The Cryptic Crypt

The river was my refuge. It was more of a stream, really, a tiny but powerful stream tucked into a corner of the Cascade Mountains. While my dad argued with my mom and my mom argued with my six brothers and sisters (and they argued with each other), I slipped out of the house and walked two miles to be at that magical place with the dozens of small waterfalls cascading into the water. I imagined some explorer discovering this place, long ago, and naming the entire mountain range after it. Cascading waterfalls…Cascade Mountains. I brought my journal, pen, and ink: nothing else. My “lucky rock” was a particularly large one in the center of the stream. I had to skip across stones that I had carefully placed to get to it, risking being swept away if I fell. I sat on my lucky rock and let the words rush out of my pen like one of the waterfalls around me. I wrote about everything: my pesky siblings, the beauty around me, and things I had never seen, but knew better than the real world. Some things about my writing were difficult to explain: like my use of a dip pen, or why I literally refused to write anywhere other than here. Maybe the answer to the latter question was simply that I couldn’t focus in the constant noise of home or school. One day, I was writing about a girl lost in an Egyptian pyramid: With each tentative step forward, Kara became more and more aware that she was hopelessly lost. Although Kara understood the many hieroglyphs on the walls, they bore no information that could help her escape. The skeletons and mummies piled in the corners didn’t suddenly come alive and tell her which way to go (although Kara was glad that didn’t happen, because it would have been creepy). Kara tried hard not to panic, but she couldn’t help it when… I stopped writing. The ink on my pen dripped onto my journal, making a large blot that covered up the last line I had written, but I didn’t notice. Something smelled strange. It was an underground, earthy sort of smell that filled my nostrils. When I closed my eyes, I could see an underground tunnel stretching out before me. The source of the odd smell wasn’t in sight. I looked down at my journal with the intent to keep writing, but the contents began spinning before my eyes in a tornado of words, commas, and periods. They all jumbled together, and the rushing water became inaudible. I screamed, but my voice sounded distant and garbled, as if I were on the phone and the connection was wavering. What was happening? Was I going insane, and losing my hearing too? I blinked, and the stream was gone. I was in a dark corridor with dust and cobwebs all around me. All I had in my hands was a torch. For a moment, I wondered where I was, but I wasn’t left wondering for long once I turned to look at the wall and saw hieroglyphics there. I knew then for sure where I was, and I wasn’t thrilled about it. I was inside my story: “A Cryptic Crypt.” The pyramid carried the same smell that I had caught a whiff of back in the mountains, in the real world. I never thought I would long for my siblings, or want to escape one of my own stories. It was practically my dream to be transported into one of my stories, but I never expected to feel so stuck if I was. I thought that I’d feel free, ecstatic. How I wished that I had been writing about what I usually wrote about: friendship and everyday courage and trying to make it through middle school, and those things that seemed so simple compared to this. While observing my dire predicament, I paced around the corridor and almost tripped over a cold, round object. I picked it up and dropped it with a small shriek when I realized it was a skull. Then I felt like something was crawling up my neck. I slapped it, and it fell lifeless into my hand: it was a beetle the size of my palm, and I now noticed thousands more creeping along the walls and floor. I really started to freak out when the torch sputtered, flickered, and went out. I tried desperately to reignite it by dragging it along the floor, but I didn’t produce a single spark. All the torch gathered was beetles. I was trapped in blackness with huge beetles and skeletons, armed with nothing except for what was basically a beetle-covered stick. “Take me back!” I shouted into the darkness. My voice echoed for several seconds around the catacombs. I didn’t really expect an answer, but I was panicked. I nearly dropped the extinguished torch when the wall was suddenly emblazoned with giant, glowing hieroglyphs that weren’t there before. I couldn’t read hieroglyphics, but I knew someone who could. Trying not to think about the beetles that were probably all over me, I started running down the passageway with my hands out so I wouldn’t run into a wall. My own shallow breathing and the pattering of my feet were the only sounds, but I hoped to hear something else—or rather, someone else. I had to find Kara. The pyramid seemed bigger than the entire state of Washington. I wandered around through its winding passageways for hours. Once, I came to a five-way fork in the path. I listened at every corridor, one by one, for any sounds that might indicate another human’s presence, but none of the corridors looked promising. I just muttered “eeny meeny miney moe” and took the path I ended up pointing at. It proved to be a mistake, because I was more lost than ever. “ Here was someone that I had created on paper as a living, breathing, three-dimensional human being

Bugs are the Future!

