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The Invisible Realm
The Invisible Realm
The Invisible Realm
Ebook162 pages1 hour

The Invisible Realm

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Eleven-year-old Hattie is on vacation. But rather than splash in the water, she’s trapped inside a beach cottage as storm-tossed waves pummel sand and wind bashes shutters. As if that’s not enough, she’s also stuck babysitting for her new stepsister Dacey. Bored to the brink of tears, upset over Dacey and her monstrous cat invading her life, Hattie prods her stepsister into action, and the two girls embark on a treasure hunt, hoping to find something – anything – to keep their minds off the miserable weather.

With the discovery of a map stuffed inside an old desk, Hattie persuades Dacey to join her on a mission to search the nearby caves, which she believes can be reached through a tunnel beneath the cottage, and for the first twenty minutes of their journey, everything goes as planned. But then the path abruptly ends in front of a floor-to-ceiling mural of a park. While Dacey tries to find a hidden door in the cement wall, Hattie notices an odd glow and wavering images within the painting. Before she can warn her stepsister, however, Dacey touches the wall and disappears, and Hattie has no choice but to follow.

Having passed through the mural, the girls realize they have entered the park, complete with sun, colorful birds and flowers, stone benches and birdbaths, and lots of trees. Too intrigued to be scared, Hattie insists they explore before they look for a way back to the cottage. The appearance of an old diary beneath a bench, complete with a second map, helps convince Dacey, and soon they uncover clues about the park and its creators.

Lost inside the pages of the diary, neither girl realizes how much time has passed since they left the cottage until Hattie looks up at the sky. Though she wishes she could stay longer, she feels they need to return, as their parents might already be back from their own trek. But as soon as Hattie suggests they leave, a disembodied voice asks if they need help. Though in shock, Hattie musters as much bravado as possible and demands the voice identify itself.

Over the next several minutes, one by one, fairy tale characters appear: a fancy-dressed cat, a glittering fairy and her sparkling butterfly friend, a baby dragon, and two black bears with blue tee shirts. In the process, the girls find they must travel to the center of the park to locate the path back to the tunnel. But the way back is not easy, for they must struggle through a maze filled with intrigue and danger, riddles and traps. The maze, however, is not the worst of what they will encounter, for as they travel, one by one, their new friends disappear, victims of an evil that threatens their world, and it is this evil that Hattie and Dacey must work together to defeat.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 2, 2019
ISBN9780999383438
The Invisible Realm
Author

Evelyn Dunbar-Webb

A lifelong reader, writer, and logophile, Evelyn Dunbar Webb is the recipient of numerous awards for her children’s stories, poetry, and essays. After more than four decades as a mother, business owner, English teacher, and workshop instructor, she returned to her first love—spinning tales—in 2016. When she is not writing, she spends her days reading, drawing, riding her tricycle, or gardening. A native of Connecticut now living in rural central Virginia, Evelyn shares a home with her husband, thousands of books (many of which are hand-me-downs), and the occasional grandchild.

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    Book preview

    The Invisible Realm - Evelyn Dunbar-Webb

    The Invisible Realm

    Copyright 2018 Evelyn Dunbar Webb

    Published by Bumblemeyer Publications at Smashwords

    ISBN 978-0-9983834-3-8

    Illustrations by Evelyn Dunbar Webb

    Cover design by Matt Tyree

    This book is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, educational institutions, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

    Smashwords Edition License Notes

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your enjoyment only, then please return to Smashwords.com or your favorite retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    Table of Contents

    Title Page

    Dedication

    Chapter One

    Chapter Two

    Chapter Three

    Chapter Four

    Chapter Five

    Chapter Six

    Chapter Seven

    Chapter Eight

    Chapter Nine

    Chapter Ten

    Chapter Eleven

    Chapter Twelve

    Chapter Thirteen

    Chapter Fourteen

    Chapter Fifteen

    Chapter Sixteen

    Chapter Seventeen

    Chapter Eighteen

    About the Author

    Special Offer

    Other Books

    The Court of Jupiter

    Connect with the Author

    For Jenianne and Heather

    Chapter One

    Hattie stared as sheets of water poured down outside, her curly red hair damp from pressing her face against the windowpane. Waves and wind pounded the shore, dumping seaweed like wet dishrags across the sand.

    Even my freckles are depressed, she muttered at the swirl of dark clouds hurling across the murky sky. I’ve got to find something to do or I’ll scream.

    Some family vacation. Her first trip to the beach since her dad and stepmom Isabelle were married, and it was ruined before it began. She glanced down on her stepsister Dacey, who sprawled on the floor with her nose stuffed in some book about a talking sea serpent, her mossy brown pigtails dangling like beagle’s ears. Hattie sniffed. Married all of three weeks and already Hattie’s dad managed to coerce her into babysitting, and on vacation, too.

    Hattie interrupted Dacey’s fascination with talking snakes and nudged her stepsister’s book with the end of her toe.

    Aren’t you seven? Why do you need a babysitter, anyway? If you’re old enough to read, you can stay by yourself for an hour or two.

    Dacey kept her attention on her book.

    You do anything else besides read?

    Like what?

    Like anything. Our vacation’s being washed away with every raindrop—doesn’t that bug you?

    With her nose still stuffed inside her book, Dacey shrugged. I guess we could go for a walk.

    Hattie gaped at her stepsister as if she’d sprouted an extra head. A walk? It’s a hurricane outside.

    Dacey again shrugged. We could walk around inside.

    Oh, really? Where exactly inside?

    The bedroom. We haven’t explored anything, and we’ve been here almost an entire day.

    Bedroom? Hattie’s brow arched. That’ll be a short, uninteresting trip.

