Â
Â
“Euan Redcap,”
snapped my mother. “You haven’t heard a word I’ve been saying, have you?”
She was right.
I hadn’t.
I’d been daydreaming
about a story my grandfather once told me about how a blood red dragon had made
its nest amongst the craggy rocks up in the high hills. It hadn’t been such a
big dragon, not much bigger than a small pony. But it proved troublesome and
problematic for all the hill folk.
It had stolen
sheep away in its powerful talons and burned the crops in the low fields with
its fiery breath. According to my grandfather it had skimmed over the church
and knocked a big chunk of masonry from the steeple. And it had landed on
someone’s barn roof, splitting the wooden support beams from the pressure of
its weight.
It had made a terrible nuisance of itself. Folk were afraid
to come out of their cottages in case it fell upon them from the sky. Folk
couldn’t get to sleep at night for its nocturnal screeching and keening. Folk
would look out of their windows in the morning and find piles of fresh dragon
dung steaming on their lawns. Eventually when they couldn’t take it any longer
some men were hired to take their hunting dogs up to the craggy rocks and . . .
“Euan?” repeated my mother. “Are you listening? I asked if
you’d finished your porridge.”
I looked down my empty bowl and gave her a nod of my head,
blushing slightly.
That morning my father had caught a rabbit in one of the
snares he’d set out along by the fence that surrounded my mother’s vegetable
patch. It was a hefty catch with plenty of meat on the bone, which meant we
were going to have a big pot of rabbit stew for my sister Isla’s birthday
supper.
My mother was
holding it up by its long ears. Her forearm strained against its dead weight.
She jabbed her finger at its underbelly, then turned to Isla, who had just
finished her last spoonful of porridge.
“I need you to go down into the glen and pick some wild mushrooms to put
in the stew.”
“You’re
sending me on a chore on my birthday?” complained Isla.
“Mushrooms
won’t pick themselves,” said my mother.
She gave my
father a sly wink.
I held up my
hand to cover the grin that was spreading on my face. I knew that sending Isla
to pick mushrooms was just a ruse so that my mother could get on and bake the
birthday cake she had been secretly hording ingredients for.
“And you’re to
take your brother with you,” she added.
The grin fell
rapidly away. What was she talking about? She didn’t need to hide the cake from
me. I already knew all about it. The last thing I needed was the humiliation of
having to trail along at my big sister’s heels.
“Him?”
complained Isla. “He’ll only slow me down.”
My mother
rolled up her the sleeves of her blouse, hefted the rabbit up by the scruff of
its neck, and laid it down by the sink. “This has to be skinned and gutted,”
she said. “I don’t want your brother getting under my feet all morning.”
“I could help you instead,” I suggested.
My mother
shook her head. “You’d be more of a hindrance than a help.”
Now she was at
it! Why didn’t either of them have any faith in me? Maybe I did have a tendency
to be easily distracted. Maybe my attention did wander sometimes. And maybe
that could be the cause of the occasional mishap or accident. But I wasn’t half
as bad as they always seemed to make out.
“He’ll be a
hindrance to me as well,” Isla moaned.
“All he’ll
need to do is hold the basket while you pick the mushrooms,” said my mother.
She began sharpening her gutting knife against the whetstone.
I drummed my
fingers impatiently on the top of the table. It was always like this with my
mother and my sister - they seemed to feel free to make all sorts of plans for
me, without ever actually including me in the conversation. But I had solemnly
promised my parents that this year I would be on my best behaviour for Isla’s
big day, so I fought down the strong urge I had to give them both a piece of my
mind.
When it became
clear that my mother wasn’t going to back down Isla let out an exaggerated
sigh. She folded her arms tightly across her chest and pursed her lips. I could
see the freckles standing out against the bridge of her nose, the way they
always did when she was annoyed.
“Why can’t you
send him up the hillside to help tend the sheep with Pa?”
