Read Lost and Found Online

Authors: Laura Dower

Lost and Found

Lost and Found
From the Files of Madison Finn, Book 6
Laura Dower

For Emma Silverman-Keates, Emily Remmers, and Maija Fiedelholtz—three future Madisons who sparkle with life and joy.

And now, years later, for my own Madison: OKD

Contents

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Mad Chat Words

Madison’s Computer Tip

Preview:
Save the Date

About the Author

Chapter 1

N
O MATTER HOW HARD SHE
shoved, Madison couldn’t squeeze all her stuff into the teeny green gym locker. She had hated gym class from the moment seventh grade started. Before the winter holidays, Madison’s gym class was scheduled in the afternoon. Now, gym was in the morning, first period on Mondays.

The worst part was wearing the dreaded gym uniform. Its ugly blue polyester gym shorts made Madison’s legs itch, and a too tight, white T-shirt with a blue Far Hills Junior High logo was not exactly the most flattering fashion statement. And wearing that shirt meant wearing a bra, even though Madison didn’t have much to fill it out.

And even
worse
than wearing a scary, see-through T-shirt was the fact that Hart Jones would see her looking that way. Hart, Madison’s big crush at school, just happened to be in her same gym section. He would see her wearing the ugly outfit.

Madison had to stop herself from over-thinking immediately. She sighed and took a seat on the small benches between locker banks.
Hart Jones.
Just the idea of him made her feel faint. Or was that because the locker room smelled like wet rubber floor mats and soccer balls?

She pulled her sweater over her head and wriggled into her T-shirt. Then she carefully yanked off her stockings and tugged on the polyester shorts under her wool skirt. They felt snugger than snug, and her legs prickled with goose bumps from the chilly air.

The locker area wasn’t very full, so no one had seen her change. That was a major relief. Madison was standing alone in her row. Madison’s homeroom had been dismissed early. Sometimes homeroom teachers let certain groups out earlier than others. However, neither of her best friends, Aimee or Fiona, had arrived from her homeroom yet.

Madison heard whispering in the next locker bank but didn’t think much of it at first. Then she heard someone say
her
name.

“I can’t believe I still have Madison Finn as my partner,” the person grumbled with a huff.

Madison knew the voice. It was Poison Ivy Daly, her mortal enemy.

Ivy was speaking about their science lab. Mr. Danehy had assigned Madison and Ivy as lab partners. He obviously didn’t know how much they didn’t get along.

“Just ignore her,” Ivy’s friend Rose advised. “What’s the big deal?”

Madison stood on top of the bench, leaning into the lockers, to hear whatever more she could hear. Ivy was talking to her drones, Rose Thorn and Phony Joanie. Madison knew they might say not-so-nice stuff, but she still wanted to hear it. Unfortunately, the juicy eavesdropping stopped there. Madison’s name wasn’t mentioned again. They moved on to talking about hair. Ivy always wore her perfect red hair in perfect red clips.

As Madison stepped off the bench, the room got very quiet. Madison was surprised to see someone standing in the space between the locker banks. It was Ivy. And she was staring right at Madison.

“Hello, Madison,” Ivy said curtly. “I didn’t know you were in here.”

“Yeah, well…” Madison mumbled. She turned back to the green locker.

Madison wondered if, even for a fleeting second, Ivy felt a smidge guilty about gossiping without knowing who was nearby. But clearly Ivy felt nothing of the sort. She just
stared.
Madison felt Ivy’s eyes watching her.

Rose and Joanie appeared from around the corner, too.

“Nice shorts,” Joanie snapped to Madison. She was always snappy.

Madison felt her entire body shrink when Joanie said the words, however.
Nice shorts.
Ivy, Rose, and Joanie were wearing their shorts baggy and longer. They made the uniform look good. But Madison stood there in gym shorts one size too small.

“’Scuse me!” Aimee Gillespie said, appearing from nowhere and sliding past the others into Madison’s locker bank. Best friends have a way of showing up just at the right time. “Hey, Maddie!” she chirped.

Ivy raised one eyebrow at Aimee’s entrance and walked away to find a mirror. Her drones followed.

“What was that about?” Aimee asked Madison.

Madison sat down on the bench again. Her shorts felt tighter than ever now. “These.” She pointed to them.

“Huh?” Aimee shrugged. “Not everyone got the new shorts, I don’t think. It doesn’t really matter, does—”


New
shorts?” Madison asked incredulously. “
What
new shorts?”

Aimee explained that a letter had been mailed home with an order form for a new style of gym shorts. The administration had received complaints about the sizes being too small for a lot of girls. They were offering a new style.

“I never knew,” Madison said. Her mom must have thrown out the mail without reading it. She did that sometimes.

“But you look great in those shorts,” Aimee said. “You have nice legs.”

“Thanks,” Madison said. Maybe the shorts weren’t so bad after all.

Fiona appeared with a flounce and a smile. “Helloooooo! Did you guys have a good weekend?”

She’d already changed into her gym uniform, pulling off her clothes to reveal the shorts underneath her pants. Fiona said it was easier to change that way. Of course she had on the loose shorts.

“Where did you get those?” Madison asked her.

“I don’t know,” Fiona admitted, a little spaced out. She sneezed. “They’re more comfy than the other ones.”

Madison would have to ask Mom to order her a pair of those.

“GIRLS!” A booming voice echoed into the locker room. Coach Hammond blew her whistle for emphasis. “LET’S GO! LET’S GO! INTO THE GYM!”

