Chapter 15: Much More Than a Chocolate Bar.
Level Up, Felicia
Hello!
I'm Charlie, nice to meet you.
Are you here to meet someone?
No? Me neither. I'm just a chocolate bar, after all.
But I know why you're here! You're looking for the latest chapter of Level Up, Felicia, aren't you?
Well, you're in luck! Felicia asked me to write a chapter about my past experiences so she could include it in her book. And guess what? Here it is!
Player: Charlie
Location: World 1, in a trash can
I lay there in the trash, surrounded by used cans and bottlesâsome still sticky with soda, others sporting mysterious, crusty stains that looked like a science experiment gone wrong. The smell was a pungent cocktail of spoiled leftovers, old pizza grease, and the unmistakable aroma of forgotten fast food fries. Above me, a squashed ketchup packet burst open like a crimson volcano, oozing its gooey contents onto a crumpled napkin. Somewhere nearby, a half-eaten sandwich lay abandoned, its lettuce wilted and soggy, a sad tribute to better days.
A rogue fly buzzed overhead, doing lazy loops like it owned the place. I considered asking it for company, but honestly, even flies werenât great conversationalists. The whole scene was less âtreasure troveâ and more âdumpster diving disaster.â But hey, at least I wasnât alone down hereâthere was plenty of grossness to keep me entertained.
My mind drifted back to the one who put me here â a woman. As beautiful as beautiful gets, like sheâd just stepped out of a perfume commercial or a magazine cover, where even the sunlight seemed to blush when it hit her skin. We were a match made in heaven: she, a rich actor with a closet full of designer shoes I could only dream of, and me, a chocolate bar that regenerated every time I was eatenâbasically the snack worldâs version of a superhero.
She wore confidence like it was her favorite accessory, and I? Well, I was her secret weapon against hunger and bad moods. Together, we were unstoppable. She had the fame, the glam, and the paparazzi flashes; I had the sweet, sweet power of endless deliciousness. You could say we were the perfect pairâlike peanut butter and jelly, but way cooler because, you know, I talked.
We were happy.
Until we werenât.
Her fitness trainer told her to go on a diet â one that didnât include chocolate bars. It was a tough choice for her: stay a movie star or keep eating sweets.
What choice did she make?
Well, Iâm in a trash can. What do you think she chose?
I thought I had a chance. I mean, come on, I had a tasty look, a charming personality, and a cocoa content that could melt hearts.
But no.
Suddenly, kale was the new king. Almonds were getting more screen time than I was. There was green juice in the fridge. Green! Juice! She started saying things like "cleanse" and "gut biome" and ârefined sugars are the enemy,â and every time she opened the pantry, I swear I saw her flinch like I was some kind of chocolatey ghost of bad decisions.
Then, one day, she didnât even say goodbye. Just picked me up with salad-tossing hands, muttered something about âself-control,â and yeeted me straight into the trash like yesterdayâs prop snack.
It was over.
She chose fame.
And I got dumped⦠right next to a leaking yogurt cup and an expired can of lentils.
Love is cruel.
I'm in a sad mound among half-squashed soda cans, greasy napkins, and a suspiciously sticky wrapper that might have once held a pickle. The trash can smelled like a swamp on a hot summer dayâif swamps smelled like expired cheese and old gym socks. I tried to make the best of it, you know, mingling with the moldy bread crusts and the crustier pizza boxes, but it was tough.
I mean, sure, Iâm magical and all, but even I donât sparkle in garbage juice.
So here I am, the discarded hero of a tragic diet story, stuck in a trash can that smelled like a dumpster had a bad day. If heartbreak had a flavor, I was pretty sure it tasted like old banana peel and regret.
A tear slid down my face.
Okay, maybe more like a drop of melted chocolate rolling off a bumpâbut hey, emotions are emotions, right?
It was the kind of tear that screamed, âIâm sweet, but Iâm also meltdown material.â As it slowly oozed down my wrapper, I imagined it was like a dramatic soap opera momentâif soap operas smelled like cocoa and sugar.
If I had eyes, theyâd be all watery and sad, maybe with a tiny chocolate mustache forming beneath my ânoseâ from the melt. I tried to keep it together, but honestly, itâs hard when your whole life is basically a constant cycle of being eaten, reborn, and occasionally tossed out like yesterdayâs leftovers.
