The Gold Dust Letters
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About this ebook
It starts with chocolates. Dreaming of a box of chocolates that never empties, Angela writes a letter to her fairy godmother asking for one. To her surprise, the fairy writes back! A letter appears on her mantelpiece from “Pilaria of the Kingdom of the Faeries,” written on ancient parchment with purple ink, and covered in a gold dust that vanishes as soon as it flies into the air. Is this really a letter from the land of magic? And if so, what does it mean? Angela and her two best friends begin investigating the mystery, searching Angela’s house for clues. But out of the blue, more letters appear on Angela’s mantelpiece. Pilaria is lonesome, and as curious about the girls’ world as they are about her kingdom. What they learn from their correspondence with this enchanting godmother will change everything they know—about magic and reality—forever. This ebook features a personal history by Janet Taylor Lisle including rare images and never-before-seen documents from the author’s own collection.
Janet Taylor Lisle
Janet Taylor Lisle (b. 1947) is an author of children’s fiction. After growing up in Connecticut, Lisle graduated from Smith College and spent a year working for the volunteer group VISTA (Volunteers in Service to America) before becoming a journalist. She found that she loved writing human interest and “slice of life” stories, and honed the skills for observation and dialogue that would later serve her in her fiction. Lisle took a fiction writing course in 1981, and then submitted a manuscript to Richard Jackson, a children’s book editor at Bradbury Press who was impressed with her storytelling. Working with Jackson, Lisle published her first novel, The Dancing Cats of Applesap, in 1984. Since then she has written more than a dozen books for young readers, including The Great Dimpole Oak (1987) and Afternoon of the Elves (1989), which won a Newbery Honor. Her most recent novel is Highway Cats (2008).
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Book preview
The Gold Dust Letters - Janet Taylor Lisle
The Gold Dust Letters
Investigators of the Unknown
Janet Taylor Lisle
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Preview: Looking for Juliette
A Biography of Janet Taylor Lisle
Chapter One
ANGELA HARRALL TOOK AN interest in magic. Not the silly hocus-pocus of birthday party magicians, or the dumb card tricks her older brother was always playing on her. Angela wasn’t a stupid person. But the real magic that is present at unexplainable happenings, the power that haunts a house or works quietly behind the scenes in secret, hidden worlds—oh yes, Angela adored that sort of thing. She was a believer in the unknown, and that was why she wrote her crazy letter in the first place.
Georgina Rusk wouldn’t have done it. She believed in the unknown, too, more or less, but not in writing to it. And little Poco Lambert, well … she was an animal-lover who spoke mostly to pets.
I can’t believe you actually wrote to her,
Georgina said irritably, on the Saturday morning that Angela’s mysterious answer appeared. I mean it’s so ridiculous, writing a letter to your fairy godmother. Nobody bothers with that stuff anymore.
The three friends were at the Rusks’ house, lounging on their big back lawn. The day was a warm one, one of those early October beauties when summer takes a last wistful turn before giving up the stage to autumn’s chill.
Well, I bothered with it, and I got an answer back,
Angela replied. It was on the mantelpiece in the living room when I came downstairs for breakfast this morning.
So? Anybody could have written a letter and put it there. In case you’ve forgotten, three other people live in your house: your mother, your brother, and your father.
And your Siamese cat,
Poco said sweetly to Angela. Don’t forget her.
Her cat!
exclaimed Georgina. Good grief!
Siamese cats are very talented,
Poco went on. People don’t yet know all the things they can do.
Georgina rolled her eyes. All right, where is this fantastic letter?
she asked Angela. You said you were going to show us, and you didn’t even bring it with you.
Yes I did.
Well, where is it? I suppose you’re going to tell us it’s invisible. It’s from one of those fairy godmothers that only appear to people who believe in them. Like Tinkerbell. But if we clap our hands together really hard and fast, the magic will go to work and—
George, ssh!
said Poco. Look!
While Georgina was talking, Angela had reached into the cotton vest she was wearing and taken something out of an inside pocket. It was a piece of paper, rolled up, with a thin gold thread tied around the middle. She held the paper up triumphantly for them to see, and when she did, a very fine golden dust flew out of one end and fell to the grass in a shimmering stream.