She wasn’t as mean as a drill sergeant, but Coach Hammond was strict about starting class on time, lining up in perfect rows, and playing fair.

Madison hid behind Aimee and Fiona as they shuffled into the main part of the gym. She was happier than happy to see a few other girls wearing the shorter, snugger shorts.

“OKAY!” Coach Hammond yelled. She yelled even when she was standing nose to nose with a student. “TODAY WE HAVE PHYSICAL FITNESS TESTING! HEADS UP!”

Aimee turned to Madison. “This stinks. It’s Monday morning. Who tests your physical fitness on Monday?”

“Yeah.” Fiona sniffled. Then she sneezed three times in a row.

Madison sat down on the floor between her friends, pretending to listen and watch Coach Hammond. But her eyes were wandering over to Hart. He was looking hunky, lying on his side across from them, whispering to Chet Waters, his new best friend and Fiona’s twin brother.

“UPSY DAISY, BOYS AND GIRLS,” Coach Hammond commanded. “EVERYONE UP AND INTO NEAT ROWS, PLEASE. WE NEED TO TEST YOUR AGILITY AND SPEED.”

Coach didn’t call it a race against each other, but kids pretended like it was. Everyone in the first row was paired up with someone in the second row.

Boys mostly paired with boys, except for Fiona and Chet, who led off the rows. They wanted to race each other for the obvious reason.

Coach Hammond didn’t hear their friendly exchange.

“Eat my dust,” Chet whispered to his sister.

Fiona smirked. “You—ah-ah…
choo
!” she said, sneezing again. “You
wish.

Coach Hammond explained that the task was to run up and down the length of the gym three times, then weave through the orange cones at the side of the room and run three more times up and back in the gym.

“I’m tired just thinking about that,” moaned Hart. He was standing right behind Madison.

“ON YOUR MARK, GET SET…GO!” Coach Hammond blew the whistle, and Fiona and Chet took off for the other side of the gym.

Madison couldn’t exactly remember what she had to do during past fitness tests in middle school, but they had certainly never been like this. Kids were cheering on other kids, like it was a sporting event.

“Go! Go! GO!”

As Fiona made the turn to come back toward the group the second time, she tripped and fell to the floor.

“Ahhhhh!” a bunch of girls, including Madison, screamed.

Coach Hammond shooed them away and helped Fiona to her feet.

Fiona rubbed her elbows, which had slammed into the floor. She started to cough. “I feel hot, Coach.”

She was
burning
hot, as it turned out. So the feverish Fiona was sent to the nurse. She waved to Madison and Aimee as she left the gym.

I hope she’s really okay, Madison thought.

“LET’S GET BACK IN LINE, BOYS AND GIRLS,” Coach Hammond ordered. Everyone obeyed. The paired-off test subjects started up again.

Years of ballerina twirls helped Aimee to pass the fitness test easily. She was fast
and
graceful. Her running companion was some girl Madison only knew a little. The girl had to stop halfway through the test to take a big puff from her inhaler. She was one of two asthmatics in the class, but she still passed the test.

Most kids passed. When their turns came, boys and girls sped up and down the gym without even breaking a sweat.

Madison always knew she was good at running, or at least she was good at running
away.
But right there in the heat of the moment, she was losing her nerve. She had a fear that she would be the one to
not
pass. She’d be the one who fell into a sweaty, lumpy pile.

She looked over to see who’d be racing by her side. It was Ivy, who made a face.

Madison leaned over to retie her sneaker. Out of the corner of her eye, she caught Hart looking her way, too. She thought he was smiling a little.

“Hey, Finnster,” he called out.

Some kids giggled at the nickname.

Madison gulped.

“ON YOUR MARK, GET SET…”

As soon as Coach Hammond screeched “GO,” Madison was off and zipping across the gym. She didn’t pay attention to how fast Ivy was going. She turned at the first wall and never looked back. Even when an orange cone got knocked over in the middle of the test, Madison ran on. She huffed and puffed as she finished up…

“IT’S A TIE!” Coach Hammond wailed.

Madison looked over at Ivy as they walked over to the sidelines, expecting her to grimace or pout or make her poisonous sneer.

But Ivy
smiled
instead.

“That was wicked hard,” Ivy said, breathing heavily. She walked away.

Madison shook her head and adjusted her shorts to make them a little bit longer. Seventh grade could be wicked hard.

“I hope Fiona’s not really, really sick,” Aimee whispered to Madison as they changed back into their school clothes in the locker room after gym ended. “
Oh-em-gee
, what if she is really, really sick?”

“She isn’t,” Madison said, hoping that her friend was okay. She pulled on her stockings leg by leg. “Nurse Shim probably already called her mom.”

“Let’s call her later,” Aimee suggested.

Madison grabbed her things out of the teeny green gym locker and climbed the stairs up toward the computer center. Her math textbook felt heavier than heavy inside her bag. Madison had a giant exam coming up the next day; she had barely reviewed the first half of the chapter.

When Madison walked into Mrs. Wing’s classroom, she found her favorite teacher sitting at her desk. She was looking out the window at the dark, blue-gray sky.

“Looks like stormy weather,” Mrs. Wing said softly, her glass-bead earrings jingling as she turned her head to face Madison. “Looks like snow.”

Madison sat down at her desk. “Cool!”

Mrs. Wing chuckled. “I don’t like this cold. Winter is my least-favorite season. Brrrr.” She faked a dramatic shiver.

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