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Authors: Susannah McFarlane

Tags: #Juvenile Fiction/Action & Adventure/General

Jump Start

BOOK: Jump Start
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Cover

Title Page
Lemonfizz Media
PO Box 499
Elwood Victoria, 3184
Scholastic Australia Pty Limited
PO Box 579 Gosford NSW 2250
ABN 11 000 614 577
Part of the Scholastic Group
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Published by Lemonfizz Media and Scholastic Australia in 2010. Text, design and illustrations copyright © Lemonfizz Media 2010.
A CIP record for this title is available from the National Library of Australia
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, storage in an information retrieval system, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher, unless specifically permitted under the Australian Copyright Act 1968 as amended.
Printed in Australia by McPherson's Printing Group
It is our policy, in association with McPherson's Printing Group, to use papers that are renewable and made efficiently from wood grown in sustainable forests, so as to minimise its environmental footprint.
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0 1 2 3 4/1
Copyright
Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page

Copyright

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Did you miss Book 1?

Book 3 coming in April 2010

Book 4 coming in April 2010

Back Cover Material

The school gym was really buzzing that afternoon. The music was blaring and the girls were laughing, but there was still a lot of hard work being done. Everyone wanted to do their best at the state competition, just weeks away.

Emma Jacks really wanted to do her best but right now she was standing on the beam, stressing.

Emma couldn't do it. She wanted to do it. She thought she really should be able to do it. And everyone else seemed to be doing it, which made things worse—a lot worse. But no matter how hard
she tried, Emma could not do the high jumps on the balance beam.

Every time she tried, she seemed to chicken out and do a tiny jump instead. So tiny her coach could hardly see it. And if she couldn't do the high jump, there was no way she would do well in the state comps.

‘Come on Em, you can do it,' said Hannah, one of the girls in Emma's squad and also one of her best friends. ‘You jump high all the time when we're just messing around. Just don't think about it so much.'

‘How can I not think about it, Hannah!' Emma replied. ‘It's the one part of the routine I never get right and our comps are about to start. If I can't get the high jumps right, I'll let the whole team down.'

Lauren, who was Emma and Hannah's coach, had been listening to the girls talk.

‘Hannah's right, Emma. You just need to believe in yourself a bit more. We all do. Come on, what's the worst thing that can happen?' she asked, and then answered her own question. ‘You fall off.'

‘Yes, but then I lose
big
points!' said Emma. Having just missed out on a medal last year, she really wanted one this time, for herself and the team. But that was never going to happen if she fell off—or if she didn't do the jump.

‘But if you don't even try the jumps, you won't get any points anyway,' said Lauren. ‘Think about the jump, not the falling off. You know you can do this but you think yourself out of it. In fact Em, maybe don't think at all. Just trust yourself and do it.'

Don't think. That was hard for Emma. She loved thinking. She thought about things all the time. Even as Hannah and Lauren were talking to her now, she was thinking how her friend's name was spelt exactly the same backwards as forwards: H-A-N-N-A-H, like E-V-E and R-A-D-A-R and R-A-C-E-C-A-R and her favourite, Y-O B-A-N-A-N-A B-O-Y.

‘Emma, are you still with us?' laughed Lauren.

‘Oops, sorry,' said Emma. ‘I was just thinking about'

‘Aaaaaaaaaaaaaaargh,' cried Hannah, waving her arms in the air. ‘Just do the jump!'

‘Okay, okay!' said Emma. ‘Don't think it, just do it.'

It was Emma's turn on the beam. She took a deep breath, presented, with her arms stretched up and out, and then started her routine. As always, she talked herself through it.

Jump off the bounce board and onto the beam. Do the squat and hold—one, two, three seconds. Keep your legs over the beam. That was hard! Okay, high left kick to the front, high right kick to the front, keep upper body in and present. Not bad! High left kick to the back, both hands up in the air, put the left leg back...

Emma was halfway through and so far, so good. She spun around at the end of the beam.

Okay, it's jump time. Big split jump to the right, big split jump to the left. Don't think about it. Do it!

But just as she was thinking about not thinking, Emma felt her muscles tighten and her mouth go dry. She could feel herself starting to panic.

Don't panic. Just do what you can and finish the routine. Stay on the beam, don't fall off, stay on the beam!

She did the first split jump to the right—not a big one but she was still on the beam. Then she did the split jump to the left, which was even smaller than the first one, but at least she had stayed on the beam.

Almost done! Handstand, pretty good I think, now turn on both feet and run to the end of the beam. Dismount and stick the landing. Present with a big smile!

It was over. It wasn't great, but it was over.

‘Nice jump,' smirked Nema. ‘That was a jump, wasn't it?'

Nema was one of the girls in Emma's gym squad but she was definitely
not
one of Emma's best friends—at least, not anymore. The two girls used to be friendly but now Nema seemed more interested in her hair, which she flicked a lot, and being randomly mean to people. Emma didn't bother answering.

‘Hmmm, good kicks and great dismount,' said Lauren. ‘But where were the jumps? I know you can do it, Emma. Just go for it. Next time I want to see really
big
jumps, even if you fall off the beam. In fact, I want you to fall off!'

Emma groaned. She knew she couldn't avoid the jumps next time. Lauren would make sure of it.

Now it was Nema's turn. She presented with a flourish, flew onto the beam and completed the routine without a single mistake. She even threw in a new trick from the next level.

‘Perfect, Nema!' Lauren clapped.

Nema turned and beamed at Lauren. ‘Thanks coach,' she said, and then with a sideways look to Emma added, ‘I really love jumping!'

‘I really love jumping,' Emma repeated quietly in a high-pitched voice. A perfect routine from little Miss Perfect, she thought.
Little Miss Mean Perfect!
But then it was Hannah's turn and her attention turned back to her friend.

Hannah almost skipped through her routine. She did two fabulous split jumps but then fell off the beam as she balanced for the handstand. As quick as a flash, Hannah got back on, did a brilliant handstand, ran down the beam and ended with a perfect dismount.

‘Good work, Hannah,' said Lauren. ‘Just settle yourself after the jumps before going on to the handstand.'

‘No probs,' said Hannah, cheerfully.

Why didn't Hannah mind about falling off? Why didn't Hannah mind about anything? And why didn't Nema have anything to mind about?

It would be Emma's turn again soon. There was only one thing she could think of that would get her out of doing her routine again—a mission alert for EJ12!

BOOK: Jump Start
13.46Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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