41 - Bad Hare Day Read online




  BAD HARE DAY

  Goosebumps - 41

  R.L. Stine

  (An Undead Scan v1.5)

  1

  “Pick a card, any card.” I spread out the deck of cards in front of Sue Mailer, facedown. She giggled and picked one.

  “Don’t show it to me,” I warned her. She glanced at the card, keeping it hidden from me.

  A small crowd of kids gathered on the school steps to watch. School was out for the day. Sue showed them her card.

  I love doing magic tricks—especially in front of an audience. My dream is to be a great magician like my idol, Amaz-O.

  I’ve been playing around with stage names. My real name is Tim Swanson—but that’s way too boring for a professional magician. I’ve been thinking of calling myself Swanz-O. My best friend, Foz, thinks Swanz-O sounds like a laundry detergent.

  “Now, Sue,” I said in a louder voice, so everybody could hear me. “Put the card back in the deck.”

  Sue slipped the card in with the others. I shuffled the deck and tapped it three times. “I will now make your card rise to the top of the deck,” I announced.

  Tap, tap, tap. I picked up the top card and showed it to Sue. “Was this your card?” I asked her.

  Her eyebrows shot up in amazement. “The three of clubs!” she cried. “That was my card!”

  “How’d you do that?” Jesse Brown asked.

  “Magicians never reveal their secrets,” I said, bowing. “And now, for my next trick—”

  “I know how he did it.” My little sister, Ginny, suddenly popped up in the crowd. The sound of her scratchy voice made my hair stand on end. She loves to spoil my magic shows.

  But a true magician doesn’t let anything throw him. I grinned my biggest, fakest grin at the little brat.

  “Ladies and gentlemen, my lovely assistant, Ginny!”

  “I’m not your assistant, freak-face,” Ginny snarled. “You won’t catch me doing nerdy magic tricks. I’m into karate. Hi-ya!” She demonstrated her karate chop.

  Some of the kids laughed. I pretended to laugh, too. “Ha, ha. Isn’t she a riot?”

  Everybody says Ginny looks like an angel. She has long, wavy blond hair, rosy cheeks, big blue eyes. People always ooh and aah over her.

  No one ever oohs and aahs over me. I’ve got curly light-brown hair and hazel eyes. I’m twelve, which Mom says isn’t a “cute age”.

  My nose is long and curves up at the end like a hot dog. Ginny likes to flick the end of my nose with her finger and say, “Boi-oi-oing.”

  Her nose is small and perfect, of course.

  I tried to continue my show, Ginny or no Ginny. I slipped the deck of cards into my pocket and yanked out my magic scarf. “Now, be amazed as I—”

  Ginny reached into my pocket and snatched out the cards. “Look, everybody!” she cried, showing them the cards. “All the cards are the three of clubs!”

  Ginny started passing the cards around so everyone could see.

  “Hey! Give those back!” I protested. I grabbed the cards away. It was true. Every single card in the deck was the three of clubs. But no one was supposed to know that.

  “You’re a phony,” Sue mumbled.

  “No—wait!” I cried. “Watch this!”

  I whipped out my magic rings—two large silver hoops hooked together. The kids quieted down a little.

  “These silver rings are locked together,” I declared. “They’re completely solid—linked together forever!” I tugged on them to show that they wouldn’t come apart.

  Then I handed them to Jesse. “Try to pull the rings apart,” I told him. He pulled hard. He pulled lightly. He pulled hard again. He jangled them around. The rings stayed hooked together.

  I took them back. “The rings will never come apart,” I said. “Unless I say the magic words.” I waved one hand over the rings. “Hocus pocus!” I gently pulled the rings apart. A couple of kids clapped.

  “You’re not going to fall for that old trick, are you?” Ginny mocked. “You want to know how he does it?” She grabbed the rings away and began to demonstrate. “They’re trick rings—”

  “I will now make my lovely assistant disappear!” I cried, shoving Ginny aside. “Beat it!”

  “Stop pushing me!” she shouted. “Hi-ya!”

  She karate-kicked me in the stomach.

  “Oof!” I doubled over. Everybody laughed and clapped.

  “That’s a great trick!” Sue said.

