Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

The Mirror of Pharos
The Mirror of Pharos
The Mirror of Pharos
Ebook314 pages4 hours

The Mirror of Pharos

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

  • An action-packed, high concept, time-travelling adventure
  • Full of animal magic and with an epic wolf character
  • Linked to a website with ‘Meet the Character’ profiles, book excerpt and background stories

  • Jack Tideswell’s parents died in a tragic diving accident while exploring the underwater ruins of the Pharos lighthouse in Egypt. So Jack wants nothing to do with adventure. Until, that is, a seagull delivers a strange disc – addressed to him in his own handwriting – and he’s catapulted briefly into another time.
    In the blink of an eye, all kinds of magic are let loose, and Jack finds himself aboard an ocean liner in the throes of a Titanic-like disaster. It all links back to Pharos, the seventh wonder of the world. An ancient power needs to be restored. Can Jack learn to navigate time before it’s too late to save the one person who can help him unravel the secrets of the disc?
    Whether he likes it or not, there’s no more hiding away. And no looking back. Especially when Alpha is watching. A wolf who sees all there is to see...
    For readers aged 10 plus, The Mirror of Pharos is a contemporary fantasy with the inventiveness of Philip Reeve’s sci-fi, the excitement of J.K. Rowling’s plots and the timeless quality of a Philippa Pearce classic.
    ‘A wonderful mix of magic and reality that reminds me of the early books in the Harry Potter series.’  The Bookbag
    LanguageEnglish
    Release dateNov 28, 2017
    ISBN9781788034159
    The Mirror of Pharos
    Author

    J S Landor

    J S Landor has worked as a journalist, farmer and publishing editor (CUP). She has a Masters in Writing for Young People and is a former Co-founder of Electrik Inc where she edited several children’s books. She lives in North Essex, plays in a rock band and has had a lifelong fascination with wolves.

    Related to The Mirror of Pharos

    Related ebooks

    Children's Fantasy & Magic For You

    View More

    Related articles

    Reviews for The Mirror of Pharos

    Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
    0 ratings

    0 ratings0 reviews

    What did you think?

    Tap to rate

    Review must be at least 10 words

      Book preview

      The Mirror of Pharos - J S Landor

      Contents

      Chapter 1

      Chapter 2

      Chapter 3

      Chapter 4

      Chapter 5

      Chapter 6

      Chapter 7

      Chapter 8

      Chapter 9

      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11

      Chapter 12

      Chapter 13

      Chapter 14

      Chapter 15

      Chapter 16

      Chapter 17

      Chapter 18

      Chapter 19

      Chapter 20

      Chapter 21

      Chapter 22

      Chapter 23

      Chapter 24

      Chapter 25

      Chapter 26

      Chapter 27

      Chapter 28

      Chapter 29

      Chapter 30

      Chapter 31

      Chapter 32

      Chapter 33

      Chapter 34

      Chapter 35

      Chapter 36

      Chapter 37

      Chapter 38

      Chapter 39

      Chapter 40

      Chapter 41

      Chapter 42

      Acknowledgements

      Chapter 1

      The circle begins

      In the hour before dawn, two amber eyes patrolled the sky over the hushed town. From their hiding place in Osmaston Wood they could see the world and when the fluttering white shape appeared, they were ready. They fastened onto it, glistening fiercely, and gave a quick blink.

      Instantly, the wind stirred. Copper leaves fell from the trees and a thick seam of fog stole down the hills, wrapping the town in a ghostly shawl.

      High above the rooftops a large seagull circled about, surveying the maze of streets below. He’d flown many miles through a long night to reach this place deep in the Rollright Hills. And now, at last, his journey was almost done.

      In his beak he held a flat, brown parcel, not much bigger than a child’s hand. All he needed was to find the right address.

      But this was easier said than done. The sprawling fog had invaded every nook and cranny and large chunks of the town were completely hidden from view. There seemed little else for it – he’d have to fly in for a closer look.

      No sooner had he begun his descent than a sharp wind blew up, blasting the leaves on the pavement skywards. The seagull swerved wildly, beating his wings hard, but before he could regain his balance an even more savage gust forced him in the other direction. From the streets below, it looked like he was dodging bullets fired by a deadly enemy.

      A third icy blast sent him nose-diving towards the market square. He flew dangerously close to the church spire, whistled past a line of open-mouthed gargoyles and narrowly missed a statue of the town’s founding father, William Godley.

