Dedication
For Didi
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Chapter 1: Arachnophobia
Chapter 2: Muse Squad Reunited
Chapter 3: The Mystery of the Tenth
Chapter 4: Packing Up the V and A
Chapter 5: Lost in LaGuardia
Chapter 6: Corona Arts Academy
Chapter 7: Gross! Gross! Gross!
Chapter 8: Fessing Up
Chapter 9: Drama at the Bodega
Chapter 10: A Mustering of Muses
Chapter 11: Exquisite Corpses
Chapter 12: The Gray Sisters
Chapter 13: Owl Trouble
Chapter 14: A Game of Chess
Chapter 15: Tiny Snacks
Chapter 16: A Picnic Near the Shore
Chapter 17: Poetry-Palooza
Chapter 18: The Queen of Corona
Chapter 19: Half-Truths and Mini-Golf
Chapter 20: Ssssssspaghetti
Chapter 21: The Giant in the Room
Chapter 22: Whose Camp? Our Camp!
Chapter 23: Aphrodite’s Gifts
Chapter 24: Questions and Answers
Chapter 25: A Giant Party
Chapter 26: Busted. Again.
Chapter 27: Tia Annie’s Secret
Chapter 28: Patience and Fortitude
Chapter 29: Future-Callie’s Problems
Chapter 30: Showdown at the Student Showcase
Chapter 31: The Tenth Muse
Chapter 32: Homecoming
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Books by Chantel Acevedo
Copyright
About the Publisher
Chapter 1
Arachnophobia
My room looked like it had imploded. There were items of clothing draped on every surface—my dresser, the doorknob, the door itself, my sister’s new microscope (an adoption day gift from our twin brothers), and even on my sister.
“Callie, this is entirely unacceptable,” Maya said, a long sock dangling over her face.
“Sorry!” I said, snatching it away. “I can’t figure out what to pack for New York.” I was out of breath and sweating. It was summer in Miami and the air-conditioning in our house had conked out that morning. Even my elbows were damp.
Maya glanced at her own suitcase, already packed and propped up by the door, ready for our flights tomorrow morning. She was heading to Space Camp in Huntsville, Alabama. Meanwhile, I was going to New York City to spend a month with my papi; my stepmom, Laura; and my new baby brother, Rafael Jr. My brothers were staying in Miami to earn money to buy a used car. At least, that was the excuse they gave. Papi had asked them to visit, too, but they’d said no right away. The truth is, when Mami and Papi broke up, the twins got really angry at Papi for leaving, and a part of them was still mad.
Maya’s summer sounded infinitely cooler than mine. While she would be learning about space and gravity and actual rocket science, I would be stuck in a small walk-up apartment in Queens, staying in the baby’s room while the baby slept with Papi and Laura in a cradle by their bed.
“I wish I was going to Space Camp,” I grumbled.
“Since when do you want to be a scientist?” Maya said. “Because astronauts are scientists first, you know.”
I didn’t have to take long to consider it. Science was Maya’s thing. Did I even have a thing? I thought of my best friend, Raquel, who just knew she wanted to be a performer. What did I want from life? I had no clue. Whenever anybody asked me, “What do you want to be when you grow up?” I nearly always just shrugged. Could a person make a career out of hanging out with friends, eating snacks, and watching television?
I don’t think so.
“Why the face?” Maya asked me. “I’m sure you’ll have plenty of a-muse-ing adventures this summer.”
“Stop it,” I said, rolling my eyes. Maya was the only person in my family who knew I was one of the nine muses. It’s supposed to be a secret, but you try keeping information from your genius sister!
There have always been nine muses, and usually, they’re grown-ups. But now, for the first time ever, four of us are kids. We’re the Muse Squad, which is a silly name, but we’ve gotten used to it. I’m the Muse of epic poetry. It sounds a little boring, but isn’t as it turns out, because epic poems are about heroes, which means I am a hero-maker.
