eBook Details

The Magic Medallion

The Magic Medallion

Series: Cynthia's Attic
By: Mary Cunningham | Other books by Mary Cunningham
Published By: Echelon Press LLC.
Published: Sep 03, 2010
ISBN # 9781590804612
Word Count: 34,768
    
EligiblePrice: $2.99
Available in: Adobe Acrobat, Palm DOC/iSolo, Microsoft Reader, HTML, Mobipocket (.mobi), Rocket, Epub
 
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Description
Sinister clowns, stalkers on horseback, mystical forests, and the creepy, crawling curse.

A magic trunk sweeps Cynthia, and best friend, Augusta Lee (Gus), back to 1914 where an ill-fated trip to the circus leads to Blackie, a sinister hobo clown. Before they can be forced by Blackie to become permanent clown troupe performers, the girls are rescued by Gabriella, a Gypsy fortune-teller, and are entangled in the theft of her family's treasure. Much to their dismay, Cynthia and Gus appear to be the family's only hope of recovering a precious magic medallion.

Traveling unexpectedly forward to 1934, they meet a 'very familiar-looking' cave guide, and are stalked by a stranger on a black horse. Dangers escalate, as they're swept into an underground river, and later, barely avoid becoming 'campfire marshmallows' in a raging forest fire.

Friendship, loyalty, and an undeniable sense of adventure, keep this twosome on a never-ending path of danger, suspense, and merriment.
 
Reader Rating:  Not rated (0 Ratings)
 
Excerpt:
Chapter One

1934

A pair of cold, deep-set eyes stared out from under the floppy, black felt hat. The tall, sinister-looking, weather-beaten man had been waiting for what seemed like an eternity. If everything went as planned, the power would be his to control. The plan had been set in motion. Now, if only the two girls will fall into my trap.

1964

Ring! "Aarrgh…" It can't be morning already! Ring…ring. With much effort, I opened one eye and yelled, to no one in particular, "I'll get it!" Stumbling out of my bedroom into the hallway, I grabbed the phone, hoping it was Cynthia telling me our trip was off because she'd contracted bubonic plague overnight or even something less severe like a painful hangnail.

"So, are you ready, Gus?" asked the demanding voice on the other end. My heart sank. The message was loud and clear. Cynthia didn't have a hangnail, and the plague had apparently skipped her house last night.

"Did you hear me, Gus? Are you ready?"

"Uh…no. Not really," I mumbled, pulling the extra-long phone cord into my bedroom, fighting the urge to hang up.

There was a pause. "Augusta Lee! You're not backing out are you? After all, you're the one who wanted to follow your grandmother to the circus to keep her out of trouble."

Oh, there it was. Augusta Lee. She only called me that when she wanted to get under my skin. Don't get me wrong. I loved my grandfather, Augustus Leegrand, but did I have to be named after him?

"No. I'm not backing out." I grumbled. "I just overslept." Well, that wasn't a total fib. I figured if I didn't get out of bed, I wouldn't have to face the day.

With a death grip on the phone, I pulled the covers over my head, shutting out the morning sun as it invaded my room like some alien laser beam trying to snatch me from my bed. There was still time to back out, but I didn't want to look like a coward to my best friend. Oh, I knew she'd eventually pester me into going, but hanging over me was this strange, creepy feeling that we should just stay home.

Plans to go to the circus with our grandmothers were made one week earlier, but it wasn't to be your typical grandmother-granddaughter outing. You see, our grandmothers, Clara and Bess, were just about the same age as Cynthia and me. Now, before you think I'm still sound asleep and simply having one doozy of a nightmare, let me explain how our four young lives became connected.

A few weeks earlier, Cynthia and I had been ordinary twelve-year-olds, riding bikes, playing softball with our neighborhood friends, and on occasion getting into our fair share of trouble. We were also blessed with our fair share of curiosity, which brought us more than we bargained for one rainy, summer afternoon. That was the day Cynthia and I discovered the magic.

Bored out of our minds, we had ventured up to Cynthia's attic. Her three-story house had been in the family for generations, and was our source of entertainment and exploration ever since we learned to climb steps. But, it took on a whole new meaning when the attic became our ticket to adventures, even beyond our wildest imaginations.

Behind the clutter of old furniture, dusty cardboard boxes, and more cobwebs than in the haunted house at the Harrison County Fair, we discovered a magic trunk. A trunk that led us into another time–back more than fifty years–into the lives of our twelve-year-old grandmothers.

The prospects of yet another adventure into the unknown with Clara and Bess had sounded like fun a few days ago. Now, it didn't seem like such a great idea. Mainly because, after we had taken a couple of routine trips into 1914, our third journey found us as passengers on a very large cruise ship on the Atlantic Ocean–and we had almost gotten Cynthia's great-aunt, Belle, not to mention ourselves, killed!

No, I wasn't sure I was ready to risk another perilous journey into the past. But, how could I convince Cynthia?

I sighed. "I'll be ready in fifteen minutes." Hanging up the phone, I resigned myself to taking at least one more trip, silently praying that Clara and Bess didn't cause as much trouble as Belle had. I wasn't in the mood to have to confront someone as evil as Belle's former fiancé, Andre, who had tried to throw her off the ship.

I grabbed yesterday's clothes off the floor, dressed, and quickly gave up on making my unruly, copper-red hair do anything socially acceptable. Pounding down the stairs, I flew into the kitchen, crammed a doughnut into my mouth, and ran out the door. "Immf…wemmeeeeng!" I muffled a powdered sugar explosion 'goodbye' to my mother. The door slammed behind me before she could ask where I was going.

Cynthia was waiting on her front porch.