By then Pa had
already picked up his shepherd’s crook and left through the back door. I could
hear his dogs yipping and yapping as they followed him up the path to the
hillside. He was a fast walker. I would have to run if I was going to catch up
with him.
My mother
lifted the rabbit and slapped it down onto the chopping board that sat on the
kitchen table. Her braids went swaying from side to side like twin pendulums on
a big grandfather clock. “He’s too
young. If the mist comes down from the high hills your father will need all his
wits about him to make sure none of the sheep wander off. It won’t help if he
has to keep a watch on Euan as well.”
That was
nonsense. If the mist came down Pa wouldn’t need to keep a watch on me at all.
I would be a huge help to him. I could listen out for the bleating of the sheep.
I could point him in the right direction to go and fetch them. I could help him
shepherd them down the hill.
Isla sighed
again. “I’m going to need my wits about me as well. I’ll need to look for good
sized mushrooms. Euan will only go and do something stupid like fall in the
stream.”
“No I won’t!”
I yelled, finally deciding that I couldn’t just stand there and hold my tongue.
“You will,”
insisted Isla. “You’re always doing stupid things! Especially on my birthday.”
Not this
again. Was I never going to hear the end of it?
“No, I’m not,”
I huffed.
“Yes, you
are,” said Isla. “Last year you went and got yourself stuck in the ditch. Up
your armpits in stinking mud, as I recall. And the year before you fell off the
dyke and knocked out the last of your baby teeth.”
“We’ll nothing
has happened to me this year.” I said, defensively.
“Not yet,”
Isla shot back.
“Quiet! Both
of you!” snapped my mother. She wiped her hands on her apron. “Isla, you’ll do
as you’re told and take your brother with you down the glen. Euan, you’re to
behave yourself. You’re to hold the basket for your sister to put the mushrooms
in. And you’re not to go anywhere near the stream. You hear?”
Realising that
there was absolutely no point in arguing, I nodded my head moodily.
“Come on then,
if you’re coming,” snapped Isla.
Grabbing the
basket, she turned to my mother.
“I bet
something stupid happens to him. You wait. I guarantee it!”
Â
Â
Â
We zigzagged
across the wide meadow, tramping a winding trail through the white and yellow
carpet of daisies and dandelions. Bumblebees with fat black stripes went
buzzing past my ears. Blue and red butterflies fluttered lazily around us. At
the far end of the meadow I caught a glimpse of a fox dashing swiftly for
cover.
I picked up a
piece of old tree branch that had snapped in half when I stepped on it. I
pretended it was a sword, swiping down blades of grass before me like imaginary
opponents. “Stop messing around,” complained Isla.
“How come
you’re always think you’ve got the right to tell me off?” I called after her.
“How come
you’re always messing around?” she called back.
Turn it
back on me, I thought. That’s just typical. That’s all she ever does.
Euan’s messing around. Euan’s getting in the way. Euan’s gone and done
something stupid again. What would she do if I just disappeared in a puff of
smoke? She’d be sorry then. Wouldn’t she?
I tossed the
branch as far across the meadow as I could.
“Watch out!”
cried Isla, as it sailed over her head. “That could have hit me!”
I growled back
at her. “It was miles away from you.”
“Stop messing
around!” she snapped again.
That did it!
She had no
right to boss me about!
I began to
deliberately drag my heels, slowing my pace till the gap between Isla and
myself grew considerably wider. With a bit of luck I’d be able to sneak off and
claim that I lost her somewhere down in the glen. Then without warning she came
to a sudden halt. I stopped too. Did she have eyes in the back of her head, or
what?
Isla swung
around on her heels and marched furiously towards me. Her face was as red as
her freckles. Her hand was so tightly wrapped around the handle of the basket
that her knuckles were turning white. With her other hand she grabbed me by the
wrist and yanked me forward. “Ma told me to keep an eye on you! So you better
stop messing around!”
