Authors: Courtney Sheinmel
And so I do make my wish. Then I lean forwardânot too far forwardâand blow.
A
fter the party, Quinn and I each get to have a friend stay for a little while. Quinn invited Madeline. I invited Eli, but he has to go visit his dad. His parents are divorced. That's why he moved to our town, Pinemont, in the first place. His dad lives an hour away, in Philadelphia, which is a big city. Eli sees him every other weekend. This is technically his dad's weekend, but he was allowed to stay at his mom's long enough to go to my party. My cousins also had to leave, because it's a long drive back to their house on Long Island.
I thought at least I'd have Uncle Max to hang out with. But after the whole present thing, I'm not so sure I want to.
Uncle Max is in the den with Mom, and I head into my room with my presents. There's the keyboard from Will and George, which is cool because now I can add a musical element to my safety reports. But I don't feel like doing that now. Eli got me a microscope. I stick my finger under the lens and examine it. Blown up, the lines of my fingerprint look like worms, or a maze. And then there's my last present, from Mom. It's a watch, just like the one Dad used to wear. I put it on. It makes my wrist look more mature. Like my dad's, except his wrist was hairier.
There's a knock at my door. “Can I come in?” calls a voice. Uncle Max's voice.
“I guess,” I say.
“Can I sit down?” he asks when he steps into the room.
“Sure.”
He sits. “Anything you want to talk about?”
Yes
, I want to say.
When did Quinn start being your favorite?
“No,” I say instead.
And then I notice that he's holding something. Some kind of box. Or not a box, exactly. A towel, kind of bulky like there's something inside it. It's folded up and secured with safety pins.
That's just the way Uncle Max would wrap a present for someone, if he had one to give.
“Is that for me?” I ask.
Uncle Max nods and hands it over. “I wanted to give it to you in private.”
“I knew you wouldn't really forget me,” I say. Even though I hadn't known that, and if you want to know the truth, I wish I'd found that out in front of the other kids. I would've liked them to at least see me get a really cool present, no matter how private it is.
But this is no time to worry about all of that. I unhook the pins (and recap them so they won't prick anyone), and unwind the towel. “Careful,” Uncle Max says.
“I know,” I say. You have to be careful with night-vision goggles. The lenses are made of glass, and if you break them, they won't work. Plus, the shards of glass could be sharp and cut you. If a cut is bad enough, you could die. Or at least need stitches.
The towel is unwound. My present is in my lap. It's not goggles. It's not even a silver box like Quinn got. It's a bottle.
A scratched-up old green bottle that you definitely wouldn't pick up if you found it washed up on the beach. The letters
SFG
are engraved on the side. They must be someone's initials, but they're not mine. Which means the bottle used to belong to someone else. Which means it's a used gift. Even Quinn got something new from Uncle Max. You could tell because they were her initials engraved into the silver jewelry box.
There's no top on my “new” used bottle. Whatever was once in it is gone, and it's empty now. I turn it over in my hands. The number
SEVEN
and the word
PORTAL
are engraved on the bottom.
“You know what it is?” Uncle Max asks.
“A bottle,” I tell him. Duh.
What am I supposed to do with a bottle? A
used
one at that. I guess it's a good thing I didn't
open this in front of Quinn and her friends after all. But just because Uncle Max spared me the humiliation of the World's Worst Present in front of the other kids doesn't make me feel any better.
He nods. “It's for genies.”
“Geniuses?”
Even if I am a genius, I still wish Uncle Max had gotten me a better present.
Sorry, that might be rude. But it's the truth.
“Genies,” Uncle Max repeats, this time a beat slower and a decibel louder. “You know what they are, right?”
“Of course,” I say. I've seen the movie
Aladdin
. The kid rubbed the bottle, out came a big blue genie, he got three wishes, and . . .
Wait a second.
“Are you saying you got me a genie? Because I'm ten now. I don't believe in make-believe things anymore. In fact, I stopped believing in them a long time ago.”
“You need to open your mind a bit more.”
“Open my mind to believing there's a genie in this bottle? I'm not that gullible.”
“No, there's no genie in the bottle. Not now anyway.”
“What do you mean?”
“Zack,” Uncle Max says, looking more serious than I've ever seen him look. “You
are
the genie.”
A
genie?
A bottle-dwelling, wish-granting, all-around magical genie?
Yeah, right.
I break into a grin. “Oh, Uncle Max, come on.”
“This isn't a joke,” he says, with that serious look still on his face.
But I'm onto his plan: He's going to try to get me to believe this unbelievable story, and then he'll burst out laughing and hand me my
real
present. The goggles, I'll bet.
I lean over and try to peer around Uncle
Max. I don't
see
any other package. He must have it hidden in another room.
Maybe it's something even better than night-vision goggles. My mind races with things that could possibly be better. Walkie-talkies, so I can communicate with my family when we're not in the same room. Or fire extinguishers for every room. Or . . . Or . . .
Or a dog! A guard dog to help me look after the house. I'll name him Buddy, or maybe Crackerjack. He'll love me more than anyone elseâespecially more than Quinn, and he'll sit close to me on the couch when I'm doing my homework or watching TV. At night he'll sleep in my bed, except for the times he leaves to patrol the halls and check for strangers. If he sees any, he'll grab on to their legs and not let go until the police arrive.
Uncle Max could be hiding my new dog somewhere in our house, or maybe it's back at his place. Either way, he's not letting on that there's
any other present hiding anywhere.