Maya was right. Something interesting would probably come up this summer. But the thing was, I hadn’t heard from the other muses in ages. Nia was trying out for a gymnastics club team in Chicago. Mela’s mother had bought her theater passes for the summer, and she was catching every tragic play she could, and Thalia had volunteered to be a junior librarian at the British Library. They were all pretty busy with non-muse activities.
As for the other muses, the grown-up ones, I hadn’t heard from any of them either. Usually every few weeks our leader, Clio, would call us to headquarters—which was in London, England, at the Victoria and Albert Museum—either for training or missions. Maybe things were quiet in the summer. Did muses go on vacation? I didn’t know. But the silence made me nervous. It made me feel as if something was up.
“Earth to Callie,” Maya said, snapping me out of my thoughts.
“Sorry, Mission Control. We’ve got a problem. I’m panicking,” I answered her, then slumped on the floor on top of a pile of a sweatshirts and tees. It was so hot, I couldn’t concentrate.
Maya smiled. She liked it when I called her Mission Control, and I liked to imagine her there, behind panels full of technology, solving important scientific problems. Maybe she could solve my problem, too. Without asking, she started plucking different clothing items off the floor and the furniture, folding them deftly and sliding them into my suitcase for me.
“No need to panic,” Maya said, cool as can be. “When I was in foster care, I had to pack up a lot. You don’t really need to take too much. Plus, you’ll want room in your bag for all the souvenirs you’re going to buy me,” she joked, rolling a pair of jeans like a burrito. Maya had started wearing her hair like Princess Leia—in two buns over her ears—and they bobbed a little as she packed, like a pair of loose headphones.
“Why aren’t you sweating?” I asked. I was drenched. The ceiling fan was spinning, but it was really just moving the warm air around. It felt like a giant was blowing his hot breath on us.
Maya giggled, lifting the bottom of her T-shirt a little. There, duct-taped to her stomach, were three ice packs.
“You won’t be laughing when it’s time to pull those off,” I said.
Maya’s smile slipped a little. “Climate change. We all have to manage somehow.” Last fall, before Mami adopted her, Maya had won the county science fair with her project—a plan to address sea-level rise in South Florida.
It hadn’t been an easy win. The competition was tough. Plus, a rogue muse who happened to be our evil science teacher, Ms. Rinse, and her three siren minions, did their worst to try to stop Maya from succeeding. Maya doesn’t know it, but she’s a Fated One—meant for great things thanks to that massive brain of hers, which means she’s under the protection of the muses.
Maya zipped up my suitcase and said, “Voilà! All packed. Now can we please go to the mall where the temperatures aren’t trying to kill us?”
She’d done it. She’d packed my suitcase. Sometimes Maya saved me.
“Vamos,” I said, “we’ll ask Fernando and Mario to take us.”
Maya crossed her fingers and her eyes. She was right. We’d need all the luck we could get if we wanted to convince the twins to be our ride to the mall.
“Bros. My bros. My wonderful brothers,” I called do
wn the hallway. Mario popped his head out of his bedroom.
“What do you want?” he asked.
“The answer is no,” Fernando added from inside. The twins would be seventeen soon, but Maya and I usually had them beat when it came to maturity.
“Please?” Maya squeaked, her hands clasped under her chin and her eyes doing their best puppy dog impersonation.
Mario blinked. “Well—”
“Don’t you give in,” Fernando barked. I could hear their favorite video game, Underwatch, blaring away.
“It’ll be nice and cool at the mall,” I said. “We won’t even bother you. You can spend the whole time at Gamer Place.”
“Air-conditioning, air-condiiiiiitioning,” Maya sang, the perfect backup.
“Fine,” Mario said.
“Ugh. You always fall for it,” Fernando said, shutting off the game. The truth was, they both always fell for it. When we’d gone before the family court judge in May to make Maya an official member of the family, the judge had given my brothers a big speech about what it meant to have a new little sister. And though it kind of bugged me that he was giving them the whole “men of the house” talk (I mean, let’s be real here. I’m in an all-girls-with-ancient-powers squad, and my mom is the head of the house, no question), my brothers had taken it to heart. That meant Maya got away with a lot when it came to them, the big softies.