Maybe one day, I thought, Iâd be more than just a snack... maybe even a trophy. But for now, I was just a chocolate bar with feelings, melting in a trash can of despair.
It had been an hour since she tossed me in here.
An entire hour of staring at the same old crumpled pizza box, listening to the sad symphony of buzzing flies and the occasional squelch as something unidentifiable slid deeper into the pile. I tried to keep track of time by counting the number of gnats that passed byâroughly seventeen, but honestly, whoâs counting when youâre a rejected chocolate bar in a trash heap?
I considered sending out an SOSâmaybe write a tiny note and attach it to a rogue french fryâbut alas, I don't have hands to write with.
Meanwhile, the smell was evolving. It started out as âold garbage,â but now it was heading dangerously into âscientific experiment gone wrong.â I swear I could hear the banana peel plotting world domination somewhere beneath me.
If this is what they call ârock bottom,â I was definitely hitting the bottom of the dumpster, too.
Suddenly, the world shook. The trash jiggled beneath me like a wobbly Jell-O mold at a kidâs birthday party. I started sinking deeper into the pileâlike quicksand, but stickier and way less glamorous.
When out of nowhere, a cat jumped in.
Not just any cat. This was a stealthy, laser-focused feline ninja with eyes that glowed like tiny green flashlights in the dim trashcan abyss. Its whiskers twitched with the precision of a master hunter, and I swear I heard a tiny âmission acceptedâ soundtrack playing in my head.
Before I could even say âHelp!,â the catâs jaws clamped around me like I was the last leftover snack at a midnight feast.
âAaaaaah!â I screamed. Cats are, by far, my worst enemy. âIâm poison for cats!â
Seriously, Iâm like the kryptonite of the feline worldâchocolate is toxic to them!
The cat didnât care. It picked me up in its mouth like I was some sort of shiny, chocolatey trophy, then leapt out of the trash can with the grace of a feline ninja on a mission.
I dangled there, swaying like a piñata in a gentle breeze, as it trotted off to who-knows-whereâprobably some secret lair where cats plot world domination and hoard all the best snacks.
I tried to get its attention. âHey! Iâm not a chew toy!â But all I got was a flick of the tail and a confident meow that clearly said, âYouâre mine now, sweet treat.â
Well, at least if Iâm going to be kidnapped by a cat, Iâm getting a free ride. Too bad the destination was definitely not a five-star chocolate lounge.
Was this the end? Was the cat going to eat me and then realize, when I reappeared, that he could profit off me?
I imagined the felineâs face going from satisfied snacker to entrepreneurial genius in a split second. âWait a minute⦠if this chocolate keeps coming back bigger every time I eat it, I could start the worldâs first infinite snack supply!â
Heâd set up a tiny cat-sized factory, maybe recruit some mice for assembly line work, and suddenly become the richest cat in the neighborhoodâking of the kibble and chocolate empire.
But then I remembered: cats are notoriously bad at math and even worse at business. So, more likely, heâd just swallow me again and promptly forget why Iâm special.
Still, I couldnât help but wonderâif this is how the rest of my life would be, at least I might inspire a new wave of entrepreneurial cats. Maybe âKittyâs Chocolate Factoryâ will be the next big thing.
Or maybe, just maybe, I'll be the reason many cats go to the hospital. Again, choculate is very poisonous to them.
âKitten Whiskers! What are you holding?!â
My doom-spiraling was abruptly interrupted by a high-pitched voice that sounded like a fire alarm mixed with sugar-rush energy.
A little girlâmaybe eight years old, wearing mismatched socks, a pair of goggles, and carrying a bright pink purse that looked way too big for herâcame sprinting toward the cat with the determination of a tiny, pint-sized superhero on a mission.
She swooped in like a chocolate-saving knight and plucked me right out of the catâs mouth before I could even say âRescue me!â
âChocolate?â she said, eyes wide with wonder. Thenâwithout missing a beatâshe swallowed me whole.
This was it. The moment I live for. My reason for living. My sweet, chewy purpose.
A white light washed over my vision like someone cranked up the brightness setting on life. I could feel itâthe surge. The mystical chocolate energy that made me whole again⦠and slightly bigger.
When the light faded, I found myself once again in her hand â slightly bigger this time. A little wider in the middle. A touch taller. Basically the chocolate version of hitting the gym for five seconds and gaining a solid bicep.
Back in the world. Ready for whatever came next.