It never did
any good to get on the wrong side of Isla once she got herself into one of her
tempers. I put aside my indignation and allowed her to haul me down the
tree-lined slope that descended into the shaded glen. It was cool down there.
The ground was soft under foot. When I breathed in, the air was full of the
perfume of pine needles and scent of wild flowers.
After five
minutes or so of searching we found a big cluster of mushrooms near the foot of
a contorted old rowan tree. The soil they were growing in was black and spongy.
Their caps were wide and creamy and their stems long and fat.
“You stay here
out of the way,” said Isla. “And hold on tightly to the basket. I don’t want
you clomping around with your big feet and squashing everything.”
She removed
her shoes and socks and went tiptoeing amongst the beige-coloured mushrooms.
Crouching gently down she began snatching the base of their stems and plucking
them out of the soil. When she’d collected six or seven mushrooms she came over
to me and tipped them into the basket.
Down in the
belly of the glen I could hear the gurgling of the stream as it gushed over the
smooth, flat pebbles. Despite the shade of the trees the hot sun was sending
darts of light down through their branches, making my back feel sticky. I
glanced dreamily towards the sound of the water. I longed to go down and paddle
there in my bare feet. I would build a dam with some big stones from the bank.
Then would use one of my socks as a net to catch sticklebacks that drifted into
the pool it created.
Isla noticed
the wistful look in my eyes. “Don’t you dare move from there,” she cautioned
me. “And don’t you dare tip the basket. I’m not going to spend the rest of the
afternoon trying to pick mushrooms caps out of the nettles.”
“I’m not that
stupid,” I said.
Isla’s
eyebrows went up.
“Oh, yes you
are.”
She wove her
way back through cluster of mushrooms.
It was then
that I heard a low droning noise coming from somewhere high above us. I looked
up through the leafy interwoven latticework of branches toward the white clouds
that were billowing in the pale blue sky. The sharp shaft of sunlight that came
streaming through the spidery bows of the rowan tree made me squint and narrow
my eyes.
“Pay attention
to what you’re doing!” barked Isla. “If you drop those mushrooms I’ll knock
your head into next Tuesday.”
The droning
grew louder. I could feel it vibrating in the ground beneath my feet. Isla came
back and tipped another handful of mushrooms into the basket. “Can you hear
that?” I asked her.
“It’s an
airship,” she said.
“An airship?”
Once I had
seen a pencil sketch of an airship in the big encyclopaedia that was usually
kept under lock and key in the library at the village school. I remembered a
boat-like structure, apparently called a gondola, suspended on wires beneath a
fat balloon. I started to feel excitement build up inside me. I had never
actually been lucky enough to see one in real life.
Isla let out
one of her pronounced sighs. “From Tennanbrau City. They rarely come this way.
But sometimes there are thunderstorms that send them off route.”
“I know where
airships come from,” I told her.
“Dragon
hunters I expect,” said Isla.
My mouth
dropped wide. Dragon hunters? In the Low Counties? I closed my eyes and
conjured up images of brave men, kitted out in protective armour, risking life
and limb to bring down monstrous fire breathing beasts and draw the wonderful
breath from their lungs. Dragon Breath, the very name sent a shiver down my
spine. It was the power source upon which all of Tennanbrau City was driven.
What a
glorious and valiant profession drawing Dragon Breath must be.
“Just pay
attention to what you’re doing,” snapped Isla. “It’ll pass over soon enough.”
The droning
grew even louder. So loud now that the leaves on the rowan tree began to rustle
and tremble. I couldn’t help but look up again. I craned my neck and gasped in
shock as the most enormous thing that I had ever seen in my life came
descending down from the clouds. The glen was swallowed up in its shadow.
Â
Â
Â
The first thing that I was able to make out was the
gondola, hanging below the balloon on silvery wires, just like the sketch I’d
seen in the encyclopaedia. The tarred hull gleamed with condensation as its big
iron anchor swayed from side to side.
Then came the balloon itself came into view, starkly
crimson in colour and as long and round as a fat marrow. I could feel the
churning of the turbines that drove the airship’s engines trembling through me.