  I clutched my stomach. Some trick.

  Stupid Ginny and her karate kicks. Why did Mom have to take her to that martial-arts school? My life has been miserable ever since. She’s only ten, and she fights way better than I do. I’ve got the bruises to show it.

  “Kick him again!” somebody yelled.

  Ginny crouched, ready to attack.

  “Try it, and I’ll tell Mom where that dent in the refrigerator door came from,” I warned her.

  She backed off. She knew Mom would kill her for karate-chopping the fridge just because we were out of ice cream.

  “She’s not going to kick him,” Jesse said. “Show’s over.”

  The kids drifted away.

  “Wait!” I cried. “Come back!”

  “See you tomorrow, Tim,” Sue said. Everybody began to head for home.

  “Thanks for wrecking everything, Ginny,” I snapped.

  She flicked my nose. “Boi-oi-oing.”

  “Stop it!” I swatted her away. “You’re definitely going to get it. I’m telling Mom about the fridge for sure.”

  “Go ahead,” she taunted. “But if you do, I’ll give you the freezer chop.” She waved her arms through the air, making those weird karate noises. “Wah wah wee—ah! Right to the neck. You’ll never walk again!”

  She trotted away. “See you at home, Swanz-O!”

  This is what I have to deal with every day of my life. A little sister who could kill me if she wanted to. What can I do? I’m helpless against her.

  That’s one reason I want to be a magician. Maybe Ginny can karate-chop my arms off—but not if I make her disappear first!

  I sighed and buttoned up my denim jacket. It was almost four o’clock and getting chilly. The wind had picked up, too. When is it going to get warm? I wondered. It’s the end of March—it’s supposed to be spring already.

  The school door burst open. “I’m outta here!” Foz shouted.

  Foz’s real name is Foster Martin. But he doesn’t look like a Foster. He’s a Foz. He’s chubby, with a brown buzz cut. His shirt is always untucked.

  “Where’ve you been?” I asked him.

  “Mrs. Pratt made me stay after school,” he replied, making a disgusted face.

  “Why?” I asked.

  “No reason,” Foz said.

  Foz has to stay after school almost every day. He always says it’s for no reason.

  I picked up my magic kit and started down the school steps. Foz followed. We left the school grounds and walked toward town.

  “What were you doing at school so late?” he asked.

  “I was trying out a few magic tricks. Ginny told everybody how they work. It was a disaster.”

  “You need better tricks,” Foz said. “Lots of kids have the same magic kit as yours.”

  “You’re right,” I agreed, rattling my kit. “This is amateur stuff. I’m ready for some real magic tricks. Professional ones.”

  “Like a hat you can pull a rabbit out of.”

  “Or that spinning box Amaz-O has,” I added.

  Amaz-O was my hero—the greatest magician ever. “Did you see him on TV last week? His assistant stepped into a big black box. Amaz-O spun it around three times, and she disappeared!”

  “He’s doing a show at Midnight Mansion,�
�� Foz said. Midnight Mansion is a club in town where magicians perform every night.

  “I know. I wish I could go. But the tickets cost twenty-five dollars.”

  We turned onto Bank Street and headed toward the center of town. It wasn’t on the way home, but Foz knew what I was doing. Malik’s Magic Shoppe was on Bank Street. I stopped in there at least once a week, just to drool over the cool tricks they had.

  “Malik’s has a bunch of new tricks,” I told Foz. “Designed by Amaz-O himself.”

  “I’ll bet they’re expensive,” Foz said.

  “They are.” I reached into my pocket to see how much money I had. Five bucks.

  “That’ll buy you a squirting flower,” Foz said. “Maybe.”

  I stuffed the bill back into my pocket. “You’ve got to see this stuff, anyway. There’s a table—you put a plate or something on it—it can be anything you want. The plate will rise up over the table and float!”

  “How does it work?” Foz asked.

  “I don’t know. Mr. Malik wouldn’t tell me. He said you have to buy the trick to find out.”

  “How much does it cost?”

  “Five hundred dollars.”

  Foz rolled his eyes. “I guess you’ll have to stick with card tricks.”

  “I guess.” I sighed.