SYNOPSIS When two boys sit down in a school cafeteria for lunch, one gets a lesson he’ll never forget. Author’s note: When the topic of food stability comes up, I always point out that the insects are better for us and more sustainable. I get reactions close to this every time I bring it up. This scene is an exaggerated version of that reaction.     CHARACTER LIST BENJAMIN Male, ten years. Always the guy in the background. The guy that helps people when they’re hurt. The kind of guy that doesn’t like being “in the light,” so to speak. JACOB Male, nine years. Would be considered a “nerd.” Is very smart,and talks very fast. Gets bullied a lot. INT. SCHOOL CAFETERIA – DAY TWO FRIENDS, JACOB and BENJAMIN, are sitting down to eat their lunches. JACOB takes the meat out of his sandwich and puts it to the side with disgust.   JACOB I wonder why the cooks always put meat in these sandwiches. BENJAMIN (Looking confused) Yesterday you were wondering why they didn’t put more meat on the sandwiches. JACOB (Still looking at the sandwich, more disappointed than disgusted) I thought this school would have made the change. BENJAMIN (Looking even more confused) What change!(Looks around, getting more and more confused) Does this have to do with school? JACOB looks at BENJAMIN, surprised that he didn’t hear the news that everyone knows about. JACOB Come on! We should all reduce our carbon footprint. BENJAMIN Wait… what does meat have to do with our our carbon footprint?! JACOB looks up as if making a list in his head. JACOB Well, cows, chickens, and like, sheep are causing global warming! BENJAMIN Has… (sighs) Has your sister told you this? JACOB (Looking at Benjamin with disbelief) NO!(Calmly) I saw it on the TV. BENJAMIN Really? So, what did it say? JACOB Well…(tilting his head) …it said something about farts, nutrition, factory fumes… BENJAMIN HOLD THE PHONE! Farts? JACOB (Fast-paced and excited) Did you know that cow and sheep farts are releasing methane into the air?! Whatever that is. BENJAMIN Isn’t that a gas? JACOB I think so. BENJAMIN Wait! Nutrition? JACOB Yeah! Nutrition. It said something like… we should stop eating land-based backboned animals, and we should all start eating INSECTS!(BENJAMIN’S face sinks into horror.) Yeah, I’ve been doing some research…. BENJAMIN WHAT! WHAT!! INSECTS!!! JACOB (Calmly) OK… So I was saying… BENJAMIN WHAT IS GOING ON IN MY LIFE!?!?! JACOB (A little bit aggravated) Yeah, and I was going to— BENJAMIN (Cutting off Jacob for the third time) NO!!! I AIN’T GOING TO DO THAT, NO WAY, NO WAY! NO NO NO(Getting faster) NO, NO, NOOOOO! JACOB (Aggravated) YEAH, and I was going to ss— BENJAMIN —No way I’m eating spiders! BENJAMIN closes his eyes and takes a deep breath. A couple beats pass. JACOB You’re calm now, right? BENJAMIN (Still taking deep breaths) Yeah. I’m still not eating spiders. JACOB (In a “matter of fact” voice) Well, Spiders are ARACHNIA, not insects— BENJAMIN Whatever! Anyway, you get what I mean. JACOB No, I don’t “get what you mean.” BENJAMIN I AM NOT EATING ANY INVERTEBRATES! JACOB Why? BENJAMIN What do you mean, “Why” JACOB Why? BENJAMIN (Very certain) They’re spiders. JACOB (Exasperated) Once again…(sighs) spiders are— BENJAMIN NO!(Aggressively but softer, softly and grumbly) I don’t care or know about any of that until now.(Louder) I don’t trust this TV show. JACOB It was on National Geographic! BENJAMIN (Slowly) OK, that’s a little bit better. JACOB (SLOWLY at first, then FAST anyway) I’ve been doing some research on food sources,especially incredibly sustainable ones, and I think I have found the perfect spot to find the perfect food!(Waits a couple seconds then says a little too loud than allowed for the cafeteria) COCKROACHES! JACOB points off screen. BENJAMIN’S face sinks into disbelief and horror. BENJAMIN starts to take deep breaths, but his whole body is tightening up. BENJAMIN (Very softly) Wh—wha—what—? JACOB, completely oblivious, picks up a container with some MEALWORMS in it. JACOB Sadly I could only find some mealworms at the pet store. They were out of cockroaches… BENJAMIN (Still taking deep breaths) B—b—bu—but… B—b—but… JACOB (Still COMPLETELY oblivious) Mind you there are quite a lot of cockroaches in the kitchen, but they most likely have diseases, because they’re not farmed. It wouldn’t be much of a change because— BENJAMIN holds his stomach as if almost regurgitating. JACOB (CONT’D) We already eat about half a cockroach a day! BENJAMIN gets more and more horrified. JACOB (CONT’D) Through breathing! BENJAMIN stops breathing and opening his mouth. JACOB (CONT’D) And just opening and closing our mouths.   BENJAMIN takes both of his hands and claps them over his mouth. JACOBS shrugs then picks up his sandwich (without meat) and adds mealworms to it.  As he bites into the sandwich, BENJAMIN faints, his face falling into his food. CUT TO BLACK THE END Oliver Jacobs, 12Tallahassee, FL Ula Pomian, 12Ontario, Canada