The girl was astonished.
Her jaw dropped so far I was worried it might hit her sneakers. She held me up like a scientist discovering a new species. If I had eyebrows, I wouldâve raised them.
âYou⦠came back,â she whispered, poking me gently like I might explodeâor turn into a marshmallow. âAnd youâre bigger! Like a chocolate balloon with confidence!â
She spun around, purse flapping wildly, and yelled to the sky, âI HAVE A MAGIC CANDY BAR!â like sheâd just won the lottery and wanted the birds to know.
Then she turned to the cat, who was licking its paw and giving me a side-eye like "I was literally just holding that snack in my mouth."
âYou saw that, right?â she asked the cat. The cat blinked slowly, in the way cats do when theyâre pretending theyâre not impressed but are secretly thinking, âOkay, that was kinda cool.â
She looked back at me, eyes sparkling. âYouâre my destiny.â
âActually, Iâm chocolate,â I corrected. âBut Iâll accept âdestinyâ if it comes with snacks and minimal chewing.â
Before I could answer, she popped me into her mouth again with the enthusiasm of a kid testing if lightning really does strike twice. GULP.
And once more, I reappearedâslightly bigger, a bit warmer, and frankly, getting closer to needing my own zip code.
Her eyes went wideâlike, saucer-sized wide. The cat screeched in horror and launched itself into the air with a dramatic flair only a startled house cat could achieve, then vanished behind a couch, probably to start writing a conspiracy blog about me.
âTHIS. IS. AMAZING,â she shouted, hoisting me above her head like I was a legendary artifact she just pulled from an ancient temple. âI HAVE A RE-SPAWNING SNACK!â
âYes,â I explained. âNo matter how many times you eat me, Iâll always come backâbigger than the last time.â
âYou talk, too?â
âYou bet! I can crawl, too.â
The girl blinked. âDo you get bigger every time you are eaten?â
âYep,â I replied. âOne day Iâll be the size of a sofa. Maybe even a minivan. The dream is galaxy-sized, but Iâll start with being as big as your finger.â
âHow is this even possible?â
âI come from a magical world.â
âA magical world?â The girl tilted her head.
She squinted at me as if trying to x-ray my nougat-filled soul. I could see the gears turning in her headâvery colorful, candy-coated gears, probably powered by bubblegum and chaos.
âTell me everything,â she said, eyes gleaming. âAnd if I eat you again while youâre talking, itâs only because Iâm emotionally overwhelmed.â
âWell,â I said, âbut itâs rather boring, if you ask me. I like it here, where talking inanimate objects are actually unique. And right now, I'll be more then happy to stay with you.â
âWow!â The kidâs eyes went wide. âI have an endless supply of chocolate!â
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Her pupils practically turned into candy swirls. She clutched me with both hands, as if I were the last slice of cake at a birthday party full of eight-year-olds.
âMy goal in life is to be eaten again and again," I explained, "So I can grow bigger and bigger. One day, Iâll be the biggest person in the galaxy! But this has to stay a secret. You can keep a secret, right?â
She paused. Her eyes darted to the left, then to the right, then to the catâwho was currently trying to sit inside a cereal box that was clearly too small for its ambitions.
âNope!â The girl chirped. âIâm a genius who can solve anythingâexcept keeping my lips sealed.â
âThen why did I tell you any of this?â I muttered to myself.
âI donât know,â she said, shrugging. âI didnât do anything but listen... and eat your delicious chocolate.â
âWell... could you try to keep it a secret?â
âHmmm...â She thought for a second. âOkay!â
I sighed. I guess eight-year-olds can be a little single-minded sometimes.
She immediately pulled a glitter pen from her backpack and began scribbling in a notebook titled "Top Secret Magic Candy Files" with stars drawn on the cover and half a peanut butter smear across the front.
âStep one,â she mumbled while writing, âfind a safe place to store self-regenerating snack. Step two: test what happens if you dip it in peanut butter. Step three: see if it can be trained to do tricks.â
âHey, Iâm standing right here.â
âWell, sort of standing,â she said. âMore like resting in a state of eternal dessert readiness.â
âThatâs accurate but still insulting.â
âIâm just brainstorming,â she said, tapping her pen to her chin, which somehow resulted in a jelly stain on her nose. âThis could be the biggest discovery since my dad found out you can toast Pop-Tarts twice.â
"Maybe I'll just be your edible friend, how's that?"
