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MARQUINE 'S LIFE:SURVIVING LIFE

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Chapter 1 - MARQUINE LIFE:SURVIVING LIFE

MARQUINE LIFE:

SURVIVING LIFECHAPTER 1: THE

SPACE BUN

DISASTER

My life was

supposed to be

aesthetic today. Ihad the perfect

outfit, the perfect

lighting, and I was

about to record a

new video for my

YouTube channel.

Then, the "MinivanMandate"

happened.

"Marquine! We

'

re

leaving in five

minutes!" Dad

shouted from the

driveway.I looked in the

mirror. My left

space bun was a

perfect,

gravity-defying

circle. My right

space bun? It

looked like a birdhad tried to build a

nest in it and then

gave up halfway

through. I tried to

pin it. I tried to

hairspray it. I

tried to reason

with it.It didn't matter. In

the world of a

14-year-old, a

lopsided bun is a

national emergency.

But there was no

time. I grabbed my

phone, my charger,and a bag of hope,

and ran for the

van.

CHAPTER 2: THE

"DOO-DOO-DOOT

" BEGINSThe minivan door

slid shut with a

sound that signaled

the end of my

freedom. I was

stuck in the middle

row, sandwiched

between a coolerthat smelled like

ham and my

brother, Leo, who

was currently

trying to see how

many goldfish

crackers he could

fit in his ear.Then, it happened.

Dad hit the "Play"

button.

"DOO DOO DOOT!

CHICKA-CHICKA

DOO-DOO!"

He wasn

't just

listening to themusic. He was

becoming the music.

He was beatboxing

to a song that was

older than my

grandparents.

"Dad, please,

" I

groaned, pulling myhoodie over my

head.

"The

neighbors have

ears. The cows

we

'

re about to pass

have ears. Have

mercy.

""Sorry, Marquine!

The rhythm is just

too strong!" he

shouted, hitting a

rimshot on the

steering wheel.CHAPTER 3: THE

1-STAR

MELTDOWN

If there was a

"How to Annoy

Your Daughter"

Olympics, my dadwould have the gold

medal.

"DOO DOO

DOOT!"

Leo started

drumming on the

back of Dad's seat

with sticky,orange-dusted

fingers. Thump.

Thump. Thump.

"Leo, stop it! You

'

re

literally vibrating

my soul,

" I snapped.

I looked down at

my phone. 1%. Thelittle red battery

icon was a tiny

digital middle

finger.

That was it. The

lopsided buns, the

dead phone, theorange dust. It all

boiled over.

"STOP! JUST...

EVERYONE STOP!"

I screamed.

The van went silent.

Dad's hand froze

mid-air."I CANNOT

SURVIVE THIS!" I

yelled, sliding down

onto the

floorboards.

"My

life is a tragedy!

I'm living in a

musical and I don'teven know the

lyrics!"

CHAPTER 4: THE

GAS STATION

GOBLIN

Dad pulled into

"Pete

's PitStop"

—the place

where hopes go to

die.

"Go get a snack,

Marquine,

" Dad

said, handing me

five dollars.

"But

nothing that makesyou look like a

radioactive goblin.

"

I marched inside,

my sneakers

sticking to the

floor. I went

straight for the

back shelf andfound them: Purple

Power Chips. The

girl at the counter

looked at my

sagging space bun

and my purple chips.

"Family road trip?"

she whispered."Is it that

obvious?"

"You have the

'Minivan Stare,

'"

she said.

"DOO-DOO-DOOT!

MARQUINE!

MOVE IT ORLOSE IT!" Dad

yelled from outside.

I wanted to melt

into the floor.

CHAPTER 5: THE

NO-SIGNAL VOIDWe hit the

mountain pass. I

watched the bars

on my phone screen

play a game of

hide-and-seek.

Three bars... two

bars...No Service.

I was forced to do

the unthinkable: I

looked out the

window.

There were cows. I

started naming

them to keep fromgoing insane. There

was Brenda, who

looked like she was

judging my hair,

and Gary, who was

chewing grass with

the same intensitymy dad used for

beatboxing.

CHAPTER 6: THE

ARRIVAL

We finally pulled

into Aunt Sheila

's

driveway. Thehouse was old,

wooden, and looked

like it had been

built before the

invention of the

internet.

"We

'

re here!" Mom

cheered.I stepped out of

the van, my legs

feeling like jelly.

My right space bun

had finally given up

and was now just a

sad ponytailhanging off the

side of my head.

"Welcome to the

wilderness,

" I told

Leo.

CHAPTER 7: THE

FLOOR IS LAVA

(LEO EDITION)"Marquine! Look!

The floor is actual

lava!" Leo

screamed, refusing

to step out of the

van.Between my feet

was a sea of

crushed chips and

empty juice boxes.

He wasn

't wrong.

The floor was a

disaster zone."Leo, just step out!

I need to save

what's left of my

dignity,

" I groaned.

"ENOUGH!" Dad

stuck his head in.

"If everyone isn

't

out in five seconds,I'm turning the

'Doo-Doo-Doots'

back on. At full

volume.

"

We scrambled out

of that van faster

than cats in a

bathtub.CHAPTER 8: THE

DINNER DEBACLE

The real boss fight

was waiting in the

kitchen.

