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Authors: Courtney Sheinmel

Zacktastic

Text Copyright © 2015 Courtney Sheinmel

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any manner without the express written consent of the publisher, except in the case of brief excerpts in critical reviews and articles. All inquiries should be addressed to:

2395 South Huron Parkway, Suite 200, Ann Arbor, MI 48104

www.sleepingbearpress.com

© Sleeping Bear Press

Printed and bound in the United States.

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Sheinmel, Courtney.

Zacktastic / written by Courtney Sheinmel.

pages cm

Summary: On his tenth birthday, Zack learns from his uncle that he is descended from a long line of genies and before he has a chance to process this information, he is whisked through a bottle portal and sent on his first assignment.

ISBN 978-1-58536-934-8 (hardcover) -- ISBN 978-1-58536-935-5 (paperback)

[1. Genies--Fiction. 2. Wishes--Fiction. 3. Brothers and sisters--Fiction. 4. Twins--Fiction. 5. Uncles--Fiction. 6. Birthdays--Fiction.] I. Title.

PZ7.S54124Zac 2015

[Fic]--dc23

2015003508

For Nicki, Andrew, and of course Zach

Contents

1.
    
A Day in the Life

2.
    
Uncle Max

3.
    
The Gift

4.
    
It Ain't Just a River in Egypt

5.
    
Anger and Bargaining

6.
    
Dumped

7.
    
In Pursuit

8.
    
Rescue #1

9.
    
Why Me?

10.
  
Oh, the Quinnsanity

11.
  
Going to the Chapel

12.
  
Food Hall

13.
  
Perks of Invisibility

14.
  
Now What?

15.
  
The Mouth of the Roof

16.
  
There She Goes Again

17.
  
History Lesson

18.
  
My Dearest Wish

19.
  
Acceptance

20.
  
Here's What Happens in the End

Acknowledgments

About the Author

1

A D
AY IN THE
L
IFE

W
hen you're interviewing yourself in the bathroom mirror, a fist under your chin makes the perfect microphone.

I pat my hair down so it falls around my head like a helmet. That's the way Drew Listerman, the reporter on the Channel 7 news, wears his hair. Every weekend he hosts a special called
A Day in the Life
, where he follows celebrities around and viewers get to see what a typical day is like for them.

I tuck a fallen strand behind my left ear, furrow my brows to make a wrinkle just above
the bridge of my nose, and round my shoulders like Drew Listerman.

And I'm on.

“Good evening, ladies and gentleman. Today we're celebrating a day in the life of Zachary Cooley. Maybe you saw his picture in the newspaper on the day he stomped out a bunch of smoldering cigarette butts in the Pinemont Woods, preventing what surely would have been Pennsylvania's most massive forest fire. Or perhaps you heard his name mentioned on the radio the morning he spotted a woman walking on the railroad tracks and got her to safety just moments before a speeding train whipped by. Certainly you saw the story on the evening news about the time Zack rappelled out of a helicopter and rescued a man swimming in the ocean below. Seconds later a school of great white sharks was spotted off the coast. Young Zack is credited with saving hundreds—no, thousands!—of lives. Please join me in welcoming birthday boy Zachary
Noah Cooley, a real-life superhero!”

I imagine viewers all over the country and around the world clapping and cheering and waiting to see me, and I run a hand through my hair so it's back in my regular style, on the longish side and messed up like I just went for a superfast ride in a convertible, top down. Then I hold my fist out toward my reflection.

“Well, first off, Drew, I don't know that I'd call myself a superhero.” I pause for a second, and in my head a few thousand voices talk back to their TVs:
What, Zack?! Of course you are!
“But second of all, I'm here to save even more lives with a special message. And that message is: Listen to your fears.”

“I thought the only thing to fear is fear itself,” Drew says.

“Sorry, Drew,” I say. “But you—and Franklin Delano Roosevelt—are sadly mistaken. There are more things to fear than you could possibly count.”

“Such as?”

“Such as: Aren't you afraid to walk too close to the edge of a roof?”

I can see Drew nodding. Of course he is.