"Hmmm." She thought for a moment and shrugged. "Okay! I'm Luna!"
âCharlie,â I said.
âWhoâs Charlie?â
âMe.â
âOh. Well, thatâs kind of boring, isnât it? I was hoping for Mr. Chocolate.â
âI wish I had that name too... but sadly, fate decided otherwise.â
She scrunched up her nose, then tapped her chin thoughtfully. âMr. Chocolate sounds like someone who wears a cape and fights candy crime.â
âExactly. I was hoping to be the superhero of sweets.â
âMaybe you could be Chocolate Man. Or Captain Cocoa.â
âCaptain Cocoa... has a nice ring to it.â
âOr The Choco Avenger!â She struck a dramatic pose, nearly knocking over a glass of orange juice.
âCareful, Luna! We canât have you spilling juice before the sequel.â
She giggled. âOkay, Mr. Charlie. But if you ever grow big enough to wear a cape, Iâll make sure itâs made of marshmallows.â
âIâm holding you to that.â
And with that, my destiny as a chocolate hero was sealed â or maybe just melted, but definitely heroic.
âCome with me!â she said, dropping me into her purse. âIâm keeping you.â
I barely had time to brace myself before I was tossed into what smelled like a combination of gum wrappers, old pennies, andâsomehowâpineapple. The purse was a cramped little cave, but hey, a chocolate barâs gotta adapt.
She took me back to her houseâa small, yellow, boxy thing that looked like it had been painted by someone who gave up halfway through.
As she walked through the front door, she called out, âMom! Dad! Iâm home!â
No dramatic entrance music or applause, just the usual echoes of a normal household.
She dashed to her room, which was a colorful explosion of stuffed animals, posters, and half-finished art projects. She jumped onto her bed with the grace of a superhero landing and promptly ate me again.
Moments later, I reappeared right back in her hands, slightly bigger and definitely more heroicâor at least thatâs what I tried to convince myself.
An adult man walked in. I figured he must be Lunaâs fatherâtall, serious, with the kind of face that says, âIâve dealt with tantrums, and Iâm not impressed.â
âGood,â he said. âYouâre back. We need to take you to the doctor.â
âWhy?â she asked, crossing her arms and giving a suspicious squint that said, âThis better not be one of those boring grown-up things.â
âYouâve been throwing up a lot lately, and your stomach hurts all the time.â
âSo?â she replied, throwing her head back with the confidence of a kid whoâs clearly not buying it. âI donât think that means I have to see a doctor.â
âWell, sadly, I disagree,â he said, arms folding like an immovable wall.
She huffed but grabbed her backpack, the silent surrender of a champion who knows this battle isnât hers to win.
âIâll go start the engine,â he said, already heading toward the door with the practiced stride of someone whoâs done this dance a thousand times. âMeet me outside and Iâll take you.â
Luna turned to me with a mischievous grin. âSee you later, pumpkin eater.â
âI canât eat anything,â I reminded her, my voice dripping with a mix of frustration and chocolatey resignation. "Including pumpkins."
âItâs an expression,â she said, waving a hand as if that explained everything.
âWell, I express that Iâm a chocolate bar to be eaten, not to eat,â I shot back, because someone had to be the responsible one around here.
She just laughed, tossing her hair over her shoulder as she skipped out of the room, leaving me alone with my existential snack crisis.
Luna came back to her room after a few hours.
âHere! Here!â the girl said excitedly, practically bouncing on the balls of her feet as if sheâd just discovered buried treasure.
She pulled out a crinkly, shiny wrapper that caught the light and crinkled loudly with every movement.
âLook at this!â
âItâs a wrapper?â I asked, raising an eyebrow. It looked pretty ordinaryâjust a piece of foil and paperâbut she was acting as if sheâd unveiled a secret weapon.
âNot just any wrapper,â she said with a sly grin, holding it up like it was a magic artifact. âWait till you see what it can do!â
She grabbed a regular chocolate barâthe kind that doesnât talk, doesnât wiggle, and certainly doesnât complainâand slipped it inside. Then, she carefully pressed along the seam where the wrapper had been opened, smoothing it down with the precision of a surgeon trying to stitch up a very thin, very crinkly wound. When she held it up again, it looked absolutely flawless, as if the wrapper had never been disturbed since the factory packed it.
