Colonial Madness

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Authors: Jo Whittemore

BOOK: Colonial Madness
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For my own crazy, quirky family.

I love you all to the moon and back!

Chapter One

N
o one ever buzzed the intercom at Mom's dress shop except Funk, the Fed Ex hunk, and that was only on Thursdays. Every week, he dropped off fabric, and every week Mom greeted him with an airy laugh and a smile traced in Hello Sailor lipstick.

So when the intercom buzzed on a
Monday
morning, Mom and I glanced at each other over the breakfast table. We were still in our flat above the shop, where I was scarfing down cereal while Mom splashed coffee in her mug of morning sugar.

“Is it already time to open?” She frowned. “Or did my sign for summer hours fall down again?”

“You still have thirty minutes,” I said, checking my phone. “And your sign keeps falling because you used Bubble Yum to hold it up.”

“Shouldn't you be going somewhere?” she asked, tapping me on the nose with her spoon.

“The museum,” I said. “But not until ten.”

“Good.” She took a sip from her mug. “Then you can change out of those not-on-your-life jeans while I answer the door.”

The intercom buzzed again, and she punched the speaker button. “Be right there!”

I glanced down. “What's wrong with my jeans?” One of Mom's designer friends had just given them to me for my thirteenth birthday.

“They're shredded, Tori.” Mom slipped a robe on over her nightgown. “It looks like you threw them in the wash with a wolverine.”

I pointed my spoon at her. “Hey, at least
I
do laundry.”

“And
I
feed and shelter you,” she said, opening the dishwasher. “I'll bet that's Sophia downstairs, wanting to see her new wedding dress plans.”

Mom grabbed a manila folder from the plate rack.

“You
really
need to get that thing fixed,” I said, nodding at the machine. “Or buy a new one.”

“What are you talking about? It makes a great office utility
and
keeps my files lemony fresh.” She pulled out a few sketches. “Besides, dishwashers are expensive.”

“Since when have you ever worried about money?” I asked, placing my cereal box in the pantry so that it lined up with all the others. “And if you
are
, is buying new fabric every week
really
a good idea?”

Mom kissed my forehead. “That's not something you need to think about. I'll be right back,” she said, waving her sketches.

“Pants, Mom!” I called after her. “People like it when you greet them wearing pants!”

“It's fine!” she shouted. “Sophia and I go way, way—”

Her voice stopped midsentence, followed by silence. After a couple of minutes, I poked my head out the door.

“Mom?”

I could hear her airy laugh, then the closing of the shop door. A moment later, she screeched and charged up the stairs.

“It was Funk! And he saw me in this!” She pointed at her robe. “And these!” She pointed at her pale, unpainted lips.

“Um . . . the natural look is in?” I suggested. “And you can't spell ‘wardrobe' without ‘robe'—”

“Ah, forget it,” said Mom, fanning herself with a puffy square envelope. “This just means I have to answer the door in a ball gown next time.”

I nodded. “Glad you didn't take it to a crazy place.” I took the envelope from her. “What'd you get?”

“Not sure,” she said. “Something from Massachusetts.”

I opened it and slid out a folded letter and plastic DVD case with the words
MURIEL ARCHIBALD'S LAST WILL & TESTAMENT
on it.

“Who's Muriel Archibald?” I asked while Mom read the letter.

“Your dad's great-aunt who . . . apparently passed away last week,” said Mom, wrinkling her forehead. “I'm surprised it took so long.”

“Wow,” I said. “So, obviously, you were close?”

Mom made a face. “Don't get smart. She was old and mean and disliked by everyone in the family. She hasn't even attended the last five reunions, so I just assumed . . .” Mom shrugged.

“Well, she was nice enough to leave you something in her will,” I pointed out.

“We'll see about that.” Mom slid the disc into her laptop. “Are you sure you don't remember her? You would've been eight last time you met.”

A leathery-faced woman with sunken eyes appeared on-screen.

“Gah!” I took a step back. “I'd definitely remember
that
 . . . I mean
h
e
r
.”

Mom tilted her head to one side. “Believe it or not, she used to be beautiful.”

“In the same way a hairless cat is beautiful?” I asked.

Great-Aunt Muriel shifted in her armchair, leaning toward the camera. A thick rope of pearls hung around her neck and swung heavily from side to side.

“Hello, nincompoops,” said Great-Aunt Muriel in a deep, commanding voice. “If you're viewing this, then you've managed to outlive me. What a pity.”

Mom and I glanced at one another.

“No doubt you're all celebrating and wondering how much money you'll receive,” continued Great-Aunt Muriel. “The answer is: nothing. I've given the entire fortune to charity.”

“Well, that's nice,” I said. “Which—”

Mom shook her head. “Wait for it . . . .”

“Charity, my polo pony, was the only one who didn't bore me with the drama of her life.”

Mom gestured at the screen. “There it is.”

I looked at her. “She left all her money . . . to a horse.”

“But Charity cannot appreciate the grounds of my estate nor its proper manor in the proper manner.” Great-Aunt Muriel frowned and spoke to someone off camera. “That sentence was appallingly cute. Are there any more of these gems I should be aware of?”