“You're afraid because you could fall off,” I tell him. “And I bet you're afraid to climb into the lions' cage at the zoo because you know they can eat you. These are good fears to have because they stop you from doing something that could hurt you—or even kill you. Having fears saves lives.”

“I've never thought of it that way before,” Drew Listerman says. “But it's certainly an important message you're spreading. In fact, it's practically a birthday present to us all. When really, we should be showering
you
with presents—especially on a birthday this significant. Tell me, how does it feel to hit double digits?”

“It's a funny thing,” I say. “When I woke up this morning, something felt different.” I peer a bit closer into the mirror—closer into the camera. “You ever get the feeling that something is
changing in your life, that you're in for something particularly extraordinary?”

As I say it I feel a tingle run down my spine, like it's true. Like I'm onto something. Like there actually are people out there, right now, watching me, and something big is going to happen right before their eyes.

And then.

“BOO!” Quinn yells.

“Ahh!” I stumble backward. “You almost gave me a heart attack!” I shout at my sister. “What are you doing in here anyway?”

The bathroom door had been closed. I'm sure of it. I hadn't locked it, but that's because I broke all the locks in our house a couple of months ago. Do you know how many people die each year because they lock themselves into their bedrooms or bathrooms, and a fire starts up, and no one can get to them in time to save them?

Okay, I don't know, either. But I bet a lot of people do.

Mom was pretty mad about all the broken locks. But it was for her own good. Quinn's, too. Dad once told me that the three of us—Mom, Quinn, and I—were the most important people in his life, and he'd do anything to protect us. After what happened to him, it's up to me to make sure no one in my family ever gets hurt again. That's what Dad would want me to do.

But never mind that, because right now there's no fire, not even the thinnest curlicue of smoke. And in the absence of a fire, we all know that a closed door means don't come in.

Not that Quinn cares. She's bent in half, laughing. She laughs in a really squeaky, fingernails-on-the-chalkboard, little-hairs-on-your-arms-standing-up kind of way:
Hee-eee-eee-EEEEEE. Hee-eee-eee-EEEEEE
. Her laugh is just as embarrassing as my little interview. Even worse, actually, because my interview was supposed to be private. But Quinn laughs that way all the time in public. She can't help herself.

Quinn stands straight and makes a big production out of trying to catch her breath, like it was just sooooo funny, she might not ever be able to breathe again. “You should've”—
pant, eeeeee, pant
—“seen yourself.”
Pant, pant
. “Only a Grade A official nut job would talk to himself in the mirror.” She pauses to take one long, deep gulp of a breath.

“I've seen
you
talk to yourself in the mirror,” I tell her. And then I mimic her in a high-pitched voice: “Quinn, your hair looks so good. Quinn, I love your nail polish.”

“At least I'm not pretending to be brave to my
imaginary
friends, when the truth is you're scared of everything. Are you sure you're turning ten today? Because you're acting like a baby.”

“Babies aren't scared, because they don't know any better,” I say. “It's actually a sign of maturity to be scared.”

“Whatever. It's no wonder you don't have any friends.”

“I do so have friends,” I tell her.

“Yeah, right.”

“And besides, I—”

“I can't wait to hear this,” Quinn interrupts.

If she can't wait, she should be quiet and listen. “I'd rather have
no
friends than have
your
friends. Your friends are so . . . are so . . .”

Quinn is standing there with her hands on her hips, shaking her head at me like she's the older sister. But really we're twins, and if you want to get specific about it,
I'm
the older one. Seven minutes older. Seven minutes that I packed a lot of wisdom into.

“Your friends are so
slame
,” I say.

“Oh, you got me this time,” Quinn says. But she rolls her eyes so I know she doesn't mean it. “I'm so hurt by one of your dumb words that's not even a real word.”

“It is a word,” I insist. “
Slame
. Adjective. The same amount of lame as Quinn.”

One day I'm going to write a dictionary of
all the words that should be part of the English language.
Slame
is one of my best words yet.

“Whatevs,” she says. She flips her hand like she's waving me away. “At least I have people to invite to the party today. I mean, aside from the original nut job that is Uncle Max.”

“And Eli,” I tell her.

“Eli doesn't know any better, because he's the new kid. That's the only reason he's your friend at all.”

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