âSee my new invention? No one can tell it was ever opened!â she declared proudly, grinning like sheâd just invented chocolate itself.
âOkayâ¦â I said, half impressed, half skeptical.
She carefully tucked me into the wrapper and sealed it shut with a flourish, as if sheâd just wrapped a priceless artifact instead of a regenerating chocolate bar with a habit of talking back.
âThat means,â she began, eyes sparkling with mischief, âI can take you to school, eat you, and then once you regenerate, I just put you back in the wrapper. Everyone will think youâre just a new chocolate bar. Because everybody knows that making a wrapper look unopened again is really hard.â
She gave me a conspiratorial wink. âThis way, no one will suspect youâre magical at all!â
âOh, wow,â I said, genuinely impressed. âThank you. And you made this yourself, with no magic?â
âYep! Told you I was a genius, didnât I?â she said, puffing out her chest. âI also made a teleportation device and sold it to the government. All without magic!â
I raised an eyebrow. (Theotorically) âYouâre saying you have a teleportation device and a magically regenerating chocolate bar? That sounds like the start of a very weird superhero origin story.â
She shrugged, grinning. âWho says superheroes need capes? I prefer purses and chocolate wrappers.â
Luna continued to show me some of her inventionsâeach one more bizarre than the last. There was a toaster that doubled as a hat, a robot that only danced awkwardly, and a "self-cleaning" sock that somehow made things messier. Afterward, she decided to teach me chess. I didnât understand any of it, honestlyâbut Luna looked thrilled, even though her moves suggested she was just making things up as she went along. Her serious face, paired with her complete confusion, made the whole game feel like a comedy show.
âExcuse me a moment,â she said suddenly, springing up with the urgency of someone chasing an ice cream truck.
She darted out the door so fast, I almost thought she was auditioning for a superhero movie. Her footsteps echoed down the hall, pounding with the intensity of a stampedeâpresumably toward the restroom.
Then came the unmistakable, not-so-glamorous soundtrack: the glorious symphony of vomiting.
A few minutes later, she came running back, cheeks still a bit rosy and hair slightly tousled as if sheâd just battled a tornado. Her eyes were wide, sparkling with a mix of triumph and mischief, as if sheâd just survived a wild adventure and couldnât wait to tell me all about it.
She reached her hand toward me.
âWait! Wait,â I said. âYou just threw up from eating too much chocolate. You donât want to eat more.â
âDonât worry,â she said brightly, grinning as if she just invented a brand-new game. âIâm not hungry. I just want to take you on an adventure!â
She scooped me up like I was a tiny, precious treasureâwell, a treasure with a wrapper.
âThis,â she said, gesturing toward a building, âis my favorite movie theater. I go here every week!â
âEvery week?â I asked, eyebrows raised in disbelief.
âYep!â She nodded with pride, as if she held the secret to eternal happiness.
She carried me inside, practically sprinting through the front doors as if the popcorn might run out any second.
âLet me show you around!â she announced, bursting with enthusiasm.
I took in the scene with my own eyes. The place was... very run-down. Leaks dripped steadily from the ceiling, forming puddles that threatened to swallow an unsuspecting shoe whole. Grime coated the floors in a stubborn, sticky layer that made every step feel like wading through ancient syrup. Mold crawled across the walls, spreading in wild patterns where no mold had any business setting up campâalmost as if it were auditioning for a horror movie role. Dust bunnies gathered in corners, throwing what looked suspiciously like tiny mold parties, and the faint smell of forgotten popcorn hung in the air, mixing with something suspiciously like regret.
âThatâs the candy place,â she said, pointing proudly to a little stand packed with colorful sweets. The stand was a chaotic explosion of wrappers, jars brimming with neon-colored gummies, and lollipops standing tall like sugary soldiers. Some candies looked so sticky they could trap a fly for days, while others gleamed under the flickering lights as if daring you to take a bite. A small bell perched on the counter jingled with every customerâthough on this day, the only jingling was from Lunaâs excitement and the occasional rumble of the old cash register, which sounded like it was one coin away from retirement.
âMy mom and dad let me pick out a candy for every movie.â Luna pointed to another chaotic corner where wrappers and sticky spots told tales of countless sweet adventures. âIâve even befriended the owners, so all of itâs free!â She beamed with pride, as if she had just revealed the secret to eternal happiness or the recipe for invisible chocolate.
