it turns when you

      stand at the center. The farther out you go,

      the faster things spin. My brother, my sisters,

      my pets, and my friends were standing far

      from the center, way out in the Looniverse.

      They’d always been strange, but now it was

      like they were clinging to the very edge, with

      their feet flying in the air. I was in the center,

      the only normal person of us all.

      After Rex finished digging, I waited until

      he picked up Willow. Then I tossed the coin

      into the hole.

      Rex instantly dropped Willow.

      “Good boy,” I said.

      Rex started to fill the hole. I went to check

      my fish. They were swimming around like

      normal. Burying the coin seemed to have

      worked.

      Just to be safe, I went

      out back to make

      sure the coin

      was still

      buried.

      When I got there, I found Sarah Beth,

      Derwin, Libby, Quentin One, Moose, and

      Mouse all there. They stopped talking the

      instant they saw me.

      Now I really felt left out. “What’s going

      on?” I asked.

      “We want to talk to you,” Sarah Beth said.

      “Right now,” Moose added.

      I felt a ripple in my stomach. I’d never

      seen them look so serious.

      “What do you want to talk about?” I asked.

      They stood there, looking at one another,

      and at the ground, and at the clouds — but

      not at me. What could be so terrible that they

      were afraid to tell me? I wondered.

      chapter

      10

      STRANGE

      TRUTHS

      Finally, Derwin stood on his tiptoes and

      whispered something to Moose. Then Moose

      stepped forward.

      “Well,” he said, “we wish you’d try to be a

      little less strange.”

      “Me?” I asked. I couldn’t have been more

      surprised if he had told me there was a

      kangaroo on my head.

      “You,” Moose said.

      “What are you

      guys talking about?”

      I asked. “There’s

      nothing strange

      about me. Right

      now, I’m the only

      normal person

      around here.”

      “No way,” Moose said. “Strange stuff

      happens when you’re around.”

      “It sure does,” Libby said. “After you read

      that story to me, all those mice showed up.”

      Mouse nodded. “I got stuck in the air

      when you came over.”

      “I got the strangest twisty feeling when I

      rode my bike past you,” Quentin One said.

      “You’re the one who told me about the

      thousand words,” Derwin said. “My hand

      still hurts!”

      “I only have trouble with my food when

      you’re at dinner,” Sarah Beth said.

      “Things have always been a little strange

      around you,” Moose said. “But they seem

      to be getting even stranger lately.”

      “Definitely stranger,” Sarah Beth said.

      “Stranger for sure,” Derwin said. I felt

      like I’d been punched in the stomach. How

      could they blame me for the way they had

      been acting? “This isn’t fair,” I said. “And I

      don’t like the way you’re ganging up on me.”

      “Look,” Derwin said, “all we’re asking is

      that you try to be a little more normal.”

      “Think about it,” Moose said.

      I watched, shocked and hurt, as all the

      two-legged creatures left the backyard. I went

      up to my room, alone, and thought about

      everything.

      If I did nothing, and let the coin fade

      without giving it to the Stranger, I would

      remove all strangeness from the world.

      Was that what I wanted?

      I thought about how both

      Derwin and Moose had

      shouted, “What a great

      idea!” I thought about all the

      wonderful paintings, movies, and

      books that must have started out

      as strange ideas. Did I

      want a world without any

      strangeness?

      No!

      I ran out back, grabbed

      a shovel, and dug up the coin.

      STRANGER

      FOR SURE

      GETTING

      EVEN STRANGER

      LATELY

      DEFINITELY

      STRANGER

      When I saw it, my heart sank. The face

      was smooth and blank. I looked closer, but I

      could barely make out the “r” in “stranger.”

      I needed to give the coin to the Stranger

      immediately. But I still don’t know who it is.

      “Think!” I told myself.

      I remembered Mr. Sage’s words. Let your

      experiences guide you.

      I thought about my experiences since I’d

      found the coin. Derwin made a saying become

      real. Sarah Beth’s train moved. Libby’s mice

      showed up. Moose got a swell idea. Mouse

      lifted himself. My pets acted weird. Then

      everyone blamed me for their strangeness.

      Their words echoed through my mind:

      It all fell together. I finally knew who the

      stranger was!

      I thought about Derwin’s pencils. A sharpener

      makes things sharper. A sweetener makes

      things sweeter.

      The Stranger makes things stranger!

      “Could it be?” I whispered. Am I the

      Stranger?

      chapter

      11

      NORMALLY

      STRANGE?