Aunt Sheila stood

over a steamingdish.

"It's my

world-famous

Surprise

Casserole!"

It was a bubbling,

gray-green sea of

mystery topped

with crushedcornflakes and...

raisins?

Dad took a bite, his

face going through

five stages of grief.

"Mmm! Crunchy!"

he choked out.I realized survival

was about

swallowing mystery

broccoli without

crying. I closed my

eyes and took a

bite. My taste buds

did not survive.CHAPTER 9: THE

BACKYARD

SIGNAL HUNT

I slipped out the

screen door to

escape the smell of

boiled socks. Thenight sky was

actually

beautiful—like

silver glitter on

black velvet.

I held my phone up

to the stars.

"One

bar. Just one?"Bling!

A single, flickering

bar appeared. I

sent a text to my

best friend,

Jasmine:

MARQUINE: If I

don't make it back,tell the world my

space buns were

perfect at the

start. Also, never

eat anything gray.

JASMINE: LOL.

Did the casserole

get you?MARQUINE: It

tried. It failed. I

am the captain of

this backyard.

CHAPTER 10: THE

MIDNIGHT

SNACK MISSIONIt was 11:42 PM.

My stomach wasn

't

just growling; it

was staging a

full-on protest.

That "Surprise

Casserole" from

Chapter 8 wascurrently sitting in

the trash can, and

I was pretty sure

the trash can was

trying to crawl

away from it.

Creak.I froze. My

bedroom door

opened an inch. A

tiny, glowing face

peered in. It was

Leo, holding his

tablet like a shield."Marquine,

" he

whispered.

"The

hunger. It's taking

over. I think I'm

seeing

hallucinations ofchicken nuggets on

the ceiling.

"

"Get in here,

Cheeto Goblin,

" I

hissed.

"I have a

plan. But we have

to be silent. If Dadwakes up, he

'll

start a midnight

'Doo-Doo-Doot'

session and we

'll

never get to the

kitchen.

"We crept down the

hallway. Every

floorboard

sounded like a

gunshot. Aunt

Sheila

's house was

old, and it wanted

the whole world toknow we were

moving. We

reached the

kitchen, the air

still smelling

faintly of gray

broccoli."Target spotted,

"

I whispered,

pointing to the top

of the

refrigerator.

Aunt Sheila kept

the EmergencyCookies up there.

The good ones. The

ones with the

chocolate chunks

that actually

looked like

chocolate and not

mystery raisins."I can

't reach it!"

Leo whined,

jumping about two

inches off the

ground."Shhh! Use the

'Boost Strategy

'!"

I grabbed his waist

and hoisted him up.

He was heavier

than he

looked—mostly

because hispockets were still

full of toy cars and

half-eaten granola

bars.

He grabbed the jar.

His fingers slipped.

Clink.We both stopped

breathing. From

the living room, we

heard Dad snore,

turn over, and

mumble something

that sounded like,"Chicka-chicka...

pass the gravy...

"

"Go, go, go!" I

whispered.

We retreated to

my room with theprize. We sat on

the floor, sharing

the cookies in the

dark. For the first

time in the whole

trip, Leo didn

't

kick me, and Ididn

't roll my eyes

at him.

"Marquine?" he

whispered, his face

covered in

chocolate.

"Are wesurvival experts

now?"

"Leo,

" I said,

taking a massive

bite of a cookie.

"We

'

re legends.

"CHAPTER 11: THE

GREAT PACK-UP

PANIC

The sun was barely

up, but the

"Doo-Doo-Doot"

was already at level

ten."Everyone in the

van! We

'

re hitting

the road before

the cows wake up!"

Dad shouted,

swinging a suitcaselike it weighed

nothing.

I was currently in a

life-or-death

struggle with my

backpack. Between

the Purple PowerChips (Chapter 4),

the Emergency

Cookies (Chapter

10), and a weird

seashell Aunt

Sheila gave me

that smelled likeold socks, my bag

was refusing to zip.

"Marquine! Move it

or lose it!" Leo

yelled, zooming

past me with his

tablet. He hadalready claimed

the "good"

seat—the one

furthest away

from the leaky

cooler.I looked at my

reflection in the

hallway mirror. My

space buns? They

were gone. I had

given up. My hair

was now in a

"tactical messybun" that said, I

have seen things. I

have eaten gray

broccoli. I have

survived.

"Auntie, thanks for

the... memories,

" Isaid, giving Aunt

Sheila a hug that

mostly smelled like

her lavender

perfume and that

mystery casserole."Wait!" she cried,

running to the

kitchen. She came

back with a plastic

container wrapped

in three layers of

foil.

"LeftoverSurprise Casserole

for the road!"

I felt my soul leave

my body. Dad took

the container with

a terrified smile."Oh... wow. Thanks,

Sheila. We

'll

definitely... enjoy...

this.

"

As we walked to

the van, I saw Dad

quietly slide thecontainer into the

very back of the

trunk, behind the

spare tire. He

caught my eye and

gave me a tiny wink."Survival of the

fittest, Marquine,

"

he whispered.

Maybe Dad wasn

't

so bad after all