She pointed to a trash can that looked more like a swamp than a container. âAnd that is a treasure chest!â she announced with the enthusiasm of a pirate unveiling gold.
I peered inside and spotted a crusty sandwich, a suspiciously squished soda can, and something unidentifiable that was definitely not treasure.
âI hate to beg to differâ¦â I muttered, âBut unless your treasure is mold and mystery smells, I think this chest is cursed.â
âThe trash only gets picked up once a month,â she explained with a proud grin. âBut before George comes to collect it, he saves it behind the counter so I can take stuff home!â
I raised an eyebrow. âThat sounds extremely dangerous, Luna.â
She just shrugged. âAdventure comes with risks!â
âAnd that!â she said, waving dramatically, âThatâs George.â
Behind the counter stood a skinny teenager who looked like he survived on pizza crusts and energy drinks. He gave a small wave that was more of a half-hearted flick of the fingers.
âHere to watch a movie?â he asked, eyeing me suspiciously.
âHere to watch a movie?â he asked, leaning over the counter with the enthusiasm of a sloth on a slow Monday.
âYep!â Luna answered cheerfully, her eyes sparkling with excitement that could power a small city.
âWhere are your parents?â he asked, raising an eyebrow so high it nearly escaped his forehead. âDonât they need to approve the movie first?â
Luna paused, her confident grin faltering for just a second. âActually, now that you mention it, George⦠I donât think weâre here to watch a movie.â
She turned to me with a grin that stretched from ear to ear, eyes sparkling with the kind of excitement reserved for secret plans and sugar rushes. âMaybe we can have a backyard picnic instead!â she announced, as if discovering the greatest idea since chocolate bars that regenerate.
I blinked, considering the options. A backyard picnic sounded peaceful enough â no sticky floors, no mystery smells, and definitely no suspicious teenagers watching me like Iâm a science experiment.
She gently set me down on a soft, slightly squished blanket spread over the grass, which smelled faintly of freshly cut lawn and a hint of⦠mystery.
âThis is a picnic,â she declared with the enthusiasm of a queen unveiling her royal feast.
Around us, ants marched in single file, clearly unimpressed by the grand event unfolding above them. A nearby butterfly fluttered lazily, as if judging our lack of sophistication.
I glanced up at Luna, who was beaming, clearly proud of this outdoor dining extravaganza.
She pulled out a sandwich, its bread slightly squished but still holding together like a champion. âMy parents say that even though sweets are delicious, itâs important to eat other stuff too.â She took a big, enthusiastic bite, crumbs falling everywhere as if the sandwich had declared war on her shirt.
Then she tore off a tiny piece and held it out with a hopeful smile. âDo you want some?â
âNo thanks. I canât eat.â
She tapped her chin and nodded thoughtfully. âAh, well⦠maybe we can imagine that you can.â She grinned, eyes sparkling with mischief. âLetâs also imagine that youâre a rinosaurous. That would be fun.â
I squinted up at her, trying to picture myself as a dinosaur with an awkward name, wondering if a rinosaurous preferred chocolate or sandwiches for its diet.
Lunaâs mom walked outside into the backyard, balancing a laundry basket in one arm and a half-drunk iced coffee in the other. A sock dangled from the basketâs edge, flapping in the breeze like a tiny white flag of surrender.
âHey, Luna,â she said, her voice a blend of mom-tone and mild confusion at the makeshift picnic situation unfolding on the lawn.
She paused when she noticed the half-unwrapped sandwich, the crumb trail leading to Lunaâs lap, and the chocolate bar (me) sitting upright on the blanket as if this were all completely normal.
âHey!â Luna called back, waving one hand enthusiastically while the other clutched the soggy sandwich.
âRemember when you went to see the doctor?â her mom asked, raising an eyebrow as if expecting a perfectly clear answer.
âUmm⦠I think so. That was earlier today, right?â Luna replied, tilting her head and squinting at the sky as if the sun might jog her memory.
âYes, that visit,â her mom said, crossing her arms and giving a look that said, Youâre not fooling anyone.
âNo, I donât remember that,â Luna declared with full confidence, as if amnesia had suddenly become her superpower.
Her mom smiled, the kind of smile that meant serious stuff was coming next. âWell, all joking aside,â she said, âthe test results came in.â
Lunaâs eyes widened. âAnd⦠am I sick?â
âNo,â her mom replied, shaking her head. âYouâre just allergic.â
âAllergic?â Luna echoed, like the word sounded foreign and suspicious.