I could see the dizzying spin of the propellers that jutted out from wide
housings at its tail end.
A column of steam came shushing out of the pistons. A huge
glob of sump oil came oozing blackly down, landing with a wet smack in the
undergrowth nearby. Lower and lower came the airship. It was so low now that I
could read the name that had been painted along its side in ornate golden
letters.
The Drunken Molly, I thought. What an odd name.
I had always imaged that an airship would have an
excitingly appropriate name, like ‘Cloudburster’ or ‘Skyslicer’ -
Drunken Molly seemed somehow a bit of a let-down.
Nevertheless,
she was an awesome sight.
I saw people
leaning over the wrought iron railings that encompassed the deck of the
gondola. They were pointing down at Isla and me. I couldn’t actually hear their
voices over the thrum and clank of the engine. But I could tell from the
animated way that their faces moved that they were shouting eagerly to each
other. One of them produced something that glinted in the sunlight and held it
to his eye.
A telescope!
I waved my arm
enthusiastically back at him and almost tipped over the basket of mushrooms
with my enthusiasm.
“Isla!” I
cried. “Look!”
But she was
already looking, still as statue below, neck stretched skywards, mouth gaping
wide. Following her gaze I looked up again. The airship had descended even
lower. It was so low now that I could make out the outline of the wooden slats
that criss-crossed the belly of the gondola. It was so low that it was actually
bending the tallest shoots on the highest bows along the canopy the glen.
Through the
shaking leaves, I could see that several of the crewmen were leaning over the
railings with what appeared to be looped lengths of rope held in their hands.
They began to swing these around and around above their heads.
“Run!” cried
Isla and broke into a sudden, unexpected sprint.
I found myself
frozen to the spot as she came dashing past me.
“Your shoes
and socks,” I called after her. “You left your shoes and socks!”
She didn’t
look back. “Run, Euan!”
Isla was
already halfway up the slope that led from the glen to the meadow.
“What about
the mushrooms?” I cried.
Isla glanced
back over her shoulder.
“Just drop the
basket and run, you idiot!”
There came a
loud crack as if something was falling rapidly down through the branches. This
was immediately followed by a dull thump from somewhere behind me. When I
looked back one of the rope loops had been thrown down from the gondola and had
landed amongst the clump of mushrooms. A second later it was swaying in the air
above my head as it was hauled back up to the airship.
Isla was at
the top of the slope now. “Run, Euan!” she screamed down at me.
I had no idea
what was going on. But the look of sheer terror on her face was more than enough
to spur me on. I threw the basket to one side. The mushrooms scattered,
spinning and somersaulting away. I ran for the slope. From behind me I could
hear the crack-crack-crack of more branches snapping, followed a dull
whump-whump-whump as rope loops were hurled down from the gondola to land in
the glen.
I stumbled up
the slope.
“Come on!”
yelled Isla.
Her face was
deathly pale.
I was three
quarters of the way up the slope when she turned and broke into a sprint again.
“Move it!” I heard her call back.
I crested the
slope and ran after her.
“Wait!” I
cried. “Not so fast!”
But the gap
between us was growing wider with every frantic churn of her legs. I could feel
the drone of the airship’s engine humming in the ground below my feet. I could
feel its ominous shadow creeping closer to my shoulders. It was like being
chased by a huge, lumbering bear. The shadow seemed to drain all the warmth
from the sun, shrouding me in a melancholy chill.
Whump-whump-whump
went the tumbling rope loops behind me.
I tried
desperately to make my legs go faster. My heart thumped against my chest. My
lungs felt fit to burst. A sharp stitch stabbed at my side. Isla was way ahead
of me now. Far across the meadow. Almost at the stone dyke. The drone of the
airship’s engine seemed to be burrowing right into my head. I started to cry.
The tears blurred my vision. I wasn’t even sure if I was still running in the
right direction.
