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Thirteenth Child

Chapter One (Excerpt)
Everybody knows that a seventh son is lucky. Things come a little easier to him, all
his life long: love and money and fine weather and the unexpected turn that brings
good fortune from bad circumstances. A lot of seventh sons go for magicians,
because if there’s one sort of work where luck is more useful than any other, it’s
making magic.

And everybody knows that the seventh son of a seventh son is a natural-born
magician. A double-seven doesn’t even need schooling to start working spells, though
the magic comes on faster and safer if he gets some. When he’s grown and come
into his power for true and all, he can even do the Major Spells on his own, the ones
that can call up a storm or quiet one, move the earth or still it, anger the ocean or
calm it to glassy smoothness. People are real nice to a double-seventh son.

Nobody seems to think much about all the other sons, or the daughters. There’s
nearly always daughters, because hardly anybody has seven sons right in a row,
boom, like that. Sometimes there are so many daughters that people give up trying
for seven sons. After all, there’s plenty enough work in raising eleven or twelve
childings, and a thirteenth child — son or daughter — is unlucky. So everybody says.

Papa and Mama didn’t pay much attention to what everybody says, I guess, because
there are fourteen of us. Lan is the youngest, a double-seven, and he’s half the
reason we moved away from Helvan Shores when I was five. The other half of the
reason was me.

I’m Eff — the seventh daughter. Lan’s twin . . .

. . . and a thirteenth child.

From the day I was old enough to understand, I heard people talking to Mama and
Papa about what to do with me. Aunt Tilly was the kindest. She only sighed and said
it was a lucky thing I’d come first, or Lan would have been a thirteenth child with all
the power of a double-seventh son. I wouldn’t be near so much a danger when I
went bad, Aunt Tilly said. Uncle Earn and Aunt Janna disagreed. They said Mama and
Papa ought to have drowned me as soon as Lan was safely born, and it wasn’t too
late yet if they just had the resolution.

There were plenty of others, too, all anxious to tell Mama and Papa how I was sure
to go bad, and to report every little thing I did as evidence they were right. If I
spilled my soup, it was done apurpose and with evil in mind; if a ball I kicked went
astray and tore up the new plantings in the kitchen garden, it was done deliberately
in malice and spite. And of course their children heard the talk, just like I did, and if
they didn’t understand it all, they understood enough to make my life a misery.

Coming in April, 2009, from Scholastic