âYes, to chocolate.â
Luna paused dramatically, clutching her sandwich like it was a lifeline. âCan I have a moment to process this?â
âSure,â her mom said, stepping back with a smirk, probably enjoying the show.
After her mom walked away, Luna turned to me with a face that looked like sheâd just lost her best friend and her favorite ice cream all in one day.
âOh no! I wonât be able to eat you anymore.â
âWell, thatâs okay,â I said, trying to sound optimistic but also resigned. âIt was fun while it lasted. When you throw me in the trash, Iâm sure some other weird creature will pick me up.â
She sighed, then gently placed me in her purse and zipped it shut.
Suddenly, total silence. No light, no movement, just the muffled sound of Lunaâs footsteps fading into the distance. I couldnât hear anything for hoursâexcept maybe the faint rumble of her tummy protesting the lack of chocolate.
I heard a zipping soundâsharp and sudden, like the grand reveal of a magicianâs trick. Lunaâs hand reached in, pulling me out of the dark depths of her purse.
âDonât worry,â she said, grinning with all the confidence of a kid about to break a very important rule. âIâll make sure to give you a good life.â
She swung open the car door and stepped out, dragging me along. The building before us was a movie theaterâbright lights, flashing signs, and the unmistakable smell of buttery popcorn mixed with something suspiciously like old carpet.
âThis is where the magic happens,â Luna declared, as if I hadnât just survived a trash can and a cat. I wondered if my magical regeneration counted for extra movie snacks.
She marched into the movie theater, dragging her parents behind her as if they were part of the package deal. Her eyes sparkled with excitement, and her grip on md tightened as if I were the key to some secret treasure. The neon lights flickered overhead, casting wild shadows on the peeling wallpaper and sticky floors that told stories of countless popcorn spills and forgotten soda stains.
Her mom glanced around nervously, probably calculating the odds of the seats still being sticky. Her dad muttered something about the âgood old daysâ when theaters didnât smell like a mix of butter, sweat, and mystery. But Luna? She didnât care. She was ready for an adventure, and I was along for the ride.
âOkay, Luna, you can pick out a candy.â Her mom said.
She darted over to the candy stand with the energy of someone on a sugar-fueled mission. The stand was a chaotic explosion of colorsâbright reds, neon greens, and yellows screaming for attention like overenthusiastic carnival barkers. Luna pulled out her special wrapper, carefully slid me inside, then expertly hid me behind a tall, suspiciously shiny chocolate bar that seemed to be guarding the candy fortress.
With a proud grin, she glanced around as if she had just pulled off the greatest magic trick in history. Meanwhile, I settled into my new hiding spot, hoping no one would notice the slightly off-kilter wrapper that might just give away my secret.
âHere.â Luna said, holding out the wrapped chocolate bar with a hopeful smile.
âLuna, what are you doing?â I asked, eyeing the suspiciously perfect wrapper.
âIâm giving you a chance to be eaten again,â she declared, sounding like she was launching me into a grand adventure.
âYeah, but then Iâll just end up in the trash,â I replied, already dreading the trash canâs familiar embraceâcomplete with its delightful mix of old pizza boxes, suspiciously sticky soda spills, and the occasional lost sock that probably smells worse than it looks.
âNo, you wonât. After you get eaten and regenerate, you can crawl right back into the wrapper and come back here. And donât worryâIâm at the movies almost every week. If you ever slip up and end up in the trash, Iâll swoop in like a chocolate bar superhero, rescue you, and tuck you safely back inside.â
âLuna, Iâm honored,â I said, already picturing my dramatic trash-can escape.
âOh, donât mention it. And hey! Iâll even sneak into this movie theater just to see you. Weâll hang out, have tons of adventures, and maybe start a chocolate bar fan club. Sounds fun?â
âYes.â I was astonished. Nobody had ever seen me as more than just a tasty treatâa simple chocolate bar. Usually, Iâm just something to be unwrapped, devoured, and tossed aside without a second thought.
âWhy?â I asked. I couldnât believe it. How could this not be a cruel joke? âYou canât even eat me anymore. Youâre allergic.â
She smiled, eyes twinkling as if sheâd just revealed a secret treasure map. âBecause youâre much more than a chocolate bar.â