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9780385900911

Dark Horse

Dark Horse
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  • Ships From: Nashua, NH
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  • Comments: Has moderate shelf wear, highlighting, underlining and/or writing. Great used condition. A portion of your purchase of this book will be donated to non-profit organizations.Over 1,000,000 satisfied customers since 1997! Choose expedited shipping (if available) for much faster delivery. Delivery confirmation on all US orders.

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  • ISBN-13: 9780385900911
  • ISBN: 0385900910
  • Publication Date: 2003
  • Publisher: Random House Children's Books

AUTHOR

Sedgwick, Marcus

SUMMARY

1 It was Mouse who found the box. She was trotting along the tide line, running with Sigurd. Looking for sea cabbage washed up in the black sand after last night's storm, because the fishing had been bad again. They were half a day from home. Flicking the hair from her eyes, Mouse tilted her head to one side. "Sigurd?" Sigurd came over to where Mouse stood. He towered above her. "What is it, Mouse?" "That." She nodded at the box. It was different. It didn't belong here. All around them was the coast--rocky outcrops, with the low hills behind--and the sea, the sea, the sea in front of them. Everything was the wildness of Storn. And amongst all this wildness lay the box. A small wooden box--a couple of hands wide but quite slender. There was no metal visible--no hinges or corner braces. No lock. It was a plain wooden box, but somehow it was very beautiful. It was made of a deep and rich red wood, black in places. It had a shine that reflected the light from the sky back onto Mouse's small, round face. It was different. It was from somewhere else. Mouse felt her head swim a little. She staggered a few paces away from the box. "Mouse?" Sigurd had noticed. "Anything?" Sigurd was used to spotting the signs, better than anyone else at knowing when Mouse might "see" something. But she put her hand on Sigurd's arm. "No," she said. "No, it's gone now." Mouse drew in a deep, calming breath. They turned their attention back to the box, but Mouse kept her distance. "What do you think it is?" Sigurd said nothing. He knelt down to touch it, but gently, as if it were a cornered animal. "It's dry," he said. "It's . . . warm." "What is it?" Mouse asked again. "Shall I open it?" Mouse shook her head. "Let's take it back." Mouse hesitated. "It's getting late," he reasoned. "All right," she said. They started back to the village, Sigurd carrying the box, Mouse with a net half full of cabbage. Neither of them had noticed the man lying still amongst the rocks, just twenty paces from where they had found the box. His skin and hair were white, whiter even than Sigurd's, but the palms of his hands were black. 2 I remember better than anyone. I remember better than anyone the day we found Mouse. It was unusual that we should have been up in the hills in the first place. There were about thirty of us, I think. A huge war party--going to wage war on . . . wolves. Father said it was stupid. Just because a lone wolf had attacked Snorri as he came home over the hills was no reason to risk our lives. That's what my father said, though he didn't say it to Horn's face. As I remember, it was only a couple of summers after Horn had beaten Father for the title of Lawspeaker of the tribe. Father was licking his wounds then, I suppose. He swore that one day he'd tell Horn to his face what he thought of him, but not then. That probably had something to do with it. The fight, I mean. Why we were up in the hills, hunting wolves. That was stupid, too. Wolves live in woods, and there were no trees up there. Horn was showing us all that he was our leader, that we had to do whatever he told us. I was the only child there, and I was a child then. It was my eleventh or twelfth summer; I can't remember. I was a part of the games Horn and Father played. "Well, Sigurd," Father said to me, "if that fool is going to take us on a wild wolf chase, we may as well show him what kind of family we are!" What this meant was that he'd take the opportunity to show me, his son, off to everyone. Because Horn, the Lawspeaker, had no son, only a daughter, Sif. There was no one to suSedgwick, Marcus is the author of 'Dark Horse', published 2003 under ISBN 9780385900911 and ISBN 0385900910.

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