Melissa Perry Moraja

The Super Secret


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we asked her if she had one, she nodded yes. And when we asked her what it was, she squatted, clenched her fists tightly, squinted her eyes, and let out this odd moaning sound like she was trying to go to the bathroom.

      I wondered if she even had an extraordinary ability or if she was like me and had to have something trigger it to get it working.

      Guess someday we’ll know.

      I’m just glad that I’m finally like every other Wunderkind—extraordinary! Although, I wish it didn’t happen the way it did.

       CHAPTER 2

      Baseball Gone Salty

      It all began on a hot August day in the small town of Boring Brook.

      Jake, Madison, and I rode our bikes to Gator Elementary with our baseball equipment slung over our shoulders. Gator Elementary was the school we attended nine and a half months out of the year.

      When we arrived, the playground area was deserted, except for this enormous bird’s nest, sitting high on one of those huge, steel power transmission towers. We had hoped some of our friends would be there, or at least a few other kids, so we could form teams. But no one was.

      As I was unzipping my baseball bag, I noticed Principal Dimples, our school’s principal, standing just inside the front entrance of our school, looking at a green piece of paper that was taped to the door. Within seconds, she ripped the paper off. Then she turned in our direction, crossed her arms, clenched her lips together, and stared at us. She made me nervous. I was glad when she turned around and disappeared into the school.

      “Are you ready?” shouted Jake from home plate.

      Like always, Jake hit first. It was like some kind of unwritten older-brother rule.

      I hurried to the pitchers mound, wound up, and pitched Jake a fastball. He hit every pitch I threw. I wasn’t the best pitcher. Most of my pitches were either way too high or outside the batter’s box or too close to the batter. But he still was able to hit every single one of them into the outfield.

      After Jake hit, it was Madison’s turn. I always let Madison go before me. And Jake always pitched to her. We agreed to take turns, rotating each position to be fair. Although it really wasn’t that fair, because Jake only wanted me to pitch to him, which meant Madison always pitched to me. Her curveballs have whacked me in the head, elbow, and knee. And yes, they all hurt!

      Madison hit the first three pitches Jake pitched, missed the fourth, and walloped the last pitch over Jake’s and my head.

      Then it was my turn.

      I bolted in, grabbed my super-slugger bat, and hustled to home plate. I swung the bat a few times, waiting for Madison to get settled in on the pitcher’s mound.

      “Are you ready?” I yelled, grinding my left foot into the ground.

      “You bet!” Madison shouted back, winding up.

      I angled my bat just perfectly above my left shoulder. My eyes connected with Madison’s. She lifted up her left knee, gripped the baseball in her right hand, and pitched a knuckleball.

      I swung and missed.

      “Ugh!” I said, disappointed.

      Madison and Jake started laughing.

      I sighed and said, “Not funny.”

      I got back into batting position and missed the next three pitches—a curveball, a fastball, and another knuckleball.

      “One left!” shouted Madison, smirking. This was it.

      This was my last pitch.

      I took a deep breath and clenched my bat tightly, scanning every angle of Madison’s pitching stance. I was ready for a changeup.

      She wound up and released the ball. It was fast!

       Whack!

      Jake, Madison, and I froze as we watched the baseball soar higher and higher. It went farther than any ball Jake had ever hit.

      I smiled proudly, imagining all of my friends telling me that I was just as great as Jake.

      But my smile changed quickly, when I noticed the ball heading right for the enormous bird’s nest. There wasn’t anything any of us could do. It crashed right into it, knocking the nest to the ground.

      No one could have predicted what happened next. This mammoth-sized bird shot out of the nest, zooming toward us like we were its next prey. Next thing I knew, Jake was shouting, “Run! You hit a raptor’s nest!”

      “Aaaggghh!” Jake, Madison, and I screamed, running for cover.

      Jake dove behind some bushes near the school.

      Madison took cover behind a tree near the basketball court.

      I had planned on diving in a ditch about twenty yards from where we were playing. But as I was running, I got this urge to look back. So I did.

      That’s when a humongous glob of this mushy, neon-green bird poop landed right smack on my face.

      It was so disgusting!

      I wish I would have closed my eyes and covered my nose because the stuff seeped into them. My eyes felt like they were on fire and my nose tingled and itched. And then, when I screamed, it dripped into my mouth. It felt so slimy and gooey. And it tasted salty. I fell to the ground, covering my face with my hands.

      I really tried hard to keep my cool. But then I heard this crackling, sizzling sound inside my ears, and my eyes started to see all of these flashing lights, and my nose smelled this awful alien odor.

      I thought I was a goner, so I jumped up and started to run, waving my arms back and forth high above my head. I tried to scream for help, but the only sound that rattled out of my mouth was a gurgling sound.

      This definitely wasn’t a proud moment for me.

      As I continued to run around like a lunatic, a thought came to mind—I’m out in the open and a sitting duck if that mammoth-sized raptor decided to attack me again.

      I froze in my tracks and looked up and down and left and right, searching for the raptor. And I felt a strange chill through my body when I found it. It was lying next to the nest that had come crashing down to the ground.

      Is it alive? I thought.

      Curious, I hurried over to it.

      When I got there, the raptor wasn’t moving or breathing.

      “Huh?” I mumbled.

      A small bird had popped its head out of the nest.

      It was so cute!

      Its tiny body was covered mostly with brownish feathers. But it also had some blue on its head and wings and these mysterious black markings just under its eyes.

      Klee, klee!

      Mommy?

      The little guy just sat there, staring at the dead raptor with the saddest eyes. Every now and then, it would glance up at me. I had a weird feeling that the mammoth-sized bird lying on the ground was its mommy. Then a strange warmth filled my body. I felt an uncontrollable urge to protect the little guy.

      Just as I was about to kneel down, something heavy touched my left shoulder.

      “Aaaggghh!” I cried out, turning around quickly, ready to fight whatever had just touched me.

      “Are you okay?” Jake asked, pulling his hand back.

      “Jake, you scared me,” I said.

      “Sorry,