Wow!
exclaimed Poco, reaching out to the place in the grass where the dust had fallen. She tried to pick some up, but it had disappeared.
Georgina said nothing, but her eyes widened.
That happens every time I go to open the letter!
Angela exclaimed. I can never see where it comes from. Look, there’s nothing inside.
She unrolled the paper, which was thin but stiffer than ordinary paper. It made a crinkly sound as it came unfurled. Angela showed Poco and Georgina the open letter. There wasn’t a bit of gold dust on it anywhere. Strange-looking purple writing covered the page. The friends leaned forward together and read the following:
With great honor I present myself: Pilaria of the Kingdom of the Faeries, Eighth Tribe, Fourth Earth, Under the Sun-Star Aravan, May It Shine on Our Land Forever and Ever.
ANGELA HARRALL:
"Your message has been received. Unfortunately, boxes of chocolates like the one you requested have long been out of stock. A hundred years ago they were all the rage, but fashions change. The kingdom has not filled such an order in fifty or sixty years and no longer prepares them. We are sorry that we cannot grant your wish in this matter.
Respectfully,
The Gray-Eyed Faerie,
PILARIA
Good grief, Angela. What kind of chocolates did you ask for?
Georgina demanded, after she had read all the way through.
Angela blushed. She was a stocky child who was known for her excellent appetite. Well … I read about a box of candy that could never be finished,
she explained. The girl in the story asked for one from her fairy godmother, and she got it. It was great. Whenever she put the cover back on, all the chocolates she’d eaten grew back again so she could start all over.
There was a long silence while everyone read the letter again. And again. The purple script was beautiful. It descended the page in marvelous loops and swirls and looked vaguely Chinese. Pilaria’s signature was elegant beyond words.
This was not done by a Siamese cat,
Poco announced finally.
No.
Georgina tested the papers thinness between two fingers. It might be old airmail paper,
she said doubtfully.
It’s too stiff,
Angela said.
I’ve never seen writing like this,
Georgina said. Or ink this color.
She paused. But the letter is stupid. Nobody would ever believe such baloney. ‘Eighth Tribe, Fourth Earth, Under the Sun-Star Aravan.’ I mean really!
Angela looked at her angrily. She rolled the letter back up fast—it seemed to want to roll up by itself anyway—and slipped the circle of gold thread around it. She was preparing to put it back in her vest pocket when Georgina gasped. Poco sat forward, her eyes round with astonishment. The gold dust!
she cried. There it is again!
A rather larger amount of dust had dropped out of the letter and was falling in a shining river toward the ground. But once there, the stuff completely disappeared, just as it had the first time.
Angela shook her head helplessly. That’s what always happens,
she said, tucking the amazing letter back into her inside pocket. The gold dust never runs out. There’s always more inside no matter how much you look and look and can’t see how there could be.
Chapter Two
THERE WAS NO WAY, after seeing Angela’s letter, that the friends could continue sitting in a backyard, however beautiful the day. Georgina demanded to be taken at once to the mantelpiece where the letter had been discovered. She wanted to know when the letter was found, who was in the house at the time, where they were—having breakfast? still in bed?—what had happened the night before, and a hundred other details.
Angela was very pleased by this flurry of questions, which showed that Georgina might not be so disbelieving as she pretended. She agreed to allow Georgina to inspect the mantelpiece on the condition that she tell no one about the Gray-Eyed Faerie’s letter. It was to be a secret until they found out more.
At this point, Poco announced that she would go to Angela’s house, too, but not to see the mantelpiece. Having spoken with such authority about the mysterious talents of Siamese cats, she wanted to look more closely at Angela’s. Perhaps, after all, she’d underestimated it.
Do you know that Siamese cats were the royal cats of kings and queens?
she asked the friends as they walked, rather fast because of Georgina’s impatience, along the sidewalk toward Angela’s house. They lived in temples and palaces in the country of Siam, and got used to lying around on silk pillows and peacock feathers. That’s why they always look so snobby.
Do they look snobby?
Georgina inquired. Angela’s always looks sound asleep to me.
Oh, yes,
Poco said. "Very