Authors: Chris D'Lacey
Tags: #Children's Books, #Animals, #Fairy Tales; Folk Tales & Myths, #Dragons, #Growing Up & Facts of Life, #Friendship; Social Skills & School Life, #Friendship, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Fantasy & Magic, #Children's eBooks, #Science Fiction; Fantasy & Scary Stories, #Action & Adventure, #General, #Juvenile Fiction
W
hen the mailbox rattled at number 42 Wayward Crescent, one of two things tended to happen. Either Lucy Pennykettle would come rushing downstairs crying, “It’s OK! I’m here! I’ll get it!” or a small green puffler dragon called Gwillan would zip down the hall, pick up the mail, and fly it quickly into the kitchen.
That morning, it was Bonnington’s turn. The Pennykettles’ large brown tabby cat was stalking a spider that had scuttled behind the Swiss cheese plant in the corner of the hall when the letter from Manitoba, Canada, dropped through the box and landed neatly between his ears. Gwillan was down the hall in a flash, only to discover that Bonnington had pounced and
pinned the letter hard to the carpet as though he had caught a falling leaf.
Hrrr,
went Gwillan from the lip of the plant pot, anxious to do his duty and transport the letter to the Dragon’s Den where his mistress, Liz, was working that day.
This did not impress Bonnington much. He had never got to grips with dragontongue. He merely twitched his whiskers and sat on the letter. It seemed the obvious thing to do.
That was how Lucy found him two minutes later. By then, Gwillan had reported to the listening dragon on top of the fridge. It in turn had sent a message to the guard dragon, Gruffen — head of household security — and he had hurred in Lucy’s ear. Down the stairs she had come.
“Up,” she said, scooping Bonnington into her arms.
Gwillan zipped to the carpet and grabbed the letter between his jaws.
“Show me,” said Lucy.
The dragon hovered mid-flight so she could read the postmark.
And, of course, once she saw the Canadian postmark, great excitement followed. “Mom!” she screeched. “We’ve got a letter from David!”
All around the house, dozens of dragon scales clattered and clacked as heads were turned and eye ridges were raised and tails were flicked in expectation. David Rain, the Pennykettles’ absent tenant, had sent a message home — from the land of snow and ice, from the Arctic.
Bonnington, whose fragile half-bitten ear did not take well to the squeals of the average eleven-year-old, hissed in protest and scrambled away.
Lucy pounded up the stairs, Gwillan flying at her shoulder. Breathlessly, she burst into the Dragon’s Den, where Liz was wiping clean a paintbrush.
“Mom, please can I read it? Please?”
“No,” Liz said, whipping the note from Gwillan’s jaws. “David gave me alone the right to read his mail.” And she took a silver dagger off her workbench and carefully sliced the envelope apart.
Lucy plonked herself onto a stool. “It’s got a picture of a big fat pigeon on the stamp.”
“I think that’s a ptarmigan,” Liz said, knowledge-ably, withdrawing two sheets of thin, folded paper. “Shouldn’t you be calling G’reth and Gadzooks?”
“Oh, yes!” Lucy sat bolt upright and hurred at Gwillan, who set off straightaway for David’s room. G’reth, the large-pawed wishing dragon, passed him on the stairs. He found Gadzooks, David’s inspirational writing dragon, in his usual place on the windowsill in the tenant’s room.
Hrrr,
went Gwillan, as politely as he could, for the writing dragon seemed deep in thought and might not take kindly to any interruption from a lowly puffler.
Gadzooks nodded to show he understood. He was busy using the tip of a claw to make a pattern of dots on the misty glass. Turning a page of his writing pad, he copied down the arrangement of the dots. A lower page of the pad fell open. It, too, was speckled with a similar pattern. It was none of Gwillan’s business, of course, to ask what the fabled dragon was doing, but it worried
him to see a fellow being frowning the way Gadzooks was now. So he bothered to ask, was everything all right? Gadzooks tucked his pencil behind his ear and said he was puzzled by the movements of the stars. Gwillan returned him a look of great awe. He could see no stars in the morning sky, but who was he to doubt Gadzooks? He blew a smoke ring and led the way upstairs.
“About time,” Lucy chided as Gwillan settled neatly on her shoulder.