      Behind the plate-glass window of the baker’s shop, a wedding cake loomed nearer. The seagull gave a desperate squawk and banked steeply upwards. For one heart-stopping moment, before his wings carried him clear, he clipped the face of the town hall clock and the package glowed faintly blue.

      It had been a close shave. He was a rugged bird from the weather-beaten cliffs of the Pentland coast, yet the freak wind had caught him completely off guard.

      Several dizzy circles later, he swooped down to a small red-brick house on the outskirts of town. It stood on a steepish bit of road at the end of a row of terraced cottages. Number 12, Hill Rise, Morton Muxloe. This was the place!

      He skidded to a halt on the gravel driveway and sat with his breath making little clouds while he studied the front door. It was yellow with an old-fashioned bell pull on one side and a brass door knocker near the top. But what interested him most was the vertical letterbox in the middle. It looked exactly the right size.

      Hopping boldly forwards, he tried pushing the package through the narrow opening. It wouldn’t go. Even with his head cocked on one side, he couldn’t get the angle right – the parcel kept jamming. After several more attempts he shrieked in frustration. There had to be some other way to make his delivery.

      He took off, climbing high over the slate roof and soon spotted the answer to his problem. At the back of the house, half overgrown by trailing ivy, another door beckoned. This one had what looked like a much larger letter box close to ground level. With a delighted cry he dived down, determined to finish the job once and for all.

      Inside number 12, Jack Tideswell woke with a jolt. A moan erupted from the knot of bedding which seemed to have turned him overnight into a human sausage roll. He struggled free and yanked back the curtains. Not morning already! He felt as if he hadn’t slept a wink.

      Flopping back, he stared blankly at the ceiling and wondered what day it was. Saturday? Sunday? The answer came to him like a stab in the stomach. ‘Noooo!’ he groaned. Monday.

      In the kitchen below, the clanking of cups and plates competed with the news on the radio. ‘Give me a break!’ he yelled, pulling the duvet over his head. Instantly, the radio volume turned to full blast. His fist thumped the mattress. ‘Not fair!’ Nan could blame her hearing all she liked, but her tactics for getting him up were just plain sneaky.

      ‘Storm-force winds and torrential rain are expected by this evening,’ blared the weatherman. ‘As deepening lows sweep in from the Atlantic, the Met Office has issued flood warnings … Take extra care on the roads tonight …’

      The seagull glided silently past Jack’s window and came to rest on the garden wall, folding his wings like a cape around his large body. In the kitchen, he could see a small thin woman in a multicoloured dressing gown, buttering a slice of bread. His belly rumbled and he let out a hungry cry.

      Nan looked up. Her corkscrew hair stuck out at odd angles and the expression on her face suggested she’d got out of bed on the wrong side.

      ‘What do you want?’ she said, jabbing the butter knife at the gull. He was staring at her with such intensity it looked as if he might actually speak. She pulled her dressing gown tightly around her. ‘It’s no good. There’s nothing here for you.’

      The bird gave another plaintive cry.

      Nan put down the knife and banged on the window. ‘You’re not wanted. Go on. Push off – shoo!’

      The seagull ruffled his feathers but made no attempt to move, and when she looked back a few minutes later he was still there, his head drooping with exhaustion into the pillow of his chest. Behind him, the mist had cleared to reveal an angry sky flushed with red. The light seemed to give his body a strange, luminous quality. Nan shivered. Her mother had told her once that seagulls were the ghosts of drowned people.

      ‘Oh … all right,’ she said, opening the window at last. She flung some crusts of bread on the garden path and the big bird hopped after them, flapping his wings and shrieking his appreciation.

      Nan watched him and, for a moment, a giddy, faraway feeling took hold of her. An icy breeze lifted her hair and she reached out to steady herself.

      To her relief, a furry head met her hand.

      ‘Odin! For heaven’s sake, where’ve you been? Get in, will you.’

      With a yowl, a large black and white cat leapt down from the windowsill and wound himself jealously around her ankles.

      ‘That’s quite enough of that.’ Nudging the cat with her foot, Nan hastily shut the window.

      ‘Time to get up!’ she bellowed at the ceiling. ‘Bacon sandwich on the table – twenty minutes and counting!’ She knew Jack’s routine: five minutes to wash and dress, five minutes to eat breakfast, five minutes to pack his school bag and five minutes to spare. Except there never was any time to spare.