Then something
caught hold of my left leg.
For the
briefest moment, I thought that a thorny branch had hooked itself onto the
bottom of my trousers. But it clearly wasn’t a thorn. As I tried to yank myself
free whatever had hold of me yanked forcefully back. I lost my balance and fell
face first onto the sun-baked grass. I tasted dirt and straw in my mouth and
spat it out.
“Isla!” I
screamed. “Isla! Help me!”
Ahead of me
Isla skidded to a halt and spun back around.
In an instant
the world turned swiftly upside down.
Everything
went into a whirl.
It took me a
moment or two to realise that I was rising high above the ground. Something was
contracting tighter and tighter around my ankle. The pain in my leg was
excruciating. I realised with a horrible jolt that I had been caught by one of
the rope loops and I was being hauled up toward the airship.
“Isla!” I screamed,
kicking out with my free leg and waving my arms desperately. “Isla!”
I could see
her running across the meadow. Her voice was carried up to me on the wind. I
could hear it above the drone of the airship’s engine.
“Euan! Euan!”
Higher and
higher I was dragged. The wind whipped around me and set me into another wild
spin. I saw my father on the hillside with his sheep. He was watching the
airship and I could tell instantly that he saw me. He came hurtling toward the
meadow, his dogs barking like crazy at his heels, his sheep scattering before
him and galloping off in a dozen different directions.
The wind spun
me again. Now I saw our cottage, with its thatched roof and the thin streamer
of smoke trailing from its stubby chimney. My mother came out of the kitchen
door with a wooden bucket under her arm. She began to toss bits of rabbit
innards out into the yard for the black crows to feed on.
She looked up
to the hill where my father was running as if his very life depended on it. She
looked over to the meadow where Isla had fallen to her knees in a fit of tears.
She looked up to where the airship ploughed through the summer sky, coughing
steam and wheezing smoke. She saw me dangling there on the rope.
She dropped
the bucket and let out a scream.
Isla was directly
below me, tiny as a mouse now. She was getting further and further away. I knew
that as well as the rope being hauled up the airship was ascending too. From
that height, I could see all of them in one go - my father scrambling down the
hill, his dogs yapping at his side, his crook outstretched as if he could
somehow reach into the sky and snatch me back down; my mother wringing her
hands by the kitchen door, the wooden bucket rocking from side to side where it
had fallen by her feet; my sister on her knees amongst the white daisies and
yellow dandelions, staring up at me.
“Isla!” I yelled. “Ma! Pa!”
I knew that
they probably couldn’t even hear me. And I knew too that even if they could
there was nothing at all they could do to help me. Then, in the blink of an
eye, I was sucked away into the misty swirl of the clouds and the comfortable
world that I had known for all the twelve summers of my life was gone in an
instant.
Â
Â
With little
recollection of how I had arrived there, I found myself flat out on my back on
the grimy deck of the airship’s gondola. Mighty crimson balloon billowed above
me. Splintery wooded deck hard against my back. A bow-legged crewman came
waddling up to me. Brandishing a keen bladed knife in his filthy hand he cut
the rope from around my ankle.
Kicking my
heels, I shunted myself away from him. The skin around my ankle was raw and
chafed from the friction burn of the rope. I started shivering from the cold
air that gusted about the deck. I found myself surrounded by a dozen or more
rough looking men, dressed in greasy clothing that was a jumble of patchwork
and stitching.
Some held
smouldering clay pipes clamped between brown stumps of worn-down teeth. Others
chewed sloppily on dirty big wads of tobacco that dribbled ochre trails of
tainted saliva over their unshaven chins. Their faces were pockmarked and
battered. Their fingernails were stained black with oil. They reeked of sweat
and stale rum. They were the opposite of what I had always imagined brave
dragon hunters would look like.