Gadzooks landed by the potter’s wheel. He glimpsed along the shelves of waiting dragons and settled his gaze on one in particular. Gretel, the headstrong potions dragon, had come to the front of the small wooden cage in which she’d been imprisoned for the past two weeks. He looked at her anxiously, noting the bitterness clouding her eyes. It pained him to see her caged like this. Surely it was dangerous to breed resentment in a clever and powerful potions dragon, even if her quiver of flowers had been removed? He glanced to the near side of the bench. In a basket filled with tissues and straw lay the stationary figure of the stone dragon, Grockle, the cause
of Gretel’s detention. Why was it wrong, Gadzooks had often wondered, to take pity on a creature born without fire? Why should this dragon not be revived, as Gretel had only been trying to do? If his master, the David, was here today, would he approve of Gretel’s punishment? And worse, if Zanna, the mistress of Gretel, herself away in the Arctic lands, could see her dragon clutching at bars, what terrible outcomes might result?
“Pay attention, everyone, here we go.” Liz flicked the first page and started to read.
“Dear Liz, Lucy, Bonnington, and dragons. How are you? How’s the weather in Scrubbley? We’re frying eggs on the sidewalk up here.”
“How?” Lucy queried, turning up her nose. “I thought it was really cold in the Arctic?”
“He’s teasing,” said Liz. “Listen, he says so:
I’m teasing, of course … there are no sidewalks in the Arctic! OK, here’s the truth: It’s cold enough to freeze the feathers off a penguin, not that you’d see any penguins here, but you get my gist. I have to sleep in socks and a woolly hat if I don’t want frostbite on my extremities —”
“What does that mean?” asked Lucy.
“His toes and ears,” said Liz. She gave a quick cough and continued:
“Zanna was moaning the other day because it was so cold her best black nail polish cracked. Oops, she’s just read that over my shoulder. Now she’s giving me one of her Gothic looks. I’ll change the subject.
“We are having a fantastic time. The polar research station is a bit basic, but we get by. The food is good. We eat WARM, thick oatmeal for breakfast every morning and have steaks the size of Lucy’s flip-flops for dinner.”
“Yuck,” went Lucy.
Her mother read on:
“The base is a sprawling single story building, right on the edge of Hudson Bay. It’s about ten miles south of the town of Chamberlain, a place we are dying to visit. Polar bears come to Chamberlain sometimes! They congregate out on the scraggy tundra and raid the trash dumps. Imagine that? A squirrel in your garden is one thing, but a real live polar bear? Wow! Dr. Bergstrom, our instructor, says we will fly out and see them soon, before the sea in the
bay completely freezes over and the bears head north to hunt for seals. We would have done it a week ago but he was called away to some important meeting, so we are stuck for the moment working in the lab.
“We spend our days analyzing ice samples. Some of them date back hundreds of years. Zanna is checking for increases in toxic chemicals called PCBs, which can poison bears and other forms of wildlife, and I am melting ice cores down and making the tea — I mean, making interesting graphs to monitor the levels of something called beryllium 10. This is to do with global warming. Dr. Bergstrom thinks that changes in the levels of beryllium 10 coincide with an increase in sunspots or flares, which might be warming the Earth and making the polar ice cap melt. That’s scary, especially for bears. Every year, the ice in Hudson Bay melts earlier but takes a little longer to refreeze. This means that bears are fasting more and more and will reach a point, maybe in the next fifty years, when they will not be able to survive their time ashore and will die of starvation out on the tundra. It’s hard to believe that the natural
world we take so much for granted is constantly under threat from climatic change and that creatures like polar bears could so easily become extinct. No one here wants to see that happen. So we are busy searching for long-term answers, feeding the data into our computers to try to predict how long the polar ice will last. The weird thing is, the best model we’ve created, based on the sampled information we have, indicates that the Earth is about to enter a meteorological phase that mimics a period four and a half BILLION years ago when the planet was first created….”
There was a clink.
Liz stopped reading. “What was that?”
“Gadzooks has dropped his pencil,” said Lucy.
Gwillan flew to the floor and retrieved it for him.
The writing dragon hurred in embarrassment and made gestures to Liz to carry on reading. He glanced lightly at Gretel, who tilted her head to look at his pad. Gadzooks gathered it under his arm, keeping his star patterns carefully hidden. Gretel shuffled her scales,
but didn’t make a sound. She had not spoken now for several days.
Liz read on:
“If I’m honest, the work is slightly boring, but we all feel proud to be doing something positive for the northern ‘biome’ as people tend to call it — or Gaia, the Earth goddess, as Zanna tells everyone, including our Inuit colleague, Tootega. He’s a strange character. His face is as wrinkled as an old leather boot and he smells of fish, and seal, and worse! He works, among other things, as a guide for Dr. Bergstrom and says he will take me out on a sled and let me drive his dog team one day.”