The Avocado Tree

  The chair by the avocado tree had turned a faded green from wear For years it sat untouched behind the orange-red sunsets Built for the old lady with the fishing hat who kept forgetting Its purpose was to help her remember To stay in the present of the ink-washed sand And it stayed there till the time of her grandson Sitting by the murky green water with his homework Reminding them of all the beautiful sunrises and afternoon checker games played And his days looking at the intriguing graphite numbers on bleached paper But before then he would wonder if his grandmother would ever be the same again If she would ever remember who he was without a lost look on her face One day Looking at the plants by the seaweed strewn about He took a nearby avocado seed and buried it into the sandy ground He began to take the wood from his backyard to build a chair Hoping it would help her remember He tended to them day by day From the mornings spent on his work To the afternoons sat with the wood Sanding and painting it as the tree grew And he worked right by the shore with the graphite numbers and the wood Making progress as time went on Eventually the chair sat next to the tree And one day the lady with the fishing hat sat in the chair with the tree And remembered the difference that was made Sara Chebili, 13Washington, D.C.

Light and Darkness

  I was at the pond one day, feeding the fish, under the hot sun. When clouds have a conversation with the sun. A cool wave of air touches my fingers and toes. The fish swim down to the bottom of the river. I was at the dinner table one night, eating the fat fish I caught, under the stars, the only things lighting the sky. When the lights shut off and flickered. My family rushed to their bedrooms, scared and worried. Even me, the bravest of the group, put down my fish liver. I was in my bedroom one morning, staring at my light switch. “What am I going to do in this hatred?” I thought. So I went to my window and spread out my curtains. My next trip was to flip up the light switch. I was at my desk one afternoon, thinking about my math, when it started sprinkling. “Anything but rain,” I moaned. Suddenly, it started to storm with thunder and lightning partnering together. Maybe the Sun and Moon now switch. Carly Vermillion, 10Indianapolis, IN