They began to
poke and prod me as if I was some curious item they’d dug up in the dirt. I was
pinched and jabbed and jostled and nudged. A gnarled hand with splintered
fingernails shot out and tugged at my red hair, while another pulled up my top
lip and an ugly face loomed in to take a good long gander at my teeth. They all
started chattering at once. So fast and noisily that I couldn’t understand a
word they were saying.
Terrified, I
started to bawl. As my face became sticky with tears a chorus of mocking
laughter assailed me. Unsightly jeering faces leered down at me. One of them
blew pipe smoke into my face, making me cough and wheeze. Through my stinging
eyes I noticed a boy not that much older than Isla amongst the jostling
crewmen. His ginger hair was long and matted. His narrow face was pale and
splattered with freckles. From his appearance he simply had to be a Low County
boy like me.
I sat up and
pleaded with him. “Help me.”
The boy came
forward with a mischievous grin on his face. He gave me a kick to my shoulder.
I fell back onto the deck, hitting my head with a painful thump. His grin
spread wider. He whispered something to the crewmen. As they howled with
laughter, he crouched down beside me. “Don’t whine,” he said. “It’s all a big
joke. They’ll lower you back down in a basket once they’ve had their fun.”
“They will?” I
rubbed my eyes with the heels of my hands.
The boy
nodded. “But the more you cry the longer it will take for them to grow bored of
you.”
A voice barked
out what sounded like an order. A female voice - deep and gruff and officious.
The crewmen stepped swiftly away from me, and a small woman appeared in the
clearing they left behind. Hands on hips she glared down at me. I swallowed
hard and did my best to stop crying. If she was in charge, then she would
surely put an end to this and order them to lower me back down so that I could
run home.
She was
dressed in men’s clothing; knee length boots, leather britches and a thick
overcoat with wide lapels. Her black hair snaked out from under her wide
brimmed hat and hung in twisted braids like sodden rat tails around her
shoulders. Her dark, sullen eyes appeared to be swirling in wildly their
sockets and her face seemed to dance and jitter with a thousand nervous tics
and twitches.
She looked as
if she was teetering on the verge of total madness. It seemed that at any
minute she might fall to the ground in some sort of juddering fit. I felt my
hopes replaced by a deep sense of foreboding. The woman poked me with a grimy
finger and whispered under her breath in an odd lilting tone that sent a cold
tingle down my spine. “We could have had a boy like you. Me and my bonny
Captain. We could have had ourselves a son had the accursed White Sow not taken
him from me.”
I had no idea
what she was talking about. Her eyes seemed to glaze over. It felt as if she
was staring straight through me. The way the crewmen stood with their heads
hung in silence suggested that they were somewhat wary of her. She reached out
and ruffled my hair. “He has fine head of red hair, just like you, Angus,” she
said, turning to the Low County boy, who was still crouched down by my side.
The boy
nodded. “But if we don’t lower him back down soon he’ll be too far from home to
find his way back before sunset.”
The woman’s
face began to twitch again. Her dark eyes went juddering crazily from side to
side. “Who said anything about lowering him back down?” Her voice became gruff and
officious once more.
“I thought.”
said Angus and shrugged his shoulders helplessly.
The woman
lashed out with her hand and smacked him with a loud crack on the side of the
face. “I’m the one who does the thinking round here.” She leaned in close to me
and a bizarre lopsided grin spread across her face. She licked her lips like a
wild cat that had just hauled a trout from the stream. I began to whimper and
tried to back further away. She reached out and pinched some of the flesh on my
arm between her thumb and her forefinger. “You’re a skinny little thing, so you
are,” she said. “Can you fetch and carry?”
From behind
her Angus gave a barely perceptible wink of his eye. I took it that he meant to
suggest to me that I played along with her I nodded my head. “I do plenty of
chores for my Ma and Pa.”
She turned to
the crew.
“You know what
I’m thinking, don’t you lads?” she asked. Some of the men looked up, but she
didn’t wait for any of them to answer. “I’m thinking that this boy here would
us make an excellent fetcher.”