  A little bell rang as we opened the door to Malik’s. I breathed in the musty smell of the shop. It was jam-packed with old tricks, new tricks, magic books, and costumes. There were even cages in the back for rabbits and doves. Mr. Malik sold everything.

  I called out, “Hi, Mr. Malik.” He stood behind the cash register. He was a short, bald old man with a fat stomach.

  I waited for Mr. Malik to say, “What’s new, Magoo?” in his gravelly voice. That’s how he greets all his regular customers.

  I called out, “Hi!” again, but he didn’t answer. He just stood there and grunted.

  “Mr. Malik?” Foz and I crept closer to the counter.

  “Unh!” Mr. Malik grunted. He stumbled forward.

  Something was sticking out of his stomach. A sword!

  “Mr. Malik?” I asked. “Are you okay?”

  He clutched the handle of the sword and moaned in pain.

  Someone had stabbed him!

  “Help me!” he groaned. “Please—help!”

  Foz and I froze in fear. I let out a gasp—but I was too frightened to move. Foz’s whole body trembled.

  Mr. Malik uttered another groan. Then his expression changed. He pulled out the sword—and he tossed it to me.

  “Hey!” I cried. “It’s a fake!”

  Mr. Malik laughed. He rubbed his round stomach, which hadn’t been stabbed at all. “What’s new, Magoo?” he chuckled. “Get a load of that trick sword. Just got it in today.”

  I tested the sword against my own stomach. It had a sliding blade. I pushed the blade into the handle, then let go. It popped out again. Very cool.

  Foz fingered the blade. “Think of the tricks you could play on Ginny with a sword like this!”

  “Like it, Tim?” Mr. Malik asked. “Only twenty bucks.”

  I shook my head. “We’re just looking, Mr. Malik.”

  He hung the sword on the wall behind him. “All right. Take your time and look around. But would it kill you to actually buy something once in a while?”

  Mr. Malik always said that, too.

  I wandered to the back of the shop. I checked out a rack of magician’s jackets. I pulled a sparkly blue tuxedo jacket off the rack and tried it on. It had a trick sleeve for hiding things.

  I stared at myself in the mirror. I pretended to announce myself. “The Amazing Swanz-O!”

  Foz shook his head in disgust. “That name is so lame.”

  “Yeah, you’re right.” I thought of another name. “How about ‘Swanson the Magnificent’?”

  “It’s okay,” Foz said. “A little boring, but okay.”

  He tried on a top hat and added, “You need something cooler, like ‘Tim the Destroyer’.”

  “That sounds like a wrestler,” I commented.

  “At least it’s not wimpy,” Foz retorted. “Like Swanz-O.”

  “Hey, boys.” Mr. Malik shuffled toward us. He held out two tickets.

  “Take these, if you want them,” he said. “Two free passes to Amaz-O’s magic show tomorrow night.”

  “Wow!” I cried. I took a ticket and read it.

  Admit One

  An Evening of Magic

  with the Great Amaz-O

  March 23

  10 P.M.

  Midnight Mansion

  “Thanks Mr. Malik! I can’t believe we’ll get to see Amaz-O in person!” I gushed. “Tomorrow night!”

  “Tomorrow night?” Foz frowned at his ticket. “I can’t go. My aunt and uncle are coming over. It’s my mother’s birthday.”

  “So? This is a once-in-a-lifetime chance! Your mother has a birthday every year.”

  Foz stuffed the ticket into my palm, shaking his head. “I know my mom—and she won’t see it that way. Anyway, tomorrow night is a school night.”

  I’d forgotten about that. I hoped my mom would let me go. Ten o’clock was pretty late to go out on a school night.

  She has to let me go, I decided. She just has to. What kind of horrible mother would keep her son from seeing his hero in person? Only a really mean, monstery mother.

  My mother is a grump, but she’s not a monster.

  I took off the blue jacket and hung it back up on the rack. A large wooden box caught my eye. It was the size of a coffin, brightly painted with red and yellow stars. I lifted the lid.

  The box was empty, lined with blue velvet on the inside. “What’s the box do, Mr. Malik?” I asked.

  “That’s for sawing people in half,” Mr. Malik replied.