As for me, unlike Maya, I was old news. Just last week, they’d covered my bed in a hundred sticky notes that read “dork.” It took all my willpower to keep from “inspiring” them to drink a ketchup milkshake.
Because that’s what muses do, we inspire people. If we wanted to, we could convince just about anyone to do something truly awful. But muses aren’t about that villain life. Besides, we have a bunch of muse rules we follow:
A muse always trusts her instincts.
Muse magic is just love, concentrated.
A muse never uses her magic against her sisters.
Inspiration knows no borders.
All people and places are worthy of magic.
A muse must always keep her identity a secret.
A muse is a person on whom nothing is lost.
A muse is no better, or worse, than the heroes she inspires.
Muses are goddesses. And don’t ever forget it.
They’re good rules, but lately, I’ve been coming up with my own. Like Callie’s Muse Rule #236: Your brothers are idiots, but you love them anyway.
Still, when I saw my bed covered in sticky notes, and Maya’s pristine and untouched, it hurt my feelings. I almost said something to them, but then I just . . . didn’t. That’s been happening a lot lately, too. Whenever I try to tell somebody about my feelings, my eyes get all watery and stupid, and I absolutely hate crying. Mami always says, “All feelings are valid because you feel them. That’s the point.” But I don’t know about that. Sometimes my feelings seem pretty ridiculous, even to me.
“I’m getting one of those food court cookies the size of my head,” Fernando was saying as he tied his laces.
“For sure,” Mario added.
“Mmm,” I said, my sweet tooth coming alive.
“I hope you brought your own money, ’cause I’m not sharing,” Fernando said. My pockets were empty and I let out a groan. Sweet tooth deactivated.
Maya pointed at her purse and gave me a wink. She’d gotten lots of adoption day gifts from our extended family, mainly in the form of spending money. Our great-aunt Carmen gave her a hundred bucks. All I ever got from her at Christmas and birthdays was socks.
Sometimes it pays to be the new kid. Literally.
Mario and Fernando had gotten permission to take Mami’s van, and we piled in. The air-conditioning was working, and we blasted it into our faces while Mario turned the radio to the reggaeton station.
Maya and I sang along to song after song the whole way to the mall. It was our last day together in Miami, and I wanted to make the most of it. First, we’d go straight to the food court for some ice cream (pistachio for Maya, plain chocolate for me), then we would make our way to Pop! Mania and see if they had any Zombie Beach merch for sale. Zombie Beach was a new horror show set in Miami. We’d seen the first season twice already and were halfway through our third viewing. I watched most of it through my fingers, covering my face every time a zombie crashed into the room and ate someone’s face. Maya was fearless, though. For some reason, the bloodier the scene, the more she laughed. Mario and Fernando were that way, too, and they teased me about being so chicken.
I was just thinking about how my brothers had always been brave about that kind of stuff when Mario let out a bloodcurdling scream.
The van swerved, tilting up onto two wheels before slamming back down and going into a spin. My seat belt cut into my shoulder, and I watched as Fernando’s head smacked the passenger door window. Maya curled into a ball in her seat, her hands clamped onto her hair buns. I could feel myself trembling all over, and I think I was saying, “No, no, no, no, please,” out loud, but I can’t be sure. The steering wheel spun wildly on its own. Mario needed to get a grip . . . literally!
I tried to summon my muse magic, but the instant tingling on my skin that came with the magic? It didn’t happen. Again, I willed my magic to come, but it just wouldn’t. After what felt like a million years, the van rolled onto the grassy swale on the side of the road and finally stopped.
Mario was still screaming.
“What happened?” I shouted, clicking off my seat belt. Maya was already clambering toward the front of the van, while Fernando was holding Mario by the shoulders and shaking him.