"It's about time!" She tapped a pink-sneakered foot on the porch bricks. "And don't try to say you spent too much time choosing the perfect outfit." She sniffed, giving me a sarcastic once-over.

Perfectly dressed in crisp white shorts and pink plaid blouse, her shiny ponytail tied with a matching satin ribbon, she looked as if she had been primping for hours. "You'd better hope we don't miss our ride."

Standing there in cut-off jeans, faded T-shirt, and licking my fingers in a useless effort to plaster down my hair, I said, "I've…uh…been…thinking about that. How are we going to get to the circus without being seen? You know the only way we became invisible was when we took the magic stairway."

A mysterious stairway had appeared to us twice in the attic–once when we discovered special clues in a dream about a loud, annoying bell, and again when we came across an old steamship ticket. It seemed that the stairway was our ticket to places beyond the reach of the trunk.

"Yeah, that could be a problem," Cynthia mused. "Maybe if Clara and Bess are hiding in the crate with the organ your great-grandfather's taking to the circus, we can take their place and sit next to him. He won't know the difference since we look exactly like the two of them when we go back in time."

"One little problem," I reminded her. "Our grandmothers aren't deaf. Won't they get suspicious when they hear us talking, especially since we'll be impersonating them?" Before she could answer, I added, "Anyway, don't you remember Bess telling Clara she wasn't allowed to go on these trips with her father? If they have to hide in the crate, what makes you think he'd let us go?"

Cynthia chuckled sheepishly. "Oh, yeah. Good point."

"What? What was that? My ears must be plugged. Did you actually say I had a good point?" I teased.

Standing on the porch didn't seem to be giving us any answers, so we walked into Cynthia's house, up the stairway to the second floor, and opened the attic door. Although we were beginning to take time travel for granted, there were still butterflies in our stomachs–especially mine–as we climbed the dusty stairs.

"Remember how terrified we were the first time we came up here?" I laughed nervously. "We were sure there were ghosts, goblins, and giant tarantulas waiting for us, but the real excitement was in that old trunk."

The attic looked pretty much the same as it had the last time we were there, complete with the old trunk from the days of Cynthia's great-grandmother, Anna…except for one thing.

"How'd this get here?"

Blocking the trunk was an old train track attached to a large piece of plywood. A small village, surrounded by snow-covered mountains and blue painted lakes, was still intact, although a long-ago train wreck had derailed the locomotive and most of the cars. The train, which had once belonged to Cynthia's great-grandfather, and had been since passed down to her brother, wasn't an ordinary train…it was a circus train, complete with clowns, elephants, and canvas tents that were set up just outside the little town.

"Remember how Kenny would growl at us never to touch it or we'd be sorry?" I blissfully thought about all the times we had pestered Cynthia's brother.

"Yeah. Maybe he thought he was one of those stupid toy lions in his circus."

I shrugged, still wondering why it was there, then bent down, and pulled the heavy plywood away from the trunk.

"Well," I said under my breath, as we stood facing our time machine, "this is it."

Cautiously opening the trunk, I was relieved to see the pink satin costume and the white, navy-trimmed sailor dress just where they had been carefully folded and placed after our trip the week before. Was it just a week ago? Hard to believe.

Our first trip through the trunk had happened quite by accident. After rooting through all the junk and old toys in the attic, we found clothes that had been stored in the trunk for almost fifty years. Cynthia tried on the ballerina dress we later discovered had belonged to her great-aunt, Belle. Although Cynthia normally danced like an amateur, she had pirouette'ed and plia'd her way around the attic with more grace than I'd seen her show in two years of ballet lessons.

Then she'd persuaded me to try on the old sailor dress that had belonged to Cynthia's grandmother, Clara. The dress didn't seem to have any special powers like the ballet dress…until I put on the hat. Then, without any warning whatsoever, I took off through the trunk on a journey that took me back in time…to the childhood days of our grandmothers.

To my total surprise, I ended up in the home of Cynthia's grandmother, Mama Clara. After a frightful and confusing meeting with Clara's mother, Nana Anna, I ran back to the attic and found my way back to the present through the magic trunk. Wanting very much for Cynthia to meet her great-grandmother and to find out for herself that I'd really traveled back in time, we finally figured out how the ballet costume would give her the special power to travel back with me. Now, here we were…once again facing another trip to the past.

"Maybe we should think a little longer about this. My grandmother's skirt and blouse might not be in the trunk for me to change into when we get back to Clara's house. Then what would I do?" I asked, trying to delay the inevitable.

"Oh me, oh my." Cynthia smirked. "Gus, stop being such a coward!"

Although I hated being called that, my teeth were chattering too much to defend myself.

"Gus," she asked in a more thoughtful tone, "do you think that strange looking card will still be in the pocket?"

I pictured the card I'd found in the pocket of my grandmother's skirt…the skirt I'd 'borrowed' from her house to keep from getting into trouble for wearing Clara's good sailor dress. The card looked like one that might be used to tell fortunes, and when we overheard Bess and Clara talking about the circus, Cynthia and I both wondered if there was a connection.

"Well, I guess if it's there, we'll figure out whether we need it…if we make it to the circus, that is." There didn't seem to be much confidence in my answer.

"Well, I can see you're full of optimism today," Cynthia loudly sighed. "Let's just get dressed and see where the trunk takes us."

Her cheerfulness didn't help my dark mood, but I'd stalled about as long as I could. I quickly buttoned up the sailor dress and waited for Cynthia to put on her ballet costume. We then took one last, anxious look at each other. Cynthia slipped the flowered headband over her ponytail. I put on the sailor hat. We were off, for better or worse, on a journey through the shimmering purple and green lights that had become so familiar on our previous travels through time.

The Magic Medallion
By: Mary Cunningham
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