Swept-Up Fish

The beach was gorgeous. The glittering blue waves lapped onto the shore; it kindly slapped away small children who got too close to the foamy current. Up where I was watching the scene, the sand, sitting peacefully in a tinged butter-yellow color, burned as a victim of the Sun, sifting like powder through my toes and occasionally producing a tiny crab here or there. The faint breeze carried a strong scent of sea salt from the coast, and I gazed again upon the children who had gone all the way down there, deeper to the cold, wet, sand. I thought of when I had charged my toes under it for a few seconds before (and had then quickly run up to the warm sand), watching the current make the sand appear as if it was escaping me, as if I was sliding further away, sweeping shells and fish that belonged there. If only a current could sweep me back into Chicago again, I thought. If only. But here, as if to taunt me, I saw a sign flapping in the wind by the beach gate. “Welcome to San Francisco Bay!” it read; and enough said, too. I did not need to be reminded. As I ate my shrimp po-boy, which was also emitting a salty fume—only a stale reminder of the fact that I was here, not at home—my mother, father, and twin brothers chatted next to me with food cramped in their mouths. They didn’t mind being stuffed; I think they wanted to “do as the Romans do” in Rome, except San Francisco, of course. In unison, other families were either docked under an umbrella to eat or playing at the shore, vulnerable to being swept up by a salty wave. It was a “celebration” of our moving here, and my family posed as ordinary Californians retiring to the beach during the long summer holiday. No wonder we, former Chicagoans, blended into the crowd; there were so many people that were minding their own business here. They would never guess that we had actually moved here in the midsummer; my mom had found a new job. I clenched my teeth inside my mouth at the sight of how pleased she looked. It was all her fault; all of the moving, everything—even choosing such a breathtaking place to replace home. Nothing will make me want to replace Chicago, though. When my ears came back to their senses, I heard the chatter of my family. “Can Henry and I go to the water?” my brother, George, asked with pleading eyes to my mother. They were both 12-years-old, but George was just a minute older. I was 15, and already considered myself (if I were to be a Californian, after all) a sit-and-sunbathe kind of teen. At least they had apparently not been in Chicago long enough to miss its long winters. “Of course. Carrie, would you like to join?” my mom asked. She had chestnut-brown hair and eyes like me, and a sort of electric, party vibe came from her. I knew she was already loving this more than Chicago. “No thanks,” I grumbled. “This is the worst vacation ever. Take me back to Chicago!” I spat, feeling a lump of angry heat in my throat as I said it. I didn’t want to take it back. My parents put on empathetic frowns and offered me ice cream, but I dismissed that as well. I’ll admit, I wanted it, but I continued to glare at my parents and pretend in my head that they were the meanest people on Earth. “ This was it, and I didn’t want to die a fish. I bathed in the sun afterward, and the heat seemed to steam around me. It also made my skin look pinkish. Strange, I thought. Sunburn doesn’t happen that quickly. Soon, I noticed my sunglasses were beside me, and my skin a scaly texture. To my horror, I saw my arms turn to tiny fins and my legs into a small tail. I was becoming a fish. And when I had transformed up to my mouth, I had trouble breathing. Water, is all I thought. Water. I need water. Flopping (literally) breathlessly around the sand, I assessed my situation. Closest water? Nowhere. This was it, and I didn’t want to die a fish. I was hyperventilating, my gills opening and closing rapidly. Just as my eyes started fluttering, and I felt a harsh feeling of restfulness and giving up, I felt a human hand squeeze me gently. Then I heard my body “plop” into a pail of salty water, and it felt amazing. My savior was a small child that looked like a toddler, and he peered into my new tank as if I were a lab specimen. For all I knew, I could have been. Then, with a giddy smile, he called his parents and showed them me. I was on display, and my fish nerves didn’t like it. Unluckily, my fish nerves also wanted to skedaddle, and do so it did. I sprang out from the bucket and onto the scorching hot sand. If I had not been in a bucket of water before, I wouldn’t have had enough time in consciousness to gather myself and create a somewhat plan (though, for a fish, I reflect that I couldn’t have thought of anything better). First, with my fish eyes alert for finding water, I found a sandcastle moat, a watery hole someone was digging, and, for closers, the coast of the ocean. This meant a journey of hopping from water to water to get to the coast. After taking these quick notes, I flopped up to the moat. Easily enough, I slid in. I was just swimming around to the other side when my fins froze in the action—I was having one of those tense, instinctive moments. I shivered, and my eyes darted fearfully to my left, where I had felt something alongside me. A crab, about