“Sp-sp-spiders!” Mario spluttered, and then I saw them—hundreds of tiny, nearly transparent spiders, crawling on the dashboard.
Fernando made a strangled sound, slamming his baseball cap over the crawlers again and again until they were still. Then he swept them into his hat and threw the whole thing outside.
Mario whimpered, his hands covering his face, his shoulders shaking. It broke my heart.
“Hey, bro,” I said softly, laying a hand on Mario’s head. I tried to call my muse magic one more time, waiting to feel my fingers going numb, and my hair standing up at the root a little, like it always did.
Nothing happened. “Don’t panic,” I whispered to myself.
“Too late,” Mario answered, hyperventilating now.
Thinking maybe I could nudge the magic along, I pictured Mario taking deep breaths, calm and brave, like he normally was. The picture in my mind grew sharper and more defined until Mario stopped shaking.
Had my magic worked? Or was Mario just back in control of himself?
“I don’t know what happened. I’ve never been funny about spiders,” Mario said after his breathing returned to normal. “But there were so many, and they started getting on my hands.” His voice was firmer, and he was smacking his own cheeks a little, like a person trying to wake up from a dream.
“Good job,” Maya whispered to me.
“Um, yeah,” I said softly. I rubbed my hands together, and they felt normal. No tingling. It was definitely my turn to panic. Where had my magic gone?
“That was nuts,” Fernando said, running his hands through his hair. He took a look at his cap on the ground outside and shivered.
“M-maybe we should go home,” Mario said, and we didn’t argue.
“Want me to drive?” Fernando asked, and Mario nodded, so the boys traded places. I watched as Mario checked the van for damage (there was none), then came over to the passenger side, his eyes darting back and forth over the grass, checking for more spiders.
That’s when I saw a different spider in the distance. This one was very large, black, and furry. It had crawled onto a traffic cone, perched at the very top.
I nudged Maya with my elbow. “Do you see that?”
Maya squinted. “The traffic cone?”
“No, what’s on it.”
Maya squinted harder. “Nothing’s on it, Callie.”
When
I looked again, I saw that Maya was right—the spider was gone. I rubbed my eyes and leaned back in my seat. Clio had once told me that muses saw the world a bit more magically than others did. In fact, I had once spotted a nymph in the River Thames. It was possible that the spiders that had scared my brother weren’t just any old arachnids. But there was no way of being sure.
My brain was racing all the way home, thoughts pinging back and forth, but nothing feeling like it made any sense.
I looked at Mario, drumming his fingers on his thighs to music. He was his old, chillaxed self again, but we were all very quiet. Nobody was in the mood to talk about what had just happened. We stopped at a red light, and I watched as a man standing on the sidewalk spit his gum onto the ground.
“Ugh. Litterer,” Maya said in disgust.
Narrowing my eyes and staring at him, I called my magic again.
Everything was still as the world seemed to slow down before my eyes, but still, my magic didn’t come. The man didn’t move. In fact, we watched as he dug into his pockets and threw some crumpled receipts on the ground.
“He’s the worst,” Fernando said from the front seat.
My breath started to hitch.
“You okay?” Maya asked.
I shook my head.
“That was pretty scary back there,” she added, resting her head on my shoulder. “But I wouldn’t worry anymore. The odds of that happening again are astronomical.”
Maya may not have been a muse herself, but she had a way of making people feel better that was pretty magical.
Outside the van windows, the man on the sidewalk pressed the crosswalk button repeatedly. I steadied myself, remembering that I’d used my imagination when Mario was freaking out, and he’d calmed down. Maybe it was a coincidence, or maybe . . .
I pictured the litterer bending down, retrieving his gum, and throwing it into a trash can that was only six feet away from him.
Just as the picture finished forming in my head, the man licked his lips, dug into his pocket for yet another receipt, bent down for the gum, and sailed it into the trash can with an elegant toss. Then he picked up the other receipts he’d let drop.
I frowned. Had I done that? Was I summoning my magic differently now?
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