      Jack didn’t feel like breakfast, not this morning. He had a tight knot in his stomach which felt like an iron fist squeezing his guts. Swinging his legs out of bed, he dragged himself to the bathroom and stared sternly into the mirror. Come on, get a grip, he told himself. It’s not as bad as you think.

      The round face beneath the mop of black hair looked unconvinced. Perhaps he wouldn’t be in such trouble if he appeared a little more lean and mean.

      Twenty minutes later, he stood beside Nan in the hall. At twelve years old, he was already able to look down at her, although he had to admit that didn’t take much doing: his grandmother was barely five feet tall.

      Out of habit, she tapped the barometer. The needle twitched nervously from Fair to Change, then right around the dial to Stormy. She pulled out a red anorak from the coat rack under the stairs.

      ‘I don’t need it,’ mumbled Jack.

      ‘What is it with boys and coats? You can’t be cool when you’re wet and freezing.’ Nan unzipped the anorak and held it out with a flourish, like a matador tempting a bull.

      Jack rolled his eyes. Reluctantly, he pulled the coat on.

      ‘And don’t take it off the minute you get to the corner,’ Nan called after him.

      Jack set off at a run, the bacon sandwich he’d forced down churning in his stomach. When he reached the bottom of the hill, he took the coat off and bundled it into his school bag.

      Back in the kitchen Nan sighed, knowing he would. Stop fussing, she told herself. If she wasn’t careful, she’d worry herself into an early grave. After all, there were far worse things in the world than catching a cold …

      Outside, while the clouds bulked together in the stormy sky, two amber eyes watched Jack sprint into the distance. A wolf sat at the corner of Hill Rise, his head lowered between his broad shoulders. When Jack finally disappeared from view, he lifted his nose to sniff the air. As if responding to a signal, a fierce wind began to blow once more.

      Chapter 2

      The traders were busy setting up their stalls in the market square. Rows of brightly striped canopies billowed like balloons, tugging at the metal frames that held them. ‘Batten down the hatches, lads,’ someone cried out.

      A flock of pigeons took off, their wings producing a clap-clap-clapping as Jack raced towards them across the cobbles. Several heads turned to watch.

      ‘What’s his hurry, then? Seen a ghost or summat?’

      ‘Nah, late for school more like. Look at ’im go. Aye aye, watch out … Ow! Bet that ’urt!’

      In his haste, Jack had skidded on the uneven stones. Face down, arms outstretched, he lay sprawled beneath the statue of William Godley like a slave paying homage.

      For a moment he didn’t move. His eyes closed and briefly the flapping of the canopies grew louder. Then it faded and what he heard next made him wonder if he was about to pass out. Blowing in his ears like a whispered message came the distant roar of the sea.

      He shook his head, trying to chase the sensation away. Seagulls! He could hear them gabbling. He must be imagining it. Morton Muxloe was in the middle of England, more than a hundred miles from the coast.

      ‘You all right, mate?’ someone shouted.

      Jack sat up, spitting the grit from his mouth. The town hall with its imposing clock tower loomed over him and, above that, great fleecy clouds rolled across the sky. He felt small as a speck of dust.

      ‘Oi! I said, are you okay?’ The fishmonger, a burly man in a brown apron, lumbered towards him.

      ‘Fine.’ Feeling like an idiot, he scrambled to his feet, grabbed the books and pens which had spilled from his bag and tore off through the broad arches at the end of the square.

      Despite the stitch in his side, he kept going. ‘You can do this,’ he muttered. Not so long ago, when he’d swum for the Dolphins, he could run the mile to school in under ten minutes. Those were the days. He pictured the bright yellow caps of his club mates slicing through the water. By now, morning training would be over and they’d be having breakfast in the canteen, laughing and bragging about lap times.

      He crossed the bridge over the River Churn. He’d never told anyone why he’d quit the sport he loved. He could barely admit it to himself. But it was the selfsame reason that had him running like a lunatic through the town centre. Fear. Simple as that. He was trying to avoid another ambush.

      Glancing left and right, he sprinted past the black railings of St Mark’s Church. Apart from an old man raking leaves, there was no one in sight.

      His chest deflated in a sigh. He had to be so careful. They could be hiding anywhere: behind a hedge, in a shop doorway, under the stone bridge, in the churchyard … With a shudder, he remembered how they’d pinned him to a gravestone and threatened to bury him six feet under.