Then, looking back at the camera, “Obviously, Charity has no need for the estate, so I'm forced to give it to one of you.
Since I loathe you all equally, it won't be easy to choose,” she said. “Therefore, the recipient will be decided by a test—”

Mom paused the DVD. “Enough of
that
. You need to get changed, Tori.”

“Wait, what's the test?” I demanded. “I'm great at tests!”

Most kids feared pop quizzes, but not me. I even had a special pen strictly for taking them. I used to have two, but my cousin Dylan stole one, hoping it would make him smarter through osmosis. Then he got expelled for hiding in the school's walk-in freezer and eating a week's worth of ice cream sandwiches. Now he lives in Texas.

I'd say his pen theory didn't work.

“Tori, I'm pretty sure this isn't going to be the kind of test you can study for,” said Mom.

“We don't know that yet,” I said. “That estate could be ours. Especially if I'm up against someone like Dylan the Dumbfounded.”

“We don't need all that land
or
a manor,” said Mom, walking toward my bedroom. “My business is here, not in Upper Snootyville.”

“Well, even if we didn't live in the manor, we could sell it,” I said, following her. “And use the money to buy a new dishwasher. Or make improvements to the shop. Like the fitting room.”

“I told you we're
fine
with money.” Mom opened my dresser,
pawing through the neatly folded jeans until she found a pair she approved of. “And what's wrong with the fitting room?” she asked, handing them to me.

I laid the jeans on the bed and set to organizing my dresser drawer. “The lighting makes people look pasty, the mirrors make them look flabby, the carpet has tearstains from women who think they're pasty and flabby,
plus
the door doesn't close unless I'm there to hold it shut.”

“You
did
say you wanted to be involved at the shop,” Mom mused as she pushed the drawer closed.

I rolled my eyes and switched pants. “With inventory or window displays! And I'm glad you focused on the important part of that sentence.” I opened my top drawer for a pair of socks and instead found a slip of paper. “ ‘IOU some clean socks'?” I put down the note and looked at Mom. “Seriously? I had three pairs in here. When did you become a six-legged circus freak?”

She flashed me a sheepish grin. “Whoops! Sorry! I got chocolate syrup on one pair and had to use another pair to clean up milk I spilled. I was making chocolate milk, you see.”

“I never would've guessed,” I said. “Where's the third pair?”

Mom lifted one of her feet and pointed to it.

I squinted and leaned closer. “Did you draw faces—”

Mom quickly lowered her leg. “Hey! Why don't you go play the rest of the video and tell me what it says? If it's something easy, we'll do it.”

“It may mean changing out of your robe,” I told her. “Are you sure you can handle it?”

I returned to the kitchen, where Great-Aunt Muriel's image was scowling, as if she knew she'd been put on pause and didn't like it.

“Sorry,” I told the image. “You were saying?”

I pressed the play button, and the video backtracked a beat.

“. . . recipient will be decided by a test of wit and will. Archibald Manor was built during the colonial era, and I want the owner to appreciate it for all its majesty during simpler times. Therefore, interested parties will live in the same environment as our ancestors. This means no modern technology, such as electronics, automobiles, or grocery stores. Living purely off the land.”

I shrugged. That didn't sound bad.

“For two weeks.”

I grimaced.
That
sounded bad.

“In addition, you will face daily challenges to test your abilities,” Great-Aunt Muriel continued. “The winner will be the person who has accrued the highest points and managed
not to die from hunger or be eaten by other contestants.” A phone number began flashing on the screen. “If interested, contact my lawyer—”

“A lawyer? You can turn that off now,” said Mom from the doorway. “We're definitely not interested. And you have to finish getting ready.”

“But—”

“Don't make me use my Bossy Mom voice,” she warned. “You know how old it makes me feel.”

“Fine,” I huffed, getting up from the table and heading to my room.

Ten minutes later, my purse dangling off one shoulder, I peeked into the kitchen. Mom wasn't there, but her laptop was. The door leading down to the shop was ajar.

I sped-crept across the hall and pushed the disc eject button on Mom's laptop.

Nothing came out.

“BOO!” Mom popped up in front of me, and I yelped, stumbling back several feet. She took one look at my terrified expression and broke into a fit of laughter.

“What . . .” I glanced back at the shop door, which hadn't budged an inch. “Where did you . . . ?”

“In . . . the . . . pantry!” said Mom between giggles. She
pointed to our tiny cupboard, filled with food and just enough space to conceal one marginally insane mother. “I nearly suffocated, but it was worth it!”

“You know I hate being scared!” I huffed, and stomped downstairs.

“Have a nice day, darling!” she called after me.

I fumed and vowed revenge as my feet hit the sidewalk, but in all honesty, Mom was a pretty cool parent. Except when she was borrowing my socks, like today. Or once, when she packed me a sack lunch consisting of half a ham and two raw eggs. “I thought they were hard-boiled!” she'd said. “And your school said you needed protein.”

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