The Missing Piece

 “Wake up, Tommy,” I said. Tommy, my thirteen-year-old robotic brother (he really is a robot—no kidding) needs to wake up! He always walks with me to school. He likes to sleep though. And eat. And sleep some more. Oh, and get into trouble. It’s not like our dad cares. He’s too busy being the Big Cheese at NASA. Not that I care. He never pays a bit of attention to us. I mean come on, it’s not like paying us attention costs $100. “Laika, school was cancelled in Houston today because the Astros won the World Series last night,” Tommy mumbled into his pillow. That was when I hit the roof. “But we have our fifth grade bake sale at school today!” I groaned. “Why did the Astros have to win?” I muttered. “Why did the Astros have to win? So I could sleep in!” Tommy pumped his fist in the air. “You and your darn sleep,” I muttered under my breath. “Hey, I heard that!” Tommy threw a pillow at my face. “Laika, you and Tommy are going to have to come with me to the office because there is no school today,” Dad said as I stomped downstairs. Nooooooo. I hate the office. It’s so boring. Too much math and calculations. “What about a babysitter?” I asked nervously. “Are you kidding me? After how you two were playing hide-and-seek in the washing machine? Absolutely not,” Dad said. “Mom would have gotten us a babysitter.” “Can you not bring up Mom’s death every time we argue?!” Dad huffed. Man do I wish that Mom hadn’t died because Dad really just lost the ability to love and care. As I looked out the window of our car, I thought about all the other kids in Houston who are sleeping in or watching a movie or playing video games while I have to go to the most boring office ever. Life is really annoying sometimes. “Okay, Tommy, at the office you’re not going to do anything that will get me into trouble. Go reboot or update yourself. I don’t know, just don’t get into trouble,” I said. “All right, sheesh. Don’t get yourself in such a frenzy,” Tommy huffed. I tried to prepare myself for the office. I brought a stack of books by James Patterson. I hoped that having the books would help with the boredom. “We’re here,” Dad said. Dad’s office was big. I had to give it to him. The ceiling was a huge cupola like the churches you see in movies. The office smelled of brain power, math, and rockets. I’m not sure if a room can smell like those things, but somehow it did. I hate those smells. The room had white walls and machines everywhere. Every nanometer was covered by a machine. Oh, and coffee. There were scientists running around with coffee in plastic cups, mugs, and thermoses. Actually, it also smelled like coffee. “Alright, kids: listen up. Stay where I can see you. NO MESSING AROUND. You hear me? I am working on a rocket that will go up into outer space in three days and we only have to install the return gear. So I need this work day. Got it?” Dad drilled. “Chill, Dad. We get it,” Tommy said. “That’s what you say every time…” “Dad! I’m going to go read!” I called out. Two hours later, I finished my books. I looked around to make sure that Tommy was within Dad’s peripheral vision. But, as usual, he wasn’t there. I didn’t worry. Yet. I just assumed he went to recharge at the power station. I checked there, but no robot. That’s when I began to worry. “Tommy, Tommy! This isn’t funny anymore! Come out from your hiding spot right now!” I hollered. I peeked around a corner hoping that Tommy would be there. But nope. I checked around every door. Or so I thought… I popped my head around the last corner and… Oh, wow. I saw a huge room with a rocket that almost scraped the paint off the ceiling, with a catwalk that led into it. Then I heard a banging. I cautiously crept inside to go investigate. “Hello? Is there anybody there? I’m looking for my robotic brother,” I called out. The inside was round and filled with buttons and switches and technology. There was a cockpit, a fridge, sleeping quarters, and a tube-like thing. I looked out a window, and I saw a bunch of scientists in white coats scurrying around. Then I heard the banging again and followed it. It led to… Tommy. He was camouflaged with all the buttons! “Tommy, what on earth are you doing here?!” I yelled. “I was bored. Duh. Weren’t you?” Tommy shrugged. I was so mad. If we had been in one of those cartoons on television, steam would have been coming out of my ears. Actually, steam was coming out of my ears. “Sir, you’re coming with me. We’re getting out of here before Dad realizes we’re gone. And don’t even think about touching anything,” I commanded. We passed by another window that I hadn’t seen earlier. As I looked out the window, my mind began to wander and think about how cool it would be to go to space. “I wonder what this big red button does,” Tommy said. “Tommy, don’t touch the launch button!” I cried out. Too late. He had pressed the button. Then I felt a deep, low, hollow rumble. The rocket was beginning to launch. We ran for the doors, but they closed just as we got there. “Now commencing countdown. Ten, nine, eight, seven, six…” a female voice said over a loudspeaker. “Tommy, what are we going to do?” “This is awesome! We’re going to fly on a real rocket!” “Super helpful, Tommy.” The rocket rose into the sky like a giant coming out of his 200-year slumber. I looked out the window and the houses, fields, and buildings shrank and

