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9780385746908

Angel Isle

Angel Isle
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  • ISBN-13: 9780385746908
  • ISBN: 0385746903
  • Publication Date: 2007
  • Publisher: Random House Children's Books

AUTHOR

Dickinson, Peter, Andrew, Ian

SUMMARY

Cold, hungry, terrified, Maja watched the two strangers from her secret den beside the mounting block, beneath the burnt barn. That was where she'd run when she'd seen a troop of the savage horsemen from the north come yelling up the lane all those days ago, and lain there cowering. Her uncle and the boys were away fighting the main army of the horsemen, but they must have caught her mother and her aunt. Maja couldn't see what they did to them because of the smoke, but she'd heard their screaming. Then the smoke of the burning buildings had got into the den and overcome her. After that she didn't remember anything for a while, and when she woke the savages were gone and the farm was ashes around her. She had felt too ill to move, and too terrified of the savages, and her throat had been horribly sore, but at last she'd crept out and climbed up to the spring and drunk, and then stolen round the farm like a shadow and found her mother's body and her aunt's lying face down in the dung pit, and a lot of dead animals scattered around. Her aunt used to make her help with the butchering, so she cut open a dead pig with her knife and roasted bits of its liver on the embers of her home, and despite the soreness of her throat had managed to swallow it morsel by morsel. By the time she'd finished, it was beginning to get dark, so she'd crawled back into her den and curled up in her straw nest and slept there all night without any dreams at all. She'd spent the next day collecting dry brushwood and straw and the burnt ends of rafters and beams and piling it all into the dung pit on top of the two bodies. As dusk thickened she'd used a still smoldering bit of timber to set the pile alight. "Good-bye, good-bye, good-bye," she'd whispered as the flames roared up, then turned away dry-eyed. She didn't seem to feel anything. She was vaguely sorry about her mother, and vaguely guilty that she'd never learned how to love her. There hadn't been anything there to love. She'd dreaded and hated her aunt, but her aunt had shaped her world and she felt a far greater sense of loss at her going. Now that shape was shattered and all she had was emptiness, until her uncle came back from the fighting, if he ever did. The dead animals had soon begun to rot, but some of the chickens were still alive and hanging around because they didn't know anywhere else to go. There was good barley out in the little barn in Dirna's field, which her aunt grew there every year to feed to the unicorns, so the chickens learned to come to her again when she called to them, and she managed to coax some of them into laying. She ate the cockerels one by one and found a few things still usable in the vegetable patch and the orchard, and survived, afraid and lonely. She had found her den long before. Ever since she could remember she had needed somewhere to hide. Hide from her uncle's sudden, inexplicable rages, from her aunt's equally savage tongue, from her boy cousins' thoughtless roughness. Only occasionally did anyone hurt her on purpose. Indeed, once or twice when she was small and at the end of one of his outbursts her uncle had slammed out to the barn, her aunt had deliberately sent her out to call him in, despite her terror of him. It was one of her aunt's ways of punishing her, though she'd never been told what for. So she'd crept through the barn door, tensed for his anger, but instead he'd called to her and put her on his lap and fondled her like a kitten for a while, and spoken gently to her, though she could feel his rage still roiling inside himand it was the rage itself that had terrified her, not the fear that she herself might suffer from it. UDickinson, Peter is the author of 'Angel Isle ', published 2007 under ISBN 9780385746908 and ISBN 0385746903.

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