      Turning into School Lane, he raced for the gates of Muxloe High and for a moment he thought he’d made it. Then, above the hubbub of voices in the playground, laughter rang out – a hard, merciless sound like crows cawing. It was them.

      They stood just inside the gates, their arms locked together like rugby players in a scrum: Fakes, Suttle, Gormley and Blunt, the meanest gang of thugs he’d ever known. They were having fun tormenting a first-year girl who scampered backwards and forwards like a rabbit, trying to dodge past them.

      ‘Let me go!’ she whined. ‘You can’t do this.’

      ‘Whassat?’ Blunt bore down on her. While the other boys sniggered, he caught hold of her ponytail and twisted it around his wrist so she was forced to dance on tiptoe. ‘Gotcha by the tail,’ he said, holding up the mane of hair. He produced a pair of scissors from his pocket. ‘You squeal and I’ll cut this off.’

      Jack stepped forwards and tears of relief welled in the girl’s eyes. Everyone knew he was the gang’s favourite victim.

      ‘Aaah, Tideswell!’ crooned Blunt, stretching out his arms in a mock welcome. ‘At last!’

      The girl scurried away, tripping over Suttle’s outstretched foot as she went.

      ‘Bin jogging ’ave we?’ Blunt hawked the phlegm from his throat.

      Jack stared at the glob of spittle on the tarmac and said nothing. If he responded, the bully would find some way of turning it into an argument.

      ‘Look at you, Jacko. You’re sweating! Maybe you need to lie down.’

      The school bell rang.

      ‘Out of the way,’ said Jack, barging past.

      ‘Saved by the bell, eh? I don’t fink so. Floor him, Fakes. Gorm, you get his feet. Suttle – ’ere, the scissors.’

      Before he knew it Jack was sprawled on the tarmac. Fakes sat on his chest, a grin of anticipation on his face. ‘You’re gonna love this,’ he said.

      Gasping for breath, Jack tried to see what the others were doing. But Fakes rammed his head back down. ‘No peeking. It’s a surprise!’

      Hands pushed down on his ankles and he realised they were removing his trainers. Struggling hard, he kicked out and one of the mob yelped. ‘Hold him, dammit!’

      A horrible ripping sound followed. Unable to move a muscle, Jack closed his eyes. Will it always be like this? he thought.

      Someone’s breath blew down one side of his face. ‘Such a loser,’ hissed Blunt in his ear.

      Jack’s eyes flashed open again.

      ‘Snip!’ laughed the bully, pressing the open scissors to his throat. ‘Got anyfing to say?’

      Jack held his breath while Blunt slowly ran the blade over his Adam’s apple up to his mouth.

      ‘Nah, thought not. Sensible boy! You keep this shut, right, or we’ll ’ave you. And that old bat you live with. Wouldn’t take much to fix that heap of scrap she drives.’

      And then it was over. Fakes’ backside lifted from his chest and the boys moved away, crowing and slapping each other on the back.

      Jack crawled over to the trainers which lay a few feet away. They had slashes down the sides and the laces had been chopped into pieces. With a sniff, he pulled the bits out. Then, ignoring the glances of the latecomers who hurried past, he put the trainers on and shuffled into school.

      In an alleyway nearby, the wolf sat quietly watching. When the playground emptied, he padded across the road to where the shoelaces lay. With unblinking amber eyes, he stared down into the pile. The pieces began to move and within seconds a mass of fat, white worms slithered beneath him. One by one, he ate them all.

      Chapter 3

      ‘Mind where you’re going!’ said the woman with the brolly.

      ‘Sorry,’ mumbled Jack, without looking up.

      The afternoon traffic honked noisily as the woman gazed after him. He kept lurching from side to side, watching his feet instead of the pavement ahead. A man with a Yorkshire terrier stepped smartly out of the way, but somehow Jack had got tangled in the dog’s lead and a great deal of yapping was going on.

      The woman clicked her tongue. She’d read about underage drinking and here was the proof of it – a schoolboy drunk in the middle of the afternoon! The thunder rumbled overhead. With a flurry of indignation, she opened her umbrella and hurried away.

      Jack kept his eyes glued to the ground, unaware of the impression he’d created. He was too busy playing a game. It called for serious concentration, not to mention some fancy footwork: he was avoiding all the cracks in the pavement.

      If you make it home without treading on a line, he told himself, they’ll close school … He jumped two squares to the right. You’ll have an amazing adventure … He leapt three squares forwards. Aaand … He wobbled slightly. Blunt will get it. Big time.