  I examined the inside of the box, trying to figure out how it worked. I found no secret compartments or panels or anything.

  “How does it work?” I asked Mr. Malik.

  “You going to buy it?” he demanded.

  “Well—how much does it cost?”

  “Two-fifty.”

  “Two dollars and fifty cents? I can afford that.”

  Mr. Malik waved me away and started toward the stockroom at the back of the shop. “Two dollars and fifty cents,” he muttered. “In your dreams.”

  “He meant two hundred and fifty dollars, Brainz-O,” Foz said.

  I tried to cover myself. “I knew that. I was joking.”

  Foz fiddled with a cool-looking trick in the corner. I moved closer to see.

  “It’s a guillotine,” Foz said. “For chopping off heads.”

  The guillotine had a place for the victim to rest his head at the bottom—and a razor-sharp blade at the top.

  Mr. Malik emerged from the back room. “I’m closing up soon, boys,” he called.

  “I just want to see how this works,” Foz said. He twisted a lever on the guillotine.

  “Foz—no!” I cried.

  The blade slid down the guillotine.

  And landed with a horrifying thunk.

  “My hand!” Foz shrieked. “My hand!”

  2

  Mr. Malik gasped. “I’ll call an ambulance! Nine-one-one!” He grabbed the phone.

  The guillotine blade had sliced right through Foz’s hand. He screamed in pain.

  “Oh!” Foz moaned. “I cut off my hand!” he wailed. “I’ll never write again!”

  I started laughing.

  “Why are you laughing?” Mr. Malik demanded. “This is an emergency!”

  “No, it’s not.” Foz held up his hands to show that he was fine. “Got a paper towel? I need to wipe off this fake blood.”

  “Fake?” Mr. Malik stammered. “Fake blood?”

  “We got you back for that sword trick,” I told him.

  Mr. Malik clutched his sweaty forehead in his hands. “I’m so stupid! I know that’s a trick guillotine. Why did I fall for such a dumb joke?”

  “Hey,” Foz protested. “It was a lot funnier
than your sword-in-the-stomach joke.”

  Mr. Malik wiped his brow and smiled. “All right, boys. Enough tricks. It’s five o’clock. Get out of here.” He shoved us toward the door.

  “Thanks for the tickets, Mr. Malik,” I called. “See you next week.”

  “Sure. Next week, when I’ll have a new shipment of magic tricks you won’t buy.”

  The bell on the door jangled as we left the shop. Foz and I walked down Bank Street toward home.

  “Sure you won’t go to Midnight Mansion tomorrow night?” I asked him.

  “I can’t. Your mom will never let you go, either.”

  “I’ll find a way,” I insisted. “You’ll see.”

  We paused in front of Foz’s house. “Come over to my house after school tomorrow,” I said. “I’m giving another magic show. Only this time Ginny won’t wreck it.”

  “I’ll be there,” Foz promised.

  “And bring your sister’s rabbit,” I added.

  Foz shuffled his feet uncomfortably. “Clare is not going to like that…” he began.

  “Please, Foz,” I begged. “I’m going to finish building my rabbit table tonight. The rabbit trick is going to be so amazing—”

  “I’ll try to bring the rabbit,” Foz said. “But if anything happens to it, Clare will kill me.”

  “Nothing will happen to it—I promise.”

  I waved good-bye to Foz and went home. “The Great Swanzini is here!” I announced as I burst into the kitchen.

  “You mean the Great Jerk,” Ginny mumbled. She sat at the kitchen table, folding napkins. She reached up and flicked at my nose. “Boi-oi-oing.”

  “Get off me.” I slapped her hand away.

  Mom set a plate of chicken on the table. “Go wash up, Tim,” she ordered. “And tell your father supper is ready.”

  “Look, Mom.” I held up a quarter. Then, with a flick of my wrist, I slipped it up my sleeve. “I made the quarter disappear!”

  I showed her my two empty hands.

  “Very nice. I see two hands that haven’t been washed yet,” Mom said impatiently.

  “I saw the quarter go up your sleeve,” Ginny sneered.

  “No one appreciates me around here,” I complained. “Someday I’m going to be the greatest magician in the world. And my own family doesn’t care!”