A wave of
shock seemed to ripple through the men. One of them pulled his pipe away from
his lips and coughed out a cloud of smoke. He stroked the bushy moustache that
drooped over his upper lip. “I don’t think that would be a good idea, ma’am,”
he said, somewhat nervously. “I mean a bit of fun is one thing - but
kidnapping?”
The woman
stiffened. She bit down on her lip. I tiny bubble of blood appeared where her
tooth pierced the flesh. She turned on the man. “Why, Mister Grisling?” she
asked. “Why do you always feel you have a right to question my decisions? I
know you’re the coxswain. I know you served for years under my husband. But is
this not my husband’s vessel? Bless his
beautiful, departed soul. And I am not
your captain now that he has been so cruelly taken from us?”
The coxswain
bowed his head and stuck his pipe back into his mouth, as if plugging it up so
that he wouldn’t be tempted to speak out again. This didn’t seem to appease the
woman. She began to rant and rave at the crew. “Did every man Jack of you not
pledge your allegiance to me? Did you not vow to avenge my Nathaniel’s death?
Are we not bound together by that vow? To take the breath of the White Sow, or
die in the trying?”
The men
shuffled their feet and, with a nod of their heads, let out a subdued “Aye.”
The woman eyed
them one by one. “So, if I say we employ the boy as a fetcher that’s exactly
what we will do!”
The coxswain
removed his pipe and held it hovering by his lip. He cleared his throat. “But
it would still be kidnapping, ma’am.”
The woman flew
into another rant. As her head snapped from side to side her rat-tail hair went
slapping against her shoulders. “This vessel belonged to my husband, Captain
Zachariah! You were his crew! Now the vessel is mine and you are my crew. Must
I get down on my hands and knees and beg you to avenge my darling husband’s
death? We agreed. We swore an oath. Any of you who wants to go back on his word
is welcome to jump over the side.”
Again, the men
bowed their head and shuffled their feet. Seemingly satisfied that she had
re-asserted authority her attention returned to me. Again Angus flashed me a
warning look. “You’d like to do some fetching for us, wouldn’t you, lad?” she
asked. Angus nodded his head at me in an animated manner. I had no idea what
‘fetching’ involved. I replied that on any other day I would love to. “But I can’t. Not today.”
She leaned
closer. Her eyes danced a wanton jig in their sockets. “What’s that? What’s
that?” she asked. “Speak up boy. I can hardly hear you. I thought you said that
you can’t?”
“It’s my
sister’s birthday today,” I told her. “And my Ma has baked a cake. And she’s
making a rabbit stew. And every year I do something stupid to spoil Isla’s
birthday. Not on purpose though. But this year I promised.”
Mrs Zachariah
shook her head and the black braids flapped around her shoulders. “Nonsense!”
she chuckled and pinched me hard on the cheek. “You wouldn’t be spoiling your
sister’s birthday. You would be making it. What sister wouldn’t be proud to
have brother who is off soaring through the clouds in search of dragon breath?
Why it’s the best birthday present a girl could ever wish for!”
“But my Ma and
Pa will be waiting for me,” I insisted.
“And how do
you think they would feel if you accidentally fell from the gondola?” she
asked, a spiteful tone creeping into her voice. “How do you think they’d feel
if a dead body came home to them instead of a heroic young man who had been off
on the adventure of a lifetime?”
I could see
several of the crew members stiffening and clenching their fists in obvious
discomfort. But not even the coxswain seemed willing now to come to my aid. “Now
what say you?” she asked, leaning in so close to me that the black braids of
her hair trailed across my face like spider legs. “How do you fancy fetching
for me and my lads?”
I saw Angus
nodding his head urgently at me.
“I suppose I
could,” I replied, fighting back the urge to start bawling again.
Mrs Zachariah
jumped to her feet. “You hear that lads?” she asked. “He’s coming along of his
own free will. You’re all witnesses to what he said. We can’t be accused if
kidnap if he comes along of his own accord.”