      The sky glimmered with distant lightning and the wind licked at the trees. In a garden across the road, a flowerpot crashed to the ground, leaving an untidy heap of soil and several red geraniums scattered on the lawn.

      Perched on a nearby fence, a magpie, as big as a crow, let out a harsh, rattling cry: ‘Tsche, tsche, tsche.’ It seemed to be laughing at him.

      Jack looked down to find he was standing on a crack. ‘Oi! Now look what you made me do!’ Without thinking, he reached for a stone and hurled it at the bird. ‘Waster!’

      The magpie took off, clapping its wings, and disappeared over the rooftops, screeching insults of its own.

      Jack stared miserably at his feet. The ancient black plimsolls which he’d been forced to borrow from school lost property made him feel like an oversized ballerina. Sadly, the comparison had occurred to his classmates too. Everyone, except his best friend Charlie, had dissolved into hysterics when he’d turned up for registration.

      Mr Marsh, his form tutor, hadn’t been exactly sympathetic either. Usually a kind man, Boggy hadn’t bought his story about a mad dog mauling his trainers. And since Jack couldn’t tell him what had really happened, the teacher had given him a sad look and a lunchtime detention for being late.

      Big splashes of rain started to fall. Turning up Hill Rise, Jack could hear the wind chimes on the apple tree in the front garden jangling furiously.

      He stopped in his tracks. Ahead, a dark cloud was moving in his direction and something about it looked very peculiar. He screwed up his eyes. It was sort of solid and appeared to be spinning. In fact, now it came closer, he could see it wasn’t a cloud at all. He walked faster. Then he broke into a run. A blur of whirling shapes, like gigantic insects, swarmed towards him. They looked far too big to be bees. What else then? Locusts?

      As he vaulted the garden wall at number 12, he felt a thud on his back, right between his shoulder blades. He twisted round, trying to see what it was. There was a second thud and a third. Something landed on his shoulder, then on his head. The ‘thing’ wriggled in his hair. Panicking, he shook his head wildly and put his hand up to extract it. Its skin felt leathery and its legs – all four of them – were scrabbling madly to escape the tangle.

      Before he had time to remove the creature, a dozen more fell around him and then a deluge.

      Frogs were falling from the sky like enormous green hailstones. Some of them lay stunned on the ground, others leapt in all directions. Jack pulled up the collar of his coat and bolted for the front door.

      Inside, he jumped up and down. Something was wriggling down his back. He ripped the coat off and threw it on the hall floor. A tiny frog, which had been clinging to the lining, hopped into the darkness of the cupboard under the stairs.

      ‘Hang it on the peg!’ bellowed Nan from the sitting room.

      Jack burst in on her. ‘You won’t believe this, but it’s raining frogs!’

      Nan looked over her newspaper and pushed her glasses down her nose. ‘You mean raining cats and dogs,’ she said. ‘I think you’ll find that’s the usual expression.’

      ‘No! I mean frogs!’ cried Jack. ‘Come and look!’ He dragged her out of the chair and propelled her towards the bay window.

      A particularly large frog hit the glass with a splat. Nan took a step back. ‘My word!’ she said.

      A mass of seething green bodies covered the front lawn. There must have been several hundred at least. Some were dead, others dying, and still more were scrabbling desperately over each other to escape. Nan’s display of autumn dahlias had been completely flattened, and before their very eyes the garden was fast turning into a mud bath.

      Jack gazed at the squirming bodies. Those that could still move were heading out of the garden.

      ‘Have you ever seen anything like it?’ he said.

      Nan shook her head. ‘Can’t say I have.’ Another frog hit the window and she winced. ‘I read a news report once – some village in Kent, I think … The frogs got sucked up by a whirling wind, a bit like a small tornado. They were dropped nearly a mile away, poor things.’

      Odin leapt onto the windowsill and sat with his ears pricked, his tail twitching furiously. The frog rain had stopped and the three of them watched in stunned silence as the survivors limped away.

      At last, Nan turned to look at Jack. She was about to suggest they go outside to clear up when she noticed how exhausted he seemed. With a glance at the black plimsolls she said, ‘Come and sit down. How was your day?’

      ‘Fine,’ Jack lied, flopping into a big armchair. To avoid any more questions he cut in with one of his own. ‘So has it ever rained cats and dogs?’

      ‘Not exactly. It’s just

      Enjoying the preview?
      Page 1 of 1