Glen said. Then he stuck his fingers in his mouth and made gagging sounds. âIâll give it back to you.â
âYouâre so gross!â Scott slid away from Glen as fast as he could. The last time Glen pulled this stunt he really did throw up. âJust forget it,â Scott said miserably.
âOh, all right,â Glen groaned. âIâll pay for half.â
Glen reached into his pocket and pulled out his money. He counted out three dollars and shoved it into Scottâs hand. âGo ahead. Order the swimming monkeys. But when the magic crystals donât come to life, Iâm not waiting for this stupid company to send my money back. Youâre gonna give it to me.â
âFine,â Scott agreed. âBut what if they do come to life?â
âThen Iâll be a monkeyâs uncle.â Glen cracked himself up. âGet it?â
âHa, ha,â Scott said, not at all amused by Glenâs lame joke. âYouâll see.â
In a few weeks Iâll finally have a cool story to tell at school , Scott thought. And maybe even scary, too.
Scott had no idea just how scary his story would be.
2
âN o!â Scott shouted. âNo!â
Scott couldnât believe his bad luck. It was the first day in three weeks that he hadnât been home to wait for the mailman. And sure enough, that was the day his package arrived.
But that wasnât the bad part. The bad part was that the mailman had just handed over Scottâs package to Scottâs older sister, Kelly.
Kelly thought she was the coolest thing on earth. She constantly reminded Scott she was almost thirteen. Almost a real teenager. Not a baby like Scottâeven though Scott was only a year younger.
Scott and Glen chased Kelly around the kitchen table.
âWe can do this the easy way, or we can do it the hard way,â Scott said, closing in on Kelly.
He shoved his open hand out. âNow, give it to me.â But he knew she wouldnât. Kelly never did anything the easy way.
âHow do you even know this package is for you?â she teased.
Scott inched closer to her. âBecause my name is on it,â he said as he ripped the package from her grip.
âJerk!â she huffed, punching him in the arm.
Scott ignored her. He couldnât wait to open the package. The minute the brown wrapping was off, Glen held out an open palm.
âWhat?â Scott said, staring down at it.
âYou might as well just give me my three bucks back right now,â Glen answered. âI told you it was gonna be a total rip-off.â
Scott hated to admit it, but Glen was probably right. The box didnât look anything like the ad in the comic book.
There was no picture of a mad scientist.
No magic crystals in his hand.
Only lots of goofy-looking creatures. Withantennae popping up from their heads. And pink and blue bows tied to them. They swam around in a fishbowl, wearing silly grins.
âMaybe they sent the wrong box,â Scott suggested, turning it around in his hands.
Kelly snatched it from him. âOoooh, âthe power to create life,â she read from the box.
âGive that back to me,â Scott demanded.
But Kelly just laughed. âYou two are such losers. Whatâs the matter? Canât find any real friends to play with so you have to grow some?â
Then she tossed the box on the table and strolled out of the kitchen.
âSo are we going to make these things, or what?â Glen asked, opening the box.
âI guess.â Scott sat down at the kitchen table and watched Glen slide a small round tank from the box.
Another disappointment. The tank was nowhere near as big as the one the mad scientist held in the ad. It was too small for even a goldfish. And it was made of plastic.
The only cool thing about it was that it had a lid with a light you could turn on and off. And the bottom of the tank looked like the surfaceof the