Fine, I'll play along. “So,” I say to Uncle Max, “people rub this bottle and I pop out, just like that?”
“Something like that,” he says.
“But I'm already
outside
the bottle right now,” I point out.
Poor Uncle Max. He didn't really think this joke all the way through.
“When the time comes, you'll be pulled into the bottle,” he says.
I don't bother pointing out that I'm about four hundred times the size of the bottle.
“And then what? I'll pop out and grant three wishes to whoever rubbed the bottle, like in
Aladdin
?”
“You know about Aladdin?”
“Of course I do. Everyone's seen that movie.”
“Oh. That movie,” Uncle Max says, spitting the words out like they taste sour. He shakes his head, and a clump of his thick white hair falls in
front of his face, obscuring his left eyeball. “It got a few things wrongâmore than a few things. You know Hollywoodâthey take a nugget of the truth and twist it around to make it ridiculous.”
I don't know a thing about Hollywood. But come on. “You're saying you think there were nuggets of actual truth in the movieâthat it got some things right?”
Uncle Max nods gravely. “There
are
genies,” he says. “They travel through bottles that serve as portals. Do you know what a portal is?”
“Sure,” I say.
“Okay. What is it?”
“Umm,” I say. I didn't expect Uncle Max to quiz me. “I forget.”
“Well, I'll tell you, and I think you should commit this to memory. A portal is an entry port.”
“Okay.”
“Think of it as a doorway,” he continues. “You go in one portal and come out another. It's the genie mode of transportation.”
“That'd be cool if it were true,” I tell him.
“Trust me, Zack, the truth about genies is cooler and more exciting than anything you've seen in some silly little cartoon. And now you're a part of it.”
I shake my head. I can't help it.
“There are several stages to finding out you're a genie,” Uncle Max says. “The first one is denial. It's true what they sayâit ain't just a river in Egypt.”
“Huh?”
“Just an expression. The Nile. Denial. Anyway, what I mean is you're right on schedule. Your reaction is typical.”
Never in all of my ten years has Uncle Max ever called me typical.
“Come on,” I say. “Give it up already. This whole thing you're describing is impossibleâbeing a genie, and granting wishes, and getting sucked up into one bottle and popping out of another.”
“Very few things are impossible,” Uncle
Max says. “Very few things indeed. That's lesson number one.”
“Plenty of things are impossible,” I say, starting to tick things off my fingers. “For example, a car transforming into a horse, then into a zebraâ”
“Lesson number two,” he says, ignoring me. “I've never lied to you.”
“Then into a dinosaur,” I continue. “A real, live one that you can ride.”
Not that I'd ride a dinosaur. Or even a horse. Do you know how many people break their backs and die each year from falling off animals?
“All right, Zack,” Uncle Max says. “I get the picture. Car, horse, zebra, dinosaur. Let's you and I get out of here.”
He calls to Mom and Quinn that we're heading over to his house. Mom says, “Have a good time.” Quinn doesn't say anything. I bet she and Madeline are taking inventory of all the stuff Quinn got today.
Uncle Max's house is four blocks away. When we get there, we sit down on the porch swing in the back. He carried the bottle with him, tucked under his arm like a football.
A football would've been a better birthday gift. And I don't even play sports. Not since before Dad, well . . . The point is, I don't play anymore, because there are too many injuries. And I'd
still
rather have a football than an old, scratched-up used bottle.
“This bottle,” Uncle Max begins. “Now that I've given it to you, you have to take care of it.”
“No offense,” I say, “but it doesn't look like the previous owner took such good care of it.” SFG, whoever he was, nicked it up real good. “And that's another thing you're getting wrong, by the way,” I tell him. “They used a lamp in the movie.”
“And I suppose that movie is the source of all your information on genies,” Uncle Max says. “Well, just so you know, stories about genies go
back further in time than anything you see in the movies or on television. They go back further than movies or TV shows themselves.”
I wave him off. “Yeah, sure.”
“Zack, look at me,” Uncle Max says. I look at himâat his wild white hair, his curly mouth, his bright candy-colored shirt. “Have I ever lied to you?”
It's true. He may have wacky hair and talk kind of fast and show up late sometimes. But he's no liar. He told me the truth about getting your blood drawn: It hurts, no matter how tiny the needle is. He told me the truth about liver: It may be good for you, but it tastes disgusting.
And he told me the truth about my dad. All the other adults around me were acting like he'd recover and life would go back to normal. But it was Uncle Max who'd told me Dad was hurt bad, so bad that he wasn't going to get better. He was going to die, and life would never be the same again.
So maybe he's not lying now, either.
Suddenly I get it. And what I get makes me really sad.
“Well?” Uncle Max says, waiting.
“You always tell me to look beyond what people say,” I tell him. He nods. “So the thing is, uh . . .”
“Yes?”
How can I explain this?
“You're kind of, well, old,” I tell him.
Not even kind of. Uncle Max is really and truly old. He won't tell anyone his real age. If someone asks him, he just says, “I'm as old as the rest of me.” Whatever that means.
I don't think about Uncle Max's age so much because he acts young. Most old men are retired, not transponding, or whatever it is he does at his job. And they're not riding roller coasters, either, or running around New York City all day without getting tired. But right now I'm noticing just how deep the lines on Uncle Max's forehead are, as if
they'd been carved that way. And he has so many crinkles at the corners of his eyes, I can't even count them all.