Jennys Odd Adventure |link| ●

“I made you curious,” the figure corrected. “There’s a difference. Now. I have a problem. The town of Mapleton has been… repeating. Last Tuesday happened three times last week. Mr. Finster has mowed his hedge backward twice. And your mother has served meatloaf for breakfast, lunch, and dinner for four days straight.”

Jenny didn’t yell. She didn’t lecture. Instead, she made a deal. jennys odd adventure

In the quiet town of Mapleton, where the clocks ran five minutes slow and the mail arrived on Wednesdays even if you mailed it on Monday, lived a girl named Jenny. Jenny was not the kind of child who chased after trouble. She preferred logic, straight lines, and knowing exactly what was for dinner. But as any storyteller will warn you, logic rarely survives the first page of an adventure—especially an odd one. “I made you curious,” the figure corrected

From that day on, Jenny had two lives: her ordinary one (school, dinner, 1,247 steps) and her odd one (Thursdays with Glitch, the tree librarian, and the occasional vending machine purchase of Tangy Regret). She never told anyone about the Slightly Adjacent. Not because it was a secret, but because, as she often thought, some adventures are better when no one believes you. I have a problem

“Why me?” Jenny asked.

“You made me turn left into a hedge,” Jenny said flatly.