Queen of the World

Sometimes I pretend I am the queen of the world Gliding in a silver sleigh of dreams My dress is made of ripped up clouds And my crown is woven with moonlight I float above the sun each day Watching over my empire I can feel every triumph and every Disappointment ripple through me like a Stone cast into a deep crystal pond But as time steals by it is not so wonderful To hold the weight of the world And I would much rather be a normal girl Bound to life and nothing more So I raise my lips to the velvet sky And gently kiss each star in the Milky Way farewell I suppose that even the queen of the world Grows weary of her place in the universe Ana Carpenter, 10Chicago, IL

Anne with an E

A Gritty but Triumphant Return to Avonlea: A review of the Netflix Original Anne with an “E” I remember reading Anne of Green Gables when I was younger. I would sprawl across the couch and slowly flip through the delicate pages, savoring the words like candy. This is why when I noticed Netflix’s 2017 adaptation, entitled Anne with an “E,” I had to watch! Set in Avonlea, a fictional town on Prince Edward Island, Anne with an “E” tells the heartwarming story of a 13-year-old orphan. After bouncing from orphanages and foster homes, Anne is sent to elderly siblings Matthew and Marilla Cuthbert to assist on their farm. Here, throughout seven 45-minute episodes, Anne navigates the road of adolescence and learns what it feels like to belong to a family and a place. The coastal and rural setting is gorgeous, but the show’s true beauty lies with the emotion and passion of the actors. One especially moving scene occurred mid-first episode when Marilla (Geraldine James) relays to Matthew (R.H. Thomson) that skinny and loquacious Anne would be no help and should be returned to the orphanage. Matthew’s face, partially lit by candlelight, strains as he looks down at his hands. After a few seconds of silence he responds, “Well, we might be of some good to her.” These words were so passionately put that, paired with his emotive expressions, I found myself fighting back tears. Additionally, Anne with an “E” explores valuable themes, like acceptance, that are as meaningful today as they were in the late 19th century. At first, Anne, like many of us, doesn’t fit in at school; she’s ridiculed and excluded because she’s an orphan with raggedy clothing and conspicuous red hair. Then she meets and befriends Diana, a girl her age who consistently makes an effort to include her. Whether it’s sitting next to her in class or making room for her at the lunch table, Diana’s acceptance helps Anne hold her head high. Still, despite the uplifting messages, some critics argue that Anne with an “E” is too negative for the usually youner Anne of Green Gables fans. Anne often has violent flashbacks about being beaten by a foster parent and tormented by other kids at the orphanage before living with the Cuthberts. While it’s true the novel doesn’t depict these barbaric acts, the television version uses them to develop Anne into a complex, compelling, and resilient character. Anne may be haunted by her past, but she perseveres and maintains a vivacious, imaginative personality—one I grew to side with during the series. All in all, I thoroughly enjoyed Anne with an “E.” Sure it’s gritty, but the talented cast, realistic writing, and multifaceted characters prove that it is, no doubt, a worthwhile show to watch. Neena Dzur, 13Toledo, OH