    Where, then?

    It seemed to Hattie that Dacey, who demanded so much attention and wasted so much time reading weird creature stories, had this irritating habit of acting dumb when it suited her. Hattie let it slide, but only because she had to admit she was somewhat intrigued by the thought of exploring the old cottage, with or without the bedroom. Her dad had said the place was built way before the Civil War, so that meant there had to be something good stuck somewhere.

    What about the attic?

    Dacey’s head popped up from her book, her eyes wide. Not the attic.

    Why not?

    I—I don’t like attics, Dacey stammered. They smell strange, and have lots of spiders, even rats. Her last word ended in barely a whisper.

    Uh huh…well, trust me, we’ll be fine.

    Dacey bit her lip.

    Hattie chose to ignore her stepsister’s panicked face. The attic probably has all sorts of treasure. Weren’t you listening when my dad told us about the people who used to own the cottage? They traveled all the time—Africa, Peru, even China.

    Dacey’s eyes narrowed.

    And the cellar, Hattie considered, who knows what we can find there—think about it.

    I really hate spiders.

    Well, I’m 11, I’m the one in charge, so I’m the one who makes the decisions, Hattie declared. She bent down, picked up her stepsister’s book, and shoved it under the sofa where, if Dacey really wanted it back, she’d have to crawl to reach it. We’ll start with the attic.

    At that, Dacey’s oversized, multi-toed, freaky cat sauntered into the room, his thick silver tail twitching.

    Why don’t you bring His Royal Tubbiness with you? Hattie suggested, leaned forward, and winked. He’d take care of the spiders and rats. He does look sort of hungry.

    Dacey stood and gently lifted the cat into her arms. His name is Sir Whiskers, and he’s not fat. He’s a Maine Coon, with lots of fur.

    Hattie rolled her eyes. Whatever.

    And he doesn’t eat spiders or rats, just crunchy kibble.

    BRR-RROW, Sir Whiskers added, and buried his face in Dacey’s arms. Within seconds, however, his attention to the conversation wavered and he squiggled free, landing on the space between Hattie’s feet and curling himself into a corkscrew around her legs.

    Hattie pulled the clinging furball free and handed him back to Dacey. Why does he do that?

    He likes you.

    Couldn’t he just rub and purr, like any normal cat?

    Sir Whiskers rotated his head to stare at Hattie upside down. She groaned inwardly. So now the beast had to look at her, all cutesy-like?

    He wants you to pet him, Dacey explained.

    Which translates into me having to babysit for some creature as well? No way.

    Sir Whiskers continued to stare, his unblinking eyes making the hairs on the back of Hattie’s neck jump to attention.

    Boo.

    Sir Whiskers didn’t budge.

    His Royal Tubbiness appears to have a defect.

    Dacey pouted at Hattie’s words. Sir Whiskers has nothing wrong with him. He’s just very sensitive.

    Fine; now, get moving before my dad and your mom get back and we’re stuck helping them put away all the groceries.

    But what about Sir Whiskers?

    Like I said, bring him along. Maybe he can sniff out some treasure.

    Dacey hugged her cat tighter. Sir Whiskers, however, had had enough of being held. He twisted from her grasp and with a THUD, landed on the floor next to a well-chewed toy mouse.

    BRR-RROW-RROW! One fat paw swatted the fuzzy toy, and it sailed down the hallway towards the back of the cottage and the open stairwell that led to the attic, Sir Whiskers thumping close behind.

    Dacey shrieked. Catch him!

    What for?

    He’ll get lost, Dacey wailed.

    Hattie doubted that but said nothing. The last they saw of Sir Whiskers was his fluffed-out tail as he sprinted up the stairs and disappeared into the dark.

    Dacey’s eyes filled. Now what do we do? He might get hurt, or trapped, or—.

    Stop it, Hattie snapped. He’s a cat. Cats see in the dark. They hear better than us and can smell danger. They use their whiskers to make sure they fit into spaces. His Roy—Sir Whiskers probably found a hole in the wall and some real mouse to chomp on, much better than any stupid toy.

    Yuck, Dacey mumbled, but at least she wasn’t crying.

    C’mon, kid; you don’t have a choice if you ever want to see your cat again.

    CRASH… THUMP… BANG!

    W-what was that? Dacey cried.

    Hattie shrugged. Ghost, goblin; who knows. We’ll figure it out when we get up there. Let’s find some flashlights.

    Of course, now she had to figure out where they should look for flashlights. Maybe a living room or kitchen drawer? Or the pantry, or possibly the back porch.

    She checked the porch, but all she saw were boxes waiting to be unpacked. She moved back to the living room, Dacey watching her, and checked inside the end tables on either side of the sofa; empty.

    Hattie harrumphed. You going to help?

    I don’t know where to look.

    Hattie squashed her retort and pointed towards the kitchen.

    Check the pantry while I search the counter drawers.

    Already did; pantry’s empty.

    Hattie ignored her and rummaged through each of the drawers next to the sink until she found two small flashlights and a bunch of different sized batteries. She tossed one flashlight to her stepsister and stuffed a package of batteries in her pants pocket.

    Ready?

    Dacey swallowed. But the spiders—.

    Maybe bats or lizards have already eaten all the spiders.

    B-bats? Lizards? Dacey blanched.

    Move it, kid; we’re wasting time.

    WOO-OOO—THUNK…

    Don’t be such a baby—it’s just wind.

    Dacey appeared nailed to the floor, so Hattie yanked her sleeve and dragged her towards the stairwell. She flipped the wall switch next to the railing; a flicker of light sparked, then the old bulb at the top of the stairs sputtered to life, adding an eerie

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