“Wow,” went Lucy, very bright-eyed.
“Zanna is totally miffed about this because he hasn’t said he’ll take her as well. Tootega and Zanna don’t get along. He seems to be a bit wary of her, probably because she never stops pestering him about Inuit mythology. She mentioned dragons the other day and he gabbled some words in his native tongue, made a strange sign, and walked away.”
“That’s not very nice,” said Lucy.
“No,” Liz muttered. “Nor is this:
Oh, by the way, if you’re wondering what this red spot is I’ve arrowed, it’s a drop of Zanna’s blood —”
Lucy and a host of dragons leaned forward. Gretel raised her scales and sniffed.
“The scratch on her arm hasn’t healed,” said Liz, reading a few lines ahead.
Lucy sat back looking concerned. “The scratch that Gwilanna made? The one that looked like the dribbles of ink on David’s book contract?”
“Yes,” said Liz. She interchanged the pages, deep in thought.
Gretel ran her claws down the bars of her cage.
G’reth, on the windowsill, shuddered uncomfortably.
“He goes on to say that the other students in their party are all doing fine and that Zanna and one of the other girls are making eyes at a handsome helicopter pilot named Russ —”
“She’s David’s girlfriend, she can’t do that.”
“I’m not worried, he writes, ‘cause she tells me she loves me about ten times a day, in front of anyone
who’ll listen; she hasn’t changed much. She says hi to you all and please will someone give Gretel a hug because she misses her and wonders if she’s feeling OK. Zanna’s been having trouble sleeping. When she wakes, Gretel is always on her mind.”
“Oh,” said Lucy, glancing at the cage. “Do you think she knows?” Her face began to redden.
“I doubt it,” said Liz. “She’s not attuned enough yet. But Gretel’s giving out a powerful auma. It would be strange if Zanna wasn’t picking up something.”
Lucy bit her lip. “What are we going to do when she comes home, Mom?”
“Tell her the truth, that Grockle will suffer if he’s brought into this world, and therefore Gretel had to be restrained. She understands that, don’t you, Gretel?”
Gretel pulled back into the shadows so that no one could see her violet eyes blazing.
“Last paragraph,” said Liz.
“Please give Gadzooks a tickle as well. I haven’t heard from him in ages; I hope his pencil hasn’t gone blunt. I’ve been writing a bit of my Arctic saga, but it’s not coming out quite the way I
predicted. I suppose I shouldn’t expect too much when my inspirational dragon is thousands of miles away. Oh well, another three weeks and I’ll be there to wipe the mist off the windowpane for him. OK, we’re going outside to watch the sunset now. This is one of the highlights of our day. It’s beautiful to see the inlets and waterways turning a deep dark orange and to listen to the geese as they flap across the bay. If my camera batteries last (they turn gooey in the cold) I’ll be bringing you lots of pictures. The other night, Zanna and I took a walk around the base in our thermal clothing, watching the northern stars coming out. You wouldn’t believe how clear they are up here. They look like sparkling Christmas ornaments. You want to reach out and pluck them and put them in your pocket. That’s how close they seem. There’s one that’s low and beautifully yellow. I don’t know what it’s called — I’ll ask Dr. Bergstrom when he comes back, but every time I look at it I feel as though it’s lighting up a candle in my heart. I love this place. I could stay here forever, but I’d miss you all too much and that would never do. Oops, I’ve gone all sentimental. On that note,
I’ll go! Love to everyone. See you soon, David xxx. P.S. Hrrr! P.P.S. If my money has arrived from Apple Tree, please will you deposit the check for me?”
Liz folded the letter and put it back into the envelope. “Well, he seems happy enough.”
“I’m going to write back now,” Lucy chirped.
“Good idea. I’m sure he’d love to hear from you.”
“I won’t say about Gretel.”
“No, I wouldn’t.”
“What should I say about his money for
Snigger?”
Oddly, Liz seemed flustered by this. She pushed her red hair behind one ear and put the letter from David away in a drawer. “Well, nothing. It hasn’t come yet.”
“OK,” said Lucy, with a breezy shrug. “I’ll say it might arrive by the time he reads my letter.”
“All right,” Liz agreed. But in her heart she knew that the money would not come. How could it, when the publishing contract David had signed and she had promised to mail on his behalf was hidden in her drawer, along with the letter he had just sent home, and the one from his editor, Dilys Whutton?