Chapter 1
The Strange Stones
I t all started one hot afternoon, down by the Lamonic River where the water rushes grow. A nine-year-old girl called Polly was skipping along by the waterâs edge and oh, what a happy little nibblehead she was! It was the height of summer and the world was her playground, sparkling with colour and excitement at every twist and turn.
A trout leapt from the clear water in a flash of silver scales.
A bumblebee did that thing where it goes really near your ear and makes you jump in astonishment.
A kingfisher soared gracefully into the side of a sycamore tree, plummeted to the ground and was stepped on by an otter.
The warblers warbled and the dragonflies dragonflew and the frogs texted âRIBBETâ to each other on their mobiles. And the sun shone down upon them all as if to say, âHere, have loads of heat off me for a laugh.â It was the height of summer all right.
âOranges anâ mermaids, says the bells of Saint Dickens!â sang Polly as she skip-skap-skappled along. âI owe you five matchsticks, says the bells of ââ
BARK!
Suddenly there came a sound from the Old Meadow yonder, a sound so happy that for one amazing moment all the soldiers in the world put down their guns and did a bit of hopscotch instead.
BAAARK!
There it was again, even happier than before and with a couple of extra â A âs in the middle free of charge.
âSPARKLERS!â shouted Polly joyously. âItâs Jake, the Number One Best Woofdog on the Woofdog Charts, anâ thatâs a official Polly Fact!â
Crashing through the undergrowth she followed the barking to the Old Meadow yonder, and yes! There was big Jake himself, doing what he loved best â digging an enormous hole with his legendary paws. Dirt was flyinâ, flies were buzzinâ, cows were mooinâ, letter âgâsâ were missinâ â it was chaos.
âHey, Jakey, let me play too!â laughed Polly, running over. But even as she spoke Jake was emerging from the hole, a small brown object clutched between his doggy-go-lucky teeth.
âWhat you found, what you found?â said Polly, petting the energetic beast until he gobbed the thing proudly into the long grass. It was a little bag made of rough cloth and tied with red ribbon. Here and there it had been nibbled away by insects and pumpkins, but the material wasthick and had withstood even the greediest attacks.
âWhatâs that?â said Polly, squinting at something written on the bag, scratched into the cloth in rusty red ink:
1559
âOoh,â she marvelled. âThis bag must befrom them long-ago Olden Days whatâs written in the history books. Anâ itâs probbly a-burstinâ with buried treasures what no oneâs never seen for thousands of years!â
With trembling fingers Polly untied the ribbon. Then, hardly daring to breathe, she tipped the contents of the bag into her sweaty palm.
âSmooky palooki!â she sighed. âThese things is well beautiful!â
For she was holding two strangely shaped stones, one pink and one white, glinting in the bright sunshine, glinting more brightly than anything Polly had ever seen before. They were beautiful indeed â and yet, Polly thought, there was something strange about their beauty. It was a cold, evil kind of beauty that would destroy you if you got too close, like a beautiful goose standing on a hillside.
You walk towards the goose, transfixed by its beauty. You want to touch the goose! You want to feel its soft feathery back and maybe have a cheeky stroke of its neck. But it is only when you are up close that you realise it is not a goose at all, but a cruel wolf with hunger in his eyes and a plastic beak strapped to his face.
Yet try as she might, Polly could not tear her eyes away. The stones were so beautiful. She wantedto look at them forever, or slightly longer if possible. They made her feel