Goodly and Grave in A Bad Case of Kidnap. Justine Windsor

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Название Goodly and Grave in A Bad Case of Kidnap
Автор произведения Justine Windsor
Жанр Детская проза
Серия
Издательство Детская проза
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780008183547



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transparent wings, which reflected tiny beads of colour where the sunlight touched them.

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      Lucy cowered further behind the rhinoceros, her metal-gloved hand over her mouth.

      Water began trickling through the hole, spattering the gravel. The trickle became a gush, and the gush became a wave carrying a small sailing boat. The wave broke, landing the boat on the gravel. Seawater foamed over the drive and trickled towards Lucy before drying up as quickly as it had appeared. A gangplank shot out from the side of the boat and a man and a woman disembarked. Both had silvery hair and were dressed in navy blue. The silver-haired people strode over to the carriage and began speaking to whoever or whatever was inside.

      Lucy began unfastening her armour as quietly as she could. Her fingers trembled and by the time she’d undone all the buckles, the strange people gathering on the drive had made their way inside the hall. Lucy sprinted out from behind the rhinoceros, round to the back of the house and into the kitchen. Becky Bone was there, sitting in Vonk’s chair at the head of the kitchen table and poring over the latest edition of the Penny Dreadful. Becky loved the Penny Dreadful, which was full of what Vonk described as a steaming pile of utter nonsense. Smell was curled up on Becky’s lap.

      “Where’s Mrs Crawley?” asked Lucy, gasping for breath.

      Becky didn’t look up from the Penny. “Gone down to the village on her penny-farthing. She’s getting her beard trimmed. That little sap Violet has gone with her.”

      “I just saw the strangest thing. These people just arrived and—”

      “What people?”

      “They’ve gone inside now, but … well, come and see.”

      “This better not be some stupid trick, Goodly. There’s another child gone missing, you know. Eddie Robinson, he’s called.” Becky held up the paper. It had the headline:

       ANOTHER MISSING CHILD!

      Below the headline was a drawing of a boy with untidy hair and a mole on his left cheek.

      “The Penny thinks they’re all being eaten by flesh-eating zombies,” Becky said.

      “Never mind that! Come on!”

      Becky sighed loudly, but she put the Penny Dreadful down and gently moved Smell off her lap. He yawned and stretched before following the two girls out of the kitchen.

      “What am I supposed to be looking at?” Becky said when the three of them reached the front of the house.

      “Those horses! That boat!”

      Becky folded her arms. “What are you talking about, boot girl? There’s nothing there. I wish some zombie would eat you, you pea brain.” She tutted and stomped off back to the kitchen and the Penny. Smell didn’t immediately follow her. He gazed up at Lucy, considering her with his unblinking orange eye, before trotting slowly off.

      Lucy stared at the carriage and the boat. One of the winged horses neighed. Why was she seeing things Becky couldn’t? Perhaps her brain was fibbing to her due to lack of sleep and too much worry.

      Lucy suddenly glimpsed movement in the corner of her eye. She turned and shrieked. A monster stood next to her. It had a pointed head with round bulging metal eyes. Lucy watched, horrified, as the monster grabbed its own head and began to pull it off … Under that head was another head.

      Lucy made a strangled noise of relief.

      “Oh dear. Did my helmet scare you? I cobbled it together myself, you know. It’s for checking the bees,” Vonk said. “What are you doing here?”

      “I came to …” She gestured towards the horses and the carriage and the boat.

      Vonk frowned. “Yes?”

      Vonk couldn’t see them either!

      “I … er … wanted some fresh air.”

      Vonk smiled at her as if she’d just done something really very good. “I see. Well, it’s nearly suppertime. Mrs Crawley’s left us some cold cuts. Although I fear they may be accompanied by an experimental salad. Let’s go in.”

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       CHAPTER SIX

       EVERLASTING SOUP AND CHICKEN-WITH-MORE-BODY-PARTS-THAN-MIGHT-BE-REASONABLY-EXPECTED

      That night, Lucy tossed and turned in her squeaky iron bedstead.

      When she finally fell asleep, it was nearly time to get up again and she overslept. Because she was so late, she skipped breakfast and went straight to the boot room, albeit reluctantly. She counted twenty-six pairs of shoes and boots for polishing. They couldn’t all be Lord Grave’s, because they were all different sizes and some were women’s shoes. Perhaps they belonged to the silver-haired woman she’d seen the night before. But if the woman was real, the rest of what she’d seen must be real too …

      Lucy picked up a boot and began scraping the mud and dirt off it, all the time thinking about the bewildering events of the last two days.

      Playing cards that came to life and changed places with each other.

      A grumpy Lord,who threatened to have the Goodly family put in prison.

      Flying carriages pulled by winged horses.

      Boats sailing in mid-air.

      Grave Hall was clearly a far from normal place. Although Lucy was partly intrigued by what she’d seen, she was also alarmed and wanted to escape back to her parents as soon as possible. “Get thinking, Goodly. Make a plan,” she muttered.

      Six pairs of shoes in, when the only thing Lucy was in danger of developing was a shoe-polish-induced headache, Violet the scullery maid opened the boot-room door.

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