      But if I was the Stranger, why were the

      words fading?

      I realized there was one more thing I had

      to do.

      “You’re mine,” I

      whispered to the coin.

      The silver coin glowed

      like the moon. The

      words rose up, solid

      and bold. I watched

      the sky as the moon

      rose and fell.

      This time, I knew it wasn’t my imagination.

      And I knew that strangeness was no longer

      in danger of fading away. I smiled, knowing

      I’d made the right decision.

      The sad part was that my friends and

      family wouldn’t want me around anymore. I

      wasn’t sure I’d be able to get used to that.

      Far off, I heard an ice-cream truck.

      Maybe a strawberry ice pop would cheer me

      up. I w
    ent around to the front yard. Derwin,

      Moose, and the others were standing there,

      waiting for me. Quentin One was gone, but

      Quentin Three was there on his skateboard.

      “We’re sorry about what we said,” Sarah

      Beth told me.

      “It’s pretty boring when you’re not

      around,” Moose said.

      “Very boring,” Derwin agreed. “Nothing

      fun happens.”

      “So you want me around again?” I asked.

      “Absolutely,” they all said.

      “That’s great!” I said. The music of the

      ice-cream truck moved closer.

      “Buy me an ice cream,” Libby said.

      “MONEY DOESN’T GROW ON TREES,”

      I told her.

      “Maybe it grows under them,” Derwin

      said.

      “Let’s see.” Mouse lifted up an oak tree

      and looked under it.

      “Hey, I found a dollar bill,” said Derwin.

      I felt a small tingle of excitement. My

      words had caused the strangeness. Could I

      learn to control my strange new power?

      Derwin scooped up the dollar and held it

      out. When the ice-cream truck drove past

      us, the driver handed

      Derwin a cone. He took

      the dollar without even

      stopping.

      “Your cone looks

      like a rocket ship,”

      Sarah Beth said.

      She grabbed the

      ice-cream cone from

      Derwin and turned it

      upside down. It shot

      up into the air. I felt

      another tingle. I guess

      I’d helped make her

      imagination do strange

      things.

      “I’ll get it,” Mouse said. He took off,

      running so fast his feet didn’t touch the

      ground.

      Quentin Three chased after him. The

      wheels fell off his skateboard, but he kept on

      going.

      “Read me a story?” Libby asked.

      “Sure,” I told her. “Go pick a good one.

      No mice, this time. And no snakes or giant

      spiders, either. Okay?”

      “Okay.” She ran toward the house. Halfway

      there, she stopped and asked, “Dragons?”

      “Only if they’re small and friendly,” I

      called back. I spotted Mr.

      Sage across the street. I

      held up the coin in one

      hand, and then pointed at

      myself with the other.

      Mr. Sage nodded and

      smiled. Then he walked

      off. But I was sure I’d be

      seeing him again.

      “I am the Stranger,” I whispered to

      myself. I liked the way that sounded. I

      thought about how I’d had to give the coin

      to myself. I guess it made sense that the

      Stranger would have a strange start.

      It felt good to be standing in the center

      of my very own Looniverse — with strange

      and amazing adventures ahead of me.

      Check out

      the next

      LOONIVERSE book!

      DAVID LUBAR

      is no stranger

      to strangeness, having written all

      sorts of weirdly funny books such

      as Beware the Ninja Weenies and

      Other Warped and Creepy Tales. He

      has a girl cat with a boy’s name,

      a left-handed guitar, and a small

      collection of plush arachnids. He sometimes uses

      a big word like “arachnid” when a small word like

      “spider” would work just fine, but he’s basically a nice

      guy otherwise. Though he grew up in Morristown, NJ,

      and now lives in Nazareth, PA, he makes frequent visits

      to the Looniverse to snatch ideas from Ed and the gang.

      MATT LOVERIDGE

      and strange are

      old friends — they go way back. Right

      from birth there have been strange

      coincidences in his life. When he was

      born he weighed 13 pounds, he wears

      size 13 shoes, and to top it all off he’s 13 feet

      tall. Okay, maybe he’s not 13 feet tall, but he is the tallest

      little brother in his family. Now that he’s all grown up, he

      likes hiking, biking, and drinking milk from the carton.

      He lives in the mountains of Utah with his wife and kids,

      and their black dog named Blue.

      scholastic.com/branches

      scholastic.com/branches

      www.scholastic.com/readinglevel

     

     

     



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