confused,” he whispered to Bea. “I’ll bet she doesn’t know what to think.”
He felt sorry for her too, because he knew what misery she was going through better than anyone. “It’s even harder for her than it is for me. I’ve got nothing to remember, but the life Lord Alwyn put into her head must seem pretty real to her.”
“Yes, you’re right. If she’s going to believe us, then she has to forget the life of the pampered girl that she remembers. That must be a hard thing to do,” said Bea.
Marcel noticed the sympathy in her eyes. It was when her face warmed like this that she was easiest to see.
But if Nicola was avoiding him , Marcel couldn’t seem to avoid Fergus, no matter how much he wanted to. Mrs Timmins threw them together at every opportunity, whether it was chopping wood or hauling water from the well. Perhaps she thought they might come to like each other.
When she sent the older boys into the orchard with Albert to collect apples one day, Marcel and Fergus competed to see who could retrieve the highest fruit. But apple trees aren’t much good for climbing. It was clear that one of the pair would come crashing to earth sooner or later. The younger children gathered to see who it would be.
Marcel felt a branch straining under him. He didn’t know whether he had been afraid of heights in his earlier life, but as he swayed precariously in the apple tree, he certainly knew he was now.
He was saved when Albert came looking to see where all his workers had gone. “Get down from there, you fools!” he bellowed angrily. “I don’t know what it is about you two. First you ride wild horses like a pair of madmen and now you’re determined to break every bone in your bodies. Seems I’ll have to keep you apart until you learn some sense.”
He ordered Fergus off to the woodpile. “As for you, Marcel, there are plenty of apples down the end of this row.” He tossed two empty sacks at his face and waved him away, calling to the rest of the boys to follow him back towards the house.
Marcel wandered miserably towards the stone fence. It was the limit of his world and a reminder of what Lord Alwyn’s powerful magic had done to him. On the far side of the wall lay a stretch of tall grass and blackberry bushes that separated the orphanage from the dense green and black of the forest. Even the colours recalled the wizard and his robe, and as Marcel stood staring into the trees, fighting a deep despair, once more he turned the golden ring on his little finger with the tip of his thumb.
He sighed and began to pick apples. He soon had one of the sacks bulging with the fruit he could reach from the ground, then, putting this aside, he climbed into one of the trees. He was still only a short distance from the ground when an odd whooshing noise caught his ear, not loud and lasting less than a second. It stopped suddenly when an arrowthudded into the ground only inches from the sack he had just filled with apples.
The shock made him lose his grip. He fell out of the tree, landing painfully on his bottom, which had only just lost the bruises after his fall from Gadfly. His first instinct was to lie still. His second was to flee. He was about to do the latter when he realised there was something wrapped around the shaft of the arrow. It looked like the page from a book, lashed tightly into place with coil after coil of black twine.
With a desperate lunge, he darted out into the open and snatched the arrow from the ground before retreating like a lizard to the meagre protection of the apple trees. There, he used his teeth to snap the twine, and instantly, the paper spiralled open in his hand. It wasn’t a page from a book but a letter.
Marcel,
Yes, I know that is your name and that you do not belong in this orphanage. I have horses waiting in the forest. Join me now. Tell no one and be sure you are not seen.
From a friend of your father’s.
My father’s! Marcel gasped. It was true, then. Everything
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