A YA Portal Fantasy Book Series for All Ages

0 Cart $0.00 0
0 Shopping Cart

No products in the cart.

Return To Shop
Shopping cart (0)
Subtotal: $0.00

Checkout

Free shipping over 49$
  • Start Here
  • Chapters
    • Printable Book Cover
    • Free Chapters
    • Member Chapters
    • Twelve Winters Book
    • Lunar High Moon Festival
  • Create Your Book
    • Printing and Binding Journal Chapters
    • Cutting and Assembling Chapters
    • Binding the Book
  • Discussion Guides
  • GAMES
  • News
    • About
  • Contact
  • Cart
Anna
Anna

There is a specific kind of quiet that only exists in a diner on a school night. It’s not a true silence; it’s a hum made of clinking silverware, the sizzle of a flat-top grill, and the rhythmic scratching of pencils against paper. In East Bay, that sound has a name: Mel’s.

I am excited to announce that the latest installment of our journey, Chapter 009: “Homework at Mel’s,” is ready for release.

For those who have been traveling with us Across the Portal in the jagged, unpredictable landscape of Skelderheim, this chapter might feel like a sharp turn. But as any traveler knows, you can’t understand the destination without remembering where you started. This chapter is a return to our “normal”—or at least, what we told ourselves was normal before the world started shifting under our feet.

The Variables and the Constant

In this chapter, we find Todd, Anna, and me exactly where we used to be: crammed into a vinyl booth that squeaks in all the familiar places. While the rest of the world sees East Bay as a postcard—a charming stop for tourists with cameras and maps—for us, it’s a series of equations and deadlines.

While Todd wrestles with the revolutionary chaos of Dickens’ Paris and I try to find the logic in trigonometry, Anna reminds us of a hard truth: we are the constant. In a town built on seasonal shifts and passing faces, we are the ones who stay, who repeat, and who hold the line.

But even in the safety of a patty melt and a refill of black coffee, the shadows of the future are beginning to stretch. We talk about “the place on the hill”—the Observatory. We talk about the “rules” of writing a story, unaware that we are already living in one. This chapter isn’t just about homework; it’s about the moment we decided that our world needed to have weight, consistency, and a little bit of mystery.

chapter 9 featured image for homework at mels diner

A Note from the Author

Writing this chapter felt like coming home. After the high stakes of Skelderheim, I wanted to capture the texture of a rainy October night in a small town. I wanted to remember the smell of wet leaves and salt from the harbor, and the way a math problem can feel like the most important thing in the world—right up until it isn’t.

Whether you’re a tourist passing through these pages or a “constant” who has been here from the start, I hope you find a seat at the booth with us. Just mind the squeak in the seat.

Stay grounded,

Charles Mandrake

Chapters Between Chapters #009: Homework at Mel's Diner

Chapters Between Chapters #009: Homework at Mel’s Diner

$0.00

– Free download
– Print-ready PDF
– Same chapter content in two paper-size options: Half Letter and US Letter
– Standalone entry (no prior reading required)
– Anna’s direct POV
– Home-printer friendly layout with comfortable margins and spacing

Add to wishlist
Category: Free Chapters
Tags: Chapters Between Chapters
Share Post
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • VK
  • Pinterest
  • Mail to friend
  • Linkedin
  • Whatsapp
  • Skype

About author

About Author

Charles

Charles Mandrake is an eighteen-year-old senior who lives above East Bay in the Mandrake observatory, where broken wiring and half-finished systems make more sense to him than most conversations. He trusts diagrams and timings more than hunches, and his notebooks are crowded with floor plans, azimuth marks, and questions. Fixing the Resonance Array feels like setting the record straight, one labeled switch at a time. When he writes, it is to pin cause to effect, to track every hum and reset, and to leave behind a clear operating manual for anyone who has to stand at the console after him.

Other posts by Charles